It had been several days since Raihn and I had gone to the human districts, so when Mische holed herself up in her room working on some new spell, we took the
opportunity to return. I expected that the districts would be full of vampires treating it as a hunting ground, given our absence. But instead, Raihn and I disposed of only two very drunk vampires attempting to pick off a couple of children and then found ourselves roaming aimlessly around the empty streets.
โHm,โ Raihn said, after an hour of fruitless wandering. โMaybe weโve built more of a reputation for ourselves than we expected.โ
โEven more terrifying than we thought,โ I said. โWeโre doing our jobs too well.โ
My cheeks tightened. I was so satisfied that it took me an embarrassingly long time to notice Raihn staring at me.
My smile disappeared, and he laughed. โThere she is.โ โWhat?โ I snapped.
โYou just looked so pleased with yourself.โ I shrugged.
Fine. Iย wasย pleased with myself.
โWe could go to the western quarter,โ I suggested.
โMmm.โ He slid his hands into his coat pockets and looked around, as if with sudden realization of where we
were.
โIs that agreement?โ โI have a better idea.โ
He set off down a side street, leaving me in the middle of the road.
โWhere are you going?โ I called after him.
He glanced over his shoulder, eyes crinkled. โIโm getting a drink. You coming?โ
โYOU MEANย to tell me that youโa humanโcome to this district almost every night, stab whatever poor vampire bastards you come across, become mysterious savior to the innocent human civilians, and yet, despite spending almost half your fucking life here, youโveย neverย interacted with these people? Never gone to a pub? Never said a quick hello to one of your rescue-ees? Nothing?โ
He said it like it was ridiculous, and that offended me.
โI wasnโt here for that.โ I glowered at him. The effect of the glare was somewhat diminished by the fact that he was so much taller than me and walking so fast that I had to awkwardly half-run to keep up with him. โWeโreย not here for that.โ
โOh, hush, princess. Weโve been working so hard thereโs no one left to kill.โ
โThen we should go back to the Moon Palace.โ
โI donโt want to go back to the Moon Palace. I want the most absolutely fucking disgusting beer in town. I want foamy, sour, piss beer. And the place to get it is less than a block away. Ah ha!โ His face lit up, and he jabbed his finger across the street as we rounded a corner, pointing to a
rickety, half-rotted wooden sign that seemed to have once read โSandraโs,โ but now looked more like โSa d r โs.โ
โThis place,โ he said, striding towards it, โhas been here for almost aย century, andโโ
โWait.โ
I grabbed his arm just as he was about to open the door. The movement was much rougher than Iโd intended, a weak puff of shadow unfurling from my fingertips, my nails digging into the leather of his coat.
He stopped, brow furrowed, and looked down at my white-knuckled hand. Then at my face. His expression changedโฆ softened.
โWhatโs wrong, Oraya?โ โIโโ
I didnโt even know how to answer that question. I let go of him, clamping my hands together in front of me so he wouldnโt see that they trembled.
I leveled my voice. โThis is a building full of humans.โ โYes. And?โ
And you are made to kill them.
And if you lose control, I donโt know if I could stop you alone.
โIโm not putting them at risk so you can drink some garbage beer,โ I said coldly.
He let out a short laugh. โI want beer, not blood. Besides, why would I go on a hunting rampage after spending the last week and a half with you killing everyone who did just that?โ
So fucking dismissive. โIt isnโt that simple.โ โWhy the hell not?โ
โBecause if we put someone likeย youย in a packed room of humans, it might not be a matter of youย decidingย anything,โ I spat. โI know what bloodlust looks like, Raihn.โ
A momentary wave of something I couldnโt decipherโ something that almost,ย almostย resembled compassionโ
flitted across his face, quickly replaced once again with amusement.
โYouโre worried about my self-control? How sweet.โ He leaned close enough that I felt his words skitter over my cheek. I didnโt know why I didnโt move.
โI haveย plentyย of self-control, Oraya,โ he murmured. โDonโt you worry about me.โ
Goosebumps rose on the back of my neck.
Yet the shiver that rolled over my flesh wasnโt the familiar shiver of fear. That, at least, was a physical response I knew how to regulate. Thisโฆ this startled me. My instinctual desire wasnโt to back away, but to pull closer. I froze. My body didnโt know how to react to this, reaching for fear and finding something else entirelyโ something much more dangerous.
A long moment passedโor maybe it had just been a second or twoโand I stepped away, shooting him a glare.
โThat doesnโt matter. Besides, what if they recognize what you are?โ
โI wonโt be flashing any dazzling grins, and theyโll be none the wiser.โ
โNo,โ I hissed. โItโs a stupid idea.โ
The wrinkle between his brows deepened, then disappeared as he gave me a sly smirk.
โOh. I see.โ
I blinked at him, already offended by whatever he was about to say next.
