A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire: Chapter 6
A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire (Blood and Ash Book 2)
Hawkeâ¦
The name didnât belong to someone else. It was real. Hawke was real?
âTo be honest, the only time my mother calls me Casteel, it generally includes my full middle and last names, and it usually means sheâs irritated by something I did or didnât do,â he continued. âAlthough Kieran doesnât call me Hawke, he knows the origin of the name. He was the one who chose the last name, Flynn. He thought it sounded like it fit with Hawke.â
âWeâ¦we donât have middle names,â I heard myself say.
âI know.â
âAre you telling the truth now?â
His features tightened as some sort of emotion flickered across them. âIâm telling the truth, Poppy.â
My gift pushed against my skin, and what Kieran had said about my abilities resurfaced. Iâd said that I had no intention of handling the Prince, but my gift could tell me what he was feeling and maybe help me determine if he was lying. Lies and truths were so often tied to emotions, and a person could try to hide what they were feeling. Sometimes, they were successful, even with the most extreme mental anguish. But while people could lie to someone about what they felt, they couldnât lie to themselves.
Opening myself up was always easy. It required no effort. My senses stretched out, and it was like a cord formed between Casteel and me, connecting us. It wasnât always like that, so singular. Sometimes, crowds overwhelmed me and pulled me in. Some people were projectors, their anguish so deep and raw that they formed the connection with me without trying. With Casteel, it took a few seconds for me to process what I was picking up from him. Emotions had a certain taste and feel to me, and what I felt now was both tart and tangy in the back of my mouth. Discomfort andâ¦sadness.
His sorrow was familiar. It was always there, shadowing his every step, every breath. I often thought about how he could laugh and tease. How he could be so ridiculously vexing while feeling such grief. I wondered if the teasing and his all-too-easy laughter were also masks because I knew his pain started and probably ended with his brother.
I didnât know what the discomfort was tied to, but I didnât feel anything that made me think he wasnât telling the truth now.
And maybeâ¦maybe that meant the name Hawke was real. That it wasnât a lie.
The next breath I took felt thin. âWhy are you telling me this about your name? Why does it matter?â
He was quiet now, his features smoothing out. âBecause knowing that Hawke is a part of my name, a part of me, matters to you.â
âCan you read minds?â I asked, thinking Iâd probably asked that before but I felt like I needed to ask again. Mind reading couldnât be too farfetched considering he could force his will upon others, and especially since what he said was true. It did matter to me. Why? I had no idea, because what did it change? At the end of the dayâ¦nothing.
A faint grin appeared. âNo, I cannot, which is a disappointment when it comes to you. I would love to know what youâre thinkingâwhat youâre really feeling.â
Thank the gods he didnât know, because what I was feeling was messier than when I attempted to knit.
âI am Hawke,â he said after a moment. âAnd I am Casteel. Iâm not two separate people, no matter how badly you want to believe that.â
I tensed, my grip tightening around the handle of the knife. I hated how well he knew me. âI know that.â
âDo you really?â
A rush of frustration scorched my skin because I did often think of him as two different people, but mainly that there were simply different masks he wore, and thereâd been one for Hawke.
But it didnât matter. It couldnât.
âI know you are the same,â I said. âYou are the one who lied to me from the beginning, and youâre the one who is holding me captive now. It doesnât matter what name you used while doing it.â
He arched a dark eyebrow. âYet you havenât called me Hawke since you learned who I was.â
The frustration quickly flamed into anger. âAnd why does that matter, Hawke?â
A smile crept across his lips then, one that showed the barest hint of fangs. âBecause I miss hearing you say it.â
I stared at him for what felt like a small eternity. âYouâre ridiculous, Casteel.â
He laughed, and the sound was warm and deep and real. I felt his amusement through the connection, a sprinkling of sugar on my tongue. That almost angered me enough to do something very reckless with the knife yet again. Somehow, I managed to resist the impulse that proved just how violent I could be.
