Authors: Sarah Fine
CHAPTER TWELVE
A
islin’s fingers wouldn’t work properly. Her hands were shaking both from weakness and the chill of the cavern, but she finally managed to tear a strip from the bottom of her sweater. It was long enough to do the job. She sat on the cold stone platform and stared at it, smeared with blood and dirt, seemingly harmless.
She’d spent her whole life surrounded by death, serving fate, but somehow, she’d never spent much time thinking about her own demise. She’d always thought it would be centuries into the future. She’d never imagined it would come so soon, so strangely and abruptly. Twenty-four hours ago, she wouldn’t have believed she’d be sitting in some secret pocket in the Veil, planning her suicide.
She took a moment to think about what she’d miss. The satisfaction of knowing she’d taken care of business, the luxury of a rare evening spent in bed with a glass of excellent wine and a well-written novel, the few fragile moments of closeness she’d shared with her siblings. And Moros. Missing him was different, though, more like a gash than an ache, and it wasn’t about the past at all.
Until today she’d never believed they could touch each other. She’d never thought they would be anything other than business partners, and she’d accepted that despite the throb of fascination and excitement she always felt when they were in the same room together. She’d had many lovers in the past, but none had ever touched her heart. They were always too intimidated by or resentful of her power for her to truly open herself to them. But now, with Moros’s touch, with his taste, he’d managed to create a home for himself inside of her. He’d carved out vast amounts of empty space . . . and the hope that she could fill them with new experiences and thrilling moments, all still to come.
She would experience none of those moments, though. And she shouldn’t even allow herself to think of them. He had told her she had no future. It had been the only reason he could touch her in the first place. The same thing that had created the hope had dashed it to bits.
Maybe he had been toying with her all along. How very like him.
Stop.
She pressed her fingertips to her temples, still trying to sort out the real from the imagined. She wouldn’t last under another assault from Strife, Vengeance, and Lies. She wasn’t that strong. Her gaze dropped to the strip of cloth in her hands. This was her only escape.
She shuddered with the thought of losing herself, maybe becoming a Shade, but would that be so different from what was happening now? Yes. Now, she could be used by the enemies of fate to destroy the one person strong enough to stop them. Suicide was the better choice. The only choice.
She wrapped the strip around her throat, determination giving her strength.
“I can’t let you do that,” came a deep, familiar voice. She pivoted to see Trevor sitting on a rock behind her, his muscular arms folded over his chest, his smooth brown skin lush against the gray stone. Declan had brought the Ker to a few Psychopomps events, and Aislin had always found him polite, if a bit rough around the edges—a perfect best friend for her brother. But now he just looked . . . tired. There were circles beneath his dark-brown eyes and a slump to his posture as he got up and came toward her. She stared up at him as he gently unwrapped the cloth from around her neck with his large warm hands.
“Trevor,” she said quietly. “How long have you been sitting there?”
“Awhile,” he admitted. “You were pretty absorbed in your own thoughts.”
She gave him a weak smile. “Are you my enemy now?”
He tossed the hard-won strip of fabric off the edge of the platform, and it spiraled through the air, landing out of easy reach. “Depends on whose side you’re on.”
“What if I don’t want to be on a side?”
“Killing yourself isn’t the same thing as not choosing a side.”
He settled himself on the platform beside her, his warmth reaching her an instant later. She fought the urge to lean toward it just to chase some of the chill from her bones. “But I’m fated to die.”
His eyebrows rose. “How do you know that?”
“Moros.” It hurt to say his name.
Trevor’s jaw tightened at the sound of it. “How do you know he wasn’t messing with you?”
Because it looked like it had hurt him. “What good would it do to toy with me like that? He wanted me on his side.” No one else was, after all. Everyone had abandoned him.
He deserves it. He was trying to use you.
Aislin shuddered, and Trevor placed his hot hand on her back. “I know it’s hard to tell what’s real from what’s not,” he said quietly.
She looked up at him. “They did it to you, too?”
“Just Eris. But she got me good enough to do a lot of damage.”
Aislin thought back. Trevor had been responsible for the slaughter of Galena Margolis’s lab assistants and research subjects. He’d also been the one to kidnap Rylan, right out of Psychopomps headquarters. “Declan knew you were being controlled.”
