by Bec McMaster
“Careful.”
The stranger mutters something in return, and Thiago laughs.
It’s starting to sound like some sort of dream, vivid with all sorts of weirdness. What does it all mean? Wooing arrogant princesses…. How is that meant to bring his wife back to him?
He’s not… sacrificing them to one of the Old Ones, is he?
Or a god?
And how many times has he done this?
I can’t help thinking of the old tale of the prince with nine wives. Don’t go down into the cellar, he warns his final wife, but of course, she does.
“So tell me,” Thiago says, “what is that bitch up to now? My scouts report there’s movement across the borders.”
“There’s always movement.”
“Not to this extent. There are banes in the wyrdwoods, hunting for fae flesh. Some of them wear Angharad’s sigil. There are goblins in the mountains, and they wear no clan marks. And something is leaving nothing but scorch marks where villages once stood.”
The stranger looks away. “There are rumors the Heartless are walking.”
My breath catches. Fetches hunt the nights and can twist along shadows themselves. They were never fae, but Angharad cut their hearts from their chests and with it, what remains of their souls. Bound to her will, they’re her hunting parties, and nothing escapes their grip. “What are they looking for?” Thiago asks.
“Nobody seems to know. The only whisper I’ve heard refers to leanabh an dàn, but that’s a myth, a legend.”
It’s also the old tongue, brought from the Other world we were exiled from all those years ago. I would love to be able to speak it right now.
Thiago paces, shooting the stranger a sharp look. “Are you sure they said leanabh an dàn?”
“As sure as—”
Snow drops from the tree above me, right down the back of my neck. A hiss of shock escapes me before I can smother it.
Both men freeze and turn toward me.
I duck back behind the tree, my heart pounding. Just one glimpse, but it’s enough to assure me the stranger’s eyes are pure black, and small horns curl out of his hair.
“What was that?” the stranger whispers.
Thiago’s definitely meeting with one of the Unseelie.
Why? Is the stranger a traitor to his queen?
Or is he planting suggestions in Thiago’s head at his queen’s behest? It wouldn’t surprise me to see Angharad pulling Thiago’s strings, though that presumes he’s a puppet, and so far, he’s given me no reason to think him a fool.
Thiago’s answer is a low rumble I can’t make out, and worse, it sounds as though it’s coming closer. Steel hisses in a sheath as someone draws a sword.
I need to get out of here.
But the snow’s going to lead him directly toward me. There’s no hiding my tracks, painted across the powder white snow like a beacon.
Looking up, I grab hold of the branch above my head and haul myself into the fir above me. I chose it because of how dense it was, and now it seems I made a smart decision. Sliding along the branches, I slip into the next tree, and then the next, using them to hide.
I can just make out Thiago as he darts around the first tree, pausing when he finds my tracks.
“Hmm,” he murmurs.
“Someone’s been listening,” the stranger hisses.
“I’ll deal with it.”
They share a look, and then the stranger draws his cloak tighter. “Make sure you do. I’d rather not have to explain to my queen just why I’ve been whispering her secrets in the Prince of Evernight’s ear.”
“It won’t reach your queen,” Thiago assures him.
It’s all I hear, because I’m easing down the tree and using a thicket of thorny brambles as cover as I slip away. The second I put some distance between us, I run for my mare.
Asturia’s to the south, where it rarely snows, so I’m not used to such a quiet forest, but I’ve spent years hunting in the mountains. Learning to move quietly can be the only thing that saves your life when your prey is a vicious predator.
Relief floods through me the second I find the mare where I left her. I’m about to put my foot in the stirrup when a voice calls out behind me.
“Did you enjoy your little excursion, Princess?”
Son of a dryad. The mare snorts in alarm and nearly dumps me on my ass. But it’s the prince behind me who causes the most alarm.
