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Chapter no 22

House of Flame and Shadow (Crescent City, #3)

Hunt could only watch in despair as the Bright Hand of the Asteri swept into the chamber, followed by Pollux and the Hawk. The Hawk noted the hand still dangling from the chains and laughed.

โ€œJust like a rat,โ€ the Hawk taunted, โ€œgnawing off a limb when caught in a trap.โ€

โ€œGet fucked,โ€ Baxian spat, Ruhnโ€™s blood coating his face, his neck, his chest.

โ€œLanguage,โ€ Rigelus chided, but didnโ€™tย interfere as Pollux snatched the iron poker from where Ruhn still clutched it between his feet. Ruhn, to his credit, tried to hold on to it, legs curling upward to tuck it close. But weakened and bleeding โ€ฆ there was nothing he could do. Pollux ripped it away, beating Ruhnโ€™s back once with itโ€”prompting a pained grunt from the princeโ€”then used the poker to prod Ruhnโ€™s severed hand from the shackleย above.

It landed on the filthy ground with a sickening thump.

Smiling, the Hawk picked it up like it was a shiny new toy.

Observing the three of them, Rigelus said mildly, โ€œIf Iโ€™d known you were so bored down here, I would have sent Pollux back sooner. Here I was, thinking youโ€™d had enough of pain.โ€

Pollux stalked to the lever, wings glowingly white. With a smirk,ย the Hammer pulled it andย sent all three of them dropping heavily to the ground.

The agony that blasted through Hunt drowned out Ruhnโ€™s scream as the prince landed on his severed wrist.

Hunt gave himself one breath, one moment on that filthy floor to sink down into the icy black of the Umbra Mortis. To fight past the pain, the guilt, to focus. To lift his head.

Rigelus stared down at them impassively. โ€œIโ€™m hoping thatย I will soon have further insight into where Miss Quinlan might have gone,โ€ he crooned. โ€œBut perhaps you might feel inclined now to talk?โ€

Ruhn spat, โ€œFuck off.โ€

Behind Rigelusโ€™s back, the Hawk folded the fingers of Ruhnโ€™s severed hand until only the middle one remained upright.

Hunt snarled softly. The snarl of the Umbra Mortis.

Yet Rigelus stepped closer to Hunt, immaculate white jacket almostย obscenely clean in this place. The golden rings on his fingers glimmered. โ€œIt brings me no joy to see you with the halo and slave brand again, Athalar.โ€

โ€œHalo,โ€ Hunt asked as solidly as he could, โ€œor black crown?โ€

Rigelus blinkedโ€”the only sign of his surpriseโ€”but the term clearly landed with the Bright Hand.

โ€œBeen talking to shadows, have you?โ€ Rigelus hissed.

โ€œUmbra Mortis and all that,โ€ย Hunt said. โ€œMakes sense for the Shadow of Death.โ€

Baxian chuckled.

Rigelus narrowed his eyes at the Helhound, then turned back to Hunt. โ€œWhat lengths would the Umbra Mortis go to in order to keep these two pathetic specimens alive, I wonder?โ€

โ€œWhat the fuck do you want?โ€ Hunt growled. Pollux flashed him a warning look.

โ€œA small task,โ€ Rigelus said. โ€œA favor. Unrelated to Miss Quinlan entirely.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t fucking listen to him,โ€ Baxian muttered, then cried out as a whip cracked, courtesy of the Hawk.

โ€œIโ€™d be willing to offer a โ€ฆ reprieve,โ€ Rigelus said to Hunt, ignoring the Helhound entirely. โ€œIf you do something for me.โ€

That was what this had been about, then. His mystics would find Bryceโ€”he didnโ€™t need the three of them for that. But the torture, the punishment โ€ฆ Hunt willed his foggyย head to clear, to listen to every word. To cling to that Umbra Mortis heโ€™d once been, what heโ€™d been so happy to leave behind.

