The War of Two Queens: Chapter 47
The War of Two Queens (Blood And Ash Series Book 4)
We crested the last of the Niel Valley just as the sun began to set, turning the sky a deep, violet-blue. Kieran rode to Casteelâs right, and Delano and the wolven traveled alongside me as the northern portion of the Rise surrounding Carsodonia came into view. The area of the Bone Temple and Pensdurth sat at a much higher elevation than Carsodonia, much like Masadonia, and the air was a little cooler and less humid. With my hands steady on Phobasâs reins, I looked at Sage.
The wolven cut away from the pack, followed by General Svenâs and Murinâs divisions, heading for the front gates of Carsodonia as planned. The draken remained in the heavily forested area at our backs, since we werenât sure if the Blood Crown had learned how many draken had survived the attack. In case they hadnât, we wanted that detail to remain unknown. With the drakenâs speed in the air, it would only take minutes for them to reach us once needed.
I glanced behind me to where Hisa and several Crown Guards rode beside the wagon. Iâd kept checking on the wagon, almost as if I expected the casket containing Malec to disappear somehow.
Which was as silly as most of the thoughts Iâd had in the middle of the night.
Our hearts were calm as we continued forward, carefully watched by the guards along the Rise. Their bows were readied, but none had fired upon us as we rode on, our Atlantian banners rippling in the faintly sea-salted breeze. The silence was unnerving, shattered by the horns blaring from the corners of the Rise. The same ones that blew when they spotted the mist. I wondered if the people were seeking shelter in their homes, hiding this time from who theyâd been led to believe was the Harbinger of Death and Destruction instead of the Craven.
My gaze lifted to the archers on the Rise, and my senses swept out. Bitter fear gathered in my throat, stroking the restlessly stirring eather. âTheyâre afraid.â
âAs they should be,â Casteel commented, and I dragged my attention from them, focusing on my King. He also eyed them. âAtlantian armies have never traveled this far west.â
âNot even in the War of Two Kings,â Kieran added. âMost of those guards up there have probably never even seen an Atlantian or a wolvenâor were aware that they had.â
âTheyâll probably be shocked that we look like them,â Emil said from behind us, where he rode with Naill and Malik. âAnd not like the Craven.â
âAll that is likely true,â I said. âAnd it means that when this is over, after weâve ended the Blood Crown, we need to prove to the people of Carsodonia and the rest of Solis that we are not the monsters they have been warned about. It wonât be as easy as it was in Padonia or any of the cities farther east,â I reasoned, though I wouldnât say any but Padonia had been particularly easy.
âWe will.â Casteelâs gaze found mine. âIt will take time, but time is what we will have on our side.â
I nodded. We had time, but so did all the Ascended whoâd fled their cities, either abandoning them or leaving nothing but death behind. They were behind those walls now. They too would need to be dealt with.
But it was what waited before us that needed all of our attention now.
The Bone Temple lined the horizon, a sprawling structure built upon thousands of heavy blocks of stone which held the bodies of the entombed Priests and Priestesses. The Temple was as tall as the Rise itself, with marble and limestone pillars that stretched even higher, and steep steps that climbed the north and south sides. Vines smothered the ones to the east and west and had even begun to climb the pillars.
âWell,â Naill drawled as the grounds beyond the Temple came into view. âIt looks like the Blood Queen brought a few friends along with her.â
âShe most definitely did,â Casteel murmured. âNot unexpected.â
And it wasnât. There was no way Isbeth would meet us in the open like this without substantial forces. Just as we hadnât.
In the rising moonlight, the ground looked red beyond the Temple, blocking the northern gates and spreading as far as the eye could see. Soldiers in black and crimson armor stood shield to shield, their faces covered by helmets or gaiters.
âWhat are we looking at?â Casteel asked as we drew closer.
I let my senses sweep out. A mixture of varying degrees of emotion came back to me. Salty resolve. Vast nothingness. Fear. A shallower emptiness from those shielding their emotions. âMortals, knights, and Revenants,â I told them.
âHow incredibly diverse of the Blood Queen,â Kieran murmured.
My gaze swept to the floor of the Temple. I couldnât see who was there. Was Millicent with our mother? Would she intervene on her behalf once it became clear what we planned? Or would she aid us?
