I couldnât have heard him right. There was no way he planned to do what heâd stated.
âNone will be the wiser until itâs too late,â he said. âYou will be beyond their reach, like all the others the Ascended have taken.â
âThatâ¦that doesnât even make sense,â I said, stunned when I realized that he was serious.
âIt doesnât?â
âNo!â I exclaimed. âFor several reasons. Starting with how you plan to get me there.â
Alastir smiled at me, and my unease grew. âPenellaphe, dear, youâre no longer within the Pillars of Atlantia. Youâre in the Crypt of the Forgotten Ones, deep within the Skotos Mountains. If anyone even learns that you are here, they will not find you. We will already be gone by then.â
My insides chilled as disbelief rose. âHow did you get past the Guardians?â
âThose who were unaware of our presence felt the kiss of the shadowshade.â
âAnd those who werenât?â I asked, already guessing whatâd happened to them. âYou killed Guardians?â
âWe did what needed to be done.â
âGods,â I whispered, swallowing the anger and panic that swirled within me. âThey protected Atlantia. Theyââ
âThey were not the true Guardians of Atlantia,â he cut me off. âIf they were, they wouldâve struck you down the moment you appeared.â
My lip curled as I forced my breathing to remain even. âEven if you hand me over to them, how will I not be Atlantiaâs problem if you give me back to the people who plan to use my blood to make more vamprys?â
He lifted his weight from his hand and sat straight. âIs that what they plan?â
âWhat else would they plan to do?â I demanded. All of a sudden, I remembered Duchess Teermanâs words at Spessaâs End. She had claimed that Queen Ileana would be thrilled to learn that I had married the Prince. That I would be able to do what sheâd never been able to doâdestroy the kingdom from within. Before I could allow those words to mix with what Alastir had said about me being a threat, I shoved them aside. Duchess Teerman had told a lot of lies before she died, starting with what sheâd said about Queen Ileana, a vampry incapable of bearing children, being my grandmother. Sheâd also claimed that Tawny had gone through the Ascension, using Prince Malikâs blood. I couldnât believe that, either.
Alastir eyed me silently for a moment. âCome now, Penellaphe. Do you really think the Ascended have no idea that they had the descendant of Nyktos in their grips for nearly nineteen years? Longer?â
Ian.
My breath caught. He was talking about Ian. âI was told Ian Ascended.â
âI would have no knowledge of that.â
âBut you think Queen Ileana and King Jalara knew that weâre Nyktosâs descendants?â When he said nothing, I fought the urge to launch myself at him. âWhat does that knowledge change anyway?â
âThey could use you to make more vamprys,â he agreed. âOr, they know what youâre capable of. They know what was written about you, and they plan to use you against Atlantia.â
My stomach hollowed. The idea of being handed over to the Ascended was terrifying enough. But to be used against Atlantiaâagainst Casteel? âThen let me ask you again, how is that not Atlantiaâs problem if theyâ¦?â I jerked back against the wall, my eyes widening.
âWait a minute. You said very few people knew what Malec could doâthat my gifts were like his. They couldâve guessed that Ian and I had godâs blood in us, but how would they know our lineage?â I leaned forward as far as I could. âYouâre working with the Ascended, arenât you?â
His lips thinned. âSome Ascended were alive when Malec ruled.â
âBy the time Jalara fought the Atlantians at Pompay, Malec no longer sat on the throne,â I said. âNot only that, but he was able to keep the vast majority of the Atlantians in the dark about his abilitiesâabout who he descended from. But some random Ascended knew? One who managed to survive the war? Because it sure as hell wasnât Jalara or Ileana. They came from the Vodina Isles, where Iâm willing to bet they Ascended.â My lip curled in disgust. âYou claim youâre a true Protector of Atlantia, but youâve plotted with its enemies. The people who held both of your Princes captive? The peopleââ
âThis has nothing to do with my daughter,â he said, and I pressed my lips together. âEverything I have done, I have done for the Crown and for the kingdom.â
The Crown? A horrible coldness spread in my chest as my mind reeled from one discovery after another. I opened my mouth and then closed it before asking the question I wasnât sure I wanted to know the answer to.