Thiago leans against a tree, one hand resting lightly against the hilt of his sword. There’s no hint of emotion in his dark green eyes. I can’t read him at all. But then a faint, mocking smile flickers over his hard mouth, as if he enjoys the sight of my sudden dilemma.
Caught. I have no excuses, and he knows it. I can see it in his eyes. “Actually, yes,” I reply, reaching for the mare again. “Nothing like a brisk ride to shake off the monotony of imprisonment.”
Thiago moves like lightning, his gloved fist curling around my reins. I can’t escape, for he’s blocking me in against the horse.
“You should have told me you wanted to go for a ride,” he murmurs, right behind me.
I glance over my shoulder. “Perhaps I wanted to go alone.”
His eyes darken. “These woods are wild and dangerous. You don’t know the area, and any stray predator could find you out here.”
“Any stray predator? Or any stray Unseelie?”
“Ah. So you did see that.”
He looms closer, and I press my back into the mare, my hand finding my knife. Before I can draw it, his hand slams over mine, trapping us there. “Don’t be stupid, Princess. If you draw that blade, I’ll have to take it off you. And while I might enjoy it, you won’t.”
“Maybe you’re underestimating me.” I’m smaller than he is, but all my life I’ve trained against larger warriors precisely for this reason.
Hone your weaknesses, Mother always told me. And use them to your advantage.
Right now, I have the element of surprise—judging by his smirk—speed, and the fact that if he hurts me, he’ll have to explain himself to the alliance.
In return, he has weight, size, unknown skills, and power beyond imagining. The only way to beat him is to play dirty, and Mother’s court has been an excellent training ground.
I let my dagger go, and Thiago’s shoulders soften.
“Good choice,” he says.
In return, I kick his feet out from under him. I’ve got one foot in the stirrup when he calls out, “Eliara, fly!”
And the mare takes off as if she’s been stung by a whip.
With one foot off the ground, I don’t stand a chance. I land on my backside in the snow as the mare kicks up her heels and vanishes. Mother of Night. Rolling to my hands and knees, I stare after her in disgust. Treacherous beast.
The prince stands, dusting off his hands and flashing a smile at me. “What is it your mother always says? Revenge is the sweetest spice to any dish?”
He’s not angry, but that doesn’t make me any less wary. I clamber upright, sinking in the soft snow. “She also says never trust an Evernight.”
The prince laughs.
“And never make alliances with the Unseelie.”
His laughter dies. “How much did you hear?”
“Enough to know you’re up to no good.”
“Oh, Princess. I’m always up to no good.”
“Enough to know you see me as some sort of means to get your wife back,” I shoot at him.
It’s like an arrow, straight to the heart. “Hmm.” He’s clearly trying to remember precisely what he said.
“I’ll save you the trouble. You need to woo a haughty, arrogant princess, which I presume is me, in order to somehow see your wife again.” Once more, my hand drops to the dagger. “And I promise you now, you’re the last male in the entire alliance that I’d ever allow to put his hands upon me.”
“But that’s a lie, Princess.”
Oh, how I hate that smug purr.
“Or have you forgotten our agre
ement?” He takes a step closer. “Though technically, I suppose we can say it shall be your lips upon mine.”
“Not if you’re dead.”
His gaze drops to the dagger, and another slow, heated smile flashes my way. “Cold iron, I presume? Straight through the heart.” Opening his arms wide, he entices me. “Have at.”
There’s no point drawing the dagger. I’m not going to kill him, nor am I going to fight him. I have no horse, I’m in the middle of an unknown landscape, and I cannot bear to deal with his smirk if he takes the blade away from me.
Which he will. I know it.
So, I do the sensible thing and bolt for his horse.
“Vi!” he yells, and then he’s cursing under his breath as I sprint through the snowy forest. “I swear to the Old Ones, I’m going to thrash you!”
He’d have to catch me first, and if there’s one thing I am, it’s fast.
And inspired.
Gnarled old trees whip past me. I’m making headway when I swear one of them reaches out with a branch and trips me. Staggering forward, I gain my feet just in time to hear his harsh panting behind me.
