by Rachel Grace
Cyrus shuddered as he thought of some of the strange requests he’d seen fulfilled in the few days he spent there, splashing more water on his face to erase the images.
He had sought pleasure before. In truth, pleasure had been forced upon him in his thirteenth year. It was his father’s gift to him for being the first in their line to ever make good, the first of his inheritance to be chosen as an Arendal Sword—though the old man could not resist mocking his future career even as he bragged to his peers. Laughing that his son’s future of blood and justice was to be replaced with adjusting the eternal queen’s cushions.
It had not been an unpleasant experience, once his father and the other men had left him with his new companion. She was a favorite of the outpost Wode, a Felidae who, for whatever reason, had been banned from her tribe.
She told him not to be nervous. That her pheromones would ease his tension. Take away his hesitation. They had. She had been gentle. Instructive. And when she left the next morning, he had felt more an unready boy than he had been before.
She had been his first, but by no means his last.
For some reason it was a fact the guards of the Siren, many of whom had decided to take him under their wing, chose not to believe. They thought him an innocent half-breed who’d saved up to escape and hoped to be fucked. It was a belief that had served Cyrus well, other than their constant attempts to fill him with drink and offer him women.
He meant to resist, to keep up his shy pretense until they arrived at the port Commander Iacchus had specified. Once the older man boarded the Siren, Cyrus would complete his mission and return home.
He had not counted on Seraphina.
The instant he saw her, he had known she would bedevil him. She strutted about in her revealing costume, her red hair tousled and her Felidae markings uncovered for all to see. She’d slipped into a nobleman’s lap long enough to steal his drink and kiss the woman who had been given to him for the night. Titillating and dangerous.
She’d caught his stare and he saw the interest flicker in her brilliant green eyes. That interest had turned to disbelief the first time he had turned her down, determination the second. The third time… the third time he had given in—on his terms.
Seraphina had allowed him to take her over that night. Everyone on this boat but Wulf and Hadi knew how she had repaid her temporary capitulation.
It was odd that the memory no longer filled him with the rage it had only days before. Not for her.
Not only did he not make his rendezvous, but the dagger he was to deliver—the safety of which meant so much to the queen—had disappeared with his other belongings.
The Khepri had told him the dagger now lay in the private rooms of the false queen. That the one who had taken Queen Idony had also attempted to remove Cyrus as a threat. It was he who had charged the cult with building the monstrosity in the Avici desert, he who had stolen the dagger.
Seraphina had nothing to do with it, and no knowledge of the plot.
The Khepri emphasized the dagger’s importance. If the queen were to be saved and restored to power, he’d insisted in the florid missive, Cyrus needed to get the dagger back into the right hands. His hands.
More than Idony’s life was in danger, it seemed. Though that was enough. Theorrey and its rule were being challenged at the core. Something dark was looming.
He had told Captain Amaranthe, who was either disturbed by her own letter or still nursing antagonistic feelings over his treatment of Dare. Whatever the Khepri said to her, it must have coincided with his command, because he had met her as she was on her way to helm’s deck to have Freeman change the Deviant’s course.
They were pausing in their search for Tower Orr and turning back to Centre City.
Now, so close to returning to the palace that had been his home for most of his life, he found he needed Dare. He needed the Chalice to accept his apology. To feel the sincerity of it inside him.
She had proven herself to the Wode in him, loved the man in him, and had never wavered in her loyalty, despite the truths she had been stunned by since this began.
They had all underestimated her. Even, may she forgive him for thinking it, Queen Idony.
The knock at his bedroom door made him wince in surprise and the basin tipped to fall on the floor. Water splashed on his boots. “Damn. Come in.”
The wooden door creaked open and he saw the small, feminine figure silhouetted in the hallway. “Cyrus?”
