To where the Cauldron sat. Unguarded. Waiting for us.
The Book appeared in Amren’s small hands. The Cauldron was nearly as tall as she was. A looming black pit of hate and power.
I could stop this. Right now. Stop this army—and the king before he killed Nesta and Cassian. Amren opened the Book. Looked at me expectantly.
“Put your hand on the Cauldron,” she said quietly. I obeyed.
The Cauldron’s endless power slammed into me, a wave threatening to sweep me under, a storm with no end.
I could barely keep one foot in this world, barely remember my name. I clung to what I had seen in the Ouroboros—clung to every reflection and memory I had faced and owned, the good and wicked and the gray. Who I was, who I was, who I was—
Amren watched me for a long moment. And did not read from the Book. Did not put it in my hands. She shut the gold pages and shoved it behind her with a kick.
Amren had lied. She did not plan to leash the king or his army with the Cauldron and the Book.
And whatever trap she had set … I had fallen right into it.
CHAPTER
74
I gripped my sense of self in the face of the black maw of the Cauldron. Gripped it with everything I had.
Amren only said, “I’m sorry I lied to you.”
I could not remove my hand. Could not pry my fingers away. I was being shredded apart, slowly, thoroughly.
I flung my magic out, desperate for any chain to this world to save me, keep me from being devoured by the eternal, awful thing that now tried to drag me into its embrace.
Fire and water and light and wind and ice and night. All rallied. All failed me.
Some tether slipped, and my mind slid closer to the Cauldron’s outstretched arms.
I felt it touch me.
And then I was half gone.
Half there, standing silently next to the Cauldron, hand glued to the black rim.
Half … elsewhere.
Flying through the world. Searching. The Cauldron now hunted for that power that had come so close … And now taunted it.
Nesta.
The Cauldron searched for her, searched for her as the king now sought her.
It skimmed across the battlefield like an insect over the surface of a pond.
We were losing. Badly. Seraphim and Illyrians were bloodied and being hauled out of the sky. Azriel had been forced to the ground, his wings dragging in the bloody mud as he fought sword to sword against the endless onslaught. Our foot soldiers had broken the lines in places, Keir screaming at his Darkbringers to get back into position, plumes of shadows flaring from him.
I saw Rhysand. In the thick of those breaking lines. Blood-splattered, fighting beautifully.
I saw him assess the field ahead—and transform.
The talons came first. Replacing fingers and feet. Then dark scales or perhaps feathers, I couldn’t get a look at them, covered his legs, his arms, his chest. His body contorted, bones and muscles growing and shifting.
The beast form Rhys had kept hidden. Never liked to unleash.
Unless it was dire enough to do so.
Before the Cauldron swept me away, I beheld what happened to his head, his face.
It was a thing of nightmares. Nothing human or Fae in it. It was a creature that lived in black pits and only emerged at night to hunt and feast. The face … it was those creatures that had been carved into the rock of the Court of Nightmares. That made up his throne. The throne not only a representation of his power … but of what lurked within. And with the wings …
Hybern soldiers began fleeing.
Helion beheld what happened and ran, too—but toward Rhys.
Shifting as well.
If Rhys was a flying terror crafted from shadows and cold moonlight, Helion was his daytime equivalent.
Gold feathers and shredding claws and feathered wings—
Together, my mate and the High Lord of Day unleashed themselves upon Hybern.
Until they paused. Until a slim, short male walked out of the ranks toward them—one of Hybern’s commanders, no doubt. Rhys’s snarl shook the earth. But it was Helion, glowing with white light, who stepped forward to face the male, claws sinking deep into the mud.
The commander didn’t so much as wear a sword. Only fine gray clothes and a vaguely amused expression on his face. Amethyst light swirled around him. Helion growled at Rhys—an order.
And my mate nodded, gore dripping from his maw, before he lunged back into the fray.
Leaving the commander and Helion Spell-Cleaver to go head-to-head. Spell to spell.
Soldiers on either side began fleeing.
But the Cauldron whipped me away as Helion unleashed a blast of light toward the commander, its quarry not to be found on that battlefield.
Come, Nesta’s power seemed to sing. Come.
The Cauldron caught her scent and hurtled us onward.
We arrived before the king did.
The Cauldron seemed to skid to a halt at the clearing. Seemed to coil and reel back, a snake poised to strike.
Nesta and Cassian stood there, his sword out, Nesta’s eyes blazing with that inner, unholy fire. “Get ready,” she breathed. “He’s coming.”
The power Nesta was holding back …
She’d kill the King of Hybern.
Cassian was the distraction—while her blow found its mark.
Time seemed to slow and warp. The dark power of the king speared toward us. Toward that clearing where I was neither seen nor heard, where I was nothing but a scrap of soul carried on a black wind.
The King of Hybern winnowed right in front of them.
Nesta’s power rallied—then vanished.
Cassian did not move. Did not dare.
For the King of Hybern held my father before him, a sword to his throat.
That was why he had looked to the sea. He’d known Nesta would land that killing blow the moment he appeared, and the only way to stop it …
A human shield. One she’d think twice about allowing to die.
Our father was blood-splattered, leaner than the last time I’d seen him. “Nesta,” he breathed, noting the ears, the Fae grace. The power sputtering out in her eyes.
The king smiled. “What a loving father—to bring an entire army to save his daughters.”
Nesta did not say anything. Cassian’s attention darted through the clearing, sizing up every advantage, every angle.
Save him, I begged the Cauldron of my father. Help him.
The Cauldron did not answer. It had no voice, no consciousness save some base need to take back that which had been stolen.
The King of Hybern tilted his head to peer at my father’s bearded and weather-tanned face. “So many things have changed since you were last home. Three daughters, now Fae. One of them married quite well.”
My father only gazed at my sister. Ignored the monster behind him and said to her, “I loved you from the first moment I held you in my arms. And I am … I am so sorry, Nesta—my Nesta. I am so sorry, for all of it.”
“Please,” Nesta said to the king. Her only word, guttural and hoarse. “Please.”
“What will you give me, Nesta Archeron?”
Nesta stared and stared at my father, who was shaking his head. Cassian’s hand twitched, the blade rising. Trying to get a good shot.
“Will you give back what you took?”
“Yes.”
“Even if I have to carve it out of you?”
Our father snarled, “Don’t you lay your filthy hands on my daughter—”
I heard the crack before I realized what happened.
Before I saw the way my father’s head twisted. Saw the light freeze in his eyes.
Nesta made no sound. Showed no reaction as the King of Hybern snapped our father’s neck.
I began screaming. Screaming and thrashing inside the Cauldron’s grip. Begging it to stop it—to bring him back, to end it—