THE THRONE ROOM WAS SO SWAMPED WITH SOLDIERS AND GENERALS,ย SO
packed with commotion as they awaited the return of their king, I could hardly hear over the din. I gripped Mari by her elbow and tugged her into a shadowed alcove. The wrought-iron candelabra above us
cast her curled hair and soft freckles in quiet illumination. โWhatโs going on?โ
โI donโt want to talk about it really.โ โThatโs very disturbing, coming from you.โ
Mari didnโt smileโalso alarmingโbut took a shuddering inhale. โI canโt seem to do magic anymore.โ
The chatter and clanging of armor that bloated the throne room fell away to the single pinprick of Mariโs words. โWhat do you mean?โ
โWhat do you think I mean?โ The fiery retort relaxed me some. That was the Mari I was used to. โI havenโt been able to since I woke up.โ
โDid you tell Briar?โ
She shook her head. I should have known. Mari was not one to ask for help readily.
โMari, do you thinkโโ
โThat I was right? That the amulet was the only reason I could do anything and now Iโm back to being a magicless witch like I was before we stole it from Kaneโs study? Yes, I do.โ
โYou knew it was helping you all along.โ I shook my head. โI never should have doubted you.โ
Mari offered me a begrudging smile. โSo you believe me now . . . What changed?โ
โBriar said you rigged the amulet magically to bolster your power. I knew you hadnโt, though. Which means the only way it could have given you power, and made you ill, was if you were from her lineage, and able to use it becauseย sheย crafted it. Kane said her coven hasnโt been seen or heard from in hundreds of years, but maybe . . . somehow . . .โ
โMy mother . . .โ
โDid you tell anyone else?โ Mari made a face. โNo, but . . .โ โBut what?โ
โYouโre going to laugh.โ
โFor some reason I doubt that.โ
โI was going to tell Griffin. I thought that he might be able to help. Or just listen, I donโt know.โ
โBut?โ
โButย he has been such a prick to me since I awoke. Ignoring me, walking away mid-sentence when I ask him to please put his pack next to the other ones in order of weight and not height because clearly that makes no sense, how does ordering them byย heightย makeย anythingย easierโโ
โMari.โ
โSorry.โ She sighed. โI just thought, back in Peridot, that we were becoming friends. Good friends. Or maybe even something more than that . . . And thatโs hard for me. I never had a lot of luck in that arena growing up in Shadowhold. Mostly, the boys here were really cruel. But Griffin . . . Well, itโs pointless now, isnโt it? I guess helping me walk down a single flight of stairs at Briarโs was enough to make him hate me all over again. Stones forbid he do one damned thing for someone else.โ She folded her arms across her chest. โArwen, he practically dropped me like a lit match as soon as he could.โ
โGriffin sat by your bedside for days on end without eating or drinking. He read to you.ย Sleptย beside you. He let Kane travel to Cragโs Hollow without him so he could stay with you.โ
โSo heโs loyal, like a good dog.โ
I missed her so much and also I was going to strangle her. โHe couldnโt bear to leave your side! He couldnโt hold you as you walked down some stairs probably because he wasย thisย close to vomiting out the wordsย I love you, please order me around for the rest of eternity.ย And it scares him almost as much as it scares you.โ
Mariโs eyes widened. โI do not order people around!โ
I glared at her, but couldnโt help a half smile. โFirst things first.โ I sighed. โYou need to tell Briar about your magic. If anyone can help you get it back, itโs her.โ
โMaybe this is a blessing. I was all right before magic. Iโll be all right again. Maybe thereโs something in my lineage that shouldnโt be touched.โ The look in her eyes told me there was more to that theory, but she moved past it. โPlease tell me youโve been faring even a little better?โ
I exhaled with an audibleย whoosh. โI have a lot to catch you up on.โ โI feel like this happens to us far too often.โ
โMaybe one day our lives will be boring.โ
Her brows rose quickly before lowering as she schooled her face. But I knew what surprised her. It had been a long while since Iโd spoken about the future as if I might still have one.
