Authors: Sara B. Larson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Love & Romance, #Action & Adventure, #General
I stopped and stared at her, but she looked at me in perfect
innocence, smiling cordially.
“Hungry?” she asked brightly. “I believe your prince saved
you some food.”
And with that, she turned and walked away, disappearing into
the darkness beyond our fire.
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I looked at the fire, where Rylan, Damian, and Lisbet sat,
watching me, waiting for me to join them. And it was suddenly all
too much. I couldn’t face them. Or maybe it was that I couldn’t
face myself.
Tanoori’s words rang in my ears, making my cheeks grow hot.
I wasn’t pretty and I knew it. Maybe if I grew my hair and dressed
like a girl. Maybe if I didn’t have hands callused from sword prac-
tice, or well-muscled arms and shoulders from training. I wasn’t
soft, I wasn’t feminine. I barely even knew how to talk like a girl
anymore, after years of purposely lowering my voice.
And yet when Damian and Rylan looked at me, I felt like they
were looking at me the way a man looked at someone he found
attractive. It was thrilling — and confusing.
I turned around and went back into the tent and lay down on
my bedroll, curling into a ball on my side. I stared at Rylan’s empty spot next to me, and tears suddenly burned my eyes. I wanted
Marcel to be here with me. I longed for my brother. Even more
impossibly, I wished Mama were still alive. If my parents hadn’t
been killed, none of this would have happened. I would have met
a boy who liked my hazel eyes or my long, dark hair. It had been so
thick and shiny — the one thing about me that had truly been
beautiful. I reached up to finger my short hair, then I remembered
Damian doing the same thing, and I shoved my hand into my
armpit instead.
When I heard someone approaching, I rolled onto my other
side. The f lap to the tent opened, and I felt someone standing
there, looking at me. But I kept still, made my breathing even.
After a moment, whoever it was left, leaving me alone with my
regrets, my impossible wishes, and my foolish heart.
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twenty-three
W
e traveled for days the same way. Each morning, we
had to wake at dawn, force down the little bit of tasteless,
dried food our captors gave us, pack up our tents and bedrolls, and
be ready to march out of camp before the sun had even risen above
the trees. We had no pack animals, so we had to take the tent poles
apart and roll them up in the canvas, then strap all of it to our
backs. Rylan and I took turns, alternating days to carry the tent.
He tried to do it every day, but when I got upset at him for treating me like I was weak, he backed off.
I mentioned to Lisbet that I should just take off the binding,
since everyone knew I was a girl anyway, but she f latly refused.
“You must keep up the pretense of being a boy for all of the hidden
eyes watching you.” I wasn’t sure what she meant, but the look on
her face made me shiver. I kept the binding on.
We weren’t given any weapons, but I wasn’t as frightened of
the jungle with at least one powerful sorcerer nearby. I was
pretty
sure he’d save me if some jungle animal tried to make me its meal
again.
Prince Damian alternated walking with Lisbet and Jax, and
staying up front where I couldn’t see him. He did eat with us
once or twice, and though he was cordial to Rylan and me, and
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surprisingly friendly with Lisbet and Jax, he didn’t try to speak to
me alone again. I buried my disappointment and told myself I
didn’t care. But deep down, I knew I was lying. I’d actually let
myself start to believe he cared about me.
Lisbet hovered close by most of the time. I often caught her
watching me surreptitiously, and it made me nervous. Once, I
dared ask her about her ability to heal, but she’d ignored me and
dropped back to walk behind me for a while. Jax had decided he
liked me, though, and would often walk next to me when Damian
was gone, chatting about the different types of plants or animals
we saw. I didn’t have to say much to keep him going, which was a
relief. He’d just talk and talk as long as I nodded and agreed every
once in a while. Rylan walked next to us, piping in now and again.
The only good fortune I had was that Tanoori decided to keep
her distance. It was a relief not to have her popping up, threatening me with arrows one minute, trying to gossip with me the next, and
accusing me of being a harlot the minute after that.
This went on for more than a week, and every day I grew more
tired, more worn down, and more worried. We pressed on through
rain, heat, mud, and humidity. We were definitely heading toward
Blevon. We’d been traveling for so long, I couldn’t imagine it
would be more than another day or two before we crossed down into
the lowlands, then reached the border and left our nation behind.
On the eighth day of traveling since I’d woken up, the sky
above us grew cloudy once again, threatening rain. I’d actually
come to enjoy the rainstorms. The deluge of water was at least a
relief from the constant, cloying heat of the sunny days, and it
washed away the sweat and grime of the long trek through the
rain forest.
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Rylan and Jax were both next to me as we trudged down a hill
toward a small stream, talking about different types of monkeys.
From our vantage point at the top of the incline, I could see Prince
Damian a little ways ahead of us, almost to the stream. As I
watched, he adjusted his bedroll on his back so that he could
stretch his arms high overhead. For some reason, my heart beat a
bit faster as I watched him. It was difficult to believe that only two weeks ago, I’d practically hated him. And now . . . I didn’t know
what I felt. I thought something had started to happen between
us, but now I was afraid I was wrong. I remembered the way he’d
smiled at Jax, how they’d laughed together when Damian carried
him on his shoulders, and my stomach tightened. Would he ever
smile like that at me?
“Are you going to stand there all day?”
I shook myself from my thoughts to realize Rylan and Jax
both stood a little way below me, waiting. I fought to keep myself
from blushing and moved forward to follow them when some-
thing grabbed my attention. I froze and squinted, trying to make
sure I wasn’t seeing things. And then I broke into a dead run.
“Damian!”
I screamed as I rocketed down the hill toward the
prince.