โ€œYour lightning is a gift, Athalar,โ€ Rigelus continued. โ€œA rare one. Use it once, on my behalf, and perhaps we can find you three more comfortable โ€ฆ arrangements.โ€

Ruhn spat, โ€œTo doย what?โ€

โ€œA side project of mine.โ€

Hunt snapped, โ€œIโ€™m not agreeing to shit.โ€

Rigelusย smiled sadly. โ€œI assumed that would be the case. Though Iโ€™m still disappointed to hear it.โ€ He pulled a sliver of pale rock from his pocketโ€”a crystal. Uncut and about the length of his palm. โ€œItโ€™ll be harder to extract it from you without your consent, but not impossible.โ€

Huntโ€™s stomach flipped. โ€œExtract what?โ€

Rigelus stalked closer, crystal in hand. The Asteri halted steps from Hunt, fingersย unfurling so he could examine the hunk of quartz in his palm. โ€œA fine natural conduit,โ€ the Bright Hand said thoughtfully. โ€œAnd an excellent receptacle for power.โ€ Then he lifted his gaze up to Hunt. โ€œIโ€™ll give you a choice: offer me a sliver of your lightning, and you and your friends will be spared the worst of your suffering.โ€

โ€œNo.โ€ The word rose from deep in Huntโ€™s gut.

Rigelusโ€™s expressionย remained mild. โ€œThen choose which one of your friends shall die.โ€

โ€œGo to Hel.โ€ย The Umbra Mortis slipped away, too far to reach.

Rigelus sighed, bored and weary. โ€œChoose, Athalar: Shall it be the Helhound or the Fae Prince?โ€

He couldnโ€™t. Wouldnโ€™t.

Pollux was grinning like a fiend, a long knife already in his hand. Whichever of Huntโ€™s friends was chosen, the Hammer would draw out their deathsย excruciatingly.

โ€œWell?โ€ Rigelus asked.

Heโ€™d do itโ€”the Bright Hand would do this, make him choose between his friends, or just kill both of them.

And Hunt had never hated himself more, but he reached inward, toward his lightning, suppressed and suffocated by the gorsian shackles, but still there, under the surface.

It was all Rigelus needed. He pressed the quartz against Huntโ€™s forearm, andย the stone cut into his skin. Searing, acid-sharp lightning surged out of Hunt, ripped from his soul, twisted through the confines of the gorsian shackles, extracted inch by inch into the crystal. Hunt screamed, and he had a moment of brutal clarity: this was what his enemies felt when he flayed them alive, what Sandriel had felt when heโ€™d destroyed her, and ohย gods, it burnedโ€”

And then it stopped.

Like a switch being flipped, only darkness filled him. His lightning sank back into him, but in Rigelusโ€™s hands, the crystal now glowed, full of the lightning heโ€™d wrenched from Huntโ€™s body. Like a firstlight batteryโ€”like the scrap of power extracted during the Drop.

โ€œI think this will do for now,โ€ Rigelus crooned, sliding the stone back into his pocket. It illuminated the dark material of hisย pants, and Huntโ€™s throat constricted, bile rising.

The Bright Hand turned away, and said to the Hammer and the Hawk without looking back, โ€œI think two out of three will still be a good incentive for Miss Quinlan to return, donโ€™t you? Executionerโ€™s choice.โ€

โ€œYou bastard,โ€ Hunt breathed. โ€œI did what you asked.โ€

Rigelus strode for the stairs that led out of the chamber. โ€œHad you agreed to giveย me your lightning from the start, both of your companions would have been spared. But since you made me go to all that effort โ€ฆ I think you need to learn the consequences of your defiance, however short-lived it was.โ€

Baxian seethed, โ€œHeโ€™ll never stop defying youโ€”and neither will we, asshole.โ€

It meant more than it should have that the Helhound spoke up for him. And also made it worse.

Lastย time heโ€™d been here, heโ€™d been alone. Heโ€™d had only the screams of soldiers to endure. His guilt had devoured him, but it was different than this. Than having to be here with two brothers and bear their suffering along with his own.

Being alone would have been better. So much better.

Rigelus knew it, too. It was why heโ€™d waited this long to come down here, giving Hunt time to comprehend theย bind he was in.

The Bright Hand ascended the steps with feline grace. โ€œWe shall see what Athalar is willing to give up when it really comes down to it. Where even the Umbra Mortis draws the line.โ€


Lidiaโ€™s time had run out. If she was to act, it had to be now. There was no margin for error. She needed the prisoners readyโ€”in whatever way she could manage.

