We immediately returned to Velaris, not trusting the queens to go long without noticing the Book’s absence, especially if the vague mention of the sixth alluded to further foul play amongst them.
Amren had the second half within minutes, not even bothering to ask about the meeting before she vanished into the dining room of the town house and shut the doors behind her. So we waited.
And waited.
Two days passed.
Amren still hadn’t cracked the code.
Rhys and Mor left in the early afternoon to visit the Court of Nightmaresโto return the Veritas to Keir without his knowing, and ensure that the Steward was indeed readying his forces. Cassian had reports that the Illyrian legions were now camped across the mountains, waiting for the order to fly out to wherever our first battle might be.
There would be one, I realized. Even if we nullified the Cauldron using the Book, even ifย Iย was able to stop that Cauldron and the king from using it to shatter the wall and the world, he had armies gathered. Perhaps we’d take the fight to him once the Cauldron was disabled.
There was no word from my sisters, no report from Azriel’s soldiers that they’d changed their minds. My father, I remembered, was still trading in the continent for the Mother knew what goods. Another variable in this.
And there was no word from the queens. It was of them that I most frequently thought. Of the two-faced, golden-eyed queen with not just a lion’s coloring โฆ but a lion’s heart, too.
I hoped I saw her again.
With Rhys and Mor gone, Cassian and Azriel came to stay at the town house as they continued to plan our inevitable visit to Hybern. After that first dinner, when Cassian had broken out one of Rhys’sย veryย old bottles of wine so we could celebrate my mating in style, I’d realized they’d come to stay for company, to dine with me, and โฆ the Illyrians had taken it upon themselves to look after me.
Rhys said as much that night when I’d written him a letter and watched it vanish. Apparently, he didn’t mind his enemies knowing he was at the Court of Nightmares. If Hybern’s forces tracked him there โฆ good luck to them.
I’d written to Rhys,ย How do I tell Cassian and Azriel I donโt need them here to protect me? Company is fine, but I donโt need sentries.
He’d written back,ย Youย don’tย tell them. You set boundaries if they cross a line, but you are their friendโand my mate. They will protect you on instinct. If you kick their asses out of the house, theyโll just sit on the roof.
I scribbled,ย You Illyrian males are insufferable.
Rhys had just said,ย Good thing we make up for it with impressive wingspans.
Even with him across the territory, my blood had heated, my toes curling. I’d barely been able to hold the pen long enough to write,ย Iโm missing that impressive wingspan in my bed. Inside me.
He’d replied,ย Of course you are. I’d hissed, jotting down,ย Prick.
I’d almost felt his laughter down the bondโour mating bond. Rhys wrote back,ย When I return, weโre going to that shop across the Sidra and youโre going to try on all those lacy little underthings for me.
I fell asleep thinking about it, wishing my hand was his, praying he’d finish at the Court of Nightmares and return to me soon. Spring was bursting all across the hills and peaks around Velaris. I wanted to sail over the yellow and purple blooms with him.
The next afternoon, Rhys was still gone, Amren was still buried in the book, Azriel off on a patrol of the city and nearby shoreline, and Cassian and I wereโof all thingsโjust finishing up an early afternoon performance of some ancient, revered Fae symphony. The amphi-theater was on the other side of the Sidra, and though he’d offered to fly me, I’d
wanted to walk. Even if my muscles were barking in protest after his brutal lesson that morning.
The music had been lovelyโstrange, but lovely, written at a time, Cassian had told me, when humans had not even walked the earth. He found the music puzzling, off-kilter, but โฆ I’d been entranced.
Walking back across one of the main bridges spanning the river, we remained in companionable silence. We’d dropped off more blood for Amrenโwho said thank you and get the hell outโand were now headed toward the Palace of Thread and Jewels, where I wanted to buy both of my sisters presents for helping us. Cassian had promised to send them down with the next scout dispatched to retrieve the latest report. I wondered if he’d send anything to Nesta while he was at it.
I paused at the center of the marble bridge, Cassian halting beside me as I peered down at the blue-green water idling past. I could feel the threads of the current far below, the strains of salt and fresh water twining together, the swaying weeds coating the mussel-flecked floor, the tickling of small, skittering creatures over rock and mud. Could Tarquin sense such things? Did he sleep in his island-palace on the sea and swim through the dreams of fishes?
Cassian braced his forearms on the broad stone railing, his red Siphons like living pools of flame.
