Authors: Sara B. Larson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Love & Romance, #Action & Adventure, #General
We both whirled around to face Damian, standing above us.
“I was explaining that I am not strong enough to completely
heal this girl right now, and so we will either have to leave her or
carry her all day again,” Lisbet said, smoothly rising to her feet.
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My chest ached from the anger and frustration building up
inside. Why did she know about my brother? How did she know
the prince? And why did her words — her warnings — burn like
acid, reminding me of how uncertain my future was?
“How much longer before the effects of the bloodroot wear
off entirely?” Damian asked, looking past me to Lisbet.
“Not much longer, but it is frustrating when she needs my
help
now
.”
“You’re doing all you can.” Damian smiled at her, the same
gentle smile he had given Jax when he’d carried him. Seeing him
give Lisbet such a tender look, hearing him speak to her with such
respect after her refusal to explain anything to me, to answer my
questions, was too much. The anger I’d been trying to subdue
overtook me. She was working with our captors, and yet Damian
seemed to trust her — more than me. And I had been his guard,
risking my life for him on a daily basis.
I jumped to my feet and pushed past Damian, out of the tent,
only to see Rylan standing ten feet away, his arms crossed, staring
at me, a silent accusation in his eyes.
The pressure was coming from all sides. Lisbet’s warnings; my
impossible attraction to a prince I should never have let myself care about; Rylan’s feelings, which only confused me even more. I
wanted to get away — I
needed
to get away.
“Alex, are you okay?” Damian followed me.
I turned on my heel and ran. I didn’t care where, I didn’t care
what happened to me, I didn’t care if Eljin tied me up after this, I
just had to escape. I couldn’t take it anymore. I plunged into the
forest, pushing the huge leaves out of my way as I ran from Lisbet,
from what she’d said, from Rylan and Damian, from everything.
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twenty-six
I
startled a flock of macaws when I rushed through the
foliage into a small clearing. They took to f light in a whirl of
colors, reds and blues and yellows, bursting through the air. My
eyes burned, and I scrubbed my hands across my face, brushing
the stupid, useless tears away.
I barely had time to catch my breath when I heard someone
crashing through the underbrush behind me, and spun around to
see Damian standing there, his chest heaving from the effort of
running after me.
“What’s wrong? What happened?”
“You shouldn’t have come after me,” I said. “Now we’ll both
get in trouble.”
“I don’t care about that.” He closed the distance between
us, so that I had to tilt my head back to look up into his eyes. His
eyes, which were every bit as beautiful as the macaws that had
just f lown into the depths of the jungle.
His
jungle. “Why did you run away?”
“You made a mistake by saving me. You revealed your secret to
save my life,” I said, my voice strained. “You kept that secret your
whole life for some reason, and now everyone here knows and I
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don’t know why you did that for me. You should have let me die if
it was so important for no one to know.”
“Is that what Lisbet told you?” The look on his face made my
heart pound.
“Yes,
Lisbet
told me that,” I bit out. Still upset — hurt — by the trust he seemed to place in her.
He moved even closer. I couldn’t breathe as I stared up at him.
He lifted both of his hands to brush the hair back from my face.
“And you believed her?”
I clenched my jaw, refusing to answer, afraid all the emotion I
was desperately trying to quell would bleed into my voice.
“It wasn’t a mistake to save your life,” he said, his voice low.
He took one last step so that our bodies touched. I could feel him
everywhere — our legs, our hips, our stomachs. “I’ve made mis-
takes. So many I can’t even count. But saving you was
not
one of them.” His thumbs rubbed across my jaw. I stared into his eyes,
my heart in my throat. For that breathless moment, there was no
sound, no time, nothing beyond his body against mine and his
hands on my face. I wanted him to kiss me, I wanted it more than
I wanted air, but the tiny part of my brain that was still function-
ing knew this was wrong. Impossible.
I tried to pull back, but he dropped one of his hands to wrap
his arm around my body, pressing me to him, refusing to let me
break away.
“But I’m not —”
“You’re
perfect
,” he said roughly, cutting off my protest. “And if I had to do it over again, I would save you every time.” His
mouth closed over mine and there was no more thought. No more
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worry. No more pain or loss or fear. There was only Damian. His
arm tightened around me, crushing me to him, his other hand
threaded through my hair. I clung to him as his lips moved on
mine with a need and hunger that nearly overwhelmed me.
My whole body burned with a fire that I’d never imagined
possible. I was the one who was supposed to protect him, but I’d
never felt as protected as I did in that moment, encircled by his
strong arms, our bodies pressed together. I dug my fingers into
the muscles of his back, his shoulders, clinging to him with every
ounce of strength I had in me.
His lips moved to my jaw, then down my throat, leaving a trail
of fire on my skin as he worked his way toward my collarbone. I
gasped for air, clutching at his tunic as he kissed me. I cursed
Lisbet for convincing me to keep the binding on my breasts.
“Alexa,” he whispered against my skin. “Do you have any
idea what you’re doing to me? I’ve never needed anyone the way I
need you.”
He pulled back slightly, his gaze heated as he stared down
at me. I was weak in his arms, struggling to breathe normally.
“After my mother was killed, and then my brother, I swore I’d
never let myself care about anyone again. I swore I’d never give
anyone the power to hurt me like that again. But when I saw that
man rushing at you yesterday, with his sword drawn . . . I realized
it was too late.”
My heart constricted at the raw pain, the fear, the
hope
in his eyes, eyes that were like jewels in the dappled sunlight.
“It was too late,” he repeated, almost in a whisper, and then he
bent his head down to mine again. This time, his kiss was gentler,
deeper somehow. I could feel his desperation in the way he held
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me, in the way his lips moved with mine, making my heart ache
and burn all at once.
