Nestaโs legs gave out on step three thousand.
Panting, sweat running down her back, down her stomach, she braced her hands on her trembling thighs and closed her eyes.
The dream had been the same. Her fatherโs face, filled with love and fear, then with nothing as he died. The crack of his neck. Hybernโs sly, cruel smile.
Cassian and Azriel hadnโt been at dinner, and sheโd received no explanation for it. They were probably either at the river house or out in the city, and sheโd been surprised to find herself wishing for the company. Surprised to find that the silence of the dining room pressed on her.
Of course she wouldnโt be invited out. Sheโd made a point to be as unpleasant as possible for well over a year now. And more than that, they had no obligation to include her in everything.
No one had any obligation to include her at all. Or the desire to, apparently.
Her panting echoed off the red stone. Sheโd awoken from the nightmare in a cold sweat, and had been halfway here before she realized where she was going. If she even made it to the bottom, where would she go? Especially in her nightgown.
She could still see her father behind her closed eyes. Felt every flash of horror and pain and fear sheโd endured during those months surrounding the
war.
She had to find the Dread Troveโsomehow.
Sheโd failed every task theyโd ever given her. Had failed to stop the wall from being blasted apart, failed to save the Illyrian legion from the Cauldronโs incinerating blowโ
Nesta shut down that train of thought.
Something thudded on the step beside her, and she blinked to find a glass of water.
โThank you,โ she said, drinking deep, letting its coolness settle her further. She asked into the dimness, โHave you read any books by Sellyn Drake?โ
The House didnโt answer, which she assumed amounted to a no. โA friend is bringing me one of her novels tomorrow. Iโll share it with you when Iโm done.โ
Nothing. Then a cool breeze ran down the stairwell, soothing her sweaty brow. โThank you,โ she said again, leaning into the breeze.
Something else clinked beside her on the step, and she found two flat oval stones and three chunks of age-browned boneโanklebones of some ovine beast. Her mouth dried out. Bones and stonesโfor scrying. โI canโt,โ she rasped.
That breeze knocked the bones together, their clicking like a question thrown into the stairwell.ย Why?
โBad things happened the last time. The Cauldronย lookedย at me. And took Elain.โ She couldnโt stop her body from locking up. โI canโt endure it, risk it. Not even for this.โ
The bones and stones vanished, along with that cooling breeze.
Nesta began the ascent, groaning softly. With each step, she could have sworn she tasted disappointment in the air.
โNesta has to start looking for the Trove,โ Amren said, swirling her wine in its glass as she sat across from Cassian at the river houseโs massive dining table. Their monthly court dinner, as usual, had turned into hours of talking
around this table, and multiple bottles of wine later, as the clock ticked toward one in the morning, none of them showed any signs of moving.
Only Feyre had gone to bed. Being pregnant made her unbearably sleepy, sheโd groused. So tired that she needed naps throughout the day, and was asleep most nights by nine.
Cassian met Amrenโs gray stare. โNestaโs been looking. Donโt push her.โ
Rhys said from where he lounged at the head of the table, โSheโs had the priestesses researching for her. Iโd hardly call that looking.โ
Varian, seated beside Amren, his arm draped over the back of her seat, asked, โYou still havenโt asked Helion to research the Trove in his libraries?โ Varian was the only person outside of the Night Courtโand Eris
โwhom Rhys had allowed to know of their search. But it had come with a risk: Varian served Tarquin, High Lord of the Summer Court. Though he had promised Rhys not to say anything about it to Tarquin without prompting, if Tarquin asked Varian about it, heโd find his allegiances held in a precarious balance.
Tarquin and Rhysโs relationship had healed since the war, but not enough for Rhys to trust the male with knowledge of the Trove. And Cassian, whoโd gotten into one tiny little fight that might have resulted in one tiny little building being destroyed the last time heโd been in the Summer Court, was inclined to agree. Not about Tarquin. No, he liked the male. And liked Varian a great deal. But there were wicked people in the Summer Courtโin every courtโand he did not trust that they were as kind as their ruler.
