The Shadows (Black Dagger Brotherhood #13) - J. R. Ward Page 0,226

mother’s adviser should be even more scared of.

As soon as s’Ex found out …

“Shall we tell him what you’ve discovered,” s’Ex said, dragging the smaller male with him. “Shall we ask him why the charts have been altered?”

Catra stared up at the executioner.

Something in her face must have betrayed her emotions, because s’Ex frowned. “Why are you looking at me like that?”

Absently, she noted that the executioner’s gray disguise was stained with even more blood. He had not hesitated to do away with any of the males who had sought to attack, in spite of the fact that he had trained them, worked with them, no doubt found a kinship with them.

If she revealed this part of what she’d found?

Well, if she did, then, in addition to this Chief Astrologer and no doubt AnsLai, the Queen … Catra’s mother … the female responsible for leading the s’Hisbe … was going to die.

And Catra felt …

She actually felt nothing.

Then again, the female was her leader, not her parent—and the Queen had violated the traditions to her own ends.

It was the only explanation, especially given what the female had said in the ritual chamber.

Catra spoke up to the Chief Astrologer. “These charts have been doctored. I assume you did it.”

The male had turned his head away so as not to see her, but s’Ex was having none of that. He bit his serrated blade, holding the weapon between his teeth, and clapped his now-free palm on that skull, wrenched the thing around by the jaw.

Then he spoke around the steel. “The Princess asked you a question. I suggest you answer it.”

When there was only a gaping mouth and no words, s’Ex looked at her. “Shut your eyes.”

She shook her head. “Do what you must. I shall be fine.”

s’Ex cursed, but then he gripped the Astrologer’s gloved hand and squeezed it so hard the male moaned … and then jerked and screamed as bones were broken.

Then s’Ex took the dagger from his lips and placed it back against that throat. “Now, answer the question—”

“Yes! I changed the charts!” the male shouted. “I changed the charts! I did not desire to do so, but the Queen demanded it of me! I was sworn to secrecy!”

“Does AnsLai know?” Catra asked.

“No! He does not! No one knows!”

The explosion of speech seemed as much due to the threats he was facing as the purging of a conscience that had long been troubled.

“I did not wish for this!” The male began to weep. “It is a violation of my sacred position, but she told me she would kill all of my bloodline—she said she would kill my mate, my young … my parents…”

“Why switch the charts for TrezLath and his brother? I don’t understand why it was necessary to change one for another.”

“The true Anointed One, the infant born first of its mother’s womb, iAm, was sickly. He was not expected to live past the night, much less survive into adulthood. The Queen wanted one of the sacred twins for you, Your Holiness, so she ordered me to change the chart to the second son, who was hearty and strong. That was the reason.”

Catra took a deep breath.

In the silence that followed, she knew that what she said next was going to change everything. Violently.

She swung her eyes back to s’Ex’s. The executioner was preternaturally still, his huge body exuding a calm that she had a feeling was like that before a storm.

In an utterly level voice, he said, “Tell me.”

As if he might already know.

She turned back to the chart, rolled it up, and placed it in the heavy gold box with the others. Then she got to her feet and approached the executioner and the male.

“Give me the knife,” she said again to s’Ex. For a different reason this time.

“Why.”

“Because we need him alive.”

She expected him to argue, and was shocked when s’Ex flipped the weapon around and handed it to her hilt-first without comment.

It weighed almost as much as the box.

“Now let him go. You have to let him go,” she said. “He’s not going to run off, because I am the only one who can save his life. Release him, s’Ex. I am commanding you to do so.”

When the executioner complied with the order, the Chief Astrologer dropped to the ground as if he were no more than a bolt of cloth. And he was smart. He dragged himself a number of feet away.

Locking eyes with s’Ex, she said loudly and clearly, “Now, Astrologer,

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