Onyx Storm: Chapter 26
Onyx Storm (The Empyrean Book 3)
In the first twenty-four hours of removal from source magic, the subjectâan asimâpresented as even-tempered. But withdrawal quickly revealed the subjectâs true nature, requiring the subjectâs immediate transfer to stage two of the study. Her results can be found with group thirty-three B under the category: DEATH BY FIRE, and subsequently group forty-six C under the category: DEATH BY POISON.
âA Study in the Anatomy of the Enemy by Captain Dominic Prishel Deverelli is beautiful by sunset, or at least it would be if I could concentrate on taking the time to really appreciate the isle.
Instead, Iâm focused on exactly how close Tairn thinks he can fly to the treetops without actually crashing into one as we race along the hillside ahead of Sgaeyl.
To Andarnaâs disdain, Tairn ordered her to remain behind for her own safety.
âYouâre sure weâre out of range of the cross-bolts?â I ask, hunkered down against the pommels of my saddle, my pack weighing me down, as if my slight stature could possibly affect his aerodynamics.
âThey are made not to rotate this way but to defend the shoreline. They woefully underestimate our intelligence.â
Still, the existence of the cross-bolts means this isle wants to do us harm. And it possibly already is.
âAre you in pain? Is Andarna?â I ask as I spot four enormous gray pillars ahead, supporting the remnants of an aqueduct as they curve around the hillside, marking the path to their palace.
âWhat would make you ask that?â His gruff tone answers for him as he crosses over an open space that looks to be in the arts district from what I remember reading, and a chorus of shouts sounds then vanishes as we pass by.
Sorry, but if you abduct our royalty, we scare the shit out of you with our dragons. Seems pretty fair to me.
âWhy didnât you tell me?â Guilt for even suggesting to Xaden that we stay, for not realizing it, settles on my shoulders.
âYou live in pain. Do you feel as though you need to alert me every time your knee twinges or your joints slip?â Even his wingbeats change, becoming more staccato. âThere have been several moments, even here, when your heartbeat has elevated and you have approached unconsciousness, yet you have not made special note.â
I lean with him as he banks left, following the centuries-old aqueduct. âThatâs just everyday life for me. This isnât normal for you.â
âAndarna shows no sign of trouble. I am inconvenienced, annoyed, and cut off from my source of power, strength, and my mateâs thoughts, but I am still Tairneanach, son of Murtcuideam and Fiaclanfuil, descended fromââ
âAll right, yes, I get it. You are superior in all ways.â I interrupt him before he can get through his whole pompous lineage like I donât have it memorized by now.
We level out, following the topography, and I take in as much of the layout as I can before weâre too far overhead. Tairnâs size is a distinct advantage in battle, but itâs a pain in the ass when Iâm trying to see whatâs below me.
The palace is unlike anything Iâve ever witnessed. Not only is the four-story structure carved into the hillside, but so is a hundred-yard meadow ahead of it. Itâs truly spectacular, a feat of engineering when it was accomplished a thousand years ago, and testament to their traditions that itâs still their seat of power and hasnât faded to ruin like so many of the ancient castles of kingdoms past on the Continent.
Soft blue light glows in orbs down a central path of the clearing, lighting our way as the sun sinks behind the hills and we descend toward the muted green grass. The space is wide enough to support the width of two dragons with fully extended wings, but probably four if they held them retracted.
âDo you know where youâre going?â Tairn asks as we approach, his wings flaring to slow our descent.
âThe majority of their formal spaces are outside, according to what Iâve read, as are the kingâs chambers, just beyond the first row of trees, so in theoryâ¦yes.â I position my body for landing as he flies over a platoon of panicked guards bearing what appear to be silver-tipped spears, then sets us down to the left of the row of incandescent blue orbs. âNot that theyâre going to let me in.â
Sgaeyl and Xaden land to the right.
Shouting ensues as I unbuckle my belt and move for Tairnâs shoulder. âNo changes to the plan?â I ask, steeling my nerves for whatâs bound to be a contentious confrontation.
I want my fucking power back, and I want it now.
