Heartless Heirs
Page 1
PRAISE FOR
THE TWIN DAGGERS SERIES
“Open this book and be transported into a world of magic, machines, and espionage. Twin Daggers is a riveting story about the length two sisters will go for each other. And be prepared—they will steal your heart.”
REBECCA ROSS, author of Sisters of Sword and Song
“Twisting and face-paced, Twin Daggers is an exciting new fantasy series filled with charming magic, harrowing politics, and the bittersweet struggle of star-crossed lovers. Be careful, dear reader, for Aissa and Aro are sure to steal your heart.”
MINDEE ARNETT, author of Onyx & Ivory
“A taut, emotionally arresting fantasy.”
KIRKUS REVIEWS
“Exceptionally well crafted with a wealth of inherently fascinating plot twists and turns, Twin Daggers is a simply outstanding YA novel that will have a very special appeal to young readers ages 13-18.”
MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW
Heartless Heirs
© 2021 by MarcyKate Connolly
Requests for information should be addressed to:
Blink, 3900 Sparks Dr. SE, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49546
Hardcover ISBN 978-0-310-76827-2
Audio ISBN 978-0-310-77109-8
Ebook ISBN 978-0-310-76833-3
Epub Edition May 2021 9780310768333
This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. All characters are fictional, and any similarity to people living or dead is purely coincidental.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording, or any other—except for brief quotations in printed reviews, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Art direction: Cindy Davis
Interior Design: Denise Froehlich
Printed in the United States of America
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Contents
Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Acknowledgments
CHAPTER 1
WHERE TRUTH CUTS, IT LEAVES CHAOS IN its wake. For my twin sister and me, that becomes clearer every minute. Each shard, each fact, chips away at the bond between us and the life we thought we knew.
The truth about what we really are—an experiment two hundred years in the making.
Our parents’ bond, and their death because of it.
A betrayal by the man Zandria loved.
My betrayal of the entire Magi people by falling in love with a Technocrat prince, the Heartless heir we were sent to assassinate.
The house of lies we once held dear has crumbled to pieces.
But those truths prickling around the edges of our hearts will have to wait. First, we must get out of this cursed Technocrat city alive. Then we can warn the rest of the Magi they’re in imminent danger.
An hour ago, we threw Palinor into chaos by destroying a sizable section of the Palace’s subterranean levels as we escaped the dungeons with our childhood friend, Remy Gaville. Dawn hasn’t yet dared to creep over the steel roofs of the city, but the streets and ramparts are overflowing with men. They form a net of flesh and blood and metal, ready and waiting to catch us.
Nothing is more terrifying to the Technocrats than a Magi on the loose. Three of us calls for every able-bodied soldier to remain on high alert.
We managed to steal some supplies—food, a change of clothes, and a couple water skeins—by shadowing guards while we hid under a shield spell. Now we huddle under a window in a shop not far from the northern gate, waiting for an opportunity to get through. We know one way out, but the path is blocked. Guards line the alley where we once exited through a secret tunnel led by Darian Azul.
Just the thought of the traitor’s name makes me quiver with rage.
My sister and I may disagree on many things at the moment, but we’re united in our shared hatred of that man.
“If we get close enough, we could kill half the guards in that alley very quickly,” Zandria whispers a little too eagerly for my liking.
“Right, but then the other half would be on top of us in seconds,” I say. “We can’t simply power through. There are too many of them, and too few of us.” Zandria may be different since we rescued her from the dungeons and the Technocrats’ torturous metal suits, but in one way she remains the same: she’s as impulsive as ever. Now with a newer, more brutal bent.
Remy grabs my wrist. “Stop talking. Both of you.”
We hold our breaths. Even before I hear it, I know what we’re listening for.
The unmistakable metallic clank of the machines.
Zandria’s face turns white as a sheet in the predawn light.
“We have to get out of here before they reach us,” she hisses. “Let’s just bring the wall down on their heads. Then we can get to the tunnel before they know what hit them.” She rises, but I yank her back down.
“No. The machines will know exactly where to hunt if we do that. If we stay here until they pass, we have a shot.”
“Aissa’s right. We need to lay low,” Remy says.
Zandria looks as if she wants to scream. Her eyes wildly glance between us as the skittering of metal legs grows louder. Remy and I each take one of her hands and squeeze tightly. She yanks her hand out of mine like she’s been burned.
It feels like a slap, but I do my best to ignore it. “Breathe, Zandy,” I whisper. “We’ll get through this.”
I peek out the window onto the street. Only guards are out there now. Any curious onlookers have been ordered back to their homes.
But they have our descriptions, and they know we’re trying to escape the city.
“We need to change our appearances,” I say to Zandria. She nods curtly and begins casting the spell. In moments, our red hair and green eyes are gone. In their place, I have dark hair and blue eyes, and she’s taller, with brown hair and brown eyes. Remy attempts the spell too, and only manages to alter his features somewhat, likely because he hasn’t had time to practice like we did.
