Stella eyed me tearfully, stuck her fingers back in her mouth and jumped off the bed, turning into a mountain lion cub on the way, and tearing out the door as if her tail were on fire. Ami sighed and watched her go. “I was afraid that would happen, but she insisted on seeing you. She could feel your pain, so there was no lying to her about it. And what Nilly wants, Willy must have, too.”
“I want to learn to use a sword,” Astar announced, blissfully unbothered, “so I can kill wolves.” He jumped up to demonstrate with an invisible sword, thrusting it wildly in the air and bouncing the bed.
“No jostling.” The lash of Ami’s reprimand caught him mid-bounce and he tucked his hands behind his back, pasting on an angelic smile the mirror of his mother’s.
Then he turned back to me. “Will you teach me to use a sword, Ash—will you?”
Ouch. I glanced at Ami, who wouldn’t meet my eye. “Maybe someday,” I told him.
“Does that mean tomorrow?” he asked hopefully.
“That means someday,” Ami corrected crisply, “and that’s enough visiting.” She scooped him up, but he struggled, reaching for me.
“I want to stay!”
“Ash needs to rest. Go find Nilly and make sure she’s not being naughty.”
He brightened at that and tore out the door, shouting, “Nilly Nilly Nilly!”
Ami shook her head and sighed, giving me a rueful smile. “Sorry about that and thank you—they were driving me crazy, worrying about you.”
“That’s all right. It was good to see them.”
“Yes. Well.” She studied me. “How do you feel, really? I know it must be bad if you reduced Nilly to tears inside of a minute, so don’t bother lying.”
“I really do feel better. The arm is improved and the fever not so high. It hurts, sure, but it’s healing.”
She pursed her lips, then poured some of the fever tea and handed me the mug. “Well, your color is better. And your eyes are back to your normal bright green, not glowing like a cat’s in the dark.”
I paused mid-sip. “They were glowing?”
“Shapeshifter magic or something, but I could see the light on my skin, even.”
I contemplated that, not sure what it meant. So much I still didn’t know about my heritage. “I’ll have to ask some of the Tala healers about that.”
“When you go back to Annfwn,” she said, matter-of-fact, no question in it, busying herself with laying out some soup. I didn’t bother to correct her that I hadn’t decided where I’d go. She brought the soup over on a tray, setting it on my lap and taking the empty mug. “After you eat, we’ll look at the arm.”
“You don’t have to wait on me, Ami. You’re a queen, not a servant.” I knew I sounded irritable, but I hadn’t quite expected her to be so ready to have me gone. Silly, as I’d been meant to be long gone before this.
She flashed me an opaque look that didn’t fool me. I’d annoyed her with that. “We’re snowed in at a virtually empty castle—believe me, the calls to hear petitions and attend social engagements have gone way down.”
“That’s not what I meant.” I rubbed my forehead, where the fever made it throb, regretting that I’d spoken.
“I know what you meant, but you’ll have to put up with my company for a while longer. Though now that you’re reasonably lucid, if cranky with it, I might get some of the maids or men at arms to spell me.”
Lucid. I frowned at her, remembering those nightmares.
“Now that you aren’t saying things you wouldn’t want anyone else to hear,” she clarified, pointedly, still expectant.
I wasn’t sure how to ask, certain I didn’t want to hear the answer. But I knew Ami and she had that look about her, like she had her teeth into something and wouldn’t be dropping it. “Did I—” My throat caught and I coughed, swallowed some broth to ease it. “During the fever, was I…”
She raised her finely arched brows, waiting for me to finish. When I couldn’t think of any words, I stared at my soup. It held no answers either.
Ami sat on the bed and covered my good hand with hers. “Ash,” she said, and the hesitation in her voice, the sympathy, had me wanting to crawl away. “What happened to you in that prison?”
“I’ve told you about that,” I said.
“Not really.” She tightened her hand on mine. I knew she wanted me to turn mine over, to lace our fingers together and return the grip, but I couldn’t make myself. More than anything I wanted her to go away, to leave me alone and not ask these questions. Not something I could ask for without driving her away forever and I wasn’t ready to face that. Still too sick and weak. I’d walked away from her before and it had taken all I had. I couldn’t do it again, not yet.
“Ash,” Ami said with more asperity. “Don’t do this. Don’t retreat inside that silence. You can talk to me.”
“There’s nothing to talk about. You know everything already.”
“You told me about the staged matches. How the old Tala man taught you to fight, how to channel the beast inside to grow strong and fast. You said the guards would whip you when you disobeyed.”
I laughed a little, the grate of it painful in my chest. “Or just when they felt like it. Disobedience is in the eye of the beholder.”
“But there’s more, isn’t there? You said you were in there ten years and you were twenty-three when you got out, which means you were little more than a boy in there.”
“A lot of us were young. Uorsin’s law didn’t discriminate based on age.”
“I’m na?ve about a lot of things, Ash, but not about everything. Some of the things you said—”
They do terrible things. It only makes them want more when you scream. When they can make you cry and plead.
“Don’t speak them,” I grated out. Glancing up at her lovely face, I saw what I’d dreaded most. That pity.
“Ash, I’m so sorry,” she said, her voice full of compassion.
“Don’t be,” I said, harshly enough that she physically flinched. I pulled my hand from hers on pretext of eating more soup, but it shook too much to hold the spoon, so I picked up the bowl and drank. Not smart because I dumped half of it down the front of my nightshirt. Growling in frustrated rage, I hurled the bowl at the wall, where it shattered with a crash, the ceramic pieces raining to the floor.
Ami didn’t look, just stared at me, lips pressed together tightly enough to make them go white as snow, eyes shadowed blue pools. Then she stood and shook out her skirts. “I’ll just get a broom and—”
“Leave it.” It came out as a barked command, making her jump.
“Fine,” she bit out. In a flurry of rustling skirts and bouncing curls, she left, the faint scent of roses lingering behind.
I hated that, hated that I’d frightened her. But this was better, wasn’t it? She should be afraid of me. She needed to see what kind of foul and twisted creature she’d taken to her bed. Then it would be easier for us both to say goodbye.
As soon as I got my strength back, I’d go.
10