âNone. I will be with you all the way, Silver One.â
His promise reassures me as I dismount, the weight of the pack jarring my spine on impact. I shake it off, then walk toward Xaden, whoâs already waiting for me at the center of the path between the rows of blue orbs. His swords are strapped to his back, but his daggers are within easy reach, and he carries the same oversize pack heâs hauled with us from Navarre, which heâd told me was for just in case.
I guess an isle kingdom kidnapping your prince qualifies as just in case.
I canât help but do a double take at one of the orbs as I walk by, stepping into the path. The blue glow isnât from a single light source, but dozens of large, bioluminescent insects with translucent wings, all feeding fromâ A smile breaks across my face. âTheyâre Fallorinia moths.â
âWhat?â Xadenâs boots crunch on the rocky path as he walks my way.
âFallorinia moths.â I touch the cool glass orb. âWe donât have them on the Continent, just their sister species. They light up when they feed from honeycomb. I read about them in Sir Zimlyâs Guide to Deverelli Fauna, but I had no idea they harnessed them for light. Itâs brilliant. Poisonous but brilliant.â
âOf course you did,â Xaden counters. âBut we should probably concentrate on the dozen pissed-off guards headed our way.â
âFair point.â I throw my braid over my shoulder, cursing that I hadnât had time to put it up as usual, and turn to face the approaching horde of angry white-clad Deverelli. Iâm guessing we have less than ten seconds, and those spear tips look mighty unfriendly. My hands dangle near the sheaths along my sides, but Xaden stands with his feet braced apart, his arms folded across his chest as if he isnât that concerned.
But his eyes sweep across the group methodically, no doubt putting them all into threat categories. I focus on the fox-like woman on the right who keeps flaring her nose and stepping off the path like I wonât notice, and her male counterpart on the left, doing his best to fade into the shadows, not realizing heâs in the presence of a master.
âLook, more blades,â Xaden says. âAnd here I thought you were a weaponless society.â
The one in the center with a blue sash steps forward and starts shouting. I can only pick out a few words, two of which are stop and kill.
âWe could really use Dain right about now,â I whisper.
âI could live the rest of my life without ever hearing you say that again,â Xaden replies.
We could really use the bond, too.
âDo any of you happen to speak the common tongue?â I ask when the serrated silver blades of their raised spears are about five feet from our chests.
They pause, and I shoot a warning look at the nose-flarer on my right.
âYou are forbidden to enter the palace of King Courtlyn the Fourth,â Blue Sash declares, jabbing his blade in our direction but not close enough to merit a reaction, âruler of Deverelli, master of the trade, keeper of the troths, justice of the tribunal, and heir of the antiquities.â
By the time he finishes, itâs hard to keep my brows level.
âSounds humble,â Xaden says. âCanât wait to meet him.â
âYou wonât be.â Blue Sash steps forward, blade raised.
My hands flex near my sheaths as the woman on my right swings her blade back and forth between me and Tairnâs slow but steady approach. His head is low, almost even with the ground, and his wings are tucked in tight for protection. If I wasnât his, Iâd probably be shitting my pants.
âWe will,â Xaden counters with a bored sigh. âAnd Iâm trying really hard to be diplomatic, since thatâs the role Iâve been handed, but let me put this in terms youâll understand. Your king kidnapped our asshole of a prince, and thereâs a large part of me that wouldnât mind him staying here and annoying the shit out of you for the rest of his miserable life, but that would make things difficult back home for someone I haveâ¦complicated loyalty toward, so Iâm going to need the prick back.â
Aaric.
Blue Sashâs brow puckers, but his blade doesnât lower.
âNow,â Xaden orders. âI have much more important things to see to this evening.â
Flare Nose to my right swings her blade fully at Tairn and pulls back her arm, preparing to thrust with a full-on battle cry.
I draw my blade the same second Tairn drops his jaw and roars, the sound shattering every glass orb within a dozen feet of us and leaving my ears ringing.
âWas that really necessary?â My right ear wonât work for a month.