That she hesitated, said his name with that much doubt in her voice, made him ache with regret. “Dare, I’m glad you came. I have wanted to talk to you. To say—”
“I know.” Dare came in and closed the door behind her. “You’ve not been suppressing your feelings the way you did inside the palace. In fact, on occasion, I would prefer it if you did not think so loudly, but I do understand. You are forgiven.”
She wrapped her arms around herself protectively and gazed about the room, a forlorn expression on her face. “I just… I truly thought I knew her. Knew you. All this is a surprise to me. Each day, each fresh revelation has left me feeling—”
“Lost?” Cyrus stepped toward her, heedless of his damp, bare torso, and pulled her into his arms. “As am I. Dare, we are soaring through the air with the birds, with a crew that already shows and owes its loyalty to you. You have, without any help from me, brought us all together. It’s who you are on an elemental level. Who you’ve always been. I am the odd man out. The cog that serves no purpose.”
She shook her head. “It was all chance. Circumstance.”
He laughed, but there was little humor in it. “Was it? I am beginning to wonder if there is such a thing. The island Felidae believe that there is a destiny, a path to which you are drawn. One that supersedes the caste you are born to, or the family. Maybe this is your special path. Where your gifts have brought you.”
She pulled back and looked up into his eyes, her own wide and unsure. “Brought us, Cyrus. This is your path as well as mine. I thought you dead. When you wandered into our camp whistling that ridiculous tune—” Her lower lip trembled. “I was so thankful.”
He cupped her chin with his fingertips. “Have I ruined our friendship, then? No one could or should forgive me for letting this happen. For failing my post. But I fear I would be unsalvageable if I were unable to redeem myself in your eyes.”
She narrowed her gaze. “Are you still keeping things from me? Protecting me?”
He refused to look away. “Yes. But only at the queen’s command. Until you are ready. Until it’s time.”
“I can feel her now.” Dare’s voice was soft. Far away. “She is safe for the moment, but worried for us.”
“You can feel her?” Cyrus studied her in surprise, then smiled. Her abilities must be growing. “I am glad. That means I still have time.”
Dare pulled herself from his embrace and clenched her fists. “We have time. We. I have killed now, Cyrus. Shed blood. What more should I do to prove to you I am Wode? That I am just as capable as the captain or Phina or you. Better, it has been said, than many who are twice my size. And I feel her because—”
“I have no doubt in your abilities,” he interrupted her. “I also know you did not enjoy it, even when it was necessary. That you felt no small jolt of pleasure when justice was served to your enemy. That you grieved instead for the loss of life. Grief is dangerous. Makes you hesitate.”
“What shield guard would find pleasure in that way?”
The door opened again and Cyrus sighed, seeing Bodhan standing there with a grim expression. He’d been listening through the door. “Every Wode I have ever met but you, princess.”
Dare grimaced apologetically before turning to face Bodhan, but Cyrus saw the burst of relief and pleasure that lit her gaze at his arrival. He was glad she had someone who did that for her. Brought her joy. She had more than earned it. It did make him envious. He was no longer needed.
“I told you I wanted to talk to him alone.”
 
; Bodhan shrugged, leaning against the doorjamb lazily, the clasp for his holster purposefully undone. “And I told you that I respected your wants, my love. However, I am still not sure the Sword is over his bout of… shall we call it melancholy? I know he will respect my desire to protect you. It is, as you have assured me, his nature as well.”
Cyrus noticed Bodhan’s eerily colored gaze light on the damp spots on her jacket. Then on his bare chest. He shook his head, reaching for the clean shirt that Freeman had brought with the other supplies. “By all means, enter before I lose control and grovel her into the pyre.”
Bodhan smirked and walked toward them, closing the door solidly with his boot heel. “Was he groveling, Dare? I am sorry I missed that.”
Dare crossed her arms again in agitation. “I’m beginning to understand the captain’s antipathy toward men. That is, if all of you cause this much aggravation.”
Cyrus watched as Bodhan pulled her into his arms and nuzzled her neck. “We have talents that make up for it. You know we do.”
