by Hall, Linsey
“Oh.” Esha blanched.
“I killed a lot of people.” Her voice was scratchy. “The boy followed his father everywhere. He was being groomed to take over and he was there when Paulinus killed my daughters. He was also on the battlefield when Paulinus came for me. So I killed him when I killed his father. Now, he wants to get out of Erebus.”
“What the hell do you have to do with that?” He didn’t want her anywhere near Paulinus, and it shone in his voice.
Diana’s eyes met his. “What don’t I have to do with that? He. Killed. My. Daughters. And I’m the one who sent him to hell. With his son.” She looked ill. “I killed anyone who got in my way after they killed Aela and Calea. I don’t regret most of it.”
“Just the boy,” Esha said.
Diana nodded, looked down at her hands.
“That’s it, then,” Esha said. “Paulinus could sense you because you killed him. Or your soul, rather, sent his to hell when you killed him as Boudica. Souls are powerful. By killing him, you probably linked the two of you together. At least in a small way. You’re his link to the outside world and I bet that’s why he wants you. It’s why we had a hard time leaving, too. Your soul was attracted to his.”
“I don’t get it,” Diana said. “Why is the portal threatening to open here? Why not in Italy, if it’s the Roman hell?”
“For the same reason that the university is here. Arthur’s Seat has the most magical energy of anywhere in Europe. The boundaries between earth and the afterworlds are weakest here.”
Diana buried her head in her hands. “What am I going to do? And why does he have Vivienne?”
“I don’t know about Vivienne,” Esha said. “She could be bait, a mistake, maybe even involved somehow.”
“Vivienne?” Cadan asked.
Diana briefly explained her friend’s abduction to him. “But she’s not involved. She was teaching my classes. Maybe the demon abductors got confused. So you think he’ll try to use me to get out?”
Esha nodded. “There was an altar.”
“An altar?” Cadan asked, dread sinking his stomach.
“Yeah,” Esha said. “Nothing says blood sacrifice like an altar.”
Diana swallowed, her eyes stark. “They want to sacrifice me?”
“Yeah, sucks,” Esha said.
“Eloquent, Esha,” Warren said.
“Shut up, Warren—some dead guy wants to cut open my new friend here on a big black rock in hell. Sucks is one of the nicer words to describe it.”
Diana nodded. “So, there’s a spell—probably one that involves my death—that is the key to getting Paulinus out of Erebus?”
“Yes,” Esha said. “I think it is supposed to be an equal exchange. One soul imprisoned so that another can escape. And because you’re the one who put him in Erebus in the first place, your soul is the only one that can get him out. If any soul would work, then he’d have escaped long ago. Hell, most folks in there would be out.”
“So what is Diana supposed to do about it? She has no magic, no way to get to Erebus to kill him. All she can do is look in with Esha’s help,” Cadan said.
“Don’t talk about me like I’m not here! I’m not helpless. And I’m sick of you deciding for me.” Her cheeks flushed red. “I killed him the first time—I can do it again if I have to. Which apparently I do.”
“Nay.” It was all Cadan said, but she jerked as if she’d been slapped, then turned to glare at him. He was getting her out of here, and they were going to talk.
“No?” She asked, her voice vibrating with rage. “You dare to tell me no? You have no say over what I do! I know better than to trust you after what you’ve done.”
“What I’ve done?” He was at her side in a second, grasping her arms once again and staring down at her fiercely. She matched his gaze, the dead look in her eyes drowned by rage. “What about you? You’re the one who left!”
He could hear Esha and Warren talking, but through the buzzing in his head couldn’t make out their words.
“Lef—” Diana started to yell back at him, but before she could finish, Esha and her damned feline were at their side. Without warning, she sucked Cadan and Diana through the aether and within seconds. they were standing in his flat in Edinburgh’s Old Town.
“You two have something to work out before we can get any further. Call me when you’re done.” She disappeared.
They stood, breathing heavily, still clasped together.
