Fast as I can move, I grab the Eastlander knife and dart to the wall beside the entrance where that pool of bloody darkness spills into the cave. I press my back to the rocks and raise my weapon.
A tall form in a scarlet cloak and bronze leathers creeps from the shadows, hatchet in hand.
I don’t hesitate.
With all the strength left in me, I bring down my blade.
28
Alexus
The Frostwater ravine runs north and south, just east of Winter Road and far north of my hunting shelter. This great, white crevice—tinted the shade of fevered cheeks—is mostly rock, though evergreen bushes and pine saplings have sprung up from the old riverbed thanks to a rainy early summer. Most of the bushes are buried in snow, and I’ve scavenged what I could from the thickets growing back the way we came, so walking north is the only option if we’re to stay warm here.
I keep moving that way, staring at the rugged cliffs, thinking about everything that just happened between me and Raina, the thing she still doesn’t know about me, and how close we are to what feels like freedom, though there’s no way to be sure unless I walk to the construct’s end. I don’t know how far the enchantment reaches or how long the kingdom’s Witch Walkers will manage to keep their magick in place.
Or what will happen once we cross into the real world.
I swear the construct is weakening, though. Silent cracks of silver lightning fracture the deep red sky, leaving behind a dark bruise. I wouldn’t dare tell Raina, but I fear the red sky is a reflection of the misery the Witch Walkers are enduring, the fissuring a sign of their dwindling control.
We may be free sooner than expected.
Snow still falls, but it’s not as cold as when we arrived, feeling more and more like the cold of home—crisp and calming. It’s peaceful here too, so I take my time, giving Raina space to think without me clouding her thoughts. I know what that’s like. She’s all I see, awake or asleep, and that’s not how any of this was supposed to go.
Get in. Get Raina. Get home.
Deny my feelings. My heart. My body.
That had been the original plan and the new plan.
And I’ve failed at both.
Spectacularly.
When I come upon a small thicket of seedlings, I gather what little kindling I can and turn to head toward the cave.
Something crashes into me from behind, knocking the air from my lungs, sending me careening toward a snow-covered boulder. It takes a split second to realize that what struck me is not a thing but a person.
Kindling scatters across the snow, and I’m plowed into the rock, the weight of another body driving me forward as my arm is wrenched behind me. Breathless, I move to turn over, to fight, but the person holding me stabs a blunt knee into my kidney, pressing my wrist against my spine, all while their other colossal hand seizes my neck, thoroughly pinning me against the stone.
“Be very still, very quiet, and listen,” a man whispers. “We’re being watched. I don’t have much time.”
My free hand is splayed on the boulder. I stretch my fingers wide and lift my palm from the snow, an effort to show a silent moment of surrender.
He leans close. “I’m a spy for the king. You don’t remember me. I was just a boy when I left Winterhold with my mother for the Eastland Territory. She was from Penrith.” His grip tightens, and he speaks through clenched teeth. “I sent a warning that the prince was coming. Why did you not heed?”
Gods. The rumor.
Faces flash across my mind, people who volunteered to work along the spy chain that has become more of a web, in truth. I’ve escorted scores of Witch Walkers, Icelanders, and even people from the tiny mining villages of the Mondulak Range to Winterhold. Several later enlisted their services.
This man could be anyone.
“The Prince of the East is on his way to Winterhold, so now you must face General Vexx. And I won’t be able to save you.” He pauses, breathing hard against my face. “We’ve been following you ever since you blew up the godsdamn forest. The prince left others behind, but they failed, so he commanded his best battalion—mine, of course—to remain in this hellish place and find this knife you two have so pathetically protected.” He lets out a long, annoyed breath. “Warriors are coming down from the cliffs as we speak. Where is the woman? I can only help her if I know where she is.”
“What do you want with her?” I strain against his hold, but he only doubles down.
“Not a damn thing. The prince wants her, probably to kill her. She sundered his face with a gash as wide as this ravine. He’s going to punish her, I’m sure, and believe me, you do not want her to meet his wrath.”
I squeeze my eyes against the image that forms in my mind—of Raina beneath the prince’s hands. I would skin him alive, hang him from a tree, and call the wolves.
Boots crunch in the snow. The sound grows closer.
Louder.
It would be so easy to wipe these Eastlanders from existence, but Raina is likely to be buried alive from the ripple effect with this much loose and fallen rock. I have to protect her, but I can’t trust this man to be her savior.
“Let me see your face.”
“They can smell your fire, Thibault. They can’t see it, but they can smell it. They will sniff her out. Unless I get to her beforehand.”
I grit my teeth. “Face. First.”
He flips me over, and it takes a moment, but his face registers. If he was a boy when he left, and if he knew me, I have long forgotten him.
But I do recognize him. The red-haired Eastlander I faced in Hampstead Loch. The warrior with the bloodless blade who stared me down and rode the other way.
“The name’s Rhonin.” He glances up, only his eyes, his sharp gaze scanning the ravine. A heartbeat later, he raises a meaty fist and meets my stare. “Sorry about this, but I’m doing you a favor.”
Above him, that odd and silent silver lightning splits the red sky.
Then his fist comes down like a hammer, and my world goes black.
29
Raina
The Eastlander whirls, catching my wrist with a firm hand before I can land my mark. I suck in a deep breath and push harder, but from beneath the cloak, a familiar face stares back at me.
Not an Eastlander.
Helena.
Fear rips through me like a blazing fire, my body locked in indecision. Shadow wraith. That’s all I can think as her eyes search mine.
“It’s me, Raina. Just me.” Her voice is her own, and her eyes are vivid and aware, her wild spirit returned. There’s no rotten smell wafting from her, no unnatural quality to her movements, and her skin is as cold as mine.
The tension in my muscles ebbs, disbelief clinging to me like a bad dream.
Her brows knit together, tears welling in her eyes. “Can you just hug me now?” She presses her forehead to mine, and I catch a glimpse of her ochre-tinted witch’s marks, flowering up from behind her collar. “Tuetha tah,” she whispers, releasing my wrist.
I drop my blade and fold my arms around her shoulders, squeezing her so tightly that she laughs around her tears.