โGo find Leigh and Ryder, and we can show them Shadowhold together. Last night I told Leigh about Kaneโs art collection and promised Iโd show her my favorite paintings in the castle. Did you know she can really draw?โ
โYes.โ I smiled at the colorful memories. โOur house back in Abbington was full of her art.โ
โAfter, you and I can go to the great hall, drink too much birchwine, and tackle everything I missed.โ Her eyes had brightened a bit, and my heart was starting to re-form from the mangled shape it had contorted into at her confession. She would survive this. I would help her to. โStarting with you and Fedrik. Heโs been asking about you nonstop.โ
Bleeding Stones,ย Fedrik. I had almost forgotten. โAnd speaking of, look who it is.โ
I whirled to see Fedrik walk into the throne room, followed by Griffin, Kane, and a handful of Onyx generals. I waved brightly at Barney and Dagan among them, which earned only a nod from Daganโan obvious sign of his deep and steadfast loveโand a full, ear-to-ear grin from Barney, welcoming me home.
Home.
I had barely luxuriated in how good it felt to refer to Shadowhold as such when Fedrik cut away from the group and directly toward me. He looked radiant, as if filled with sunbeams, despite the dark, rich stone walls and obsidian thorns of Kaneโs throne behind him.
โArwen,โ he said brightly. โHow was your trip?โ โIt was . . . informative.โ
โKane tells me you found the seer but her clues on the blade were a bit ambiguous.โ
โYes, but at least we have a lead now. Itโs here in Onyx. And we got a few other helpful pieces of information we can hopefully tie together, too.โ
โGood to hear. Mari, do you mind giving us a moment?โ
Mari couldnโt hide her sly smile as her eyes locked on mine. โNot at all. Iโm going to go find the other two Valondales and teach them a bit about fine art. Itโs been a while since I felt like a snob.โ
Fedrik drew closer once Mari had left us. โIโm sorry I left Briarโs abruptly. Griffin said youโd be back last night.โ
โWe got caught in a storm.โ
His blue eyes flared. โIโm sure you did. Have you made a decision regarding my offer? Iโm sailing back to Azurine today.โ
โFedrikโโ
โWhat offer?โ Kane asked behind me, his voice like lightning across a desolate sky.
I spun to face him, my eyes pleading.ย Not now.
Fedrik only smiled. โWell, you were going to find out eventually.โ He stood a bit taller, still at least half a foot beneath Kane. โI asked Arwen to come back to Azurine with me. At least until youโve found the blade and prepared for battle. Itโll be safer for her, and franklyโโhe looked around at
the dark drapery and flickering, wrought-iron candelabrasโโa little more scenic.โ
โA generous offer,โ Kane said, his voice dry, โif Arwen wasnโt our key to finding the weapon.โ
โShe already told me itโs here in your own kingdom. For all we know youโve had it all along and are just delaying the inevitable.โ
Kane stepped toward him with intent. โMind your tongue, or Iโll sever it from your mouth.โ
โKane.โ I leveled a glare at him.
โAnd there he goes,โ Fedrik drawled. โHostile and threatening once again.โ
Griffin strode over to stand beside his king. โI donโt think Iโve ever seen you so aggressive, Fedrik. Didnโt get your beauty sleep?โ
But it was Kane who loosed a dark and venomous chuckle. โHeโs angry.
He wants her and knows sheโll never be his.โ
There was that predictable Kane cruelty. And to the very person we needed to vouch for him to Citrine. โDonโt talk about me like Iโm not here.โ I pulled Fedrik away from the prying eyes of the throne room by the arm. โCome on.โ
Kane called to our backs, โEnjoy the soaked kingdom.โ
โIs that the kind of brute you always imagined yourself with?โ Fedrik asked as we passed Kaneโs sentries and roamed out into the hall.
โNot particularly,โ I admitted once we were alone.
โLet me show you a better life. Maybe not with me, but surely not with him.โ
โFedrik, I canโt come with you.โ
โIโm not trying to sweep you off your feet, Arwen. But you havenโt even
โโ
โIโm in love with him.โ
The quiet hall was already a reprieve from the teeming throne room, but there was a peaceful calm in my mind as well as soon as I spoke the words aloud.