The smirk broadened to a grin. โYouโre scared. Youโre
scaredย of a bunch of humans.โ
โNo Iโm not.โ I said it just too-loud and too-quickly enough to confirm his suspicions.
I wasnโt scared. Scared wasnโt the right word. It was justโฆ wrong. I belonged out here, hiddenโnot in there, with them. Maybe my blood was human, but Iโd abandoned that part of myself a long time ago. Raihn seemed confident
that he could pass as one of them, but hell, I didnโt know if
Iย could.
โWhat are you so nervous about?โ he said. โYouโre human too, for fuckโs sake.โ
I scowled. โNotย really.โ
He made a face. โIxโs tits. I wish you could have seen your expression just then. Iโm glad youโre so proud of your heritage.โ
Before I could stop him, he threw open the pub door and dragged me inside.
THE PUB WASย in the basement, and wobbly stairs directly within the door led us down into the dim throng. Humans gathered at mismatched wooden tables on mismatched wooden stools, leaning close and chatting bawdily over games of cards or mugs of mead. The walls were made of stone and clay, tiny windows at the top revealing peeks of the streets. Lanterns along the walls drenched the whole room in warm orange light. At the pubโs center was a square counter, where a barkeep poured drinks and slid food to waiting patrons. The air was thick with a unique scent that blended beer, sweat, and bread.
It was dark and crowded inside. I wondered whether business had picked up considerably since Raihn and I started patrolling the streets again, because it seemed unthinkable to me that this many people had felt comfortable being out after dark when such dangers loomed within those shadows. Or maybe they just no longer cared. These people didnโt even seem afraid.
It was soโฆ so wildlyย differentย than anywhere Iโd ever been before. I had spent a little time in vampire pubs in the
inner city, briefly and out of nothing more than stupid teenage curiosity. They were plenty grimy and depraved, but everyone was so much more restrained, even in the throes of debauchery. Vampires behaved as if every emotion, every impulse, took a bit longer to reach the surface of their skin. But humans? Humans laid it bare. They were loud and expressive and unapologetic.
This struck me, strange and confusing. My humanness had been the reason why Iโd spent a lifetime dimming myself. For these people, it was the reason they burned brighter.
It was so utterly foreign that I was certainโcertainโ that everyone would stop to stare at us the minute we crossed the threshold.
It didnโt happen.
I glanced at Raihn, hand moving to the hilt of my blade, watching for signs of bloodlust. With so many sweaty humans packed into this small a space, the scent of blood must be overwhelming. But his nose didnโt so much as twitch.
Iโd been skeptical when he said he could pass as human. Much more separated vampires and humans than the teeth and the wingsโtheir entire demeanors were different. Vampires simply moved like predators, all silent grace and calculated finesse. And Raihn, though he was an unusual vampire, still had that in spades.
Until he justโฆ didnโt.
The moment we walked into the pub, Raihnโฆ changed. The way he stood changed, growing a little more relaxed and lopsided. The way he walked changed, his steps a little more meandering. The way he held his face changed, predatory stillness replaced with laid-back ease. Everything about the way he held himself grew a little rougher, a little less polished.
And just like that, Raihn was human. A very tall human, yesโa human that no one would want to fuck withโbut
human.
He jerked his chin towards the back of the room, took hold of my arm, and led me to an unoccupied little booth in the corner. Then he announced that he was going to get us the shittiest beer the place had and was gone before I could say anything else.
I watched him in awe as he cut through the crowd. Everything, from how he gently touched peopleโs shoulders to move them out of the way, to the half-nod of greeting he gave the keeper, to the lumbering swagger of his walk back to the tableโbeer in handโwas immaculate.
He placed a large, chipped glass mug full of foamy mud-brown liquid in front of me, then took his own and slid into the seat beside me. The booth was a small half-circle with a wobbly table at its center. He took up roughly three-quarters of the seating space. He leaned against the wall, limbs sprawled, threw his head back, and took several long gulps of his drink.
โFucking horrific,โ he said affectionately, as he slammed the mug down on the table. โItโs perfect.โ
โImpressive,โ I said.
โThank you. Iโve had plenty of practice drinking terrible alcohol.โ
โNot that.โ I gestured broadly to him, up and down. โThat.โ
His eyebrow twitched. โIโve had a lot of practice on my physique, too. I didnโt think youโd noticed.โ
I scoffed, then leaned closer. โYou are a very good actor, is what I mean. You look veryโฆโ
โHuman.โ
โYes.โ
He shrugged and took another drink. โMakes sense.โ
I narrowed my eyes at him. โMaybe I was right to distrust you in the beginning. You have so many different versions of yourself.โ
โOh, theyโre all me.โ Now it was his turn to give meย thatย lookโthe kind that picked me apart. โMeanwhile, you look like someone has shoved you in a pen with a bunch of lions. Do you actually have your hand on your blade right now?โ
I yanked my fingers away from the hilt at my hip and placed my hands on the table. โNo.โ
โYouโre safe, Oraya. Relax.โ
It could have sounded dismissive, but his voice was unexpectedly tender.