His humor faded. âI havenât lied to you since you learned who I was.â
âHow am I to believe that?â I demanded. âAnd even if you havenât, that doesnât erase those lies.â
âYouâre correct. I donât expect you to believe, nor do I expect you to ever forget those lies,â he said. Again, through the connection I had left open, I felt sadness with the fading taste of humor. âBut I have nothing to gain from lies now. I have what I want. You.â
âYou do not have me.â
One side of his lips curled up. âWeâll have to agree to disagree on that. Ask me something, Princess. Ask me anything, and I will tell you the truth.â
A hundred different questions arose. There was so much I could ask him. Two things dominated.
Did you ever care for me?
Was any of it real?
I wouldnât ask those questions again. âAnd Iâm just supposed to believe you?â
âWhether or not you do is up to you.â
It wasnât just a question of me choosing to believe him, but I didnât point that out. There was another question that rose to the forefront, something Iâd been thinking about earlier.
âDid you kill the first Maiden?â I asked.
âWhat?â Surprise filled his tone, and I also felt it through the cordâcool like a splash of ice water.
I told him what the Duchess had claimed about the first Maidenâs abilities. âShe said that the Maiden had been unworthy, even though she was still to be given to the gods. But her decisions and choices led her to the Dark One. To you.â Just like me. âThe Duchess basically said that the Dark One killed her.â
âI donât know why the Duchess would tell you that. The only Maiden I have met is you,â he answered, and I could feel the hot, acidic burn of anger radiating from him. âI donât even know if there truly was another Maiden.â
I⦠I had not considered the possibility that there had been no other Maiden. That could explain why there was nothing written about her, not even a name. But for her to not exist at all?
âI have a lot of blood on my hands, Poppy. Sometimes, so much that I donât think theyâll ever be clean. So much that I donât know if I ever want them to be.â
My gaze shot to his.
âAnd Iâm sure youâve heard a lot about meâabout the Dark One. Some of it is true. I kill the Ascended every chance I get, in Carsodonia and in every city Iâve visited. And, yes, I do find unique ways to end their lives. I am drenched in their blood.â
Skin chilled, I was unable to look away. âYou were responsible for Goldcrest ManorâLord Everton?â
âLord Everton was not alive when I left the city of Three Rivers. Nor were any of the mortals who aided him when it came to his penchant for feeding on young boysâa predilection that went beyond that. And as Iâm sure youâve realized, some mortals know the truth, and they helped to cover what happened in the Temples and what they did when there was no Rite.â
Iâd figured that the Ascended had help. They had to. The Priests and Priestesses in the Temples had to know. The Mistresses of the keeps and those who served the Ascended closely.
âAnd Iâm sure you heard the rumor that my affair with Lady Everton was what allowed me to enter the manor?â he said. I had heard that. âI will admit that Iâve used every weapon I have. After all, the Ascended taught me that.â
I flinched.
âShe was known for her affairs. Servants helped to sneak her lovers inside the manor. Many never left, but I made sure she saw me. Eventually, she invited me to her bed, and that was how I gained entry. But I did not lay a finger on her in that way. Never.â There was a low rumble in his tone. âAnd if she hadnât run as the flames began, she wouldnât have escaped either.â
I didnât doubt that for one second.
Tipping forward, he held my stare. âItâs not just the Ascended that stain my hands. There are innocents. Mortals and descendants of Atlantians alike, caught between what I want and me. Your guard, Rylan, was one of those.â
My throat tightened.
âAs were the ones who traveled here with us, and countless others. Each by arrow, poison, or fall. Anything that stood between you and me.â He didnât look away, not for one second. âAnd Vikter? Those Ladies at the Rite? I didnât kill them, but you were right. Those who support me acted on their own, but they did so enflamed by my words, urged by my lead. So, their blood is on my hands, too. I shouldâve taken ownership of that from the first moment.â
A shudder worked its way through me, one of pain and sorrow. âDoes any of it stain your soul?â I whispered.
âMuch of it does.â He sat back. âBut this Maiden is not a part of that. If she did live, and she was like youâpart Atlantian, and shared your gifts or something similarâshe wasnât given to the gods. She was most likely used in the same way they plan to use you.â
The breath that left me was ragged. âIfâ¦if theyâve had your brother, why would they have needed her?â
He eyed me from his chair. âAtlantians need Atlantian blood to survive. One who is only half-Atlantian can provide the necessary sustenance. That was how I was kept alive.