“Why, Cadan? Why did you lock me away? Why did you take my choice?” She gazed up at him, the questions hanging between them.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
“I couldn’t lose you.” Pain hollowed out Cadan’s voice, as if something vital had been carved free of his soul. “I’d lost too many. Was unable to protect too many.”
It dawned on her then. His family. When the Romans had taken his village, they’d killed many of the Trinovantes and expelled the rest from their homes. She’d known the loss of his sisters and mother in the initial attack had affected him, but she’d had no idea how much. He’d carried that burden with him, blamed himself, though he’d barely been out of childhood when they’d attacked. As Boudica, she’d been too filled with her own pain to ask about his, to even wonder. Had that wound been festering all this time?
“You couldn’t have protected them, Cadan. You were a boy. The Romans were an army with the support of the greatest empire on earth. You were lucky to survive when they burned your village.”
“It was my fault. It was my responsibility to protect them.”
“Not yours alone, and their deaths aren’t on your shoulders.”
“Yours is.” His voice was bleak, his eyes dark with pain.
“No!” She wanted to stamp her foot. How could he not get this? “It’s not. That’s what you don’t understand. It wasn’t your job to protect me above all else. We were to look out for each other in battle, yes, as soldiers do.”
“You were my woman. The woman I loved. The only person left alive who meant anything to me. When our homes were burned, our people killed, you were all that was left.”
Oh God. What was she supposed to do? Her anger was just, his sins unjustifiable. But what could she do in the face of such pain? Continue to kick a man who’d committed his sin out of love? Because she had escaped his trap and fought in the final battle, his actions hadn’t had long-ranging consequences other than killing Boudica’s trust in him.
“And then you left me.” His voice had the jagged edges of pain. “Without a word, without a good-bye, you plunged that dagger into your heart.”
The sight of him standing tall and strong across from her made her feel like a piece of glass had just carved its way into her heart, not unlike the blade from so long ago.
“I missed,” she said, recalling the pain of dying slowly, with the blade piercing her lung instead of her heart.
“Aye. If you hadn’t, I’d never have come upon you while you were still alive. I’d lost so many. You, and vengeance, were what I’d lived for. And you, the woman I loved and the only good thing remaining on earth, left without a word. Would have snuck off into death.”
“What was I supposed to do? I couldn’t trust you to let me do the right thing—you’d have taken that choice from me as you’d done the previous night. Tied me up, thrown me over your horse, and taken me away to hide.”
His jaw tightened; she could see in his eyes that it was true.
“I was not just the woman you loved. I was a warrior, the leader of a lost people. We’d been crushed in that last battle—the Romans even slaughtered the women who made up the last line of defense. They’d have come for me, taken me to Rome to be slowly executed as an example of our so-called barbarism, or worse, ransomed back to the Iceni.”
Her tribe would have paid a price they could ill afford, and they’d already suffered so much. She hadn’t wanted to fight anymore. “I couldn’t be either of those things. You’d have done the same if you had been in my position. Why shouldn’t I
have had that right?”
“We could have fled. Gone north.”
She could admit that now, as Diana, she might have run with him. Run with the man she loved when the battle was lost, and hidden for the rest of their lives. But not Boudica.
“That’s what you don’t understand, Cadan. Boudica would never have done that. After the death of her daughters and the theft of her land, she saw no future for herself. Not even with you.”
“What?” He took a step back.
“She—no, I mean, I cared for you.” It was becoming harder to speak as Boudica once she realized that their choices might have been different. “But she didn’t have her whole heart to give and what she had wasn’t enough to change her path. Paulinus took that when he took her daughters, when he took her home. When she picked up her sword in vengeance, she never planned to lay it down. There would be no life for her if she failed to expel the Romans from her land. She knew that she stood for her people, was a symbol for her cause. And her warriors were dead.” She could remember them, as she knew he could, too, their bodies scattered across the fields in all directions.
