Slowly, I turned around, and my gaze crawled up thick, glistening bark and across the bare limbs of a massive tree. Tiny golden buds formed all over and blossomed, thousands unfurling to reveal blood-red leaves.
A Blood Forest tree stood, rooted where my blood had first fallen.
Movement snagged my gaze. My head jerked to the left, and whatever breath I managed to get into my lungs fled.
They were sleek shadows prowling up the wide steps, hesitating there, surveying the bodies on the stone floor.
Heads turned to one another. Pairs of keen, frosted eyes lifted to where I stood before the blood tree, breathing heavily. I tensed.
Behind them, larger ones pressed forward. Two. Three. Four. So many more. There were dozens. Maybe even a hundred. Perhaps more. Each one greater than the one before them, their fur glossy in the sunlight as the clouds overhead scattered, their eyes an incandescent blue I’d never seen before. Their ears perked and nostrils twitched as they scented the air—the blood.
As they scented me.
I recognized the shock of Delano’s white fur and then my heart twisted as I saw Kieran, his unnaturally bright eyes fixed on me, on the silvery light that still glowed around me.
Claws clicked on stone as they came forward, stepping over the fallen, heads down low, slowly moving around me, circling me, making room…
Good gods.
The color of steel, the wolven was double the size of any I’d seen, nearly as tall as me. Maybe even taller, and it stalked forward, paws the size of two of my hands.
It was Jasper. During the battle at Spessa’s End, I hadn’t realized how large he was.
The silver wolven stopped in front of me, meeting my wide-eyed stare with those unnerving, glowing eyes, and I knew if I ran or reached for the fallen dagger to protect myself, I wouldn’t make it an inch.
A shivery sense of awareness drew my gaze from Jasper, from the wolven, and beyond the statue of Nyktos.
Casteel came up the steps, his dark hair wet and windblown as if he’d run faster than the wind could travel. Faint traces of red streaked his face as he stalked forward, features stark and chin dipped low.
It struck me then, sort of dumbly, that Casteel looked like some kind of god standing there. In black, with his swords strapped to his sides, and the near brutal hardness that had settled into the striking planes and angles of his features, he reminded me of the god Theon.
Jasper turned to the Prince. The other wolven stopped circling me. Casteel’s chest rose and fell heavily as he stepped around a body, stopping only when Jasper let out a low rumble of warning.
He drew up short, taking in me, the wolven, the bodies, and the lit torches. His eyes widened a fraction as something akin to understanding flickered across his face.
“My gods,” he uttered. Golden eyes met and held mine as Casteel crossed his arms, withdrawing his swords.
Air lodged in my throat as pressure clamped down on my chest, squeezing my heart.
Casteel hadn’t arrived alone.
Others were climbing the steps. Naill. Emil. Alastir. Familiar faces. Nameless ones. My senses flickered to life in me, sensing…sensing fear and awe and so many different emotions that I was afraid it would all overwhelm me again, and I would…
I didn’t even know what I’d done.
Growls rumbled from the other wolven as two more crested the top of the stairs, followed by several dressed as the ones sprawled across the ground, their golden swords drawn. I should be concerned by them, but it was the two who had entered before them that captured my attention.
A tall, blond man, broad of shoulder and dressed in a white tunic stained from the blood rain, whose cut jaw, straight nose, and high cheekbones were painfully familiar. He drew up short, his hand going to the sword at his side.
“Impossible,” breathed the woman who stood beside him, her hair a glossy onyx tucked back in a loose knot at the nape of her neck. The shape of her eyes and her mouth was also familiar, and she was beautiful, absolutely as breathtaking as the disbelief that poured from her.
Even if it weren’t for the similarities, the crowns of twisted, bleached bone would’ve told me who they were.
Queen Eloana’s hand pressed to the bodice of her simple, sleeveless lavender gown—a gown stained by the rain that had fallen. “Hawke…”
The silvery glow around me pulled back and faded, seeping into my skin as my entire body shuddered.
“What have you done?” she asked, her eyes as vibrant as her son’s as she stepped forward. “What have you brought back?”
“It’s not too late,” Alastir spoke, startling me. “It’s not, Eloana—”