I swallowed thickly, hurting for him despite everything. Hurting for her, a woman I didnât even know, wasnât even sure existed. âShe couldâve been held captive toâ¦to feed him? To keep him alive?â
âWithout Atlantian blood, we donât die,â he said.
I frowned. âHow could you not survive but still live?â
âBecause what we become is not something I would compare to being alive,â he answered. Before I could question that, he spoke. âIf there was a first Maiden, she was either keeping my brother alive, or she was used in the same manner as he is. Possibly both. But either way, I imagine that she has long since perished. What you should be asking is why they need you. Why would they make you the Maiden, keep you closeted away, under their protection and under their ever-watchful gaze? Why did they wait until now for your Ascension?â He spat out the last word. âEarlier, after the Craven, you were right about why they forced you to stay quiet about being bitten and told you never to use your abilities. Someone couldâve discovered what you were, and that would have brought their entire house of bones down on them. So, why did they wait so long and take that risk? Please tell me that youâve asked yourself these questions.â
My skin chilled. âI have. Theyâ¦they want to use me to make more vamprys. But why? They haveââ
âAnd why do you think they waited this long?â he repeated. âWhy did this supposed first Maiden conveniently disappear around the same time her abilities began to grow? There is no Ascension for you. The gods require no service. They waited so you could be useful to them.â He sat forward. âThereâs a reason the Ascended wait until a certain age to Ascend. Do you know what happens when an Atlantian reaches the age of nineteen?â
I did. Iâd read about it in The History of The War of Two Kings and the Kingdom of Solis. The answer had been in that damn book Iâd been forced to read a hundred times. Probably the only part that was true. âAn Atlantian reaches a state of maturity. You call itâ¦the Culling, when they go through physical changes.â
âAnd when certain other abilities begin to manifest or strengthen for some,â he added, his eyes bright in the dimly lit room. âFor me, it was compulsion. As a child, I could be somewhat persuasive, but once I went through the Culling, I could force my will onto another if I wished.â
A hollowness spread in my stomach. âThen why havenât you just made me go along with whatever it is you wish for me to do?â
His brows furrowed together. âBecause I may be a monster, but Iâm not that kind of monster, Poppy.â
There was a catch in my chest as I looked away from him.
âBesides, compulsions are temporary, only useful for immediate gains,â he said. When I looked at him again, his expression had smoothed out. âAnd interestingly, just like you canât pick up on emotions from the Ascended, compulsions do not work on them either.â
I cleared my throat. âDo you know why?â
âSome believe itâs because they have no soul.â
I thought of Ian and then shut those thoughts down. âSo you think my abilities are changing because Iâm going through the Culling?â
âA version of it, yes. Your blood wouldnât have been useful to them until you at least hit nineteen, even if your abilities took the next two years to morph.â
As I processed what he was telling me, my brain went in one direction. âWill I developâ¦fangs?â
He lifted his brows. âDoubtful. Half-Atlantians donât need blood, so they donât need fangs.â
âWhat aboutâ¦immortality?â
âWould you not want that?â
I thought of the Ascended, of how long they lived, and I wasnât sure their lack of humanity was due to what they did to survive or because they lived to see everyone around them die several generations over.
âI donât know,â I answered honestly. âWill I?â
He shook his head. âOnly full-blooded Atlantians have what mortals would think of as immortality.â
I wasnât sure if I should feel relieved or not. âCan I even Ascend then? Be made into a vampry?â I asked, thinking of Ian. If he were part Atlantian like meâ¦
âI honestly donât know, Poppy. It is forbidden for any Atlantian to Ascend anyone with a drop of mortal blood in them. Even the half-Atlantians that live in Atlantia are not Ascended. They live and die just like mortals,â he explained, and that was something I didnât know about those who lived in Atlantia. That not all Atlantians were like him. âI would imagine a half-Atlantian going through an Ascension would be the same as a mortal. They would become a vampry.â
Meaning, they would be ruled by bloodlust, just not as consumed by it as a Craven. Pressure settled in my chest. âWhen a person is turnedâmade vampryâwhat happens to them?â
He was quiet for several moments before he said, âThey are fed upon by other vamprys, brought to the brink of death by blood loss, and then fed blood from an Atlantian. Sometimes, the change is immediate. Other times, they can appear dead for hours. But they wake up andâ¦they are hungry. As uncontrollable as a Craven, it often takes several Ascended to subdue them.â His jaw worked as his gaze shifted to the fire. âEven after being fed, theyâre consumed by hunger. Iâve heard that it can take weeks, sometimes months for a newly made vampry to control his or her thirst.â
A sinking sensation threatened to pull me through the floor. There had been a space of time after Ianâs Ascension that I hadnât heard from him. It was when heâd married, and it had been months.