โHelion is a last resort,โ Rhys said, sipping his wine. โWhich we may come to in a matter of days if Nesta does not at least attempt a scrying.โ The last words were directed toward Cassian. โIโd have Elain try her hand before we approach him, though.โ
Elain had already departed with Feyre, claiming she had to be up with the dawn to tend to an elderly faerieโs garden. Cassian didnโt exactly know why he suspected this wasnโt true. There had been some tightness in Elainโs face as sheโd said it. Normally when she made such excuses, Lucien was around, but the male remained in the human lands with Jurian and Vassa.
Cassian countered, โNesta will do it, if only to keep Elain from putting herself at risk. But you have to understand that Nesta was deeply affected by what happened during the warโElain was taken by the Cauldron after she scried. You canโt blame her for hesitating.โ
Amren said, โWe do not have the time to wait for Nesta to decide. I say we approach Elain tomorrow. Better to have both of them working on it.โ
Azriel stiffened, an outright sign of temper from him as he said quietly, โThere is an innate darkness to the Dread Trove that Elain should not be exposed to.โ
โBut Nesta should?โ Cassian growled. Everyone stared at him.
He swallowed, offering an apologetic glance to Az, who shrugged it off. Amren drained her wine and said to Cassian, โNesta has a week. One more week to find the Trove with her own methods. Then we seek out other routes.โ She threw a nod toward Azriel. โIncluding Elain, who is more than capable of defending herself against the darkness of the Trove, if she
chooses to. Donโt underestimate her.โ
Cassian and Azriel looked to Rhys, who merely sipped from his own wine. Amrenโs order held. As Rhysโs Second in this court, short of Rhys overruling her, her word was law.
Cassian glowered at Amren. โItโs not right to wield Elain as a threat to manipulate Nesta into scrying.โ
โThere are harsher ways to convince Nesta, boy.โ
Cassian leaned back in his chair. โYouโre a fool if you think threats will make her obey you.โ
Everyone tensed again. Even Varian.
Amrenโs lips spread in a sharp grin. โWe are on the cusp of another war. We let the Cauldron slip from our hands in the last one and it nearly cost us everything.โ Amrenโs new Fae form was proof of thatโsheโd yielded her immortal, otherworldly self to remain in this body. No gray fire glowed in her eyes. She was mortal, in the way that High Fae were mortal. Varianโs fingers tangled in the blunt ends of her hair, as if to reassure himself that she was here, sheโd remained with him. โWe must head off this potential
disaster before we lose the advantage. If we need to manipulate Nesta into scrying, even by using Elain against her, then weโll do what is necessary.โ
His stomach tightened. โI donโt like it.โ
โYou donโt have to like it,โ Amren said. โYou just have to shut up and do as youโre told.โ
โAmren,โ Rhys said, the word laced with reprimand and warning.
Amren didnโt so much as blink in remorse, but Varian frowned at her. โWhat?โ she snapped.
The Prince of Adriata gave her an exasperated smile. โHavenโt we talked about this? About โฆ being nice?โ
Amren rolled her eyes. But her face softenedโever so slightlyโas she met Cassianโs stare again. โA week. Nesta gets a week.โ
Three days passed. Emerie came to each lesson, and while Gwyn had mostly caught up to Nestaโs progress, Emerie would need more work. So Nesta and Gwyn partnered with each other, going through the sets of exercises that Cassian showed them before he worked one-on-one with Emerie on her balance and mobility.
None of them minded, not when Emerie had been right about the Sellyn Drake books. Nesta had stayed up two nights in a row reading the authorโs first novel, which was as toe-curlingly erotic as she could have wished. And, as promised, Emerie had brought a copy of one of Drakeโs tamer novels for Gwyn, who had arrived blushing the next morning and told Emerie that if the book was considered tame, then she could only imagine the content of the others.
After that first day, Emerie stayed for the entire length of their lessons, which had now officially stretched into a full three hours, deciding that her morning business traffic was slow enough to risk it. So they trained, and between their exercises they talked about books, and Nesta woke on the fourth morning and found herself โฆ excited to see them again.
She was shelving a tome in the library that afternoon when Gwyn found her. Thanks to Gwynโs lesson each morning, sheโd been busier in the afternoons, which meant that Nesta rarely saw her in the library save for
when Gwyn was running through the stacks, hunting for some book or another for Merrill. Occasionally, Nesta heard a lovely, soaring snippet of song from some distant corner of the libraryโthe sole indicator that Gwyn was near.