But sheโ€™d gotten no farther than twoย steps into the dungeon when the breath whooshed from her body at the sight of the stump where Ruhnโ€™s hand should have been.

The prince hung, unconscious, from his chains. Athalar and Baxian were out, too. All three were caked in blood.

Pollux and the Hawk were panting, smiling like fiends. โ€œYou missed the fun, Lidia,โ€ the Hawk said, and held upโ€”

Held upโ€”

That broad, tattooed handโ€”Ruhnโ€™s handโ€”hadย touched her. On that mental plane, soul to soul, those hands had caressed her, gentle and loving.

โ€œWell done,โ€ she managed, though she screamed inside. Clawed at the walls of her being and shrieked with fury. โ€œWhich one of you claimed the prize?โ€

โ€œBaxian, actually,โ€ the Hammer said, chuckling. โ€œChewed it off like the dog he is in an attempt to get free.โ€

Lidia made herself turn. Look at theย Helhound like she was impressed. Some small part of her was. But the pain Ruhn had endured โ€ฆ

She put a hand to her stomach, and her wince wasnโ€™t entirely feigned.

โ€œLidia?โ€ the Hawk asked, white wings rustling.

โ€œHer cycle,โ€ Pollux answered for her, disdain coating his voice.

โ€œIโ€™m fine,โ€ she snapped, to make the show complete. The Hawk and Pollux swapped looks, as if to say,ย Females.ย She pulledย a velvet case from an interior pocket of her uniform jacket. When she flicked it open, firstlight glowed from the two syringes strapped within.

โ€œWhatโ€™s that?โ€ The Hawk stalked a step closer, peering at the needles.

Lidia made herself smirk at him, then at Pollux. โ€œIt seems a shame to me that Athalar and the Helhoundโ€™s wings are no longer able to be โ€ฆ targeted. I thought weโ€™d bring them backย into play.โ€

A shot of a medwitch healing potion, laced with firstlight, would regrow their wings within a day or two, even under the repressive power of the gorsian shackles. If sheโ€™d known about Ruhnโ€™s hand, she would have brought three, but now there would be no way to casually explain the need for it, not without drawing too much attention.

And she needed Athalar and Baxian able to fly.

Pollux smiled. โ€œClever, Lidia.โ€ He jerked his chin toward the unconscious angels. โ€œDo it.โ€

She didnโ€™t need the Hammerโ€™s permission, but she didnโ€™t protest. โ€œWait until theyโ€™re fully regrown,โ€ she warned Pollux and the Hawk. โ€œLet them savor the hope of having their wings again before you find some interesting way to remove them anew.โ€

Athalar and Baxian were too deeply unconscious to even feelย the prick of the needle at the center of their spines. Firstlight glowed along their backs, stretching like shining roots toward the stumps of their wings. The wounds in between healed over slowly, but sheโ€™d bade the medwitch whoโ€™d crafted the potion to weave a spell in it to target the wings specifically. If sheโ€™d healed them both completely, it would have been too suspicious.

Slowly, beforeย her eyes, the stumps on their backs began to rebuild, flesh and sinew and bone creeping together, multiplying.

Lidia turned from the gruesome sight. She could only pray theyโ€™d be healed in time.

โ€œIโ€™ll take it from here,โ€ she said to Pollux and the Hawk, striding to the rack.

โ€œI thought you were here to heal them.โ€ The Hawk glanced between her and the angels.

โ€œOnly the wings,โ€ Lidia said. โ€œWhyย not play with other parts while they mend?โ€

The Hammer smiled. โ€œCan I watch?โ€

โ€œNo.โ€

Ruhn stirred, groaning softly, and it was all she could do to keep from pulling one of the long blades from the rack and plunging it through Polluxโ€™s gut.

โ€œYou know how I like to watch,โ€ Pollux purred, and the Hawk chuckled. What an utter waste of life. Heโ€™d stood by while the Hammer committed his bloody atrocities.ย Had delighted in watching during those years with Sandriel, too.

