โMILLIONS,โ HAZAN SAID AGAIN, HIMSELFย thunderstruck.
Kamran processed this revelation as if from afar, both awed and horrified. His grandfather might not have been right about Alizeh โ not precisely โ but heโd not been altogether wrong, either.
Like a cold wind, he felt the rush of Zaalโs voice, words from the manโs final days coming to life inside his mind โ
If you do not think there are others searching for her right now, you are not paying close enough attention. Pockets of unrest in the Jinn
communities continue to disturb our empire. There are many among them deluded enough to think the resurrection of an old world is the only way to move forward.
Kamran swallowed.
All this time, heโd thought of her royal title as symbolic; he never thought sheโd be truly recognized as a queen. But now โ now that thousands of people had stormed the castle to see her, and millions more might soon swear their allegiance to her โ
He realized, with a shock, that he didnโt know Alizeh at all. Heโd fallen for a mirage of a girl. A version of her that had never truly existed.
Sarra was stunned into speechlessness, and Kamran felt much the same. โHow many millions?โ Deen asked, blinking.
โI donโt know,โ Hazan said quietly. โThis is merely an estimate. There are very few empires that live in peace with my people. Many Jinn live and die undocumented, forced to live out their lives in prison camps. Others
continue to live in hiding. We are a people with no nation, expelled from our own land, the earth under our feet stolen by Clay kings. For so long
weโve been waiting for the heir to our empire, the one who will protect and unify our people. I have no way of knowing for certain how many will
comeโ โ he shook his head โ โbut you may trust that those who can, will. By foot, by caravan, by ship or dragon. If they have to drag themselves, inch by inch across the earth to get to her, they will.โ
Sarra made a frantic sound, her skin now bloodless with fear. She was muttering half words and nonsense, something about how the city wasnโt meant to hold so many people at once, that there werenโt enough bathrooms, โand where will theyย sleep?โ
Omid started crying.
โI didnโt mean to hurt her,โ he choked out. โHonest, I never wouldโve killed her โ I was just โ I was so hungry I couldnโt think clear โโ
Huda shifted her chair closer to the boy and pulled him against her, smoothing his hair and making shushing sounds as he wept. โItโs all right, dear,โ she whispered. โShe forgave you already, didnโt she?โ
โShe showed me mercy, missโ โ he lifted his head, eyes bloodshot as he sniffled โ โwhen I didnโt deserve โโ
โPull yourself together,โ Deen hissed, looking distinctly uncomfortable. โYouโre embarrassing yourself.โ
โThatโs a bit harsh โโ
Kamran watched this strange scene from a cold distance; he felt frozen in his seat, astonished by his own fear, his pulse racing as he was struck by another blow of memory.
His grandfather had tried to warn him.
If the girl were to claim her place as the queen of her people, it is possible, even with the brace of the Fire Accords, that an entire race would pledge their allegiance to her on the basis of an ancient loyalty aloneโฆ The Jinn of Ardunia would form an army; the remaining civilians would riot. An uprising would wreak havoc across the land. Peace and security would be demolished for months โ years, even โ in the pursuit of an impossible dream โ
Hells, heโd been so naive.
When he first met Alizeh sheโd been but a humble snoda, scrubbing
floors in his auntโs grand house, taking beatings from a vile housekeeper. Sheโd been so vulnerable and small; Kamran had been unable to imagine her beyond the powerless servant girl she first appeared to be. Heโd discovered, later โ when sheโd dispatched the assailants his own grandfather had sent to kill her โ that she was perfectly able to defend herself. Still, she possessed no connections, no wealth, no obvious interest in recognition.
She lived in the shadows.
That someone in her position had said no to his power, his wealth, his crown โ that sheโdย continuedย to refuse him even after theyโd made a clear physical connection, the embers of which still burned within him โ
It had made no sense.
There exists no bridge between our lives, sheโd said.ย No path that connects our worlds.
Heโd been a fool.
In a matter of days sheโd found a kingdom to crown her, the people to support her. Already her ascent had inspired the demise of his grandfather, had devastated his life. Sheโd strengthened as heโd been shattered, and now she would shake the foundations of his empire, too.
What would happen to his kingdom โ to his armies โ if the Ardunian Jinn swore their allegiance to a foreign sovereign?
He dragged a hand down his mouth.ย Theyโd be torn apart.
All this ran through his mind in moments, and he was returned to the present by the sound of a terrible whimper. Sarra had begun to pace.
โHeaven help us,โ she cried. โIf they find out sheโs been injured โโ โYes.โ Hazan had sobered a great deal. โThis is grim, indeed.โ โAnd you say you donโt even know where she is? Sheโs injured and
gone? If sheย diesย โโ
โShe wonโt die,โ Hazan said harshly.
โCyrus sent her off on the back of a dragon,โ said Kamran. โThe king is the only one who knows where she went, and as he is currently indisposed, we have no way of knowing what he did with her.โ
At that, Sarra regained a flicker of her edge, her anger. โSo she did not fall off a cliff andย disappear. My son sent the injured girl away.โ
Kamran narrowed his eyes at her tone. โIndeed.โ
โAnd yet you say you have no way of knowing what he did with her? Is your imagination truly so colorless?โ
โI am not a mind reader, maโam.โ
โAnd you,โ she said to Hazan. โWhat of you? Can you envisage no other explanation for his actions?โ
Hazan stared at her with renewed concern. โYou think he used dark magic on her? Or perhaps poisoned her?โ
Sarra looked almost disappointed in Hazan then, shaking her head as she said, โYour every theory assumes as fact that he intends her harm.