But that afternoon, it was Gwynโs panting that announced her presence seconds before she appeared, her eyes wide enough that Nesta went on alert, scanning the dimness behind the priestess. โWhat?โ Had the darkness below chased her?
Gwyn mastered herself enough to say, โI donโt know how, but Merrill learned you swapped the book out.โ She gasped for air as she pointed up to a level high above. โYou should go.โ
Nesta frowned. โWho cares? Iโm not going to let her scare me off like some errant child.โ
Gwyn blanched. โWhen sheโs in a fury, it isโโ
โIt is what, Gwyneth Berdara?โ crooned a female voice from the stacks. โWhen Iโm in a fury, it isย what?โ
Gwyn winced, turning slowly as the white-haired beauty appeared from the gloom. Her pale robes flowed behind her as if on a phantom wind, and the blue stone atop her hood flickered with light. Gwyn bowed her head, face paling. โI meant nothing by it, Merrill.โ
Nesta ground her teeth at the bow, the fear on Gwynโs face, in her soft words.
Priestesses halted along the railings above them.
Merrill turned her remarkable eyes to Nesta. โI do not appreciate thieves and liars.โ
โNeither do I,โ Nesta said coolly, lifting her chin.
Merrill hissed. โYou tried to play me for a fool in my very own office.โ She didnโt so much as look at Gwyn, who cringed away.
โI donโt know what youโre talking about.โ
โOh? You mean when I went to see the book that my inane assistant hadย incorrectlyย given meโoh, yes, I knew about that from the startโand found the proper volume instead, withย yourย scent upon it, it wasnโt you who did it?โ Merrill looked between Gwyn and Nesta. โIt is inexcusable to ask others to make up for your own stupidity and carelessness.โ
Gwynโs fear grated against her senses. Nesta said, voice dropping, โGwyn did no such thing. And who cares? Are you so bored down here that you have to invent these dramas to entertain yourself?โ She waved a hand to the open walkway behind Merrill. โWeโre both busy. Clear off and let us work in peace.โ
Someone gasped on a level above.
Merrill laughed, that phantom wind around her whispering. โDo you not know who I am, girl?โ
โI know that you are keeping us from our work,โ Nesta said with that flat calm she knew made people irate. โAnd I know that this is a library, but you hoard books like it is your own personal collection.โ
Merrill bared her teeth. โYou think I do not knowย you? The human girl who was shoved into the Cauldron and came out High Fae. The female who slew the King of Hybern and held up his head like a trophy as his blood rained upon her.โ
Surprise lit Gwynโs face at the graphic description. Nesta didnโt allow herself to so much as swallow.
โThe wind whispers to me even here, under so much stone,โ Merrill said. โIt finds its way in through the cracks and murmurs the goings-on of the world in my ear.โ Merrill snorted. โDo you think you are entitled to do as you please now?โ
Nestaโs power rumbled in her veins. She stomped on it, shoved it down and strangled it. โI think you like to hear yourself talk too much.โ
โI am descended from Rabath, Lord of the Western Wind,โ Merrill seethed. โUnlike Gwyneth Berdara, I am no lackey to be dismissed.โ
To hell with this witch. To hell with restraint and hiding.
Nesta let enough of her power simmer to the surface that she knew her own eyes glowed. Let it crackle, even as she ignored its wild, unholy bellowing.
Gwyn had backed away a step. Even Merrill blinked as Nesta said, โWith a fancy title like that, surely such a petty grudge should be beneath you.โ
Nesta smiled, savage and cruel. Merrill only glanced between her and Gwyn before saying, โGet back to your work, nymph.โ
Wind snapping at her heels, Merrill stalked into the gloom.
Nesta dropped the thread of her power, quelling its music and roaring with an iron hand.
But it wasnโt until Merrillโs brisk wind faded that Gwyn leaned against a stack, rubbing her hands over her face. The priestesses whoโd been watching launched into movement again, their whispering filling the library.
