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Chapter no 54

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

Bryce lay on the hard, cold ground and tried to pretend she was back in her bed, that a rock wasnโ€™t poking into her hip bone, that her arm was theย mostย comfortable pillowโ€”

From Sathiaโ€™s tossing and turning nearby, she knew the female was having the same amount of success getting settled for the night.

Hunt had fallen asleep right away, his deep breathing now a gentle rhythm that she triedย to focus on, to lure her to sleep. She supposed his warrior days had made him used to rougher conditions, but โ€ฆ no. She didnโ€™t want to think about all the things Hunt had endured so that sleeping on this unforgiving surface was easy for him. Especially when the misplaced guilt from so many of those things was now clearly eating him alive.

It had been easier in the Fae world, as exhaustion hadย been riding her so hard that sheโ€™d had no choiceย butย to pass out. But here, even well protected by Baxian on watch, sleep remained elusive.

Bryce flipped onto her back, her starlight shifting with her, broadcasting every one of her movements like a lighthouse beacon. Fuck, how sheโ€™d sleep withย thatย blazing in her eyesโ€”

She stared miserably up at the ceiling, carved here to resemble the branchesย of a forest. Beautiful, remarkable work that had neverย been documented, never been revealed to the world at large. Only to the few Fae royal males whoโ€™d sought the Starsword.

That blade was currently lying to her left, a thrumming, pulsing presence made worse by Truth-Teller on her right, which pulsed in a counter-beat. Like the blades were talking.

Just fucking great. It was a regular old sleepoverย here. Bryce ignored the chattering blades as best she could, focusing instead on the caves, the carvings.

Females had never been allowed in here. Nowย twoย Fae females had entered. She hoped all the long-dead princes buried in the caves were thrashing in their sarcophagi.

Such fear of femalesโ€”such hatred. Why? Because of Theia? Pelias had been the one to found the Starborn line here on Midgard.ย Had all the bans and restrictions stemmed from his fear of someone like her rising again?

Bryce supposed scholars and activists had spent centuries researching and debating it, so the likelihood of finding an answer herself, even knowing the truth about Theia, was slim to none. It didnโ€™t make it any easier to swallow, though.

So she curled on her side, gazing at the carved river of stars thatย her starlight illuminated. The river of her lineage, meant to last through the millennia. Her bloodline, in its literal, starry form. Her bloodline, running straight through these caves. An inheritance of cruelty and pain.

She wished Danika were with her. If there was one person who might have understood the complexity of such a fucked-up inheritance, of having the future of a people weighingย on her, it would have been Danika.

Danika, whoโ€™d wanted more for this world, for Bryce.

Light it up.

But maybe the Fae and their bloodline didnโ€™t deserve Bryceโ€™s light. Maybe they deserved to fall forever into darkness.


Flynn and Dec, the bastards, didnโ€™t show up to breakfast. Leaving Ruhn and Lidia to dine alone again.

Ruhn had lain awake most of the night, hard and achingโ€”then frettingย about what Bryce and the others were facing in the Cave of Princes. Maybe he should have gone with them. Maybe staying here had been cowardly, even if they did need information from the archives. Flynn and Dec could have found it.

The dining room doors opened as they were finishing their meal, and Ruhn braced himself for his asshole cousins. But a tall Fae male walked in, glancing about beforeย quietly shutting the door behind him. As if he didnโ€™t want to be seen.

โ€œLidia Cervos.โ€ The maleโ€™s voice shook.

Ruhn reached a hand toward the knife in his boot as the male approached the table. Lidia watched him, expression unreadable. Ruhn tried and failed to control his thundering heart. He opened his mouth. To order the stranger to announce himself, to demand he leaveโ€”

โ€œI came to thank you,โ€ย the male said, and reached for his pocket. Ruhn drew his knife, but the male only pulled out a piece of paper. A small portrait of a female and three young children. All Fae.

But Lidia didnโ€™t look. Like she couldnโ€™t bear to.

The male said, โ€œTen years ago, you saved my life.โ€

Ruhn didnโ€™t know what to do with his body. Lidia just stared at the floor.

The male went on, โ€œMy unit was up in theย base at Kelun. It was the middle of the night when you burst in, and I thought we were all dead. But you told us that the Hammer was comingโ€”that we had to run. All seven of us are alive today, with our families, because of you.โ€

Lidia nodded, but it seemed like aย thank you, please stopย motion. Not from any humility or embarrassmentโ€”it was pain on her lowered face. Like she couldnโ€™t endure listening.

He extended the portrait of his family again.