Everything seemed to happen in slow motion. He turned to
look at me, his eyes widening. I screamed his name again, pointing
behind him, at the trees on the other side of the stream. The archers hidden in the shadows loaded their bows as I frantically shouted
at everyone to take cover. But I wasn’t fast enough. I had almost
reached the bottom when a volley of arrows f lew out of the trees.
I screamed Damian’s name once more and jumped toward
him with every ounce of strength in me. I collided with him a split
167
second before the arrow would have hit him, crashing so hard, we
both tumbled to the ground. He landed f lat on his back, and I was
on top of him, our faces only inches apart. Almost every part of
our bodies touched as he stared up at me in shock. And then
Damian pushed me off him and, rolling with unbelievable grace,
rose to a crouch, grabbing the sword out of the scabbard of a man
who wasn’t as lucky as he was. An arrow protruded from the man’s
throat, leaving a pool of blood beneath his head.
There wasn’t time to be surprised at his agility or the comfort
with which he held the sword. The men who’d shot at us were now
rushing toward us through the stream, swords lifted. They wore
the tattered uniforms of the Antionese army, attacking their own
prince unknowingly. We were at the far reaches of the kingdom,
too far for them to have received word of Damian’s abduction.
And few outside the palace knew what he looked like. There was
no hope they’d recognize him and retreat. We would have to fight
our own people if we wanted to live.
“Aim to injure, not kill!” Damian shouted as I leaped to my
feet, desperately searching for a weapon to use. Bodies littered the
ground, but I didn’t have time to make it to another one to grab a
weapon. I was defenseless.
Where was Eljin? Where was his power when we needed it?
Those with weapons raced forward to meet the soldiers, and
the sounds of blades crashing together rang through the forest.
A man rushed directly at me, sword raised. I turned to run for
my life, only to collide with someone — a tall, handsome prince
who shouldn’t have been in the middle of this battle.
“Alex, get behind me.
Now!
” Damian barked when my eyes
widened in panic. Why hadn’t he run for cover?
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“Give me your sword!” I shouted back over the sounds of
fighting.
Instead of listening, he shoved me behind him, blocking the
soldier’s attack just as his blade would have cut me through.
I stumbled back, and watched first in horror, then in growing
amazement as Damian not only held off the man’s attack, but
fought back with surprising skill.
“Alex!”
I turned at the sound of my name just in time to lift my hand
and catch the sword Rylan had tossed to me. Armed at last, my fear
dissolved. As I gripped the hilt of the sword, my mind calmed and
my body filled with purpose.
This
was who I was —
this
was what I knew how to do. I was a fighter.
Damian had disarmed the soldier who’d rushed at me, swiped
his sword arm so that he couldn’t pick up his weapon again, then
moved on into the thick of the fight. I plunged in after him, my
sword arcing through the air, carving a path through the army
that obviously had no idea it was attacking its own prince. I did as
Damian had asked, and struck only to injure. These were our own
people. It made me sick to have to fight them, but our lives
depended on it. They obviously believed we were rebels or part of
the Blevonese army, and they
were
striking to kill.
I stayed as close to Damian as I could, in case he needed help.
But as the fighting continued, it became very apparent that my
help was not needed. He was an incredible swordsman.
He twisted and lunged, spun and parried as though he’d been
born with a sword in his hand. It was all I could do to keep fight-
ing and not stop to watch him.
And then Eljin finally showed up.
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“Enough!” he shouted and swung his fist through the air, as
though he was trying to smash something in front of him. A huge
boom reverberated through the forest and the ground began to
shake. “If you wish to live, you will retreat this instant!” His voice carried over the horrible sound of the earth threatening to tear
apart beneath our feet.
We all froze, Antion’s army and Eljin’s own men alike.
“Sorcerer!” someone from the army shouted in fear.
“Retreat!”
The cry was repeated, and all the soldiers who remained unin-
jured rushed back across the stream and melted into the forest
they’d emerged from only minutes before.
Eljin released his fist and the shaking stopped.
Breathing hard, my heart still beating rapidly, I gazed at the
bodies on the ground in dismay. There were casualties from Eljin’s
group and the Antion army. Most of the men from the army were
only injured, not dead, just as Damian had ordered. I marveled
that Eljin’s men had followed his command, even though he was
their prisoner.
Damian stood a few feet away from me, holding his sword
loosely in his hand. I stared at him, half in astonishment and half
in anger.
“You can fight,” I finally said.
He remained silent, watching me. I couldn’t tear my eyes away
from his. Why had he kept this from his guard — from
me
? I
remembered seeing him in his room, how I’d wondered at the
sheen of sweat on his well-muscled body. I clenched my jaw to hold
back everything I wanted to say to him in that moment. I was mad
at him. Mad and confused and amazed.
He’d
saved
my
life.
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“Alex! You’d better come here!”
I spun around to find Rylan crouching next to a body on the
ground. I could only see the person’s legs, those of a smaller body,
definitely not one of Eljin’s men. My heart stopped as I rushed to
his side, praying it wasn’t Jax.
When I reached Rylan, he moved aside to show me my prayer
was answered. It wasn’t Jax.
It was Tanoori, lying in a puddle of blood, an arrow protrud-
ing from her chest.
171
twenty-four
I
s she dead?” I dropped to my knees beside Rylan.
“Not yet. She’s breathing, but just barely.” He had his hand
pressed around the wound, trying to stop the bleeding. “We’ve
got to get this arrow out.”
It was embedded on the right side of her chest, closer to her
shoulder than her belly. All we could hope was that it hadn’t punc-
tured her lung. At least it was far away from her heart.