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Chapter no 39

House of Flame and Shadow (Crescent City, #3)

Bryce found the Autumn King in his study, his red hair aglow in the morning light. Contemplating the Starsword and Truth-Teller on his desk.

What sheโ€™d said the other night must have struck a nerve, then. Good.

โ€œSo close,โ€ she purred as she shut the door and approached the desk, โ€œbut so far. So unworthy.โ€

Flames danced in his eyes. โ€œWhat is it you want, girl?โ€

She swept around the deskย to stand beside his chair, peering at the weapons from his angle. He frowned, as if her mere proximity was distasteful. โ€œDid my mom ever tell you what happened that night she was trying to get me to safety? When your goons caught up to her and Randall?โ€

โ€œIโ€™d consider your words carefully,โ€ he snarled.

Bryce smiled. โ€œRandall hadnโ€™t picked up a gun in years. Not since heโ€™d gotten home from theย front and vowed heโ€™d never use one again. He was on the verge of swearing his vows to Solas when he got the request from the High Priest to go help a single mom and her three-year-old daughter get away from you. And that night your loser guards caught up with us โ€ฆ that was the first time Randall picked up a gun again. He put a bullet right through yourย chief security officerโ€™s head. Randall hatedย every single fucking second of it. But he did it. Because in that moment, even after only three days on the run, he knew that he was already in love with my mom. And that there was nothing he wouldnโ€™t do for her.โ€

The Autumn Kingโ€™s nose crinkled with annoyance. โ€œIs there a point to this story?โ€

โ€œMy point,โ€ she said, leaning closer to her father, โ€œis that I didnโ€™t just learn about love from myย mom. I learned about it from my dad, too. Myย trueย dad. My weak human dad who youโ€™re so jealous of that you canโ€™t stand it. He taught me to fight like Hel for the people I love.โ€

โ€œI grow bored of this.โ€ The Autumn King made to pull away, but Bryce grabbed his arm.

โ€œWay ahead of you there. I grew bored of you the instant you opened your mouth.โ€

Stone clicked.

The Autumn King reeled back, butย too late. The gorsian shackle had already clamped on his wrist.

โ€œYou little bitch,โ€ he hissed, and Bryce let the shackle from her other wrist tumble to the ground. โ€œYou have no idea who youโ€™re fucking withโ€”โ€

โ€œI do. A useless, pathetic loser.โ€

He lunged to his feet, but sheโ€™d already snatched up both Truth-Teller and the Starsword. He halted as she unsheathed the blades and pointed both at him.

Bryce said smoothly, the knife and sword steady in her hands, โ€œHereโ€™s the bargain: you donโ€™t put up a fight, and I donโ€™t impale you with these and experiment on how to open a portal to nowhere in your gut.โ€

Flame burned and then died out in his eyes as the shackle held him firm.

She smiled, inclining her head. โ€œThanks for that intel about the blades, by the way. I thought you might know somethingย of use. Itโ€™s really too bad that you sent all the servants away, isnโ€™t it? No one to hear you scream.โ€

His face whitened with rage. โ€œYou arrived here intentionally.โ€

โ€œGuilty as charged,โ€ she said, shaking her hair over a shoulder with a toss of her head. โ€œI knew youโ€™d been doing all this research for centuries. Youโ€™re the one person whoโ€™s obsessed with the Starsword and its secrets, sad Chosenย One reject that you are. So I came here for answers. To learn what, exactly, a weapon like this could do. How to get rid of our little intergalactic friends.โ€ She grinned. โ€œAnd you assumed I landed here because โ€ฆ?โ€

He glowered.

โ€œOh right,โ€ she said. โ€œBecause Iโ€™m your stupid, bumbling daughter. I landed here by accidentโ€”is that it?โ€ She laughed, unable to help herself. โ€œYou probably even convincedย yourself it was Luna sending you some sort of gift. That you were given the godsโ€™ favor and this was destined by Urd.โ€

His silence was confirmation enough.

