Archer’s chest was heaving, his clothes were soaked, his hair was a mess across his face—yet in that moment, Evangeline knew he would carry her through more than just freezing waters. He would pull her through fire if he had to, haul her from the clutches of war, from falling cities and breaking worlds.
Evangeline’s mind spun as the memory ended. Days ago, when she’d glimpsed the last part of this memory, she’d thought the person who’d been carrying her was Apollo.
But she had been wrong. It had been Archer.
The day at the well had not been the first time he’d met her. She also doubted this new memory was of their first encounter. He’d held her with too much intensity.
As Evangeline’s senses returned to the present, the first thing she noticed was that Archer had crossed the bedroom. He was standing at the door and he wasn’t looking at her the same way he had in the memory, as if he’d walk through fire to save her. The hand she’d been touching was fisted at his side and he looked at her as if he wanted nothing more than to get away.
And she wanted nothing more than for him to stay.
She had so many questions, and not just about this new memory. She thought about how she’d reacted when Madame Voss had mentioned The Ballad of the Archer and the Fox. She’d thought the story had triggered her, but now she knew it was just the name. Archer.
It was him.
“I’ll make sure the guards clean this up and keep it quiet. But in case anyone asks, tell them that you killed the man who attacked you.”
Archer turned to go.
“Wait!” Evangeline called. “Don’t leave!”
He didn’t stop.
He was already out of the room.
But this time she chased after him.
Chapter 19
Apollo
Apollo’s boots were going to be ruined. There was so much blood. Blood stained the carpets, the walls, and now his boots. Not that he was actually mad about the boots. Apollo could easily get more boots—he didn’t care about his footwear, not really. What truly bothered him was that his wife had been carrying around a dagger that had once belonged to Jacks.
Apollo would have loved to have gone out and hunted the bastard that very night, but he had to deal with this mess instead.
“You said there was one survivor?” he asked.
“Yes, Your Highness,” replied the guard assigned to this particular scene.
“I’d like to speak with him privately.” Apollo marched out into the hall, stepping in more blood as he moved. He’d seen death before, but it had never been this grisly.
Down the hall, he heard another guard heaving into a pot.
Apollo was thankful he hadn’t had the time to eat before arriving, or he would have done the same.
Upstairs the mood was grim, but at least the air no longer held the coppery scent of blood.
It smelled of beeswax candles. Their soft light cast a glow over the flowery paper covering the walls. There were also a number of framed watercolor paintings and pencil sketches. Someone in the family must have been an artist, for none of the paintings were that good at first. But as he ventured farther down the hall, the art grew quite a bit better. Some of the sketches appeared to be faithful renderings of the family members who now lay strewn dead across the floor downstairs.
Finally the guard stopped in front of the door that must have led to the massacre’s sole survivor.
“I’ll enter alone,” said Apollo.
“But, Your Highness—”
“That’s an order. This victim has been through enough torment tonight. I don’t want him to feel as if he’s being interrogated.”
The guard dutifully stepped aside.
Apollo entered the dim room and shut the door behind him.
A boy who looked to be about fourteen sat curled up on a large sleigh bed, holding his knees as he rocked back and forth. He was skinny, most likely going through a growth phase rather than malnourished.
The Fortunas were one of the Great Houses. Even if they lost half their fortune, they would always have more than enough to eat.
That’s why Apollo had been called here tonight. It wasn’t often most of the members of a Great House were massacred in a single night. Word of what had happened here would get out, and when it did, the Crown needed to be in control of what was said.
This sort of news could either cast a further pallor on Apollo’s reign or make it stronger.
“Hello there,” Apollo said as he sat gingerly on the edge of the bed.
The boy curled tighter into himself.
“I’m not here to hurt you.”
“Doesn’t matter,” said the boy, voice cracking. “Nothing could hurt more than this.”
“No,” Apollo agreed. “I’ve never seen anything so horrific, which is why I’m here. I want to make sure whoever committed this atrocity is caught so that it can never happen again.”
“You can’t catch him,” the boy murmured, rocking back and forth. “He’s not human.”
“Why do you say that?”
The boy finally looked up. The terror on his face was so raw he looked like a skeleton with skin painted on. “He moved so fast. I was up here when I heard the first scream. It was my sister. She’s always so dramatic. I ignored it at first. Then there was another and another.”
The boy brought both hands to the sides of his head and covered his ears as if he were still hearing the wails.
“I knew it was bad—evil. I ran downstairs, but as soon as I saw all the blood, I hid in the closet.”
“Did you see who did this before you hid?”
The boy nodded shakily. “He looked feral.”
“Did he look like Lord Jacks?”
“No.”
“Are you certain?” Apollo asked.
He didn’t actually believe it was Lord Jacks. Only one type of creature could cause this sort of devastation. But he wanted the boy to say it was Jacks. It would make everything so much easier.
“It wasn’t him. I would have recognized him. Lord Jacks was friends with my grandmother before she passed. This man—I don’t think he was even a man . . .”
The boy brought the palms of his hands to his eyes and quietly cried.
Apollo, never having been comfortable with crying, pushed up from the bed and took a quick survey of the room. There was a desk near the window with an easel to the side of it. It seemed this boy was the family artist. Propped against the easel was a half-finished watercolor that looked rather nice. On the desk there were even more drawings and sketches and notebooks. He seemed to favor animals and people. Although there was one drawing of an apple.
Apollo hated apples.
Just the sight of the fruit brought his anger back to the surface. He looked from the outline of apple to the blood on his boots to the boy still crying on the bed.
There was nothing he could do for the boy or about the blood. But all the artwork and the apple made Apollo realize there was something he could do about Jacks.
“You’re quite talented,” Apollo told the boy. “Some of this art is good.”
“Thank you.” The boy sniffed.
“Do you think you could draw something for me?” Apollo picked up a notebook and a pencil, then he handed the items to the boy.
“You want me to draw you something now?”