A blur comes toward me out of the corner of my eye, and then his heavy weight slams into me.
We hit the ground, snow flying up around us as I kick and scramble. Gods, he’s strong. It’s like wrestling a bear. I may have overestimated my ability to defeat him.
“Hold still!”
I spin, wrapping my thighs around his hips and sending us rolling. A stick jabs my shoulder, but it’s the heavy weight of his body as he flips us that drives the breath from my lungs. I land flat on my back, and there’s no escaping him. Curse it. Every furious wriggle only succeeds in ensconcing him even more firmly between my legs.
The Prince of Evernight is between my thighs, and this is not how I planned this at all. I go still, giving in to the inevitable. For now.
Thiago breathes hard, pinning my wrists to the ground. “Well, that was fun—if predictable. Now what?”
Balls, or throat?
He sees my eyes narrow, correctly guesses which one I’ll choose, and takes my knee to his thigh, instead.
A grinning leer paints his face and he leans closer until our noses almost touch. “Pre-dic-table.”
I want to kill him.
Slowly.
“Enjoy the moment, Your Highness. Because this is as close as you’re ever going to get to winning me into your bed.”
“Would you care to make a wager on that?” He gathers both my wrists in one hand and then rests his weight on his other elbow.
I squirm. Nothing. “What do you have in mind?”
“Within the three months, I’ll have you in my bed, Princess.” He brushes his thumb over my bottom lip, his voice lowering to a husky whisper. “And you’ll enjoy it.”
A furious quiver runs through me. Mostly at myself and how much a part of me enjoys that simple touch. I bite his thumb, and he laughs.
“I’ll take you up on that bet.” It’s a terrible idea, but I simply can’t help myself. Me? In the prince’s bed? No surer bet has ever been won, even if I’m subjecting myself to his relentless chase. “Because my mother will bow at your feet before I’ll ever end up beneath your sheets.”
“Tell her to practice her curtsy. I want to see her grovel.”
Oh, you arrogant ass. “And if I win, then you will relinquish the disputed territories between our lands to my mother.”
The prince stiffens.
It’s the perfect opportunity to show my mother I can be valuable. Make whatever deals you have to, she’d said. Imagine the look on her face if I return with the deeds to the borderlands.
An unreadable expression crosses his face. “It’s a deal.”
He’s that confident? I gape.
“Now what?” he asks.
I swear, that smile is going to be the end of me. “What do you mean?”
“How do you escape your thrashing now?”
He’d best be joking. “If you even think about it, I’ll kill you in your sleep.”
“I quiver with terror.” He leans his entire weight upon me, as if to prove there’s no means of escaping him. Every rock-hard inch of him presses me deep into the snow.
I barely feel the chill. Perhaps he’s got good reason to be confident, because there’s a battering ram of indefinite proportion pressed firmly against my thigh. It stops just short of where I want it, and I can’t help freezing beneath him. One inch. Just one little twist of my hips, and this would be an entirely indecent embrace.
The son of a bitch is enjoying this.
Worse. There’s a small part of me that wants him to make that move.
“Get off me!”
“Ask me nicely, and I might just let you go,” he teases, his breath caressing my jaw.
I can see he’s not going to let me go. Not without making me beg.
And pride is my weakness. It always has been.
But what is his weakness?
The second I think it, I know exactly how I’m going to escape.
The kiss takes him by surprise.
But not for long.
I shove a handful of snow down the back of his shirt, and he yelps, giving me just enough space to kick him off. Then I’m out from under him, whipping his cloak over his head and planting a boot in the middle of his chest.
By the time he fights his way free of the cloak, I’m in the saddle of his mount—an enormous black stallion, how typical—and doffing an imaginary hat to him. “A pity you sent my mare fleeing. It’s going to be a long, cold walk back to Valerian, Your Highness.”
