A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire: Chapter 36
A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire (Blood and Ash Book 2)
Slowly, Casteel turned to me.
âIt was the truth when I said you were the first thing Iâd ever truly chosen for myself. Itâs also true that I chose you when you were just Hawke, and itâs not just because you were the first person to ever really see me. That had something to do with it, of course, but if I wanted to experience pretty words or pleasure, I couldâve donned the mask once more and went back to the Red Pearl. Iâ¦I wanted you.â My cheeks heated, but I continued. âIt was true that I had already begun to suspect the Ascended, and whether I could be the Maiden. And I chose you because you made me feel like I was someone, that I was a person and not merely an object. You saw me and accepted me, but what you donât know is that the night I asked you to stay with me, I had already left behind the veil. Iâd made my choice. I wanted to find a way to be with you even though I had no idea if you wanted that. And if you didnât, it wouldâveâ¦it wouldâve hurt, but I was no longer the Maiden. I fell for you when you were Hawke, and I kept falling for you when you became Casteel.â
His eyes widened.
âAnd I couldnât understand how I kept falling for you. I was so angry with youâwith myself for not seeing the truth. And it felt like a betrayal to Vikter and Rylan, the others. And myself.â
His chest rose with a heavy breath. âAnd you still feel that way? Like itâs a betrayal to keep falling for me?â He took a step and then another toward me before stopping. âIf so, I understand, Poppy. Some things canâtââ
âSome things canât be forgotten or forgiven,â I said, rubbing my damp hands over my knees. âBut I think I realized, or have come to accept, that even then, some things canât be changed or stopped. That they still matter but donât. That those emotions are powerful, but not as strong as others. That what I felt for you had nothing to do with what you did or didnât do. It had nothing to do with Vikter or anyone else. And acknowledging that felt like permission toâ¦to feel. And that scared me.â
I placed my hand against my chest. âIt still terrifies me because I have never felt this way about anyone, and I knowâ¦I know it has nothing to do with you being my first or there being, well, limited options in my life. Itâs you. Itâs me. Itâs us. What I feel? Like how I want to take your pain away and yet throttle you at the same moment? How your stupid dimples are infuriating, but I look for them every time you smile because I know thatâs a real smile. I donât know why I look forward to arguing with you, but I do. Youâre clever, and you are kinder than even you realizeâeven though I know you have earned the title of the Dark One. You are a puzzle I want to figure out, but at the same time, donât. And when I realized you have so many masksâso many layers, I kept wanting to peel them back, even though I fear it will only hurt more in the end.â
I shook my head as I curled my fingers around the collar of my tunic. âI donât understand any of this. Like how do I want to stab you and kiss you at the same time? And I know you said that I deserve to be with someone who didnât kidnap me, or someone I donât want to stabââ
âForget I said that,â he said, closer to me when I looked up. âI have no idea what I was talking about. Maybe I didnât even say that.â
My lips twitched. âYou totally said that.â
âYouâre right. I did. Forget it.â His eyes searched mine. âTell me why this terrifies you. Please?â
My breath snagged. âBecause youâ¦you could break my heart again. And what weâre doing? Itâs bigger than us, and even your brother. You have to know that. We could actually change things. Not just for your people, but also for the people of Solis.â
âI know that,â he whispered, his chest rising and falling rapidly, his eyes luminous.
âAnd things are already complicated and messy, and acknowledging what I wantâwhat I feelâjust makes it all the more complicated and scary. Because this timeâ¦â Tears burned the back of my throat. âThis time, I donât know how I will get over that. I know that probably makes me sound weak and immature or whatever, but itâs just something I know.â
âItâs not weak.â Casteel came forward, but he didnât stand there. He didnât sit beside me. He lowered himself to his knees in front of me. âYour heart, Poppy? It is a gift I do not deserve.â He placed his hands on my knees as he lifted his gaze to mine. âBut it is one I will protect until my dying breath. I donât know what that means.â He stopped, curling his fingers into the leggings, into my skin. âOkay. Fuck. I do know what that means. Itâs why Iâm in awe of everything you say or doâeverything you are. Itâs why youâre the first thing I think about when I wake and the last thought I have when I fall asleep, replacing everything else. Itâs why when Iâm with you, I can be quiet. I can just be. You know what that means.â
He took one of my hands and pressed it to his chestâhis heart. âTell me what that means. Please.â
Please.