Nesta asked into the rustling quiet, โNymph?โ
Gwyn lowered her hands, noted the lack of glowing power in Nestaโs eyes, and sighed in relief. But her voice remained casual. โMy grandmother was a river-nymph who seduced a High Fae male from the Autumn Court. So Iโm a quarter nymph, but itโs enough for this.โ Gwyn gestured to her large eyesโblue so clear it could have been the shallow seaโand her lithe body. โMy bones are slightly more pliant than ordinary High Faeโs, but who cares about that?โ
Perhaps that was why Gwyn was so good at the balancing and movement.
Gwyn went on, โMy mother was unwanted by either of their people. She could not dwell in the rivers of the Spring Court, but was too untamed to endure the confinement of the forest house of Autumn. So she was given in her childhood to the temple at Sangravah, where she was raised. She partook in the Great Rite when she was of age, and I, weโmy sister and I, I meanโwere the result of that sacred union with a male stranger. She never found out who he was, for the magic chose him that night, and no one ever showed up to ask about twin girls. We were raised in the temple as well. I never left its grounds until โฆ until I came here.โ
Such pain filled Gwynโs eyes then. Such terrible pain that Nesta knew not to ask about her mother, or the twin sister.
Gwyn shook her head, as if dispelling the memory. She spread her fingers. โMy twin had the webbed fingers of the nymphsโI donโt.โ
Had.
Again, Gwyn sighed. โMerrill will make your life a living hell, you know.โ
โShe can try,โ Nesta said mildly. โItโd be difficult to make it any worse.โ
โWell, now we have a common enemy. Merrill will never forget this.โ She nodded toward the railings where the priestesses had been. โThough I suppose they wonโt, either. Itโs not every day someone stands up to her. Only Clotho can really make her fall in line, but Clotho lets her have her way, mostly because Merrill throws those windy tantrums that can send everyoneโs manuscripts scattering.โ
โAnytime you need someone to knock Merrill down a few pegs, let me know.โ
Gwyn smiled slightly. โNext time, perhaps Iโll have the courage to do it myself.โ
It seemed the priestesses didnโt forget what Nesta had done.
Nesta, Gwyn, and Emerie were going through their opening stretches, Cassian stone-faced and eagle-eyed to catch any mistake, when footsteps scuffed in the archway beyond the pit.
They all paused at the three hooded figures who emerged, hands clasped so tightly that their knuckles were white.
But the priestesses stepped into the sunlight, the open air. Blinked up at it, as if remembering what such things were.
Gwyn nimbly rolled to her feet, grinning so broadly that Nesta was momentarily taken aback by it. The priestess had been pretty in the library, but with that joy, that confidence as she aimed for the three priestesses, she had emerged into a beauty to rival Merrill or Mor.
Or maybe nothing had changed at all beyond that confidence, the way Gwynโs shoulders were pushed back, her head high, her smile free as she said, โRoslin. Deirdre. Ananke. I was hoping youโd come.โ
Nesta hadnโt checked the sign-up sheet that morning. Had stopped believing anyone except Gwyn would ever come to training.
But the three of them huddled together as Cassian offered a casual smile that was nearly a replica of Rhysโs. Designed to put people at ease and lessen the threat of his power, his body. โLadies,โ he said, gesturing to the ring. โWelcome.โ
Roslin and Ananke said nothing, but the one in the middle, Deirdre, tugged back her hood.
Nesta clamped down on every instinct that would have had her gasping.
Emerie, on the mat beside her, seemed to be trying to do the same.
A long, vicious scar cut across Deirdreโs face, narrowly missing her left eye. It was raised, stark white against her brown skin, and flowed from her tightly curling black hair to her slender, lovely jaw. Her round dark eyes, framed by a thick sweep of lashes that made them seem even rounder, were wide but determined as she said, โWe hope we are not too late.โ
All of them looked to Nesta. But she wasnโt the leader here.
She threw Cassian a glance, and he gave her a shrug as if to say,ย Iโm just the instructor.
Another scar flowed down Deirdreโs neck, disappearing beneath her robe. For such scars to exist on a High Fae at all suggested an event of such violence, such horror, that Nestaโs stomach clenched. But she stepped toward the priestess. โWe were just starting.โ
โGive me those stones and bones, please,โ Nesta said quietly to the House as she sat in the private library, a map of all seven courts before her, Cassian a step behind her.