It will have to be enough. The first mechs are the seekers, trundling like spiders over the cobblestone streets. Some turn down other streets and alleys, hunting for us. A few buildings down the road, they begin prying open shop doors. Soon they’ll reach us.
“I know what to do,” I say suddenly. “We can’t go out on the streets, and we can’t stay here much longer either. We’re going to tunnel to the secret passage.”
Zandria’s eyes widen
, but her shaking begins to subside.
We locate the latch to the cellar and drop down one by one. Remy closes it behind us and fastens the lock. Outside the front door, metallic legs prod and pry. I shudder.
My twin’s hands quiver as she weaves them. The metal walls reinforcing the cellar peel away, leaving a door-sized patch of dirt behind. Remy casts his own spell to help, and soon the three of us tunnel forward, shifting the earth at full speed.
Zandria packs the dirt behind us while Remy and I continue to use our spells to dig ahead. Once we hit brick and metal again, my sister joins me in the lead. The secret tunnel is hidden in the alley just across the street from the shop where we took cover, so we’ve been digging in a straight line. Zandria eyes the bricks suspiciously; we don’t know exactly what’s beyond them. There could be guards lying in wait or no one at all.
We have no choice but to find out. We’ll run out of air if we remain down here for long.
I hum softly, coaxing a brick from the wall. Beside me, Zandria casts a silencing spell so it won’t make a sound as it slides free. I peek through—and relief floods my limbs. The hall is empty. The king and queen no doubt have heard how we escaped their dungeons and must’ve called all the guards above ground to hunt for us. If we do encounter a guard or two, we should be able to disarm or evade them.
“It’s safe,” I whisper. “Come on.”
Zandria and I make short work of dismantling the wall with our magic, then we all step into the silent, metal-paneled hall. I take a moment to put the wall back together before we proceed; no one needs to know how we escaped.
Nerves strung tight as bow strings, we run down the hall in the direction of the gates. This tunnel goes right under the city walls. We only have a couple more turns until we’re free, when I stop suddenly. Zandria and Remy pause behind me, our heaving breaths blessedly silent thanks to the spell Remy casts.
Footsteps ring out directly in front of us. There’s nowhere to hide, no rooms to duck into. Zandria’s expression quickly shifts from terror to rage, and her hands begin to move. I shake my head at her, then hum a shield spell that envelops us just before the guard tromps around the corner. We flatten ourselves against the wall, hearts in our throats.
The guard passes by, unaware of our presence.
When he’s safely around the next corner, we wait for another minute, then finally move ahead.
“We should’ve just killed him,” Zandria hisses. “Why are you protecting them?”
Her words surprise me. “If we leave a trail of bodies in our wake, Darian and the royals will know exactly which way we went and how we left the city. It would only expose us.”
My sister grunts but doesn’t respond. When we reach the end of the tunnel, we exit into the cool air of the metal forest.
We may be out of the city, but we’re not safe yet.
We take off at a run, racing in the direction of the Chambers—the underground hideaway where the last remaining members of the Magi faction live. The woods are crawling with Technocrats and their fearsome machines—every one of them searching for us. The screech of metal beasts brushing against metal trees haunts the woods, setting our teeth on edge.
Finally, we enter a rocky section where real trees have begun to take root. There are still many of the lifeless metal trees the Technocrats installed after the wars to give the semblance of a forest, now brushing up against green leaves and moss-coated bark. At least they’re useful for hiding when necessary.
“We have to rest,” Zandria says. Her face looks paler than usual. Remy puts a hand on her shoulder.
“We can rest here,” he says. “We’ll make a place to hide if we have to.”
Zandria straightens her spine. “Just for a few minutes. Then I can go on. We can’t afford to stop for long.”
“We can’t afford for you to get captured again either,” Remy says.
I step between them. “We’ll take ten minutes to eat something and rest our legs. Then we’ll get moving.”
Remy starts to say something, but I hold up a hand. “Why don’t you keep watch, Remy?”
“Fine,” he says, and stalks off a few yards.
I sit next to my sister on a log flanked by ferns and split the few rations we were able to steal before leaving the city. We may be free now, but her expression is tight and laced with grief.
I understand why.
She’s reeling from all I’ve told her since we rescued her from the dungeons. Our parents’ deaths and Darian’s betrayal most of all. She had no idea either that long ago, our parents risked the wrath of the Armory Council and used the forbidden Binding rite to irrevocably join themselves together—heart, body, and soul. Ultimately, it was their undoing. When Darian arrived that terrible night, searching for me, he only had to stab one parent to kill them both. Zandria and I both trusted Darian when we first met him. He’s the Magi spymaster, after all. But his loyalty lies only with himself. And he will sacrifice anything—and anyone—in his way.
