âWar is upon us,â I said to the Carver. âRumor suggests you have ⦠gifts that may be useful upon the battlefield.â
A smile at Cassian, as if understanding why heâd joined me. âIn exchange for a price,â the Carver mused.
âWithin reason,â Cassian countered.
The Carver surveyed his cell. âAnd you think that I wish to go ⦠back.â
âDonât you?â
The Carver folded his legs beneath his small frame. âWhere we came from ⦠I do not believe it is now anything more than dust drifting across a plain. There is no home to return to. Not one that I desire.â
For if heâd been here before even Amren had arrived ⦠Tens of thousands of yearsâlonger, perhaps. I shoved against the sinking sensation in my gut. âThen perhaps improving your ⦠living conditions might entice you, if this world is where you wish to be.â
âThis cell, Cursebreaker, is where I wish to be.â The Carver patted the dirt beside him. âDo you think I let them trap me without good reason?â
Cassianâs entire body seemed to shiftâseemed to go aware and focused. Ready to haul us out of there.
The Carver traced three overlapping, interlocked circles in the dirt. âYou have met my sisterâmy twin. The Weaver, as you now call her. I knew her as Stryga. She, and our older brother, Koschei. How they delighted in this world when we fell into it. How those ancient Fae feared and worshipped them. Had I been braver, I might have bided my timeâwaited for their power to fade, for that long-ago Fae warrior to trick Stryga into diminishing her power and becoming confined to the Middle. Koschei, tooâconfined and bound by his little lake on the continent. All before Prythian, before the land was carved up and any High Lord was crowned.â
Cassian and I waited, not daring to interrupt.
âClever, that Fae warrior. Her bloodline is long gone nowâthough a trace still runs through some human line.â He smiled, perhaps a bit sadly. âNo one remembers her name. But I do. She would have been my salvation, had I not made my choice long before she walked this earth.â
I waited and waited and waited, picking apart the story he laid out like crumbs of bread.
âShe could not kill them in the endâthey were too strong. They could only be contained.â The Carver wiped a hand through the circles heâd drawn, erasing them wholly. âI knew that long before she ever trapped themâtook it upon myself to find my way here.â
âTo spare the world from yourself?â Cassian asked, brows narrowing.
The Carverâs eyes burned like the hottest flame. âTo hide from my siblings.â
I blinked. âWhy?â
âThey are death-gods, girl,â the Carver hissed. âYou are immortalâor long-lived enough to seem that way. But my siblings and I ⦠We are different. And the two of them ⦠Stronger. So much stronger than I ever was. My sister ⦠she found a way to eat life itself. To stay young and beautiful forever thanks to the lives she steals.â
The weavingâthe threads inside that house, the roof made of hair ⦠I made a note to throw Rhys in the Sidra for sending me into that cottage.
But the Carver himself ⦠âIf they are death-gods,â I said, âthen what are you?â
Death. He had asked me, over and over, about death. About what waited beyond it, what it felt like. Where I had gone. Iâd thought it mere curiosity, but â¦
That boyâs face crinkled with amusement. My sonâs face. The vision of the future that had once been shown to me all those months ago, as some sort of taunt or embodiment of what I hadnât dared yet admit to myself. What I was most uncertain of. And now ⦠now that young boy ⦠A different sort of taunt, for the future I now stood to lose.
âI am forgotten, thatâs what I am. And thatâs how I prefer to be.â The Carver rested his head against the wall of rock behind him. âSo you will find that I do not wish to leave. That I have no desire to remind my sister and brother that I am alive and in the world. Contained and diminished as they are, their influence remains ⦠considerable.â
âIf Hybern wins this war,â Cassian said roughly, âyou might find the gates of this place blown wide open. And your sister and brother unleashed from their own territoriesâand interested in paying a visit.â
âEven Hybern is not that foolish.â A satisfied huff of air. âIâm sure there are other inmates here who will find your offer ⦠tempting.â
My blood roared. âYou will not even consider assisting us.â I waved a hand to the cell. âThis is what you would preferâfor eternity?â
âIf you knew my brother and sister, Cursebreaker, you would find this a much wiser and more comfortable alternative.â
I opened my mouth, but Cassian squeezed my hand in warning. Enough. Weâd said enough, revealed enough. Looking so desperate ⦠It would help nothing.
