Half resting on the inner ledge, I stared out the window at the torches beyond the Rise, eyes aching and weary with the pressure of tears that wouldnโt fall.
I wished I could cry, but it was like the cord that had connected me to my emotions had been severed. It wasnโt that Vikterโs death didnโt hurt. Gods, it ached and throbbed every time I even thought his name, but that was almost all Iโd felt in the week and a half since his death. A sharp slice of pain that cut through my chest. No sorrow. No dread. Just pain and angerโฆso much anger.
Maybe it was because I hadnโt gone to his funeral. I hadnโt made it to any of the funerals, and there had been so many dead that ten or more were held at a timeโor so I had heard from Tawny.
It hadnโt been my choice not to attend the services. Iโd been asleep. Iโd been sleeping a lot this week. Entire days just gone in a blur of sleep and drugged consciousness. I didnโt even remember Tawny helping me bathe away the blood and gore or how I got back to bed. I knew sheโd talked to me then, but I couldnโt recall a single thing sheโd said. I had this weird impression that I hadnโt been alone while I slept. There was a sensation of callused palms against my cheek, fingers brushing hair back from my face. I had the faintest memory of Hawke talking to me, whispering when the room was filled with sunlight and when it had been taken over by night. Even now, I could feel the touch against my face, my hair. It had been the only grounding connection Iโd had while I slept.
I squeezed my lids shut until the phantom sensations vanished, and then I reopened my eyes.
It wasnโt until about four days after the attack on the Rite that Iโd learned that Hawke had used some kind of pressure point on my neck to render me unconscious. Iโd woken up sometime later in my room, unable to
use my voice. The screamingโฆit had torn up my throat. Hawke had been there, so had Tawny, the Duchess, and a Healer.
I was offered a sleeping draught, and for the first time in my life, I took it. I mightโve kept taking it if it hadnโt been for Hawke removing the powder from my room four days ago.
It was then I learned that the attack on the Rise hadnโt been the only one that night. The Descenters had set fire to several of the opulent homes along Radiant Row, drawing guards from the Rise and the castle. That was where Hawke had been after heโd left the garden, which explained the soot on his face.
The fires had been a smart move by the Descenters. I had to give them that. With the guards distracted, the Descenters were able to move through the night, taking out guards stationed around the castle before they even knew they were there. They were able to commence wholesale slaughter before the guards whoโd gone to Radiant Row could even be summoned.
No one could be positive what message the attack on the Rite had been meant to send, or even if they had been searching for me. None of the Descenters were taken alive that night, and any of those who had escaped, had slipped back into the shadows.
The Ascended had done what the Duchess said they would do. They got their hands dirty, but their assistance had come too late. Most whoโd been left in that room had died. Only a few had survived, most so traumatized that they couldnโt even recall what had happened.
Well over a hundred had died that night. Gods, Iโd rather be asleep than awake.
At least when I slept, I didnโt think about the Duke burning from where he had been hung and impaled. I couldnโt think about Dafinaโs one blue eye, or how Loren had tried to go back to her friend, only to be struck down. I wouldnโt remember how it had felt to crawl over people who were dead or dying, unable to do anything to help him. The metal wolf masks didnโt haunt my sleep. Neither did that smile Vikter had given me, or how heโd told me that he was proud. Asleep, I didnโt think about how the last words heโd ever spoken were a plea for forgiveness for him not protecting me. And I couldnโt remember how my gift had failed me when I needed it the most.
I wished I had never said what I did in that garden.
I wishedโฆI wished Iโd never gone to the Rite or gone out into the willow. If Iโd been in my room where I was expected to be, we wouldnโt have been in the thick of it. The attack still wouldโve happened, and people still wouldโve died, but maybe Vikter would still be here.
However, a tiny voice in the back of my mind whispered that the moment Vikter learned of what was happening, he wouldโve gone down there anyway, and I wouldโve followed. Death had come for him, and that voice also whispered that death wouldโve found a way.
In the days I spent lost to the deep nothingness, I couldnโt acknowledge what Iโd done to Lord Mazeen and how I felt about it now.
Or how Iย didnโtย feel.
