A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire: Chapter 25
A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire (Blood and Ash Book 2)
The realization had a far more chilling effect than it should, and it was all Kieranâs stupid heartmates conversationâs fault.
And come to think of it, why in the hell hadnât Kieran brought this up?
Then I thought of having this conversation with Kieran, and I wanted to take a wire brush to my brain. As handsome as I believed Kieran to be, I justâ¦I couldnât even begin to imagine doing something like that with him.
With him and Casteel.
I looked around for a glass of water, but there was none.
âYou donât need to worry about this. I donât think heâd expect something like that. Casteel is not about the old traditions,â Alastir said.
âBut would the wolven expect that?â I asked, and then the worst thing ever spewed from my mouth. âWould Shea have done it?â
Alastirâs eyes widened.
I immediately wished I hadnât said anything. âIâm sorry. I imagine as a wolven, she wouldnât have been expected to. And I shouldnât have brought her upââ
âNo. No, itâs okay.â Alastir stretched forward, placing his hand on mine. âDonât apologize. Iâm actually glad youâre willing to speak of her.â He smiled again, squeezing my hand before leaning back. âAlthough she was a wolven, it is a tradition that some wouldâve expected to be honored, and Kieranâs oath would have also extended to her. She wasâ¦â He pressed his lips together, and a long moment passed. âShea never backed down from anything, no matter if others found it distasteful or crude. She wouldâve done anything for Casteel.â
And would Casteel have gone through with it?
Gods, I didnât even want to think about that.
I swallowed as I sank into the chair. My head started racing again.
âIâve taken up enough of your time.â Alastir once again began to rise.
âWait,â I nearly yelled as something occurred to me. âIf the Joining can extend a mortalâs life, then why didnât King Malec do that with Isbethâhis mistress? Instead of making her a vampry? Or wasnât he bonded?â
Alastir stared at me as if Iâd suggested whole-heartedly embracing the Ascendedâs way of life. âKing Malec had a bonded wolven. Actually, he had more than one since he often outlived them. But it wouldnât have worked on a mortal. The partner has to carry Atlantian blood in them, and even if that woman had Atlantian blood in her, it wouldâve been a grave insult to the Queen. One that went beyond carrying on affairs. Any wolven of worth wouldâve refused. That much, I know.â His gaze met mine and held. âHow old do you think I am?â
His question threw me. âIâ¦I donât know. Far older than you look, I imagine.â
âIâve seen eight hundred years.â
Good gods.
âAnd the reason I know his bonded wolven wouldâve refused if asked?â Alastir stated. âItâs because I was his last, and it was I who alerted the Queen to what Malec had done, shattering an unbreakable oath.â
Sometime after Alastir left, the tub was filled with warm water, courtesy of Casteel, according to the two mortalsâa younger man and woman with curious eyes. They didnât ask questions or linger longer than necessary and let me know that if I put my clothing and the nightgown in the wicker basket theyâd placed outside the door, my clothes would be laundered. While Iâd hoped to see Casteel, I appreciated the gesture, and I was also relieved that he hadnât returned.
I needed time to processâ¦everything.
So, I made use of the bath, washing my hair, and then I slipped on the robe, tightening it around my waist. The sun was now high, but there was a chill in the room that wasnât present outside. I sat in front of the fire, slowly working the tangles free from my hair as my mind wandered from one utterly shocking topic to another.
Alastir had been Malecâs bonded wolven? And the Joining? My gods, would the people of Atlantia actually expect that of meâfrom the three of us? The heat of embarrassment almost drove me away from the fire. It wasnât that I was disgusted or repulsed. What people decided to do and with whom or how many was their business. And the way Miss Willa had written about sharing herself with more than one partner was never discussed in a way that made me uncomfortable.
Well, that wasnât exactly true.
Mostly, I didnât understand how all of it worked. Not the physical aspect. Sheâd gone into quite a lot of detail regarding that. But more so, it all sounded so very complicated. I just couldnât even wrap my head around something like that when everything with Casteel was already so damn convoluted.
And why was I even concerning myself with this? Obviously, this was not something Casteel planned. But had he planned to do it with Shea?