You are safe.ย I could not remember the last time those words were uttered to me. It was never true, after all. And strangely enough, even though these people were so much less dangerous than the predators that surrounded me every day, I felt more exposed here than ever.
I looked out across the room. โDid you used to come to places like this? When you wereโฆโ
โHuman? Yes. Often.โ His gaze slipped out over the room. โThey looked quite a bit different back then, though. A lot of time has passed.โ
โHow much time?โ
A pause. โA couple of hundred years.โ
He said it very casually, but I knew that pause. It was the same kind of pause I made when he asked me how long I had been coming to the human districts. He knew exactly how long it had beenโyears, days, minutes.
โBut I still come to places like this regularly. I get a bit exhausted by vampires, sometimes.โ
โDo you miss it? Humanity?โ
It was only after the question left my lips that I realized how oddly intimate it was. I thought he wouldnโt answer. He was silent, watching the patrons laugh and drink.
โI miss the sun,โ he said at last.
And for a moment, he wore the same expression that he did when I would come back to the apartment at dawn to find him looking out the window, long after the light would have been eating at his skin.
I didnโt know why I felt the urge to pull away from that uncomfortable question, as if Iโd prodded a wound. I took a sip of my beer. Thick bitterness flooded my mouth. I made a face, and Raihn laughed.
โUgh. Thatโsย disgusting.โ โDisgusting and amazing.โ โJust disgusting.โ
โYou have no taste, princess.โ
Despite myself, I chuckled. Maybe he had a point, because I took another sip.
โMische probably also used to be human,โ I remarked.
A warm smile curled the corner of his mouth. โShe makes it obvious, doesnโt she?โ
โI havenโt met another vampire like her.โ โNor have I.โ
โWere you the one whoโโ
The warmth disappeared from Raihnโs face. โNo,โ he said, sharply enough to cut off the rest of the question and any further follow up on that topic, then took a long drink.
I watched him closer than I allowed myself to let on.
Raihn had told me that he wanted to ally with me because he was curious about me. And I hated to admit this
โeven to myselfโbut I was curious about him, too. It had been a long time since I found myself wanting to know more about someone, even if it was only because they were so confusing.
He set down his drinkโalready mostly emptyโand we sat in silence, observing the patrons.
Eventually I asked, โWhy did you enter the Kejari?โ
Such an obvious question, and yet none of us had ever asked it of each other. It was like once we entered the Moon Palace, the outside world and the circumstances that had brought us there ceased to exist.
โI have a lot of people depending on me, and Turned Rishan from the slums donโt get many options.โ He shook
his head. โNever make deathbed promises, Oraya. Always bites you in the ass.โ
Turned Rishan from the slums.ย I was often so focused on the suffering of the humans within the House of Night that it was easy to forget that vampires suffered here, too. Iโd thought that most would enter the Kejari for the glory of it, but maybe it was really desperation fueling all of us.
โFamily?โ I asked.
โIn a sense. And I exhausted all other avenues. Joining this fucking barbaric spectacle was not high up on my list of things I wanted to do with my pathetic never-ending life.โ His mouth twisted into a wry smile. โI wouldnโt even be here if Mische didnโt force me into it.โ
My eyebrows leapt.
He chuckled and took another drink. โLook at that face. You thoughtย Iย was theโwhat was your word?โbruteย who Turned Mische, carted her around Obitraes for a few hundred years, then dragged that poor, innocent little sunshine sprite halfway across the world to the bloodthirsty Kejari tournament, is that it?โ
โYes,โ I said, without hesitation. โAbsolutely.โ
โThat fucking girl.โ He shook his head. โNo, this was all her idea. And she knew Iโd never let her do it alone.โ
I struggled to reconcile this information with the version of Mische that I knew. Tried to imagine the girl who put flowers all over the apartment and giggled uproariously whenever anyone made a sound that vaguely resembled flatulence dragging Raihn to the Kejari.
I had wondered many times over these last weeks why both of them were here. They clearly loved each other deeplyโneither, I was certain, would be willing to hurt the other. But then again, it wasnโt unheard of for close friends to enter together, if their interests aligned. Two chances at victory were better than one.
โThenโฆ why isย sheย here?โ I asked.
โBecause sheโs a manipulative little thing,โ he grumbled, as if to himself.
โManipulative?โ
โRight. Like someone else I know. Trying to get me drunk so you can ask all kinds of invasive questions.โ He took a drink and shot me a wary glare. He set down his mug, and with every second of silence, I grew more surprised.
