“Aria,” she said as her head tilted. “You don’t know if that witch would’ve survived. No one knows how it would have ended. I’m sorry.”
“Well, I have a better shot if I try than if I don’t. Besides, I have a plan to get Knox away from Hecate. It’s not an easy one, and it’s going to be dangerous. If he engages Zyion, I can get close enough to attempt drawing out the darkness. I think I can force her darkness to release him. The issue is that he’s not exactly aspiring to be rescued. He’s under her control. If that doesn’t work, we’d need to find another way to trap him. One that would hold him long enough for me to figure out how to force it out.”
“You didn’t think I might need to know I was the bait?” Zyion aked, as his and Eva’s eyes rounded with shock.
“I intended to once we’d actually discussed the details.” His head lowered, then elevated with an anxious look over face. Scoffing at my plan, he dropped his attention to my middle, frowning.
“You want everyone to risk their life for Knox, who may or may not already be gone? Aria, he could literally be a corpse and you wouldn’t even know it.”
“I saw the blue in his eyes, Soraya,” I snapped, glaring at the ground while slowly counting inside my head for patience. “Knox took control of a warrior’s body, then rode through the palace gates while driving it earlier today. He told me he was in there, and I need to see if it’s true. I have to know he’s not trapped in there, waiting to die.”
“Okay,” she whispered with a short exhale. “I’m in. However, Avyanna and the kids need a safe place to go. We’ve gained a few since you left six fucking months ago.” Hurt was buried in her tone.
“For us, it was only a couple of days. We did not know we were gone that long. I’m sorry for not foreseeing it as a possibility. Trust me, no one is as sorry about it than I am right now.”
“How is that even possible?” she countered as her forehead puckered in confusion.
“That’s a longer conversation than I’m prepared to endure right now,” I muttered. “Let’s get the urchins to the library, then we’ll head out from there.”
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Aria
Aria
I stood in the shadows, my eyes skimming over the towering, foreboding walls of the citadel. We’d cemented the plan and set out to execute it, praying we didn’t end up executed ourselves for daring to trespass on their home field. We’d stopped along the way at various grids, tossing corpses aside, shattering Hecate’s connection to them. She wouldn’t dare allow anyone else to mend the grids, not when it would give up her secrets.
Hecate’s grid was an extension of herself. It contained her weaknesses and strengths that she’d genetically designed to strengthen her further, making the details one of her closely-guarded secrets. Wiping out one would hurt her immensely, leaving her weakened as well. I’d counted on Hecate physically feeling the grids she’d fueled with the lifeless witches, which then would force her to inspect them.
I’d left her too weakened to manage a body jump, which meant she wouldn’t leave the citadel. As I’d told Brander, you didn’t allow your most valuable piece to leave the protection of an impenetrable fortress. You sent your strongest, which meant she’d send Knox. He was also one of the most powerful, feral beasts in the Nine Realms, which, if you had the option to wield against another, you did so.
“If it comes down to you or him, he’s dead,” Zyion hissed. “I didn’t sacrifice my future to watch you throw it away for him. You are the future of the realms. Without you, our sacrifices were all in vain.”
“You hold the course. I’ll hold the light.” I pivoted and met his hard gaze. “I’d rather burn the Realms to ashes and leave her nothing but the remnants of the land she coveted so much.” Swallowing the pain, I exhaled a calming breath. “I have a reason to live. One that I promise you is going to force me to do everything in my power to ensure that I stay alive.”
Zyion’s face softened before he dropped his head forward. “You are no longer alone, Aria. If need be, I will stand beside you as you raise them. Not as your consort or your king, but as your friend.” Zyion’s words made my eyes watery, which wasn’t what I needed right now. I needed to be composed, or I’d end up fucking everything up and losing Knox.
“There he is,” I murmured, watching Knox and Hecate stroll to the edge of the gates.
Hecate waited with hopeful eyes, which caused my stomach to churn. Knox stopped, lifting lifeless eyes. His movements were jerky as he went back to her and leaned over, his mouth waiting for something. She leaned closer to him, kissing his lips—that didn’t kiss back. A line formed in the middle of my eyebrows. The entire time she lathered his mouth with her tongue, Knox didn’t reciprocate the kiss at all. Narrowing my eyes, I heard my jaw pop from straining, as he stood like a zombie waiting to be released.
“Did you see that?”
“That was peculiar. He didn’t return the kiss,” Zyion uttered. “Obviously, she didn’t get all of him.” Zyion’s words sent a wealth of hope slicing through me. It at least confirmed I hadn’t merely seen what I’d wanted to during their exchange.
The longer I watched, the more uncomfortable it became. Hecate didn’t seem to care that he wasn’t returning her forced affection. A tight ball built in my abdomen, spreading out as hatred simmered in my soul. My fingers curled against my palms, forming tight fists at my sides.
“She doesn’t seem to care that he’s merely . . . there. He’s a mindless killing machine that she sends out to do her dirty work. That fucking bitch doesn’t understand the storm in his vibrantly-colored eyes is the most beautiful thing to stare into as fury coils in his belly. Knox is the type of tree that stands tall within a forest as the wildfires burn everything around it.” I wanted to scream and send down fireballs and lightning bolts, until everything around and inside the citadel died in anguish. To watch all of them burn until their flesh melted off of their face, then limbs, until their corpses fell lifelessly into the sludge of their rottenness. The murderous emotion forced a jolt of fear at how easily I’d do something for the man I loved.