Thorns of Frost (Fae of Snow & Ice, #2)

Laughing, I released my own affinity. I coiled my fire around his, shoving it off.

“I’m not that easily thwarted.” He circled me, and we battled playfully, lobbing fireballs at each other, whipping strands of fire at one another’s ankles, and creating walls of flames to halt the other’s progress.

Tormesh soon began sweating, and the surprise on his face was priceless when my fire again cut through his.

“You truly are stronger than me.” The teasing left his voice, awe taking its place.

I sucked my fire affinity back into me, shrugging.

Tormesh’s smile broadened. “Who would have thought my sister would become so powerful.” He shook his head in wonder, but then his lips downturned. “I wish I could have seen you manifest.”

My chest tightened. The prince had brought my family here to keep them safe, but this tiny village was still a cage. Nobody could come and go willingly. It was too great of a risk that would expose them all. Basically, it was a prison, and that stirred memories of the time I’d been locked in the Exorbiant Chamber.

If it wasn’t such a sad situation, I probably would have snorted in amusement. While the prince’s intentions were noble, he also had a habit of locking fae up. Although life on the Cliffs of Sarum, with the hope of one day being free, was better than entering the afterlife.

Tormesh bumped me with his elbow again. “Don’t look so sad. It’s really not that bad here. We’ve gotten used to it, and honestly, it’s not that much different from life back home. We just can’t do trips to Firlim anymore, but how often did we leave our village anyway?” He shrugged. “Besides, I saw a lot of the continent when I marched with the Solis Guard. At least I got that.”

“Oh, Tormesh.” I pulled him into a hug. He’d always been an optimist.

He hugged me back just as fiercely, and then our father hollered from inside, asking where the drinks were.

We both laughed as tears pricked my eyes again before we joined everyone else.

The rest of the evening passed in a blur, and it was so surreal it felt magical. We all crowded around the tiny kitchen table, catching up on all that had occurred in the past full season. My family had endless questions about me and Cailis, and the wistful sigh on my mother’s face told me she wanted to see my sister as desperately as she had wanted to see me.

But I didn’t know if the prince would allow it. He’d seemed cagey and concerned about bringing me here, and the secretiveness of the place told me that he’d taken a huge risk just by allowing my entry.

But I didn’t let those concerns cloud my thoughts. Instead, I focused on the present and soaked up every second of my family’s company while the prince remained quiet but ate a mountain of food.

By the time the sky darkened to the deepest night through the window-like ice above the tiny village, I knew it was time to go. We’d been gone for hours, and just because the bombshell of my family’s survival had hit me like a ton of bricks, it didn’t stop everything else that was occurring in my life.

I still needed to wake up early to heal another field, I still had to train, and I still had to prepare for my three Trial tests, which were only weeks away.

So when we stood to leave, I didn’t fight it.

“I’ll mistphase myself, and if you’d like, I can mistphase you too,” I said to the prince, knowing his pride wouldn’t allow him to admit that his magic was weakened.

Surprise filled his eyes. “You can mistphase others?”

I nodded. “I’ve been reliably able to for a few weeks now thanks to Matron Olsander, and mistphasing us from here will be good practice for me.”

“You can mistphase too?” Tormesh’s eyes bugged out as my parents gaped.

I laughed. “I can do a lot more than that now.”

“Who would have thought that my daughter with her black hair and missing wings would grow to be so powerful.” My mother wrapped me in a hug, then my father did the same.

My family walked us to the veil that shrouded their tiny village. Now that I knew my parents and brother were alive, a sense of peace settled over me. But more than that filled my soul. The male standing at my side with his great wings and masterful affinities was the reason they’d survived.

And suddenly, the thought of being the victor of the Rising Queen Trial, of becoming Norivun’s wife . . .

For the first time since I’d learned of my fate, that thought didn’t make me want to run.

It made me want to win.





CHAPTER 20





I mistphased us back to the castle just after midnight, landing precisely where the prince told me to go even though it wasn’t an area of the castle I’d ever ventured to before.

When our feet touched a solid floor, I took in the dark and unfamiliar room surrounding us. A bed bigger than the one I slept in rested against the wall. Large windows allowed moonlight to stream in, highlighting the grand fireplace, couches and chairs surrounding it, along with a massive closet filled with garments of all cuts and colors.

“Where are we?” I asked.

“This is my private chambers.” In the dark, the prince’s wings rose behind him like horns, the talons at the tips like sharp claws.

“This is your bedroom chambers? But isn’t it warded?”

“Of course it is, but it’s never been warded to you.”

That statement slammed into me. He’d never warded his most private chambers to me because I was his mate, and he’d known I was his mate since the second I first entered this castle.

For a moment, I didn’t know what to say. I’d never seen where he slept, had never even thought to ask since I’d been fighting the attraction that had so naturally born between us.

But now . . .

I wrapped my arms around myself. “I’m still in shock that they’re alive.”

His fingers immediately covered my lips, silencing me. A current ran through me at that light touch. He dropped his hand, his eyes gleaming in the moonlight, and the unspoken words that passed between us told me that he’d also felt that buzz of energy. But more importantly, my silence over that village in the Cliffs of Sarum was imperative. No one could know about it.

Magic rumbled inside me, and I called upon my air element and concentrated on forming a silencing Shield around us. My affinity flowed out of me, creating a wall of air until I knew nobody outside of my magic could hear us.

“I won’t tell anyone,” I said, my tone low in the dark room despite my Shield. “But I have to tell Cailis. I can’t keep this secret from her.” When he opened his mouth to argue, I added, “She won’t tell a soul. Not if it puts our family’s lives in jeopardy.”

He frowned but gave a curt nod. “Cailis and Cailis only. If word were to ever get out, my father would destroy that place, kill everyone inside it, and my end would come just as swiftly.”

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