âStop it,â I hissed, forcing my thoughts elsewhere. Unsurprisingly, they came right back to him.
What was a serious Casteel even like? Was that another mask he wore? Iâd seen glimpses of that version of him whenever he asserted his authority, but he was so quick to tease and make light with me.
Heâs just more alive when heâs with you.
Placing the brush on the floor, I closed my eyes and thought of Shea. Had he been that way with her? I doubted heâd donned any masks with her. Most likely, he had been an entirely different person then.
Whatâd happened to her? All I knew was that the Ascended were involved in her fate. How did she die? How long were she and Casteel together? Did she love him, too?
Of course, she did.
Even with little to no experience, I knew better than to travel down that road. Iâd seen how Casteel reacted before, and while I might not have ever been in a relationship or loved, I knew people either wouldnât or couldnât talk about certain things. Things that could only be shared with those you loved, those you truly trusted.
I think youâre heartmates.
There was a snag in my chest as I bit down on my lower lip. After learning about the Joining, I knew Kieran was totally off-base on the whole heartmates thing, but I still wanted to travel that road with Casteel. I wanted to know about who he used to be before he lost Shea, lost his brother. And I wanted to know all of that because Iâ¦I cared about him. Because Iâd never stopped falling.
Gods.
I was in so much trouble.
And there was a high likelihood that Alastir had realized what I had when we spoke. That Casteel hadnât trusted me with the knowledge of Spessaâs End. Worse yet, there was no way he believed our engagement was real.
Sitting with my head tipped back and eyes closed was how Casteel found me when he walked into the room. Impossibly, all thoughts Iâd been wrapped up in vanished, replaced by what I made up my mind to do.
âWhat are you doing?â he asked, and I heard the door close behind him.
âBrushing my hair.â Straightening, I opened my eyes, but I didnât turn around.
âWouldnât you need the brush in your hand to do that?â He sounded closer.
âYes.â A hundred silver hawks fluttered in my chest.
A moment later, he was sitting beside me, one knee bent and the other curled, resting against mine. Slowly, I looked over at him. The moment our gazes connected, the air whooshed out of my lungs. I didnât know if it had to do with what Kieran had told me or everything else.
âIâm sorry,â he said. âIâm sorry about this morningâabout losing control like that. It will never happen again.â
My skin pimpled. His apology was unexpected, but I wasnât sure if I wanted it. What happened seemed mostly out of his control, and his apologyâ¦it made me respect him. I nodded.
âI planned on talking to you earlier than this. I came back afterâ¦well, I came back, and you were gone.â
âI was with Kieran,â I told him. âWe went down to the Bay and then had breakfast.â
A faint smile appeared. âI heard.â
My brows lifted. âYou did?â
He nodded. âThe people here told me.â
I didnât point out how the people here hadnât spoken to me during our brief encounter but felt the need to report to him that they had seen me.
âI came back to see if you had returned as soon as I could.â
âItâs okay.â I swallowed. âThank you for the bath.â
âI should be the one thanking you.â
âFor what?â
âFor knowing how to reach me this morning,â he said, and heat raced across my face.
I toyed with the end of the sash as I glanced at him. Words rose and died on the tip of my tongue. He stared at the flames, the lines of his face nowhere near relaxed. Something occurred to me then, in my desperation to not think about this morning. âWhenever you introduce me to people, why are you so insistent that no one refers to me as the Maiden?â
âThatâs an incredibly random question.â
It was. âIâm beginning to realize Iâm an incredibly random person.â
The half-smile returned. âI like it. Forces me to stay on my toes when Iâm around you. But to answer your question, the less people think of you as the Maiden, the more they will think of you as the half-Atlantian whoâs captured my heart.â There was an odd hollowness to his words, and when he looked at me, I noticed faint blue shadows under his eyes. âAnd the less likely they will be to want to harm you.â
I nodded as I opened my senses to him. The connection was shockingly fast, and within a heartbeat, his hunger hit meâhis hunger and his sadness, the latter more bitter than normal, and heavyâso damn heavy. He hadnât felt that way earlier. Was it because of whatâd happened this morning or something else?