“Had she fled, the people in the villages would have known. The last armies would have known that their chosen leader, the one who had sent them in to die in a near hopeless battle, had abandoned her honor and fled. Fleeing was never an option and there was no life that she wanted to flee to.”
He said nothing, just stood strong and still in the middle of the room, and she watched as he tried to process what she’d told him. The woman you loved didn’t love you back in the same way. Couldn’t love you back in the same way.
She could see everything more clearly now that she remembered who she was. It was as if a fog had cleared from her mind. She felt more herself than ever. Boudica’s memories gave her context for her own life, for the things she’d felt and missed and hadn’t understood. They were clearer now; her whole life was clearer.
The feelings she’d had for Cadan—the mixed-up mess of attraction, mistrust, affection, hate, love, curiosity—had all begun to make sense when she regained her memories. She knew him now; knew his past and why he’d done the things he had.
They had both been broken by loss those many years ago. He by the slaughter of his family, and by the time he’d spent alone atoning for a sin he thought he’d committed. And she by the loss of her daughters and her home. But that didn’t make him any less hers.
She realized now that she’d hurt him as much as he’d hurt her, perhaps more. He hadn’t respected her will, but she had abandoned him without an explanation, leaving him to wonder and mourn for millennia.
I was selfish. Noble and well intentioned, and she wouldn’t take back her actions, but selfish all the same. Though wasn’t that always the way of it? Fighting for a great cause could lead one to neglect the details. Like the people around you who were still alive. Like the strong, beautiful man standing across from her. His bravery and self-sacrifice awed her.
With their wounds laid bare, their sins stood between them like an impassable lake of pain they continued to fill with buckets full of more. There was only one way across.
“I’m sorry, Cadan.” Tears burned her eyes. “Truly. For what she took away from you by not saying good-bye. She was brave and her cause was just. But I’m sorry for not saying good-bye. For the hurt it caused you.”
It felt as if something large and hard was lodged in Cadan’s throat. He hadn’t thought he needed Diana’s apology. Or that he would agree with her.
He was ashamed to admit it, but when he truly thought about it, when Diana made him think about it, he’d cared for Boudica, but not in the way he should have. He’d still been reeling from the pain of losing his own family, had been running toward redemption or forgiveness or death. Which it should be, he hadn’t known or cared. Boudica had become his solace, a woman who’d been as betrayed by life as he had and had given him something to fight for again. If he could just protect her. On the eve of the final battle, he’d been overcome by the fear of losing her.
He scrubbed a hand over his face. Christ, she was right. He’d wanted to protect her, true, but more out of a desire to save himself. To prove that he could. He’d wanted to protect her, but she’d wanted to fight, wanted her vengeance. Wanted to protect her daughters, even if it was only their memories, by killing the man who had taken their young lives. As he wanted to do for her. Could he begrudge her that? His fear, which had made him take her choice from her, was the same fear that had driven her so many years ago.
He hadn’t seen it then, had been blinded by his past. After her death, he’d buried his head in the sand. Thinking about it had only made him ill. But he could see it, now that he’d heard her perspective. It had taken nearly two thousand years, and Diana, to make him see that it hadn’t been his choice to make.
He’d been so caught up in his own pain that he hadn’t thought about hers. She’d been their leader, their queen, but above that, she had been the woman he loved.
“I—” Keep going. “I’m sorry.” He dragged a hand through his hair. “You’re right. And it’s something that I could only realize when I heard it from you. In my head, I just couldn’t have that perspective. I was a product of my upbringing, and then of my own fear. I took your choice from you, and I shouldn’t have. I’m—sorry.”
Cadan stood, not daring to move, possibly unable to, as his words hung in the air. He’d never been able to think of the past in that way. She began to walk toward him, and his heartbeat drummed in his ears. Diana stopped inches from his chest and reached up and laid her palm on the side of his face.
“You’ll never do that again, right? You’ll let me fight my own battles, and never take the choice from me even when it’s a hard one to make?”