âWhat?â Alastir asked. âThereâs no need to play the quiet one now. We both know thatâs not who you are.â
My shoulders tightened as I lifted my gaze to his. âDid Casteelâs parents know you were going to do this?â Theyâd fought back in the Temple, but that couldâve been an act. âDid they know?â
Alastir studied me. âDoes it matter?â
It did. âYes.â
âThey do not know about this,â he said. âThey may have speculated that ourâ¦brotherhood had risen once more, but they had no hand in this. They wonât like what Iâve been a part of, but I believe they will come to see the necessity of it.â He inhaled deeply through his nose, tilting his head back. âAnd if they donât, then they too will be treated as a threat.â
My eyes widened once more. âYouâ¦youâre staging a coup.â
His gaze shot back to mine. âNo. I am saving Atlantia.â
âYouâre saving Atlantia by working with the Ascended, putting the people of the kingdom in even more danger, and overthrowing or doing something worse to the Crown if they disagree with your actions? That is a coup. That is also treasonous.â
âOnly if youâve sworn allegiance to the heads the crown sits upon,â he countered. âAnd I donât think it will come to that. Eloana and Valyn both know that protecting Atlantia may mean engaging in some most unsavory deeds.â
âAnd you think Casteel will go along with this?â I demanded. âThat after you hand me over to the Ascended, heâll just give up and move on? That heâll marry your great-niece after your daughterââ I cut myself off before exposing what Shea had really done. Withholding that wasnât for his sake. Gods, no. The desire to see his face when he learned the truth of what his daughter had done savagely burned through me, but I stopped out of respect for Casteelâfor what heâd had to do.
Alastir stared at me, his jaw tight. âYou wouldâve been good for Casteel, but you never wouldâve been my daughter.â
âDamn straight,â I said, my nails digging into my palms. It took me several moments to trust myself before I spoke again. âCasteel chose me. Heâs not going to turn around and marry your great-niece or another family member you can drag out before him. All youâre doing is causing him to risk his life and the future of Atlantia. Because he will come for me.â
Pale eyes met mine. âI donât think it will come to that.â
âYouâre delusional if you believe that.â
âItâs not that I believe heâll give up on you,â he said. âI just donât think heâll get the chance to stage a rescue attempt.â
My entire body locked up. âIf you hurt himââ
âYou will do nothing, Penellaphe. Youâre not in a position to do anything,â he pointed out, and I swallowed a scream of rage and frustration. âBut I have no plans to harm the Prince. And I pray to the gods that it doesnât come to that.â
âThen whatâ¦?â It occurred to me then. âYou think the Ascended will kill me?â
Alastir said nothing.
âYou are delusional.â I tipped my head back against the wall. âThe Ascended need me. They need Atlantian blood.â
âTell me, Penellaphe, what will you do when youâre in their hands? The moment you are free of the bones. Youâll attack them, wonât you? Youâll kill as many of them as you can to get free and return to our Prince.â
He was right.
I would kill any and all who stood between Casteel and me because we deserved to be together. We deserved a future, a chance to explore each otherâs secrets. To love one another. We deserved to simplyâ¦live. I would do anything to ensure that.
Alastir continued watching me. âAnd what do you think is the only thing the Ascended value above power? Survival. They will not have these bones to hold you. And if they believe they canât control you, think that youâre too much of a risk, they will end you. But before that happens, I imagine you will take many down with you.â
Sickened, I forced my hands to relax. âKill two birds with one stone?â
He nodded.
âEven if youâre successful, your plan will still fail. You think Casteel wonât know that you and every other so-called Protector handed me over to them? That the wolven wonât know?â
âThere is still a risk of an uprising,â he admitted. âBut it is a small one. You see, we will lead them to believe that you escaped your captivity and fell into the Ascendedâs hands. They will never know that we gave you to them. They will turn their anger on the Ascended, where it should have always been. Every Ascended will be killed, and any who support them will fall beside them. Atlantia will take back what belongs to us. We will become a great kingdom again.â
Something about how he spoke told me that I would sense pride and arrogance in him if I could use my gift. I also had a feeling Iâd feel the thirst for more. I didnât, for one second, believe that his only motivation was to save Atlantia. Not when his plan put the kingdom at further risk. Not when his plan could possibly benefit him if he survived this.
âI have a question,â I asked as my empty stomach grumbled. He arched a brow. âWhat happens to you if Malik or Casteel becomes king? Will you still be an advisor?â
âIt would be whoever the King or Queen chooses. Usually, itâs a bonded wolven or a trusted ally.â
âIn other words, it wouldnât be you?â When Alastir fell silent, I knew I was onto something. âSo, whatever influence you have on the Crownâover Atlantiaâcould be lessened or lost?â
He remained silent.
And since Jasper was the one who spoke for the wolven, what effect would Alastir have? And what kind of power did he want to wield?
âWhat are you getting at, Penellaphe?â
âGrowing up among the Royals and other Ascended, I learned from a very young age that every friendship and acquaintance, every party or dinner a person was invited to or hosted, and every marriage ordained by the King and Queen were all power moves. Each choice and decision was based on how one could either retain power or influence or gain it. I donât think that is a trait just to the Ascended. I saw it among the wealthy mortals. I saw it among the Royal Guards. I doubt the wolven or Atlantians are different.â
âSome are not,â Alastir confirmed.