âAnd I know that for those who could not abide by what was now needed of them, they ensured that they would not harm another,â he added quietly.
âHow?â I asked, instinct telling me that the answer wasnât going to be an easy one.
âThey choose to walk when the sun is at its highest. It doesnât take long, but it is not quick by any means. Nor is it painless.â
Oh, gods.
Now thatâ¦that sounded like something Ian would do. But he was alive. Heâd been sending letters. He had to be alive.
I swallowed. âThose you saw turned? Did all of them seem aware of what was happening?â
His gaze shifted back to me. âI know where youâre going with this, and I donât think the answer will change things in the way you wish.â
âWill you just answer the question?â
His lips thinned. âThe Ascended held a ceremony for it. Mortals were brought in dressed in robes and wearing masks. Meaningless words were chanted, and candles were lit. Some seemed to know what would occur. Most appeared intoxicated. I had no idea if they knew exactly what was happening.â His chest rose with a deep breath. âSome seemed drugged. I doubt they even knew if they were awake.â
I stared at him, stuck in this terrible place between relief and horror. Suddenly, I understood why he hadnât wanted to answer the question. If Ian had been drugged to the point where he hadnât been awareâif others hadnât been aware of what was happeningâthat was far worse.
Casteel watched me silently. âThere is no reason for an Ascended to turn a half-Atlantian. Doing so would taint the bloodâthe part they need to either turn other Ascended or to keep an Atlantian alive. That is why they made sure you were healthy and safe, why your precious Queen cared so tenderly for you,â he said. My entire body went as taut as a bowstring. âYour blood meant nothing to them before now, and it would mean even less to them if you went through the Ascension.â
So, Ian and I likely had different parents, either one or both. Because he had to have been turned. Heâd been writing me letters, and Casteel claimed that Ian had only been seen at night. Unlessâ
Unless Casteelâs contacts had seen someone else, and it hadnât been Ian sending those letters at all.
The pressure inside me increased, shifting to my stomach as I swallowed thickly. I couldnât even consider any of that right now while I was so far from Ian. The questions and the doubts would crush me.
And I already felt crushed.
I knew what theyâd planned for me before, but to fully understand why theyâd waited, why they did everything they had done, it sickened me to the point where I feared I might actually become physically ill.
âThey were only keeping me alive until theyâ¦â I choked on my words as the weight of them threatened to crush me.
Casteel said nothing as he sat there, though that was probably for the best at the moment. I felt like a powder keg that had been lit. Inside me, disbelief and anger sparked. Iâd been kept sheltered and virtually caged, cared for like some prized cattle until my blood had aged. Until it was usefulâeither to make more vamprys or to keep another alive to continue making more.
âIâm not a bottle of wine,â I whispered.
âNo,â he said quietly. âYou are not a bottle of wine, Poppy.â
My head jerked up. âAnd you didnât know this when you came for me? You swear? You swear right here and now that you didnât know I was part Atlantian. That this is why they made me the Maiden. That I was being kept alive and sheltered from everything until I wasâ¦useful?â
His gaze met mine. âI swear to you, Poppy. I had no idea that you were Atlantian until I tasted your blood. I didnât even expect that was what you were when I learned of your gift. Maybe I should have.â A shadow crossed his features, gone so quickly I wasnât even sure I had seen it. âBut no Atlantian has been capable of such a thing for, well, for hundreds of years. I didnât know.â
My senses were still open, and it took several moments to filter through what I felt to even make sense of his emotions. There was still the acidic taste of anger, the tart flavor that I associated with uncertainty, and the sadness that always lingered within him.
My gift wasnât a lie detector by any means, but I didnât think he was lying. Pulling my gift back was the hardest part because that didnât feel natural. What did was going to him and taking away the sadness, giving some temporary peace. My skin tingled with the desire to do just that, and it wasnât necessarily because it was him. The gift demanded to be used, to heal. I wrestled it back, exhaling raggedly as I sat on the edge of the bed.
