Tella wished that time would stop. For years sheโd divided her life into two periods:ย When Her Mother Had Been Thereย andย After Her Mother Had Left. Now her mother was dead. But Tella didnโt want to use this moment as a measure of time. She didnโt want time to move forward at all. She wanted time to freeze, like her unmoving limbs, but even they were regaining echoes of feeling.
She couldnโt walk, but she managed to crawl across the cavernโs granite floor to her motherโs body. But thatโs all it was, a body. When Paloma had been in her enchanted sleep, her face had still possessed color, her chest had moved up and down. Tella had once thought she was still as a corpse, but she wasnโtโuntil now.
โAt least he stabbed her instead of burning her to death with his powers,โ Jacks said. โFireโs the most painful way to die.โ
โThatโs not helping,โ Tella muttered.
โWell, Iโm not really the comforting sort.โ Jacksโs cool arms slipped beneath Tellaโs back as he picked her up from the ground.
โPut me down,โ Tella said. Jacks was a Fate, and the last thing she wanted was help from someone like him.
Jacks huffed a sigh. โIf I leave you here, youโll die like your mother when Gavriel comes back to life. Or another Fate will just find you.โ
โWhy do you care?โ
โI donโt.โ Jacks flashed his dimples, narrow lips parting into a sharp smile that turned him into the beautifully cunning Prince of Hearts that sheโd been fascinated with as a child. โI just prefer torturing you myself.โ
โToo late,โ Tella mumbled, and she probably should have tried to fight him
more.
Jacks hadnโt bothered her for the last sixty-odd days, and supposedly she was his true loveโthe one person immune to his fatal kissโbut he was still a Fate. A murderous one. Heโd been heir to the throne before Legend, and according to rumors heโd killed seventeen people to take that place. Heโd even threatened to kill Tella. He was viperous and fatal. Yet Tella couldnโt muster the appropriate fear. She couldnโt feel anything other than numb.
Her motherโs death didnโt even make sense. Gavriel hadnโt hurt her until after sheโd wounded him. He might not have killed her if she hadnโt stabbed him. Why would she risk it, when he would only come back to life?
โWho is Gavriel?โ Tella choked out. โWhich Fate is he?โ
Jacksโs cold fingers tensed against her back. โIโm only telling you this because I like him even less than I like you. Gavriel is the Fallen Star.โ
The same Fate who, according to Legendโs witch, had created all the Fates. A venomous surge of rage briefly broke through Tellaโs shock. If Legend really did want to kill the Fallen Star to defeat the other Fates, heโd have to get in line.
โIโll find a way to destroy him,โ Tella vowed.
โNot in this condition,โ Jacks muttered as he carried her up a set of steps.
She didnโt want to see the sky as she and Jacks finally emerged outside. It should have been black. But it was still impossibly blue, rippling with threads of indigo. Tella usually loved it when the sun stayed out so late, when it was night and the world remained light, but now it just felt wrong. The day should have ended. The sun should have fled and turned the world dark the moment her mother had died.
Tellaโs throat went tight. She closed her eyes, attempting to shut out the light, but that only made it worse. Every time her eyes closed, all she could see was the Fallen Star as he drove a knife into her mother.
A sob began to build inside her. She was only dimly aware of her surroundings as Jacks carried her down a brick street. She didnโt know where he lived now that he was no longer heir to the Meridian Empire and had been kicked out of Idyllwild Castle. Sheโd assumed he resided in the Spice Quarter, inside a crooked building with a coven of thieves, or in an underground tomb with a den of gangsters.
But it didnโt smell as if he was taking her to the Spice Quarter. There were no pungent cigars. No streams of spilled liquor or urine stained the ground. Jacks had brought her to the clean pathways of University Circle, a world of leather-bound books, pressed robes, and pristine hedges, where ambitious
scholars grew like weeds.
