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Chapter no 1 – ARWEN

A Promise of Peridot (The Sacred Stones, #2)

IM GOING TO BE SICK AGAIN,โ€ WARNED RYDER AS HE HUNG HIS HEAD

over the wet steel edge of the ship. Angry droplets of rain pelted us both as I rubbed soothing circles into the damp fabric clinging to my

brotherโ€™s back.

โ€œIโ€™m here,โ€ I said, trying to send lighte into his knotted stomach. I waited, and waited some more, until I couldnโ€™t help but tense my fingers against the void I felt where my lighte should have regenerated days ago.

Nothing.

Still nothing.

Ryder retched into the churning sea below us.

In the ten days since the battle of Sirenโ€™s Bay, I had healed the entire ship of all their wounds without my power. The injuries inflicted by Lazarusโ€™s army, burns singed and gashes slashed by both lighte and Fae weapons, were more damaging to the Onyx and Peridot soldiers than any mortal steel. It had been the most taxing work Iโ€™d ever done.

And all the while, elbow-deep in bandages and sickly, fevered sweat, I tried to grieve.

We had held a small, makeshift funeral for herโ€”the woman I had always thought was my mother. Against the rhythmic creaking of ropes and the quiet flapping of sails, the unscathed soldiers aboard had lowered her body into the sea beneath us. I said a few words, all of which felt flat and foreign in my mouth. Mari sang a hymn. Ryder cried. Leigh didnโ€™t look at

any of us, and then slunk into our cabin belowdecks before we even finished.

It had been awful.

Kane had asked if he could join us. I believe his words were, โ€œIโ€™d like to be there for you, if youโ€™ll let me.โ€ As if his presence might have somehow made me feel better, instead of infinitely, infinitely worse. I hadnโ€™t wanted him anywhere near my family. Or what had been left of them.

Then, the storm came.

A thunderous assault of rain, with waves that sloshed against the ship like battering rams. It raged and raged throughout our entire journey. Those who sought even a minuteโ€™s reprieve from stale cabin air were immediately soaked in a frigid deluge. Yesterday the captain had rationed the shipโ€™s coals, leaving us without hot water. I already couldnโ€™t stomach any more lukewarm porridge.

I looked down at my fingers on Ryderโ€™s back. They were eternally pruned, like little raisins. He heaved again, and down the bow a couple feet, a Peridot woman in a weather-beaten wool cloak followed suit.

Though I was lucky not to suffer from seasickness, the same couldnโ€™t be said for the rest of the passengers. The stomach-turning sounds of retching echoed at all hours of the day and night. I offered care to whomever I could, but without my lighte there wasnโ€™t much to do.

I hadnโ€™t offered any help to Kane, though.

Iโ€™d watched him climb a rickety set of stairs with ease a single day after being pierced through the chest by a spear of ice. Heโ€™d scaled them two at a timeโ€”nimble, strong, lively even.

And yet, he had needed me to heal him so critically that day in the Shadowhold infirmary?

All lies. More and more lies. My head swam with them.

I waited for the instinctual rush of fear to ripple through me when I thought of the fate heโ€™d kept from me all those months. The prophecy that foretold my death at Kaneโ€™s own fatherโ€™s hands. But I felt nothing.

I had felt nothing for days.

After a lifetime of too much fear and tears and worryโ€”now I couldnโ€™t muster anything at all.

With one final dry heave, Ryder slumped down against the metal and sucked in a deep breath. โ€œThat has to be the last of it. Thereโ€™s nothing left in my stomach to vomit up.โ€

I frowned. โ€œA lovely mental image.โ€ His answering smile was weak.

But in my mind a memory was unfurling. One of a slow autumn evening

โ€”silent save for the sounds of wind rustling among the weeds outside my home. Iโ€™d been sick after eating something moldyโ€”Powellโ€™s leave no scrap behind mentality at workโ€”and my mother had rubbed my back in steady sweeps, calming me as I purged. I could have healed myself then, but chose not to. I liked how it felt to have her comfort me. I liked her hand on my shoulder, her quieting words. Leigh had been born recently, and both Ryder and I missed being the sole objects of her affection.

It was such a selfish, childish thing to do. To retch for an hour rather than heal my own illness just to keep her by my side in the chilly evening air, away from her new baby, husband, and son.

But it felt so good to be cared for. And nowโ€”

Now I fell asleep every night wondering who the woman even was. Had she found me on the road one day?

Had someone forced her to raise me?

And if so, where in the world were my real parents? They were both full-blooded Fae, so most likely living in another realm. A melting one of parched earth and ash, governed by a tyrantโ€”

โ€œFeeling any better?โ€

My attention snapped to Mari, wandering over wrapped in a thick fur cloak. Sheโ€™d raided the ship on our first night and somehow found the most fashionable pieces aboard. But even her elegant new pelt couldnโ€™t hide the way her copper hair clung in wet ringlets to her face or the icy drops that showered her nose and near-blue lips.