Trevor’s hand slipped from her back, and he bowed his head. “I was too weak to stop it, and now look at me.”
“Do they have your soul?” she whispered.
He gave her a sidelong glance. “I’m not allowed to say who has it.”
“But you have to obey whoever does.”
Trevor nodded. “And that means I can’t allow you to hurt yourself.”
Aislin looked toward the large tent on the opposite side of the cavern. “They knew I might try to commit suicide.”
He bumped her shoulder with his. “You were fighting pretty hard. They know they haven’t won you over yet, so they’ll work harder next time.”
Aislin tried to push down a swell of nausea, needing to rid herself of the memory of Moros slamming her against stone, his hand around her throat, telling her she was useless, that he’d only been pretending to care. “It feels like a memory,” she said in a choked voice. “But it never happened.”
Trevor sighed. “You won’t know the difference soon.”
Tears stung her eyes. She had always prided herself on her control, and having it stolen from her like this was almost more than she could bear. “Why are you being kind to me?”
“They didn’t tell me I had to be cruel.”
“And they told you not to allow me to hurt myself.” Her thoughts whirred. “But did they tell you that
you
couldn’t hurt me?” She turned to him, new hope taking root. “If you were to . . . I don’t know . . . strangle me, could you do that? I could will myself to die and . . .”
But he was already shaking his head. “I can’t. Even if I was willing to do that to you, I couldn’t. They were very thorough. When they come back, you have to be alive—or I won’t be.”
She sagged, hopelessness and dread weighing so heavily she could barely hold herself up. “Do you have to keep me here?”
“Yes.”
“Can you take a message to someone for me?”
“No.”
“But you can talk to me. You can sit next to me.”
A faint smile appeared on his face. “What’s six inches long, has a head—and is something I like to blow from time to time?”
Aislin stared at him.
“Money. See? I can tell dirty jokes, too, but I don’t think that’ll help you much.”
A weary chuckle escaped her. “Money. Very amusing.”
Trevor snorted. “Dec thought it was funny.”
“Of course he did.” Her chest ached suddenly, missing her brother. “I hope he’s not too upset,” she whispered, and then her face crumpled as she realized a bigger fear—that he wouldn’t be upset at all. She could barely blame him, after what she’d done.
Trevor caught her and held her up as she began to collapse onto the platform. “Dec doesn’t give up easy,” he said. “It’s one of the best and worst things about him.”
“He didn’t give up on you. We all thought you had gone willingly, that you’d fooled Declan and infiltrated Psychopomps on purpose, but he insisted your confession was sincere, that someone took control of you again once you were inside.”
“He was right,” Trevor said in a hollow voice.
“He still hopes he’ll get you back.”
“I don’t think so,” Trevor muttered.
“But you seem to be yourself. You don’t seem—”
“Evil?” His eyes glowed red. “How about now?”
“I’m afraid I’ve grown a bit fond of red eyes of late,” she admitted.
He looked surprised for a moment but apparently decided to let her comment slide. “Are you going to keep fighting them?”
She nodded. “Now that you’ve given me no other choice.” Her brow furrowed. “Why haven’t they made me a Ker? They apparently have the ability—that’s what they did to Rylan.”
“They might,” he said. “Not all of them can do it, though.”
“Which of them can?”
He shook his head.
“Got it. You’re not allowed to tell me. Can you tell me which of them
can’t
do it?”
He chuckled, deep and rumbling. “They’re not stupid.”
She shrugged. “Well, you can’t blame me for trying.”
Trevor grinned, his white teeth gleaming. “You’re all right, Aislin. You know that?”
Despite everything, she found herself smiling back. “Thank you. Tell Declan and Cacia that, if you see them again?”
Trevor’s grin dimmed with sadness. “They know it already, Aislin. Dec does, at least.”
She winced. “I’ve made so many mistakes with both of them.” Her throat tightened mercilessly. “I wish they knew how much I love them. I wish I’d been able to tell them.”
“Maybe they know, Aislin. Both of them tend to cut through the bullshit.”