“Alex!”
I froze at the sound of my name being shouted from the trees
behind us, and we broke apart. I took a step back, lifting one of my
hands up to my swollen lips.
“Alex!”
It was Rylan. About to find me — about to find
us
. He’d
know. He’d know and there would be no going back. He’d never
forgive me.
“Alexa.” Damian looked concerned. “What’s wrong?”
I couldn’t answer; I just shook my head. And then Rylan was
there. He burst out of the trees and ground to a halt when he saw
us both standing there, only a couple of feet apart. I had no idea
what I looked like, what expression was on my face. But whatever
he saw was enough. The concern on his face hardened into some-
thing else, something foreign.
“I was worried about you since you’re afr — hate the jungle so
much, but obviously you’re just fine.” I’d never heard his voice
so cold, and it turned the heat in my body to ice. But even in his
anger, he kept his promise not to reveal my fear of snakes. “We’re
leaving. Lisbet is preparing Tanoori for us to carry her again.
Assuming you still wish to try and save her?”
“Of course,” I said, my voice shaky.
Anger rolled off him in waves. “That’s great. Carry on,
then. Sorry for interrupting.” He turned on his heel and plunged
back into the jungle the way he’d come, leaving me alone with
Damian again, my stomach twisted into knots and my whole
body trembling.
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“Alexa, are you all right? What’s wrong?” Damian stepped
toward me again, took my hand in his. I stared down at his fingers,
laced through mine, and I almost cried again. I could no longer
deny that I was falling for him — so fast and so hard, it scared me.
But I had feelings for Rylan, too — he was the closest friend I’d
had at the palace, next to my brother. And now he hated me.
I clenched my jaw to keep my emotions in check. I looked up
at Damian, at the concern on his face, the worry in his eyes.
“Was I wrong to kiss you?”
I swallowed past the lump in my throat. “No,” I whispered. “I
just don’t know what to do. You’re the
prince
.”
“We’ll figure it out. I won’t let anyone hurt you — not even
my father. I promise.” He squeezed my hand and I tried to smile
back as I let go.
“We’d better get back before Eljin threatens to kill me again
and makes you break your promise,” I said, trying to keep my
voice from trembling. I turned to walk away, but Damian grabbed
my arm, pulling me gently back to him.
“Thank you,” he said softly as I stared up at him once more.
“For what?”
“For saving me — and I don’t just mean from that arrow.” He
smiled, a soft, wistful smile. “It’s always been you, you know that,
right? From the first moment I realized you were a girl — it was
always you.”
My heart constricted as he pressed his lips to mine. Once.
Twice. Just enough to make my pulse start to race again, and then
he broke away. “All right, let’s go.” He sighed.
I turned to follow him with tears in my eyes.
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twenty-seven
A
fter the longest day of my life, trudging through the
final stretch of jungle, carrying Tanoori on the same make-
shift stretcher with Damian in front of me and Rylan across from
me, we finally stopped for the night, near the border of Antion
and Blevon. It was torture to be so close to Damian after our kiss,
but unable to touch him, or even to talk to him. And the trip
hadn’t improved Tanoori’s condition at all. I began to wonder if
she really would make it. She thrashed several times during the
day, making it even harder to carry her. I was so sore, I could
barely move after we set her down on the ground next to where
Lisbet was setting up her tent.
Eljin made us pitch our tents as close together as possible, and
we weren’t allowed to light a fire. He stood with his back to us
as we hurried to eat our cold dinner. What had once been a group
of near fifty was closer to thirty-five after the attack. So many lives lost in the attempt to abduct the prince into enemy territory. I wondered again what Eljin and his followers hoped to accomplish. Were
they going to demand King Hector pay ransom for his son?
“What’s he doing?” I heard Jax ask his mother, nodding
toward Eljin. I leaned forward to listen for her answer as they fin-
ished tying their tent down for the night.
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“He’s going to stand guard all night, and protect us if
necessary.”
“In case another group from the army finds us?” Jax sounded
scared.
“Yes. But you don’t need to worry. Eljin will make it so that
they can’t see us.”
“But what if he falls asleep?”
“He won’t.”
I glanced back at Eljin, wondering what other powers he pos-
sessed. How could he keep an entire battalion from seeing us?
Then I noticed Rylan standing apart from the grouping of
tents, near a copse of trees. It was strange to be out of the jungle, to see rolling fields of grass spreading gently downward, into the
valley below. Although I hated the jungle, I was used to it; I felt
exposed out here.
I glanced around but didn’t see Damian anywhere. Now was
as good a time to approach Rylan as any, I supposed. We would be
crossing into Blevon tomorrow and I had no idea what awaited us
there. I figured I’d better talk to him in case I didn’t get another
chance. Steeling my courage, I stood up and walked toward him.
He felt me coming — I could tell by the way he tensed up. But
he didn’t turn to look at me. I stopped a few feet away, my little bit of bravery failing at the scowl on his face.
“What do you want, Alex?”
“Rylan, please don’t do this.” I moved so that I stood in front
of him, forcing him to look at me.
“Do what? I’m not
doing
anything. I guess that’s my problem.”
“So that’s it? You’re not going to talk to me anymore?” I hesi-
tantly reached for his arm, but he pulled away from my grasp.
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“Oh, would you like me to jump into the fray? Do you want to
turn it into a game? See who can catch you first? Me against a
prince. I’m pretty certain I know how that would turn out.”
“No! That’s not what I meant,” I stammered, heat rising in
my cheeks. “Rylan, I’m sorry I made you so mad. I’m sorry that I
made you hate me. Apart from Marcel, you’ve been my closest