THE POWER OF THE THRONEย and the crown andย the courtย pumps through me.
The crown has been returned to its rightful place in the Court of the Moon.
Mordeusโs eyes go wide. He steps back and stumbles down the stairs. โWhat have you done?โ
โYour turn,โ I say, mustering all my bravado. I still donโt know if this
will work. โReturn my sister safe and alive to the mortal realmโsend her to Mage Trifenโs so he can tend to her.โ
His mouth twists with rage, but he snaps his fingers as he glares at me. โIt is done.โ He steps toward me, but Iโm still too numb to object to his nearness. โYou think youโre so clever,โ he says. โBut you never said I had
to returnย youย to the mortal realm, and now you have signed your own death sentence. I would rather see my peasant-loving nephew on this throne than let a humanย womanย take charge of my court.โ
โIโm not afraid of you.โ
Mordeus straightens and opens one big hand. Suddenly the scar-faced
servant girl who took me to the restroom is between us. He holds a blade to her throat. โYouโre not. Butย sheย is,โ he whispers. โAnd I hear youโre like my nephew in your fondness for protecting the weak.โ
A thin line of blood appears on the blade where it bites into her skin, and her soft whimper is more piteous than the loudest cry for help.
He goes on. โYou think you can trick me, but your unskilled magic is no match for my power. Your mortality and empathy make you weak. Bond
with me, and she will be spared. Refuse me and watch countless others just like her lose their lives because of you.โ
More blood trickles across the blade.
โRelease her,โ I say, my voice broken. Iโm floundering. The throne room is lined with Mordeusโs sentries, all looking ready to tear me apart at the first order. If this worked, maybe Jas is safe now, but I might be the reason that this innocent girl dies. โPlease.โ
โYouโll take the bond?โ
I canโt die without knowing Jas is okay, and I canโt allow the bond and give someone so cruel control of this power. I canโt abandon the innocent Unseelie whoโve already suffered so much from his rule.
โBond with me,โ he growls. โAnd this ends.โ
โNo.โ My voice shakes three times on the single syllable, but my chin is high.
Mordeus slices the blade across her throat, and blood burbles from her mouth and neck, covering his hand before she falls to the floor.
When he opens his hand again, his magic flares, and another girl appears in the first girlโs place. This one canโt be more than twelve. She fights his grip, and the knife at her neck bites into her skin as she looks desperately
around the throne room.
โI have dozens upon dozens of humans at my disposal, all bought and paid for thanks to the greed of your kind,โ he says. โHow many are you willing to sacrifice for your own selfish reasons? How many lives is your stubborn pride worth?โ
The girlโs blue eyes are wild before landing on me. I watch the moment she takes me in. Then I see it there in a flash: hope.
Hope.
Even with another girl dead on the floor before her and a blade digging into her throat, she has hope.
I tap into that feeling and blanket the room in darkness. Itโs Mordeusโs element but mine too, and Iโm stronger than before. Invisible tendrils of
power tether me to the throne and the court. I draw on all of it as I mentally wrap the night around each of his guards, locking them into little boxes of shadow just as I disappear into my own. The king loses his grip on the girl as he lunges forward to stop me, but I reappear behind him, the adamant knife Sebastian gave me in my hand. The moment he spins to face me, I plunge it into his heart.
Mordeus roars in pain, and everything moves in slow motionโhis snarl as he grabs a handful of my hair, the hot, sticky blood from his chest pouring onto my fingers, and the keening cry of the young girl whoโs fallen to her knees behind him.
Mordeus strikes with his bloody blade, aiming for my gut and finding his mark, but he falls to a heap on the ground before he can drive it home.
With shaking, bloody hands, I help the girl to her feet. โDo you have a
safe place to go until I can get back to you?โย Countless humans,ย he said. All just waiting to feed Mordeusโs power and extend his cursed life.
She nods. There are tears running down her face. โMy sister,โ she chokes out, and I realize sheโs looking at the body of the first girl on the floor. The one I didnโt think fast enough to save.
