The Fragile Threads of Power (Threads of Power, #1)

She didn’t fully understand the chains, but she knew enough to know that the one wearing the cuff was bound to the one with the ring, that the first’s power became the second’s. She pulled the thin length of gold from her pocket, its edge stained red with Berras’s blood. She hesitated, long enough that Kell took it from her and wrapped the gold around her finger. As he did, the chain around his own wrist changed, became a solid cuff. Hers became a ring.

She’d been on the other side. Felt the utter absence of her magic. Now, she felt it double, as Kell’s power poured in on top of hers. The whole world hummed with the force of it.

At the same time, Kell sighed, his shoulders sagging, as if a massive weight had suddenly been lifted. He closed his eyes, hand wrapped around the cuff as if to keep it there.

There was no time to ask if he was sure.

Lila turned back to the open door.

The wind was a torrent now, dragging at her clothes, but her very bones felt grounded with power. She touched the cut on her cheek, only to find it healed. The pain in her chest had faded too, the surge of Kell’s power enough to mend her wounds. She drew her knife, and cut deep, painting both hands red as she approached the chasm.

It was so large now, she had to spread her arms wide just to touch the sides. Her fingertips curled around its edges. She filled her lungs, and forced the magic down into her hands as she called the spell.

“AS STARO.”

The wind was a howling force, and yet, the words rang out, through her skin, through the room, as loud as that crashing bell. She felt them, clamping like giant hands against the splintered doorway, felt the frame shudder, and cave in, the darkness shrinking as the door was finally forced closed.

Then it was gone, leaving nothing but a ragged scar, like a badly stitched wound, on the air in its wake.

The wind died with it.

The room was still.

Lila sagged with relief, and turned toward Kell, hoping to see her own triumph mirrored on his face. But he wasn’t standing there beside her. He was on the floor, his entire body rigid, muscles seizing.

“Kell.”

Lila dropped to the ground beside him, tearing the ring from her finger. As soon as it was gone, the gold chain sloughed off his wrist, the connection between them broken. He should have been okay then, but he wasn’t.

“Talk to me,” she pleaded, but his teeth were clamped. His muscles clenched. His eyes were open, but he didn’t seem to see her, tears sliding into his hair.

“God dammit, Kell,” she said, gripping his face.

But as she touched him, something finally came loose inside his jaw, and he opened his mouth, and began to scream.





X


WHITE LONDON

The greater the power, the higher the price.

Kosika thought of Holland’s words as she stood beneath the cherry tree. The one she’d grown with only blood and want.

It was an intruder, taller than the others in the orchard, in full summer bloom instead of giving way to fall. But that was not what troubled her. It was the trees to either side. They looked sickly now, their own leaves curling as if parched, their color leached away. As if, without realizing, she’d stolen from them to feed her silly spell.

What have I done?

“Magic is not infinite.”

She jumped a little at the sound of Holland’s voice. He was standing on the grass beside her, white hair lifting off his cheeks as it had in her dream. He followed her gaze. She thought of the Silver Wood, the heart of the world in her hands.

Footsteps sounded behind her on the path, and she turned to find Serak coming toward her. The Vir had always been a somber man, his dark brows often creased in thought. But she had seen him in the halls that morning, and he had seemed in good spirits. Now, he had the look of a messenger carrying bad news.

“My queen,” he said. “You are needed.”

“What is it?” she asked, but he would not say, only gestured for her to follow; not back to the castle, but toward the outer gates.

Kosika sighed, and started after him, casting a last look back at the tree. Flowers bloomed, but to its left and right, the branches withered.

“All spells have a cost,” said Holland.

Kosika rubbed her injured thumb against her finger. “I thought I paid it.”

“What did you say?” This, from Serak, who had stopped a few strides down the path.

Kosika looked from the Vir to her king, and for a moment, considered telling him the truth, that she was speaking to the Saint himself. But Holland cast her a heavy look, and in the end she shook her head, and said nothing.



* * *



The carriage rattled through the city streets. Serak’s mouth was a grim line, his eyes cast down, and when Kosika asked where they were going, he shook his head and said only, “Better if you see.”

If it had been anyone but Serak, she might have suspected malice, might have wondered if this was some attempt at a coup. If the Vir meant to lead her into danger, even death (she wondered briefly if any of the Vir were strong enough to kill her, but she doubted it). But this was Serak, loyal Serak, who looked at her and saw the incarnation of power, the heir of a saint.

Still, as the carriage trundled on, she kept her hands folded beneath her cloak, one nail grazing the shallow cut she’d made to grow the cherry tree.

At last, the carriage stopped, and Serak stepped out first, holding the door for her. As Kosika stepped down, she saw they were at the edge of an alley, the city walls rising high to either side. Ahead, the narrow road was interrupted by a white tent.

It struck her as an odd place to pitch a market stall, until she realized, of course, it had been erected to hide something else from view.

A soldier stood waiting for them, and as she followed Serak forward, he drew back the flap, and ushered her inside.

Holland had not followed her into the carriage, but she felt him now, at her side as she stepped into the tent. She blinked, eyes adjusting as sunlight was traded for soft lanterns. She looked down, expecting to see something on the ground—a body, perhaps, or the remains of a spell, something worth hiding from view—but the stones beneath her feet were bare, unstained. Kosika frowned, gaze flicking up to Serak, lips already forming the protest that there was nothing here—when she saw it.

What it was she saw, she couldn’t say. It hung in the air between her and the Vir, rippling his image slightly like a pane of imperfect glass. At her back, Holland drew in a short, sharp breath, and she nearly glanced back, over her shoulder. Instead she reached out, sure her fingers would land on something solid, but they passed through the mark without resistance, as if there was nothing there.

Kosika’s frown deepened. “What is it?” she asked, speaking both to Serak and the Saint.

“We are not sure,” said the Vir. “It was discovered this morning by a soldier’s wife, who told her husband, who came straight to us. Which was fortunate. It’s not in a very public place, and we were able to erect the tent before rumors spread—”

“Rumors?” she asked.

Serak cleared his throat. “The nature of the mark, the way it is and isn’t here. There is a chance—a small chance—that it could be a sign of damage to…”

“The walls.” Holland’s voice was low, and yet it filled the tent, heavy as smoke.

“—the walls,” finished Serak a moment later.

Kosika didn’t understand. And then, suddenly, she did.

The walls. The ones erected between worlds. As she stared at the warping in the air, it took on a different shape, seemed less like a ripple, and more like a crack.

“You think the walls are weakening?”

Serak said nothing, and that was answer enough. Panic pinged through her, tight and sudden as a plucked string. “There must be a way to reinforce them,” she said. “Make them stronger.”

“Perhaps,” said Serak, sounding unconvinced. After all, it had taken dozens of Antari to create the walls that sealed the worlds off from each other. That kept the magic of Black London from spilling out. If the dam was breaking—

“I have soldiers scouring the city,” said Serak. “Searching for other marks.”

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