“That hurt my feelings.”
“Uh-huh.” I pushed from the chair and rose. “I learned something yesterday.”
He tossed the dagger again. “That you’re capable of whoring yourself out to get your way?”
My eyes narrowed, and I didn’t think about what I was doing. I just did it as a ripple of hot anger swept through me. The embers throbbed as my gaze flipped to the dagger rising into the air. I pictured it speeding downward, faster than gravity would take it, straight for his eye.
And what I saw became my will.
The dagger had just flipped above Callum when a burst of energy left me. The blade jerked a foot to its side and then fell with the speed of an unleashed arrow.
“Fuck,” gasped Callum as he rolled. His knees hit the floor a heartbeat before the dagger slammed into the arm of the couch where his head had been resting.
He whipped toward me.
I smiled sweetly at him. “Careful there, Cal, you might hurt yourself.”
“Don’t call me that.” Glaring, he rose. “What did you realize?”
“I learned that I wasn’t in Cor Palace.”
“It took you that long to realize that?” He yanked the shadowstone dagger free.
“How was I supposed to know I wasn’t there? What I’ve seen of the grounds reminded me of the palace.” I watched him take a swig of his drink. “I know I’m still in Dalos.”
“If you didn’t know that, I would have grave concerns about your intelligence.”
I arched a brow. “Where am I, exactly?”
“You are at the Vita,” he said, sheathing the dagger to his hip. “It is a sanctuary built by His Majesty, replacing the existing Council Hall.”
The Council Hall in the Shadowlands was in Lethe, an amphitheater holding a second set of much larger thrones. If the Council Hall was the same as the one in the Shadowlands, then that meant…
“I’m in the City of the Gods?”
“Maybe I don’t need to worry that much about your intelligence,” he quipped.
My gaze flew to the narrow windows. I’d only seen the sparkling city from a distance.
“You seem troubled by the knowledge.”
Only because I had a feeling it would be harder to escape a whole damn city than one palace. “I didn’t think the city was in use.”
“And exactly why did you think that?” Placing his dagger on the low table, he sauntered to the cage. “Let me guess? Nyktos told you such?”
Actually, he hadn’t. He’d just told me that many had taken to calling it the City of the Dead. I just assumed that meant it was vacant and no longer in use. But before I could respond, the embers suddenly hummed in my chest. My attention shifted to the doors. A Primal was near.
The gown swayed around my feet as I took a step back from the bars. The doors opened no more than a few heartbeats later, proving that I had been right about the feeling.
Kolis entered, his crown in place, and he wasn’t alone.
A woman wearing a green silk gown followed him, her skin a medium shade of brown, her hair dark and chin-length.
“Your Majesty.” Callum bowed as they drew near.
Kolis nodded at the Revenant as the attention of the one who followed him fixed on me. The silvery glow of eather pulsed behind dark eyes. She was a goddess. Her gaze quickly darted away.
A nervous goddess.
Kolis glanced over the table of food. “Did you enjoy your supper?” he asked warmly.
“Yes,” I answered, softening my tone.
Callum’s head snapped in my direction, his eyes narrowing behind his painted mask.
“Good.” Kolis snapped his fingers, and the Chosen entered from the hall.
They approached the cage as Callum came forward to unlock the door. Clasping my hands together, I stepped back several feet, not wanting to incite any of them to hurt one of the Chosen.
“Leave the drinks,” Kolis instructed. “I believe we will be in need of them when we’re done.”
The Chosen neither nodded nor spoke as they carried out his command. Within a minute or two, they had left the chamber, and the doors were once more closed.
But the one to the cage remained open.
That sweet and stale scent increased as Kolis entered, followed by the goddess. “I would like to introduce you to someone. This is Ione. She serves in the Court of the Primal Keella,” he said, a bit of disdain tainting the Primal’s name.
I wasn’t surprised to hear that, as I didn’t expect Kolis to favor the Primal of Rebirth, who’d aided Eythos in hiding Sotoria’s soul. But what was one of her gods doing here?
Ione gave a curt bow as she folded one arm over the black rope at her waist. “Your Highness.”
“Come and sit,” Kolis said to me, gesturing to the divan.
Aware that those in the chamber watched, I went to the couch and sat on the edge.
“Ione is unique to the gods of the Thyia Plains,” Kolis said, speaking of Keella’s Court, while the goddess appeared to find something fascinating on the floor. “Not many are left that can do as she can.”
Warning bells started to ring. My gaze shot to Callum. The bastard was grinning now, and it dripped with…feral anticipation.
“What…” I swallowed. “What can she do?” I asked.
“See into your thoughts,” Kolis answered.
My heart began pounding. No, no, no. My muscles locked.
“She can see your truths and lies,” the false King continued. “See all that is needed.”
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
At once, the fa?ade of my blank canvas began to crack.
My gaze swiveled from the Primal to Ione as I rose from the divan. Good gods, how could I have forgotten about Taric and not think about there being another god like him? One who could see right into my mind—and my memories.
Foolishly, I hadn’t prepared for this, and there was no time to do so now.
Dread took root, dampening my palms as the reality of the situation hit me with the force of an out-of-control carriage. This was bad, really bad.
“It will not take very long,” Kolis explained, that fabricated smile plastered across his face. “Ione will be quick and efficient.”
Pressure clamped down on my chest. Not only was I mere moments from Kolis discovering way too quickly that I was manipulating him, I also clearly remembered how painful it had been when Taric flipped through my memories as casually as Callum had turned the pages of his book.
“Sit down,” Kolis instructed, “so we can be done with this.”
I didn’t move. Outside the cage, Callum’s smile grew even wider. That bastard knew what was about to happen. Whether it was just his distrust of me or something else, I had no idea, but he looked like he was about to witness all his dreams coming true.
The weight of the burgeoning fear was suffocating, threatening to crush me. My stomach twisted as the consequences of my lies being exposed loomed before me like a curse. I wouldn’t gain Ash’s freedom, and if Ione saw anything having to do with Sotoria’s soul and how I wasn’t truly her? I was as good as dead.
“Sit,” Kolis snapped, his patience already running thin.
I felt Sotoria then, near my thundering heart. I felt her fear and anger, and it joined mine, forming a combustible mix. The embers started to thrum.