Authors: Sara B. Larson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Love & Romance, #Action & Adventure, #General
backed away from Damian. He lifted an eyebrow, his eyes piercing.
But I couldn’t explain it to him — not then. I couldn’t tell him
that I didn’t want Rylan to see Damian holding me in his arms. I’d
admitted to him — and myself — that I loved him. But things
weren’t that simple.
There was a knock at the door and then it opened and Eljin
walked in. Rylan’s eyes opened and he slowly sat up in bed, his hair
sticking out on one side.
“Sun’s up,” Eljin said. “Let’s go. It’s going to be a long day for
you.” He looked right at me and I nodded.
I was afraid he was right.
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thirty-three
A
fter hours and hours of nonstop sword fighting and
hand-to-hand combat, I was hot, sweaty, sore, and exhausted.
I still hadn’t gotten any answers to my questions, and I still hadn’t managed to get one blow past Eljin’s magical shield. He’d told
me that to succeed in beating a sorcerer in a fight, I had to be faster than his ability to draw up the shield, or strong enough to push
through it. After an entire day of his blocking every single attempt, I didn’t see how either option was possible.
Damian and Rylan had watched for part of the day, and then
decided to start sparring as well. I found myself distracted, watch-
ing them fight, and Eljin landed a hard blow to my ribs, knocking
the air out of me.
“Distractions often prove fatal. A good lesson to learn in a
practice room,” he said, his expression mocking above his mask.
I hated that mask. I hated
him
. I was better than this. I didn’t make fatal mistakes. And no one defeated me. With a fresh surge
of fury, I f lew at him once more. I attacked so hard and fast that
he couldn’t keep up with me. I felt him preparing to draw up a
shield, and my anger increased. I wasn’t going to let him do that
again. Not this time. I faked left and felt the surge of magic. With
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a lightning-fast move, I f licked my sword up to the right instead,
grazing his cheek, and yanked the mask right off his face.
At first, it didn’t dawn on me what I’d done, because all I
could do was stare at his mutilated face. But then the heavy silence
in the room was broken by a shout of excitement.
“She did it!” Rylan whooped. “You got past his shield!”
Damian gave me a nod of approval, smiling grimly, as Eljin
reached out and grabbed the black scrap of fabric from the end of
my wooden sword. If it had been a real blade, I would have cut off
his ear.
“I think that’s enough for today,” he said angrily as he put the
mask back in place, hiding the scars that lined his jaw and twisted
his mouth into a grotesque mockery of lips. He tossed his sword to
the ground and stormed away. “You all stay here.”
The echo of the door slamming shut behind him was the only
sound for a long moment.
“What happened to him?” I finally asked, unable to enjoy my
victory with the memory of his scars in my mind.
Damian sighed as he walked over to the wall to set down his
own sword. “General Tinso and his wife were from Blevon, but he
was stationed at a border village when Eljin was a child. When my
father declared war on Blevon, he announced it by raiding the
border villages. General Tinso was on duty on the other side of
theirs when it was attacked.
“General Tinso’s wife — Lisbet’s sister — was also a sorceress,
and she tried to protect her son. But she wasn’t strong enough to
hold off so many soldiers at once. After they killed her, they tried
to capture Eljin. He fought back, but he wasn’t trained yet — he
was too young and couldn’t block all of them. What you saw on his
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face is just part of the scars he got that day. General Tinso and his men were eventually able to fight back and force the Antion army
to retreat, but it was too late for Eljin’s mother. At least Eljin was able to keep them from killing him, too.”
“Why didn’t Lisbet heal him?” I stared at Damian, my stom-
ach churning. Because of me, they’d both had to reveal their
painful pasts in fewer than two days. I was really on a roll.
“She couldn’t; she was at the palace in Antion.”
“The palace? Why?”
“She was my mother’s lady-in-waiting. She came with my
mother when she married Hector.”
“And Jax?” I hardly dared ask. I knew, even before he answered
me. I didn’t know why I hadn’t put it together before now — the
reason Jax’s blue eyes looked familiar. They were the same as
Damian’s.
A dark shadow crossed his face. “He’s my half brother. My
father’s bastard son. Lisbet should have left after my mother was
killed, but she stayed. She hid for years, trying to watch out for my brother and me. Iker found her when I was eleven and took her
straight to the king. My father raped Lisbet and had her thrown
out with orders to kill her if she showed her face again.”
A wave of nausea rolled over me, threatening to make my
stomach heave. Was there no end to King Hector’s atrocities? He
was bloodthirsty and a rapist, a man who had forced our nation
into a war that had lasted most of my life — and for what? What
did he hope to gain?
“Even after that Lisbet didn’t dare leave us boys at the mercy
of the king. She was determined to stay and help, even though
she’d have been killed if she was caught. Victor and I helped her
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hide in the abandoned wing of the palace and she began to take
bloodroot to hide her presence from Iker. The only other person
who knew was Cook, and she’d never tell because Lisbet healed
her daughter years ago.”
“That room you took me to . . .” I trailed off, remembering
the dark hallway and the fear I’d felt, the sense of being watched.
Damian nodded. “I was going to see Lisbet. My father has
been growing steadily more suspicious of me, which is partly of
why he assigned my guard to be with me at all times. And he was
having me followed, on top of that.” He sighed and shoved his
hand through his hair. “I had to assume that all of you were loyal
to him, not me, especially since I always acted like such a brat, to
def lect suspicion that I could possibly be plotting to overthrow
him. But by then I’d begun to hope that maybe I could trust you.
And Lisbet had sent me a message that I needed to come see her
right away. Since I’d been ordered to have a guard with me at all
times, I took a risk and picked you.”
“The boy that came through the secret passage — that was
Jax, wasn’t it?”