âNo, but I found it amusing.â
The guard drops her spear and stands there, shaking like a leaf for several seconds before she slowly turns around to face us, her brown eyes wider than should be physically possible, her bronzed skin suddenly rather wan.
I tilt my head at her. âThey donât like it when you do that.â
Trembling, she drags her gaze to mine, then collapses to sit on the ground.
Thereâs a definite quiver in Blue Sashâs arms, but I give him credit for still holding his blade. âYou. May not. Enter.â
âIâm Xaden Riorson, the Duke of Tyrrendor.â Xaden inclines his head. âHeâs probably expecting me.â
Blue Sash blinks, then looks in my direction. âAnd you are?â
Well, shit. My mouth opensâ
âMy consort,â Xaden replies casually. âViolet Sorrengail.â
What the actual fuck? My jaw snaps shut so hard my teeth click. I want our bond back and I want it back right now. He canât just announce things like that without at least a discussion.
âAre congratulations or commiserations in order?â Tairn lifts his head.
âShut up.â I sheathe my dagger to keep from chucking it at the man I love.
âIn that case.â Blue Sash raises his spear fully upright, and the others follow his lead. âIf youâll divest of your weaponry here, weâll escort you to the table.â
âThatâs not happening.â I shake my head. This place took my lightning and my bond. Malek himself would have to pluck my daggers from my sheaths before I give them up.
âWhat she said,â Xaden agrees.
Blue Sash blusters. âWe do not believe in weaponryââ
âUnless youâreâ¦you,â I say slowly. âHave you seen the size of their teeth?â I gesture toward Tairn and Sgaeyl. âThen thereâs the fire. Our blades are the least of your worries.â
Tairn huffs a blast of steam scented with sulfur, and Blue Sash lifts his chin, ordering the others to stay where they are, then leads Xaden and me down the path.
Sgaeyl and Tairn follow alongside us until we reach the first barricade of the clearing, two thick rows of palm trees marking the formal entrance to the outdoor palace.
âYour creatures remain here,â Blue Sash demands.
âWeâll pass that request along,â Xaden replies.
âWe can see right over these,â Tairn notes.
âRemember, diplomacy is plan A.â I reach for Xadenâs hand and move closer to him as we walk on the orb-lit path, passing what looks to be an open-air receiving room on the left with various seating arrangements, and a music room on the right with instruments waiting for their musicians.
âNo walls,â Xaden notes. âNo ceilings. What do they do when it rains?â
âAwnings.â I point to the long wooden rails that run the length of the room, ready to shelter its occupants with fabric. âAnd consort?â I whisper. âWe arenât married.â
He fucking smirks. âIâve noticed. But âgirlfriendâ is missing that permanent tone. If it makes you more comfortable, consort is used pretty loosely in Navarrian aristocratic circles. Pretty sure the Duke of Calldyr has had four different consorts in as many years. The designation just gets you the invitation into this place, plus gives you the protection and privileges of my titleââ
âI donât need the protection and privilegesââ I shake my head as we pass another row of palms.
âOuch.â He lifts his hand to his chest. âNever thought youâd reject me.â
I roll my eyes. âIt is not the time for this.â Jokes have to wait.
âWhen would be?â The next look he gives me is a hundred percent serious.
My feet nearly stumble along with my heartbeat. Just the idea of really having forever with him makes my chest ache with a longing that doesnât belong on a possible battlefield. âWhen weâre not risking deathââ
âWeâre always risking death.â He strokes his thumb over mine.
âTrue,â I admit as we walk onto a flagstone floor, entering the palaceâs dining hall.
The room is laid out in two rows of eight circular tables, each seating ten finely dressed Deverelli on backless chairs, all outfitted in a riot of pastel colors and lightweight tunics and gowns. The table linens are embroidered, the place settings extravagant with golden cups and crystal chalices, and jewels glitter in the soft blue light that emanates from the center of every table and the posted orbs that run the length of the room, illuminating the rows of guardsâand their blades.
At the end of the open-air chamber, thereâs a raised dais with a U-shaped table for five. A man I can only assume is the King of Deverelli sits at its center, twirling a bejeweled dagger in his hands and staring at Halden on the right end of the table like he hasnât decided if heâs going to use that dagger on him or not.