She covered her face, thinking of her brawling, salty-mouthed siblings, of their good hearts and unwavering sense of right and wrong. “I hope they don’t think I abandoned them.”
“They’re smart enough to figure it out.”
“But what if I, I don’t know, what if I do something terrible?”
Trevor’s dark eyes were hard on her face. “You can join the club.”
“If you could choose, would you go back to Moros?” she asked suddenly.
Trevor sighed. “If I did, he’d probably dust me before I had a chance to explain.”
Moros had promised to do exactly that, actually, but that was before it had become clear Trevor hadn’t gone rogue—he’d been commandeered, used by Moros’s enemies. “I don’t think he would.”
“He was a decent boss,” Trevor said. “Now that my head has cleared, I can see that. And I’ll keep seeing it until Eris and Nemesis work on me again. But then?” His fingers flared, as if he were letting his understanding of Moros blow away in the wind.
She stared at his fingers, wondering if, with enough torture, her own feelings for Moros would be so fleeting, so easy to lose her grasp on. “We could help each other,” she said in a low voice.
“I told you—I can’t help you escape,” he said, annoyance creeping into his voice.
“But what if I could help
you
?”
He went still, and she took his silence for interest. It was a dangerous gamble—he could easily be a spy for Eris and her siblings, but what did Aislin have to lose? If she did nothing, she was doomed anyway. “Do you know where your soul is being kept?”
Trevor’s gaze darted to the tent and then back to her in a sheer instant. “Why?”
Aislin forced herself not to look at the tent, but eagerness made her heart beat faster. “I bet they’ve forbidden you from taking it back.”
“Yep.”
“But if I could get a hold of it?”
He blinked at her, looking stunned. “You serious?”
“Did they tell you to stop me from going into that tent?”
He nodded.
“Did they tell you not to
carry
me into the tent?”
His eyebrows shot up. “But they’ll destroy me if they catch me.”
Aislin paused. “Then I suppose it’s your choice.” And for a man who’d had his soul taken, who hadn’t been truly free for as long as Aislin had been alive, she knew he had to be the one to make it.
Trevor stared at her for a long, breathless moment, his mouth set. Then he stood up abruptly, leaving Aislin sitting on the rock, wondering if she was strong enough to stand. She was bracing her palms on the stone when Trevor reached down and pulled her up, letting her lean against his powerful body. He was strikingly tall—the top of her head only made it to his shoulder—but he leaned closer as they took their first step. “Thank you,” he murmured.
“For what?” The perky voice sent a hard shiver right down Aislin’s spine. Eris had appeared right in front of them, her hands on her waist, her skirt fluttering.
Trevor stiffened. “For giving me a choice.”
He couldn’t lie to his master. She knew that about Moros’s Kere. They had to tell him the truth. “It was—” Aislin began, desperate to protect Trevor. “I gave him the choice—either he could take me someplace private where I could relieve myself, or I was going to empty my bladder right here.”
Eris snorted. “Humans.” She waved toward a far corner of the cavern. “Take her over there, but then bring her back. Apate is right behind me, and Nemesis should be here any minute, and we’ve got a really fun evening planned.”
Trevor’s fingers spread along Aislin’s ribs, almost as if he wished he could shield her from what was coming. “I’ll be right back, then.”
He transported Aislin across the cavern to the place Eris had pointed, and stood with his back to her as she pretended to relieve herself. Her body was empty, though—she hadn’t had anything to eat or drink in at least a day, she realized. “Perhaps I’m going to die of dehydration,” she whispered, and to her surprise, Trevor let out a low chuckle.
She took as long as she could, but eventually he said, “I have to take you now. They’ll know something’s up if I don’t.”
Dread stabbed through her.
I won’t let them win. I won’t let them make me forget who I am. I won’t—
Trevor turned around and his eyes met hers. “It has to be now. I’m sorry.”
She stood up. “Okay.” She closed her eyes as he took her hand, and when she opened them, she was inside the silk walls of the tent. There were pillows everywhere, along with a tray of olives and fruit and a pitcher of wine. Aislin’s eyes streaked around the space, looking for a hint of where Trevor’s soul might be hidden.
Eris leaned in front of her. “Nice, huh? I did the decorating myself.”