The River Queen’s daughter bit her bottom lip, hesitating. But it was Captain Tharion Ketos who drawled to Sandriel, “I’d say that when your war machines rip up our oyster beds and kelp forests, it’s not shortsighted to say that it will destroy our fishing industry.”
Sandriel’s eyes flashed. But she said sweetly, “You will be compensated.”
Tharion didn’t back down. “It is not just about the money. It is about the care of this planet.”
“War requires sacrifice.”
Tharion crossed his arms, muscles rippling beneath his black long-sleeved T-shirt. After the initial parade and that first day of endless meetings, most of them had donned far less formal wear for the rest of the talks. “I know the costs of war, Governor.”
Bold male, to say that, to look Sandriel dead in the eye.
Queen Hypaxia said, her voice soft but unflinching, “Tharion’s concern has merit. And precedent.” Ruhn straightened as all eyes slid toward the witch-queen. She, too, did not back down from the storms in Sandriel’s eyes. “Along the eastern borders of the Rhagan Sea, the coral and kelp beds that were destroyed in the Sorvakkian Wars two thousand years ago have still not returned. The mer who farmed them were compensated, as you claim. But only for a few seasons.” Utter silence in the meeting room. “Will you pay, Governor, for a thousand seasons? Two thousand seasons? What of the creatures who make their homes in places you propose to destroy? How shall you pay them?”
“They are Lowers. Lower than the Lowers,” Sandriel said coldly, unmoved.
“They are children of Midgard. Children of Cthona,” the witch-queen said.
Sandriel smiled, all teeth. “Spare me your bleeding-heart nonsense.”
Hypaxia didn’t smile back. She just held Sandriel’s stare. No challenge in it, but frank assessment.
To Ruhn’s eternal shock, it was Sandriel who looked away first, rolling her eyes and shuffling her papers. Even his father blinked at it. And assessed the young queen with a narrowed gaze. No doubt wondering how a twenty-six-year-old witch had the nerve. Or what Hypaxia might have on Sandriel to make an Archangel yield to her.
Wondering if the witch-queen would indeed be a good bride for Ruhn—or a thorn in his side.
Across the table, Jesiba Roga smiled slightly at Hypaxia. Her first acknowledgment of the young witch.
“The canal,” Sandriel said tightly, setting down her papers, “we shall discuss later. The supply lines …” The Archangel launched into another speech about her plans to streamline the war.
Hypaxia went back to the papers before her. But her eyes lifted to the second ring of tables.
To Tharion.
The mer male gave her a slight, secret smile—gratitude and acknowledgment.
The witch-queen nodded back, barely a dip of her chin.
The mer male just casually lifted his paper, flashing what looked like about twenty rows of markings—counting something.
Hypaxia’s eyes widened, bright with reproach and disbelief, and Tharion lowered the paper before anyone else noticed. Added another slash to it.
A flush crept over the witch-queen’s cheeks.
His father, however, began speaking, so Ruhn ignored their antics and squared his shoulders, trying his best to look like he was paying attention. Like he cared.
None of it would matter, in the end. Sandriel and Micah would get what they wanted.
And everything would remain the same.
Hunt was so bored he honestly thought his brain was going to bleed out his ears.
But he tried to savor these last days of calm and relative comfort, even with Pollux monitoring everything from across the room. Waiting until he could stop appearing civilized. Hunt knew Pollux was counting down the hours until he’d be unleashed upon him.
So every time the asshole smiled at him, Hunt grinned right back.
Hunt’s wings, at least, had healed. He’d been testing them as much as he could, stretching and flexing. If Sandriel allowed him to get airborne, he knew they’d carry him. Probably.
Standing against the wall, dissecting each word spoken, was its own form of torture, but Hunt listened. Paid attention, even when it seemed like so many others were fighting sleep.
He hoped the delegations who held out—the Fae, the mer, the witches—would last until the end of the Summit before remembering that control was an illusion and the Asteri could simply issue an edict regarding the new trade laws. Just as they had with the war update.
A few more days, that was all Hunt wanted. That’s what he told himself.
76
Bryce had camped out in the gallery library for the past three days, staying well after closing and returning at dawn. There was no point in spending much time at the apartment, since her fridge was empty and Syrinx was always with her. She figured she might as well be at the office until she stopped feeling like her home was just an empty shell.