He looked away when his lifetime companion melted into the cocky man’s embrace, gazing instead out the window. He caught a glint of light in the distance. “We are getting close. The copper domes are coming into view.”
Dare’s tone was concerned behind him. “Captain Amaranthe told me about your message. Your’s and Phina’s. I know it has to be done but I am worried. Queen’s Hill is no longer safe for any of us.”
Seraphina. The captain had informed him this morning that they would have to work together. Apparently they both had instructions that required reconnaissance and retrieval inside the palace. Despite her obvious abilities, he hated the idea of her diving into danger. He chose not to consider why. However, it was clear arguing the point would be unwise and fruitless. Captain Amaranthe was a woman bound to have her way. He respected that. Respected her. It was, after all, her ship. And no one could stop Seraphina.
He turned back to them and smiled. “Don’t worry about me, Dare. I am the Queen’s Sword. The men at the gate know me well. Seraphina may have a harder time of it.”
Dare bit her lip. “She told me she’s done it a dozen times over the years. But neither of you have had to face a woman who wears the queen’s face but is not the queen. You will have to craft your words and reactions with care.”
His smile hardened. “I know exactly what to do. You will see me when I return, with the dagger, long before our Felidae.”
Bodhan lifted one dark brow in interest. “Care to wager on that, Arendal?”
Dare sent him a telling look. “Are you sure you want to do that? Until a few hours ago, you thought Phina had taken the dagger, even when I told you she hadn’t. And last night Freeman beat your move at a game he has never played. Luck has not been on your side of late.”
Bodhan’s expression was confident. “My love, with you, luck is always on my side. Besides, we are discussing Seraphina Felidae and her talent for escape. My odds have never been better.”
Cyrus refused to admit that he agreed with the man. He also refused to make the wager. He had not lost all his faculties. Yet.
This was a disguise. It did not define her. She was not this person anymore.
Phina studied herself in the beveled mirror in her room, her shiny bracelet off once more, lying on the table beside her. The knot in her stomach made her want to howl. To scratch someone’s eyes out. To do something wild, anything wild, to make the feelings disappear. To make this old identity disappear.
Seri the slave. Younger sister to Nephi, Jobi, Eli, and Nob. All born to work in the mines. Lower in stature than the factory Felidae who lived among them in the settlement.
Nephi once told her that they were named for the old angels and the great chosen in human myth, though everyone used a shortened version. Phina had never been able to ask their mother why they had been given such big names for such small lives, since the woman died a few days after she was born.
Her brothers had blamed her, but Phina had long since deduced that it had to do with her mother being put back to work the day after her new baby was born.
Born wrong. Phina sucked in her cheeks and glared at her reflection. Her life certainly hadn’t started out well. But she had more than made up for her lack these past years. She had lived. She had thrived knowing her eldest sister, the unconditionally patient and loving Nephi, was safe with the queen.
The Khepri’s message was simple and clear. Nephi was no longer safe.
Phina smeared the black soot more artistically across her cheek, her chin as defiant as the wild shoots of bright red hair framing her face.
A dingy gray woven shirt with long sleeves and a pair of shapeless pants, their hem tucked into black buckle-less boots, covered her body. Concealed her figure from view.
It was a Felidae’s nature to stand out. Their colorful eyes and hair, the unique patterns of their markings, were all indicators that their bodies were meant to be seen. But for miners, attracting attention was not a priority. In fact, with the type of Wode they sent to guard the entrances to the settlement and the factory, it was better to go unnoticed.
Safer.
She picked up the ton sticks Freeman had made for her the first time she had done this, and twirled their short handles in her hands. She may not be bringing her attention-drawing weapons with her, but she would never go completely unarmed. She swung them a few times, loving the balance and flow of the smooth wood, before tucking them in the empty belt loops of her pants. Their weight brought her comfort.
The sounds of the engines had changed. She could easily hear the ugly churning growl of the steam power making the transition to the near-silent hum of theorrite as they moved closer to civilization. Almost time.