“I won’t.” And as he said the words, he realized that they were true. “You’re the only one who can do this, and I’m behind you. ’Til the end. I was so afraid to lose you again, but I realize now that I’ve got no control over it.”
As much as it tortured him not to do everything in his power to protect her, taking the decision from her had been wrong. Looking down at her, he saw a woman who had changed drastically from the shy mouse he’d thought she was. A sense of assurance pervaded her being now. She had the courage and the skill needed to face her demons. And like Boudica, the wisdom to do what was right. They would fight side by side, and only fate could determine the outcome.
“We’ll help each other,” she said. “I’m not stupid and my pride isn’t going to get in the way of my taking any help I can get. And it’s your help I want.”
He reached out and crushed her to him. “Thank you,” he whispered into her hair. He lifted his head and asked, “Do you think Boudica would have forgiven me?”
“I don’t know. But I do, and she is me. Maybe it’s my life experiences that allow me to.”
He squeezed her tight. It didn’t take away the pain of the lost years, but it helped him now.
They stood, wrapped in each other, as rain began to patter on the roof above. His heart squeezed in his chest, but he spoke no words of love, and neither did she. What had formed between them was too new, too raw, and too much to process for more words. Something deep and intricate tied them together; forgiveness and understanding had created a bridge over the lake of pain.
“I need you.” Her voice was ragged, desperate.
He groaned as he bent down to take her mouth, hauling her up against him until he could feel all the curves and hollows of her body pressed to his. Her lips were soft and sweet, warm beneath his as they parted on a sigh to accept his tongue.
He fisted his hand in her hair, holding her steady so that he could explore her mouth, half afraid that she would change her mind.
It was too late now. There was no saving himself the pain of losing her. If he lost her, he’d be broken, his heart finally torn apart once and for all. He gripped her tighter, running his tongue along hers and nipping her lower lip.
Her arms clutched him fierce
ly as a desperate energy drew them together.
She clouded his mind with her soft body, scent, and the small noises she’d begun to make as he slipped his hand beneath the back of her shirt.
She tore her mouth away from his and whispered, “Your bed. Take me to your bed.”
He swept her up into his arms. Her soft mouth found the side of his neck, her tongue dancing along his skin.
Thunder boomed. He strode across the wide wooden floor as lightning lit the interior of his flat from the windows and skylights above. Lightning continued to illuminate the room as the streetlamps from below cast a soft, steady glow through the windows.
He reached his bed and gently set her down. She rose to her knees on the mattress, the waves of honey-red hair falling from the band she’d tied around it. Her eyes were hot as she began to pull at his shirt.
“Take it off,” she demanded.
“All right, my eager Diana.” He smiled as he yanked the shirt over his head. He began to unbuckle his belt, pausing to watch appreciatively as she undid the buttons of her conservative blouse.
His breath caught as she peeled the cream silk back and revealed an expanse of lightly freckled skin. Her breasts swelled out of a pale bra, her nipples hard and visible through the lace. She slipped the silk blouse off her shoulders and it fluttered to the bed behind her.
His eyes were riveted on her as she unbuttoned her slacks to reveal matching lace. He caught sight of the fiery curls visible beneath the lace and his cock throbbed painfully against his pants. He dragged them over his aching shaft and was naked in seconds.
He wanted her. Needed her. Now.
Once she was clad in nothing but the lace, he stalked toward her, reaching around her waist and lifting her up so that he could lay her upon her back. He climbed atop her, settling himself between her thighs, and they both gasped at the contact.
She was hot and soft and made for him.
“You’re more beautiful than anything I could imagine.” He gazed at her in awe. She smiled tremulously, as if she were nervous. Good—she should be nervous. He bit her earlobe and growled low, “I am going to torture you, my love, the same way that you tortured me. Until you are hot and desperate and aching, I am going to torture you. And even when you beg me, I might no’ give you what you desire. At least, no’ then.”