Casteel gave the signal, and the horses slowed before stopping as we neared the foot of the Temple. He looked over at me, and I took a shallow breath, nodding.
Loosening my grip on the reins, I dismounted as Casteel did the same. The others who would join us at the Temple followed as Casteel went to where the generals waited. âRemember the plan,â he said. âThe wolven will alert you when itâs time.â
General Aylard and Sven nodded as Naill and Emil carefully unloaded Malecâs casket from the wagon.
âBe careful,â Sven called to us.
Remembering what Iâd heard before, I replied with, âBut be brave.â
Hisa caught my eye and grinned as she helped Naill and Emil. I smiled as Casteel caught Malik by the arm. The curve of my lips faded.
âStay close to me,â Casteel spoke, his voice low as he met his brotherâs stare. âDonât do anything that could jeopardize what weâre doing here or your life.â
Malikâs expression was stoic, but he nodded.
âYou could at least smile,â Kieran said to Malik as Casteel let go of his arm. âAt least you have a sword this time.â
âGee, thanks,â Malik muttered as Casteel shot him a look a wise person wouldâve shut up upon receiving. âYou know, for allowing me to have the bare minimum protection.â
âHow about you stop bitching and help us?â Naill grunted. âFor a sleeping god, the fucker sure is heavy.â
Cursing under his breath, Malik went to the front of the casket. âMaybe itâs not that heâs heavy. Itâs just that you are all weak.â
âSay that again,â Hisa warned, her eyes flashing a sharp amber from above the face guard of her helmet, âand I will kick your ass.â
Malik said nothing as he helped lower the casket to the ground, but his lips twitched as a sugary taste gathered in my mouth.
âWhat is it with the DaâNeer men and being amused when women threaten them?â I asked.
Kieran snorted, taking my hand and turning me to face him. âIt probably has a complicated answer,â he said, carefully taking hold of my crown and lifting it so it didnât snag in my hair. Neither Casteel nor I would wear our crowns. We would already be targets on the field, and we didnât need anything making it easier to pinpoint us. âBuried in deeply rooted issues that span many generations.â
âI find that deeply offensive,â Casteel remarked, coming to us as I smiled.
âSure, you do.â Kieran took my crown, placing it in the box that a Crown Guard heldâa much more ornate, wooden, engraved thing with the Atlantian Crest. I supposed people had gotten tired of seeing the crowns in a cigar box. He then turned to Casteel and removed his crown with the same gentleness, placing it beside mine. He looked between us as the guard mounted his horse and rode off to keep the crowns safe. âAre we ready?â
Casteel looked down at me. âMy Queen?â
My pulse increased slightly, and a flutter of nervous anticipation bloomed in my chest. The essence thrummed. âYes.â
âThen itâs time.â Casteelâs mouth brushed mine. His lips tasted of the salty breeze as he took my left hand. His thumb ran over the dazzling, golden swirl. âWe will end this tonight, one way or another. And then, Iâm going to find that diamond I told you about.â He kissed me again. âBut before that, Iâm going to get what I want. You. In the armor.â
âGods,â Kieran half sighed, half laughed.
Casteelâs lips curved into a smile against mine. âItâs not like you arenât thinking it.â
My eyes went wide as Kieran sounded as if he choked on his breath. What I suddenly felt from him while Casteel chuckled wasnât embarrassment. It was sharp and heavy, too fleeting for me to latch onto. My eyes narrowed on Kieran as Casteel took my hand. âAre you shielding your emotions?â
âI would never do such a thing,â Kieran replied, his expression one of pure innocence.â
âUh-huh,â I muttered as Casteel led us around the wagon and toward the Temple.
The moment we began our climb of the steep steps, followed by Delano and the other wolven, whatever Kieran was or wasnât feeling slipped to the background. What was about to happen was bigger than meâthan Casteel and me. Even bigger than Kieran. The future of the kingdoms rested on what happened tonight. There was no way to mentally prepare for this. Not when Iâd been in the veil not so long ago and only known as the Maiden. My heart beat as fast as it had when we rode up to the Rise of Oak Ambler and a fine tremor ran through me.