âNow that you fully understand why theyâve done what they have to you and what they plan,â Casteel said, his voice hardening in a way I rarely heard when he spoke with me. âWhy in the hell would you run back to them, Poppy? Marriage to me or not.â
I stared at Casteel, the meat knife loose in my hands. âI told you earlier, I wasnât running back to them.â
âThen where were you running to? With no supplies, might I add.â
âYou donât need to add that. Iâm well aware of what I left here with.â
âIf you werenât going back to the Ascended, where did you think to go? You were heading toward Whitebridgeâto the south.â His eyes were like shards of amber. âYou werenât going back to Masadonia. I figure you were going to the capital. Why? Even knowing what you did then, why would you do that?â
âWhy?â Anger flashed through me, hot and bright like the flames. âAre you seriously asking that question again?â
âDo I look like Iâm joking?â he asked.
I was stunned into silence, but only for a moment. âWhy would I stay here and let you turn me over to them? To the people you told me wanted to use meâto the people who abused and tortured you? Who are doing that to your brother? How does that make you any better? Safer? Youâre doing the same thing they did to me!â The back of my throat burned as a knot of ugly, painful emotion lodged there. âYouâre keeping me safe, well-fed, and caged until you can use me!â
A muscle flexed in his jaw.
âAnd then you announce that youâre going to marry me.â I shook my head, trembling. âWhat in the world would make you even say such an offensive thing?â
âOffensive? Come now, Poppy, I know deep down that you must be excited. Not everyone gets to become an actual Princess.â
âI am not remotelyââ I snapped my mouth shut, realizing he was actually teasing me. Was this all some grand joke to him?
âItâs considered a great honor in Atlantia to be welcomed into the bosom of the noble, ruling family,â he went on. âI think my mother is going to like you.â
I shot to my feet. âWe are not getting married!â Slamming the knife down, it scored deep into the wood of the table by the bed, the handle vibrating from the impact.
âOn second thought, my mother is definitely going to like you,â Hawke murmured, and right then, he was Hawke.
That was the bemused tone I was all too familiar with, and it threw me enough that it took a few moments to recover, to remember that it was simply another mask. âWhy? Because I didnât throw it at your face this time?â
âSheâll most likely be amused to hear that you have done exactly that,â he said, and my brows knitted. âAnd she will be happy to know that you are capable of showing restraint.â
âNow, I wish I hadnât shown restraint.â
Casteel chuckled, and that too sounded so familiar, but it was Casteelâs laugh that faded. It was his golden eyes that held an intense look of fascination. He was both Hawke and Casteel, but it was the latter that I now dealt with. He leaned forward in his chair, lowering both bare feet to the floor. âYou are so incredibly beautiful when youâre angry.â
I refused to be flattered by that somewhat weird compliment. âAnd youâre so incredibly disturbed.â
âBeen called worse.â
âIâm sure you have.â I folded my arms across my chest.
He rose from the chair, and for a moment, I got a little lost in all the bronze skin on display. âWeâll talk tomorrow about our futureââ
âThere is no future to talk about. Weâre not marrying,â I cut in.
âI think youâll find my reasonings impossible to refuse.â
âNothing is impossible.â
âWeâll see.â
âNo, weâwhat are you doing?â I demanded as he walked to the other side of the bed. âWhat are you doing?â
âGetting into bed.â
âWhy?â My voice pitched high.