A small earthenware bowl appeared beside the map, filled with them. Nesta swallowed against the dryness in her mouth.
Cassian whistled. โIt really does listen to you.โ
She peered over a shoulder. Sheโd invited him here after sheโd returned from working in the library out of pure caution, she told herself. If she lost control, if she wasnโt able to witness where her finger landed on the map, someone had to be here. That person just so happened to be him.
Never mind that heโd once stood beside her, his hand upon her back as it was now, and let her lean into his warmth and strength.
Cassian glanced between the bowl of scrying instruments and the map. โWhy did you change your mind?โ
Nesta didnโt give herself time to hesitate before she slid her fingers into the bowl and scooped up the handful of stones and bones. They clinked
against each other, hollow and ancient.
โI couldnโt stop thinking about those priestesses who came to practice today. Roslin said she hadnโt set foot outside in sixty years. And Deirdre, with those scars โฆโ She took a long breath. โI am asking them to be brave, to work hard, to face their fears. Yet Iโm not doing the same.โ
โNo one accused you of that.โ
โI donโt need anyone to say it. I know it. And I might fear this scrying, but I fear being a cowardly hypocrite even more.โ
The priestesses had been novices in every sense of the word: Ananke had such terrible balance sheโd fallen over trying to plant her toes in the dirt. Roslin had been only a fraction better. Neither had removed their hoods, not as Deirdre had done, but Nesta had caught glimpses of wine-red hair on Roslin and golden hair on Ananke, their skin pale as cream.
Cassian said, โYou sure you donโt want to do this with Rhys and Amren around?โ
Nesta squeezed the bones and stones in her fist. โI donโt need them.โ He fell silent, letting her concentrate.
It had taken a few moments the first and only time sheโd done it. To let her mind go empty, to wait for that tug through her body that had hauled her toward an unseen force. Sheโd been whipped across the earth, and when sheโd opened her eyes, sheโd been standing in a war-tent, the King of Hybern before her, the Cauldron a squatting, dark mass beyond.
Nesta closed her eyes, willing her mind to quiet as she lifted her tight fist over the map. She focused upon her breathing, upon the rhythm of Cassianโs breathing.
Her swallow was loud to her ears.
Sheโd failed at everything. But she could do this.
Sheโd failed her father, failed Feyre for years before that. Failed her mother, she supposed. And with Elain, sheโd failed as well: first in letting her get taken by Hybern that night theyโd been stolen from their beds; then by letting her go into that Cauldron. Then when the Cauldron had taken her into the heart of Hybernโs camp.
Sheโd failed and failed and failed, and there was no end to it, no endโ โAnything?โ
โDonโt talk.โ
Cassian grunted, but sidled closer, his warmth now solidly at her side.
Nesta willed her mind to empty. But it couldnโt. It was like being in that damned stairwellโshe just circled around and around and around, down and down.
The Dread Trove. She had to find the Dread Trove.
The Mask, the Harp, the Crown.
But the other thoughts pressed in. Too many.
The Mask, she strained to think.ย Where is the Mask of the Dread Trove?
Her palm slickened with sweat, the stones and bones shifting in her fist. If the Mask was aware like the Cauldron had been โฆ She couldnโt let it see her. Find what she loved most.
Couldnโt let it see her, find her, hurt her.
The Mask, she willed the stones and bones.ย Find the Mask.
Nothing answered. No tug, no whisper of power. She exhaled through her nostrils.ย The Mask, she willed them.
There was nothing.
Her heart thundered, but she tried again. A different route. Thought of their common originโthe one she and the Trove shared. The Cauldron.
Yawning emptiness answered.
Nesta furrowed her brow, clenching the items harder. Pictured the Cauldron: the vast bowl of darkest iron, so large multiple people could have used it as a bathtub. It had a physical shape, yet when that icy water had swallowed her, there had been no bottom. Just a chasm of freezing water that had soon become utter darkness. The thing that had existed before light; the cradle from which all life had come.
Sweat beaded on her brow, as if her very body rebelled against the memory, but she made herself recall how it had sat in the King of Hybernโs war-tent, squatting atop the reeds and rugs, a primordial beast that had been half-asleep when sheโd entered.
