The priestess began to speak. I’d practically memorized the story of our history, but as always, I focused closely, hoping for some hint about why I still had my power.
“Centuries ago, our people went to war with the fae,” the priestess said. Several townspeople spat on the ground at the mention of the creatures who’d caused such heartache. The priestess allowed it, closing her eyes.
“Not content with their incredible power, indescribable wealth, and fertile lands, the fae decided they wanted more. They wanted humans,” she said in a hushed tone. My skin crawled at the thought of being stolen in the middle of the night.
“They wanted women to be their brides to make up for their low fertility. They wanted human servants to manage their households and work in their mines. They wanted more power. More wealth. More, more, more. Finally, the king’s great-great-grandfather, a strong, wise king called Regner said ‘enough.’ He was tired of his people being preyed upon. Tired of the fae taking whatever they wanted. And so, they went to war.”
Statues of Regner stood in most northern villages. I remembered climbing on top of one of them as a child. The king had been practically a myth while alive, and once dead, he’d become almost godlike himself.
The priestess ran her gaze over the crowd, clearly in her element.
“The fae may have been outnumbered by us, but they had the kind of power that could flood valleys. The kind of power that could burn entire cities to the ground. Our people had fae iron. And they used it to fight back however they could.”
I’d spent many hours mumbling prayers during various ceremonies in my village, and many of those prayers had involved thanking the gods for risplite—the strange mineral they’d gifted us. When added to iron while it was in the furnace, it turned previously normal iron into a true weapon against the fae.
The priestess continued talking. “The slaughter continued for weeks. And then months. Our people—on the brink of being destroyed completely—were losing hope. And so, King Regner went to the gods and begged them to intervene. If they helped us defeat the fae, we would give the gods back our power while it was young and potent. Because that power would grow as it aged, and the gods could sip on it, staying strong themselves in a time where few were worshipping as they should.”
Next to me, Rythos let out a soft snort. Lorian glanced at him, and Rythos’s expression turned blank.
“For the gods had been losing power themselves,” the priestess said. “As fewer people prayed to them. As fewer people sacrificed to the deities. The gods—on the verge of fading—agreed to the king’s deal. And so, the bargain was struck.
“Every year, we celebrate the first Taking—on a day known forever as Gods Day—to respect the sacrifice our people made that day. They were willing to give up their power, to lose their magic until they reached maturity at the age of twenty-five winters. They screamed as they gave the king everything they had. Some of them died. But it was enough. The gods accepted the sacrifice and helped King Regner drive the fae back behind their borders. And now, that sacrifice protects those borders from the monsters who would avenge their fallen friends and family members. Because the fae are much longer-lived than us mere mortals. And while this may be history to us, that time is a memory for most of the fae. And they will not forget.”
The priestess turned her smile onto the couple standing below her. “Come, and help your daughter sacrifice to keep all of us safe.”
The man followed his wife up the stairs, and the priestess held up her hands, the wide sleeves of her impeccable gray robes falling down her arms.
“Just as the gods gift, they also take.”
The town priestess waved her hand at one of her novices, and the priestess-in-training walked toward the platform, the basket of dark, empty blue stones in her hands. The blood rushed in my ears as I stared at the stones I’d imagined would be the answer to my problems.
The novice bowed her head, offering up the oceartus stones.
The priestess plucked one at random. She lifted her hand, held the stone high in the air, and began to chant. Slowly, she lowered the stone, until it was poised just above the baby’s head.
“Heed our sacrifice and see our piety. Have mercy on our weakest, bolster our strongest, and protect all who live here. For our power will always belong to the gods from whom it came.”
We all began to speak the words we’d memorized when we were children. “Faric, see our sacrifice. Tronin, see our sacrifice. Bretis, see our sacrifice,” I chanted along, hearing Galon’s and Lorian’s low rumbles next to me as they spoke the same words. Faric was the god of knowledge, Tronin, the god of strength, and Bretis, the god of protection.
If those gods had any mercy, this would finish soon, and we could flee.
The priestess spoke a few more sentences in the old language. A language never to be spoken by those who hadn’t taken the holy vows.
I tensed. I hated this part.
The baby began to scream. Her parents kept their expressions blank, but any who cared to look could see the pain in her mother’s eyes. Could see the way her father’s hands fisted as the priestess took his daughter’s magic, sucking it into the oceartus stone, which glowed so brightly, it hurt to look at it.
I shifted my attention to the guards. They were watching too, their gazes intent as they witnessed the Taking. Occasionally, parents would attempt to protect their babies. It wasn’t common, but it happened.
My heart began to thunder in my chest.
The Taking was over. The baby continued to scream as if she were being tortured, and her mother lifted her, pressing her to her chest.
The priestesses insisted that the Taking was painless. But no one who had ever seen a newborn lose their magic could ever believe that lie.
Everyone climbed off the platform. They would have a quiet service at their home and announce their baby’s name. My legs had gone weak again—this time with relief. We’d survived this long. Now we just had to find our horses.
The crowd began to disperse. We slowly began to move toward the road leading out of the town. I wanted to shove my way through these people. To beg them to move. But that would only draw attention.
Lorian’s grip changed on my arm, and I looked up. Marth was standing in front of us, his face pale.
“We have a problem.”
He handed us a piece of parchment. Someone had drawn my likeness and described my features. It wasn’t exact, but it was close enough that I was sure to be questioned if we attempted to leave. Everything receded until all I could see was my own face. My lungs seized, and a line of cold sweat slid down my spine.
Beneath the picture were the names of the corrupt who had been taken to the city. This wasn’t uncommon. I’d seen this list before, hung in our village square.
My gaze got stuck on a name halfway down the list.
“No. No, no, no.”