in her voice or face.
Just . . . regret. And resolution.
Mab knew something—something Maeve didn’t.
“Remember that when this world is in ashes, Mother,” Maeve said, “for you cannot risk my death this night, and I will not lift a finger to aid you in the Night to come. Without the Winter Lady’s power, your downfall is simply a matter of time—and not much of that. After this night, you will not see me again.”
“Yes,” Mab said, though to which statement was unclear.
“I have choice, Mother, while you will be destroyed in your shackles,” Maeve said. “You will die, and I will have freedom. At last.”
“To fulfill one’s purpose is not to be a slave, my daughter,” Mab said. “And you are not free, child, any more than a knife is free because it leaves its sheath and is thrust into a corpse.”
“Choice is power,” Maeve spat in reply. “Shall I make more choices this night, to demonstrate?”
She lifted the little pistol again and pointed it at me.
Karrin drew a sharp breath.
And I suddenly understood what was happening; I understood what Mab knew that Maeve didn’t.
Sarissa wasn’t the only Faerie vessel on the hilltop. She was simply the one Maeve had been meant to see.
There was one other person there who had been spending time with a powerful fae.
Who had a relationship with one that was deeper and more significant than a casual or formal acquaintance.
Whose life had been methodically, deliberately, and covertly reshaped for the purpose.
Who had been extensively prepared by one of the Sidhe.
“Maeve,” I said in a panic. “Don’t! You’re killing yourself. You haven’t won. You just can’t see it.”
Maeve cackled in delight. “Can’t I?”
“Being able to choose to tell lies isn’t a freaking superpower, Maeve,” I said. “Because it means you can always make the wrong choice. It means you can lie to yourself.”
Maeve’s smile turned positively sexual, her eyes bright and shining.
“Two plus two is five,” she said, and rotated the gun sideways, the barrel still pointed at my eye.
Mab moved her little finger.
Karrin’s hands flew out from behind her back in a shower of broken chips of black ice. She tore her little holdout gun from a concealed ankle holster.
“No!” I shouted.
Two shots rang out, almost simultaneously.
Something hissed spitefully past my ear.
A neat, round black hole appeared just to the side of Maeve’s nose, at the fine line of her cheekbone.
Maeve blinked twice. Her face fell into what was almost precisely the same expression of confusion Lily’s had. A trickle of blood ran from the hole.
And then she fell, like an icicle in a warm sunbeam.
“Dammit, no,” I whispered.
Deep blue fire gathered over the fallen Winter Lady. It coalesced with an ugly howl into the outline of a serpent, which coiled and then lashed out in a strike that carried its blazing form fifteen feet, to the nearest corner of the ruined cottage . . .
. . . where Molly, behind her veil, had been crouched and waiting for a chance to aid me.
The serpent of Winter cold plunged into her chest, shattering her veil as it struck, and my apprentice’s expression was twisted in startled horror. She didn’t even have time to flinch. It struck, and she fell back against the side of the cottage, her legs buckling as if the muscles in them had forgotten how to move.
Molly looked up at me, her expression bewildered, confused, and she barely managed to gasp out, “Harry?”
And then she, too, collapsed to the ground, shuddering and unconscious.
“Oh, God,” I breathed. “Oh, God.”
Molly.
Chapter
Fifty-three
Two Queens of Faerie lay dead.
Long live the Queens.
Everyone was shocked, still.
I turned to the retinues of the fallen Queens and said, “Let Fix go. Now.”
They released the smaller man, and he went at once to Lily’s side, his face still wrenched with grief.
“You will put down anything you took from my friends,” I told the fae in a level voice. “Then you will withdraw as far down the hill as the wall will allow. If I see any of you try anything violent, you will never leave this island. Am I understood?”
I didn’t look like much, but Mab was looming right over one of my shoulders, and Demonreach over the other, so they took me seriously—even the rawhead. They all moved away, breaking into two groups as they went.
“Harry,” Karrin said. “What just happened? Is Molly all right?”
I stared hard at Mab. “I don’t know,” I said to Karrin. “Can you and Justine get them both into the cottage? Just . . . make