A serene, steadfast resolve solidifying around that singular truth.
Of course I loved him.
I had been falling in love with Kane since the day we raced in the woods. Maybe even since he had given me his fox fur when Iโd been so close to breaking. He never let me, though. Not then, not after Sirenโs Bay, and not now.
Denying it for so longโit had been a cruelty to both him and myself. Saying the wordsโeven to Fedrikโfelt like walking through those enormous ornate doors to Shadowhold. It felt like coming home.
Fedrikโs brows knit inward. โI canโt say Iโm happy for you two.โ
โYou donโt have to. I donโt think it would be fair to him to be together.โ โThatโs a load. Heโs utterly devoted to you.โ
I said nothing. I understood his anger.
โIf he made you think . . . He is such a fool.โ Fedrik shook his head. โAlways has been.โ
I smiled weakly as a handful of soldiers with masks like skulls and sleek leather armor passed by us and into the bustling throne room. โWhat will you tell your parents?โ
โSome version of the truth.โ โWhich is?โ
Fedrikโs face gave nothing away. โIโm not sure yet. Look, if you change your mind, Iโm just a sea away.โ
I nodded, and once he had strolled back into the throne room, I sagged against the cool stone wall.
Maybe Fedrik was right. Maybe we were both fools.
Was it not foolish to know we loved each other and not act on it? Not try to be together, in whatever way we could?
Or was it foolish to confess my love to Kane knowing I might be ripped from his grasp any day now? Knowing how many heโd already lost. Remembering how pained he looked when heโd admitted his love . . .
I wasnโt hiding from what might tether me to this life anymore. I wasnโt concealing my feelings for my own benefitโI was doing it for his.
Was that foolish? Or a mercy?
I stared across the bustling castle, gloomy and shadowed as everโ Stones, I had missed this place. The candles flickering in the summer wind that slipped through wide-open stained-glass windows. The fireflies drifting around in drowsy late-afternoon air. I knew fall would be here soon, and all the trees would turn the maple color of my childhood.
I wondered if Iโd be here to see it. What it might feel like to blend my old home and my new. What I might look like, wrapped in my familiar fox fur, my new boots stomping through the crisp, fallen leaves all over the courtyard. The children I might treat in the apothecary, knees scraped from hay and hands blistered from carving gourds.
Did Kane love the rusted red and sunflower yellow of the leaves when they grew here in his bountiful keep? Or still loathe them as much as he did back in Amber? If he did, I would have to convince him otherwise. If we were both still here then, I would drag him, grumbling and rolling his eyes, into the gloomy woods and force him to jump in the leaves with me like schoolchildren. To brew cider with me, as rich as the one from Marinerโs Pubโmulled and sweet and spiced. Iโd show him all the reasons autumn was spellbinding and gorgeously melancholy. Why even as a citizen of Onyx, it would always be a part of me.
โArwen?โ Mari rounded out of the throne room with Ryder and Leigh in tow, shaking me from my hopes.
Hope.
Thatโs what that felt like.
Leigh flew into me with racehorse speed. The stone floor of the hallway was cold on my knees as I sank to the ground and held her, blonde hair filling my vision. Ryder joined us on the floor, making the hug smell of tobacco.
โYouโve been smoking,โ I whispered into them. โI would never,โ Leigh swore against my back.
โNot you.โ I grinned, pulling on one of her curls. โHow are you both?โ Leigh withdrew and spoke first. โYouโre in love with Kane?โ
My eyes widened. โEavesdropping?โ Ryder blanched. โI wasnโt, just her.โ
โYou love him, but youโre not going to tell him?โ Leighโs face was grave.
โLeigh, this has nothing to do with you.โ โWhen will you stop treating me like a kid?โ
My heart sank. We were already fighting. โWhy are you so angry with me these days?โ
โIโll let you two talk,โ Ryder offered. Torchlight glinted along his hair as he ambled down the stone hallway back toward Mari.
โIโm not angry with you,โ Leigh said.
