Azriel lunged for Bryce, but she’d already pointed to the crystal coffin. “Get up, then.”
A click, loud as thunder, and the lid unlocked.
25
Opening the coffin had been as easy as commanding the stones of the mountain to move.
“What have you done?” Nesta said, silver fire flaring in her eyes, down Ataraxia’s blade.
The Asteri laid a hand on the unlocked coffin lid and began to push.
Like Hel would she face this thing unarmed. Bryce extended a hand toward Azriel, casting her will with it.
The Starsword flew from his hand and into hers.
Azriel started, shadows flashing at his shoulders, readying to strike, but Bryce said, “Theia showed me that trick in Silene’s little memory montage.” It was the feeling she’d been sensing, of the blade calling to her. Being willing to leap into her hand.
Azriel bared his teeth, but drew another sword that had been sheathed in a concealed panel at his back and hefted Truth-Teller in his other hand as Nesta lifted Ataraxia—
Bryce twisted to the coffin in time to see the Asteri slowly climb out, like a hatching spider.
Bryce’s chest provided the only light, making the monster’s pale skin even whiter, deepening the red of her lips to a near-purple hue. Her long black hair draped down her slim form, pooling on the stone beneath her like liquid night.
But she remained on the floor, hunched over herself. Like she didn’t have the strength to stand.
“You go left,” Azriel murmured to Nesta, power blazing around them.
“No,” Bryce said, not looking back as she approached the Asteri on the floor and sat down, setting the Starsword on the cold stone beside her.
To her shock, Azriel and Nesta didn’t attack. But they remained only a step away, weapons at the ready.
“Your companions think you mad for releasing me,” the Asteri said, picking at an invisible speck on her golden silk gown as she settled herself into a proper seated position.
“They don’t realize that you haven’t fed in thousands of years, and I can kick your ass.”
“We realized it,” Nesta muttered.
“Let’s start with the basics, leech,” Bryce said to the Asteri. “Where did—”
“You may call me Vesperus.” The creature’s eyes glowed with irritation.
“Are you related to Hesperus?” Bryce arched a brow at the name, so similar to one of Midgard’s Asteri. “The Evening Star?”
“I am the Evening Star,” Vesperus seethed.
Bryce rolled her eyes. “Fine, we’ll call you the Evening Star, too. Happy?”
“Is it not fitting?” A wave of long fingers capped in sharp nails. “I drank from the land’s magic, and the land’s magic drank from me.”
“Where did you come from, before you arrived here?”
Vesperus folded her hands in her lap. “A planet that was once green, as this one is.”
“And that wasn’t good enough?”
“We grew too populous. Wars broke out between the various beings on our world. Some of us saw the changes in the land beginning—rivers run dry, clouds so thick the sun could not pierce them—and left. Our brightest minds found ways to bend the fabric of worlds. To travel between them. Wayfarers, we called them. World-walkers.”
“So you trashed your planet, then went to feed off others?”
“We had to find sustenance.”
Bryce’s fingers curled against the rock floor, but her voice remained steady. “If you knew how to open portals between worlds, why did you need to rely on the Dread Trove?”
“Once we left our home world, our powers began to dim. Too late, we realized that we had been dependent on our land’s inherent magic. The magic in other worlds was not potent enough. Yet we could not find the way back home. Those of us who ventured here found ways to amplify that power, thanks to the gifts of the land. We pooled our power, and imbued those gifts into the Cauldron so that it would work our will. We Made the Trove from it. And then bound the very essence of the Cauldron to the soul of this world.”
Solas. “So destroy the Cauldron …”
“And you destroy this world. One cannot exist without the other.”
Behind them, Nesta sucked in a sharp breath. But Bryce said, “You gave this world a kill switch.”
“We gave many worlds … kill switches. To protect our interests.” She said it with such calm, such surety.
“Do you know Rigelus?”
“You speak his name very casually for a worm.”