Burning Glass (Burning Glass, #1)

The prince’s nostrils flared ever so slightly. My stomach tightened like I’d just swallowed rancid milk. I hoped to the gods I felt what he did, that I’d inflicted on him the jealousy he’d been inflicting on me. “Then you should save your strength,” he said, and turned to walk away, his manner casual. He nodded at a few lords conversing nearby.

I rushed forward and kept pace beside him. He wouldn’t evade me so easily. The auras of the ladies who had flirted with him met my bloodstream. They amplified my own desire and escalated my boldness to new heights. “I have strength enough for two dances,” I declared, catching up the length of my robes so I wouldn’t trip. In truth, my strength was waning. Even standing made my heart beat faster, my breath come quicker. Vaguely, I realized these were complications of dehydration brought on by diuretic tea. No matter. I clung to the women’s auras and strove to bolster myself. I could eat something later. I wasn’t finished with Anton.

“I am glad you are feeling well.” He served himself a cup of aqua vitae. “I, on the other hand, am quite fatigued.”

I balled my hands. It wasn’t midnight. He wouldn’t retire from these rooms. Not yet. Perhaps he wouldn’t even leave when the time came. His secret business could be enacted here.

I resisted the urge to hang on him like a beggar. All I wanted was one dance. More than that, I felt desperate for one, desperate that the prince take this chance to prove to me—in the presence of everyone else—that I was a good enough person to be in his association. If he would dance with me, maybe I could hope for something more between us. Or better yet, drive the darkness from my soul.

Anton took a long drink and watched the dancing resume, his lips pressed together in a firm line.

“He’s gone,” I said, referring to the emperor.

A beat later, Anton replied, “I know.”

I folded my arms. “The nobles can see we’re conversing, even if you don’t look at me. Though I’m sure no one can hear our words above the music, not from this corner, if that’s what you’re worried about.”

Anton sighed and drew his brows together. Something sharp lodged in my chest near the region of my heart. “Sonya, what do you want from me?” He kept his eyes averted.

I shifted on my feet. What did I want? What was this fragile thing between us? Did it only exist when the palace was asleep and we were closed away from the world? Was it only in my imaginings that Anton cared for me in some small way—some way that would still exist if he didn’t feel the need to protect me from his brother?

“I want a dance,” I said.

“No, you don’t. You want more than a dance, more from me than what you understand. I know you. You’re reflecting something that is not your own. Let it go.”

My mouth fell open as hurt and anger suppressed my breath. More powerful was the cold and lonely part of me wanting to warm at the hidden meaning in his words. But he kept pushing me away. “I’m not a mirror, Anton. And I don’t break like glass. I’m capable of my own feelings. You told me as much. The difference between you and me is I don’t hide my emotions. The part of me that’s me has a chance to shine through.”

“Emotions alone can’t tell you the whole truth of who a person is,” he replied defensively.

“Well, they’re all I have to go by,” I quipped. “And you hide more than your emotions; you hide your potential for greatness. You would discover it if you embraced who you are.” When he didn’t respond, I lowered my voice, despite my surety no one could hear us. “You could be greater than any man in this empire.”

He set his cup down hard. The remaining liquid sloshed out. “Hush, Sonya!” he rasped. “Leave me be.”

My eyes burned with the prick of frustrated tears. I was only trying to make him see how I saw him. I whirled to leave, to return to my stump of a stool, when Anton brushed past me and asked another lady to dance, even though the quadrille was halfway over. Steam practically rose off my skin. Through the haze of my jealousy, I formed a mad idea. Resolved, I wove through the ballroom and searched for someone. Not just anyone, a man with an amethyst ring. I found him in a corner, laughing with two young noblemen.

I curtsied deeply and offered the required salutation: “Your High Nobleness.”

His eyes rounded. “Sovereign Auraseer.” The men behind him exchanged glances. Something like panic fluttered in my belly. Did I make them that nervous? Were they all anxious, or just the amethyst-ringed man?

“Are you acquainted with His Imperial Highness, Prince Anton?” I asked.

The butterfly inside me beat harder. The man shot a look at the crowd, no doubt at the prince, though I didn’t turn to see. “Every nobleman has an association with him,” he answered with a smile, though it didn’t reach his eyes.

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