โAnd now,โ he said, โyouโre waiting for me to ask you whyย youโreย doing this.โ
โA bit,โ I admitted.
A human in the Kejari? Anyone would be curious. โWell, I wonโt. I know already.โ
My brows rose. โOh, you do?โ
โIโll admit that before, I was wondering. I was thinking, โWhy would this human put herself in a situation where she was surrounded by predators? Near certain death?โโ He smirked. โOr, more accurately, โWhy wouldย Vincentย put her in this situation?โ Easy, viper.โ He raised his hands at the glare I shot him. โI know. But I was curious about a lot. Like, why were you here at all? Youโre an adult. Vincent clearly doesnโt keep you literally locked up. Why did you remain in the House of Night, instead of crossing the Bone Seas to the human nations, where you could live a real life?โ
A real life,ย he said, as if my life wasnโt real.
The truth was, it had barely even occurred to me that it was an option to leave the House of Nightโleave Vincent. Only once, when I was seventeen years old, did I consider it. Ilana had raised the idea. It was shortly afterโฆ after. Those days were a blur of grief and pain. But I could still remember exactly how she had looked that dayโso uncharacteristically serious, so worried. She had taken my face in her rough hands, pulled me so close I could smell the cigar smoke on her breath, and looked directly into my eyes. โYou donโt have to live this way, my love,โ she had
said. โI made this choice, but you didnโt. You can choose another life, in another world, where youโd be just a person.โ
I had only stared at her blankly before turning away.
The thought was incomprehensible. Where else could I possibly exist but the House of Night?
โI donโt want to leave,โ I said.
โI see that now, after watching you here. You donโt see yourself as human at all, do you? So why would you leave to go live with them?โ
I didnโt like that tone at all. โThere are problems that need to be solvedย here. Iโm not running away from that. This is my home. Maybe itโs a home that hates me, but itโs my home.โ
This kingdom was a part of me, and I, whether it wanted me or not, was a part of it. I was the daughter of its king, blood or no. The bones of my parents were buried in this country. No matter how many times the House of Night bruised my skin or my heart, I would stay. Just as all the humans who lived hereโwho did not have a choice but to live hereโwould stay.
This was where I belonged. Here. Not some foreign human land half a world away.
Raihn examined me, a thoughtful expression on his face. It wasnโt the first time Iโd seen that look, and every time, it made me uncomfortable. Like he was letting a facade drop for just these few rare, quiet moments, and revealing just how much he analyzed the world around him, typically hidden beneath violence and swagger.
I didnโt especially like being the subject of that analysis. โYou have balls, princess,โ he said. โI will give you that.โ
Then he leaned across the tableโso small compared to his frame that even that slight movement put him right in front of me.
โHereโs the other thing I have never understood about you. Vincent.โ
I drew back, already defensive, every muscle tensed at the mere mention of his name.
โYouโre just some human girl,โ Raihn went on. โAnd the King of the Nightborn, well-known to be a cold, ruthless bastard, justโฆ has a moment of compassion and decides to take you in? Why?โ
His brow furrowed, and his eyes searched my face, like he was really looking for an answer to this questionโand like he was already concerned on my behalf for what that answer might be. I glimpsed something in that expression, the faintest edge of something strangely familiar, gone in seconds.
โOf course,โ he continued, โI know some vampires have a taste for human sex, butโโ
โVincent is myย father,โ I cut in, disgusted.
โRight. At least if he was fucking you, I could make sense of it. But by all accounts, including yours, heโs not. Soโฆโ
If I wasnโt so offended, I would find it a bit funny that Raihn had the exact same thought about me and Vincent that Iโd had about him and Mische.
โMische is your family, even if she isnโt your blood. It shouldnโt be so hard for you to understand that.โ
โIย understand it. I just didnโt think our oh-so-great-and-powerful divine king did.โ
โBecause you know him so well.โ I scoffed. โOf course you think poorly of him. Youโre Rishan. He unseated your people from the throne.โ
โIโm sure the two dozen extended family members of his that he executed to take that throne feel somewhat strongly about his commitment to familial bonds, too.โ
Oh, please. As if every vampire king didnโt have to kill to get that power. It wasnโt pleasant, but it was reality.
โAnd how many people areย youย about to kill to fulfill those โresponsibilitiesโ you talked about?โ I smirked at him,
gesturing to myself. โAnd you still took in a human stray, didnโt you?โ
He finished the last of his beer.
โOraya, there is nothing stray about you. I think you know precisely where youโre going, even when you donโt know you do.โ
And I was about to ask him what, exactly,ย thatย was supposed to meanโ
โBut then the floor shook in an abrupt lurch, and the crowd drew in a sudden gasp as the explosion rang out loud enough to make the world tremble.