by Sage, May
But then she grew into a beautiful woman, and it became more.
Much more.
He still didn't understand why she'd betrayed him. Why Aurora had locked him down here. That it was the machination of his enemies, he didn't doubt.
But the pain had not faded after all these years, and it would never go away.
Eirikr released Chloe's face now that she'd seen what he couldn't put into words.
He wasn't angry at her. He was distraught.
Seeing Greer had opened a wound he never touched if he could help it. A wound deep in his soul.
Chloe choked on a tear.
She'd once believed the world. She'd once thought that Eirikr could be a monster, or at least act like one.
No more.
"I will get you out of here," she swore.
"You can't."
Chloe swallowed.
"Why?"
Eirikr sighed.
"You'd have to kill the witch. And I will not let you."
Epilogue
Seth felt rather awkward as he entered the De Villier household. The great house was meant to impress, and usually, when he entered a home such as this, it belonged to him.
"Anyone here?"
The first thing to answer his call was a cat. A dreadfully adorable creature with a mischievous soul. He could tell.
"I won't fall for it. Go bother someone else."
The cat, somewhat predictably, rushed to rub over his leg.
"She doesn't usually take to strangers, you know."
Levi was standing at the top of his staircase.
"May I be of assistance?"
Seth grimaced. "I'm mostly here because my sister is getting fucked and I don't need to hear that."
Levi tilted his head. "An understandable position, I suppose. Would you care for some tea?"
"Please. Also, it's my understanding that you may have a question or two about a queen, if I'm not mistaken?"
He had Levi's attention then.
"Indeed. Many."
"I thought so. I asked Alexius to run me through the situation here last night. I happen to know a little about that queen. And her island."
The vampire was at the bottom of the stairs within an instant.
"How?"
Seth shrugged. "I was there last summer. And if you want me to tell you, I demand tea as a bribe, if you please. Earl Grey, preferably.”
“Well?” the queen asked her spy.
The creature stood still, pupils dilated like a soulless puppet.
“As you expected, the Stormhales did manage to break the shields, Your Highness. But they were rebuilt.”
The queen’s fists tightened on her scepter.
“How?” she demanded.
The spy’s eyes clouded, becoming dazed and unfocused.
“I don’t know. I can’t remember.”
The queen narrowed her eyes. A spell to confuse her spy. Which meant that someone in Oldcrest knew whose mind she was using.
She’d underestimated her opponents. For the last time.
“I suppose I have no use for you now, Easton. Slice your wrists, please,” she whispered softly. “Then I want you to portal back to the borders of Oldcrest. Be it a warning to your little friends.”
“Yes, my queen.”
* * *
The End.
Next in After Darkness Falls: Wickedly They Dance.
* * *
May Sage juggles multiple series and prioritizes those which are well reviewed. If you want to speed up the releases in the After Darkness Falls series, don’t forget to leave a review!
More from May…
This was how she died. She knew it, felt it to her bones. There was no other way, not here. Saving herself would mean condemning every breathing soul in the city of night. As little as she liked most of them, and however much they hated her in return, she couldn’t bring herself to destroy so many just to save herself.
She should give in now. Drop her bow, accept her fate. Yet she shot one arrow after the next, desperately holding on to life.
Devi took down enemy after enemy, her mind processing each kill with a cold, analytic indifference. They were relevant because she knew there had been fifty-one arrows in her quiver. Each fae she killed represented one arrow lost. There was every chance she'd run out of weapons before she reached the gates.
She was at the very center of the city, in the large Square of Dawn, famous for the obelisk erected at the end of the last war. The closest exit was a mile east, and there were three dozen enemies around her right now and more coming at every passing moment. It was a credit to her skill with a bow that none of them had managed to get close to her yet.
A horse whinnied to her left, and Devi’s head turned sharply. She expected enemy knights. She’d managed until now because she’d only had to deal with foot soldiers; fae knights were another matter altogether.
When they came into the square from the south avenue, there were only two riders. She stiffened in alarm, until her eyes took in the colors of their habits and then their faces.
Devi had no issue recognizing the two males, although she’d never seen either dressed in anything other than their fine court attire. Now they wore plain reinforced gear under dark unseelie coats.
Neither of them looked any less intimidating for it.
“Vale.”
The name fell from her lips in a tone she had never used to say it. With relief. Barely conscious of her decision, she adjusted her position to aim at the enemies following Vale and his second, rather than foolishly carrying on attempting to clear a path out of this nightmare. Vale was more important. If he lived through the night, there would be hope for the Isle.
Her shot hit the mark, killing a fae right behind the prince. As the enemy tumbled, Vale turned to see where the arrow had come from, his eyes landing on her.
He was on the other side of the square, but her vision could distinguish him quite clearly. For the first time since they’d met, he wasn’t amused. His trademark smirk had disappeared. That shouldn’t have come as a surprise given the circumstances, but his expression wasn’t what Devi might have expected. Vale wasn’t confused, shocked, or scared, unlike her. The dark prince seemed downright pissed right now. His violet eyes, so like his mother’s, watched her with pure fury.
Devi’s heart hit her stomach. Was this her fault? Had the attacks started because of her? It wasn’t impossible at all, given her history.
Then, to her astonishment, Valerius Blackthorn, the dark prince, lord of the court of sin, lifted his hands, pulling on the reins to turn his horse away from the road leading to the eastern gate. Away from safety. Instead of heading out, he rode at full speed toward her. Her. The half-breed who was “nothing,” according to him.
Devi regained her senses just as he reached her, in time to take his hand and hop behind him on his black mount.
“Fucking idiot!” he yelled before leaning forward and whispering sweet spells at the horse, who obeyed his master’s urging, rushing through the streets of the city of night.
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