As we neared the top of the steps, and just about when my legs felt as if they would turn to liquid, Casteel halted. He turned to me and squeezed my hand. âRemember what we told you in Evaemon?â
I shook my head, my thoughts racing far too much to even begin to recall what he could possibly be referencing.
His eyes caught mine, the gold glimmering in the starlight. âYou have faced Craven and vamprys, men wearing masks of mortal flesh. Stared down Atlantians whoâve wanted to harm you, seized cities, and freed me,â he said, touching my cheek. âYouâre more than a Queen. More than a goddess on the verge of becoming a Primal. Youâre Penellaphe DaâNeer, and youâre fearless.â
My breath snagged in my chest.
Kieran touched the other side of my cheek, turning my gaze to his. He smiled. âAnd you run from no one and nothing.â
Emotion clogged my throat, and as it had in Evaemon, their words were as powerful as the eather thrumming in my chest.
They were right.
I was brave.
Strong.
And I wasnât afraid.
Nodding, I faced forward as Delano brushed my legs, and several of the wolven prowled past us. I lifted my chin and straightened my shoulders, my heart steady as we crested the top of the steps.
Delano stayed at my side as the wolven spread out, their bodies sleek under the moonlight as they wove between the pale stone statues of the kneeling gods lining the pathway to her.
Draped in a tight-fitting, crimson half-coat and gown, the Blood Queen stood before an altar once used to display the bodies of the deceased Priests and Priestesses. The ruby and diamond crown upon her head glittered like the stars blanketing the sky, as did the ruby piercing her nose, and the wide, jeweled belt at her waist, visible beneath the halves of her coat. Her lips were as red as her clothing, and as she stood there, she was equally as beautiful as she was horrifying.
My mother.
My enemy.
She wasnât alone. Callum stood to her right, as golden as the sun itself. Dozens of Royal Guards and knights flanked her, and a line of Handmaidens stood behind the altar, but it was one who caught my eye.
Millicent was dressed as the other Handmaidens in a sleeveless crimson tunic fitted to her hips. Slits on either side revealed pants of the same color with daggers sheathed to both thighs. The painted markings were back, swirling up and down her arms, and the deep, reddish-black mask painted upon her face obscured what Casteel had seen. Our shared features. The sides of her hair were braided like mine and swept back to fall down her back, the color a flat, dull black.
One look at her, and I knew she wasnât shielding her emotions. Millicentâs unease was strong and tart, mixing with the heaviness of her concern as her attention drifted over the three of us and beyond, to where I suspected she looked for Malik. I had no idea what was going on between themâhow or why she disliked him like Malik claimed and yet obviously worried about him. I didnât know where her true loyalties lay, but neither of those things mattered.
Only our mother did.
âYou brought an army with you, and youâre dressed for battle,â the Blood Queen spoke. âShould I be concerned?â
My gaze locked with hers, and I didnât allow myself to search for any sort of feeling toward her. âYou should always be concerned.â
Isbeth smiled tightly as she stepped forward, her hands clasped at her waist. âI hope you didnât come all this way just to be clever. Where is Malec?â
âWe have him, but you need to lift the curse first,â I said.
âOr what?â Callum answered.
Delanoâs head lowered as his lip curled back, and a low growl rumbled from him. I reached for the notam, calming himâsoothing the others as they prowled across the Temple floor, their instincts riled by so many vamprys and Revenants.
âOr we set his casket on fire,â Casteel responded coolly. âAnd then kill you.â
âYou keep saying that,â the Revenant replied, âyet here I remain.â
Casteel turned his head to Callum, and his lips curled in a shadow of a smile. âAnd here I stand.â
âThe curse will be lifted once I see that you have Malec with you and he still lives,â Isbeth interjected before Callum could. âI need proof that you have fulfilled your end of the bargain before I complete mine.â
I glanced at Casteel. He gave me a curt nod, and through the notam, I reached out to Rune, who waited with the others. The wolvenâs response was swift. âHe comes.â
Isbethâs stare left mine, traveling to the steps as Casteel said, âHe remains asleep.â
âOf course,â she responded with a quick glance. My head cut to my left as Millicent quietly moved forward. âHe will until given blood.â
I watched Millicent move forward even more, tensing.