I said, perhaps because I was a busybody who liked to stick my nose in other people’s affairs, โIt meant a great deal to meโwhat you promised my sister the other day.โ
Cassian shrugged, his wings rustling. โI’d do it for anyone.โ
โIt meant a lot to her, too.โ Hazel eyes narrowed slightly. But I casually watched the river. โNesta is different from most people,โ I explained. โShe comes across as rigid and vicious, but I think it’s a wall. A shieldโlike the ones Rhys has in his mind.โ
โAgainst what?โ
โFeeling. I think Nesta feels everythingโsees too much; sees and feels it all. And she burns with it. Keeping that wall up helps from being overwhelmed, from caring too greatly.โ
โShe barely seems to care about anyone other than Elain.โ
I met his stare, scanning that handsome, tan face. โShe will never be like Mor,โ I said. โShe will never love freely and gift it to everyone who crosses her path. But the few she does care for โฆ I think Nesta would shred the world apart for them. Shred herself apart for them. She and I
have our โฆ issues. But Elain โฆ โ My mouth quirked to the side. โShe will never forget, Cassian, that you offered to defend Elain. Defend her people. As long as she lives, she will remember that kindness.โ
He straightened, rapping his knuckles against the smooth marble. โWhy are you telling me this?โ
โI justโthought you should know. For whenever you see her again and she pisses you off. Which I’m certain will happen. But know that deep down, she is grateful, and perhaps does not possess the ability to say so. Yet the feelingโthe heartโis there.โ
I paused, debating pushing him, but the river flowing beneath us shifted.
Not a physical shifting. But โฆ a tremor in the current, in the bedrock, in the skittering things crawling on it. Like ink dropped in water.
Cassian instantly went on alert as I scanned the river, the banks on either side.
โWhat the hell is that?โ he murmured. He tapped the Siphon on each hand with a finger.
I gaped as scaled black armor began unfolding and slithering up his wrists, his arms, replacing the tunic that had been there. Layer after layer, coating him like a second skin, flowing up to his shoulders. The additional Siphons appeared, and more armor spread across his neck, his shoulders, down his chest and waist. I blinked, and it had covered his legsโthen his feet.
The sky was cloudless, the streets full of chatter and life. Cassian kept scanning, a slow rotation over Velaris.
The river beneath me remained steady, but I could feel it roiling, as if trying to flee fromโ โFrom the sea,โ I breathed. Cassian’s gaze shot straight ahead, to the river before us, to the towering cliffs in the distance that marked the raging waves where it met the ocean.
And there, on the horizon, a smear of black. Swift-movingโspreading wider as it grew closer.
โTell me those are birds,โ I said. My power flooded my veins, and I curled my fingers into fists, willing it to calm, to steadyโ
โThere’s no Illyrian patrol that’s supposed to know about this place โฆ
,โ he said, as if it were an answer. His gaze cut to me. โWe’re going back to the town house right now.โ
The smear of black separated, fracturing into countless figures. Too big for birds. Far too big. I said, โYou have to sound the alarmโโ
But people were. Some were pointing, some were shouting.
Cassian reached for me, but I jumped back. Ice danced at my fingertips, wind howled in my blood. I’d pick them off one by oneโ โGet Azriel and Amrenโโ
They’d reached the sea cliffs. Countless, long-limbed flying creatures, some bearing soldiers in their arms โฆ An invading host. โCassian.โ
But an Illyrian blade had appeared in Cassian’s hand, twin to the one across his back. A fighting knife now shone in the other. He held them both out to me. โGet back to the town houseโright now.โ
I most certainly would not go. If they were flying, I could use my power to my advantage: freeze their wings, burn them, break them. Even if there were so many, even ifโ
So fast, as if they were carried on a fell wind, the force reached the outer edges of the city. And unleashed arrows upon the shrieking people rushing for cover in the streets. I grabbed his outstretched weapons, the cool metal hilts hissing beneath my forge-hot palms.
Cassian lifted his hand into the air. Red light exploded from his Siphon, blasting up and awayโforming a hard wall in the sky above the city, directly in the path of that oncoming force.
He ground his teeth, grunting as the winged legion slammed into his shield. As if he felt every impact.
The translucent red shield shoved out farther, knocking them backโ We both watched in mute horror as the creatures lunged for the shield,
arms outโ
They were not just any manner of faerie. Any rising magic in me sputtered and went out at the sight of them.
They were all like the Attor.
All long-limbed, gray-skinned, with serpentine snouts and razor-sharp teeth. And as the legion of its ilk punched through Cassian’s shield as if it were a cobweb, I beheld on their spindly gray arms gauntlets of that bluish stone I’d seen on Rhys, glimmering in the sun.
Stone that broke and repelled magic. Straight from the unholy trove of the King of Hybern.
One after one after one, they punched through his shield.