โ€œI thought you might like to see what your choice that night achieved.โ€

Still, Lidia didnโ€™t look up. Ruhn couldnโ€™t move. Couldnโ€™t get a breath down.

The male went on, โ€œThere are a few of us from my unit stillย here, in secret. Prince Cormac convinced us all to join the cause. But we never told him, or anyone, who saved us. We didnโ€™t want to jeopardizeย whatever you were doing. But when we heard through the rumor mill that youโ€”the Hind, I meanโ€”had defied the Asteri, some of us contacted each other again.โ€

The male at last noticed Lidiaโ€™s discomfort and said, โ€œPerhaps it is too soon for you to acknowledge all you have done, the lives you saved, but โ€ฆ I wanted to tell you that we are grateful. We owe you a debt.โ€

โ€œThere is no debt,โ€ Lidia said,ย finally meeting the maleโ€™s eyes. โ€œYou should go.โ€

Ruhn blinked at the dismissal, but Lidia clarified to the stranger, โ€œI assume you have kept your activities and associations secret from Morven. Donโ€™t risk his wrath now.โ€

The male nodded, understanding. โ€œThank you,โ€ he said again, and was gone.

In the silence that followed, Ruhn asked, โ€œYou let them see who you really were?โ€

โ€œIt was eitherย risk my identity being revealed to the world, or let them die,โ€ Lidia said quietly as they headed for the door. โ€œI couldnโ€™t have lived with myself if Iโ€™d chosen the latter.โ€

Ruhn arched a brow. โ€œNot to sound totally callous, but why? There were only seven of them. It wouldnโ€™t have made a difference in the rebellion.โ€

โ€œMaybe not for Ophion as a whole, but it would have made a difference for theirย families.โ€ She didnโ€™t look at him. โ€œPartners, children, parentsโ€”all hoping for their safe return.โ€

โ€œThere had to be more to it than that,โ€ he pushed. โ€œThere was way more than that on the line for you.โ€

She opened the door, and didnโ€™t speak again until theyโ€™d stepped into the hallway. โ€œI guess I hoped that โ€ฆ that if my sons were ever in a similar situation, someone would do the same for them.โ€

His heart twisted at the words, her truth. โ€œYour path was difficult, Lidiaโ€”Hel, I donโ€™t think I could have endured any of it. But what you did was incredible. Donโ€™t lose sight of that.โ€

โ€œI could have saved more,โ€ she said softly, eyes on the floor as they strode down the empty hall. โ€œI should have saved more.โ€


Lidia had no idea what to make of the encounter with the former rebel this morning.

Maybe Urd had sent him to her, to remind her that her choices and sacrifices had, in fact, made some difference in the world. Even if they had gutted her.

The Ocean Queen hadnโ€™t given her a choice in leaving the ship, both all those years ago and now. But here, on this cheerless Fae island โ€ฆ here, at least, were some people whoโ€™d benefitted from that impossible position.

Flynn and Declan hadnโ€™tย yet arrived in the archives, and as the silence became unbearable while she and Ruhn started their search, the only scents the musty catalog cards and Ruhnโ€™s inviting, reassuring smell, Lidia found herself calling down the line of the card catalog, โ€œIโ€™m going to go hunt for some coffee. Want to join me?โ€

Ruhn looked over, and gods, he was handsome. Sheโ€™d never really let herself think about theย sheer beauty of him. Even with his tattoos in ribbons, proof of what Pollux had doneโ€”

His blue eyes flickered, as if noting the direction of her thoughts. โ€œSure, letโ€™s go.โ€

Even the way he spoke, the timbre of his voice โ€ฆ she could luxuriate in that all day. And when heโ€™d touched her last night, licked herโ€”

Did he have any idea how close sheโ€™d come to begging him to strip her naked, to lickย her from head to toe and spend a long while between her legs?

โ€œWhatโ€™s that look about?โ€ Ruhn asked, voice low, thick. She noted every shifting muscle in his shoulders, his arms, his powerful thighs as he walked toward her. The way the sunlight gleamed on his long dark hair, turning it into a silken cascade of night. That buzzed side of his head seemed to be begging for her fingers to slide overย the velvet-soft hair while she nipped at his pointed earโ€”

She began walking as he reached her, because the alternative was to wrap herself around him. โ€œBrain fog. I need a cup of coffee.โ€

Sheโ€™d slept poorly again last night. At first, it had been thanks to the memory of what theyโ€™d done in the hallway, but then her thoughts had shifted to Brann and Actaeon, to that last conversation with them,ย and sheโ€™d wished that she could find herself on that mental bridge, her friend Night sitting in his armchair beside her.