โYes, you are. Youโve been furious with me since the day we left for Citrine, and I cannot for the life of me figure out why.โ
โIโm not angry,โ she conceded, and with more maturity than I had seen from her before, said, โIโm afraid.โ
For a moment, I couldnโt fathom an adequate response. Of course she was afraid. How had I been so blind?
โMe, too,โ I admitted, taking her hand in my own. โOf Lazarus, of this war. But what do your fears have to do with me and Kane?โ
โNo, thatโs the problem,โ she said, yanking her hand from mine. โYou canโt be scared, too. One of us has to be brave.โ
โLeigh . . .โ I started, her words a vise around my heart. โI wish I knew what to say to make everything feel safe again.โ
โI know there isnโt anything.โ
โMaybe not. But you know what? When I was most scared, there was one thing that helped me.โ
โRunning?โ
โNo.โ I grinned. โEven better.โ Her eyes lit with curiosity.
โDagan taught me here in this very keep how to protect myself with a sword. It made me feel strong and powerful. Like I could face things bigger and more frightening than me. Like maybe one dayย Iย could be the frightening one. Iโd like to teach you, too.โ
Leigh held my eyes as she considered the offer. โIโll never be as strong as you, though. Iโm not Fae.โ
It was shocking to see myself, however briefly, through Leighโs eyes. As the brave one, the resilient one, her full-blooded Fae sister. No wonder my childish avoidance of Kane had upset her so. She was looking to me all along to be strong. For us. For her.
In the place of our mother.
โYou donโt need to be Fae. You can harness power onlyย youย have.
Bravery comes from in here.โ I pointed to her heart.
Her eyes stayed fixed on me as I stood. โSo, what are you going to do?โ โHelp Kane track down the blade. Find a way to save the realms and my
own life. And figure out the love story if we make it that far?โ Leighโs lips cut a flat line. โI hate that plan.โ
I slumped against the stone wall behind me once more. โYeah, me, too.โ โYou two ready to explore?โ Mari called from around the corner, Ryder
behind her like an eager pet.
โLetโs do it.โ I grinned back at them. Iโd help Mari with her magic block later tonight. Figure out what in the world to do about Kane later, too. For now, it was enough to spend the afternoon with the people I had missed so much. Iโd tell them what Iโd learned about my mother, about Powell. Iโd share with them my fears, and my hopes, my faith in the future.
What I should have done weeks ago I could do now. And that would have to be enough.
โI found the painter you were looking for,โ Mari said to Leigh as we started down the hall. โHis abstract work is in the north wing gallery below the vault and above the . . .โ She trailed off, cringing.
Leigh swallowed. โAbove the what?โ
โThe . . . torture chamber.โ Mari grimaced. โBut! This place really isnโt as scary as you might think. Most castles have a torture chamber, itโs not just us!โ
Leigh did not look pleased.
โItโs actually pretty interesting, Leigh,โ Ryder added. โOne of the most prolific thieves of all time was held in there. I read all about it last night in the library.โ
I might have made a comment about Ryder suddenly being interested in books now that they had been given to him by Mari, but the words dried up on my tongue.
โWho?โ I asked.
โDrake Alcott,โ Ryder said, barely able to contain his pride in knowing the answer.
The vault that had housed the blade for forty-five years was only two floors above the torture annex. Where notorious, world-renowned thief and con man Drake Alcott had been kept. Hadnโt Niclas said he had been sent away five years ago? The same time the blade went missing . . . And to Hemlock Isle. An island here,ย in Onyx.
I stilled. โRyder . . . youโre a genius.โ โStones, donโt sound so surprised.โ
But I was already moving. Ignoring their calls as I ran back into the throne room, past those sentries once more, searching for Kaneโbut he was nowhere to be found. I turned to Griffin and Barney and the herd of Onyx soldiers that surrounded them.
โWhereโs Kane?โ
โNot sure,โ Griffin said coolly. โBut he thinks youโre leaving for Citrine with Fedrik.โ
Bleeding Stones.
โI need to find him. Right this moment.โ
โI think heโs in the gardens, Lady Arwen,โ Barney supplied. โThank you.โ
I raced for the castle garden as fast as a bird in flight.