“Kai.” His name tumbles out of my mouth, breathless.
Blair’s stare is sharper than my dagger I so desperately wish I had right now. “The princes,” I continue with a cough. “Kai and Kitt both. You can’t have either of them.” I pause before choking out, “Because they don’t want you.”
I slam into the ground.
The little air I had whooshes out of me. I’m left panting, my face half-buried in the sand.
Get up.
I lift my head and push shaky arms underneath me, slowly making it to my feet. And alarmingly, Blair lets me. A fit of coughing laughter escapes me when my eyes meet hers.
I hold her gaze, now burning with anger.
That’s it. Get mad enough to hurt me with your own two hands.
“Tell me, what’s it like? Being rejected over and over and—”
I don’t even get the chance to finish my sentence before I’m thrown through the air and crashing back into the sand. Coughing, catching my breath, I begin rolling over onto my back.
Blinding pain shoots through my ribs.
I curl into myself, my only defense against the hard boot connecting with my stomach. I crack an eye open, catching sight of Blair’s livid face above me, contorted in rage.
“Never forget that your wit is a weapon to be wielded, if only your mind can be as sharp as your blade.”
I smile despite the pain.
I have her right where I want her.
Her foot drives into my stomach again, and this time, I catch it. I hear her gasp of surprise when I twist it terribly before yanking it towards me, sending her crashing to the ground.
I’ve knocked the wind out of her, something I know she isn’t used to feeling, not when she’s always had her power to hide behind. I’m crawling on top of her in an instant, pinning her arms down beneath my knees. She growls up at me, her gaze filled with guttural rage.
I know I only have time for one hit before she recovers and throws me off with her mind. So I make that hit count.
I slide my father’s ring onto my middle finger and send a hard right hook to her temple, hitting that sensitive spot on her head with very little sensitivity.
And just like that, she’s out cold.
But not for long. She’ll wake within the next couple of minutes, and by then, I’ll be lost in the maze and hopefully far away. Because next time we meet, I have a feeling she’ll crush my heart on sight.
I stumble to my feet, body aching. Every inch of me screams in protest, staggers with each step. But I force myself forward, force myself to pick up speed.
I’m lost in the madness of the maze again, second guessing each path I take, wondering if the other would have led to my victory.
Left or right?
Left. Definitely left.
Definitely not, seeing that it’s a dead end.
Every few minutes I hear a cry of pain or sounds of a struggle blending with the shouts of the crowd far beyond these walls. Sights stand in the paths, startling me so much that I nearly punch half of them. But as soon as they see me coming, they move out of my way as best they can. I feel sorry for them, sorry that the things they have witnessed have been permanently burned into their brains.
The maze rearranges itself for the dozenth time, forcing me off my closing path and onto a new one.
I want to scream.
I turn right down a path at random before skidding to a stop.
There, at the end of this narrow path, is a sandy, open circle.
The center.
The victory.
My victory.
Chapter Fifty-Eight
Kai
The very earth is under my control. One could say I hold the world in the palm of my hand, though it’s a very dramatic interpretation of my power. Well, the power I’m borrowing.
The maze wall before me collapses. The vines and foliage that make up the hedge sink back into the ground, slipping beneath the sand. I run forward, reaching out with the Bloom’s power to tear down walls or split them in half.
I’m destroying every bit of the maze near me, unraveling vines and branches.
I create a clear and wide path all while hoping I’m running in the right direction. And I don’t slow. Hedges melt apart for me to run through while others slither back into the earth where they sprouted from.
The shouts of the crowd amplify with each wall I tear down. The sound of my name echoes through the audience but I ignore it, focusing on my ability.
Focusing on the ability that is flickering.
The power inside of me dims.
The Blooms have finally figured out what I’m doing and are no doubt running away from the maze, trying to get out of my range.
I split a wall in front of me, creating a path for me to run through. It grows and grows and then—
Stops.
The ability seeps from my bones, leaving me powerless and pointlessly holding an outstretched hand at the hedge. I push my way through the hole I created, thorns and branches clawing at me.
I hear the maze rebuilding itself behind me as the Blooms try to fix the damage I’ve done. But it’s too late.
I’ve already made it to the center.
I step into the open circle, filled with nothing but sand and the two figures within it. The first came from a path in the maze opposite mine, and the flash of silver glinting in the light tells me exactly who it is.
Paedyn is limping. Her whole body seems to drag even while she pushes it to run. Her leg and body are bloodied, bruised.
I start forward.
But her gaze never finds mine. No, those blue eyes are fixed on the figure at the center of the circle. Paedyn’s steps falter, fumbling as though she’s back in my bedroom where I taught her how to dance.
And then she’s sprinting towards the criminal who’s destined to die.
Chapter Fifty-Nine
Paedyn
I suddenly can’t breathe again, and I vaguely wonder if Blair is back, squeezing the air from my lungs with her invisible grip.
I sway on the spot, feet sinking into the sand beneath me at the edge of the circle.
I’m seeing things. I must be seeing things.
I stagger forward, tripping into a run. I force myself faster, ignoring the protest of pain shooting up my foot.
“Adena?”
This can’t be right. This can’t be happening.
Her beautiful form is broken and bleeding. Her knees sink into the sand, and her hands are tightly tied behind her back. Tears streak down her once glowing, dark skin, now dull and drenched with blood.
A shuddering sob escapes her, and my heart threatens to fail me at the sound. I’ve never heard Adena cry. Even after losing her parents as I had, after being beaten for attempting to steal those sticky buns she loves so much, after shivering on the streets—nothing has ever broken her. Nothing has ever dulled the light that is her.
She’s my light.
I’m stumbling towards her, numb and nauseous all at once.
This isn’t right. This can’t be right— “Paedyn!” Her voice cracks and I think my heart does the same. She struggles to stand, trying to walk towards me even with her feet bound. Panic laces her next words, fast and frantic. “Pae, I’m so sorry. I—”
Time seems to stall.