Not just to have someone to talk to, but to haveย himย to talk to. About โ€ฆ everything.

Ruhn fell into step beside her. โ€œWho would have thought the Hind had a caffeine addiction?โ€

His half smile did something funny to her knees. But he said nothing more as they explored theย back hallway of the archives, opening and closing doors. A closet crammed with half-rotted brooms and mops, another closest adorned with trays of various quartz crystalsโ€”no doubt some sort of scholarly recording device needed for this technology-free islandโ€”and a few empty cells with chipped desks that must have once been private studies.

โ€œMorven really needs to invest in a new break room,โ€ Ruhnย said as they finally beheld the kitchen. โ€œThis canโ€™t be good for employee morale.โ€

Lidia took in the dark, dusty space, the wooden counter against the wall littered with mouse droppings, the cobwebs spun under the row of cabinetry. โ€œThis is like some bad medieval clichรฉ,โ€ she said, approaching the filth-crusted cauldron in the darkened hearth. โ€œIs this โ€ฆ gruel?โ€

Ruhn stepped up beside her, andย his scent had her going molten between her legs. โ€œI donโ€™t know why everyone thought Avallen would be some fairy-tale paradise. Iโ€™ve been telling Bryce for years that itโ€™s horrible here.โ€

Lidia turned from the days-old goop in the cauldron and began opening cabinets. A mouse had made a home in a box of stale crackers, but at least there was a sealed jar of tea bags. โ€œI should have known thereย would be no coffee.โ€ She peered around for aย kettle and found Ruhn standing with one by the ancient sink, pumping water into it.

โ€œYour sister,โ€ Lidia said, โ€œwas right to wonder what was going on with this place. Do you think Morvenโ€™s hiding anything?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re the super spy-breaker,โ€ Ruhn said, going to the hearth and tossing a few logs into the ashes. โ€œYou tell me.โ€

The muscles in his forearmย shifted as he grabbed some kindling and flint and lit the fire with a sort of efficiency that shouldnโ€™t have made her mouth water. He glanced over a shoulder, those blazingly blue eyes curious, and she realized heโ€™d asked her a question, and sheโ€™d just been โ€ฆ staring at him. At his arms.

She cleared her throat and went about hunting for two mugs. โ€œMorven never gave the Asteri or me cause to lookย into this place. He always appeared when summoned, and offered his services without question. He was, as far as Rigelus was concerned, a perfect minion.โ€

โ€œSo there was never any discussion about these mists and Morven getting to hide behind them whenever he wanted?โ€ The fire sparked to life, and Ruhn rose, stepping back to monitor it.

โ€œNo,โ€ Lidia said. โ€œI think Rigelus believes the mists toย be some โ€ฆ charming quirk of Midgard and the Fae. Something that added a bit of personality to this world. And since Morven and his forefathers played nice, they were left alone.โ€

Ruhn slid his hands into the pockets of his black jeans. โ€œI guess Iโ€™m surprised that after the truth about Cormac came out, the Asteri still didnโ€™t come poking around Avallen to see what might have caused the princeย to turn rebel.โ€

โ€œMorven slithered right to the Eternal City,โ€ Lidia said, clenching her jaw. โ€œAnd disavowed his son immediately.โ€

โ€œRight, with my dad in tow.โ€

She scanned his face, the pain and anger that he didnโ€™t hide. โ€œYesterday, when I said you should act more like a prince โ€ฆโ€

โ€œDonโ€™t worry about it.โ€

โ€œI know the kind of monsters youโ€™re going up against.โ€ She dipped her eyes to his forearms,ย where the childhood burn scarsย were now mostly gone, but a few shiny pink streaks remained, untouched even by Polluxโ€™s ministrations.

โ€œI can look after myself,โ€ he said tightly, fitting the kettle onto the hook over the fire and swinging it above the flame.

โ€œI know you can,โ€ she tried, failing miserably at explaining. โ€œIโ€™m just โ€ฆ I see how good you are, Ruhn. You wear your emotions on your faceย because youย feelย in a way that Morven and the Autumn King do not. I donโ€™t want them to use that against you. To figure out how to hurt you.โ€

He slowly faced her, those beautiful blue eyes wary, yet tender. โ€œI think thatโ€™s a compliment?โ€

She huffed a laugh, and plopped two tea bags into the least dusty mugs sheโ€™d found. โ€œItโ€™s a compliment, Ruhn.โ€ She met his gaze, and offered him a small smile.ย โ€œTake it and move on.โ€


They found nothing new that day. Flynn and Dec seemed content to let them do the work, because they didnโ€™t show up. Or perhaps theyโ€™d gone off on some important errand and couldnโ€™t let them know, with no way to text or call.