At the sight of her, Ryder straightened and folded his hands confidently across his chest. โ€œRight as this rain. Barely even sick.โ€ He inclined his head toward the Peridot woman still heaving down the deck. โ€œItโ€™s all these other folk I feel sorry for.โ€

โ€œHe vomited the entire contents of his stomach out and then some,โ€ I said to Mari.

Ryder glared at me, and Mari gave him a compassionate frown. โ€œSorry to hear it. This storm is unrelenting.โ€

โ€œYeah, wellโ€”โ€ We sailed over another swell and Ryder turned pale, clutching at his stomach. โ€œI . . . I am going to go talk to someone about that. Right now.โ€ He dashed for the other end of the ship and out of eyesight.

Mari lifted a brow at me. โ€œTalk to someone . . . about the storm?โ€ I shook my head. โ€œHeโ€™s too proud.โ€

โ€œI think itโ€™s sweet that heโ€™s embarrassed. Here.โ€ She produced a small glass vial from her skirts. โ€œGive him this. Itโ€™s Steel of the Stomach.โ€

โ€œIsnโ€™t that potion used for undertakers?โ€ After Iโ€™d read the book on flower species I got from the Peridot library twice, I had started working through Mariโ€™s grimoires out of sheer boredom. She didnโ€™t have much use for them anymore anyway. Not now that she had the amulet.

I didnโ€™t blame her. Mari never learned to wield her magic properly after her mother, the only living witch in her family, had died in childbirth. The necklace that we stole from Kaneโ€™s study, the one that belonged to Briar Creighton, the supposed most powerful witch of all time, allowed her to harness her powerโ€”and quite a bit of it. Now she did magic whenever and however she pleased. And the amulet never left her neck.

Mari shrugged, pawing absently at the violet charm as it hung below her collarbone. โ€œI figured it might help him. It was easy to brew.โ€

The only issue was that she wasnโ€™t actually pulling any power from Briar or her lineage. I replayed the moment in which Kane told me the amulet was merely a trinketโ€”that all the spells Mari cast with such ease these days were her ownโ€”and fished for guilt. I owed her the truth, but I only found a well of apathy where my ethics used to be. I didnโ€™t want to lie to her, butโ€”

But I just didnโ€™t have the energy.

โ€œHave you talked to Kane at all today?โ€ she asked, gripping the slick bow as the ship pitched over another uneasy wave.

I sighed, a long and thorough noise. Another thing I couldnโ€™t bring myself to do. โ€œNo.โ€

โ€œWhat if thereโ€™s another way? Hadnโ€™t he said as much?โ€

He had, the last time we spoke. After the battle. After my motherโ€™s death. After my outburst of power and butchery. Kane had said he was willing to let the entire continent fall to Lazarus to save me from my death sentence. To help me live my life in peace.

But what kind of โ€œpeaceโ€ could I find knowing how many would suffer at Lazarusโ€™s hands because I was holed away in some idyllic city, nameless and hiding from my fate?

โ€œThereโ€™s nothing he can help me do but run.โ€

Mari pursed her lips. โ€œPerhaps, but . . . He knows more about this prophecy than anyone. Canโ€™t you try to have a little hope?โ€

โ€œI just need off this boat,โ€ I said, staring up into the heavy, rumbling storm clouds above.

โ€œI know.โ€ She sighed. โ€œThis journey has been miserable.โ€

But I wasnโ€™t thinking of the rain or the cold or the vomiting. Only getting Leigh and Ryder safely to Citrine, and myself as far from Kane as possible. Somewhere I could be alone until I was needed. A sacrificial lamb, awaiting slaughter.

So I stayed silent as the rain battered my face, searching my heart for an ache, for hope, for even a trill of fear at the thought of my horrific future.

But I found nothing. I missed my mother. I wanted to go home.

I wanted to sleep for a long, long time.

โ€œWhy wonโ€™t anyone tell us what awaits us in Citrine?โ€ I hadnโ€™t talked to many people the last ten days, but the lieutenants and nobles who were on the ship with us had been very tight-lipped about the secretive kingdom. All

we were told was that it was impossible to breach, and therefore about as safe from Lazarus as we could get.

Mari shrugged. โ€œAll the texts Iโ€™ve come across just say itโ€™s hard to access. On most maps itโ€™s either floating in the middle of the Mineral Sea or left off altogether.โ€

I let the oceanโ€™s swell rock me while Mari tightened her grip on the wet steel.

โ€œCould it be an island? Like Jade?โ€ The Jade Islands were an equally mysterious kingdom, but at least Mari knew some people who had traveled there and said it was uninhabited.