Youโve done a poor character study of my son.โ
โI disagree,โ Hazan replied, his concern displaced by anger. โKing Cyrus has proven nothing but violent, aggressive, murderous, and
manipulative. In a single night he slaughtered the king of Ardunia and an entire halo of Diviners, and this isnโt even mentioning the destruction he left in his wake, having half destroyed one of the oldest palaces in history by allowing a dragon to โโ
โYes, all right,โ she said with a sigh. โI suppose youโre not wrong to
draw such conclusions. I confess, at first, I thought he meant to hurt the girl as well. But I no longer believe heโd cause her suffering. Not on purpose, anyway.โ
โWhat do you mean?โ Kamran sharpened. โHow can you be sure?โ
Sarra opened her mouth to respond, then appeared to think better of it, saying only: โHave you never seen the way he looks at her?โ
โNo,โ he said, his mood darkening. โIn fact I have not.โ
She offered a brittle smile. โWell. I suppose youโll see for yourself soon enough.โ
โWhatโs that supposed to mean?โ
Sarra looked at Kamran then as if he were not the impending heir to the largest empire on earth but an idiot child. โIโd bet my life,โ she said, turning her eyes to Hazan, โthat heโs entrusted one of his blasted dragons to help her. If the girl were badly injured, thereโs only one place heโd โโ
โThe Diviners,โ Hazan said. โOf course.โ
โReally?โ Huda frowned. โYou really think he was trying to help her?โ
Omid rubbed at his tearstained cheeks. โIย wasย wondering, miss, why he was hugging her so much. Seemed like an awful lot of hugging for people who donโt like each other.โ
โHe was hugging her?โ Hudaโs eyes went wide.
โHe wasย holdingย her,โ Deen corrected. โProbably to keep her from falling off the dragon. Thoughโ โ he hesitated โ โI suppose if he did mean for her to die, he couldโve simply let her tumble into the ocean?โ
Kamran felt himself growing angry, and he couldnโt articulate why. He didnโt realize that what he felt was a warped jealousy, his mind recoiling from the idea thatย heโdย been the one to hurt her, that Cyrus mightโve been the one to save her. And it was with undiluted venom that he said, โIf his intention was to help her, why send her off alone? Why not deliver her to
the Diviners himself?โ
Omid made a face. โAnd why did he ask her to marry him if all he wanted was to kill her?โ
โWell, I donโt know,โ said Huda, โbut my parents have been married nearly thirty years and Mother is all the time going on about how much sheโd like to kill Father, and in fact I worry, sometimes, that he doesnโt seem to take her seriously โโ
Kamran leaned forward, insisting: โIt does not stand to reason. The king, too, was injured โ had they gone to the Diviners, he mightโve received care for his own wounds. It makes more sense that he mightโve cursed her, binding her to the dragon before sending her off into the unknown, all so that we might never find her โโ
โHeโs not allowed to set foot in the temple,โ said Sarra, her words dripping with condescension. โCyrus is forbidden even from walking the grounds. Ever since he murdered my husband, the Diviners have refused him entrance.โ
Kamran stiffened.
It was the casual way she stated the horrifying fact that cast a brief pall over the room, and it was the reminder they all needed: the truth of who King Cyrus really was, how blackened was his soul. Kamran couldnโt
believe Alizeh would consider marrying such a criminal. If she was so
desperate for a crown, why hadnโt she appealed to him instead? Heโd all but offered for her โ and sheโd chosen to align herself with this animal?
Even now, even with his head and heart muddled beyond reason, Kamran experienced a painful thrill at the thought of appealing to her, convincing her to join forces withย him. In fact, the more he learned of her influence, the more he realized that an understanding between them would forestall his fears of upheaval in the Ardunian empire; if a Jinn queen and Clay king could join peacefully, perhaps the people, too, could live in harmony.
The idea took root inside him.
His interest in her would no longer be labeled impractical or emotional; marrying her would instead prove the perfect hedge against rebellion. He felt certain even his grandfather wouldโve been convinced, for it wouldnโt be a match born of base desire but a considered alliance made for the good of the people.
Something like relief began to expand in his chest.
Perhapsย thisย was what the Diviners had meant for him to accomplish;
perhaps proving his worth as king was bound up in the search for his queen.
Perhaps the magic in his body had altered because he was not meant to be the sole ruler of Ardunia.
He felt a purifying clarity then, a feeling of ease cleansing weeks of tension. Kamran had been lost and confused, confounded by grief, by the machinations of Zahhak, the demands of the Diviners.
Now he understood.
His presence here, in this godforsaken empire, became suddenly tolerable. He would find a way to stay. He needed to speak with Alizeh at the first opportunity and make his intentions clear. After all, heโd never
made her any formal offer. Surely such a proposal would appeal to her now; surely she would see the advantages of such a union โ and would be
sensible enough to leave this hellscape by his side, toward a future where they could both have exactly what they wanted.
โBut โ heโs the king,โ said Huda, breaking the silence and his reverie. โThe Diviners are obligated to serve the rightful sovereign.โ She looked around. โArenโt they?โ
โThey do as they please.โ
Kamran felt a chill pierce the room, his instincts awakening in a blaze of scorn for that voice. Thatย face.
Softly, Omid screamed.
King Cyrus stood in front of the closed door, his wretched, haggard, and bloodied appearance doing nothing to diminish the blue blaze of his eyes.
How heโd reanimated so quickly, Kamran couldnโt imagine; though he supposed it had something to do with the devil. Black magic likely ran through the beastโs veins. Perhaps he couldnโt be killed so long as he was allied with Iblees. Perhaps that was the bargain heโd made.
โWhatever youโre thinking,โ said Cyrus quietly, โyouโre wrong. Now leave my home before I rip you apart with my bare hands.โ