She made an exaggerated pout. โ€œTough luck. Andย reallyย tough luck about the shackle. Though I guess itโ€™s fitting that I used the key Ruhn kept in his room. He told me about it once, you know. Thatโ€™s what he had to use when youโ€™d bind him withย these and burn him. You put these delightful things on him so he couldnโ€™t fight back. And it happened often enough that he invested in a disarming key that he left in his desk so he could free himself when you sent him back to his room to suffer.โ€

Again, the Autumn King said nothing. The bastard wouldnโ€™t deny it.

Bryce flashed her teeth, searing white rage creeping over her vision. But her voiceย was cold as ice as she said, โ€œTo be honest, Iโ€™d really like to kill you right now. For my mom, but also for Ruhn. And for me, too, I guess.โ€ She nodded to the doorway. โ€œBut we do have a bargain, donโ€™t we? And Iโ€™ve got a hot date today.โ€

Pure death loomed in his eyes. โ€œThe Asteri will kill you.โ€

โ€œMaybe. But youโ€™re not going to help them by telling them about this.โ€ She extended the Starswordย toward his face. He didnโ€™t dare move as she bopped him on the nose with its tip. โ€œItโ€™s a real shame that you unplugged all your electronics and shut off your interweb. Thereโ€™ll be no way to call for help from the basement closet.โ€

He choked on his outrage. โ€œTheโ€”โ€

โ€œOh, donโ€™t worry,โ€ she drawled. โ€œI put a bucket and some water in there for you. Probably enough to last until one of your meatheadย guards wonders whatโ€™s going on in here and comes to check.โ€ She pretended to think. โ€œThey might have a bitch of a time getting through your wards, though.โ€

โ€œAs will you.โ€

โ€œUnfortunately for you, no, I wonโ€™t. You didnโ€™t ward against teleporting. Such a rare gift hereโ€”you didnโ€™t even think to spell against it, did you? Lucky me.โ€

โ€œI would consider your next movesย veryย carefully ifโ€”โ€

โ€œYeah, yeah.โ€ย She pointed with the sword to the door. โ€œLetโ€™s go. Your subterranean abode awaits.โ€

He didnโ€™t try anything as she escorted him down, clearly wary of the power of the weapons she held.

Ever since Vesperus had writhed under the two blades, there had been a thought niggling at the back of Bryceโ€™s mind. Remembering all Ruhn had told her about the Autumn Kingโ€™s obsession with the Starsword, sheโ€™dย gambled that he might know about the dagger, too.

It had been the hardest decision sheโ€™d ever made: to come here, to play this game, rather than to will the portal to take her right to Hunt. But Hunt, as she had feared, had still been in the dungeons, and to appear there would have been too risky. And this knowledge was too important.

But now she knew a little more. The Starsword and Truth-Tellerย could open a portal to nowhere, whatever that was. Now she just needed to learn how to make them do it.

Good thing heโ€™d also told her where on Midgard to find more information about the blades.

The Autumn King balked as Bryce pointed with the sword to the open closet in the basement. Like so much of the house, it was fireproof. The heavy steel door would likely take him a while to break outย of, if he even managed to free himself from the gorsian shackle.

The Autumn King growled as he backed into the closet, โ€œI will kill you and your bitch mother for this.โ€

She motioned him further inside. โ€œIโ€™ll pencil you in for tomorrow.โ€

With that, she slammed the door shut in his face and locked it. He barreled into it a second later, the door shuddering, but it held.

Whistling to herself,ย propping the Starsword on a shoulder, Bryce strode out of the basement.

There was so much more to do. Places to be. People to see.

And more to learn.

Five minutes later, Bryce pulled her phone out of the desk drawer in the Autumn Kingโ€™s study. It was dead, and a quick search of his office showed no hint of charging cords to get it working again. She slipped it into the band of her leggings,ย then picked up the Starsword and Truth-Teller from where sheโ€™d placed them on the desk.

The Autumn Kingโ€™s prism device sat where heโ€™d left it. An idle beam of sunlight shone through the windows, catching in the prism and refracting a rainbow onto one of the golden planets of the orreryโ€”on Midgard. Light pulled apart. Light stripped bare.