âHe will sleep deeply until then,â Isbeth continued. âNothing in either realm could wake him at this point.â
âAnd yet, you believe that he will wake upon being fed and then give you what you seek?â Casteel queried as I inched forward, partially blocking him and Kieran.
âI know he will,â Isbeth said.
I saw the moment Malik and the others arrived at the top of the Temple steps. Isbethâs hands unlocked. One fluttered to her chest as they traveled between the kneeling, faceless gods. Millicentâs steps faltered, and her concern rose, pressing down on my shoulders.
They placed the casket before where we stood, and then Malik and the others stepped back. I moved forward, reaching into the pouch at my hip. My fingers slid over the horse as I withdrew the ring. I placed it on top of the flat surface of the casket, beside the bone chains. Isbeth lifted a hand. Several knights moved forward, their dark, soulless eyes the only parts of them visible as they retrieved the casket, carrying it to the altar as Millicent approached me.
Delano eyed her warily as her pale eyes flicked briefly to Malik and then to me. âWhere is the blond?â she questioned quietly. âThe one called Reaver. Your draken.â
âYou worried about where he may be lurking?â Casteel countered as Isbeth turned her back on us.
Millicent didnât look at him. âNo.â Her eyes remained on me, and as close as we were, it was hard not to notice that we were the same height. âBut you should be.â
My brows rose while the knights began pulling the bone chains from the casket. âAnd why is that?â
She looked over her shoulder at the clatter of bones hitting the Temple floor. âBecause she didnât ask about where he is,â she answered, and Kieranâs head snapped in her direction. âOne would think sheâd be concerned about the one thing that could take out a large portion of those on the Temple grounds.â
I glanced at the altar. Isbeth was sliding the Atlantian diamond back onto her fingerâI wasnât even sure why Iâd bothered to return itâas a knight jammed the tip of his sword into the seam of the casket. Wood groaned. It was unlikely that Isbeth was currently aware of where Millicent was at the moment. She was solely focused on the casket, having moved to the other side of the altar. Callum watched, though.
âNor did she mention the fact that youâre about fifty thousand less than you were when you crossed the Niel Valley,â Millicent went on, her gaze lowered. Another knight worked at the center of the lid, and I heard another cracking, popping sound. âShe is fully aware that they are no longer with you, which could only mean that they have been sent somewhere else.â
Focusing on Millicent, a hundred different things rose to the tip of my tongue. There was so much I wanted to know, but all I said was, âI know.â
Millicentâs gaze flew to mine, and I knew she understood what I meant. That I knew who she was.
One side of her lips twitched and rose and then flattened. âThen you should also know that there is something very wrong about all of this.â
Tiny bumps spread out along my arms as the knights freed the top of the casket and lifted the lid. Millicent turned back as they placed it on the floor. The knights all stepped back. Only Isbeth moved forward, and she did so slowly, almost fearfully.
Malik had made his way to Kieranâs side. He didnât look at Millicent, but I knew he spoke to her when he whispered, âAre you well?â
I didnât know how Millicent answered. I was completely focused on Isbeth as she clutched the rim of the casket and stared inside. An arrow of raw, pounding agony pierced straight through me, surprising me. The emotion belonged to Isbeth. The Blood Queen shuddered.
What I could see of Malec wasâ¦it wasnât good. Strands of dull, reddish-brown hair lay against sunken cheeks. Too-dry lips were parted, peeled back over fangs as if he had lost consciousness while screaming. He was skeletal, and more weathered flesh than man. A husk of whoever he may have once been. And the sight of him, no matter what his actions might have caused, was a pitiful sight.
âOh, my love,â Isbeth whispered and then slipped into a hoarsely spoken language I didnât understand.
âOld Atlantian,â Kieran explained.
I may not understand what she said, but I understood the agony mingled with the sweetness of love. The sorrow. There was no relief. No joy or anticipation. Only the bone-deep, icy anguish that hurt more than any physical pain.
âAs you can see, we have held up our end of the deal,â Casteel said, silencing Isbeth. âLift the curse.â
Isbeth didnât move or respond for what felt like an eternity. My heart seized. If she didnât do as sheâd promised and the Joining hadnât usurped the curseâ¦
I reached down, grabbing Kieranâs hand. He was stoic, his emotions shielded, while Casteel was a rapidly building storm of rage.