âYou believe Iâm a threat because of the blood I carry, and because of what I can do. But you havenât even given me a chance to prove that I am not just the sum of what my ancestors did. You can choose to judge me based on what Iâve done to defend myself and those I love, but I do not regret my actions,â I told him. âYou may not be able to feel the Primal notam, but if you planned for Casteel to marry your great-niece to bring the wolven and the Atlantians together, then I canât see why you wouldnât support this union. Give it a chance to strengthen the Crown and Atlantia. But thatâs not all you want, is it?â
His nostrils flared as he continued staring at me.
âCasteelâs father wants retribution, just as you do. Right? For what they did to your daughter. But Casteel doesnât want war. You know that. Heâs trying to save lives even as he gains land. Just like he did with Spessaâs End.â
That was what Casteel had planned. We would negotiate for land and the release of Prince Malik. I would find my brother and deal with what he may or may not have turned into. King Jalara and Queen Ileana wouldnât remain on the throne, not even if they agreed to everything Casteel set before them. They couldnât. He would kill them for what theyâd subjected his brother and him to. Strangely, the idea of that no longer made me squirm with conflict. It was still hard to reconcile the Queen whoâd cared for me after my parents died with the one who had tortured Casteel and countless others, but Iâd seen enough to know that her treatment of me wasnât enough to erase the horrors she had inflicted on others.
But now, if Alastir had his way, that plan could never become a reality.
âWhat he did with Spessaâs End was impressive, but itâs not enough,â Alastir stated, his voice flat. âEven if we were able to reclaim more land, it wouldnât be enough. King Valyn and I want to see Solis pay, not only for our personal losses but for what the Ascended have done to many of our kind.â
âThatâs understandable.â Realizing what Ian could have become was hard enough. But Tawny, tooâmy friend who was so kind and full of life and love? If theyâd turned her into an Ascended as Duchess Teerman claimed, it would be hard for me not to want to see Solis burn. âSo, youâre not a supporter of Casteelâs plan. You want blood, but more importantly, you want the influence to get what you want. And you see that power slipping through your fingers even though I havenât made a single claim to the Crown.â
âIt doesnât matter if you want the Crown or not. So long as you live, itâs yours. It is your birthright, and the wolven will ensure that it becomes yours,â he said, speaking of his people as if he were no longer one of them. And maybe he didnât feel like he was. I didnât know, and I didnât care. âJust like it was Casteelâs. It doesnât matter if you detest the responsibility as much as the Prince does.â
âCasteel doesnât detest responsibility. Iâm sure he has done more for the people of Atlantia in his lifetime than youâve done since you broke your oath to Malec,â I shot back, infuriated. âHe justââ
âRefuses to believe his brother is a lost cause, and therefore, refuses to assume the responsibility of the throneâwhat wouldâve been in the best interest of Atlantia.â A muscle ticked in his jaw. âSo, it is up to me to do whatâs best for the kingdom.â
âYou?â I laughed. âYou want what is best for yourself. Your motivations arenât altruistic. Youâre no different than anyone else whoâs hungry for power and vengeance. And you know what?â
âWhat?â he barked as his façade of calm began to crack.
âThis plan of yours will fail.â
âYou think so?â
I nodded. âAnd you wonât survive this. If not by my hand, then by Casteelâs. Heâs going to kill you. And he wonât tear your heart from your chest. That will be too quick and painless. Heâll make your death hurt.â
âIâve done nothing that Iâm not willing to accept the consequences for,â he replied, lifting his chin. âIf death is my fate, so be it. Atlantia will still be safe from you.â
His words wouldâve unsettled me if I hadnât seen the way his mouth tightened or how he swallowed. I smiled then, just like I had when Iâd stared down Duke Teerman.
Alastir rose suddenly. âMy plan might fail. That is possible. I would be foolish not to take that into consideration. And I have.â He stared down at me. âBut if it fails, you will not be free again, Penellaphe. I would rather see a war among my people than have the crown sit upon your head, and you unleashed upon Atlantia.â
At some point, food was brought to me, carried in by either a man or woman wearing the bronze mask of a Descenter. They placed the tray just within my reach and then quickly backed out without saying a word, leaving me to wonder if Alastir and these Protectors had played a role in the attack on the Rite. Casteel hadnât ordered the attack carried out in the name of the Dark One, but it had been organized and well planned regardless. Someone had set a fire to draw many of the Rise Guards awayâsomething Jansen couldâve ensured happened.
I clenched my jaw as I stared at the hunk of cheese and the lump of bread wrapped in a loose cloth next to a glass of water. When Casteel learned that not only had Alastir betrayed him but that Jansen had, as well, his rage would be unyielding.
