In the Veins of the Drowning(32)
There, in a leadlight window, was a depiction of a Siren hovering over a rocky shore and a vine-covered ship. There was nothing ominous in her portrayal. Rather, she looked like she had been… adored. Her black wings were wide. Rays of yellow glass shone down on her from above. In comparison, the ship below her looked small, overshadowed.
I stared, curiosity swirling, for a long moment before I pounded on the door. “Let me out.”
A shape rippled through the stained glass. The lock clicked. The door swung open, and there stood Lachlan. He seemed even taller now than before. A dark stubble had grown over his jaw. I stared up into his scrutinizing eyes, yellow-green shot through with brown, and said, “Ugh.”
Lachlan arched a brow. “Not happy to see you either, but let’s make the best of it, shall we?”
“Where’s the king?”
“Working.”
I looked over my shoulder at the paper-cluttered desk on the wall opposite the wide bed. Then at the long polished table that held two trays of food—the breakfast and lunch I’d slept through. “Why isn’t he working in here?”
He lifted a shoulder. “Theo likes his privacy.”
“Please,” I begged, “I need this sickness to stop. Please, go get him.”
Lachlan gave me a flat, unbending sort of assessment, and I knew he wouldn’t.
“I hope he’s vomiting all over his paperwork,” I seethed. “All right. Agatha, then. Where is she?”
Lachlan’s entire countenance changed. His shoulders fell and a long exhale pushed through his lips. “She’s locked herself in her cabin.”
I narrowed my eyes. “What did you do to her?”
“You sure it wasn’t you?” He counted my sins on his fingers. “What with your murdering, and your almost getting yourself killed, and your king-stealing?”
We glared at each other for a beat.
“Fine.” I crossed my arms staunchly over my chest. “I’ll concede that I’ve very likely helped send her into a fit, but only if you tell me what the hell is going on with the two of you.”
“There’s nothing going on.”
“Liar,” I said, just as my stomach muscles clenched. I ran toward the basin and retched and retched until my ribs ached so badly, I moaned. As I wiped my mouth with a cloth, I heard the door close and lock.
Lachlan strode toward the settee and collapsed onto its cushions, propping up his feet. “I’m not lying. There is nothing going on between us, however much I would like there to be.”
“But last night the two of you had obviously been kissing at the very least.”
“That we had.” He massaged his brow like it hurt. “She also yelled at me for writing so often, even though she always wrote back. Apparently, I have not let her ‘move on’ and we are ‘no longer compatible,’ but we felt pretty damn compatible last night, so I don’t know what I’m supposed to fucking do with that.”
“I think we’re tied,” I said, before I dry-heaved once more into my fist.
He snorted, then gave me a pitying look. “You’re almost a full day into your bond now. One more day to go.”
“I don’t consider myself a petty woman.” I made for the shelf where the box of little glass vials sat and searched for some tonic that might give me relief. “But I hope that the king is curled up in a ball right now, spectacularly miserable.”
“Liar,” Lachlan quipped. “I know for a fact that you’re both riddled with worry for each other and that the only reason he hasn’t run back in here is because the contracts he’s poring over are eating away at him with sharper teeth than yours.”
The glass clinked as I lifted one after the other to read the labels. “Contracts! Not war plans, or something else confidential? Why in the bloody Gods wouldn’t he look through them in here, then?”
“They’re marriage contracts.”
A slash of envy lit my body green. My hand tightened around a vial. “Why would I care about his marriage contracts?”
Lachlan smirked. “Don’t you?”
Silence stretched for a long moment before I relented. “Yes. I care,” I admitted in an agitated rush. “Though I can’t understand why.”
“It’s the blood bond.” He lifted his wistful gaze to the ceiling. “It makes you believe you are the person best suited to care for him. To see that he isn’t harmed. The thought of him marrying another person should drive you mad.”
“Why on earth would anyone want a blood bond?” My stomach cramped again with sick, and I pressed a hand to my sternum, praying it would settle. “I can’t think of a more insufferable arrangement. It’s like I’m being thwacked with a stick over and over and over… until I throw up.”
Lachlan rose and strode to a little cabinet hidden in the gilded wall. He took out a crystal decanter and filled a glass with a healthy pour of honey-colored spirits. “Well, it’s very nice when you love the person. Or can at least stand to be in the same room as them.” His eyes twinkled—not with nostalgia, but with mischief. It was both charming and infuriating and I could see how Agatha might be at war with herself over someone like him. He held his glass up as if in a toast. “But alas, that’s not the case for you two.”