Then Isbeth nodded.
Callum came forward, driving Millicent back and away. Her reaction to him was unsettling. Iâd seen her handle Delano in his mortal form as if he were nothing more than a child. But this Revenant was supposedly oldâreally old. The essence stirred as he drew close. Through the notam, I nudged Delano back.
âLift the wounded arm,â Callum requested with a pleasant smile. The Revenant was utterly unfazed by the wolvenâs and Elementalsâ glares.
I let go of Kieranâs hand, and he did as Callum requested. The Revenant cocked his head to the side. âThe mark of the curse?â One wing rose as he looked down at me. The smile spread. âItâs gone.â
âIt is,â Casteel answered.
âIt shouldnât be.â
âAnd?â Casteelâs voice was soft, in the way that was always a warning.
âNothing. Itâs just interesting.â Callum closed his fingers around Kieranâs arm as he withdrew a dagger, one made of some sort of milky-white stone Iâd never seen before. âThis may sting.â
âYou harm him, and you will regret it,â I warned.
âI only need to make a shallow cut as before,â Callum said. âBut I suspect there is not much I could do that would seriously harm him.â His hand was quick, making a shallow cut on the same area of Kieranâs forearm as before. âNow is there?â
I didnât even bother responding as a faint black shadow lifted from the shallow slice. My heart tripped. Did that mean the Joining wouldnât have overpowered the curse? I didnât know, and I wasnât sure if we would ever know. What I did know was that it didnât matter.
âGods,â Naill muttered as the inky mist flowed out from Kieranâs blood and rose to where it disappeared into the night.
âThere you go.â Callum dropped Kieranâs arm, sheathing the strange dagger as he smiled brightly.
âThatâs it?â Casteel asked.
The Revenant nodded.
Kieranâs arm flew out in a flash. I saw a glint of bloodstone, and then the hilt of the dagger was flush with Callumâs chest. âThank you,â he growled, jerking the dagger up and out. âFucker.â
Callum staggered back. Blood trickled from his mouth. âGodsdamn itâ¦â
A rough laugh came from Millicent as Callum hit the floor. âNever gets old,â she said, stepping over his body. âHe recovers fast, though. Go for his stupid head next time.â
âAdvice taken and accepted,â Kieran muttered, glancing at me as I folded my hand over his arm. âIâm fineââ He sighed as the healing warmth hit him. His eyes flicked to Casteel.
âLet her do her thing,â Casteel replied, his focus now on Isbeth. âIt makes her feel good.â
Kieran quieted then, and when I lifted my hand, there was no mark. âYou do feel fine?â I asked, not trusting the Revenant at all.
He nodded.
âHeâs fine,â Millicent snapped. âUnlike the Queen, who appears seconds from climbing into the casket.â
âWould that be a bad thing?â Emil asked.
A choked laugh left me, the sound quickly fading as I saw that Isbeth leaned over Malecâs body.
âHeâs my heartmateâa part of me. My heart. My soul. Heâs my everything. If Nyktos had granted us the trials, we would be together.â
âAnd ruling over Atlantia?â Casteel surmised.
âI donât think so. He was done with that godsforsaken kingdom,â she said. âWe wouldâve traveled the realm, found a place that we were at peace with. There, we wouldâve stayed. Together. With our son. Our children.â
Who knew if what she spoke was true to anyone but her, but it was painful to witness, nonetheless.
Isbeth smoothed a palm over Malecâs cheek, her hand trembling as she bent over him more, her mouth inches from his dry, pale lips. âI love you now as much as I loved you then when our eyes first met in the rose gardens. I will always love you, Malec. Always.â
I shifted under the weight of the raw tide of emotion that Isbeth did nothing to shield. Tears rolled down her cheeks, leaving faint tracks in the pale powder she wore.
âYou know that, right?â Her voice had lowered as she reached for the jeweled belt at her waist. âYou have to, even now, as you sleep so deeply. You have to know how much I love you.â Isbethâs fingers trailed down the side of his neck as she pressed a kiss to his still lips.
âThatâs really disgusting,â muttered Emil.
It was.
