My blood froze as a creeping, leeching cold lurched by. I couldnโt see anything, just a vague shimmering in the corner of my vision, but my horse stiffened beneath me. I willed my face into blankness. Even the balmy spring woods seemed to recoil, to wither and freeze.
The cold thing whispered past, circling. I could see nothing, but I couldย feelย it. And in the back of my mind, an ancient, hollow voice whispered:
I will grind your bones between my claws; I will drink your marrow; I will feast on your flesh. I am what you fear; I am what you dread โฆ Look at me. Look at me.
I tried to swallow, but my throat had closed up. I kept my eyes on the trees, on the canopy, on anything but the cold mass circling us again and again.
Look at me.
I wanted to lookโI needed to see what it was.
Look at me.
I stared at the coarse trunk of a distant elm, thinking of pleasant things. Like hot bread and full belliesโ
I will fill my belly with you. I will devour you.
Look at me.
A starry, unclouded night sky, peaceful and glittering and endless. Summer sunrise. A refreshing bath in a forest pool. Meetings with Isaac, losing myself for an hour or two in his body, in our shared breaths.
It was all around us, so cold that my teeth chattered.ย Look at me.
I stared and stared at that ever-nearing tree trunk, not daring to blink. My eyes strained, filling with tears, and I let them fall, refusing to acknowledge the thing that lurked around us.
Look at me.
And just as I thought I would give in, when my eyes hurt so much fromย notย looking, the cold disappeared into the brush, leaving a trail of still, recoiling plants behind it. Only after Lucien exhaled and our horses shook their heads did I
dare sag in my seat. Even the crocuses seemed to straighten again.
โWhat was that?โ I asked, brushing the tears from my face.
Lucienโs face was still pale. โYou donโt want to know.โ
โPlease. Was it that โฆ Suriel you mentioned?โ
Lucienโs russet eye was dark as he answered hoarsely. โNo. It was a creature that should not be in these lands. We call it the Bogge. You cannot hunt it, and you cannot kill it. Even with your beloved ash arrows.โ
โWhy canโt I look at it?โ
โBecause when you look at itโwhen you acknowledge itโthatโs when it becomes real. Thatโs when it can kill you.โ
A shiver spider-walked down my spine. This was the Prythian Iโd expectedโthe creatures that made humans speak of them in hushed tones even now. The reason I hadnโt hesitated, not for a heartbeat, when Iโd considered the possibility of that wolf being a faerie. โI heard its voice in my head. It told me to look.โ
Lucien rolled his shoulders. โWell, thank the Cauldron that you didnโt. Cleaning up that mess would have ruined the rest of my day.โ He gave me a wan smile. I didnโt return it.
I still heard the Boggeโs voice whispering between the leaves, calling to me.
After an hour of meandering through the trees, hardly speaking to each other, Iโd stopped trembling enough to turn to him.
โSo youโre old,โ I said. โAnd you carry around a sword, and go on border patrol. Did you fight in the War?โ Fineโperhaps I hadnโt quite let go of my curiosity about his eye.
He winced. โShit, FeyreโIโm not that old.โ โAre you a warrior, though?โย Would you be
able to kill me if it ever came to that?
Lucien huffed a laugh. โNot as good as Tam, but I know how to handle my weapons.โ He patted the hilt of his sword. โWould you like me to teach you how to wield a blade, or do you already know how, oh mighty mortal huntress? If you took down Andras, you probably donโt need to learn anything. Only where to aim, right?โ He tapped on his chest.
โI donโt know how to use a sword. I only know how to hunt.โ
โSame thing, isnโt it?โ โFor me itโs different.โ
Lucien fell silent, considering. โI suppose you humans are such hateful cowards that you would have wet yourself, curled up, and waited to die if youโd known beyond a doubt what Andras truly was.โ Insufferable. Lucien sighed as he looked me over. โDo you ever stop beingย soย serious and dull?โ
โDo you ever stop being such a prick?โ I snapped back.
Deadโreally, truly, I should have been dead for that.
But Lucien grinned at me. โMuch better.โ Alis, it seemed, had not been wrong.
Whatever tentative truce we built that afternoon vanished at the dinner table.
Tamlin was lounging in his usual seat, a long
claw out and circling his goblet. It paused on the lip as soon as I entered, Lucien on my heels. His green eyes pinned me to the spot.
Right. Iโd brushed him off that morning, claiming I wanted to be alone.
Tamlin slowly looked at Lucien, whose face had turned grave. โWe went on a hunt,โ Lucien said.
โI heard,โ Tamlin said roughly, glancing between us as we took our seats. โAnd did you have fun?โ Slowly, his claw sank back into his flesh.
Lucien didnโt answer, leaving it to me.ย Coward.
I cleared my throat. โSort of,โ I said.
โDid you catch anything?โ Every word was clipped out.
โNo.โ Lucien gave me a pointed cough, as if urging me to say more.
But I had nothing to say. Tamlin stared at me for a long moment, then dug into his food, not all that interested in talking to me, either.
Then Lucien quietly said, โTam.โ
Tamlin looked up, more animal than fae in those
green eyes. A demand for whatever it was Lucien had to say.
Lucienโs throat bobbed. โThe Bogge was in the forest today.โ
The fork in Tamlinโs hand folded in on itself. He said with lethal calm, โYou ran into it?โ
Lucien nodded. โIt moved past but came close. It must have snuck through the border.โ
Metal groaned as Tamlinโs claws punched out, obliterating the fork. He rose to his feet with a powerful, brutal movement. I tried not to tremble at the contained fury, at how his canines seemed to lengthen as he said, โWhere in the forest?โ
Lucien told him. Tamlin threw a glance in my direction before stalking out of the room and shutting the door behind him with unnerving gentleness.
Lucien loosed a breath, pushing away his half-eaten food and rubbing at his temples.
โWhere is he going?โ I asked, staring toward the door.
โTo hunt the Bogge.โ
โYou said it couldnโt be killedโthat you canโt face it.โ
โTam can.โ
My breath caught a bit. The gruff High Fae halfheartedly flattering me was capable of killing a thing like the Bogge. And yet heโd served me himself that first night, offered me life rather than death. Iโd known he was lethal, that he was a warrior of sorts, but โฆ
โSo he went to hunt the Bogge where we were earlier today?โ
Lucien shrugged. โIf heโs going to pick up a trail, it would be there.โ
I had no idea how anyone could face that immortal horror, but โฆ it wasnโt my problem.
And just because Lucien wasnโt going to eat anymore didnโt mean I wouldnโt. Lucien, lost in thought, didnโt even notice the feast I downed.
I returned to my room, andโawake and with nothing else to doโbegan monitoring the garden beyond for any signs of Tamlinโs return. He didnโt come back.
I sharpened the knife Iโd hidden away on a bit of
stone Iโd taken from the garden. An hour passedโ and still Tamlin didnโt return.
The moon showed her face, casting the garden below in silver and shadow.
Ridiculous. Utterly ridiculous to watch for his return, to see if he could indeed survive against the Bogge. I turned from the window, about to drag myself into bed.
But something moved out in the garden.
I lunged for the curtains beside the window, not wanting to be caught waiting for him, and peered out.
Not Tamlinโbut someone lurked by the hedges, facing the house. Looking towardย me.
Male, hunched, andโ
The breath went out of me as the faerie hobbled closerโjust two steps into the light leaking from the house.
Not a faerie, but a man. My father.