And the brief Morrighese notes that were tucked in with it confirm it was uncovered more than a decade after Princess Arabella was born. Early nomadic text in Dalbreck’s historical record suggested something similar, in nearly identical phrasing—from the scheming of rulers, hope would be born. I always assumed it meant Breck, but perhaps not.”
The steadiness of his gaze told me more than his commentary. He believed every word.
I felt a beat like a warning, the juddering that crawls through your bones when a horse is galloping toward you.
“There’s a little more on the next page.”
I looked down at the papers and shuffled the top one aside. There were two more verses.
Betrayed by her own,
Beaten and scorned,
She will expose the wicked,
For the Dragon of many faces
Knows no boundaries.
And though the wait may be long,
The promise is great,
For the one named Jezelia,
Whose life will be sacrificed,
For the hope of saving yours.
Sacrificed?
This Lia had never shared with me.
Had she known all along?
Rage shot through me, and right on its heels, gutting fear.
It is true, Rafe. Every word is true.
I stood and walked to one end of my chamber and back again, circling around my desk, my head pounding, trying to make sense of it. Betrayed by her own? Beaten and scorned? Sacrificed?
Dammit, Lia! Damn you!
I grabbed tomorrow’s schedule and threw it against the wall, papers flying to the floor.
Merrick stood. “Your Majesty, I—”
I brushed past him. “Sven! I want General Draeger in my chamber first thing in the morning!”
“I believe he already has—”
“Here! By dawn!” I yelled.
Sven smiled. “I’ll see to it.”
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR
KADEN
I used to go to market with my mother. Isolated on the estate, I didn’t get to see much of the world, so the market was a place of wonder to me. We traveled on this same road in the wagon with the cook. My mother bought supplies for my lessons with my half brothers—paper, books, inks, and small bags of candied peels as rewards for a week of diligent study.
She always bought something just for me too. Strange small gifts that fascinated me—trinkets of the Ancients that had no purpose or meaning anymore, thin shiny disks that caught the sun, brown coins of worthless metals, battered ornaments from their carriages. She told me to imagine their greater purpose. I kept them on a shelf in the cottage, carefully arranged treasures that held my imagination and took me to places beyond the grounds of the estate, objects that grew in wonder and helped me imagine a greater purpose even for myself—until one day my eldest brother snuck into the cottage and stole them all away. I caught him just as he was dumping them down the well. He wanted me to have nothing. Less than I already did.
It wasn’t the last time I cried. A year later, my mother died.
Less was all I’d ever had, or been. Even now. I was nothing. A soldier without a kingdom, a son without a family. A man without—
The day Lia and Rafe had parted churned in my thoughts again, as it had so many times before, like a piece was missing, something I didn’t understand. When she’d left Rafe to join us on the trail, her face was like a piece of stone sculpture with a thousand tiny cracks in it, a sightless stare, her lips parted, frozen the same way a statue might be. In the past months, I’d thought Lia had looked at me with everything her eyes could hold—hatred, tenderness, shame, sorrow, vengeance—and what I’d thought might be love. I’d thought I knew the language of Lia, but the look she’d had in her eyes the day she left Rafe behind, I had never seen.
Yes, it’s different between us. It always has been, Kaden, and if you’re honest with yourself, you’ve always known it too.…
We both care for Venda and Morrighan.… Don’t underestimate the bond we share. Great kingdoms have been built on far less.
Maybe with Lia, less could be more, the greater purpose my mother had always hoped for.
Maybe less could be enough.
* * *
The road to the manor was thicker with trees than I remembered. Branches hung overhead like a twisted-fingered canopy. For the first time, I wondered if I’d misremembered the way. I couldn’t imagine the grand and powerful Lord Roché living down this unassuming, remote lane. I had never been back. The beggar’s threats to a child had lodged somewhere in my skull, he will drown you in a bucket. Even once I was Venda’s Assassin,