His pace turned leisurely as he approached a four-story house made of clay-red bricks and onyx columns. Tella might have asked what they were doing here, or if this was where he lived. But all she could do was let her tears fall.
It couldnโt even be called crying. Crying gave the impression of participation, action. But Tella was done acting. She could barely keep breathing.
โIโd try to say something comforting, but last time you didnโt appreciate it,โ Jacks murmured. But despite his words, he held her closer to his cool chest as he reached a pair of polished doors.
Maybe he really did plan to torture her. Or maybe he knew that even though her paralysis was almost gone, Tella wouldnโt have moved if heโd left her. Maybe he knew sheโd have lain on the steps leading up to his house even after the sun finally fell and the night turned cold enough to make her numb once again. Because now that she had all her feeling back, it hurt. Everywhere. Her emotions were bruised and bleeding. And for a moment she hoped that theyโd bleed out. Then maybe it wouldnโt feel so impossibly painful, or so hard to breathe and think and feel anything but agony.
The door before them swung open. They stepped inside and the wretched blue sky was replaced by a ceiling covered in gold chandeliers that dangled lights over walls papered with black and red symbols from playing cards. It was a den of gambling, full of dealers who smiled like tigers and players eager as cubs.
People were laughing and clapping and rolling dice on tables with whoops and hollers, and all of it had never sounded so wrong. It was a blur of gaming chips, and fizzing drinks, discarded cravats and clacking wheels of misfortune and chance. When someone won, confetti made of diamonds and hearts and clubs and spades rained down on everyone. The room was alive in a way her mother was not.
If anyone thought it odd that Jacks was carrying a hysterical girl, no one remarked on it. Or maybe Tella just didnโt notice. The drawn windows might have managed to block out the sun, but all the noise and chaos of Jacksโs gaming parlor only intensified the piercing emptiness inside of her.
Jacksโs arms tightened around her as he wove through the crowd. Multiple people approached him. โCanโt you see my hands are full?โ he drawled, or simply just ignored them.
A few steps later and they were on the stairs. The carpets went from plush
to threadbare the higher they climbed. Jacks had redecorated the ground floor for his guests, but left the upper levels unchanged. Not that Tella saw much of them. Her eyes mostly stayed on the ground and Jacksโs scuffed boots until he carried her through another door.
It looked like a study. There was an empty fireplace with a decorative amber rug marred by several scorch marks in front of it, a worn whiskey- brown leather couch, and a scratched desk with a lone plant underneath a glass dome. Jacks continued to cradle her as he sat slowly on the deep couch.
Tella could have pulled away. It was wrong to let him touch herโhe was the same type of creature that had killed her mother in front of her. And yet she feared that Jacksโs deadly arms were the only things still holding her together. She didnโt wantย hisย comfort, but she desperately needed comfort.
Jacksโs shirt had quickly dampened against Tellaโs cheek, but rather than push her away, he held her closer. He rubbed circles around her back, while his other cold hand wove through her curls, carefully untangling them with gentle fingers.
โWhy are you helping me?โ Tella finally managed. Unlike Legend, who either hid his feelings or pretended to have them when he didnโt, Jacks never pretended to care. When he had an agenda, he just made threats to get what he wanted.
โYouโre not fun when youโre this pathetic. I canโt torment you if youโre already miserable.โ His hand left her hair to press against her cheek and brush several tears away. The touch was as soft as the last kiss her mother had pressed to that very same cheek, and Tella lost what sheโd been able to keep together.
No longer were tears just falling from her eyes. She was crying harder than she ever had in her life, sobbing with so much force she felt as if she might break. It was too much emotion to hold on to and too much to release.
