“Avan?”
His knuckles brushed my cheek. “I know what you think I am. But I’m not mahjo.”
“Some humans,” Kronos said, “possess the ability to sense the Infinite. As one of them, and due to his affection for you, Avan was in a convenient position to be your guardian.”
I moved away from Avan, and he let me go. I looked between them, from Kronos’s stoic face to Avan’s guilty one.
“You knew? All along, you knew and you didn’t tell me?”
“I didn’t know all this,” Avan said, gesturing around us. “I told you I already knew what you could do, Kai. I knew you were special; and when Kronos came to me, I finally discovered why. But I wasn’t expecting any of this.”
“With Reev gone, you were the only person I thought I could trust, and you’ve been lying to me from the start.”
“I had to be able to protect you.”
“I knew you would need help, so I offered him a proposition,” Kronos said. “He made an adequate guardian.”
As furious as I was with Avan, I had to defend him. “Adequate? He saved my life.” Probably more than once.
Kronos looked down his nose at me. “Precisely.” Then he said to Avan, “You recall what I told you about your time?”
Avan nodded.
“Okay,” I said, lifting my hands. “Quit being cryptic and tell me what’s going on.”
“He asked me to keep you safe, and he gave me the power to do it,” Avan said. He rubbed the back of his neck, as if the admission embarrassed him. “But if I told you the truth, the deal would be off. In Etu Gahl, when I thought that was the end of your search for Reev, I wanted to tell you then.”
What if you could find out for sure? Avan had said that first night. Would you want to know?
Suddenly, I couldn’t catch my breath. “Why didn’t you?” I asked, overcome.
“Because Irra promised a way back into Ninurta, and I had to be there to protect you.”
“I can take care of myself.” I spat out the words. Not only had he lied to me, he hadn’t trusted me to keep myself safe.
“I know,” he said. “And I know what you’re thinking, but you’re wrong. You’re a strong person, Kai. I’ve always admired that about you. But anything could happen, and I had to be prepared for both our sakes.”
“How long have you known?”
“Since the day before Reev disappeared.”
“Did you know Reev would be kidnapped?” Rage swelled inside me.
“No,” he said, stepping close. His hand cupped my cheek. “I would have stopped it if I’d known.”
I believed him. I knew that Avan wouldn’t let anything happen to Reev if he could prevent it.
“As I said,” Kronos interrupted, “his affection for you worked in my favor. In order to protect you from whatever the Outlands and Ninu might place in your path, I froze his time. Any injuries he sustained would be temporarily revers—”
“I understood the risks,” Avan said softly.
I remembered Avan’s broken arm after our crash. Irra deliberately cutting him. The complications with drawing blood.
Reev’s blade laying open his chest.
I shook my head, staring at the base of his neck where his collarbones met. My anger ebbed as the memories came together. My hands found his shoulders, nails digging into his skin that was firm and alive. They couldn’t mean—
Avan tilted my chin so I’d look up at him. “Kai, I—” He paused, appeared to search for the right words, and then sighed and leaned forward.
His kiss wasn’t at all uncertain. I drew in a shuddering breath, taking the air from Avan’s parted lips and holding it. Everyone and everything else faded away as I lifted on my toes and kissed him back. His fingers trailed down my neck, gentle enough to make my chest hurt. His other hand lingered at my waist, his restraint evident in the way he gripped my hip.
His mouth moved desperately over mine, his taste against my tongue. I pressed closer, curling my fingers against his chest. His heart beat a frantic rhythm against my palms. I couldn’t remember how to breathe, but that was okay because Avan’s breath filled me.
He whispered against my lips, “I love you. You have to know that.”
All the words I wanted to say scattered. I could only hold on to him and nod. He pulled back so I could see his eyes, beautiful and sad and filled with emotions I wasn’t used to seeing there.
“I thought I knew how I felt about you,” he said, “when we were in the Alley. When I was convinced you saw me only as your friend. But now I know the truth.” He touched his forehead to mine, his dark lashes closing. “I love you, Kai. Which is why I can’t let you see this.”
Confusion made me frown, but his kiss and his words still burned inside me.
“Reev,” Avan said, drawing back farther. His hands fell away. “Can you take her?”
“What?” I reached out, but Reev took hold of me instead.
“Come on, Kai,” Reev said, his voice too soft. Too careful. I tried to elbow him off.
“What are you doing?” I demanded.
Avan said, “Kronos is going to release my time.”
“But that means—”
“You can’t watch this,” Reev said. My feet faltered. Reev’s hands were like manacles around my arms.
“Let me go!” I struck out at Reev, abandoning all my training and letting my limbs fly. A raging frenzy consumed me. This couldn’t be happening.
My strength was no match for Reev’s. He hauled me against him, his arm wrapping around my waist and dragging me toward the exit. Avan watched me go.
I shouted at Kronos, “If you do this, I’ll never join you!”
My fingers grappled against the threshold, but Reev peeled them loose with a quiet apology. He reached for the door.
I didn’t realize I was crying until the sob tore free. Stupid, stupid Avan—I took in the beautiful curve of his mouth, that drekking dimple, the warmth in his eyes. I had to make sure this image of him would remain with me always, seared into my mind.
He whispered, “Stay safe.”
Then Reev slammed the door shut, time hurtled forward again, and Avan was gone.
CHAPTER 40
NINU MUST HAVE liked his solitude, because there were a surprising number of secluded places on the palace grounds. My favorite was the enormous oasis right next to a block of official buildings.
The gardens stretched over three acres, filled with all varieties of trees, dirt paths and meandering streams, lush flowers and wildly overgrown plants as densely tangled as the forest. Scattered throughout were tables and benches set in patches of grass that had been allowed to grow wild.
When I’d first found the oasis, I had tossed my bag over my shoulder and lost myself in its winding paths for a week. Eventually, I’d come upon a gazebo at the end of a path laid with cracked stones. The gazebo overlooked a pond with water so clear that I could see all the way down to the silt bottom. Glittering gold and silver fish darted through the water.
I spent most of my time here. Like today. I’d folded a blanket to soften the gazebo’s stone bench and sat watching the branches rustle and shake the leaves loose.
Everyone else had spent the last couple of weeks running around me, briefing and reorganizing the sentinels—those who’d chosen to remain—while making room for the recent arrival of Irra and a contingent of his hollows. Kalla had decided to continue the Tournament to avoid alerting the public.
The first thing I demanded of Kalla was to remove my alias from the citizen registry and clear my fugitive status so I could move about freely.