Thereâs no sign of Captain Winshire, but Tecarus looks like heâd rather be anywhere than between Courtlyn and Halden.
âFuck,â Xaden mutters.
âHeâsâ¦younger than I thought,â I say about the king. By about four decades or so. Courtlyn only looks to be a few years older than Xaden and me. Heâs handsome, with deep golden-brown skin stretched over high cheekbones and a strong jaw, cunning brown eyes, and shoulder-length black hair, but the speed with which he locates Xaden and me and quickly appraises us leaves me a little queasy.
Xadenâs hand tightens around mine, and he leans down to brush his lips against my ear. âThe shadows here are not mine. I know your skill with a dagger. Iâm not discounting your ability to protect yourself, but for the good of my sanity while I try to get Halden out of whatever mess heâs created, will you please stay by my side?â
I nod. How can I not? Heâs not asking me to hide behind him, nor did he leave me with Tairn to keep me safe. Heâs just asking me to stay close.
And honestly, thereâs nowhere else Iâd rather be.
He squeezes my hand once, then lets go, freeing us both in case we need to fight, and we move forward as Blue Sash beckons, clearly exasperated with the time weâre taking.
King Courtlyn waves off the couple on the left as we approach, listening to whatever Tecarus whispers in his ear, and servants scurry to replace the plates and cups as the couple departs.
âThey donât shake hands,â I tell Xaden quietly as we walk down the aisle. âThey donât mince or waste words. They speak in double meanings only when itâs convenient to them. They value status, wealth, knowledge, and secretsâanything that can be traded. If you break your word once, youâre never trusted again.â
âSay what I mean. Donât lie. Act like a rich, entitled dick. Got it.â He nods.
Rage shines in Haldenâs gaze as it meets mine when we reach the last set of tables, and his fist closes around his gold fork.
I send him a silent, subtle plea to keep his shit together, and he places the fork on the table and clenches his jaw.
âThe Duke of Tyrrendor,â Blue Sash announces loudly, gesturing to the four steps that lead up the dais on the left, âand his consort, Violet Sorrensail.â
Close enough.
Xaden walks up the steps first, his gaze sweeping the floor, the chairs, the table, and even the place settings before he reaches back with a hand. Itâs unnecessary but sweet, so I take it and walk up after him. âItâs Sorrengail,â he corrects Blue Sash.
I take the seat on the end, and Xaden takes the one closest to Courtlynâs right.
âWhat did you do?â I ask Halden across the divide.
âStraight to the point,â Courtlyn says, rolling the jeweled dagger. âI enjoy this.â
âWhat makes you think I did anything?â Halden challenges, leaning over his plate.
âPrevious history.â
Servants step up behind the other three occupants and remove the dishes.
âIâm sorry to say that you missed the dinner portion of the evening,â Courtlyn announces, âbut dessert will soon arrive.â
âWhat did you do, Halden?â Xaden repeats for me.
âExactly what I was sent here for.â Color flushes Haldenâs cheeks and he slams his palms down on the table. âI reestablished diplomatic connections with Deverelli and asked for their permission to use Tecarusâs manor to launch a search mission with a riot of dragons in return for the artifact he requested, and when that was not enough, I offeredââ
âWhat was not yours to give!â Courtlyn lunges across Tecarus and plunges the dagger into Haldenâs hand.
Holy. Fucking. Shit. My stomach churns.
âYour Majesty!â Tecarus balks, the blood draining from his face.
I drop my hand to Xadenâs knee and squeeze to keep from screaming the way Halden does as he stares down in shock.
Xaden tenses but wears his mask of bored indifference like a professional.
âStop wailing like a child.â Courtlyn sits back in his chair, then takes a drink of red wine from his crystal goblet.
Halden sucks in breath after breath, staring at his hand, but the screaming ceases.