โIt was all for nothing,โ Tella moaned. โEverything I did to save her only worked to destroy her. I should have never tried to change the future Iโd seen in the Aracle. The first time I saw her, the card only showed her in a prison. If I hadnโt tried to alter that future, sheโd still be alive.โ
โOr maybe youโd be dead too,โ Jacks said. โYou donโt know how things could have turned out differently.โ
โBut they could have been different.โ Tella pictured all the other ways her motherโs story could have ended. If Tella had listened to her mother as a child and never played with her cursed Deck of Destiny, maybe her mother never would have left the girls on Trisda in the first place. Or if Legend had just
taken the deck, like Tella had asked, and then destroyed it before any more of the Fates escaped, her mother would be alive now.
Tella had made so many mistakes. If only she could go back and make one right. If she could just rechart her path so it led somewhere else.
That was it.
A spark of hope lit up inside her.
Tella could travel back in time and re-create the entire day. Now that all the Fates were awake, there was a way to do it. Then at least one good thing could come from their return.
Tella looked up at Jacks, seeing him for the first time since heโd carried her away. His untamed locks of golden hair made him look more like a lost boy than a murderous Fate; his unearthly eyes were the silver-blue of young girlsโ dreams; and his lips were so sharp she imagined he could cut with a kiss. She couldnโt trust him, but to do this, she would need him.
โIn Decks of Destiny, there was a Fate that could move through space and timeโthe Assassin. What if he could help undo this?โ
โI know youโre grieving,โ Jacks said, โbut thatโs the worst idea Iโve ever heard. Traveling through time is always a mistake.โ
โSo is trusting you. But here I am, and you havenโt hurt me yet.โ
โYetย is the key word in that sentence.โ He ran a cool finger under her chin. โStay long enough and I guarantee that will change.โ
Tella sat up straight. โTell me where the Assassin is and Iโll leave right now.โ
โEven if I knew where he was I wouldnโt tell you, Donatella. Contacting the Assassin is not a good idea, and not just because of his nickname. Before the Fates were trapped in the deck, the Fallen Star, the Undead Queen, and the Murdered King all used the Assassin to travel through space and time, and all the different timelines made him insane. Heโs not always aware of when he is, and heโll disappear for long stretches. People whoโve convinced him to take them back in time donโt always return. As I said, worst idea.โ
โNothing could be worse than this! Please, Jacks.โ Tella grabbed his damp shirt with her fists, pulling his cruel face even closer. โHelp me find him. Iโm begging you. It hurts so much. Too much. Everything is painful. Each time I close my eyes I see him murdering her. Every time itโs quiet I hear the awfulย click-clackย of that wheel. And I canโt shut it off!โ
Jacksโs hand went still against her back. โWhat if I could take away the pain and the sadness?โ
โHow?โ she asked.
โItโs one of my abilities.โ He wiped another trail of tears from her cheeks. A warning flare cut through some of Tellaโs grief. Myth had it that the
Prince of Hearts had the ability to control emotions. But, since Jacks had not been in the Deck of Destiny when Legend had freed the other Fates, he should have still been at half power. โI thought you didnโt have your full powers back.โ
โI donโt,โ he bit out. โI still canโt control emotions the way I used to, or give someone feelings that they donโt have. But I can temporarily remove unwanted feelings. I can take away your pain for tonight.โ His icy fingers lingered on her cheek, a numbing promise and a warning all at once. โI wonโt be permanently erasing it, my love. Youโll still experience it. But when your sorrow returns tomorrow, it wonโt be as powerful as it is now.โ
His other hand stroked up and down her back again until it was easier for her to breathe. Too easy. She wondered if he was using his powers to calm her. But Tella couldnโt bring herself to care as much as she should have. The heartache was too overwhelming. She knew that the instant Jacks let her go, her lungs would tighten once more, her tears would return to sobs, and even if she didnโt close her eyes, sheโd see her mother dying over and over and over. A hundred deaths in the span of one heartbeat. Too many heartbeats and she might die, too.
โDo it,โ Tella said. A part of her knew how desperately wrong it was to take comfort from a Fate. But even if it was a mistake, it couldnโt be as bad as this. โTake the sadness and the painโjust take everything that hurts.โ