And it was also sad. As terrible and evil to the core as Isbeth was, she still loved deeply and painfully. It would hurt even more when she realized that we had no intention of allowing her to keep him.
âFuckboy is awake,â Kieran muttered as Callum slowly climbed to his feet. âHeads up.â
Casteel reached between us, folding his hand around mine. He winked at me, and other than proving that he could pull that off without looking ridiculous, it was a sign. It was time. Looking away from the sad scene playing out before us, I narrowed my senses until I could only feel the notam and searched out Sageâs fresh rain imprintâ
âAnd thatâs why⦠Thatâs why you have to understand,â Isbeth said to Malecâs sleeping form. âYou know how much I loved our son. You understand why it must be like this. That it cannot be any other way.â
Concentration broken, my head jerked toward Isbeth at the same moment as Millicentâs. Isbeth jerked her arm up. Casteel pulled me to his side at the first glint of shadowstone. The jeweled belt at her waist had hidden a shadowstone dagger. I tapped into the eather, worried that she would turn that dagger on any number of people standing nearâ
Isbeth screamedâand, gods, that was the sound of pure anguish. She brought the dagger downâinto Malecâs chest. His heart.
My mouth dropped open.
Isbeth hadâ¦
Sheâd stabbed Malec in the heart with shadowstone.
Shadowstone could kill a god. I remembered Reaver saying as much.
What weâd just witnessed didnât make sense. Not in any realm. But she hadâ¦she had killed Malec. Her heartmate.
âWhat in the actual fuck?â exclaimed Casteel, dropping my hand as Millicent staggered back, her eyes going wide.
Kieran cursed as Isbeth jerked her hands free of the dagger. Her body folded over Malecâs. âIâm sorry. Iâm so sorry,â she wept. âIâm so sorry.â
My arms fell to my sides. The shock of seeing the glimmering, ruby-encrusted hilt jutting from Malecâs chest rooted me to where I stood. And that astonishment rolled, coming in waves from all who witnessed itâall except one.
The golden, now-bloody Revenant.
Callum smiled.
A nearly overwhelming sense of dread exploded in my chest as Callum slowly turned his head toward me. He clasped his hands together, bowing. âThank you.â
The essence stirred violently. I reached out, clasping Casteelâs arm.
âThank you for doing what you were prophesied to do long ago. Thank you for fulfilling your purpose, Harbinger.â Callumâs pale eyes brightened behind the golden mask, and the eather, it thrummed through my veins. âIt wasnât exactly as foretold or how many of us understood, but propheciesâ¦well, the details arenât always exact, and interpretations do vary.â
âI donât understand,â Millicent said, her wide-eyed gaze darting between Callum and our mother.
âWhat is it that you donât understand?â
âEverything,â she seethed. âEverything about what just happened.â
âYou mean what couldâve happened to you if you hadnât been a failure?â Callum countered, and Malik shot forward, blocked only by Casteel, who was simply faster. âYou wouldâve bled for him, and he wouldâve rewarded you greatly for it.â
Millicent drew back, her skin paling under the mask. Her stare hit mine, and suddenly, I understood. Mouth dry, my gaze fell to Malec. âThat was supposed to be me, wasnât it?â
âYou succeeded where she didnât,â Callum said. âAnd Iâve been waiting a long time for you. Heâs been waiting for the sacrifice. The balance the Arae always insist upon. Waiting for the one born of mortal flesh, on the verge of becoming a great Primal power. You arrived as promised, butâ¦â He extended his arm. âBut you werenât the only one. As long as both shared the blood of the Primal of Life and were loved, it would restore him. She just needed youâsomeone of his bloodlineâto find Malec. We all know that Ires surely wouldnât have done that. Weâd have had to free him. And, well, heâs kind ofâ¦pissy, to say the least.â
âWhat in the hell?â demanded Naill.
Callum cocked his head. âI just didnât think sheâd do that. Not until she asked for him. And even then, I truly didnât think she would go through with it, to be honest.â He laughed. âI thought it would be a fifty-fifty shot on who she chose. You. Or Malec.â
Heart pounding, I pressed my hand to my chest as clouds appeared over the sea, darkening the night sky. I was on the verge of becoming a Primal, and it struck me, finally, the why now of it all. Why Isbeth had waited until this time to exact her centuries-old plans. Sheâd had to wait until I entered the Culling so she could⦠I stared at the altar. So she could kill me. But she hadâ¦
But it wasnât me on that altar.