There wasnโt an ounce of regret. My nails dug into my palms. I would do it again. Gods, I wished I could, and that disturbed me.
When I was out of it, I didnโt think, and I didnโt care about anything.
But now I was awake, and all I had were my thoughts, the pain, and the anger.
I wanted to find every single Descenter and do to them what Iโd done to the Lord.
Iโd tried the second night I was awake. I donned my cloak and mask and grabbed the short sword Vikter had given me years before since my dagger was lost to the chaos of that room the night of the Rite. Iโd planned to pay Agnes a visit.
Sheโd known. Nothing could convince me otherwise. Sheโd known, and her attempts to warn me hadnโt been enough. The blood that had been spilled that night was on her handsโVikterโs blood tainted her skin. My mentor and friend, whoโd drunk her hot cocoa and comforted her. She couldโve stopped all of this.
Hawke had caught up to me halfway through Wisherโs Grove and all but dragged me back to the castle. The chest of weapons had been removed from my room at that point, and the servantsโ access barred from the stairwell.
And so, I sat. I waited.
Each evening Iโd been awake, I waited for the Duchess to summon me. For punishment to be rendered. Because Iโd done something so expressly forbidden that it made everything Iโd ever done before an afterthought.
Iโd killed an Ascended.
Maiden or not, there had to be some kind of punishment for that. I had to be found unworthy.
A knock drew my gaze from the window. The door opened, and Hawke strode in, closing the door behind him. He was dressed in the uniform of the guards, all black except for the white Royal Guard mantle.
No one had replaced Vikterโs position yet. I didnโt know why. Maybe after seeing what I was capable of, the Duchess realized that I no longer needed as much protection. But protecting myself would be kind of hard to do without access to any weapons. Or maybe it was the fact that Iโd already gone through three guards in one year. Or it could be because so many had died during the attack, and they were shorthanded.
My back tensed as Hawke and I stared at one another from across the room.
Things had been weird between us.
I wasnโt sure if it was because of what had happened in the garden and then with Vikter, or if it had been what Iโd done in that room after Vikterโs death. It couldโve been all of that. But he was quiet when he was around me, and I had no idea what he was feeling or thinking. My gift was hidden away behind a wall so thick that it couldnโt even crack.
He said nothing as he stood there. Just crossed his arms over his chest and stared at me. Heโd done that a time or five hundred since I woke. Probably because when he tried to talk to me, all I did was stare at him.
Which was also probably why things were weird.
My eyes narrowed as the silence stretched between us. โWhat?โ โNothing.โ
โThen why are you here?โ I demanded. โDo I need a reason?โ
โYes.โ
โI donโt.โ
โAre you just checking to make sure I havenโt figured a way out of the room?โ I challenged.
โI know you canโt get out of this room, Princess.โ โDonโt call me that,โ I snapped.
โIโm going to take a second to remind myself that this is progress.โ My brows furrowed. โProgress with what?โ
โWith you,โ he answered. โYouโre not being very nice, but at least youโre talking. Thatโs progress.โ
โIโm not being mean,โ I shot back. โI just donโt like to be called that.โ โUh-huh,โ he murmured.
โWhatever.โ I tore my gaze from his, feelingโฆI didnโt know what I was feeling. I squirmed, uncomfortable, and it had nothing to do with how hard the stone was beneath me.
I wasnโt mad at Hawke. I was just angry withโฆeverything. โI get it,โ he said quietly.
When I looked at him, I saw that heโd moved closer, and I hadnโt heard him. He was only a few feet from me now. โYou do?โ I lifted my brows. โYou understand?โ
Hawke stared at me, and in that moment, I felt something other than anger and pain. Shame burned through me like acid. Of course, Hawke knew, at least to some extent. But still, he probably knew better than a lot of other people.
โIโm sorry.โ
โFor what?โ The hardness had eased from my tone.