Add to all that the fact I fell for—and performed the Binding rite with—the very person I was supposed to kill: Aro. I imagine Zandria sees that as a betrayal too. My sister spent weeks in captivity, only to find the world had turned upside down in her absence.
The way she looks at me now . . . breaks my heart.
I rest my head on her shoulder. She flinches and shrugs me off.
I don’t know what to say. The only comfort I have to offer her is that we’ve finally been reunited. After what we’ve been through, I’m not sure that’s enough.
While we eat, my thoughts drift back to Aro. I’m worried about him. He foolishly insisted on remaining in Palinor because he believes he can make a difference.
It’s futile. But I do believe his parents, the king and queen, will protect him. The wild card is Darian, their most trusted advisor and second in line to the throne—after Aro. What will Darian do now that Aro knows his plans? I’ve left the person I love—literally given my heart to—in a nest of knives and vipers.
I haven’t told Zandy yet, but I’ve already made up my mind: once we get the rest of the Magi to safety, I’m going back for Aro.
Remy appears before us, scowling deeper than I’ve seen before. “We need to leave. Right now.”
We get to our feet without a moment’s hesitation. Remy’s furious with us for concealing the truth about our magic, but he’s been drawn into this mess by helping my sister and me escape. He won’t betray us to the Technocrats.
However, his father, Isaiah—the leader of the Magi—is another matter. I don’t fully trust Remy to keep our secret from him.
But that won’t matter if we never reach the Chambers.
We head out again, each of us putting a protective spell in place. I cast the shield spell that conceals us, Zandria casts the silencing spell, and Remy covers our tracks.
We keep an ear out for the sounds of skittering metal, our bodies tense as we walk briskly. We won’t run unless a machine or a soldier is directly upon us, or else we’ll wear ourselves out quickly.
Remy is a little ways ahead of me and Zandy. When he stops short, holding up a fist, magic flares inside me, as I know it does for my companions. We’re ready to defend ourselves if necessary.
After a moment of standing stock-still, listening only to the sound of our own breaths, we hear it: the click of metal. Steel parts moving in tandem, a machine with legs. I shudder. It could be any number of things, and only one or a pack.
“This way!” Remy hisses as he shoves us toward the eastern part of the forest. We need to head northeast to reach the Chambers, but the detour is worth it to evade the machines.
This time we run.
Despite our quickened pace, the machines draw closer, their noise growing louder than before. My pulse throbs in my ears.
We are absolutely not getting caught now. Not when we’re so close to escape.
Soon the sound comes from all around us. It’s impossible to pinpoint the exact direction. We’ve been carefu
l to hide our tracks and stay under our spells. But something must’ve given us away.
We burst through a break in the trees into a field filled with large boulders. I scramble onto the nearest one, turning to see in all directions. Within moments, a metal beast steps onto the field at each of the four points—north, south, east, and west.
Mechwolves.
The articulated metal in their sleek bodies repeats the sound we heard. I take in the legs that allow them to run at inhuman speeds, perked ears with listening devices that can transmit back to whoever controls them, and razor-sharp teeth meant to tear apart their prey. My palms turn slick. These are not the sort of machines the Technocrats send out when they want to capture someone.
They’re the kind they deploy when they want to kill.
Remy and Zandria clamber onto the boulder beside me. We’re surrounded. I glance at my sister. We’ve never used our secret magic so brazenly before. But doing so now is the only way to defang this new threat. Remy is already muttering a spell to lift one of the nearby boulders when the mechwolves rush toward us. He knocks one aside, but another slips through. Its cold, reflective eyes bore into me as it lunges in my direction.
Anxiety and exhilaration fill me in equal parts as my magic rips its head clean off its neck. Its body clanks as it tumbles to the ground, a mess of metal legs and parts, and the head bounces once beside it.
This is what my sister and I were born—made—to do. Act on the machines and organic matter. Using my magic boldly may be risky, but it’s still a thrill.
The mechwolves aren’t done with us yet. Zandria makes short work of one of the two barreling down at her, and I take on the second with the same spell, dismantling it efficiently. When we turn around, we find Remy has successfully used the small boulder to crush the mechwolf he knocked off its feet earlier.
“You really can use magic on the machines,” Remy says, awe creeping into his voice.
I snort. “Did you think we made up a treasonous claim just for fun?”
“No, no. But seeing it in action is something else.” He puts a hand on my shoulder. “With what you can do, we could destroy the entire Technocrat army. We could—”
“We do have limits, you know,” Zandria says, finally straightening up again. “We still need our hands and our breath to cast spells. And if they sneak up on us unawares or overwhelm us with sheer numbers . . .” My sister shudders. She doesn’t need to finish that sentence. We both know what will happen.