The Malleusโ€™s eyes gleamed with naked lust. โ€œWhy donโ€™t you put on a show for us?โ€

โ€œGet out,โ€ she said, unamused. Pollux might pretend he had control, but he knew who the Asteri favored. Her orders were not to be ignored. โ€œI donโ€™t need distractions.โ€

The Hawk snickered, but obeyed, stalking out. A true minion, through and through.

The Hammer, however, walked over to her. With a loverโ€™s gentleness, he put a hand on the side of her neck. And then squeezed tight enough to bruise as he said against her mouth, โ€œIโ€™ll fuck that disrespect out of you, Lidia. Bloody cunt or not.โ€

Then he was striding up the steps, wings glowing with his wrath. He slammed the door behind him.

Lidia waited, listening. When she was convinced theyย were both gone, she pulled the lever that sent the prisoners crashing to the floor and rushed to where Ruhn lay sprawled.

โ€œGet up.โ€ She kept her voice hard, cold. But the prince opened his beautiful blue eyes.

She scanned his face.ย Ruhn.ย No one answered. As if pain had carved him up and hollowed him out.ย Ruhn, listen to me.

Youโ€™re dead to me,ย heโ€™d said. It seemed heโ€™d killed the connectionย between them, too. But Lidia still cast her thoughts toward his mind.

Ruhn, I donโ€™t have much time. I managed to make contact with people who can help get you out of here, but the Harpy is somehow about to be resurrected, and once she is, the truth will come out. If my planโ€™s to go off without a hitch, if you are to survive, you need toย listenโ€”

Ruhn only closed his eyes and didnโ€™t open themย again.


Silence, heavy and unbearable, filled the chamber beneath the Prison. Bryce stared at the eight-pointed star, revulsion coursing through her in an oily slide.

โ€œThey were horrible,โ€ she rasped. โ€œSelf-serving, reckless monsters.โ€

โ€œSilene and Helena did shut the portal,โ€ Nesta countered carefully.

Bryceโ€™s gaze snapped to the female. โ€œOnly after they opened it againโ€”toย escape. It was openย because they wanted to run. And they left all those people behind. They could have held it open a little longer, could have saved them. But Silene chose herself. Sheโ€™s a fuckingย disgrace.โ€

โ€œSurely their fate at Peliasโ€™s hands,โ€ Azriel said, โ€œwould explain some of their motivation in acting quickly.โ€

Bryce pointed to the place where Silene had stood. โ€œThat fuckingย bitchย locked out children toย save herself and then tried to justify it.โ€

It was no different than what the Valbaran Fae had done this spring in Crescent Cityโ€”locking the innocents out of their villas while they cowered inside, protected by their wards.

โ€œWhat did you โ€ฆ,โ€ Nesta began, a shade gently. โ€œWhat was it that you expected to find here?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know.โ€ Bryce let out a bitter laugh. โ€œI thought maybe โ€ฆ maybe theyโ€™dย have some answer about how to kill the Asteri. But she glossed overย thatย part. I thought that in the thousands of years since then, maybe the Fae of Midgard had evolved into theย reprehensible shitheads they are. Not that they were reprehensible all along.โ€

She scrubbed at her face, eyes stinging. โ€œI thought having Theiaโ€™s light was โ€ฆ good. Like she was somehow better than Pelias. But she wasnโ€™t.โ€ย And Aidas hadย lovedย her? โ€œI thought itโ€™d somehow give me an edge in this shitshow. But it fucking doesnโ€™t. It just means Iโ€™m the heir to a legacy of selfish, scheming assholes.โ€

And worse, that parasite in Midgardโ€™s waters โ€ฆ what could even be done against that? Bryce sucked in a shuddering breath.

A gentle hand rested on her shoulder. Nesta.

โ€œWe need to tell Rhys,โ€ Azriel said hoarsely. Likeย he was still reeling from all heโ€™d heard. โ€œImmediately.โ€

Bryceโ€™s gaze snapped to his face. The concern and determination there. Everything heโ€™d seen โ€ฆ it was a threat to this world, to the people in it.

Azriel asked her with terrifying calm, โ€œWhat happened to the Horn?โ€

Bryce held his stare, seething, beyond trying to spin any bullshit.

