Tower of Dawn
Page 158
A kernel of hope.
The most dangerous of all weapons against Erawan, against the Valg’s ancient darkness.
What he had been brought here to retrieve for his homeland, his people. What he had been brought here to protect. More precious than soldiers, than any weapon. Their only shot at salvation.
Hope.
“Why not kill me, then,” Yrene demanded. “Why not just kill me?”
Chaol hadn’t dared ask or think the question.
Duva rested her dagger upon her belly again. “Because you are so much more useful to Erawan alive, Yrene Towers.”
Yrene was shaking. In her bones, she was trembling.
“I am no one,” Yrene breathed.
That blade—that blade sat atop that womb. And Hafiza remained still and watchful, ever calm, beside Duva.
“Are you?” the princess crooned. “Two years is an unnaturally swift pace to climb so high in the Torre. Is it not, Healer?”
Yrene wanted to vomit as the demon inside Duva looked upon Hafiza.
Hafiza met her stare unflinchingly.
Duva laughed quietly. “She knew. She said as much to me when I spirited her out of her room earlier. That I was coming for you. Silba’s Heir.”
Yrene’s hand slid to her locket. The note within.
The world needs more healers.
Had it been Silba herself who had come that night in Innish, who had sent her here, with a message she would later understand?
The world needed more healers—to fight Erawan.
“That was why Erawan sent me,” Duva drawled. “To be his spy. To see if a healer with those gifts—the gifts—might indeed emerge from the Torre. And to keep you from learning too much.” A little shrug. “Of course, killing that brat-princess and the other healer were … mistakes, but I’m sure His Dark Majesty will forgive me for it when I return with you in tow.”
Roaring filled her head, so loud Yrene could barely hear herself as she snapped, “If you mean to bring me to him, why kill the healer you mistook for me? And why not kill every healer in this city and spare yourselves the trouble?”
Duva snorted, waving that dagger. “Because that would raise too many questions. Why was Erawan targeting your kind? Certain key players might have started pondering. So the Torre was to be left alone—in ignorance. Dwelling here, removed from the north, never leaving these shores. Until it’s time for my liege to deal with this empire.” A smile that made Yrene’s blood ice over. “As for that healer … It had nothing to do with how she resembled you. She was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Well, the right time for me, since I was frightfully hungry and I couldn’t exactly feed without being noticed. But to drum up some fear in you, to make you realize the danger and stop working on that Adarlanian fool, stop prying too far into such ancient matters. But you did not listen, did you?”
Yrene’s hands curled into claws at her sides.
Duva went on, “Too bad, Yrene Towers. Too bad. For every day you worked on him, healed him, it became clear that you, indeed, were the one. The one my Dark King covets. And after Duva’s own palace spies told her that you had healed him fully, once he was walking again and you proved beyond doubt that you were the one I’d been sent to find …” She sneered at Hafiza, and Yrene wanted to rip that expression right off her face. “I knew outright attack would be complicated. But luring you down here … Too easy. I’m rather disappointed. So,” she declared, flipping the knife in her hand, “you will be coming with me, Yrene Towers. To Morath.”
Chaol stepped in front of Yrene. “You are forgetting one thing.”
Duva lifted a groomed eyebrow. “Oh?”
“You have not won yet.”
Go, Yrene wanted to tell him. Go.
For that was dark power starting to curl around Duva’s fingers, around the hilt of her dagger.
“What’s amusing, Lord Westfall,” Duva said, peering down at them from atop the dais, “is that you think you can buy yourself time until the guards come. But by then, you will be dead, and no one would dare question my word when I tell them you tried to kill us down here. To take this gold back to your poor little kingdom after you wasted your own upon ordering those weapons from my father’s vizier. Why, you could buy yourself a thousand armies with this.”
Yrene hissed, “You still have us to contend with.”
“I suppose.” Duva pulled something from her pocket. Another ring, crafted from stone so dark it swallowed the light. No doubt sent directly from Morath. “But once you put this on … you’ll do whatever I say.”
“And why should I ever—”
Duva rested the knife against Hafiza’s throat. “That’s why.”
Yrene looked to Chaol, but he was sizing up the room, the stairs and exits.
The dark power twining around Duva’s fingers.
“So,” Duva said, taking one step down the dais. “Let’s begin.”
She made it a second step before it happened.
Chaol did not move. But Hafiza did.
She hurled her body, chair and all, the entire weight of that golden throne, down the stairs.
Right atop Duva.
Yrene screamed, running for them, Chaol launching into motion.
Hafiza and the baby, the baby and Hafiza—
Crone and princess tumbled down those steep stairs, wood snapping. Wood, not metal. The throne had been painted, and now it shattered as they rolled, Duva shrieking and Hafiza so silent, even as her gag came free—
They hit the stone floor with a crack that Yrene felt in her heart.
Chaol was instantly there, not going for Duva, sprawled on the ground, but for Hafiza, limp and unmoving. He hauled her back, splinters and ropes clinging to her, her mouth gaping—
Eyes cracking open—
Yrene sobbed, grabbing Hafiza by the other arm and helping him heave her out of the way, toward a towering statue of a Fae soldier.
Just as Duva rose up on her elbows, hair loose around her face, and seethed, “You rotting pile of shit—”
Chaol shot upright, sword angled before them while Yrene fumbled for her magic to heal the ancient, frail body.
The old woman managed to raise her arm long enough to grip Yrene’s wrist. Go, she seemed to say.
Duva climbed to her feet, long splinters embedded in her neck, blood dripping from her mouth. Black blood.
Chaol gave Yrene all of one look over his shoulder. Run.