Twice in one conversation heâd said that, a word that didnât pass his lips often. And how could I refuse?
I didnât just focus on him to get what I was now learning was a cursory reading of his emotions. I opened myself, forming the invisible tether to him and what he felt. It came back to me in a rush, and it was shocking.
Not the heavy and thick-like-cream feel of concern. He worriedâabout what was going to happen to his brother, his kingdom, to me. It wasnât the cool splash of surprise that made me think he didnât quite believe this conversation. The tangy, almost bitter taste of sadness was minimal, and the only time his agony hadnât been raw and nearly overpowering was when Iâd taken his pain from him. That surprised me, yes, but what shocked me more was the sweetness on the tip of my tongue.
âDo you feel that?â he asked. âWhat does it feel like?â
âLikeâ¦it reminds me of chocolate and berries.â I blinked back tears. âBerriesâstrawberries? Iâve felt that from Vikterâfrom Ian and my parents. But Iâve never felt it like thisâlike itâs more decadent somehow.â
And I thought I knew what it was. It was the emotion behind the long looks and the seeking touches. The feeling behind the way his arm always tightened around me when we rode together and why he was always messing with my hair. It was the emotion that drove him to draw that line he wouldnât cross with me. It was why he wouldnât use compulsion, and it was what allowed him to want to protect me but demanded that he allow me to protect myself. It was how when he was with me, he didnât think of his kingdom, his brother, or the time heâd been a captive.
And it was one of many things forbidden to me as the Maiden.
It was love.
âDonât cry.â He lifted my hand to his mouth and kissed the center of my palm.
âIâm not crying. Iâm not sad,â I told him, and he grinned. The stupid dimple in his right cheek appeared. âI hate that stupid dimple.â
âYou know what I think?â He kissed the tip of my finger.
âI donât care.â
The dimple in his left cheek appeared. âI think you feel the exact opposite when it comes to my stupid dimples.â
He was right, and I shuddered.
Casteel let go of my hands and stretched up, cupping my cheeks. He leaned in, pressing his forehead to mine, and I swore I felt his hands tremble. âAlways,â he whispered in the breath we shared. âYour heart was always safe with me. It always will be. There is nothing I will protect more fiercely or with more devotion, Poppy. Trust in thatâin what you feel from me. In me.â
Trust.
As Casteel, heâd never asked me to trust him. He knew how fragile that was. One crack could bring it all down.
But I knew what I felt.
I nodded. âI donât want to pretend anymore.â
âNeither do I.â
âIâ¦I donât know what that means for us,â I whispered. âYour people and your parentsâ¦they donât trust me. Youâre basically the closest thing to immortal there is, and Iâmâ¦my lifespan is a blink. What do we do now?â
âWe donât worry about my people or my parents or our lifespans. Not right now. Not even later. We take this day by day. This is new to you, and in a way, itâs new to me. Letâs make a deal.â
âYou and your deals.â
His lips curved into a smile against mine. âLetâs make a deal that we donât borrow tomorrowâs problems today.â
Tomorrow always came soon enough, but I nodded. Because in the same breath, tomorrow wasnât todayâs problem. âI can agree to that.â
âGood.â He drew back, and I thought there was a sheen to his eyes. âIf weâre going to do this, for real, then I feel like I need to make amends. And I know the list of things I should apologize for is long, but I think I should start with this.â He moved then, rising so he was on one knee before me.
My heart hadnât stopped racing and swelling from the moment we started to really talk. But now, it beat so fast, I didnât know how I didnât pass out. He took my hand, and I wondered if he could feel it trembling.
He could.
Casteel folded both hands around mine, steadying my hand. âPenellaphe Balfour?â He stared up at me, and there was no teasing glint to his eyes, no smirk to his lips. No mask. Just him. Casteel Hawkethrone DaâNeer. âWill you do me the honor of allowing me to one day become worthy of you? Will you marry me? Today?â
âYes. I will give you the honor of becoming my husband, because youâre already worthy of me.â
Casteelâs eyes closed as he shuddered.
