He strode closer, his chest puffing out as he took a deep breath in through flared nostrils. “You act like you want the Barmbrack Ring to be correct, but you know what it means, don’t you? You would mate with one of us. Kael, most likely. Then, you would leave the Academy, and rarely ever see the others again. They wouldn’t be in your life anymore. I wouldn’t be in your life anymore. Is that really what you want?”
My heart squeezed tight. “Of course not.”
“Because that is what will happen if that damn ring is correct. And it’ll be a cold day in hell when I let you get away from me that soon.”
And there it was, words I’d been dying to hear all these weeks. The slightest hint, the smallest of concessions, the weakest of hopes that Liam still felt something toward me. That his emotions hadn’t just vanished into thin air.
My arm reached toward him out of its own volition, my body craving to feel him close to me. His pupils were dilated, and his breath was hot on my lips. Liam was fire, and I was a moth, drawn to him despite every risk of getting caught in his flames.
Liam’s fingers wrapped around my arm, and he jerked me to his chest. My breath shuddered from my lungs, and anticipation sung through my veins. He was so close. His mouth was only inches from—
Footsteps thudded on the ground outside the tent, and Liam dropped my arm like it was a chunk of molten rock. He stepped back, shook his head, and then lifted the burlap flap to peer out into the newly-autumn night.
Steel clashed with steel, and a gurgled cry echoed in the quiet. Liam cursed underneath his breath.
“What’s wrong?” I whispered as my heart thudded hard in my chest.
“Looks as though the Autumn fae came prepared,” he murmured softly. “A few of them are out there fighting the Hunters. They’re close, so stay quiet.”
“Royals?”
He shook his head. “Lesser Fae.”
Why would the Lesser Fae—as much as I hated to think of them like that—bring weapons to the Feast? It was a celebration, a festival, a happy time in this realm where darkness and danger seemed to lurk in every corner.
“Wait here,” Liam said. “I’m going to go see what’s happened.”
Before I could object, Liam disappeared through the tent’s flap. Heart trembling in my chest, I lifted the heavy material just enough to keep one eye on his retreating form. He was heading toward a cluster of three Hunters. Around their feet, bloodied Autumn fae had fallen like broken puppets, their limbs askew and twisted into strange shapes.
They stiffened as Liam approached, but relaxed when they saw who it was. He and the other instructors at the Academy had worked tirelessly with the Hunters on their ambush plan, one that seemed as though it was beginning to unravel.
“What’s happened?” Liam asked, gesturing at Autumn fae weapons. “Have the Autumn Royals been captured?”
One of the Hunters, a Summer fae I’d seen around the Academy these past few months, gave Liam a strange look. “You mean, you don’t know?”
Liam’s back tightened. “No, I daresay I don’t know, given the look on your faces. Tell me now.”
“The Autumn fae were better prepared than we gave them credit for,” the Hunter said. “Did you happen to notice that everyone started running far sooner than we’d planned to attack?”
Liam gave a nod. “I just assumed that you had decided to make your move early.”
The male fae let out a bitter laugh. “If only.”
“What’s happened, Alastar?”
“The Autumn Court attacked first, Liam,” Alastar said. “All the Summer Royals are dead. Poisoned by blackberries, it looks like. Many of the Lesser Autumn Fae came with weapons. We’ve been fighting them off for the past twenty minutes. Where in the name of the forest have you been?”
“Protecting that changeling girl no doubt,” one of the other male fae muttered.
Alastar frowned. “Perhaps you should stop putting the welfare of one over the safety of us all. If you hadn’t been distracted by the changeling, if you’d been watching the Autumn Royals like we’d asked, then maybe none of this would have happened.”
I blinked and dropped the flap, taking two big strides away from the tent’s entrance. Fear and confusion burned through my gut. The Summer Royals were dead. All those months ago, Liam and I had discovered that the Autumn Court was planning an assassination. And now they’d truly done it. We’d thought we’d set a trap for them, but really, they’d set a trap for us.
And what had Alastar meant? Liam had stuck to me like glue all day. He’d told me that he’d been assigned to be my bodyguard. Surely he couldn’t have lied. The fae liked to twist things, yes, but their words always held the truth, even if it was difficult to see it.
Suddenly, two gold-cloaked fae rushed toward Liam and his group of Hunters. My heart leapt into my throat, and I stormed out of the tent with my arms open wide.
“Liam!” I screamed as the fae bore down on him. “Watch out!”
Liam reacted in just enough time to duck out of the way of the sword that soared toward his neck. He bellowed and drew his weapon, the Summer fae beside him moving in time, with the graceful movements of fighters who had spent their whole lives training for these moments.
A breath of relief whooshed from my lungs as they blocked blow after blow after blow.
And then an arm closed around my wrist, tight as a snake, tough as steel. Shadows closed in around me, and the world dropped away from my feet. Colors swirled like melting rainbows, and the rush, rush, rush of wind filled my head.
A moment later, I found myself in the middle of the screaming festival. Footsteps pounded, daggers were tossed. The entire world was full of chaos. I jerked on the hand that held my wrist and whirled to face whoever had shifted me away from the tent.
The eyes that met mine were a golden red, full of ice, and hard as nails. An Autumn fae. One who looked horribly delighted to have found me. I tried to pull away, but he kept his grip tight.
“What are you doing? Let me go. How did you even shift in this place?”
“Queen Viola killed the fae who controlled the magic of the Feast.” He flashed me his teeth. “There’s nothing to stop me from shifting you all the way to the Autumn Court, if I wanted to.”
A rush of movement caught the corner of my eye, as well as the fae who had his grip on me. It was a enough of a distraction for me to wrench my wrist away from him, and for me to stumble back. Bree jumped to my side and pulled me back, her body trembling as she stared at the fae.
“Bree, thank the forest it’s you,” I whispered.
Bree had been doing so much better since she’d taken the Winter Starlight, though the results hadn’t been quite what we’d hoped. She was no longer an out-of-control Redcap, but she could—and did—still transform into a wolfish beast, but only when she wanted to.
And right now, I could tell she very much wanted to.
Hair had begun to sprout along her arms as she stared at the Autumn fae stalking toward us. One of his friends had joined in, and they were both licking their lips as if we were some kind of prey that needed to be devoured. Fear pounded like a bass drum in my gut, and a terrifying kind of darkness crept into the corners of my eyes.
Claws sprouted from Bree’s curled hands, and her jaw begin to shift and grow. The two Autumn fae took one look at my transforming friend, and then they turned tail and ran.
Rourke found us only moments later, huddling together as we watched the horror of the night. He shifted us back to safety and made sure we got back into our rooms and locked our doors.
But even though we were back inside the walls of the Academy, I didn’t feel safe. The Summer Royals were dead, and the Autumn fae had launched an all-out attack. It didn’t feel like we’d ever be safe again.
Chapter Three
“I heard you were the one who got the Barmbrack Ring in her cake,” Sophia said with a slight smile when I padded into our dorm’s kitchen. It was two mornings after the Feast of the Fae, and my head still felt fuzzy from the horror of it all. But our studies must go on, as Rourke had insisted. It wasn’t up to the changelings to retaliate against the Autumn Court.