“Get your ass back here!” Thiago yells.
It’s so incredibly childish that I can’t help myself. I kick his horse into a trot and yell back, “Make me!”
A snowball hits me between my shoulder blades, but all I can do is laugh as his horse canters away from the clearing.
I do believe I finally won a round.
And look at that. Nobody even drew blood.
It takes the prince four hours to return.
Even after enduring a blistering lecture from Eris, nothing can shake my good mood as the prince limps in under the portcullis.
“I’ve had the servants draw you a bath, Your Highness,” I call down from the guard tower above in the sweetest voice I can possibly muster. “Since I daresay you’re chilled to the bone. Of course, they’re demi-fey, so whether the water is warm is entirely up to their whims.”
He merely smiles.
That’s not the expression I was hoping to see.
“You look considerably happier than I expected. What are you planning?”
“You’re so suspicious,” he murmurs, taking the stairs two at a time. “I was rather displeased at first, but I’ve had time to think. And I consider today a win.”
I gape. “How in Maia’s name do you consider yourself the victor?”
He pauses before me, all heat and muscle and dangerous eyes. “Because you’re no longer afraid of me. And you wonder what I’m like in bed.”
“I do not.”
He rests both hands on the railing beside my hips, trapping me there. “No? I’m very, very good, by the way.”
There’s nowhere to go, no means to avoid him.
“Of course you’d say that.” It comes out a little breathlessly. “But I’m sorry to disappoint you. I’m not remotely interested in you or the state of your bed. You’re losing, Your Highness. You haven’t gained a single inch of ground, so perhaps you’d best forfeit.”
“Losing?” He leans toward me. “If you think I’m not making progress, then you haven’t been paying attention, Princess.”
I press a hand to his chest.
His heart kicks swiftly, making my fingers curl in his shirt. It’s too intimate, but I dare not let him come closer.
“You owe me a kiss,” he whispers.
“I granted you one in the forest. It’s not my fault it was swift and followed by a fistful of snow.”
“Hmmm.�
�� His heated gaze slides over my mouth.
I go still.
There’s something intimate about that look, and every inch of me warms as if his gaze is a caress. I can’t help wondering what it would feel like to let him claim the kiss he clearly desires instead of the perfunctory one I grace him with each and every night.
He smiles. “Lie to me again, Princess. Tell me you’re not thinking about it.”
I shove at his chest, and though he takes a step back, I fear it’s more his doing than mine.
“I would kiss every inch of you, if you’d let me. And I would use my tongue, Princess, until you were begging me for mercy.”
Sweet Maia.
I swallow. “If you dared, then I would cut it off for trespassing where it wasn’t wanted.”
“I love the way you lie to me,” he says. Lifting my hand to his lips, he brushes a gentle caress there. “Until tomorrow. Sweet dreams, Your Highness.”
The breath leaves me explosively as he strides away. My will may be strong, but my body has begun to weaken. Even now, blood rushes through my veins and my nipples tingle as if they felt his touch.
Curse him.
Because he’s right.
I can’t help wondering what that mouth would feel like on my body.
My good mood evaporates the moment I enter my bedchambers. There’s a message resting on my pillow, and it looks exactly like the tiny scroll I discovered in the icy remnants of the ballroom.
I snatch it up, glancing around.
There’s no sign of anyone, but I’ve been gone for hours. Anyone could have left it. Except, Eris is the only other soul in the ruined palace, and I’m fairly certain if she were leaving me messages, they’d be painted in blood upon the walls.
Besides, Thiago gave me the only key. He couldn’t have lied about that. Not if he promised thrice.
Everything is not as it seems, Princess. The only way to discover the truth is to remain close to the prince. Push him. He won’t be able to maintain the charade for long, as he’s desperate to reunite with his wife. Trust your instincts.
The note chills me to the bone. The one in the ballroom might have been left by chance, to be discovered by whoever came after, but this was deliberately placed here.