The look on Raihnโs face lingered with me longer than I wish it did. Why would he give me that? Something so honest.
I hated that I knew it was honest.
I was ushered out of the throne room quickly after that, Raihn striding away without giving his nobles a second glance, casual in a way that I knew was calculated. Keturaโs guards flanked me, and Raihn walked several steps ahead, though I could see the whitened knuckles at his side. He didnโt even say a word to me as Cairis, Ketura, and the nobleโhis new Head of War?โ flocked around him, the group of them disappearing down a side hallway while the guards ushered me to the staircase that led back to my rooms.
Septimus joined me several steps up. I smelled him before I heard him.
He walked silently, but that damned cigarillo smoke gave him away. โWell that,โ he said, โwas interesting, wasnโt it?โ
He eyed the guards, who had visibly stiffened in his presence. โOh, pardon my rudeness. Am I interrupting?โ
The guards said nothing. As always.
Septimus smirked, satisfied with this non-answer.
โI knew your husbandโs past was a subject ofโฆ weโll call it controversy, among the Rishan nobles,โ he went on, to me. โBut I have to say, that exceeded my expectations. Suppose Iโll probably have to call in more troops from the House of Blood.โ He flicked ash to the marble staircase, grinding it under his heel. โLooks like the Rishan wonโt be much help, if thatโs the best they have to offer.โ
We turned up another flight of stairs.
I had nothing to say. Septimusโs words floated through me like background noise.
โYou,โ he said at last, โhave gotten much quieter.โ
โI donโt just talk for the sake of hearing my own voice.โ
โThatโs a shame. You always had such interesting things to say.โ
He was playing with me, and I hated it. If Iโd had the energy, maybe I wouldโve granted his wish and snapped at him.
I didnโt have the energy, so I said nothing.
We made it to the top floor. Just as we rounded the corner, my bedchamber door ahead, quick steps approached from behind. Desdemona, one of Septimusโs guards, fell into stride beside him.
โPardon, Highness. We have an issue.โ
Septimus and Desdemona fell back, while I kept walking. Stillโฆ my ears perked.
โItโs about the attack on Misrada,โ Desdemona was saying, voice low. โWeโll need to pull troops from the armory if we want to get enough men in two weeksโโ
My door swung open, jerking my attention back. The familiar havenโ prisonโof my bedchamber opened before me.
โWell, then do it,โ Septimus was saying, sounding impatient. โI donโt care aboutโโ
I walked inside.
The door shut behind me, closing me in once again. I loosened the buttons on my dress and immediately flopped onto the bed, waiting for the all-too-familiar sound of my door. Four clicks. Four locks.
Click.
Click.
I waited. Seconds passed. Footsteps faded.
My brow furrowed. Curiosity piqued for the first time in weeks. I sat up.
Had I imagined it? My mind had been blurry lately. Maybe Iโd missed the other two.
I went to the door and squinted into the crack. Two shadows interrupted the sliver of light from the hall. The upper two locksโsimple sliding barsโ were closed.
And the bottom two had been left open.
Fuck.
My first day here, Iโd managed to get three of the locks open. It was the bottom one, the big deadbolt, that had evaded me. But nowโฆ
I stepped away from the door, sizing it up the way Iโd size up an opponent in the ring. A glimmer of a foreign, unpracticed sensationโhope
โstirred in my chest.
I could get those locks open. I couldย get out.
It was nighttime still, albeit nearing dawn. I should wait until the sun rose and the vampires had mostly gone to their respective rooms. Then I wincedโthinking of the room right next to mine, and the man within whoโd be back any minute. Vampire hearing was impeccable. If I tried to get out while he was there, heโd know it.
Butโฆ Iโd paid attention to Raihnโs movements, too. He spent very little time in his room. Oftentimes, he didnโt return until well after sunrise.
So, Iโd have to gamble. Wait until tomorrowโwait long enough that most vampires had gone to sleep, but not long enough that Raihn had.
And then what?
You know this castle better than anyone here, little serpent,ย Vincent whispered to me, and I flinched, as I always did when I heard his voice.
He was right, though. Not only had I lived in this castle my entire life, Iโd learned how to sneak around it with no one noticingโnot even the last King of the Nightborn.
I just needed to bide my time.