“Next time,” Tamara said with a shit-eating grin, “more than half of us will have our dragons.”
“What if we don’t want to leave?” someone asked from the back, a skin-and-bones man in his late thirties, I’d guess.
His eyes had a sheen over them in his gaunt face. His lank black hair fell down over a pronounced forehead.
“Why wouldn’t you want to leave?” I asked.
“Because I’m in no hurry to rush to my death. Like the alpha said, it’s been tried. It failed. My dragon has already been suppressed again. I don’t have access to healing. When they put me back in my cell the last time, they cracked my head and broke all my limbs in multiple places. I nearly bled out. I’d rather not suffer that again. They’ll kill me this time, I know they will.”
I stared at him incredulously.
He looks like he’s nearly dead now, my dragon murmured. What is he holding out for? Why does he wish to go slowly?
I glanced at the cells lining the squat room, the ceiling pushing down over us. I worried the cold, grimy stone with my toe and curled my nose at the thick, putrid smell that hung heavy in the air.
“This is living?” I asked, taking two steps and pulling the door to the nearest cell wide. I pointed inside while looking at him. “Being forced to rot in this cage? Being taken out and beaten so they can consume our pain and fear?” I glanced in, intending to point out the light covering of straw, nothing more than an illusion of bedding. Or the bucket in the corner for waste that usually overflowed before it was emptied.
But something caught my eye. Something I hadn’t seen when being dragged in and out of the dungeon.
Dotted here and there, creeping through the stone, somewhat wilting and laden with dead leaves, sprouted five everlass plants. They’d found a way to keep us company, even in hell.
Everlass, the very plant that had provided the people in the villages healing from the sickness the demons had unleashed on us.
Everlass, the plant that had brought Nyfain and me together.
Emotion welled up through me. Tears blurred my vision.
I choked out a laugh and walked into the cell immediately, avoiding the straw piled up on one side, and bent to the first plant, immediately pruning.
“What is she doing?” a man asked.
“What do you have in there?” a woman replied, obviously speaking to the owner of the cell.
“Nothing. Same as you. Probably less,” the man said.
Tamara appeared outside the cell door, quickly followed by Vemar. Micah filled in behind them.
“She’s pruning the everlass,” Tamara said softly. “Like the queen used to do. And the lady’s maids. She knows how to work the plants.”
“Lotta good that’ll do us in here,” someone murmured.
“Where there is everlass, there is hope.” I stood when I was finished and walked to the next cell, finding four plants huddled in the shadows near the back. “Because where there is everlass, there is life.” Heart in my throat, I went from cell to cell. Finally, in one, I felt my chest tighten and my hope flower. “And sometimes”—I bent toward the crowded plant—“There is death.”
TEN
HADRIEL
“Oops.” I put up my hand even though my mare was walking steadily behind the master’s bad-tempered stallion. “Sir, you took the wrong trail.”
I stopped at the fork in the beaten-down path within the Royal Wood as the prince went right instead of heading left toward the castle.
“Sir…” I stared longingly in the direction we were supposed to go, then up through the straggly, twisted tree cover to glimpse the darkening sky. Now that I had access to my wolf again, I could see in the dark for the most part, but that was beside the point. I didn’t want to be stuck in this hellhole of a wood after dark. I definitely didn’t want to battle the horrible creatures that populated it.
In all honesty, I also wanted to be released from the master’s company. He wasn’t good for my bowels. The guy was much too intense.
“It’s rolling toward night, sir,” I called, getting farther and farther behind. “Shouldn’t we be getting— Damn it.”
I leaned forward to get my mare walking after him. It was possible I wouldn’t get in trouble for just leaving him and going back to the castle, but it was a risk I wasn’t willing to take.
“I’m sure you remember, sir,” I said as I caught up, “that last week was the lull in demon creature activity. Tonight will have demon creature activity. You need to get something to eat and a little rest before you face the threat.”