โI said this to you before, shortly after everything, but I donโt think you heard me,โ he said. I thought about those vague sensations of him being beside me. โI shouldโve said it again sooner. Iโm sorry for everything that has happened. Vikter was a good man. Despite the last words we exchanged, I respected him, and Iโm sorry that I couldnโt do anything.โ
Every muscle in my body locked up. โHawkeโโ
โI donโt know if me being thereโlike I shouldโve beenโwouldโve changed the outcome,โ he went on, โbut Iโm sorry that I wasnโt. That there was nothing I could do by the time Iย didย get there. Iโm sorryโโ
โYou have nothing to apologize for.โ I rose from the ledge, my joints stiff from sitting for so long. โI donโt blame you for what happened. Iโm not mad at you.โ
โI know.โ He looked above me and out the window to the Rise. โBut that doesnโt change that I wish I wouldโve done something that couldโve prevented this.โ
โThere are a lot of things I wish I wouldโve done differently,โ I admitted, staring at my hands. โIf Iโd gone to my roomโโ
โIf youโd gone to your room, this still wouldโve happened. Donโt put this on yourself.โ A heartbeat later, I felt his fingers under my chin. He lifted my gaze to his. โYouโre not to blame for this, Poppy. Not at all. If
anything, Iโโ He cut himself off with a low curse. โDonโt take on the blame that belongs to others. You understand?โ
I did, but that changed nothing, so I said, โTen.โ His brows knitted. โWhat?โ
โTen times, youโve called me Poppy.โ
One side of his lips tipped up. The faintest trace of the dimple appeared. โI like calling you that, but I like calling youย Princessย more.โ
โShocker,โ I replied.
He dipped his chin. โItโs okay, you know?โ โWhat is?โ
โEverything that youโre feeling,โ he said. โAnd everything that youโre
not.โ
My breath caught as my chest squeezed, and it wasnโt just pain doing
that. It was something lighter, something warmer. How he knew was proof that, in some way, heโd been where I was right now. I didnโt know if I moved or if he did, but my arms were suddenly around him, and he was holding me just as tightly as I was him. My cheek was plastered to his chest, below his heart, and when his chin dropped to the top of my head, I shuddered in relief. The tender hug didnโt fix the world. The pain and anger were still there. But Hawke was so warm, and his embrace wasโฆgods, it felt likeย hope, like a promise that I wouldnโt always feel this way.
We stood there for some time before Hawke pulled back, and as he did, he smoothed the unruly strands of hair back from my face, sending a shiver of recognition through me.
โI did come here with a purpose,โ he said. โThe Duchess needs to speak with you.โ
I blinked. So, it was time. โAnd youโre just telling me now?โ โFigured what we had to say to each other was far more important.โ
โI donโt think the Duchess would agree,โ I told him, and the expression on his face said that he didnโt really care. โItโs time for me to find out how Iโll be punished for what Iโฆfor what I did to the Lord, isnโt it?โ
Hawke frowned at me. โIf I thought I was delivering you for punishment, I wouldnโt be taking you there.โ
Surprise flickered through me, proving it was yet another emotion I could feel. โWhere would you take me?โ
โSomewhere far from here,โ he said, and I believed him. Heโd do what no one else would, not evenโฆnot even Vikter. โYouโre being summoned
because word has come from the capital.โ
It felt strange when Tawny arrived to help me with the veil, to be wearing it after everything, and even more weird to realize that the castle looked the same as it had before the attack. All except for the Great Hall. It had been barricaded from what I could gather. One brief glance at the room Vikter had died in told me that the door had been replaced.
That was all I needed to know.
The Duchess wore white, like I did, but while I wore the clothing of the Maiden, she wore the color of mourning. She sat behind what had been the Dukeโs desk, looking over a piece of paper. Not the desk that had been in the Dukeโs more private office. If weโd been meeting there, I had no idea what I wouldโve done.
I still couldnโt believe how the Duke had been killed. Surely, the weapon had been coincidental, but it still pecked away at something in the back of my mind.
The Duchess glanced up as the door closed behind us. She lookedโฆ different. It wasnโt the color, or that her hair was pulled back sharply from her face in a simple twist. It was something else, but I couldnโt place it as I walked past the benches. There were two other people in the room, the Commander, and a Royal Guard.