âPull it out, wrap your hand, get it stitched by a healer, and youâll be fine in a fortnight,â Courtlyn lectures. âThe cut is between your bones, in the fleshy part. No tendons. My aim is very good.â He lifts his goblet at Halden. âYouâre lucky I respect Tecarus, because what youâve done is unforgivable.â
âThe dagger was mine to give,â Halden bites out, staring at the jeweled blade. It looks to be antique, with a silver handle and emeralds the size of my fingernails adorning the hilt.
âNo, it wasnât.â Courtlyn shakes his head.
âItâs mine,â Xaden says, and it takes everything I have to keep my features schooled. âOr rather, it should have been. Itâs the Blade of Aretia, appropriated for the royal vault by Reginald during the Unification.â
âYes!â Courtlynâs goblet swings Xadenâs way as three servants climb the steps around us, one on each side. âFascinating how he chose this particularâ¦gift, knowing it might provoke your emotions. Normally when it comes to such heirlooms, weâd consider possession ownership, but in this case, His Highnessâs word was already broken, hence why I could not make his deal. Iâm fascinated to learn how much he is worth on the ransom market, or perhaps Iâll entertain classic blackmail. Surely King Tauri will be amenable to quite a few things should his son remain in residence.â
âYou canât just keep him,â Tecarus argues.
âWhy not? Werenât you telling me you wanted to keep that one?â Courtlyn points at me.
âI did not break my word!â Halden growls and grabs hold of the daggerâs hilt as the servants put down a covered dish in the center of each side of the table. Looks like weâre sharing dessert.
âI hope you donât mind waiting a moment,â Courtlyn says, and the servants wait, their hands poised on rounded copper covers. âMy little ones have arrived.â He gestures down the aisle, and I inhale a sharp breath.
Tairn growls and Andarna perks up, taking notice along the bond, her golden energy intensifying as three pure-white panthers stalk toward us. Iâve only ever seen their kind illustrated in books, and never in white. Theyâre graceful and elegant and so very beautiful, and the closer they getâ¦the more Iâd like them to stay in the books. Their paws are huge.
Wind rustles the trees at my back, and a chill runs the length of my spine.
This entire palace is outdoors, and they have the run of it.
I have no desire to be their dinner.
âArenât they magnificent?â Courtlyn asks, his tone marveling like a proud father. âShira, Shena, and Shora. Iâve raised them from cubs myself. All hunters. All vicious. All adept at sniffing out a thief.â He turns a pointed look Haldenâs way.
My stomach sinks, and my heart begins to pound.
âPull it out and bandage that hand now,â I tell him.
Xaden moves to push back from the tableâ
Courtlyn raises his hand. âDo it for him, and any chance of us striking a deal is off.â He sets his goblet down. âI need to know you can uphold your end of a bargain even when itâs unpleasant to do so, just as your father did.â
Xaden nods once, his face an unreadable mask, but his leg tenses under my hand.
Guess my father wasnât the only one keeping secrets.
âNow, Halden!â I have no problem yelling at the heir. The panthers are halfway here.
Halden yanks the dagger free with a hiss, then sheathes it like itâs his and quickly binds the wound with his napkin, field-dressing it as best he can.
âNow that thatâs done.â Courtlyn turns to Xaden. âI assume you would like the same deal he asked for?â
My hand tightens on Xadenâs knee.
âI canât agree, seeing as I have no idea what Halden requested,â Xaden says. âBut weâd like to reopen diplomatic channels and secure permission to use Viscount Tecarusâs manor as a stopping point for a riot of no more than eight dragons and an equal number of gryphons for the purposes of a search party, which would entail securing hunting rights of wild game for said creatures and a promise of safety for all parties.â
Courtlyn rolls the stem of his goblet between his thumb and forefinger. âTo whom do you owe your loyalty, Your Grace? Your father was a rebel. From what I hear, you are cut from the same cloth, and yet youâve been restored to your title, so to whom do you swear your fealty?â
I reach into the right side pocket of my pack for the conduit out of sheer habit as the panthers approach the dais, splitting to surround us. The familiar weight of the orb is comforting in my hand, and I swear I can feel a hum, a swift rise in heat that I know is only in my head, but itâs soothing all the same.