โ€œListen to this,โ€ Lidia said, and Ruhn stopped his endless browsing to walk over to where sheโ€™d opened an ancient scroll. Heโ€™d noticed the way sheโ€™dย been looking at him earlierโ€”the pure desire in her eyes, her scent. It had distracted him so much that heโ€™d barely been able to light the fire in that sorry excuse for a kitchen.

But Ruhn reined in the urge to scent her, to bury his face in her neck and lick that soft skin. Lidia pointed at the unfurled scroll before her. โ€œThe catalog listed this scrollโ€™s title asย The Roots of Earthen Magic.โ€

โ€œAnd?โ€

Her mouth quirked to the side. โ€œI think itโ€™s strange that both Flynn and Sathia canโ€™t stand Avallen.โ€

โ€œWhat does that have to do with defeating the Asteri?โ€

โ€œI figured it might be worthwhile to pull out some of theย earliest writings about earth magicโ€”what role it played in the First Wars, or soon after. This scroll was the oldest I could find.โ€

Flynn had picked a Hel of a time to notย show up. โ€œAnd โ€ฆ?โ€

โ€œThis doesnโ€™t offer more than what we already know about the usual sort of earth magic the Fae possess, but itย doesย mention that those with earth magic were sent ahead to scout lands, to sense where to build. Not only the best geographical locations, but magical ones, too. They could sense the ley linesโ€”the channels of energy running throughout the land, throughout Midgard.ย They told the Asteri to build their cities where several of the lines met, at natural crossroads of power, and picked those places for the Fae to settle, too. But they selected Avallenย justย for the Fae. To be their personal, eternal stronghold.โ€

Ruhn considered. โ€œOkay, so if Flynn and Sathia say this place is dead and rotting โ€ฆโ€

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t line up with the claims recorded here about Avallen.โ€

โ€œBut why would the ancient Fae lie about there being ley lines here?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t think they lied,โ€ Lidia said, and pointed to the maps on the other table, where Dec had discarded them. โ€œI think the Avallen they first visited, with all those ley lines and magic โ€ฆ I think it existed. But then something changed.โ€

โ€œWe knew that already, though,โ€ Ruhn said carefully. โ€œThat something changed.โ€

โ€œYes,โ€ย Lidia said, โ€œbut the mists havenโ€™t. Could that be intentional? They left the mists intact, but the rest was alteredโ€”entire islands gone, the earth itself festering.โ€

โ€œBut that would only have hurt the Faeโ€”and we all know theyโ€™re self-serving bastards. Theyโ€™d never willingly part with any sort of power.โ€

โ€œMaybe they werenโ€™t willing,โ€ Lidia mused. โ€œWhatever happened, the mists kept it hidden fromย the Asteri.โ€

โ€œWhat do you think they wanted to hide? Why rot their own land?โ€

Lidia gestured to the catalog behind them. โ€œMaybe the answerโ€™s in there somewhere.โ€

Ruhn nodded. Even as he wondered if theyโ€™d be ready for whatever that answer might be.


Bryce stood with Baxian on the bank of a second river, surveying the path on its distant side, her star glowing dimly toward it. The river passagewayย was narrow enough that she would have to teleport them across. She kept her starlight blazing bright, the ghouls a whispering malice around them.

There had been nothing helpful in the carvings so far. Fae slaying dragons, Fae dancing in circles, Fae basking in their own glory. Nothing of use. All surface-level shit. Bryce ground her teeth.

โ€œDanika was the same, you know,โ€ Baxian said quietlyย so the others wouldnโ€™t hear. โ€œWith the wolves. She hated what so many of them were, and wanted to understand how they had become that way.โ€

Bryce turned toward him, her starlight flaring a bit brighter as it illuminated the downward sweep of the river. It dimmed as she faced the Helhound fully. โ€œThe wolves are by and largeย wayย better than the Fae.โ€

โ€œMaybe.โ€ Baxian glanced to her. โ€œBut what ofย your brother? Or Flynn and Declan?โ€ A nod to where Sathia, Tharion, and Hunt sat together. โ€œWhat of her? Do you think theyโ€™re all a lost cause?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ Bryce admitted. Baxian waited. She let out a long breath. โ€œAnd the Fae I met in the other world werenโ€™t so bad, either. I might have even been friends with them if circumstances had been different.โ€