But Nesta said, โ€œSheย isย the Horn, Azriel. Itโ€™s inkedย into her flesh.โ€ She lowered her hand from Bryceโ€™s shoulder and peered at her. โ€œIsnโ€™t that right? Itโ€™s the only thing that would have made your tattoo react that way earlier.โ€

Azrielโ€™s hazel eyes flickered with predatory intent. Heโ€™d carve it out of her fucking back.

If she ran for the exit tunnel โ€ฆ Theyโ€™d said something about a climb out of here, then a hike down a mountain.

But this courtย was an island. She wouldnโ€™t be able to get away from them.

Azriel began circling her with an unhurried, calculating precision. Bryce turned with him, keeping him in sight, but doing so exposed her back to Nesta, who she suspected might be the apex predator in the room.

โ€œThatโ€™s how you got to this world,โ€ Nesta went on, backing up a stepโ€”no doubt to provide space to draw Ataraxia. โ€œWhy you, andย no one else, can come. Why you said no one would be able to followย you here. Because only you have the Horn. Only you can move between worlds.โ€

โ€œYou got me,โ€ Bryce said, throwing up her hands in mock surrender and taking a step out of Nestaโ€™s range. โ€œIโ€™m a big, bad, world-jumping monster. Like my ancestors.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re a liability,โ€ Nesta said flatly, eyes taking on that silvery sheenโ€”that otherworldlyย fire.

โ€œI told you guys a hundred times already: I didnโ€™t even want to come hereโ€”โ€

โ€œIt doesnโ€™t matter,โ€ Nesta said. โ€œYouย didย come here, to the place where the Daglan are still apparently dead set on returning.โ€

โ€œThe Asteri would need the Horn to open a portal. They might find me, but they canโ€™t get in.โ€

โ€œBut you want to go home,โ€ Nesta said, โ€œand for that youโ€™ll have to open a door to Midgard.ย What if Rigelus is right there? Waiting to come through?โ€

Bryce turned to keep facing Azriel, butโ€”

Only shadows surrounded her.

Nesta had distracted her, enough that her focus had slipped and Azriel had vanished. Theyโ€™d worked in silent, perfect tandem.

Not to attack, she realized, as a shadow darker than the ones around it raced for the tunnel across the chamber. But to go get reinforcements.

โ€œNo!โ€ Bryce threw out a hand, and light ruptured from her fingers. It slammed into Azrielโ€™s shadows, fracturing the darkness and revealing the warrior beneath. But not enough to stop his sprintโ€”

She needed more power.

The eight-pointed star at her feet glimmered. As if her magic had nudged something within it. Like embers flaring in stirred ashes. What if her star hadnโ€™t been guiding her toย the knowledge, but to something โ€ฆ different? Something tangible.

Like calls to like.

To you, in this very stone,ย Silene had said,ย I leave the inheritance and the burden that my own mother passed to me.

This place, this Prison and the court it had once been, wasย Bryceโ€™s inheritance. Hers to command, as Silene had commanded it.

And that memory, of Silene lying next to the Harp in the centerย of this room, reaching for one of the carvings with a kernel of light forming at her finger โ€ฆ

In this very stone โ€ฆ

Silene had warped her former palace and home into this Prison. She must have imbued some magic in the rock to do it. Must have given over some part of her power to not only change the terrain, but to house the monsters in their cells.

Theia had shown her how to do it. In thoseย last moments with her daughters, Theia had used the Harp to transfer magic from herself into Silene and Helena, to protect them. It had appeared as a star. Had Silene replicated that here?

Was it possible that the Harp, in that moment that Silene reached for it, power at the ready, had been able to transfer her magic to this place?

โ€ฆ I leave the inheritance and the burden that my own motherย passed to me.

And precisely as Theia had gifted her own power to Silene โ€ฆ perhaps Silene had in turn left that same power here, to be claimed by a future scion.

One by one, rapid as shooting stars, the thoughts raced through Bryce. More on instinct than anything else, she dropped to her knees and slammed her hand atop the eight-pointed star. Bryce reached with her mind, through layers of rockย and earthโ€”and there it was. Slumbering beneath her.