âNavarre,â Courtlyn continues, âor Tyrrendor? Lie, and this discussion is over. Weâve fared quite well without the Continent.â
Xaden tilts his head, studying the king. âViolet.â
My heart skips into double time.
âMy loyalty is to Violet first above everything, everyone else,â Xaden says. âThen Tyrrendor. Then Navarre in the moments itâs worthyâusually when Violet is in residence.â
Itâs a reckless answer given what hangs in the balance, and now is absolutely not the time, but damn if it doesnât make me love him even more.
âInteresting.â The king stops twirling his glass.
âIâm assuming with our deal, trade would begin again,â Xaden says, âwhich would be mutually beneficial, since Iâm sure youâve heard weâre in a war with the venin. Should you decide to become our allyââ
âOh, weâve never involved ourselves with venin.â Courtlyn shakes his head. âWar destroys isles, blocks economies. Supplying those at war, howeverâ¦thatâs where the money is. We remain neutral in all things and always have. Itâs how weâve maintained trade, commerce, growth, and knowledge for the world no matter what god you worship or magic you can access.â
âBut theyâve been here, right?â I narrow my eyes slightly, noting that thereâs now a panther perched directly behind me. I lean forward to look around the servant who is still holding our dish shut. âDid you defeat them?â Or cure them?
Courtlyn glares. âTo imply that our isle is weak, conquerable, is a line you do not want to cross. Such an assumption is disastrous to an economy that is built on safe, stable trade. People do not invest in unstable isles.â He snaps his fingers.
The panthers leap onto the dais with an ease that speaks to nightly routine.
âI will not stand for you being devoured by a house cat,â Tairn growls.
âStay put and keep Sgaeyl with you,â I shout down the bond, and my knuckles whiten around the conduit as the panther pushes between Xaden and me, its soft coat brushing against my arm.
âShoraâs lovely, donât you think?â Courtlyn says to Xaden, an indulgent smile curving his mouth, then continues toward Halden without waiting for an answer. âI hope you donât mind, but theyâre used to eating with me. Your Highness, do remember that Shira earned every bit of her special dinner today.â He lifts his hands, palms up, and crooks his fingers.
The servants remove the copper covers, then duck off the dais.
Oh gods, itâs a giant slab of red meat that has to have been carved off the largest cow to have walked this isle.
The pantherâShiraâchuffs low in her throat, flicking her tail, and I canât help but wonder if this is how the infantry cadets felt that day on the field when Baide found us.
Xadenâs hand covers mine and squeezes, and I look over to find him staring, stone-faced across the table, then track his gazeâ
Captain Anna Winshireâs head lies on the plate between Halden and Tecarus, her short, strawberry-blond curls unmistakable.
My jaw slackens. Oh, Malek, Courtlyn has killed Haldenâs personal guardâ¦and is serving her to his cat.
Iâm going to be sick.
Bile rises in my throat, and I swallow quickly, breathing in through my nose and out through my mouth, but all I smell is meat and blood.
âDonât watch,â Xaden whispers, and I wrench my gaze away.
âEat,â Courtlyn orders, and the panthers pounce.
Paws land on the table between us, and a massive maw opens, snatching the meat off the plate and dragging it, leaving a bloody trail on the white linen as she hauls her meal to the dais, then to the floor.
The others follow suit.
When I look across at Halden, he stares at his empty plate, completely stricken.
âArenât they beautiful creatures?â Courtlyn asks.
I blink away the shock and set the conduit on the table. Death and I are old friends, and itâs not like I really knew Anna. But the audacity is truly unparalleled.
âYou murdered my guard,â Halden says slowly.
âYour thief was found in my treasury,â Courtlyn counters, âwith six stolen treasures on her person and a list of five more she had yet to attain written in your handwriting.â
My stomach lurches, and my gaze jumps to Haldenâs. âYou didnât.â
âThey are all items that belong to us!â He pounds his chest and stands, his chair falling back against the dais. âIt is not stealing to take back what is rightfully ours!â A vein in his neck bulges.