And then it had opened an eye. Not one she could see, but one that she could feel fixed on her. It had widened as it realized who stood there: the female who had taken so much, too much. It had narrowed all of its depthless power, its rage, upon her, a cat trapping a mouse with its paw.
Her hand shook. โNesta?โ
She couldnโt breathe. โNesta.โ
She couldnโt endure it, the memory of that ancient horror and furyโ
She opened her eyes. โI canโt,โ she rasped. โI canโt. The powerโI donโt think I have it anymore.โ
โItโs there. Iโve seen it in your eyes, felt it in my bones. Try again.โ
She couldnโt summon it. Couldnโt face it. โI canโt.โ She dropped the stones and bones into their dish.
She couldnโt endure the disappointment in Cassianโs voice, either, as he said, โAll right.โ
She didnโt eat dinner with him. Didnโt do anything except crawl into her bed and stare up at the darkness, and free-fall into it.
It was searching for her.
Winding through the hallways of the House, wending like a dark snake, it searched and sniffed and hunted for her.
She couldnโt move from her bed. Couldnโt open her eyes to sound the alarm, to flee.
She felt it come closer, crawling up the stairs. Down her hallway. She couldnโt move her body. Couldnโt open her eyes.
Darkness slid through the crack between her door and the stone floor.
Noโit couldnโt have found her. It would catch her this time, hold her down on this bed and rip from her everything she had taken from it.
The darkness slithered to her bed, and she forced her eyes open to see it gather over her, a cloud with no shape, no form, but such wicked presence that she knew its name before it leaped.
She screamed as the Cauldronโs darkness pinned her to the bed, and then there was nothing but the horrible weight of it filling her body, tearing her apart from the inside outโ
And then nothing.
Cassian jolted awake and reached for the knife on his nightstand. He didnโt know why. Heโd had no nightmare, heard no sound.
Yet terror and dread sluiced through him, ratcheting up his heartbeat. The lone Siphon on his hand glowed like fresh blood, as if also seeking an enemy to strike.
Nothing.
But the air had gone cold as ice. So cold his breath clouded, and then the lamps flared to life. Flared and flickered, flashing, as if desperately signaling to him.
As if the House were begging him to run.
He vaulted from the bed, and the door opened before he could careen into it. Launching into the hall, knife in hand, he didnโt care that he was in his undershorts, or that he only had one Siphon. Azโs door flung open a heartbeat later, and his brotherโs steps closed in behind him as Cassian hit the stairs and raced down them.
Heโd reached the landing of Nestaโs level when she screamed. Not a scream of rage, but of pure terror.
His body distilled at that scream, as if it were no more than the knife in his hand, a weapon to be used to eliminate and destroy any threats to her, to kill and kill and not stop until every last enemy was dead or bleeding.
Her door was open, and light blazed from within. Silvery, cold light.
โCassian,โ Az warned, but Cassian pushed himself faster, running as swiftly as he ever had in his life. He slammed into the archway of her door, rebounding off it and into the room, and came up short at what he beheld.
Nesta lay in her bed, body arched. Bathed in silver fire.
She was screaming, hands ripping at the sheets, and that fire burned and burned without destroying the blankets, the room. Burned and writhed, as if devouring her.
โHoly gods,โ Azriel breathed.
The fire radiated cold. Cassian had never heard of such a power amongst the High Fae. Fire, yesโbut fire withย warmth. Not this icy, terrible twin.
Nesta arched again, sobbing through her teeth.
Cassian lunged for her, but Azriel grabbed him around the middle. He snarled, debating whether he could rip out of Azrielโs arms, but the hold Az had on him was too clever.
Nesta screamed again, and a word appeared in it.ย No. She began shouting it, pleading,ย No, no, no.
Nesta arched once more, and that fire sucked in, as if a great inhale had been made, and was about to be exhaled, rupturing through the worldโ
The windows of the room blew out.
Night burst in, full of shadows and wind and stars.
And as Nesta erupted, silver fire blasting outward, Rhys pounced.
He smothered her fire with his darkness, as if heโd dropped a blanket on it. Nesta screamed, and this time it was a sound of pain.