âI will marry you.â I dipped down, kissing his forehead. âToday.â
It was like nothing and everything changed after I accepted Casteelâs proposal.
I stood in the bathing chamber, skin mostly dry as I tied the sash on the robe. A pink flush stained my cheeks, and there was a near feverish brightness to my eyes.
It was strange, the nervous flutter in my chest and stomach. Marrying Casteel wasnât something new, but it was real now, and that changed everything.
What was also strange was the unexpected feeling of lightness, as if a tremendous, suffocating weight had been lifted from me. I hadnât expected that. Iâd thought more guilt would settle on me after admitting what I felt to Casteel. Instead, the guilt and the feeling that I was betraying others and myself had left me.
As I dragged the brush through my drying hair, I realized the guilt had actually left me in the cavern. I just hadnât realized it.
And even though a lot of unknown still faced usâthe encroaching Ascended and what felt like the first act in a war that hadnât been decreed yet. How Casteelâs parents would respond to the news of his marriage, and if his people would ever accept me. His brother and mine, and the whole biological differences between us that would one day become an issue, gods willing, when I aged and he barely showed signs of the passing decadesâI was going to do exactly what Casteel had said.
We wouldnât borrow from tomorrowâs problems. Or even the problems we could very well face in a handful of hours. Because I was about to marry the man Iâd fallen in love with.
The man I knew felt the same, even if he hadnât spoken the words.
I was happy.
I was scared.
I was hopeful.
I was excited.
And all of those emotions were real.
A knock on the main door drew me from the bathroom. I opened it to find Vonetta waiting, a splash of red draped over one arm and holding a small pouch in the other.
âI hear thereâs going to be a wedding today,â Vonetta announced as she swept into the room. âOne that Kieran is going to be so irritated heâs not here for.â
âI sort of, kind of, wish he was too. Not that Iâll ever admit that to him,â I said, and she laughed. Closing the door, I followed her into the bedroom. âIt doesnât seem right that heâs not here when Casteel marries.â
âIt does feel weird, but Iâm relieved. Not that heâs missing the wedding.â She looked over her shoulder at me as she laid what turned out to be a gown across the chaise. âBut because he wonât be here later.â
âI know.â
âCasteel isâ¦he has a good heart. What he did by sending Kieran away? Theyâre bonded, and Iâ¦I donât know if anyone else wouldâve done that.â
âHe does have a good heart,â I agreed, feeling my cheeks flush. Vocally complimenting Casteel wasnât something I did often.
A smile appeared as she turned back to the gown, straightening the skirt. âAnyway, Kieran is probably glad heâs not here for the actual ceremony part.â
My heart skipped a beat. I knew very little about an Atlantian wedding ceremony. The ones in Solis sometimes lasted days. The bride would cut her hair, and there was bathing in water anointed by the Priestesses and Priests. There were no vows, but many feasts. A particular part always came to mind when I thought of the Atlantians. âCan I ask you something?â
âAsk away.â Vonetta faced me.
âI learned about the Joining a few days ago.â I fiddled with the sash on my robe. âCasteel said itâs not something thatâs done often, but is it something the wolven would expect? Or the Atlantians?â
âIt really depends on the parties involved. Sometimes, the blood exchange is done, and other times itâs not. But the choice to do so gives the impression of there being a strongerâ¦well, for lack of a better word, bond.â She shrugged, and I couldnât help but notice that she didnât appear weirded out, nor did she speak about it as if it were something sexual or shameful. âIt doesnât always happen at the wedding. Iâve known it to occur before and after.â
I nodded.
âBut I donât think anyone expects you to do that,â she added quickly.
My brows pinched. âWhy?â
She studied me for a moment and then said, âYouâre not full-blooded Atlantian. Thereâs never been a Joining with one who has mortal blood.â
âBecause it extends the life of the mortal?â I asked.