Malec wasnât the True King of the Realms as we believed. This really had nothing to do with him or even me. We were just pawns.
Suddenly, I thought about the prophecy. ââThe Bringer of Death and Destruction,ââ I murmured, and Casteelâs gaze flew to mine. âNot Death and Destruction, but the bringer of it.â My hand lifted to my mouth. That godsdamn prophecy⦠âAnd I did just that.â
âFuck,â Malik growled.
âThis is not the right time,â Casteel said under his breath, âbut I just want to point out that I always said you were not death and destruction.â
Kieran shot him a look because it really, really wasnât the time, and because while Malikâs reluctance to give Malec to Isbeth may not have been rooted in knowledge of what was to come, if we had listened to himâ¦
No. If we had known, we wouldnât have stopped. We wouldnât have risked Kieran. Right or wrong, it was as simple as that.
âThen what is this?â Millicent demanded. âWho is the Harbinger?â
âShe is the Harbinger.â Callumâs head swung to her. âThe warning.â His eyes widened. âWhat did you think, dear? That she was the one who would destroy the realms?â He glanced at me. âA Primal born of mortal flesh? Her?â His laugh echoed through the valley. âSeriously?â
I stiffened. âAt any other time, I would find that kind of rude.â
âNo offense meant, Your Highness,â he said with a mockery of a bow. âItâs just that it would take eons for you to become that powerful, and that was if the power didnât drive you mad first.â
The limp, flat hair flew about Millicentâs face as she shook her head, while Isbeth continued sobbingâas the dread grew and grew. The last part of Callumâs comment was something weâd have to worry about later. âNo.â
âYes.â Callum tipped his head back as he eyed me. âIt shouldâve been you on the altar. That was the plan. That is what all of this has been about. You.â He pointed to Millicent and then to me. âAnd you. Yeah, weâll have to deal with you later.â Callum winked. âBut now, itâs time.â
âTime for what, you silly fuck?â Kieran snarled, grasping the hilt of his sword.
The Revenantâs eyes closed. âTime to bow to the one True King of the Realms.â
Casteel stepped toward him. âAnd who is that supposed to be?â
Pressure settled on my shoulders. An awareness that brought a chill to the nape of my neck. That heavy, oppressive feelingâthe same as Iâd felt the night that Vessa had struck down the draken, and in the woods outside of Three Riversâcloaked my skin. Iâd felt it before when we were in Stonehill and Iâd heard that voice urging me to lose control.
The same one Iâd heard that night in Lockswood when Iâd been floating in the nothingness.
âHeâs been waiting.â Callum ignored Kieran, his chin dipped, eyes eager and voice soft, full of worshipâso very much like the Priests and Priestesses in Oak Ambler. âThis whole time, he too has slept fitfully. Kept well fed under the Temple of Theon.â
Kieranâs skin blanched as a shudder rocked me. âThe children,â I gasped. âThe extra Rite.â
âHe had to be strong enough to awaken, and he was.â Callum dragged his teeth along his lower lip. âWhen you shed the mortal flesh and began your Ascension, it freed him. And soon, when Malec takes his final breath, he will be at his full strength. All these yearsâall these centuries and centuriesâheâs been waiting. Sleeping even more restlessly after your birth. Sensing you, feeling you. Heâs been waiting and waiting for the proverbial key to his lock, for hisâ¦pretty poppy to pick and watch bleed.â
Red-hot rage swirled through Casteel, gathering in my throat like a pool of acid. He moved so fast, I didnât see his hand until it was tearing through Callumâs chest, and the Revenantâs heart was in his palm, dripping blood and thick tissue.
Malik and Millicent turned to him. âWhat?â Casteel snarled, throwing the heart aside. âI couldnât listen to another word. Not even going to say Iâm sorry. Fuck him.â
Delanoâs imprint brushed against my thoughts. Somethingâs comingâ¦
No, someone was already here.
Death.
Destruction.
Stale lilacs.
Oh, my gods.
The dread exploded into panic as I jerked to the side. âKolis.â