She grabbed the knit cap that would conceal her hair until she was as indistinguishable as any of the others who lived in their drab community. Only her claws had grown back, and she meant for them to stay sharp.
He was in the hall. Cyrus. He’d obviously just come from his own room. Phina heard Dare and Bodhan climbing the stairs that led to the deck above and knew they were talking about her and Cyrus. What they had to do.
Cyrus wore a pristine white shirt, well fitted across his broad shoulders, dark brown pants that clung to his lean hips and muscular thighs, and military boots. Draped over his forearm was a worn-looking hooded cape. To indicate a long journey spent in hiding, she assumed.
The Sword planned to walk right through the front gates and into the Copper Palace. Phina had a more roundabout way inside, but his way held more peril. Each step could be blocked. Wode could have been instructed to imprison him. The members of the Raj, or whoever was behind this treason, could easily lay a trap for him to fall into.
He stopped at the sight of her and she stared into his blue eyes, noticing not for the first time that his long lashes appeared more black than blue. He studied her in return.
When Cyrus smiled, she felt a snarl ready to curl her lips, her tail go taut as a wire. If he teased or insulted her, he would trail a bloody path behind him to the palace. She was on the edge. Eager for a fight. For blood.
“Your disguise isn’t working, Seraphina.” He tilted his head, shaking it a bit as if in bewilderment. “As if your firelight could be dimmed so easily.”
He turned his back on her and walked away, leaving her stunned. Had that been a compliment? She replayed his words in her head, certain there was a barb, a tone that she would find that would prove her wrong. But no.
Had Cyrus Arendal seen her covered in muck and dressed in shapeless rags and called her… attractive? More than that. Firelight.
Her claws came out and she cursed under her breath. Damn the man. Now she wanted to scratch another type of itch. He was a bastard for throwing her off by not playing their game. By not hating her and wanting her. And then hating himself for wanting her. She deserved it. She wanted his scorn. It made it easy for her to stay away from him. To not care whether or not he was hurting, or how he had suffered.
Damn him.
On deck the crew had grown quiet. Many had their guns drawn and wore expressions of disbelief. Most had never flagrantly sailed a giant airship over a populated city in the full light of late afternoon, unseen. They would learn. She corrected herself—they would learn if the captain let them live long enough.
It was a bit like tiptoeing past your own pyre. As long as they never hung from the aether cocoon announcing their arrival, the dodge and the silent running engine would work their marvelous magic and keep them hidden.
No one would ever know they were there.
Captain Amaranthe headed in her direction. “There is no way I am landing in Centre City. I don’t care if he is the Queen’s Sword, her gun, or her entire bloody arsenal.” Her voice lowered when she noticed Phina’s new look. “Are you sure you want to do this?”
Phina smiled, knowing that her sharp incisors showed brilliantly white against her dirty face. “I have to. The commands come from the right hand of the queen. More than that, I need to. The cargo I’m returning with is more precious than any weapon.”
The captain nodded, slipping a hand beneath her long dark hair to rub her neck. “Then it is settled. The usual location for the drop, but this time you will have an irritating man who, no doubt, has not the first idea how to get down from an ironwood tree.”
The idea lightened Phina’s mood considerably. She would finally have the upper hand. “Have you told him yet?”
Aramanthe could not contain the obvious sparkle in her hazel gaze. “Why would I want to do that?” She sobered swiftly. “I trust you to keep him safe on the way down. He is the Queen’s Sword, after all. Just remember you’ll need to hurry. We should get you in with not much time to spare for shift change. You mustn’t allow yourself to be sidetracked or you will have to spend the evening inside. And you and I both recall how well that turned out the last time it happened.”
Phina shuddered, her markings tingling in a decidedly unhappy way. She remembered. “I know what I’m doing. I can only hope the Arendal won’t get lost between the settlement and Queen’s Hill. It is farther away than his feet will tell him.”