The night cleared enough that Cassian could see Rhys at the bed, roaring something that the wind and fire and stars drowned out. But from his lips, Cassian knew it was her name. โNesta!โ Rhys shouted. The wind cleared enough for Cassian to hear this time. โNesta! This is a dream!ย โ
Nestaโs fire reared again, and Rhys shoved a wave of blackness upon her. The entire House shook.
Cassian thrashed against Azriel, bellowing at Rhys to stop it, stop hurting herโ
Rhysโs darkness pushed down, and Nestaโs flame battled upward, as if their two powers were swords clashing in battle, fighting for the advantage.
Dominance thundered in Rhysโs words this time. โWake up. Itโs a dream.ย Wake up.โ
Nesta still fought, and Rhys gritted his teeth, power gathering again.
โLet me go,โ Cassian said to Azriel. โAz, let me go right now.โ Azriel, to his surprise, did.
Cassian knew the odds were against him. He had a knife and one Siphon. To get caught in the magic between Nesta and Rhys would be akin to entering a lionโs den unarmed.
But he walked to where silver fire and darkest night battled. And he said with steady calm, โNesta.โ
The silver fire flickered.
โNesta.โ
He could have sworn her consciousness, that power, shifted toward him.
Just long enough.
The wave of Rhysโs power that hit her wasnโt the brute attack of earlier, but a soft wave that washed over that flame. Banked it.
Rhys went still in a way that told Cassian his brother was no longer fully present, but rather in the mind of the female who had gone unmoving upon the bed. Heโd rarely thought twice about Rhysโs gifts as a daematiโ Feyreโs gift, tooโbut heโd never been more grateful for it.
Cassian barely dared to breathe. Azriel hovered behind him as Rhys stood before the bed.
Slowly, that flame receded. Vanished like smoke. Slowly, Nestaโs body relaxed.
And then her breathing evened out, her body going limp. Blissfully unconscious.
Cassian swallowed, his heart pounding so hard he knew Azriel could hear it as his brother came up beside him.
Then Rhys inhaled sharply, his body full of movement again. Azriel asked, his own shadows gathering at his shoulders, โWhat happened?โ
But Rhys just walked to the little sitting area and slumped into a chair. The High Lordโs hands were shakingโtrembling so wildly that Cassian had no idea what to do. From the worry etched on Azrielโs face, neither did his brother.
Cassian asked, โShould we send for Feyre?โ
โNo.โ The word was a snarl. Rhysโs eyes flared like violet stars. โShe doesnโt come near here.โ
โWas that โฆโ Azriel glanced to the bed and the unconscious female atop it. โThat was Nestaโs true power? That silver fire?โ
โOnly the surface of it,โ Rhys whispered, hands still shaking as he ran them down his face. โFuck.โ
Cassian braced his feet, as if he could physically intercept whatever Rhys was about to say.
โI went into her nightmare.โ Rhys peered up at Cassian. โWhy didnโt you tell me you attempted a scrying today?โ
โIt didnโt work.โ And Nestaโs fear and guilt had been so heavy in the room that his chest had ached. Heโd left her alone afterward, knowing sheโd want privacy.
Rhys blew out a shuddering breath. โThe scrying was a trip wire. For the memories. I caught that as I went in.โ His throat worked, as if heโd heave, but he held it down. โShe was dreaming of the Cauldron. Of โฆ of when she went in.โ Cassian had never seen Rhys at such a loss for words.
โI saw it,โ Rhys whispered. โFelt it. Everything that happened within the Cauldron. Saw her take its power with her teeth and claws and rage. And I saw โฆย feltย โฆ what it took from her.โ
Rhys rubbed his face, and slowly straightened. He met Cassianโs stare unflinchingly, his eyes full of remorse and agony. โHer trauma is โฆโ Rhysโs throat bobbed.
โI know,โ Cassian whispered.
โI guessed,โ Rhys breathed, โbut it was different toย feelย it.โ โWhat is her power?โ Azriel asked.
โDeath,โ Rhys whispered, hands trembling again as he got to his feet and aimed toward the window, which was now repairing itself shard by shard, as if a careful, patient hand worked upon it. He gazed at the female sleeping in the bed, and fear clouded the face of the High Lord of the Night Court. โPure death.โ