in a petty way that bitchy girls always are. “Have you heard of Royal Reaper Academy, Daesyn?”
“No,” I reply, crossing my arms and leaning back in my seat. Sounds like a shitty pompous school for rich kids.
“May I explain?” Torfinn asks, and Alun nods. The angel fucker turns his eyes on me, and even though he is enchanting to look at, I make sure not to give him eye contact as he speaks, in case he sees right through me. “The Royal Reaper Academy is only ever open to new students once every one thousand years. The academy is a test, a two-year evaluation of all of its students to look for a new queen or king to rule. Only one student makes it to the end of the academy, all other students will have either died or been injured enough to be taken out.”
“Sounds brutal,” I say with wide eyes. I knew the reapers were a fucked up race, but this shit takes the cake. “Who the fuck would go to that academy?”
“You,” Alun bluntly answers, and I cough on thin air before laughing.
“Very funny,” I laugh, but when I look around and see no one else is laughing, a nervous feeling enters my stomach. “Are you actually not fucking around with me?”
“We are not fucking around,” Alun mimics me, while Torfinn looks highly amused. “The one hundred students, aged between nineteen and twenty-one, for Royal Reaper Academy are randomly chosen by the current queen. My twin daughters were both picked.”
“And how is that my problem?” I ask, even though I’m starting to get an idea of where this conversation is headed.
“Laelia is not gifted in fighting or in her powers. I am certain she would die instantly at the academy, and I will not let my firstborn die in there. I cannot simply take her away, as Poppy and our entire family would be killed if found,” Alun firmly states. “I want you to take Laelia’s place and protect Poppy in the academy. Within the first year, Poppy and I have a plan to make it seem like she cannot fight, and she will be excused. Then you will get yourself excused, however you wish, and take my daughter’s identity. Laelia is going to live on Earth, and you will be free.”
I glance between Poppy and Laelia. I don’t believe for one second either of these two have a clue how to fight or that they are very good with their powers. They would both be dead from the get-go at the academy, and I’m sure their parents know it. They just picked their favourite to save.
I sigh. “This is insane. They would know I’m not her twin sister.”
“No, they wouldn’t,” Alun counters. “No one has ever met my daughters, and you look alike enough to pass. Same dark hair and height. Twins don’t always look similar, and you can put your unusual eye colour down to distant Seelie fae blood in our line. Purple eyes like yours are a marker in our world of mixed fae blood, and it is not strange per se. Many fae and reapers mated in the times before the war, and that blood has trickled down. They will judge and hate you for the colour, but I assume that is where it came from in the first place.”
It’s not, but fuck am I admitting to that right now.
When Alun seems to realise I’m not going to confirm anything, he then adds, “You must not use fae magic, for it is banned.”
The room falls into silence as they all look at me, still waiting for an answer. I’m surprised it’s Velia who speaks first. “If you had stayed in this world, grown up in it, I have no doubt your name would have been picked for the academy. Your grandfather went to the academy, and heirs are always chosen.”
“He didn’t win, though, did he?” I question, and she shakes her head.
“He was one of the five who were excused,” she answers.
Five in one hundred does not sound like good odds.
“Don’t you want to search for more about who you are? The academy trains you with extreme tests that are designed to bring out your true nature,” Alun suggests. “It is the only way for you to be free.”
“I know who I am and what I want. Both of which don’t include being murdered for a throne,” I growl.
Torfinn laughs. “You don’t have a clue about yourself or anything, Dae.”
“I’m not doing this,” I