The Damned - Renee Ahdieh Page 0,97
standing before the throne took a single step down from her marble dais. Then she smiled at Celine, her expression one of unabashed warmth. The beauty radiating from her face caused Celine to stop short.
The woman’s hair was black and long, not unlike her own. It had been arranged in a loose braid over one shoulder, wound with thin vines of tiny glowing leaves. Atop her brow was a pearl coronet. Her gown was liquid silver, her shoulders trimmed in white fox fur. An artist had enhanced her pale skin with gleaming powder and stained her lips a vibrant red, similar to the color of fresh blood.
When the woman stepped closer, her arms outstretched, Celine gasped, distant memories sharpening in her mind.
This was the Lady of the Vale. Celine’s mother.
“Welcome, my daughter,” the woman said, her voice like a lilting melody. The birds overhead warbled in response, the sunlight glittering brightly. “You don’t know how much I’ve longed to see you.”
Celine stood rigid on the carpet of emerald clovers, Bastien at her side. A low hum of awareness began to gather in the air about her. Her vision started to distort. She struggled to find a point of reason. Something that made sense in this world of searing sunlight.
What she found was . . . anger. A raw, seething kind of anger, masking a hollow pain.
Celine’s body shook. “Is it true, then?” she demanded, shocked by the unchecked wrath in her own tone.
Murmurs rippled through the throng of fey gathered beneath the lacy canopy. Celine’s disrespect did not sit well with them. The immense wasps hovering above began to settle on lower branches, their iridescent eyes gleaming.
“Is what true?” The Lady of the Vale’s smile grew, her expression serene.
“Did you choose to leave your daughter behind in the mortal world?” Celine continued without flinching. “Did you let her think you were dead for fourteen years?”
The regal woman took the last step down from the marble dais, its veins shot through with flecks of gold. They shimmered with the weight of her bare footsteps. She glided closer, all the while studying Celine, her gaze flitting from her head to her toes.
Then, instead of replying, she began to sing. From the first note, the trembling in Celine’s limbs intensified. Her fingers fell from Bastien’s. Tears trailed down her cheeks. It was a melody that had haunted her for years. One sung in a language she could never seem to place.
Familiar. Filled with unmistakable love.
The last note echoed through the air, unfolding into the treetops above. “I did not want to leave you,” the Lady of the Vale said softly. “I regretted it every day.” She came closer, her arms extended once more. “Please . . . forgive me.”
“Mother?” Celine sobbed, her heart cracking in her chest like a dam about to burst.
“Aga,” her mother replied, her hands outstretched. “My child.”
Before Celine could stop herself, she raced into the Lady of the Vale’s arms.
It was like waking from a nightmare. The anguish remained, but beyond it lay hope. The promise of a rising dawn. Celine knew this hope would not erase her anger, nor would it silence the questions burning within her. But the fact that she could hold her mother now—that her mother could return her embrace—was a gift in its own right.
Her mother brushed her long, slender fingers across Celine’s cheek, wiping away her tears. As Celine considered her mother’s inhuman features—the pointed ears, the sharp cheekbones, the eyes that glittered like onyx—she became aware of an obvious fact. One she had failed to consider at first blush.
If Celine’s mother sat on the throne, it meant the Lady of the Vale ruled this court of elegant fey. Which meant Celine was not merely the daughter of an enchantress. She was the daughter of fey royalty.
Was this . . . was this the reason for Bastien’s rejection?
Were they more than simple rivals from opposing realms?
“Now that you are here,” her mother said quietly, “we can spend as much time as we wish becoming acquainted with each other. I can answer all your questions.” She stroked her fingers through Celine’s hair. “Why I made that misguided promise to your father, to keep away until your eighteenth birthday. Why I believed a childhood in the mortal realm was preferable to one here.” A kind smile curved up her face. She gazed out at the gathered crowd, the timbre of her voice growing louder. “Perhaps we can all make amends for the past.” Something glinted