He arched a brow as he pulled the blanket aside. âTo go to sleep.â
âI figured that out, thanks. But why do you think you get to sleep in the same bedchamber, let alone the same bed with me?â
âBecause, as I explained earlier, this is my bedchamber.â
âThen I will find another room.â
âThere are no other rooms available, Princess.â
My hands dug into the blanket as my mind raced. âThis isnât appropriate. Iâm the Maiden. Or was. Whatever. Iâm the definition of appropriate.â
He stared at me. âBesides the fact that you are not the definition of appropriate, everyone in this keep knows that weâve already shared a bed, Poppy.â
âWell, thatâs justâ¦â My face burned. âThatâs just great.â
âIâm not leaving you alone.â
âIâm not going to try to escape! I promise.â
âI hope you donât think Iâm foolish enough to trust your vow.â Casteel picked up a rather flat pillow and fluffed it. âSo, either itâs me in here, or itâs Kieran. Would you rather it be him? If so, I will summon him for you.â He tossed the pillow toward the head of the bed. âBut just so you know, he often slips into his wolven form and has a habit of kicking in his sleep.â
My lips slowly parted. âWhat? Wait. I donât need an explanation of that. I donât want Kieran.â
The hint of a smile was pure wickedness. âYou want me.â
âThat is not what I said. You can sleep on the floor.â
âI am not sleeping on the floor. And before you say it, neither are you.â He slipped into bed with enviable grace. âNo matter what you think you know of me, I hope you realize that I would never force myself on you, nor would I compel you to do something like that. I wonât ever do something you donât want from me, and thatâs not just because I know what that feels like,â he said flatly, and my heart squeezed. âItâs because Iâve never been that kind of person.â
âI donât think you would do something like that,â I said quickly. And I didnât want to know. Iâ¦needed to know. âWhat did they do to you?â
âThatâs not something I really want to get into, Poppy.â
I opened my mouth and then closed it. I could understand that. Respect it.
And as I remained where I was, I thought about what Kieran had said earlier about me being safe with the Prince. Unfortunately, I also remembered the effects of his blood, and how I all but begged him to touch me.
Not one of my finer moments.
Casteel had refused, though. He couldâve easily taken advantage of the situation, but what had he said? That he wasnât a good man, but that he was trying to be one. I thought of the shame I had felt inside him. He was both the villain and the hero, the monster and the monster-slayer.
But I wasnât afraid of him trying something with me. I was more afraid of myselfâscared of how much my heart was pounding. The night we had been together, falling asleep in his arms had beenâ¦it had been just as beautiful as what weâd shared before that.
Only it hadnât been real.
The problem was that my heart didnât seem to understand that, at least not all the time. That was why it was pumping so fast now. To someâprobably to most in the kingdomâsleeping beside someone didnât mean much of anything. But to me? It was as life-altering as holding hands, being able to openly touch another, or sharing dinner with someoneâthings other people often took for granted.
That was why sharing a bed with Casteel was dangerous.
I watched him let the blanket fall to his waist and then fold his hands under his head. Once he appeared comfortable, he said, âBut, just so you know, if you want my lips on any piece of you, Iâm more than willing to appease you.â
My mouth dropped open.
âAnd my willingness to comply extends to my hands, my fingers, and my cockââ
âOh, my gods,â I cut him off. âYou donât have to worry about that. I will never request yourâ¦your services.â
âServices?â He tipped his head toward me. âThat sounds so dirty.â
I ignored that comment. âYou and I are never going to do anything like what we did before.â
âNever?â
âNever.â
âWould you say it would beâ¦impossible?â
âYes. Itâs definitely impossible.â
Hawke smiled then, and it was Hawkeâs smile. Dimples appeared in both cheeks, and I hated the catch I felt in my chest upon seeing them. Loathed that it made me see him as Hawke. âBut didnât you just say nothing was impossible?â he all but purred.
I stared down at him, at an absolute loss for words. âI want to stab you in the heart right now.â
âIâm sure you do,â he replied, closing his eyes.
âWhatever,â I muttered, accepting that I would have to deal with him. At least for the night or until I figured out how to escape. I scooted back, shoving my legs under the blanket. I threw myself down with enough force that it shook the bed.
âYou okay over there? Sounds like you couldâve hurt yourself.â
âShut up.â
He laughed.
With my back to him, I stared at the knife. The blade was bent. I sighed. A moment later, there was a click, and the room darkened. Heâd turned off the oil lamp by his side of the bed.
His side of the bed?
We didnât have sides.
I tugged the blanket to my chin as I shifted my focus to the fireplace. My mind wandered back to something that shouldnât matter but did.
âWhy did you tell me?â I whispered, not even sure if he was still awake or why I was asking. Heâd already answered. âWhy did you have to tell me that Hawke was your middle name?â
The fire crackled, spitting sparks, and I closed my eyes.
Seconds, maybe minutes later, Casteel said, âBecause you needed to know that not everything was a lie.â