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Chapter no 39

The Ashes & the Star-Cursed King

Maybe Oraya was right, and I was more out of shape than Iโ€™d thought, because that dance had taken more out of me than it should have. For those few minutes, the rest of the party had

become a blur, time and music and the sounds of the crowd fading to a distant din. How could it not, when I was so singularly focused on her?

But when Cairis led me away, that feeling lingered. My thoughts were fuzzy and slow, a half step behind. When I looked around and realized that weโ€™d left the ballroom, wandering outside under the cooling night air, I startled a little. I didnโ€™t even remember walking through the rest of the party.

Cairis was saying something, but Iโ€™d managed to miss whatever it was. โ€œWait.โ€ I held up a hand, then pinched the bridge of my nose. โ€œIโ€”go

back. Iโ€™m sorry. What are we talking about?โ€ He let out a small laugh.

โ€œOne dance with her and you canโ€™t even think straight anymore, hm?โ€ His voice lowered. โ€œI told you to be careful about that.โ€

My head was suddenly throbbing. I didnโ€™t especially feel like being scolded.

โ€œIโ€™m allowed to dance with my wife,โ€ I said shortly. โ€œWhat did you want to talk to me about? I have things to do.โ€

I imagined Oraya in that ballroom, surrounded by vampire pricks whoโ€™d just found a new reason to be interested in her. Suddenly the image of Simon standing over her, his hand on her arm, was infuriatingly vivid.

Cairisโ€™s mouth thinned as he cast a disapproving glance back to the party, light spilling from the open doors and multi-paned windows. The

entrance was farther away than I remembered it beingโ€”when did we walk this far?

He sighed. โ€œThatโ€™s the problem, Raihn. You think weโ€™re all stupid.โ€

It took a few seconds for the words to sink in. When I turned back to Cairis, brow furrowed in confusion, my eyes struggled to focus on his face. I couldnโ€™t get the sharp rebuke out of my mouth.

โ€œSurely you must think more of my intelligence than that,โ€ he was saying, hands tucked into his pockets, eyes drawn to the ground. โ€œYou keep saying that sheโ€™s just a prisoner. But Iโ€™m not blind. And no one else is, either.ย Everyone knows.โ€ His gaze lifted to me, a wrinkle between his brows. โ€œItโ€™s sweet, Raihn. But it wasnโ€™t justย youย who sacrificed for this.โ€

His voice sounded like he was underwater. The world tilted, the stars behind him smearing against the sky.

I opened my mouth to argue with him, ready to unleash the appropriate verbal storm of a disrespected Nightborn king, but instead, a sudden wave of dizziness had me falling back against a stone wall, barely catching myself.

He caught my shoulder. โ€œAre you feeling alright?โ€

No.

The truth solidified through my sluggish thoughts.

This wasnโ€™t alcohol or exertion. Something was very wrong.

I forced my head up to look at Cairis, expecting confusion or concern on his face.

Instead, what I saw was pity. Guilt.

โ€œIโ€™m sorry,โ€ he said, voice low. โ€œI just canโ€™t go back to the way it was, Raihn. I canโ€™t stay with you until that happens. I justโ€”I canโ€™t. I need to pick a winner. You have to understand that.โ€

Realization ignited through increasingly sticky, drug-addled thoughts. What Cairis was admitting to. How many drinks had I let him hand me tonight, accepted without question?

I never even considered him. That fuckingย bastard.

I conjured my wings, trying to fly, trying to move fast enough to prepare for the onslaught that I knew was coming. But my body betrayed me, just as my advisor had.

I fought the drugs until the last moment, even as my vision faded at the edges, my stomach roiling, my head pounding. I fought it even though I couldnโ€™t even keep track of how many soldiersโ€”Rishan soldiers, my own Goddess-damned menโ€”poured from the darkness, surrounding me, grabbing me. I managed to strike a head, a throat, an arm.

But whatever Cairis had given me drained my consciousness ravenously, second by second.

I fought until I physically couldnโ€™t anymore. Until the chains wrapped around my wrists.

I forced my head up to see that distant ballroom light, now little more than smears of gold in my failing vision. I tried to crawl to it.

But by then my body had failed me.

In another distant world, the clock rang out in ominous solitude, a thunderousย GONGย echoing through the bloody night.

I didnโ€™t hear it chime again.

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