In the chaos of those final moments with Vesperus andย these days with the Autumn King, she hadnโ€™t yet had a chance to explore the magic sheโ€™d taken from Sileneโ€™s store.

Sheโ€™d claimed the magic, she supposed, as Silene had surely left it there for future heirs to take. But why hadnโ€™t they? Why hadnโ€™t her son, whoโ€™d heard the truth directly from her mouth? Bryce knew she might never know the answer now. But she could try to learn something about theย power she now held within her.

With a sharp inhale, Bryce rallied her magic. On the exhale, she sent a stream of her starlight into the prism, her power faster than ever before.

Starlight hit the prism, passed through it, andโ€”

โ€œHuh.โ€

It wasnโ€™t a rainbow that emerged from the other side. Not even close.

It took her a moment to process what she was seeing: a gradient beam of starlight. Whereย the rainbow would have been full of color, this one began in shimmering white light and descended into shadow.

An anti-rainbow, as it were. Light falling into darkness, dropletsย of starlight raining from the highest beam into the shadowy band at the bottom, devoured by the darkness below.

Like the fading light of dayโ€”of dusk.

What did it mean? She was pretty sure her light had been pure before,ย but now, with Sileneโ€™s power mixed in โ€ฆ there was darkness there, too. Hidden beneath.

Et in Avallen ego.

Did it make a difference to her power? To her? To now have that layer of darkness?

Bryce buried the questions. She could think about it later. Right now โ€ฆ

She took the notebook on the desk and slid it into the inside pocket of her athletic jacket.

Then she nudged the prism on the deskย a few inches to the side, angling it toward the device across the room. The one the Autumn King said might be able to recapture the light, possibly with more power added to it. But what if light blasted from either prism, meeting in the middle? What would happen in the collision of all that magic?

All that smashing light, those little bits of magic bashing into each other, would produce energy.ย And fuel her up like a battery.

She hoped.

โ€œOnly one way to find out,โ€ she muttered to herself.

With a prayer to Cthona, she sent twin beams of light arcing around the prisms, shooting straight into them.

Twin bursts of that light flared from either prism, gunning for each other. Bands of light falling into darkness, her power stripped to its most elemental, basic form. They shot for eachย other, and where they met, light and darkness and darkness and light slamming into each otherโ€”

Bryce stepped into the explosion in the heart of it.

Stepped into her power.

It lit her up from the inside, lit up her very blood. Her hair drifted above her head, pens and papers and other office detritus flowing upward with it.

Such light and darknessโ€”the power lay in the meeting of theย two ofย them. She understood it now, how the darkness shaped the light.

But all that colliding power โ€ฆ it was the boost she needed.

With a parting middle finger to the floor at her feet and the Autumn King sulking beneath it, she teleported out of the villa to the place she wanted to be the most.

Home. Wherever that was in Midgard.

Because her home was no longer just a physical place, but a person,ย too.

Silene had claimed as much when she spoke of Theia and Aidasโ€”their souls had found each other across worlds, because they were mates. They were each otherโ€™s homes.

And for Bryce, home wasโ€”and always would beโ€”Hunt.


Exhaustion weighed so heavily on Ruhn that despite his aching neck, he couldnโ€™t be bothered to shift into a more comfortable position in the chair. Machines beeped endlessly,ย like metal crickets marking the passing of the night.

He had a vague sense of Declan replacing Flynn. Then Dec left and it was Flynn again.

He didnโ€™t know what woke him. Whether it was some hitch in the machine or some shift in the cadence of her breathing, but โ€ฆ a stillness went through him. He cracked his eyes open, sore and gritty, and looked to the bed.

Lidia still lay unconscious. Ghastlyย pale.

Lidia.

No answer. Ruhn leaned over his knees and rubbed his face. Maybe he could crash on the tiled floor. Itโ€™d be better than contorting himself in the chair.

โ€œMorning,โ€ Flynn said. โ€œWant some coffee?โ€

Ruhn grunted his assent. Flynn clapped him on the back and slipped out, the door hissing open and shut.