âItâs also not who you are anymore,â he added, and I pulled back my gift, realizing that closing it down had been easier since Casteel had given me his blood the second time. âItâs not who you ever were.â
âNo, itâs not.â
âDid you ever accept it?â He planted a hand on the floor beside me and leaned over an inch or two. âWas there ever a point where you wanted to be what they made you?â
I had never been asked that before, and it took me some time to figure out how to answer. âThere were times when I wanted to make the Queen happyâto make the Teermans pleased with me. So, I tried to be goodâto be what was expected of me, but it was likeâ¦wearing a mask. I tried but the mask cracked quickly enough.â
âForcing a warrior to don a veil of submission was never going to last.â
Feeling my cheeks warm, I looked away. âI donât know about the warrior partââ
âI do,â he insisted. âFrom the moment you stayed instead of walking out of that room at the Red Pearl, I knew you had a warriorâs strength and bravery. Itâs why you went to Rylanâs funeral. Itâs what drove you out to the Rise when the Craven attacked and fought backâfought me. Itâs why you didnât bow under Alastirâs remarks when you first met him but rather challenged his beliefs. Hell, itâs what drove you to learn how to fight in the first place.â A dimple appeared in his right cheek. âItâs your bloodlineâitâs you.â
The warmth in my chest had little to do with the fire. âIâm still a little annoyed that Iâm not of the changeling line and I canât shift forms.â
Casteel laughed, and the sound was as real and sunny as my chest felt. And when his gaze snagged on mine, I finally found the courage of the warrior he claimed I was.
And started with perhaps the most embarrassing thing ever. âI spoke with Alastir earlier.â
âHe mentioned that he was going to visit with you.â
âHe did, and heâ¦he told me about the Joining.â
Casteelâs head swung toward mine so fast, I was surprised he didnât crack his neck. âHe did what?â
âDo I really need to repeat that?â
âWhat did he tell you?â
âHe told me what it is.â I focused on my brush. âThat itâs a blood exchange that often turns into something, um, more intimate.â
âGood gods, he did not.â
âHe did.â
âIâ¦â Casteel suddenly broke out into deep, thunderous laughter. The kind that was so loud and hard, it sounded like it hurt.
My wide gaze shot to him.
âIâm sorry,â he gasped. âItâs just that I wouldâve paid good money to see him try to explain that to you.â
I narrowed my eyes. âWould you have?â
âHell, yes, I wouldâve. Oh, gods.â Dragging a hand through his hair, he looked over at me. âLet me guess? He said it was crude and disgusting?â
âYeah. Pretty much.â
âGods, what an old alarmist.â He laughed again, shoulders shaking. âI wish I couldâve seen your face.â
âWell, since I learned about it from him, I wished I couldâve punched you in your face.â
âI bet you did.â
âI donât know what is so funny. He said people might expect it from usâespecially because Iâm not full-blooded Atlantian!â
âFirst off,â he said, struggling for breath, âI donât think anyone is going to expect that.â
From you seemed to hang unsaid between us.
âAnd while it is an intimate ritual, one that isnât often done anymore, it is not always sexual. For some, Iâm sure it becomes that naturally. And hey, to each their own. Theyâre consenting adults, and you do you, you know? Iâm not going to judge.â
âIâm not judging either.â
He cocked an eyebrow. âYouâre not?â
âIâm not,â I insisted.
âSo, youâre interested then?â he murmured.
âThat is not where I was going with that.â
âUh-huh.â
I ignored the way he said that. âIs it true that a mortal with Atlantian blood would be given a longer lifespan?â
Casteel nodded.
âHas that been done before?â
âI havenât known any bonded elementals who have taken a mortal with Atlantian blood,â he answered. âAs far as I know, there hasnât been. And itâs a lot to ask of a wolven. That kind of blood bond goes both ways. If the wolven dies, so does the other, and if the mortal with Atlantian blood dies, the wolven would also.â
âOh.â I blinked slowly. âAlastir didnât mention that.â
âWait.â He swung his head toward mine. âDo you even know what could happen during that ritual that would make it so very crudeââ
âI know what could happen,â I snapped.