âI imagine that has something to do with it. And itâs not often a bonded Atlantian of an elemental line marries one with mortal blood. Itâs not forbidden like the act of Ascending is,â she said, referencing the making of a vampry. âIt simply hasnât been done.â
I didnât know what to think of that. If the Joining extended my lifespan, that could resolve at least one of tomorrowâs problems, but I wasnât sure how I felt about tying my life to anotherâs or even the idea of living that long.
âAnyway, Casteel stopped by when he was looking for my father and asked if I had anything that would be deserving of a Princess to wear to her wedding. I told him no. That all I owned was deserving of a Queen,â she replied, and I grinned at that. âBrides in Atlantia typically wear a veil of red or yellow to ward off evil spirits and bad blessings, but he mentioned that the veil would be a no-go.â
Godsâ¦
That was incredibly thoughtful.
âSo I thought the red gown would be perfect. And it should fit, with the exception of being a bit on the long side, so just donât run around in it.â
âIâll try not to.â
She picked it up, handing it to me. âUnderneath is a red slip. Just basic. You should get changed. I have a feeling theyâll be here soon.â
The flutter in my chest increased until it felt like a nest of a dozen birds had taken flight while Vonetta went into the living room. I quickly dressed, donning the silky slip that barely reached my thighs and then stepped into the loosely draped gown of silk and chiffon. Gathered at the waist and form-fitting through the bust, it reminded me of the gown Iâd worn the night of the Rite. The skirt of the dress was sheer to the thigh, forming two gauzy panels, and delicate golden thread was woven throughout the entire dress, stitched to form delicate vines. The neckline was looser than the rest of the bodice and the straps were fitted so they lay just off the shoulders. There was no hiding the scars in this kind of dress, but Iâ¦I was done hiding them anyway.
âThe gown is beautiful,â I called out. A moment later, Vonetta returned.
She smiled when she saw me. âDefinitely no running, though.â
I looked down to where the dress formed a crimson puddle against the tile. âDefinitely not.â
âCome. Sit. Let me see if I can do something with your hair,â she said, tossing the pouch. âJust hold onto this.â
Catching the pouch, I found it surprisingly weighty. I sat on the chaise, wondering what was in it while Vonetta retrieved the brush and an army of pins from the bathing chamber.
âI thought I had a lot of hair,â she said, gathering the sides of my hair. âBut damn, you almost have me beat.â
Running my fingers over the velvety pouch, I thought of Tawny. âA friend of mine would sometimes help me braid it. Not braids like yours, but a couple that she would then twist into a knot so my hair wouldnât be visible under the veil.â
âYour friend? Is she back in Solis?â she asked after a couple of moments.
âYes. Her name is Tawny. You would like her, and she would love you. Sheâs a second daughterâmeaning she is destined to Ascend,â I explained as she twisted and plaited the sides of my mostly dry hair. âShe has no idea what the Ascended are truly like, and I have no idea if sheâll Ascend now with me being gone.â
âKieran and Casteel once told me that a lot of the people of Solis are innocentâthat they are unaware of what the Ascended really are. I used to find that hard to believe,â she admitted as she gathered the braided sides and began to twist them into a knot at the back of my head. âBut the more Descenters I met, the more I learned that the Ascended are masters at hiding the truth.â
âThey are.â I swallowed as I stared at where the curtains were secured to the posts and swayed slightly in the breeze from the open doors. My mind disobeyed me. I thought of tonight, and the possibility that the first group of Ascended may reach Spessaâs End. âI hate whatâs about to happen,â I blurted out.
Her fingers stilled. âThe wedding?â
âNo. Gods. Iâm actually looking forward to that,â I said, letting out a little laugh.
âYou sound like that surprises you.â
âIt does,â I admitted softly. âI was thinking about the Ascended. What they may do when they reach here. Iâ¦I hate that Iâm the reason everything you all built here is now at risk.â
âWe were always at risk,â Vonetta said. âSooner or later, we wouldâve been discovered, and there would be a fight. We all knew that when we agreed to come here.â
But like with New Haven, I was the catalyst that made things happen sooner, before they were ready.
âI imagine most brides donât think of sieges on the night of their weddings.â
âBut youâre not most brides, are you?â
Gods, she had no idea how true that was.