Gods, his whole body hurt. His hand โ€ฆ He examined the thin, strangely pale fingers,ย the lack of tattoos or scars. Still weak.ย Like it was still rebuilding the strength stored in his immortal blood on the day of his Drop.

He flexed his fingers, wincing, then slowly sat up and rolled his neck. He was on his third rotation when he looked at the bed and noticed Lidia staring at him.

He went wholly still.

Her golden eyes were hazy with pain and exhaustion, but they were open, andย she was โ€ฆ she was โ€ฆ

Ruhn blinked, making sure he wasnโ€™t dreaming.

Lidia rasped, โ€œAm I dead or alive?โ€

His chest caved in. โ€œAlive,โ€ he whispered, hands beginning to shake.

Lidiaโ€™s lips curled faintly, like it took all her effort to do so. The weight of it hit himโ€”of what she was and who she was and what she had done.

The Hind lay before himโ€”the fuckingย Hind. How could he feel such relief aboutย someone he hated so much? How could he hate someone whose life mattered more to him than his own?

Her glazed eyes shifted from his. Glanced around the windowless room, taking in the machines and her IV. Her nostrils flared, scenting the room beneath the antiseptics and various potions. Something sharpened in her stare. Something like recognition.

Then Lidia asked very quietly, โ€œWhere are we?โ€

The question surprised him. Sheโ€™d planned this escape. Had her injury affected her mind? Gods, he hadnโ€™t even thought about the potential damage from going without oxygen for so long. Ruhn said softly, โ€œOn theย Depth Chargerโ€”โ€

She moved.

Tubing and monitors came flying off her, ripped from her arm so fast blood sprayed. Machines blared, and Ruhn couldnโ€™t act quickly enough to stop her as sheย leapt out of the bed, feet slipping on the floor as she hurtled to the door.

The glass hissed open, revealing Flynn with two cups of coffee in hand. He dodged to the side with a โ€œWhat the fuck!โ€

Lidia barreled out, hardly able to stand, and it was all Ruhn could do to race after her.

The few medwitches in the hall at this hour let out surprised cries at the deer shifter stumbling past in herย pale blue medical gown, careening into the walls with the grace of a newborn colt. Her legs had been rebuiltโ€”sheโ€™d never used these ones before.

โ€œWhat theย Hel,โ€ Flynn said, a step behind Ruhn, smelling of the coffee that had spilled on him when heโ€™d dived out of Lidiaโ€™s way.

Lidia hit the stairwell, and just before the door shut behind her, Ruhn saw her trip, falling to her knees on the steps,ย then surge up again.

โ€œLidia,โ€ he panted, each step singeing his lungs.ย Fuckย his still-healing bodyโ€”

He slammed into the stairwell door, but she was already halfway up, long legs pale and thin against the gray tiles.

She charged up and up, around and around, either unaware or uncaring that Ruhn ran close behind. She threw open an unmarked door, then bolted down the hall. People in civilian clothesย pressed back against the walls at the sight of herโ€”then him. The walls here were covered with bright art and flyers.

Sharp inhales came from Lidia. She was sobbing, craning her neck to see through the windows of the rooms she passed. Ruhn read the words on each wooden door:ย Year Three. Year Seven. Year Five.

She skidded to a halt, gripping a doorjamb. Ruhn reached her side as she shoved herย face up to the glass.

Year Nine.

A group of teenagersโ€”most of them mer, with striped skin and various coloringโ€”sat in rows of desks in the classroom. Lidia pressed a hand against the door. Tears rolled down her cheeks.

And then a boy, golden-haired and blue-eyed, looked away from his teacher and toward the window. The kid wasnโ€™t mer.

The ground slid out from under Ruhn. The boy had Lidiaโ€™sย face. Her coloring.

Another boy to his left, also not mer, had dark hair and golden eyes. Lidiaโ€™s eyes.

Behind them, Flynn grunted with surprise. โ€œYouโ€™ve got brothers on this ship?โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re not my brothers,โ€ Lidia whispered. Her fingers curled on the glass. โ€œTheyโ€™re my sons.โ€

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