In the Veins of the Drowning(49)
It wasn’t long before my body began to ache. My mind, too, grew troubled. It filled with a maelstrom of worries and questions and thoughts, one circling the next, dragging me down and down. Not even the arresting beauty of Varya could soothe me.
Theodore rode ahead of me, our horses close. “Have you been to the Mage Seer before?” I finally asked.
He scrubbed a hand through his windblown hair. “Only once.” The words were clipped. Final. He didn’t want to talk, but the festering silence between us was eating me alive.
“And? Is it as awful as Agatha says?”
He adjusted in his saddle. Let the quiet stretch and stretch until I was certain he wouldn’t answer. Then, “Yes.”
Cold, choking dread overcame me. My fingers gripped the reins so tightly they locked up. I asked no more questions. I only watched his tense shoulders and cursed beneath my breath, hating that Agatha was always, always right. The thought that Agatha might also be right about us, that whatever simmered between Theodore and me might leave me permanently marred, was too dismal a thought. I wanted to be free of him entirely. And days spent with him like this, terror-riddled and unspeaking, would drive me mad.
“Let’s have it out, then, shall we?” I waited for his reaction. Finally, he glanced at me over his shoulder, a question in his hard gaze. “Let’s get it all out of our systems. Everything that’s got you in a piss-poor mood. Everything we hate about each other, every grievance, so that when our bond is severed, we’ll be properly purged of each other.”
Theodore let out a low whistle and rode for a few more paces. “That sounds like an awful idea.”
We’d crossed into a vineyard and a warm sea breeze rolled through the wide grape leaves. I spoke loud enough for him to hear me over their rustling. “You scared?”
That did it. He pulled in a deep breath, then slowed his horse until we were ambling side by side. He eyed me sidelong. “I’ll go first.”
I rolled my shoulders, readying myself for the blow.
“Your lack of responsibility astounds me,” he said. “I’ve struggled to understand how someone so entrancing—the daughter of such a stunning, powerful goddess—could have spent her life contentedly curled up in the mountains, like a lazy, overfed cat. Willing to marry that captain. No—you seemed eager to marry him.” Each word grew heavier and heavier with scathing anger. “Clinging to him, pressing your lips all over him when he’d done nothing to deserve you. What’s worse—I’m inexplicably envious of the dead bastard. He killed Sirens, and you would have him anyway, and it gnaws at me.” He took in a gulp of air, but it did nothing to quell him. “I struggle to understand why you wouldn’t want to hone your power, to use it to help. Why you wouldn’t be desperate to claim the lost seat of your mother’s queendom for yourself. You’re cowardly. And selfish. You gave your blood and prayed for the end of your own kind. You’re only concerned with the parts of the world that touch you. You lack mettle and foresight and yet…” He clamped his jaw to stop himself from saying more.
I tried to blow out my hurt and embarrassment, my shame, but my throat had grown too thick.
He dragged a hand over his brow. “I used to stare up at that statue of Ligea as a boy. Lit candles at her feet and asked for the kind of courage the stories and songs about her told. Then I saw you, her very image, and I—I wanted… It’s been a disappointment to learn that you are a beautiful shell of her.”
The horses clomped over the dirt road as I tried to steady myself. My tight chest only let through short, shallow breaths. It was a long moment before Theodore finally looked at me. I kept my eyes on the road ahead.
“My turn,” I said, when I was finally able to speak. “You’re a pompous ass. You’re so self-righteous that it’s made you callous and closed off. You lack empathy. For me. For anyone who wasn’t given choice and power and gold from their cradle, like you were. Your ridiculous sense of duty does not make you better than me. It makes you see in simple shapes, in black and white, and so it’s made you see only pieces of me. And I hate that even though you are sanctimonious, and stubborn, and have treated me unkindly, I desperately want you to see me as I truly am. To see that just because my courage does not look like yours, or Ligea’s, does not mean I lack it. You wish to control me, and you’re hardly better than Nemea for it.” My voice became wobbly, and I spoke in a rush. “I’ve heard you laugh once, and it was to scoff at me. I’ve only seen you smile genuinely at your dressmaker. For fuck’s sake, you think that simply thinking me beautiful might besmirch your hallowed name. And Gods forbid the paeans that will no doubt be written about you might mention you being virile. No, the great God-king Theodore was unplagued by evil desire. He made beautiful women wear sacks—”
“All right.” Theodore’s voice was desolate.
“No, I’m not done. You could use a Godsdamned fuck. A good, long one. Hopefully your new wife will enjoy your chaste kisses and rigid embraces and the fireworks you shoot off for her in the bay, because that’s the most warmth she’ll get.”
My anger was vivid and beating and I wanted him to know it, but I’d spewed a half truth. I’d felt his warmth before, many times. Even now, the memory of his strong hand against the plane of my stomach filled me with a heavy, fiery ache.