There is more to you sharing this than you taking a liking to me.
True, Aenah replied. I know now that I cannot win you over by guile—that mistake is the reason I am imprisoned here. So I turn to truth where deception has failed. I ask for nothing, Tea. Not for my release from this prison and not for you to join my cause. All I desire is to show you how the asha have deceived you. I have done many terrible things in my life, sweet child. But your asha have done worse, and it is time you look at them with new eyes. If you are willing to listen to me, then I will tell you more about the elder asha, their machinations, and the more powerful of the runes in my book.
What have the elder asha done that make your transgressions pale in comparison?
It was your asha elders who conspired to hide your sister’s heartsglass.
You lie!
And for what reason? The truth should be easy enough to ascertain. Ask them why they abandoned the search so easily. Ask them why the young King Vanor refuses to speak, even in death. Ask them why shadowglass interests them so. Ask how Blade that Soars and Dancing Wind’s story truly ends. What secrets can you find when you step into Mistress Hestia’s study?
I quickly broke off the link, more shaken than I want to admit. That wasn’t possible. She was lying. Why would the elders withhold Mykaela’s heartsglass?
A sudden barrage of emotions that were not my own flooded into my mind, at once unexpected and familiar. The Veiling dissipated; Fox had broken his barrier.
I scried again and reached out to him, prepared to tease him for the sudden lapse, but it was not the practice fields or straw dummies I saw when my vision refocused. It was the angry, teary-eyed face of Princess Inessa.
She was exceptionally lovely, beautiful from her delicately curved nose to her high cheekbones and smooth flawless skin. Her bright-blue eyes were perhaps her most arresting feature, a rarity for a Kion, proof of the royal house’s ancient ties to the old kingdom of Arhen-Kosho, and a devastating contrast to her chestnut-colored hair.
“I can do whatever I want, now can I?” I’d never heard the princess speak like this; her normally pleasant alto was loud and harsh. “You have no say over where I go and who I marry!”
“But it’s not your decision, is it?” Fox sounded different too. His voice was too even from holding back his anger with great effort. “Why can’t you be honest for once in your life?”
“You are the last person to talk to me about honesty!” She shot back. “We have nothing! We had nothing!”
I hunched over, the pain in my chest catching me by surprise. The jolt soon passed. Fox responded without any change in expression. “And that’s why you’ve been watching me at practice for the last three weeks.”
She reeled back this time, and I could see her heartsglass mist over into blue. She clutched at the collar of her dress. “I don’t… I haven’t—”
“And now you’re to wed the Odalian prince,” my brother continued ruthlessly, much to my dismay. “It’s nice to see you free to make your own choices.”
The princess lifted her chin. “It was never my decision. But I’m prepared to honor my promises, unlike other people who come to mind.”
“Honoring your promise to a stranger one moment, honoring it to a prince in the next. And in between, honoring it to every Ahmed, Farshid, and Hamid who so much as looks at—”
Her slap knocked me to the ground. I blinked up at the ceiling with my cheek burning, but Fox remained upright, watching the princess stomp away. Once she was gone he said, very quietly, “Tea?”
I’m sorry, I squeaked, scrambling to my feet. I wasn’t intending to pry. I felt you loosen the barrier, and I wanted to—
It’s fine. We can talk about it later.
A quiet Fox was the saddest thing I’d ever felt. Gently, I disengaged from his mind but not before his melancholy washed over me, aimless and drifting.
Deliberately, I reached out and sketched the Resurrecting rune. I cast no spell, summoned no magic.
The elders couldn’t have worked this sorcery. Polaire was right. They would never have compromised themselves this way. But if I acknowledged that Aenah could be telling the truth, let her tell me more…
I sat and watched the rune glittering before me, light as air yet like a millstone around my neck, before I raised my hand again and watched it disappear.
It was Lord Khalad who sounded the warning cry. He grabbed three injured Daanorian soldiers from the line of wounded and dragged them out of the room, one after another, with a ferocity I had not expected of him. Stunned, I followed Lord Kalen and the bone witch as they rushed out after him. Princess Yansheo attempted to do the same, but the Deathseeker admonished, “Stay inside, and do not come out until we tell you to. You too, Bard.”
Still, I lingered by the doorway, ready in my ignorance to protest in the Daanorians’ defense.
“Stay back,” the Dark asha commanded, and the servants loitering in the corridor turned away without another sound.
Choking, the soldiers dropped to their knees. One of them cried out, his face contorted in pain. Then his face lengthened, elongating in a way no human face had ever been shaped. With a harsh curse, Lord Kalen drew his sword, as did the bone witch.
Limbs burst out of the poor man’s back, as the soldier morphed before our very eyes. His body jerked haplessly, bones cracking, until it was as tall as a horse, an emaciated, horrifying creature with yellow, bulbous eyes and foot-long teeth. I backed away in fright. Something close to recognition flared in its lidless eyes as it turned to the Dark asha, and she was the first person it chose to attack.
Her blade swung true; a stroke severed a twitching limb and the monster dropped, snarling.
A second soldier fell to the ground as a human but soon rose to its feet a beast, pincers taking the place of a mouth, terrible eyes glowing with a diaphanous sheen. Unlike its brethren, it leaped for the Heartforger.
Ice crackled and slid up its arm. The monster staggered, and Lord Kalen brought his sword down upon it, shattering the frozen appendage. The beast screamed, but just as quickly, another arm iced over and another arm was pulverized.
The bone witch sank her sword into the monster’s side. Its hide proved tough, the blade cutting in but not deeply enough to kill it. The creature swiped at her with its claws, and she spun, switching targets and driving the steel deep into the back of its head. It shuddered once, twitching, and collapsed. Lord Kalen finished off his opponent, bringing his sword down on its neck.
The final soldier remained in agony on the floor, still in human form. The asha knelt beside him. Her hands found his, squeezing comfortingly.
The man cried a high-pitched plea in Daanorian.
“I am sorry,” the bone witch told him, and from behind, Lord Kalen’s sword struck one final blow. Death came quickly, mercifully.
The Dark asha didn’t move for some time, staring down at the body before she gently disengaged her hand from his.
Back in the throne room, I suspected that the emperor would’ve cowered if wasn’t already cornered by the aeshma. She punched him, hard, in full view of his subjects. His head whipped back, and she slammed another fist into his stomach.
“Tea!” Princess Yansheo screamed.
“Did you do this?” The Dark asha grabbed the man’s hair, pulling his head from the ground. “Did you blight them?”
“No,” the emperor gasped, his mouth full of blood.
“I killed your lieutenant when he was on the cusp of transforming. My azi devoured him before the blight could be completed. You’re lying if you claim to know nothing of this.”
“Then kill me, witch,” the emperor rasped. “Take your revenge once and for all.”
“I’ve been inside your mind, you old crone. A quick death is the least you deserve.”
“Then what is it that you think I deserve, bone witch?”