Her gaze flickered over me, and I wondered if she could tell that I had left my hair down beneath the veil. โI hope youโre doing well.โ She paused. โOr at least better than the last time I saw you.โ
โI am well,โ I said, and that felt like neither a lie nor the truth.
โGood. Please. Take a seat.โ She gestured at the bench, and I did as she asked.
Tawny sat beside me, but Hawke remained standing to my left. I did everything in my power not to think about how Vikter belonged here.
โA lot has happened while youโve beenโฆresting,โ the Duchess started. โThe Queen and King have been notified of recent events.โ She tapped one long finger on the parchment.
The message must have been sent through carrier pigeon to the capital, but only a Huntsman would deliver a Royal message here. He had to have ridden night and day, changing horses along the way to have made it back. It generally took several weeks to travel that distance.
โAfter the abduction attempt and the attack on the Rite, they no longer believe itโs safe for you here,โ the Duchess announced. โThey have summoned you back to Carsodonia.โ
I knew this was coming. Since the abduction attempt, Iโd accepted that there was a high chance that the Queen would summon me to the capital, and I knew that could mean an earlier than expected Ascension. That was probably why I wasnโt surprised, but it didnโt explain the lack of dread and fear.
All I felt wasโฆacceptance. Maybe even a little relief because this castle was now the last place I wanted to be, and I wasnโt thinking about what could happen when I got to the capital. I wasnโt even thinking about seeing Ian again. I knew what else I felt, though. And that was confusion.
โIโm sorry,โ I blurted out. โHow am I not punished?โ
Hawke turned to me, and without looking, I knew he probably had the same expression on his face that Vikter would have had.
The Duchess didnโt respond for a long moment until she said, โI assume youโre speaking about Lord Mazeen.โ
My stomach tightened as I nodded.
Her head tilted. โDo you think you should be punished?โ
I started to respond as I wouldโve two weeks ago before the attack, back when I was still trying so damn hard to be what I was beginning to believe I was never meant to be. โI donโt think I can answer that question.โ
โWhy not?โ Curiosity marked her features.
โBecauseโฆthere was a history there.โ I settled on that, aware of how Tawny shifted so her leg pressed against mine. I drew in a deep breath. โI know Iย shouldย be punished.โ
โYou should,โ she agreed. โHe was an Ascended, one of our oldest.โ
Tension radiated from Hawke as I felt him move just the slightest bit toward me.
โYou cut him up like a butcher would a slab of meat,โ she continued. I shouldโve felt horror or disgustโanything other than the surge of gratification that swamped me. โBut Iโm sure you had your reasons.โ
My mouth dropped open.
The Duchess leaned back as she picked up a quill. โIโve known Bran for many, many years, and there is very little about hisโฆpersonality that I am unaware of. I had hoped that he wouldโve known better given what you are. Apparently, I was wrong.โ
I tipped forward. โDid youโ?โ
โI would not ask that question,โ she interrupted, her unflinching stare locking on mine. โYou would not like my answer, nor would you understand. Neither would I expect you to. Take this as a much-needed lesson, Penellaphe. Some truths do nothing but destroy and decay what they do not obliterate. Truths do not always set one free. Only a fool who has spent their entire life being fed lies believes that.โ
Chest rising and falling, I snapped my mouth shut and sat back. She knew. Sheโd always known about the Lord and the Duke. Maybe not what theyโd done exactly, but she knew. My fingers dug into the skirt of my gown.
โYouโre the Maiden,โ she continued. โThat is why you will not be punished. Count your blessings, and do not speak of them ever again.โ A muscle twitched under her eye. โAnd do yourself a favor. Do not waste another moment thinking of either of them. I know I will not.โ
I stared at her as her white-knuckled grip on the quill eased. It struck me then. If the Duke had treated me as he did, why had I assumed he would treat his wife any differently? After all, Iโd never seen them being loving towards one another, and that went beyond the almost cool nature of the Ascended. Iโd never seen them touch. Being an Ascended didnโt mean you were no longer in a position to be abused.
Lowering my gaze, I nodded. โWhenโฆwhen do I leave for the capital?โ
โTomorrow morning,โ she answered. โYou will leave with the rise of the sun.โ