âIs it because of that diary?â
âShut up.â
âDid you bookmark the chapters detailing how Willa spent afternoons entertaining not one but two suitors, one in front and the otherâ?â
âYou seem to know a lot about that book.â
âI love that fucking book,â he said, and my jaw ached from how hard I was clenching it. âSo, youâre interested then, Princess. What a wild side you have.â
âThat is not what I said!â My cheeks flushed.
âI know.â He chuckled. âIâm sorry. Iâm being an ass.â
âAt least you recognize it.â
âI justâ¦I was not expecting this. But you do have a veryâ¦adventurous personality.â
âI hate you,â I growled.
âNot that adventurous, huh?â Casteel laughed again. âLook, I know youâre not looking for this marriage to go beyond the necessary,â he said, and that strange, stupid ache in my chest pulsed. âSo, itâs not even something you need to worry about. But the Joining is meant to strengthen the bond thatâs already there, and ensure that the partner is also a part of that bond. Itâs not done lightly, and again, it is not always a sexual thing. I know itâs been done where everyone kept their body parts to themselves.â
My brows lifted. âThen why did Alastir make it sound like it was aâ¦â
âA dirty thing?â He grinned. âBecause heâs old and overdramatic and thinks heâs being helpful.â
âWhyâ?â I cut myself off before I could ask why heâd never brought it up. I already knew why. Just like I knew why he hadnât told me about Spessaâs End.
âWhat?â
I shook my head, changing the subject. âAlastir said he was Malecâs bonded wolven.â
âThat he was. Did he tell you he told my mother that Malec had Ascended Isbeth?â When I nodded, Casteel let his head fall back. âAlastir broke his oath, severing his bond. That hasâ¦well, that has rarely happened. Alastir can sometimes say too much, but heâs a good man.â
I nodded slowly, watching him as he closed his eyes. âYour mother didnât leave him then?â
âNo.â
âDid she stay with him because she loved him?â
âYou know, I really donât know. She doesnât talk about him, but you have to wonder given she named her first son a name so similar,â he said. I wondered how their father felt about that. âWhen my mother confronted Malec, she did so privately, but what heâd done still got out. And others followed suit. In a way, it all happened so quickly.â
âAnd here we are,â I murmured.
âHere we are,â he confirmed.
Drawing in a deep breath, I said what needed to be said. âI know you need to feed. I know youâre close to the edge, and you havenât fed from anyone else.â
âSomeone has been talking,â he replied flatly. âAnd I doubt it was Alastir.â
âSomeone needed to. What happens if you donât feed, other than the black eyes? If you do tip over the edge?â I asked. âYou never really explained beyond it being a very bad thing.â
He looked away, dragging his lip between his teeth. âItâs like beingâ¦dead inside, worse than an Ascended. We fall into bloodlust, but itâs a violent madness, like that of a Craven. But we donât decay or rot.â He shook his head. âOnce we tip over the edge, we grow stronger with each feeding, but itâs like a disease of the mind because we become nothing more than rabid animals. Very few come back from that.â
I remembered what he said the Ascended did to himâwithheld blood until he was ravenous. âDid the Ascended withhold blood from you often?â
âThereâd be years when they kept me well fed.â The twist of his lips was a mockery of a smile. âThen theyâd give me enough so I didnât die, and sometimes, that wasnât enough.â
Years.
Sorrow gripped my heartâfor him, for his brother, and any other who was going through that. But mostly for Casteel because he knew exactly what his brother was facing. âBut you came back.â
âThere were times when I didnât think I would, Poppy.â He stared into the flames, his voice barely audible. âWhen I forgot how much time had passed. When I forgot who I was and what mattered to me. It was like parts of my brain had turned dark.â He dragged a hand through his hair and then dropped it to his knee. âBut I came back. Not the same. Never the same. But I found parts of who I used to be.â
I swallowed against the knot in my throat. âIâmââ
âDonât say youâre sorry.â He cut me a sharp look that wouldâve stung my feelings before, but I understood itâunderstood him. Sympathy wasnât always wanted. âYou did nothing you should apologize for.â
âYouâre right. I was going to say Iâm glad you found yourself.â
A harsh laugh burst from him. âTruly, Poppy? Are you really?â
âYeah, I guess I am.â I lifted a shoulder in a shrug. âYou may have come back as an asshole, but thatâs better than being lost in your own mind. I wouldnât wish that on anyone.â
The laugh that left him was softer, and it tugged at my lips. âTrue.â He dragged a hand down his face. âAnyway, I know what itâs like to be close to the edge. Iâve been past it. Iâm fine.â
âBut youâre not, Casteel.â
His eyes widened slightly as he looked at me.