And his pain?
It would be just as ruthless.
But what I felt when I thought about Alastirâs involvement the night my parents died? The rage scorched my skin. Heâd been there. Heâd come to help my family and had betrayed them instead. And what heâd said about my parents knowing the truth about the Ascended? Obviously, they had learned the truth and escaped. That didnât mean they knew for years as they stood by and did nothing.
And my mother? A Handmaiden? If that was true, why didnât she fight back that night?
Or had I just not remembered that she had?
There was so much I couldnât remember about that night, things I couldnât decipher as real or only nightmares. I couldnât believe Iâd forgotten them. Had I blocked them out because I was scared of them? What else had I forgotten?
Regardless, I had no idea if the Queenâs Handmaidens were guards or not. And I didnât believe that any darknessâbesides Alastirâwas involved with that night. His twisted sense of honor and righteousness prevented him from owning up to what heâd done. Somehow, heâd led those Craven to us and then left everyone in that inn to die. All because I carried the blood of the gods within me.
All because I was King Malecâs descendant.
A part of me still couldnât believe any of itâthe old part of me that hadnât been able to understand what about me, beyond a gift I hadnât been allowed to use or being born in a caul, had made me special enough to be the Chosen. Blessed. The Maiden. And that part reminded me of when I was a child and used to hide behind Queen Ileanaâs throne instead of going to my room at night because the darkness had scared me. It was the same part that had enabled me to spend afternoons with my brother, pretending that my parents were out walking together in the garden instead of being gone forever. It felt incredibly young and naïve.
But I wasnât that little girl anymore. I wasnât the young Maiden. The blood in me explained the gifts Iâd been born with and why Iâd become the Maidenâhow my gift had grown, and why my skin glowed. It also explained the disbelief and agony Iâd felt from Queen Eloana. Sheâd known exactly who I descended from, and it must have made her sick to think that her son had married the descendant of a man whoâd repeatedly betrayed her and nearly destroyed their kingdom in the process.
How could she ever welcome me, knowing the truth?
Could Casteel ever look upon me the same?
My chest twisted painfully as I stared at the food. Would I even get the chance to see Casteel again? Seconds turned into minutes as I tried to keep my thoughts from straying toward what Alastir planned. I couldnât let myself dwell too long on itâto think about the worst-case scenario playing out in my mind. If I did, the panic Iâd been fighting off would seize control of me.
I wouldnât let Alastirâs plan succeed. I couldnât. I needed to either escape or fight back the second I could. Which meant, I needed my strength. I had to eat.
Reaching out carefully, I broke off a piece of the cheese and gingerly tasted it. There was little flavor to it. The section of bread I tried next was most definitely stale, but I quickly ate both and then drank the water, trying not to think about the gritty taste or how dirty it likely was.
Once I finished, I turned my attention to the spear. I wouldnât be able to hide it, even if I were able to free it from the poor soul beside me. But if I could break off the blade, I might have a better chance. Drawing in a breath that feltâ¦oddly heavy, I inched my hand toward the spear and stopped suddenly. It wasnât the bindings. They hadnât tightened.
I swallowed, and my heart skipped a beat. A strange, sweetness coated the back of my throat and myâ¦my lips tingled. I pressed the tips of my fingers to them and didnât think I felt the pressure. I tried to swallow again, but it felt weirdâas if the mechanics of my throat had slowed.
The food. The gritty taste of the water.
Oh, gods.
That sweet taste. The sleeping drafts the Healers made in Masadonia had a sugary-sweet aftertaste. There was a reason Iâd refused the drafts, no matter how little sleep I got. They were powerful and rendered you completely unconscious for hours and hoursâleaving you entirely helpless.
Theyâd drugged me.
This was how Alastir planned to move me. How he planned to deliver me to the Ascended. Heâd be able to remove the bindings safely when I was unconscious. And when I came toâ¦
There was a good chance Iâd be in the Ascendedâs hands once again.
And Alastirâs plan would likely come to fruition because I would never allow the Ascended to use me for anything.
Anger at themâand myselfâexploded within me and then quickly gave way to panic as I staggered to the wall. I barely felt the pain of the bindings tightening. Desperate, I reached for the spear. If I could get that blade, I wouldnât be weaponless, even with the damn bone and root bindings. I tried to seize it, but my arm wouldnât lift. It didnât feel as if it were a part of me any longer. My legs became heavy, numb.
âNo, no,â I whispered, fighting the insidious warmth seeping into my muscles, my skin.
But it was no use.
Numbness swept through my body, deadening my eyelids. There was no pain when the nothingness came for me this time. I simply fell asleep, knowing I would wake to a nightmare.