“Very well then. I suppose today is not lost after all. Though I do not believe you received orders to assassinate the High Prince of Spring,” Sira says, walking over to her son. He’s taller than her, but somehow, she’s able to look down on him.
“Thought I saw an opportunity,” Caspian says.
Lie after lie. He’s taking responsibility for everything his sister did.
“Still,” Sira taps a pointed fingernail on the side of her cheek, “there are easier ways to kill the High Prince of Spring.”
All the princes roar at once, but Ezryn’s voice cuts over them all. “Then kill me and be done with it,” he growls. “Make the High Princes bear witness to my death and your power if that is your will. But let them live. And know that with my death, you will face the full wrath of Spring and my brother’s vengeance.”
My world narrows to a frantic, singular purpose as Sira looks him up and down. “Don’t you dare touch him!” I snarl.
She ignores me, instead gliding over to Ezryn and placing a finger under his helm, lifting it up so he stares at her face. “How very gallant.”
Keldarion’s voice is more roar than words. “Harming him will bring all the forces of the Enchanted Vale down on the Below, Sira.”
Her red lips curve into a sinister smile, and she turns away from Ezryn to face Keldarion. “What forces, High Prince of Winter? Your people who have not had the strength of a leader in an age? Autumn? Those trembling folks were hardly capable of winning one battle, let alone an entire war. Or do you speak of Summer? Nothing more than a child’s dollhouse. No. I do not think I will worry too much.”
Shadows spill from Sira’s fingertips, dripping to form two sinister serpents.
“Spring will never bow to you,” Ezryn yells, thrashing against his binds.
Keldarion howls, the tiniest glint of frost gleaming on the edges of the thorns. But his magic won’t reach here. The shadow serpents lunge from the ground, jaws unhinging to reveal inky black incisors.
“Ezryn!” I scream, and the thorns binding me fall away like waves rolling off sand. I stretch out my hand. Thorns from my bracelet strike at the shadow serpents. As they hit, the two snakes disappear into a cloud of smoke.
Sira turns to me, eyes flashing.
While holding her gaze, I try to reach for the thorns chaining my princes. If I could just connect with all of them, then we could escape.
“So, the rumors are true,” Sira snarls. “How is this possible?”
Kel, Farron. I spread the magic further, reaching to connect with the thorns binding Ezryn and Dayton. A smile spreads over my lips. “I—”
“I made a bargain with her.” Caspian steps in front of me.
Sira’s expression contorts into one of fury.
There’s a hard crack as she slaps her son across the face. “Fix this.”
Caspian inhales a rattly breath. Shadows leach from Sira’s fingers, wrapping over Caspian’s thorns until they all shrivel and die. I feel the loss of the connection, like someone cut off my arm.
Then, like his mother, shadows creep from Caspian. “No,” I gasp. The gloom forms shackles around the princes’ ankles and wrists. Two inky black ropes shoot out and wrap around my arms, tethering me to the ground.
And Caspian’s eyes are entirely void.
“Let me go!” I cry out, pulling at them, but they don’t give. I have no connection to these like I did the thorns.
Caspian shrugs, dusting his shoulders, and the last of the shadows fall away from him like clouds, eyes returning to that dark purple.
Twice today I’ve witnessed Caspian wield magic I didn’t know he possessed. I had noticed this gloom around his thorns before, but always thought they were connected. No, these shadows he inherited from his mother.
“Rescind the bargain,” Sira commands, then shifts her gaze to me. “And I would not resist, girl, or you may find my mercy for the remaining princes short-lived.”
Instinctively, I try to reach for the thorn bracelets around my wrists, but the shadows hold my arms taunt.
“What bargain?” Keldarion growls.
I can’t bear to look at him, nor the rest of the princes. I should have told them. Now, my lie is out in the open.
Sira gives a light chuckle at Kel’s obvious torment. “Well, darling, what are you waiting for?”
“I can’t rescind the bargain.” Caspian practically spits out the words, his usual musical cadence now clipped and short. “She hasn’t fulfilled her end of it yet.”