or took him for her own, Wrath was going to watch the situation carefully.
Wrath harnessed his thoughts and started to chant in the old language, using the sounds to wipe out his cognitive processes. He was rusty at first, tripping over words. The last time he'd said the prayers, he'd been nineteen or twenty years old. Memories of his father sitting next to him and telling him what to say were a seductive diversion, but he forced his mind to be blank.
The pearls began to warm against his chest.
And then he found himself in a courtyard. The Italianate architecture was white; the marble fountain, the marble columns, the marble floor, all had a pale glow to them. The only splash of color came from a flock of songbirds sitting in a white tree.
He stopped praying and got to his feet.
"It has been a long time, warrior." The regal female voice came from behind him.
He turned around.
The diminutive figure approaching him was completely draped in black silk. Her head and face were covered, her hands and feet, everything. She glided over to him, not walking, just moving through the still air. Her presence made him uneasy.
Wrath bowed his head. "Scribe Virgin, how are you?"
"More to the point, how fare you, warrior? You have come seeking change, have you not?"
He nodded. "I - "
"You wish the covenant with Marissa to be broken. You have found another and you would take her as your shellan."
"Yes."
"This female you want. She is the daughter of your brother Darius, who is in the Fade."
"Have you seen him?"
She laughed slightly. "Do not make inquiries of me. I let your first question slide because you were being polite, but remember your manners, warrior."
Shit.
"My apologies, Scribe Virgin."
"I grant you and Marissa freedom from your covenant."
"Thank you."
There was a long pause.
He waited for her ruling on the second part of his request. He sure as hell wasn't going to ask.
"Tell me something, warrior. Do you think your species is unworthy?"
He frowned and then quickly smoothed his face into neutral. The Scribe Virgin wasn't going to put up with being glowered at.
"Well, warrior?"
He had no idea where she was going with this. "My species is a fierce and proud race."
"I didn't ask you for a statement of definition. I asked you what you thought of them."
"I protect them with my life."
"And yet you will not lead your people. So I can only surmise that you do not value them and therefore fight because you like to or because you wish to die. Which is it?"
This time he let his frown stay in place. "My race survives because of what the brothers and I do."
"Barely. In fact, its numbers dwindle. It does not thrive. The only localized colony is the one that settled on the United States' East Coast. And even they live isolated from one another. There are no communities. The festivals are no longer held. Rituals are observed privately, if at all. There is no one to mediate disputes, no one to give them hope. And the Black Dagger Brotherhood is cursed. There are none left in it who do not suffer."
"The brothers have their... problems. But they are strong."
"And should be stronger." She shook her head. "You have failed your bloodline, warrior. You have failed your purpose. So tell me, why should I grant your wish to take the half-breed as queen?" The Scribe Virgin's robes moved as if she were shaking her head. "Better that you continue to merely service her with your staff than to have your people saddled with yet another meaningless figurehead. Go now, warrior. We are finished."
"I would have a word in my defense," he said, gritting his teeth.
"And I would deny you." She turned away.
"I beg of your mercy." He hated saying the words, and he guessed by the sound of her laugh that she knew it.
The Scribe Virgin came back to him.
When she spoke, her tone was hard, hard as the black lines of her robe against all the white marble. "If you're going to beg, warrior, do it properly. Get on your knees."
Wrath forced his body down to the ground, hating her.
"I rather like you like this," she murmured, back to being relatively pleasant. "Now, what were you saying?"
He swallowed the hostile words in his throat, forcing himself to affect an even temper that was an absolute lie. "I love her. I want to honor her, not just have her to warm my bed."
"So treat her well. But there is no