âWhat?â
âItâs just that you hardly say my name.â
âShould I call you Your Highness?â
âGods,â he choked out. âNo.â
I did grin a little at that, and he saw it and stared as if Iâd just pulled off an amazing feat. I had no idea why a grin from me would do that.
I refocused on the task at hand. âI felt it. I felt your hunger this morning,â I told him. âI know youâre starving, and I know how that feels, at least to some extent. The Duke would forbid me food sometimes when he was angry. You need to feed.â
âFirst off, knowing that the Duke did that, I want to kill him all over again. But secondly, blood wasnât the only thing I was starved for this morning.â His eyes were heated honey. âAnd I think you know that.â
My pulse skittered, and my voice sounded raspier than normal when I said, âIf you wonât do thatâif you canâtâthen you need to take my blood.â
Casteel jerked back as if Iâd smacked him. He rose to his feet in the next instant. âPoppyââ
âYou canât continue on this way.â I stood, not nearly as gracefully as he had. âWhat if you get injured again?â
âIâll be fine.â He took a step back from me. âI told you. I wonât lose control again.â
âI donât think you have a choice in that, do you? Itâs just a part of who you are. You need Atlantian blood. You havenât fed from anyone else, so maybe youâll do it from me. Itâs not like you havenât bitten me before.â
The angles of his face stood out in stark relief. âI havenât forgotten that.â
âThen this shouldnât be a big deal. You need blood. I have the blood. Letâs get it over with.â
He laughed, but it was without humor. âGet it over with? As if this will just be another business arrangement?â
I lifted my chin. âIf thatâs what it needs to be, then it will.â
âSo, youâre okay with being that? Being the source of my strength, considering everything that Iâve done to you? Adding this to a long list of things you donât want to do but feel you need to?â
âWell, when you put it that wayâ¦â I threw up my hands in frustration. âMaybe Iâd rather be the source of your sanity so I donât have to worry about you tearing into my neck between now and whenever this is over.â
His chest rose with a deep, shuddering breath as his shoulders bunched with tension.
âCan you really say that it wonât happen again? Look me straight in the face and tell me you truly believe that youâll be able to stop next time,â I demanded. When his nostrils flared and he said nothing, I knew the truth. And I knew I had to admit another truth, one that I wouldnât be able to take back. âI felt your hunger, Casteel, and I donât need to do this. I stopped doing things I didnât want to do the moment I took off the damn veil. I want to help you. Because as stupid as this may make me, and only the gods know why, I care about you! So, yeah, I donât want to have my throat ripped open, and I also donât want to know that youâre suffering for no reason.â
Trembling and stomach twisting, I felt like Iâd just stripped myself bare. âThereâs probably something wrong with meâactually, thereâs definitely something wrong with me. Obviously. But if youââ I forced the words out before they choked me. âIf you care about me at all, you wonât want to put me at risk. Youâll take what Iâm offering with a thank you and stop acting like an idiot!â
Casteel stared at me, his brows raised, and then, after what felt like an eternity, his shoulders lowered. âIâm so incredibly unworthy of you,â he whispered, and I shivered, remembering the only other time heâd said that to me. It was the night Iâd shared my body, my heart, and my soul with him. He lifted his head and seemed to take another breath. âOkay.â
I exhaled slowly. âOkay.â
âOn one condition,â he said. âI wonât do this alone. Not afterâ¦not after not feeding for so long. I wonât risk that. Iâ¦I could take too much. Do you agree?â
At first, the idea of someone else being present made me uncomfortable, but then I remembered how his bite had felt before. Maybe having someone present would curtail that.
So, I nodded. âI agree.â