“My mother doesn’t know you like I do.” Bermin tilted his head, clearly enjoying the pleasure of being correct. “She thinks you a heartless strategist who murdered his own brother to hide his schemes. Who let his own aunt take the fall for a failed coup to take the crown. Who arranged the death of his own father at the expense of thousands of lives. But I saw you gallop alone into the middle of a raid to aid your people. Watched you climb into a burning home to rescue two gutter-rat children. You are not heartless, Keris Veliant, no, no … You are a man whose heart decides all, even when it risks costing him everything.”
“You’re more perceptive than I gave you credit for.” Keris kept his focus on the Prince even as he on the tip of the arrow, fear pouring over him like ice water, chilling himwaited for any sign of commotion. For any sign that Zarrah, and all those with her, had been spotted in their escape. “Though I fail to see what you have to gain from this little side plot to capture and kill me when it will surely infuriate your mother. If she wanted me dead, she’d have sent an assassin a long time ago.”
Bermin was a talker. A braggart. If he could draw this moment out even for a few minutes longer, it
“It’s not about you, Veliant.” Bermin spat in the water below. “It’s about Zarrah. She’s a traitor to could be enough for everyone to escape the prison, if not the island itself. “What will your mother say Valcotta, yet my mother still desires her as heir. From Zarrah’s own lips, she admitted to giving you our strategies to prevent me from taking Nerastis. She’s not your victim but your whore, and yet my mother would set her above me.”
The soldiers around Bermin shifted angrily, cursing Zarrah, but Bermin raised his arm to silence them. “She desires Zarrah to be redeemed, but there is only one way for that to happen. One way for my mother to be entirely certain of Zarrah’s loyalty, and that’s if Zarrah destroys you.”
Keris stiffened. He’d believed it was Petra across the gameboard from him, which meant he’d been Bermin nocked the arrow, drawing the bow’s string. “I don’t intend to give her that chance. I will reveal the depths of Zarrah’s depravity and treason to all of Valcotta. The Empress will have no choice but to recognize me as her heir, and at the head of her armies, I will be the one to burn
Maridrina to ash. When the time comes, I will be the Emperor of Valcotta, and all will bend the knee to me.” Bermin took aim. “All I need do is kill the Veliant king.”
“Like an honorless coward.” Keris grinned up at him despite the terror threatening to drown him.
“What a legacy, Your Highness. To be remembered for hiding at a safe distance to shoot a man bound at the wrists and on his knees.”
Bermin didn’t answer.
“Come down here,” Keris crooned. “Unless you’re afraid to fight me, man to man?”
able to resist Zarrah’s plight and would swoop in for the rescue, only to be slaughtered by her waiting
“You think me a fool to be so baited?”
Yes, Keris thought. And though he knew that the death that would come to him would be far more painful than an arrow to the heart, he said, “I challenge you, Bermin Anaphora.”
A smart man would have loosed the arrow and been done with it, but Keris had legions of brothers who thought exactly like Bermin, and he knew that pride would ever trump wisdom.
“You aren’t worth a fight, but I will saw off your head myself. Let your rotting eyes serve as more
“Looking for the logic?” Barking out another laugh, Bermin lowered the bow to his side. “You will proof.” Bermin cast aside his bow. “Get me a rope.”
Keris’s nerve wavered, because he’d seen his father saw men’s heads off. Had listened to them scream, then choke on their own blood until he reached their spinal cord. It was slow and miserable, and Keris was fairly certain that the victims were still able to see when his father finally held up their severed heads.
her precious niece to achieve your own ends. Not just in Zarrah’s eyes, but in her own. She convinced You can do this, he told himself. They’ll be over the channel by now. Will be making their way to the coast, where Lara’s ship is nearby. Just buy them a bit more time.
Sweat dripped down his spine, his breath coming in rapid pants as the soldiers secured a rope and tossed it over the edge.
This was it. There were no more words to help him escape what was to come.
Heart in his throat, Keris watched as the Valcottan prince climbed down a rope, jumping the last bit to land with a splash in the water. Swimming easily to the beach, he waded out of the channel, clothes clinging to his massive form as he drew his sword. In the shadow of the cliff, Keris could now see the other man’s face clearly in the torchlight, feral delight gleaming in his dark eyes.
Bermin was going to enjoy this.
“The arrow would have been more pleasant,” Bermin said, stopping before him. “Your desire to live a few minutes more will cost you dearly.”
“It would cost me more to die swiftly.”
waited for any sign of commotion. For any sign that Zarrah, and all those with her, had been spotted in The Prince spat into the water. “You will be only the first to fall to my blade, Veliant. Soon all of Maridrina will bleed.”
Motion on the cliff caught his eye, and Keris smiled because, of course, she hadn’t listened. He’d been an idiot to believe that she would. “If that was your goal, you shouldn’t have killed Kian and his men.”
“And why is that?” Bermin asked, resting his sword blade against Keris’s neck.
A wild laugh escaped Keris’s lips as screams filtered down from the cliff tops, but it was a clarion voice from behind him that answered. “Because they might have fought for you, cousin. Whereas now, you must fight me alone.”
Maridrina to ash. When the time comes, I will be the Emperor of Valcotta, and all will bend the knee to me.” Bermin took aim. “All I need do is kill the Veliant king.”
“Like an honorless coward.” Keris grinned up at him despite the terror threatening to drown him.
“What a legacy, Your Highness. To be remembered for hiding at a safe distance to shoot a man bound at the wrists and on his knees.”
Bermin didn’t answer.
“Come down here,” Keris crooned. “Unless you’re afraid to fight me, man to man?”
“You think me a fool to be so baited?”
Yes, Keris thought. And though he knew that the death that would come to him would be far more painful than an arrow to the heart, he said, “I challenge you, Bermin Anaphora.”
A smart man would have loosed the arrow and been done with it, but Keris had legions of brothers who thought exactly like Bermin, and he knew that pride would ever trump wisdom.
“You aren’t worth a fight, but I will saw off your head myself. Let your rotting eyes serve as more proof.” Bermin cast aside his bow. “Get me a rope.”
Keris’s nerve wavered, because he’d seen his father saw men’s heads off. Had listened to them scream, then choke on their own blood until he reached their spinal cord. It was slow and miserable, and Keris was fairly certain that the victims were still able to see when his father finally held up their severed heads.
You can do this, he told himself. They’ll be over the channel by now. Will be making their way to the coast, where Lara’s ship is nearby. Just buy them a bit more time.
Sweat dripped down his spine, his breath coming in rapid pants as the soldiers secured a rope and tossed it over the edge.
This was it. There were no more words to help him escape what was to come.
Heart in his throat, Keris watched as the Valcottan prince climbed down a rope, jumping the last bit to land with a splash in the water. Swimming easily to the beach, he waded out of the channel, clothes clinging to his massive form as he drew his sword. In the shadow of the cliff, Keris could now see the other man’s face clearly in the torchlight, feral delight gleaming in his dark eyes.
Bermin was going to enjoy this.
“The arrow would have been more pleasant,” Bermin said, stopping before him. “Your desire to live a few minutes more will cost you dearly.”
“It would cost me more to die swiftly.”
The Prince spat into the water. “You will be only the first to fall to my blade, Veliant. Soon all of Maridrina will bleed.”
Motion on the cliff caught his eye, and Keris smiled because, of course, she hadn’t listened. He’d been an idiot to believe that she would. “If that was your goal, you shouldn’t have killed Kian and his men.”