โIโm so sorry,โ I whisper. Iโve sacrificed so much to save my sister, but I let hers die. โSo very sorry.โ
She sinks to the floor to smooth her dead sisterโs hair from her face, and the sight threatens to tear away my numbness. I donโt have the luxury for the pain or the terror that want to claim me. I have to go.
I snap a thread on my goblin bracelet.
Bakkenโs eyes go wide when he surveys the scene before him, his gaze locking on the false king who is dead on the floor in a pool of his own blood.
โTake me to Finnโs catacombs.โ I wipe my hands on my skirt, my
stomach roiling at the smell of blood and the feel of it under my fingernails and soaking the silken sleep clothes that cling to my skin.
Bakken steps back and shakes his head. โYou ask too much.โ
โI always pay,โ I say between clenched teeth. I squeeze the handle of the dagger in my hand so hard the threads in the hilt bite into my palm. โTake me to the shadow princeโs catacombs.โ
โThe location is a highly guarded secret. This isnโt your average information.โ
Without thinking, I wrap my fist around my hair and use the bloody knife to sheer it all off. I shove the handful of hair toward him. โHere.โ
His eyes bulge, and spittle drips from the corner of his mouth as he takes it from me. โYes, Fire Girl.โ
I close my eyes, prepared for the nausea that comes with moving through the world with a goblin, but it doesnโt help. When the world stops weaving beneath my feet and I open my eyes, Iโm surrounded by darkness so deep
even my eyes canโt quite make out where we are. โI leave you now, Fire Girl.โ
I sense more than see Bakken disappear, and I donโt try to stop him. The air is cold and smells of damp earth. We must be deep underground.
Mordeus thought he could drug me to convince me to bond myself to him. Then he thought he could use innocents to force me. Which means that Mordeus is as untrustworthy as everyone said and as devious as I feared.
But I was prepared for Mordeus to be devious.
I wasnโt prepared for the same from Finn.
All this time, thatโs why Finn helped me. He was hoping I would fall for him and eventually trust him enough to bond with him. He planned to claim my life force and with it the magic crown I didnโt even know I carried.
I believed I had friends here, actually feltย lessย lonely than I did in Fairscape. But Sebastian is the only real friend I have, and I have broken his trust too many times to count.
Slowly, my eyes adjust and I have to bite back a sob. I donโt know what I expected to see. These are hisย catacombs.ย Of course the dead are kept here. But even so, I never expected this.
The catacombs hold row after row of glass coffins. I rush forward. The
woman inside the first one is youngโprobably my ageโand her long blond hair is pulled over one shoulder, her eyes closed. Her hands are folded
across her stomach.
She wears a soft white gown of lace and looks like a bride ready for her wedding. I put my hands on the glassโto push it aside, to wake her up, to
. . . Save her?โit wonโt move.
I press my hand against the glass. โNo.โ
I step to the next and see a young man. He has sunken cheeks and sallow skin. He was probably starving when he offered himself to Finn. Maybe he was like me and had a younger sister relying on him. Maybe he handed his life over so someone he loved could survive.
Coffin after coffin, human after human, these catacombs tell a story of a monster who was willing to take the lives of men and women to protect his own. When I come upon a coffin with a familiar face inside, I lean on it and choke back a sob.
Kyla. Iย watchedย as she offered herself to him. Sacrificed herself because whatever life sheโd been living had been worse than this fateโeternity in a glass coffin.
I wanted to believe that Finn was good. When Bakken told me about the curse, I wanted to believe that Finn would never take a human life, that heโd let go of his magic and sacrifice his own immortality before falling victim
to the awful choice offered by the curse. Part of me knewโpart of me has known for a long timeโjust what it means to be a tribute.
I wanted to believe we were friends and that the connection I felt when we touchedย meantย something. Instead, the connection was nothing more than a crown I donโt want. A crown he needs. A crown he planned to kill me to take.
