Forged by Malice (Beasts of the Briar, #3)

Ezryn’s curse is breaking.

“Look, Ez!” I cry. Finally, Ezryn will be rid of the monster that he swears he is. And all of the Spring staff will be free. Marigold can reunite with Eldy without fear. Ezryn’s power will grow. We can protect Spring. Everything is going to be okay—

“Rose?” Ezryn pulls away from me and gets to his feet. “Rose, you need to—”

“It’s okay, Ezryn!” I smile up at him. “It’s your curse breaking!”

Light beams bright and the silhouette of a wolf begins to form behind him. Something is wrong though. Farron had looked curious, hopeful. Ezryn looks terrified. And the shadow of his wolf thrashes, clawing at his back.

“It’s okay, Ez. Just relax. Let it happen,” I breathe.

Ezryn doubles over, clutching his skin. “No! It’s too much. I can’t hold it. Rosalina, you need to go.”

I stumble up, backing into the rock wall. “What’s happening?”

Ez cries out again, his skin looking like a star about to combust. The wolf’s silhouette howls, a mournful, anguished sound. This is wrong. This isn’t the way it’s supposed to go.

“I won’t let it happen again,” Ezryn growls.

It’s like he’s fighting his curse breaking, pulling the beast back into himself. “Ez, stop! You need to let your curse break!”

“It’s too much power,” he grits. Then he jerks his head up, eyes glowing like a beast.

I gasp, hanging on to the rock wall to steady myself. Farron told me when his curse broke, his magic grew. And the last time Ezryn had a great influx of magic…

Was when his mother passed on the Blessing of Spring.

When he accidentally killed her.

“Rosalina,” Ezryn snarls. But it’s not his own voice, but that of the beast. “Leave. Now.”





80





Ezryn





I have to suppress it. I can’t let it out.

Magic roars through me, making my blood swell and my heart feel like it’s about to explode. I clench my hands into fists to try to hold it in. Something’s tearing out my back, trying to escape, but I can’t let it.

No more magic. I can’t control it. And last time…

The image of my mother’s body flashes in my mind’s eye. Her armor caving in, the helm crumpling—I let out a scream.

“Ezryn, I’m not going anywhere.” Rosalina’s voice. “Your curse is breaking. You must let it. It will be okay. You can do this.”

No, no, no. She doesn’t understand. She’s too close. If I let the curse break, this trapped well of magic will bubble over, explode out—

The thought makes me panic more. I claw at my skin, unable to shake the vision of my mother’s blood seeping into the earth. “Get away from me!”

“You won’t hurt me,” she says. “Let me help you.”

She touches my shoulder. It feels like static before a storm. “NO!”

Power floods through my arm, and there’s nothing I can do. I thrust my hand out, and a jolt of electricity surges from my palm into the rock wall. It smashes apart, and Rosalina screams, ducking away from the debris.

She’s afraid of me. I told her the truth, but she wouldn’t listen. Now, she sees.

Now, she truly knows.

A beast’s howl erupts through my chest. I can’t hold back the magic anymore. Another shock of electricity bursts from my body, shattering the rest of the rock wall I created. The grove opens up. Sunlight streams down over the crystalline lake. It’s too bright. My entire being is brimming with energy, my eyes burning.

“Ezryn, please stop this,” Rose begs. But there’s nothing I can do. I’m not myself, not even the beast. The magic keeps filling me, and my wolf wants to escape.

I must stop him. For if he leaves, the magic will take me over completely. All the power trapped by the Enchantress’s curse will be unleashed.

Sinking to my knees, I dig my hands into the earth. The grass dies beneath my touch.

“Ez, stop! The trees!”

Rose keeps screaming at me. But I can barely hear her over the rushing of blood in my head.

“Ezryn, STOP!”

But I can’t.

More sounds clatter. The clink of armor, men shouting.

I force my eyes open. Black veins of decay slither across the ground, leaking from my fingertips.

“Y-your Highness?”

I look up. Standing at the edge of the grove is a cluster of Spring Soldiers.

They’re staring at me.

Witnessing me.

My helmet … Where is it? No, no, no.

“No!” I howl, and the decay shoots out further, leaching into the lake. A black ooze like oil slicks over the surface.

Rosalina runs up beside me and moves as if to touch my shoulder but pulls back.

“That cannot be the High Prince,” one of the guards says. “Prince Kairyn said he may be here. But it cannot be.”

“The fae woman said his name,” another says urgently. “And there, on the ground! His helm!”

Rosalina holds her arms up to them. “Please, you have to get help. You must send word to Castletree at once—”

“The High Prince has broken his creed,” the guard interrupts. “He’s using his Blessing to destroy our sacred grove.”

Another raises his spear high in the air. “Arrest him!”

I … I have broken my creed.

The thought tears all the energy from me. But the decay doesn’t stop. Black lines run up the willow tree. The catkins turn to ash, blowing toward us as charcoal petals.

Suddenly, a glowing white light appears before me. A bonfire. But it’s a person. Rosalina’s skin flickers with flame, her hair blowing in bursts of embers. She stands in front of me, blocking the soldiers’ path. “Touch him and die,” she snarls.

The guards balk. But one steps forward, raising his bow. “The High Prince has broken our most sacred creed. Step out of the way or I will do what I must.”

“You will leave this place,” Rosalina says, her voice like a thunderclap, “and tell no one of what you saw. I am the Golden Rose. I will crack your bones with fire if you so much as move against him.”

Rosalina doesn’t understand. To the people of Spring, the creed is as sacred as life itself. There is no other way.

“Run!” I cry and move to leap in front of her. But I can’t—my hands are stuck into the dirt, the decay no longer just lines but great waves spreading all over the shore, the treeline, the lake. “Run, Rosalina!”

It’s too late. The archer looses his arrow.

Rosalina’s fire flickers once, twice, before she falls to the ground, a shaft sticking out of her shoulder.

I implode.

The sound that escapes me is more than a man or a beast, but a monstrous roar. I tear my hands free from the earth and jerk them toward the guards. I have been a healer, a maker of storms, a shepherd of growing things.

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