Not firstlight, not as she knew it on Midgardโ€”but raw Fae power from a time before the Drop. The power ascended toward her through the stone, like a glimmering arrow fired into the darkโ€”

Azriel flapped his wings and was instantly airborne, swooping for the tunnel exit.

Like a small sun emerging from the stone itself, a ball of light burstย from the floor. A star, twin to the one in Bryceโ€™s chest. Her starlight at last awoke again, as if reaching with shining fingers for that star hovering inches away.

With trembling hands, Bryce guided the star to the one gleaming on her chest. Into her body.

White light erupted everywhere.

Power, uncut and ancient, scorched through her veins. The hair on her head rose. Debris floated upward.ย She was everywhere and nowhere. She was the evening star and the last rays of color before the dark.

Azriel had nearly reached the tunnel. Another flap of his wings and heโ€™d be swallowed by its dark mouth.

But at a mere thought from Bryce, stalactites and stalagmites formed, closing in on him. The room became a wolf, its jaws snapping for the winged warriorโ€”

The rock had moved for her, as itย had for Silene.

โ€œStop him,โ€ she said in a voice that was more like her fatherโ€™s than anything sheโ€™d ever heard come out of her mouth.

Azriel swept for the tunnel archwayโ€”and slammed into a wall of stone. The exit had sealed.

Slowly, he turned, wings rustling. Blood trickled out of his nose from his face-first collision with the rock now in his path. He spread his wings, bracing for a fight.

The mountain shook, the chamber with it. Debris fell from the ceiling. Walls began shifting, rock groaning against rock. As if the place this had once been was fighting to emerge from the stone.

But Nesta raced at Bryce, Ataraxia drawn, silver flame wreathing the blade.

Bryce lifted a hand, and spike after spike of rock ruptured from the ground, blocking Nestaโ€™s advance. The chamber shudderedย againโ€”

โ€œStop,โ€ย Azriel roared, something like panic in his voice. โ€œThe cellsโ€”โ€

From far away, she could sense it: theย thingsย lurking within the mountain, her mountain. Twisted, wretched creatures. Some had been here since Silene had trapped them. Had been contemplating their escape and revenge all this time. Sheโ€™d let them out if she restored the mountain to its former glory.

And in that moment,ย the mountainโ€”the islandโ€”spoke to her.

Alone. It was so aloneโ€”it had been waiting all this time. Cold and adrift in this thrashing gray sea. If she could reach out, if she could open her heart to it โ€ฆ it might sing again. Awaken. There was a beating, vibrant heart locked away, far beneath them. If she freed it, the land would rise from its slumber, and such wonders would spring again from itsย earthโ€”

The mountain shook again. Nesta and Azriel had halted ten feet away, Ataraxia a blazing light, Truth-Teller enveloped by shadows. The Starsword remained sheathed at Azrielโ€™s backโ€”but she could have sworn it twitched. As if urging Azriel to draw it.

Nesta warned Bryce, her eyes on the shaking earth, โ€œIf you open those cellsโ€”โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t want to fight you,โ€ Bryce said, voice oddly hollow,ย like the surge of magic sheโ€™d taken from Sileneโ€™s store had emptied out her soul. โ€œIโ€™m not your enemy.โ€

โ€œThen let us bring you back to our High Lord,โ€ Nesta snapped. Ataraxia flashed in answer.

โ€œTo do what? Lock me up? Cut the Horn out of my skin?โ€

โ€œIf thatโ€™s whatโ€™s necessary,โ€ Nesta said coldly, knees bending, readying to strike. โ€œIf thatโ€™s what it takes to keep our world safe.โ€

Bryce baredย her teeth in a feral grin. More spikes of rock shot up from the ground, angling toward Nesta and Azriel. โ€œThen come and take it.โ€

With a flap of his wings, Azriel burst toward her, fast as a striking pantherโ€”

Bryce stomped her foot. Those spikes of stone stretched higher, blocking his way. Blue light flared from him, smashing through the stones.

Bryce stomped her foot again, summoning moreย lethal spears of rockโ€”but there were none left. Only a vast, gaping void.

Bryce had only a second to realize there literallyย wasย a void below her feet, before the ground beneath them collapsed entirely.

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