“One dance with her and you can’t even think straight anymore, hm?” His voice lowered. “I told you to be careful about that.”
My head was suddenly throbbing. I didn’t especially feel like being scolded.
“I’m allowed to dance with my wife,” I said shortly. “What did you want to talk to me about? I have things to do.”
I imagined Oraya in that ballroom, surrounded by vampire pricks who’d just found a new reason to be interested in her. Suddenly the image of Simon standing over her, his hand on her arm, was infuriatingly vivid.
Cairis’s mouth thinned as he cast a disapproving glance back to the party, light spilling from the open doors and multi-paned windows. The entrance was farther away than I remembered it being—when did we walk this far?
He sighed. “That’s the problem, Raihn. You think we’re all stupid.”
It took a few seconds for the words to sink in. When I turned back to Cairis, brow furrowed in confusion, my eyes struggled to focus on his face. I couldn’t get the sharp rebuke out of my mouth.
“Surely you must think more of my intelligence than that,” he was saying, hands tucked into his pockets, eyes drawn to the ground. “You keep saying that she’s just a prisoner. But I’m not blind. And no one else is, either. Everyone knows.” His gaze lifted to me, a wrinkle between his brows. “It’s sweet, Raihn. But it wasn’t just you who sacrificed for this.”
His voice sounded like he was underwater. The world tilted, the stars behind him smearing against the sky.
I opened my mouth to argue with him, ready to unleash the appropriate verbal storm of a disrespected Nightborn king, but instead, a sudden wave of dizziness had me falling back against a stone wall, barely catching myself.
He caught my shoulder. “Are you feeling alright?”
No.
The truth solidified through my sluggish thoughts.
This wasn’t alcohol or exertion. Something was very wrong.
I forced my head up to look at Cairis, expecting confusion or concern on his face.
Instead, what I saw was pity.
Guilt.
“I’m sorry,” he said, voice low. “I just can’t go back to the way it was, Raihn. I can’t stay with you until that happens. I just—I can’t. I need to pick a winner. You have to understand that.”
Realization ignited through increasingly sticky, drug-addled thoughts. What Cairis was admitting to. How many drinks had I let him hand me tonight, accepted without question?
I never even considered him.
That fucking bastard.
I conjured my wings, trying to fly, trying to move fast enough to prepare for the onslaught that I knew was coming. But my body betrayed me, just as my advisor had.
I fought the drugs until the last moment, even as my vision faded at the edges, my stomach roiling, my head pounding. I fought it even though I couldn’t even keep track of how many soldiers—Rishan soldiers, my own Goddess-damned men—poured from the darkness, surrounding me, grabbing me. I managed to strike a head, a throat, an arm.
But whatever Cairis had given me drained my consciousness ravenously, second by second.
I fought until I physically couldn’t anymore.
Until the chains wrapped around my wrists.
I forced my head up to see that distant ballroom light, now little more than smears of gold in my failing vision. I tried to crawl to it.
But by then my body had failed me.
In another distant world, the clock rang out in ominous solitude, a thunderous GONG echoing through the bloody night.
I didn’t hear it chime again.
40
ORAYA
The music had gotten louder, more chaotic. I couldn’t hear myself think over it. The alcohol had flowed freely. The blood, too. The blood vendors had arrived, a dozen humans who had clearly been chosen for their appearance just as much as their blood. All were dressed in finery no human in Obitraes could possibly afford—dressed by Cairis, I was sure. Some were obviously professionals—I even recognized a few from Vincent’s parties. Others seemed new. One sat on the lap of the Shadowborn prince, her cheeks and chest flushed, eyelashes fluttering as he nipped at her throat, his hand wandering up between her legs. Her bodyguard—one of Ketura’s—stood beside them, clearly struggling to fulfill her job of watching over the human without making awkward eye contact.
That was the difference between this party and Vincent’s: every one of the blood vendors had a bodyguard. I recognized these ones. They were among Raihn’s best. And this was what they had been chosen for tonight. Not guarding Raihn. Not serving the Shadowborn guests. They were watching over these humans—humans that, under my father’s rule, would have been considered disposable.