โ€œSo the Fae arenโ€™t inherently bad.โ€

โ€œOf courseย not,โ€ Bryce hissed. โ€œBut most of the ones in this worldโ€”โ€

โ€œYou know every Fae on Midgard?โ€

โ€œI can judge them by their collective actions,โ€ Bryce snapped. โ€œHow they locked people out during the attackโ€”โ€

โ€œYeah, that was fucked up. But until Holstrom defied orders, the wolves werenโ€™t helping, either.โ€

โ€œWhatโ€™s your point?โ€

โ€œThat the right leader makes all the difference.โ€

Bryce recoiled at theย words:ย the right leader.ย Baxian went on, โ€œThe Valbaran Fae might not be the most charitable people in our world, but think about whoโ€™s led them for the last five hundred years. And long before that. Same with the wolves. The Prime isnโ€™t bad, but heโ€™s only one decent guy in a string of brutal leaders. Danika was working to change that, and she was killed for it.โ€

โ€œRigelus told me they killed herย to keep the information about their true nature contained,โ€ Bryce said.

Baxian cut her a look. โ€œAnd you believe everything Rigelus says? Besides, why canโ€™t it be both? They wanted to keep their secrets to themselves, yes, but also to destroy the kernel of hope Danika offered. Not only to the wolves, but all of Midgard. That things could be different. Better.โ€

Bryce massaged her aching chest,ย the starlight unusually dim. โ€œThey definitely would have killed her for that, too.โ€

Baxianโ€™s face tightened with pain. โ€œThen make her death count for something, Bryce.โ€

He might as well have punched her in the face. โ€œAnd what,โ€ she demanded, โ€œtry to redeem theย Fae? Get them some self-help books and make them sit in circles to talk about their feelings?โ€

His face was like stone. โ€œIf you thinkย that would be effective, sure.โ€

Bryce glowered. But she loosed a long breath. โ€œIf we survive this shit with the Asteri, Iโ€™ll think about it.โ€

โ€œThey might go hand in hand,โ€ he said.

โ€œIf you start spewing some bullshit about rallying a Fae army to take on the Asteriโ€”โ€

โ€œNo. This isnโ€™t some epic movie.โ€ He cocked his head. โ€œBut if you think you could manageโ€”โ€

Bryce, despite herself, laughed.ย โ€œSure. Iโ€™ll add it to my to-do list.โ€

Baxian smiled slightly. โ€œI just wanted you to know that Danika was thinking about a lot of the same things.โ€

โ€œI wish sheโ€™d talked to me about it.โ€ Bryce sighed. โ€œAbout a lot of stuff.โ€

โ€œShe wanted to,โ€ he said gently. โ€œAnd I think putting that Hornย in your back was her way of perhaps โ€ฆ manipulating you onto a similar path.โ€

โ€œTypical Danika.โ€

โ€œShe sawย it in youโ€”what you could mean for the Fae.โ€ His voice grew unbearably sad. โ€œShe was good about seeing that kind of thing in people.โ€

Bryce touched his arm. โ€œIโ€™m glad she had you to talk to. I really am.โ€

He gave her a sorrowful smile. โ€œIโ€™m glad she had you, too. I couldnโ€™t be there with her, couldnโ€™t leave Sandriel, and Iโ€™m so fucking grateful that she had someone there who loved her unconditionally.โ€

Bryceโ€™s throat closed up. She might have offered some platitude about them reuniting in the afterlife, but โ€ฆ the afterlife was a sham. And Danikaโ€™s soul was already gone.

โ€œGuys,โ€ Hunt said from where he and the others had risen to their feet. โ€œWe need to keep going.โ€

โ€œWhy?โ€ Bryce asked, walking over. Her starlight dimmed, as if telling her she was headed in the wrong direction.ย I know,ย she toldย it silently.

โ€œWe shouldnโ€™t linger, even with the Magical Starborn Princess watching over us,โ€ Tharion said, winking. โ€œI think itโ€™s getting too tempting for the ghouls.โ€ He jerked his head toward the writhing mass of shadows barely visible within the mists. Their hissing had risen to such a level that it reverberated against her bones.

โ€œAll right,โ€ Bryce said, resisting the urge to plug her earsย against the unholy din. โ€œLetโ€™s go.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s the first wise decision youโ€™ve made,โ€ drawled a deep male voice from the tunnel behind them.

And there was nowhere to run, nothing to do but stand and face the threat, as Morven stalked out of the mists. And behind him, flame simmering in his eyes, strode the Autumn King.

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