Guards move in toward the edge of the dais, forming a perimeter around the panthers, and I slip my hand from beneath Xadenâs and reach for the sheaths at my lower thighs, beneath the tablecloth.
âItâs about to turn to shit,â I warn Tairn. âCommunicate that to Sgaeyl however you can.â
He rumbles in acknowledgment, and palm trees sway in the distance.
âRightfully yours?â Courtlyn challenges, his voice rising in a sinister melody.
âWhatâs the penalty for thievery here?â Xaden whispers.
âFrom a royal house?â I focus inward. âDecree twenty-twoâ¦â I wince. âNo, twenty-three, is death.â Iâve studied, but Iâm nowhere near a legal expert.
âIs Halden complicit under their laws?â
âTheir system isnât like ours. Their decrees can contradict each other, and Courtlyn sits on their tribunal, soâ¦â My words trip over themselves. âI donât know. Maybe.â
I might want to strangle Halden myself, but I canât let him be executed here for stealing.
âThose items are mine, received as goods bartered for services rendered over the last century, as you well know!â Courtlyn shouts, and the diners fall silent at their tables, leaving only the sound of the panthers devouring their dinners.
Wait. The last century? My shoulders fall and my mind whirls, recalling Aaricâs words from last year when I asked what Halden was going to do about what was happening beyond our borders. Iâm here, arenât I? Aaric had implied that Halden wasnât going to act.
But this is so much worse.
Halden didnât just know; heâs been playing a starring role.
âYou took advantage of our desperation,â Halden accuses. âAccepted priceless magical artifacts under unfair terms, and now you execute my personal guard when we seek to rectify your outright theft with a genuine agreement? Fuck you! We want no part of you, your deception, or this godsforsaken isle!â Halden surges forward, shoving his section of the table over, and it topples into the void of the center.
Oh. Shit.
Courtlynâs gaze turns to ice, and my ribs feel like theyâre twisting inward as I watch everything weâve worked for fall apart in a matter of seconds. Tecarus jumps backward, then quickly scrambles down the steps, and I donât blame him in the least.
Halden has fucked us over. The sour taste of betrayal fills my mouth, but a bitter flood of metallic anger carries it away with the next heartbeat.
âEnough, Halden!â Xaden stands and I slowly do the same, monitoring the guards around us, the panthers behind us, and those in the crowd reaching beneath the linens for what could be hidden weapons.
âHe is a thief, and he impugns my honor in front of my entire court!â Courtlyn shouts at Xaden, but he points his finger toward Halden.
âHe no longer speaks for us.â Xaden swings the pack from his shoulder, setting it atop the table with a clang. âIf you will not accept the deal with Navarre, then accept it with Tyrrendor, and Iâll assure you the only riots on your shore will have Aretian riders and their flier counterparts, who will abide by your laws and respect your customs, and in return, with my utmost gratitude for your trustââ He unbuttons the top flap of his rucksack and pulls it back slowly, revealing an inch of an emerald-studded hilt that steals my breath. It looks too much like the dagger to be a coincidence.
My heart stutters. That canât be. He canât. I wonât let him.
âNo.â I grab hold of Xadenâs hand, preventing him from showing the rest of it. âIf thatâs what I think it is, then absolutely not.â
âViâ¦â He shakes his head, searching my eyes, and I know Iâm not the only one longing for the bond that usually makes these moments easy for us. âIt might be the only way to forge an alliance and save the prick.â
âYouâve sacrificed enough. Iâve got this.â I slip my heavy pack from my shoulders and set it beside his.
âAbsolutely not!â Halden shouts.
Xaden gives him a look that clearly says heâs had enough of his shit.
âI alone have the authority to speak for Navarre!â Halden rages, taking two threatening steps toward the king. âYou do not make deals with provinces, let alone the son of a traitor who blackmailed his way into a title. I am the only voice of our kingdom!â His hands curl into fists, and the binding around his right floods crimson.
Courtlyn sighs, then reaches for his goblet and takes a drink. âIâve heard enough, and this grows tedious. Tecarus may live. Kill the rest.â