Cassian sent another wall barreling for them. Some of the creatures peeled away and launched themselves upon the outskirts of the city, vulnerable outside of his shield. The heat that had been building in my palms faded to clammy sweat.
People were shrieking, fleeing. And I knew his shields would not hold
โ
โGO!โ Cassian roared. I lurched into motion, knowing he likely lingered because I stayed, that he needed Azriel and Amren andโ
High above us, three of them slammed into the dome of the red shield. Clawing at it, ripping through layer after layer with those stone gauntlets. That’s what had delayed the king these months: gathering his arsenal.
Weapons to fight magic, to fight High Fae who would rely on itโ
A hole ripped open, and Cassian threw me to the ground, shoving me against the marble railing, his wings spreading wide over me, his legs as solid as the bands of carved rock at my backโ
Screams on the bridge, hissing laughter, and thenโ A wet, crunching thud.
โShit,โ Cassian said. โShitโโ
He moved a step, and I lunged from under him to see what it was, who it wasโ
Blood shone on the white marble bridge, sparkling like rubies in the sun.
There, on one of those towering, elegant lampposts flanking the bridge
โฆ
Her body was bent, her back arched on the impact, as if she were in the throes of passion.
Her golden hair had been shorn to the skull. Her golden eyes had been plucked out.
She was twitching where she had been impaled on the post, the metal pole straight through her slim torso, gore clinging to the metal above her.
Someone on the bridge vomited, then kept running.
But I could not break my stare from the golden queen. Or from the Attor, who swept through the hole it had made and alighted atop the blood-soaked lamppost.
โRegards,โ it hissed, โof the mortal queens. And Jurian.โ Then the Attor leaped into flight, fast and sleekโheading right for the theater district we’d left.
Cassian had pressed me back down against the bridgeโand he surged toward the Attor. He halted, remembering me, but I rasped, โGo.โ
โRun home.ย Now.โ
That was the final orderโand his good-bye as he shot into the sky after the Attor, who had already disappeared into the screaming streets.
Around me, hole after hole was punched through that red shield, those winged creatures pouring in, dumping the Hybern soldiers they had carried across the sea.
Soldiers of every shape and sizeโlesser faeries.
The golden queen’s gaping mouth was opening and closing like a fish on land. Save her, help herโ
My blood. I couldโ
I took a step. Her body slumped.
And from wherever in me that power originated, I felt her death whisper past.
The screams, the beating wings, the whoosh and thud of arrows erupted in the sudden silence.
I ran. I ran for my side of the Sidra, for the town house. I didn’t trust myself to winnowโcould barely think around the panic barking through my head. I had minutes, perhaps, before they hit my street. Minutes to get there and bring as many inside with me as I could. The house was warded. No one would get in, not even these things.
Faeries were rushing past, racing for shelter, for friends and family. I hit the end of the bridge, the steep hills rising upโ
Hybern soldiers were already atop the hill, at the two Palaces, laughing at the screams, the pleading as they broke into buildings, dragging people out. Blood dribbled down the cobblestones in little rivers.
They had done this. Those queens had โฆ had given this city of art and music and food over to these โฆ monsters. The king must have used the Cauldron to break its wards.
A thunderousย boomย rocked the other side of the city, and I went down at the impact, blades flying, hands ripping open on the cobblestones. I whirled toward the river, scrambling up, lunging for my weapons.
Cassian and Azriel were both in the skies now. And where they flew, those winged creatures died. Arrows of red and blue light shot from them, and those shieldsโ
Twin shields of red and blue merged, sizzling, and slammed into the rest of the aerial forces. Flesh and wings tore, bone meltedโ
Until hands encased in stone tumbled from the sky. Only hands. Clattering on rooftops, splashing into the river. All that was left of them
โwhat two Illyrian warriors had worked their way around.
But there were countless more who had already landed. Too many. Roofs were wrenched apart, doors shattered, screaming rising and then silencedโ
This was not an attack to sack the city. It was an extermination.
And rising up before me, merely a few blocks down, the Rainbow of Velaris was bathed in blood.
The Attor and his ilk had converged there.
As if the queens had told him where to strike; where in Velaris would be the most defenseless. The beating heart of the city.
Fire was rippling, black smoke staining the skyโ Where was Rhys, where was my mateโ
Across the river, thunder boomed again.
And it was not Cassian, or Azriel, who held the other side of the river.
But Amren.
Her slim hands had only to point, and soldiers would fallโfall as if their own wings failed them. They slammed into the streets, thrashing, choking, clawing, shrieking, just as the people of Velaris had shrieked.
I whipped my head to the Rainbow a few blocks awayโleft unprotected. Defenseless.
The street before me was clear, the lone safe passage through hell. A female screamed inside the artists’ quarter. And I knew my path.