âYouâre about to marry the handsome, albeit annoying as hell, Prince of Atlantia, Penellaphe.â Her warm hands brushed my shoulders as she gathered up the rest of my hair, letting it lay against my back. âAnd from what Iâve learned about you from my brother and Casteel, the Ascended have already stolen a lot of joy from you. Donât let them steal this.â
I drew in a deep breath and nodded. âI wonât.â
âGood. Can you open the pouch?â she asked. âAnd hand me whatâs in it.â
Looking down, I unraveled the string and reached inside. My lips parted as I pulled out several strands of diamonds.
âPretty, isnât it? Itâs not the nicest of necklaces, but I like its simplicity.â
âThis is simple?â I stared at the bright diamonds strung across three layers of chains. There had to be at least half a dozen diamonds per chain.
âCompared to the standard in Atlantia? Yes.â
I thought of the diamond Casteel had promised, and my eyes widened.
âDiamonds are also a tradition here.â Vonetta took the necklace from me, and I lifted the hair that she had left down. âThey are the joyous tears of the gods given form,â she explained, securing the clasp. âWearing them means the gods are with you even as they slumber. Did they have such a tradition in Solis?â
I shook my head as I fixed the strands. âDiamonds only represent wealth in Solis. Those who had the means would hold celebrations that lasted days. Iâve never been to one, but from what I know, the Ascended took center stage during the weddings. Not the gods. I canât even imagine a wedding that takes days to complete. Are they like that in Atlantia?â
âThey could typically last a few hours, which is why Kieran would be glad to be missing that part.â She walked around the chaise. âBut with my father officiating the wedding, I doubt it will last more than a few minutes.â
âOh, thank the gods,â I exclaimed as I stood. âIâm sorry. Days or hours is justâ¦itâs too long.â
Vonetta laughed as I roamed into the bathing chamber. âYou may luck out with the ceremony, but I imagine that once you reach Evaemon, the King and Queen will demand a celebration in your honor and to introduce you to your subjects. That will last days.â
My subjects. Days-long celebrations.
I couldnât think of that as I looked at my reflection. The three rows of diamonds glittered in the soft lamplight. The dress and my hairâall of it was beautiful, and it was more than I expected or hoped forâ¦or even what I knew I needed.
I spun toward her. âThank you for thisâfor all of this. It means a lot, Vonetta.â
âItâs not a big deal, but youâre welcome.â
It was a big deal to look and feel like a bride when it was real. âWill you be at the wedding?â I asked and then laughed. âI donât even know where the wedding will be held.â
âI can be if youâd like. And if you call me Netta. Thatâs what my friends call me, and since Iâm attending your wedding, I imagine weâre friends.â
I smiled as I nodded. âAs long as you call me Poppy. Thatâs what my friends call me.â
âThat I can do. By the way, the wedding will be here. Outside, actually. They are always outside, no matter the weather, and you wonât wear shoes.â
âBecause both need to be standing on Atlantian soil?â I surmised.
âCorrect.â She brushed several braids over her shoulder. âAnd itâs time. Theyâre here.â
âWolven senses must be amazing,â I said as my heart started to pound once more.
She grinned. âThey are, but I saw my father walk past the window.â
âOh.â I laughed. âWell, then.â
âYou ready?â
Nodding. I started to follow her out but then stopped. âOne second.â
Hurrying to the bed, I picked up the wolven dagger and secured it around my thigh.
âPlanning to stab him during the ceremony?â Vonetta asked.
âWhy does everyone act like Iâm seconds away from stabbing Casteel?â I demanded.
âApparently, you have a habit of it.â
âI only stabbed himâ¦a few times.â I turned, fixing the skirt of the gown. âThe dagger was given to me by someone I care about. He was like a father to me, and in a way, heâll be with me when I do something he never thought Iâd be able to do.â
Something I knew Vikter wouldâve been happy to see, even though I was marrying the Prince of Atlantia. In my heart of hearts, I knew that all that would have mattered to Vikter was that I wanted this and that I was cherished.
And I knew both were true. They had been true for longer than I realized.