âWe should go,â Cassian said to me, the very picture of unruffled calm. âThe delights of the Hewn City await.â
Weâd indeed be late if we didnât leave now. I threw a glare at the Carver by way of farewell, letting Cassian lead me toward the open cell door.
âYou are going to the Hewn City,â the Carver saidânot entirely a question.
âI donât see how that is any business of yours,â I said over my shoulder.
The Carverâs beat of silence echoed around us. Made us pause on the threshold.
âOne last attempt,â the Carver mused, eyes skating over us, âto rally the entirety of the Night Court, I suppose.â
âAgain, it is none of your concern,â I said coolly.
The Carver smiled. âYou will be bargaining with him.â A glance at the tattoo on my right hand. âI wonder what Keirâs asking price will be.â A low laugh. âInteresting.â
Cassian let out a long-suffering sigh. âOut with it.â
The Bone Carver again fell silent, toying with the shard of the Attorâs bone in the dirt beside him. âThe eddies of the Cauldron swirl in strange ways,â he murmured, more to himself than us.
âWeâre going,â I said, making to turn again, hauling Cassian with me.
âMy sister had a collection of mirrors in her black castle,â the Carver said.
We halted once more.
âShe admired herself day and night in those mirrors, gloating over her youth and beauty. There was one mirrorâthe Ouroboros, she called it. It was old even when we were young. A window to the world. All could be seen, all could be told through its dark surface. Keir possesses itâan heirloom of his household. Bring it to me. That is my price. The Ouroboros, and I am yours to wield. If you can find a way to free me.â A hateful smile.
I exchanged a glance with Cassian, and we both shrugged at the Carver. âWeâll see,â was all I said before we walked out.
Cassian and I sat on a boulder overlooking a silver stream, breathing in the chill mists. The Prison loomed at our backs, a dreadful weight blocking out the horizon.
âYou said that you knew the Carver was an old god,â I mused softly. âDid you know he was a death-god?â
Cassianâs face was taut. âI guessed.â When I lifted a brow, he clarified, âHe carves deaths into bones. Sees them. Enjoys them. It wasnât hard to figure out.â
I considered. âWas it you or Rhys who suggested you come here with me?â
âI wanted to come. But Rhys ⦠he guessed it, too.â
Because what weâd seen in Nestaâs eyes that day â¦
âLike calls to like,â I murmured.
Cassian nodded tightly. âI donât think even the Carver knows what Nesta is. But I wanted to seeâjust in case.â
âWhy?â
âI want to help.â
It was answer enough.
We fell into silence, the stream gurgling as it rushed by.
âWould you be frightened of her, if Nesta wasâDeath? Or if her power came from it?â
Cassian was quiet for a long moment.
He said at last, âIâm a warrior. Iâve walked beside Death my entire life. I would be more afraid for her, to have that power. But not afraid of her.â He considered, and added after a heartbeat, âNothing about Nesta could frighten me.â
I swallowed, and squeezed his hand. âThank you.â
I wasnât sure why I even said it, but he nodded all the same.
I felt him before he appeared, a spark of star-kissed joy flaring through me right as Rhys stepped out of the air itself. âWell?â
Cassian hopped off the boulder, extending a hand to help me down. âYouâre not going to like his asking price.â
Rhys held out both hands to winnow us back to Velaris. âIf he wants the fancy dinner plates, he can have them.â
Neither Cassian nor I could muster a laugh as we both reached for Rhysâs outstretched hands. âYou better bring your bargaining skills tonight,â was all Cassian muttered to my mate before we vanished into shadow.