โ€œPossibly. I guess weโ€™ll find out soon enough.โ€ Her eyes shone with anticipation. The discovery of something still unknown. โ€œDo you want to go down to the mess? Have some dinner?โ€

I looked up at the furious sky, purple and blue and gray. Like a bruise, or a mottled pigeonโ€™s wing. Heavy, rhythmless droplets landed on my face. โ€œNo, I think Iโ€™ll stay out here for a while.โ€ When she frowned, I amended my voice to sound warmer. โ€œBut Iโ€™ll meet you in there.โ€ I was doing the best I could, and Mari knew it.

She flitted off with the same spritely energy she always had, rain or shine. The girl was resilientโ€”it seemed nothing, not even the recent battle, pounding storm, or pitching ship could break her spirit.

Heavy footfalls dragged my gaze over to a group crossing the scarred deck.

I knew those boots. That walk.

Kane strode toward the galley alongside Griffin, with Leigh in tow behind them.

The weakest flame of fury, barely a spark, lit in my chest at the sight of him.

His sable hair was wet and plastered against his forehead and the back of his neck. His eyes were ringed in gray from an obvious lack of sleep. A scratchy-looking beard covered his jaw, and he had a swollen face from days and nights of too much drink.

The man was a disheveled mess.

Often Iโ€™d hear him, Griffin, and Amelia drinking together into the late hours of the night through the thin walls of my cabin. Laughing, playing cards, singing poorlyโ€”any part of me that flared up in vague jealousy at Kane and Ameliaโ€™s drunken joy I attributed to muscle memory. Sometimes, Mari and Ryder would join them out of boredom. That hurt even more.

I told myself it was a benefit, to feel anything at all.

But Leigh . . . her newly developed bond with Kane had proven to be the most irritating. I would catch them sneaking into restricted sections of the ship, returning with pilfered treats and rusted treasures. Iโ€™d hear him tell her of twisted, snarling creatures from lands beyond her wildest imagination. She seemed more than a little enamored of him.

I understood the feeling.

I had been naive and gullible, too, once.

I motioned over to her with a wave. Leighโ€™s curls bobbed against her too-large gray cloak as she said something to the hulking men who walked beside her. They looked like her guard dogsโ€”tall and imposing and powerful. Soaked in rain and scowling. When she strode over to me and they descended down the galley steps, I exhaled.

โ€œWhat are you doing with those two? Theyโ€™re dangerous Fae, Leigh. Not playmates.โ€

She rolled her eyes.

My skin itched. โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re being so hard on him.โ€

She was colder, more serious these days. I understood her pain, and I was trying to be patient, but all her rage seemed directed only at me.

I crouched down to meet her eyeline. โ€œI know youโ€™re going through an impossible time. I miss her too.โ€

โ€œThis isnโ€™t about Mother.โ€

โ€œBut your anger . . .โ€ I reached for her, grasping her arm. โ€œI think it may be coming fromโ€”โ€

She shook me off. โ€œJust stop. Youโ€™re upset about Mother. Youโ€™re upset you couldnโ€™t save her.โ€ She swallowed, her eyes hard on mine. โ€œYouโ€™re upset about what you are. And youโ€™re taking it out on him.โ€

I bit my tongue against the sting of her words.

โ€œI know you think heโ€™s charming, Leigh. And you two have this odd little friendship, but he lied to me. He ruined my life.โ€ Even as I said the words, they felt hollow. Devoid of emotion. As if I were saying, He lost my parasol. This pitch-black emptiness tunneling inside of me was so foreign I barely recognized myself. โ€œYouโ€™re too young to understand.โ€

The look she gave me could have frozen the sun itself. โ€œHeโ€™s barely making it through each day.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™ve listened to him sing sea shanties in the captainโ€™s quarters every night. Does he sound broken up to you?โ€

โ€œHeโ€™s just trying to survive, like we all are.โ€

As if summoned, Kane climbed back out onto the deck, alone this time, a bottle of whiskey in hand. Our gazes met instantlyโ€”I knew he could tell we had been talking about him. I folded my arms and let the ice in my veins reach my face. Kaneโ€™s brows knit inward slightly before he looked away.

I turned away from him, away from Leigh, and faced out toward the bottomless expanse of uneven, inky waves. There wasnโ€™t enough room on this ship to get the hundred miles away from Kane that I needed. Leigh was right. I had been cruel. But he deserved it. Actually, he deserved far worse. He was a liar and a killer, the man who betrayed me, who used me. Who took the first shreds of real joy I had ever felt in my life and turned them to ash. Who broke me down until all that was left was a shell. An empty casing where a human person once lived. Barely lived, but still.

This feeling I had for himโ€”this rageโ€”it was easy. The easiest thing in my life, at the moment.

Iโ€™d never be able to forgive him. So instead, I hated him.

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