“Yes.” Damian’s expression was inscrutable. “It was a test, to
see if you were truly loyal to me.”
“Now do you see why we had to fake an abduction to get him
away from the palace?” General Tinso asked from the doorway,
startling us. “We have to stop Hector’s reign of tyranny. We have
to put Damian on the throne. But there was no way to do it with
him stuck in the palace, being guarded day and night, with Hector’s
pawn constantly on his tail.”
So many missing pieces were beginning to fall into place, my
head was spinning.
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“I told you I’d answer your questions when the time was
right,” Damian said, looking straight into my eyes. Just the force
of his gaze was enough to make my legs feel weak. I wasn’t sure if
that was a good thing or not.
Rylan had remained silent the whole time, listening, until
now. “But you decided to trust Alex and me for some reason.”
“I once overheard her tell someone that it didn’t matter if she
liked me or not, her duty was to protect me and she always kept her
word. That was when I started to hope I could trust her. When she
was assigned to guard my door, I knew it was providence. And I
even hoped that if she got to know the real me, she’d come to like
me someday.”
I f lushed with embarrassment. “I’m sorry you heard that,” I said.
“Don’t be. I didn’t like that version of myself, either.” He
turned back to Rylan. “Alex’s ability to fight gave me new hope.
With my father’s guard dog always nearby, no one, not even a sor-
cerer, could get close enough to kill the king.”
“Do you mean Iker?” I asked. I’d barely thought about him
since we’d left the palace. Honestly, I’d rarely thought about
him when we were
in
the palace unless he was in the room. “He’s creepy, but how could
he
stop a sorcerer?”
Damian and General Tinso glanced at each other before
Damian looked at me, his expression grim. “Iker isn’t just an advi-
sor to my father. He’s his bodyguard. I would have killed the king
myself long ago if I’d stood a chance of getting close to him with-
out Iker stopping me first — and I think they know it. Why do
you think my rooms are on the opposite side of the palace from
his? Why do you think I was forced to spend so much time there —
basically imprisoned in my own room?”
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I shook my head, almost feeling the urge to laugh. They were
all afraid of trying to kill King Hector because of
Iker
? “Are we talking about the same person?”
“Alexa.” The seriousness of Damian’s voice made the smile
slide from my face. “Iker is a black sorcerer.”
“A . . . a
what
?” My heart dropped. “But Iker is from Dansii, not Blevon. And — and your father
hates
sorcery. He has sorcerers killed!”
Rylan looked as shocked as I felt when I glanced at him.
“No, he only hates sorcerers who fight
against
him. He spread lies about sorcerers so that our people would be terrified of them
and support his decree that all sorcerers be killed in Antion, ensur-
ing that no one will ever be able to challenge him or stop him.”
“And not all sorcerers are from Blevon,” General Tinso added.
“That was one of the lies Hector told his people to build more
animosity toward our kingdom.”
I stared at them in shock.
“It’s true,” Damian agreed grimly. “Iker was a gift from
Hector’s brother, the king of Dansii, to protect my father. No one
can get past Iker and he never leaves my father’s side.”
“What makes a black sorcerer so much worse than other
types?” Rylan asked as I tried to wrap my mind around all the lies
we’d been told by our king. I’d hated him before, but as I contin-
ued to learn just how evil he was, there wasn’t a word strong
enough for the utter abhorrence that burned through me.
“It’s a sorcerer who uses the forces of the underworld to
increase his power. He draws on the strength of demons by mak-
ing blood sacrifices to them. Because of it, he is even able to create and wield an unnatural fire. It makes him unbeatable, but in so
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doing, he forfeits his soul.” General Tinso looked at me as he said
this, for some reason. I shivered. The sun had gone down while
we talked, leaving the room in shadow. I remembered suddenly
the scent of burned blood, the stains on Iker’s knife, the oppres-
sive heat and unnatural darkness in his chambers. So that’s what
he’d been doing. Making an offering to the demons that fueled his
power. I’d known something was wrong that night.
“All sorcerers are able to sense the power of sorcery in others,”
General Tinso continued, breaking into my troubled memories.
“So if another sorcerer gets near Eljin, he can
sense
it?” Rylan asked.
“Yes. If that person comes within a few feet of him, Eljin can
tell whether he is a sorcerer,” General Tinso confirmed.
“So I’m not a sorcerer, then?” I blurted out and then immedi-
ately snapped my mouth shut.
“What?” Rylan turned to me, his eyes wide. “You think you’re
a sorcerer now?”
“No.” General Tinso smiled grimly, answering my question.
I tried not to f lush in embarrassment. I’d been worried about
it ever since he said I was “gifted” — especially since no one would tell me what that meant.
“Has no one answered your question yet?”
I shook my head, not daring to look at Damian or Rylan.
“My suspicion is that your
father
was a sorcerer, and a powerful one at that. Most likely one of the rare sorcerers whose gift
was the ability to fight. And I believe he passed that on to you.
You’re not a true sorcerer, but you carry some of his power within
you. It enhances your ability to fight. It’s why you can sense magic
around you. Average humans, without an ounce of sorcery in
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them, wouldn’t have been able to feel the use of magic during a
fight.”
I stared at General Tinso. “My
father
? There’s no way. I would have known. He would have told me if he were a
sorcerer
!”
“My dear girl, do you honestly think so? In a nation where
being a sorcerer is akin to a death sentence?”
My mouth opened to continue to protest, but nothing came
out. What if he was right? I thought again of how much I loved
watching Papa practice — how he’d been so fast, so beautiful.
How I’d longed to be like him. I thought of the hours and hours
we’d spent relentlessly sparring, how he was always pushing me,
driving me to be better. Faster. Stronger. But I’d never felt him use magic against me. I shook my head, my mind spinning.
“But . . . if he was a sorcerer, why did he die? Why didn’t he