โI keep them here to honor them.โ
I spin around in the darkness. Finn stands behind me, the orb of light floating at his side illuminating that criminally beautiful face. That lying mouth. Those deceiving silver eyes. โAre you going to finally ask me to bond with you? Or maybe youโre too much of a coward to take the crown you and your friends have been grooming me to hand over.โ
He leans one shoulder against the stone wall and closes his eyes as if he is very, very tired. โThen you know everything now?โ
โI know you planned to kill me from our very first dance.โ I canโt keep the pain from my voice. โEverything you did to win me over you did for the crownโto get me to bond with you so you could beย sureย the crown would be yours.โ
Straightening, he drags his hands through his hair in frustration. โI canโt solve the problems of my court from exile.โ
My hands shake, but Iโm not scared. Iโm . . . hurt. My gaze scans across the row of coffins, and the room tilts around me. I press a hand to my
stomach and feel the sticky warmth of Mordeusโs blood. Of my blood, still oozing from the daggerโs shallow strike.
โAnd while you worked to manipulate me, you were killing all these innocent people because you believedย yourย life was more important than theirs.โ
When I turn back to him, he doesnโt deny it. A mask of resignation
covers his face, and sadness glistens in those silver eyes. No,ย not sadness.
Thatโs what he wants me to see, and I wonโt be manipulated. Not anymore.
I swallow hard, but it does nothing to push down the ache in my chest. โDid you kill them all?โ
โNo, but enough.โ He walks to the first coffin and gently presses his fingertips to the glass as he studies the woman inside. โToo many.โ
โDo you even know their names?โ โEvery single one.โ
I nod to the coffin his hands are resting on, the one holding the bride. โWhoโs that?โ
โHer name was Isabel.โ His voice cracks, and he lifts his head to meet my eyes.
I remember asking him about Isabelโwho she was, what happened to her. I remember the anguish in his eyes when he replied,ย She was mortal.
โYou killed her,โ I whisper. โYou killed your own betrothed.โ
โYes.โ Itโs hard to hate him when he looks so broken, but the facts make it easier. He isย notย the male I was beginning to believe he was.
โThe king is dead,โ I say. I want him to know what Iโm capable ofโthat Iโm not so easily manipulated or bested. I wantย myselfย to know.
โI know.โ
I pull my dagger from my calf but keep it wrapped in shadow in my palm. โI killed him.โ
โI know. He underestimated you from the beginning. But your mother didnโt.โ
An image of her smile flashes in my mind. โDonโt talk about my mother.โ
My eyes burn. I canโt think about that. Not when Iโve spent the last nine years so angry with her for abandoning us. I canโt think about all the anger Iโve felt that she didnโt deserve. I canโt think about how much she sacrificed for me.ย Not yet.
โI could have forgiven you for the deceit, but this?โ I wave my hand toward the coffins. โIโve lived my whole life in a world that thought humans could be bought and used. I willย neverย give the crown to someone who is part of that problem.โ
His jaw twitches as he flicks his gaze over me. โYou should make use of the dagger youโre hiding in your hand and kill me then. Because as long as I live, I have an obligation to my people. So as long as I live, I will fight for that crown you wear.โ
My hand shakes as I adjust my grip on the hilt. Killing him wouldnโt bring back all these humans, but he would be one less shadow faerie taking innocent lives.
I take a step forward and he doesnโt move.
Would he even fight me, or would he just let me end him? Iย trustedย him.
And I betrayed Sebastian. For my sister, yes, but for Finn too. For his kingdom. For his chance to take back his throne.
I try to grip the dagger for a proper strike, but I canโt. My fingers refuse to tighten. So I run. I find the stairs and run up and up and up. I feel him
watching me, but he doesnโt follow. My lungs and legs burn as I climb, but Iโm driven by something more than oxygen, and I keep going until I smell the fresh air of day and see the light of the sun peeking in from a door beyond.
I scramble into the sunlight and collapse onto the pine needle carpet of the clearing. I canโt catch my breath, and itโs not just because my heart is pounding so fast or because the pain from the serpentโs bite and the gash in my gut are finally catching up with me.
Finn betrayed me, I betrayed Sebastian, and it all hurts more than I can handle.