The most dangerous of all weapons against Erawan, against the Valg’s ancient darkness.
What he had been brought here to retrieve for his homeland, his people. What he had been brought here to protect. More precious than soldiers, than any weapon. Their only shot at salvation.
Hope.
“Why not kill me, then,” Yrene demanded. “Why not just kill me?”
Chaol hadn’t dared ask or think the question.
Duva rested her dagger upon her belly again. “Because you are so much more useful to Erawan alive, Yrene Towers.”
Yrene was shaking. In her bones, she was trembling.
“I am no one,” Yrene breathed.
That blade—that blade sat atop that womb. And Hafiza remained still and watchful, ever calm, beside Duva.
“Are you?” the princess crooned. “Two years is an unnaturally swift pace to climb so high in the Torre. Is it not, Healer?”
Yrene wanted to vomit as the demon inside Duva looked upon Hafiza.
Hafiza met her stare unflinchingly.
Duva laughed quietly. “She knew. She said as much to me when I spirited her out of her room earlier. That I was coming for you. Silba’s Heir.”
Yrene’s hand slid to her locket. The note within.
The world needs more healers.
Had it been Silba herself who had come that night in Innish, who had sent her here, with a message she would later understand?
The world needed more healers—to fight Erawan.
“That was why Erawan sent me,” Duva drawled. “To be his spy. To see if a healer with those gifts—the gifts—might indeed emerge from the Torre. And to keep you from learning too much.” A little shrug. “Of course, killing that brat-princess and the other healer were … mistakes, but I’m sure His Dark Majesty will forgive me for it when I return with you in tow.”
Roaring filled her head, so loud Yrene could barely hear herself as she snapped, “If you mean to bring me to him, why kill the healer you mistook for me? And why not kill every healer in this city and spare yourselves the trouble?”
Duva snorted, waving that dagger. “Because that would raise too many questions. Why was Erawan targeting your kind? Certain key players might have started pondering. So the Torre was to be left alone—in ignorance. Dwelling here, removed from the north, never leaving these shores. Until it’s time for my liege to deal with this empire.” A smile that made Yrene’s blood ice over. “As for that healer … It had nothing to do with how she resembled you. She was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Well, the right time for me, since I was frightfully hungry and I couldn’t exactly feed without being noticed. But to drum up some fear in you, to make you realize the danger and stop working on that Adarlanian fool, stop prying too far into such ancient matters. But you did not listen, did you?”
Yrene’s hands curled into claws at her sides.
Duva went on, “Too bad, Yrene Towers. Too bad. For every day you worked on him, healed him, it became clear that you, indeed, were the one. The one my Dark King covets. And after Duva’s own palace spies told her that you had healed him fully, once he was walking again and you proved beyond doubt that you were the one I’d been sent to find …” She sneered at Hafiza, and Yrene wanted to rip that expression right off her face. “I knew outright attack would be complicated. But luring you down here … Too easy. I’m rather disappointed. So,” she declared, flipping the knife in her hand, “you will be coming with me, Yrene Towers. To Morath.”
Chaol stepped in front of Yrene. “You are forgetting one thing.”
Duva lifted a groomed eyebrow. “Oh?”
“You have not won yet.”
Go, Yrene wanted to tell him. Go.
For that was dark power starting to curl around Duva’s fingers, around the hilt of her dagger.
“What’s amusing, Lord Westfall,” Duva said, peering down at them from atop the dais, “is that you think you can buy yourself time until the guards come. But by then, you will be dead, and no one would dare question my word when I tell them you tried to kill us down here. To take this gold back to your poor little kingdom after you wasted your own upon ordering those weapons from my father’s vizier. Why, you could buy yourself a thousand armies with this.”
Yrene hissed, “You still have us to contend with.”
“I suppose.” Duva pulled something from her pocket. Another ring, crafted from stone so dark it swallowed the light. No doubt sent directly from Morath. “But once you put this on … you’ll do whatever I say.”
“And why should I ever—”
Duva rested the knife against Hafiza’s throat. “That’s why.”
Yrene looked to Chaol, but he was sizing up the room, the stairs and exits.
The dark power twining around Duva’s fingers.
“So,” Duva said, taking one step down the dais. “Let’s begin.”
She made it a second step before it happened.
Chaol did not move. But Hafiza did.
She hurled her body, chair and all, the entire weight of that golden throne, down the stairs.
Right atop Duva.
Yrene screamed, running for them, Chaol launching into motion.
Hafiza and the baby, the baby and Hafiza—
Crone and princess tumbled down those steep stairs, wood snapping. Wood, not metal. The throne had been painted, and now it shattered as they rolled, Duva shrieking and Hafiza so silent, even as her gag came free—
They hit the stone floor with a crack that Yrene felt in her heart.
Chaol was instantly there, not going for Duva, sprawled on the ground, but for Hafiza, limp and unmoving. He hauled her back, splinters and ropes clinging to her, her mouth gaping—
Eyes cracking open—
Yrene sobbed, grabbing Hafiza by the other arm and helping him heave her out of the way, toward a towering statue of a Fae soldier.
Just as Duva rose up on her elbows, hair loose around her face, and seethed, “You rotting pile of shit—”
Chaol shot upright, sword angled before them while Yrene fumbled for her magic to heal the ancient, frail body.
The old woman managed to raise her arm long enough to grip Yrene’s wrist. Go, she seemed to say.
Duva climbed to her feet, long splinters embedded in her neck, blood dripping from her mouth. Black blood.
Chaol gave Yrene all of one look over his shoulder. Run.