I flipped my Illyrian blade in my hand and winnowed into the burning and bloody Rainbow.
This was my home. These were my people.
If I died defending them, defending that small place in the world where art thrived โฆ
Then so be it.
And I became darkness, and shadow, and wind.
I winnowed into the edge of the Rainbow as the first of the Hybern soldiers rounded its farthest corner, spilling onto the river avenue, shredding the cafรฉs where I had lounged and laughed. They did not see me until I was upon them.
Until my Illyrian blade cleaved through their heads, one after another. Six went down in my wake, and as I halted at the foot of the Rainbow,
staring up into the fire and blood and death โฆ Too many. Too many soldiers.
I’d never make it, never kill them allโ
But there was a young female, green-skinned and lithe, an ancient, rusted bit of pipe raised above her shoulder. Standing her ground in front of her storefrontโa gallery. People crouched inside the shop were sobbing.
Before them, laughing at the faerie, at her raised scrap of metal, circled five winged soldiers. Playing with her, taunting her.
Still she held the line. Still her face did not crumple. Paintings and pottery were shattered around her. And more soldiers were landing, spilling down, butcheringโ
Across the river, thunder boomedโAmren or Cassian or Azriel, I didn’t know.
The river.
Three soldiers spotted me from up the hill. Raced for me.
But I ran faster, back for the river at the foot of the hill, for the singing Sidra.
I hit the edge of the quay, the water already stained with blood, and slammed my foot down in a mighty stomp.
And as if in answer, the Sidra rose.
I yielded to that thrumming power inside my bones and blood and breath. I became the Sidra, ancient and deep. And I bent it to my will.
I lifted my blades, willing the river higher, shaping it, forging it.
Those Hybern soldiers stopped dead in their tracks as I turned toward them.
And wolves of water broke from behind me. The soldiers whirled, fleeing.
But my wolves were faster.ย Iย was faster as I ran with them, in the heart of the pack.
Wolf after wolf roared out of the Sidra, as colossal as the one I had once killed, pouring into the streets, racing upward.
I made it five steps before the pack was upon the soldiers taunting the shop owner.
I made it seven steps before the wolves brought them down, water shoving down their throats, drowning themโ
I reached the soldiers, and my blade sang as I severed their choking heads from their bodies.
The shopkeeper was sobbing as she recognized me, her rusted bar still raised. But she noddedโonly once.
I ran again, losing myself amongst my water-wolves. Some of the soldiers were taking to the sky, flapping upward, backtracking.
So my wolves grew wings, and talons, and became falcons and hawks and eagles.
They slammed into their bodies, their armor, drenching them. The airborne soldiers, realizing they hadn’t been drowned, halted their flight and laughedโsneering.
I lifted a hand skyward, and clenched my fingers into a fist.
The water soaking them, their wings, their armor, their faces โฆ It turned to ice.
Ice that was so cold it had existed before light, before the sun had warmed the earth. Ice of a land cloaked in winter, ice from the parts of me that felt no mercy, no sympathy for what these creatures had done and were doing to my people.
Frozen solid, dozens of the winged soldiers fell to the earth as one.
And shattered upon the cobblestones.
My wolves raged around me, tearing and drowning and hunting. And those that fled them, those that took to the skiesโthey froze and shattered; froze and shattered. Until the streets were laden with ice and gore and broken bits of wing and stone.
Until the screaming of my people stopped, and the screams of the soldiers became a song in my blood. One of the soldiers rose up above the brightly painted buildings โฆ I knew him.
The Attor was flapping, frantic, blood of the innocent coating his gray skin, his stone gauntlets. I sent an eagle of water shooting for him, but he was quicker, nimble.
He evaded my eagle, and my hawk, and my falcon, soaring high, clawing his way through the air. Away from me, my powerโfrom Cassian and Azriel, holding the river and the majority of the city, away from Amren, using whatever dark power she possessed to send so many droves of them crashing down without visible injury.
None of my friends saw the Attor sailing up, sailing free.
It would fly back to Hybernโto the king. It had chosen to come here, to lead them. For spite. And I had no doubt that the golden, lioness-queen had suffered at its hands. As Clare had.
Where are you?
Rhys’s voice sounded distantly in my head, through the sliver in my shield.
WHERE ARE YOU?
The Attor was getting away. With each heartbeat, it flew higher and higherโ
WHEREโ
I sheathed the Illyrian blade and fighting knife through my belt and scrambled to pick up the arrows that had fallen on the street. Shot at my people. Ash arrows, coated in familiar greenish poison. Bloodbane.
Iโm exactly where I need to be, I said to Rhys. And then I winnowed into the sky.