“Cousin,” Evelaena purred. “What a joy to finally meet.”
Oraya—ever transparent—blinked in shock at the sound of Evelaena’s voice. So, so young. Like it could’ve belonged to a fourteen-year-old girl.
Evelaena lay her hands on Oraya’s shoulders, and I could see every muscle in Oraya’s body tightening to avoid pulling away.
“Evelaena,” she said—and nothing else.
She clearly didn’t know what else to say. My wife was not much of an actress. But I could be good enough for both of us.
My hand slid around Oraya’s shoulders, casually displacing Evelaena’s.
“Thank you for your hospitality, Lady Evelaena. I have to admit, we weren’t sure what we’d find. We never received your response to our letter.”
Evelaena smiled, but a familiar, intoxicating scent—just a whiff of it—dragged my attention away. At first, I thought I was imagining it—but then I swept my thumb over her shoulder, right where Evelaena’s hand had rested.
Warm. Wet.
Blood.
My fake smile withered. My gaze shot to Evelaena, who folded her claw-tipped hands at her lap, leaving little specs of bright-red blood on her dress.
A wave of the exact same emotion that had fallen over me before I ripped Martas’s head off his body stifled me.
Evelaena just kept up that dreamy smile.
“I wasn’t sure that you would be interested in coming so far east. Such a journey! You must be starving. Come. I’ve had a feast prepared.” Her eyes brightened. “More than a feast! A ball! One of the grandest Lahor has seen in decades. Come! Come!”
Well, that sounded morbid.
It was morbid.
When we were brought to the ballroom, I actually stifled a laugh—because honestly, I couldn’t help myself.
The room had been grand once, and still held the distant echo of its long-ago magnificence, albeit all covered with a faint layer of dust. Long tables sat over mosaic tile floors on one side of the room, the windows overlooking the sea beyond them. The other side was a dance floor, a roaring bonfire in the hearth and an orchestra before it, magically enhanced, ghostly music echoing against the ceilings. Yes, this had all the trappings of a ball—the entertainment, the tables of food and wine, the finery.
Except, of the dozens of “guests” that turned to regard us with silent curiosity as we arrived, not a single one appeared to be more than fifteen years old.
Most were far younger—ten or twelve, wearing clothes so ill-fitting that they dragged skirts and pant hems over the dusty floor. Almost all of them were blond, with fair eyes.
Surely these couldn’t all be her children. Or if they were all members of her family, where were the other parents?
Evelaena took no notice of the sudden, awkward silence. She stretched her arms out. “Come! Sit!”
The children wordlessly turned to the tables and took their seats.
I’d witnessed plenty of disturbing things in my time, but the silent, simultaneous obedience with which dozens of children did this would certainly be among the most unnerving.
The seats at the head of the table, closest to Evelaena, were, apparently, ours. She motioned to them and we, ever the respectful guests, took our chairs.
“You must be famished,” she said. Her eyes fell to me and her smile stilled.
Hatred. Easy to see it. I knew how to recognize it by now. That wasn’t a surprise. I’d killed Vincent, after all. There was a reason why Oraya’s name had come first in our letter.
I glanced at Oraya’s shoulder, and the little beads of scabbing red on her shoulders.
Not that that seemed to be going any better.
We couldn’t trust this woman. We had to get what we needed and get the fuck out of—
The smell made my head snap up.
Blood. Human blood. Lots of it. Still beating. The truth was, I was hungry after so much travel—the truth was, even after all this time, when I first smell it, it takes me a minute to collect myself. Ketura’s eyes brightened. The Bloodborn peered over their shoulder.
Evelaena perked up, too, her smile brightening.
“At last,” she crooned, shifting aside so that her child servants could hoist a naked woman onto the table.
20
ORAYA
The woman was still alive. Her throat had been cut, but not enough to make her bleed out fast. Her eyes, big and dark, danced wildly about the room. Landed on me.
A sudden intense wave of nausea made vomit rise in my throat. Images from another feast hall, another table, another human bleeding out on a wooden slab—shown to me by my own father—assaulted me.