“I’ll see to the duties. You’re going to stay in here and rest.”
Her eyes widened with bafflement. “You can’t. I can’t.”
“I’d love to see you try and stop me. Or leave this room. Now make a list of what you have to do.”
If he wanted to do her chores, fine. Opulens would see him and laugh. Even the servants would snicker. Josephina would finally have time away from him—time of peace. The feelings he stirred...she was beginning to hate them. Their intensity.
Grinning with sugary sweetness, she stalked into the bedroom and dug a pen and pad of paper from the nightstand. Then she wrote. And wrote. And wrote. He used the silent minutes to strap on his weapons, rifle through the contents of the closet and dress in the clothes the king had provided for him. Her wrist was aching by the time she finished the list.
He approached her, wearing a black shirt and black pants, and looking absolutely edible despite having covered up his magnificent body. She handed over the paper.
He gazed at it, scowled. “You do all of this?”
“Almost every day.”
He read over the list a second time. “I should just kill your father and brother right now.”
“And be hunted by the Fae for the rest of your life?”
“That doesn’t worry me,” he said, and he sounded sincere.
“It should. I know Tiberius has allowed you many liberties, and you probably think my entire race is a joke—otherwise you wouldn’t be so cavalier—but you haven’t seen everyone revved up for a blood vendetta. I have.”
“I’m still not worried.”
She anchored her hands on her hips. “If the Fae want you dead and fail to find you, they’ll find your closest friends and torture them to force you out of hiding. Even the famed Lords of the Underworld.”
“And if I’m already dead?”
“They’ll do it just for fun.”
CHAPTER TWENTY
IN SECONDS, KANE had the lock on his bedroom door rigged, keeping Tink in and everyone else out. Ropes of guilt threatened to jerk him under a river of shame, which was ridiculous. He was doing her a favor. She needed rest and he needed to make sure she was safe and, prisoner or not, this was the only way to ensure those things. Maybe one day she’d even thank him.
Battling a sense of urgency, he hustled together a handful of the servants and issued a round of orders. The humans rushed around to take care of the twenty-nine items on Tink’s list—and avoid the consequences of failure. Soon, the wrinkles were being steamed out of curtains, the floors were being scrubbed, the banisters were being polished, and the queen’s bathroom was being cleaned.
The last was a chore meant to humiliate Tink, nothing more, he would bet. At breakfast, he’d witnessed the way the queen watched her, with resentment in those royal blue eyes. And he didn’t have to guess why. Tink was living proof the king had cheated, and Queen Penelope was lashing out in the only way she could. But that crap ended today. No longer would Tink serve a single member of the royal family.
She’d been placed in Kane’s care. She would serve him, and no one else.
He smiled. Tink would have balked if she’d heard his thoughts.
After speaking with one of the guards, he’d learned that Synda, his other responsibility, had decided to go for another walk in the garden, without protection and despite the Phoenix infestation.
As he stomped outside, a brutal wind suddenly kicked up, causing a hoe to lift from the ground and slam into him. When Kane failed to find the girl in the garden, he prowled into the forest. One hour passed, then two, but he found no tracks to suggest Synda—or even Petra—was out there. He would bet Synda had met someone, had sex, and returned to the palace. Sounds about right.As for Petra...he wasn’t sure. He only knew she wasn’t the type to give up.
Frustrated, he returned to the palace.
What a mess.
Disaster released a maniacal laugh.
Kane moved through the corridors, staying in the shadows, watching, listening. This had become his nightly ritual. He liked to make sure everyone was where they were supposed to be, staying out of trouble, and making no plans to come after Tink. The king snaked around the far corner, leading his new mistress toward his suite of rooms. The man was huffing and puffing with eagerness, his hands already roaming under the girl’s dress. The girl muttered an encouragement, with zero inflection in her voice. She sounded dead.
They disappeared through the door, and Kane moved on. Synda was now in her bedroom, playing strip poker with Red, Green and Black. No surprises there, though Kane was relieved she was back at the palace at least. Where was White? In the billiards room, he discovered a surprisingly healthy Leopold playing with three human maids. All three had long, black hair.
Like Tink.
Kane pressed his heels more firmly into the floor. Can’t kill him without causing Tink problems.
“You missed your shot,” Leopold said to the one holding the cue. “You’ll have to pay the penalty.”
The girl crooked her finger at him. “I’m more than willing.”
Leopold advanced on her, bending her over the table as he smashed his lips into hers. The other females watched, giggling.
Kane had heard the gossip. He knew the king had despised his son since his birth, yet Synda, the eldest, the one with the freaking mental disorder, he adored. What Kane didn’t know was why.
He backed out of the room. In the hallway he paused, booted footsteps claiming his attention.
“—must have chased the Phoenix horde out of the realm,” a guard said as he marched past.
Neither he nor his companion noticed Kane in the shadows.
“Cowards,” the other spat.
In the next room over, a group of servants were dusting and straightening a sitting room with a pink couch, pink loveseat, and multiple pink chairs.
“—just like her mother.”
“I know! I hear she’s sleeping in his room.”
A dreamy sigh wafted through the air. “I’d love to sleep in his room.”
A muscle twitched below his eye. They were talking about Tink, insinuating she was a...that she was his... He couldn’t even think the word anymore without wanting to kill someone. Painfully. He left the room—and ran into White.
“Are you following me?” he demanded.
She shrugged, unabashed.
He stepped around her, but she grabbed onto his wrist. He jerked from the contact, while Disaster purred.
“I’m confused about you, Kane, and I don’t like being confused.”
“That’s not my problem.”
A grinning William stumbled from the queen’s bedroom, and White rushed away down the hall.
“Hurry back, my darkling,” the queen called, oblivious to her audience.
“As if anything could keep me away for long, my pet,” the warrior twittered.
Kane stopped, waiting, his hands fisted.
The moment William shut the door, Kane was in his face, demanding softly, “What do you think you’re doing?”
The grin fell away, revealing a scowl of irritation. “Besides fighting a gag reflex? I’m getting answers. Why? You think I was betraying you?”
“You say that like I’d be crazy to think so, but we both know you once stabbed Lucien in the chest.”
“Ah, memories,” the warrior said with a grin. “But you aren’t trying to steal from me the way Lucien was. And by the way, I never do cougars free of charge. You so owe me for this.”
He eased off, but only slightly. “What have you learned?”
“I’ll tell you when I’m sure we’re alone. Wouldn’t want anyone to hear and think I actually enjoy helping my friends.” William led him down the hall and around the corner, then shouldered a portion of the wall—it opened, revealing a secret passage Kane hadn’t yet discovered. They entered the torch-lit space and pounded up a flight of creaking steps.
“Well,” the warrior began, as promised, “the king recently found out our good friend Paris is screwing Sienna, the new ruler of the Titans. He also learned Sabin and Strider are whipped by Harpies, and that Lucien had his balls removed by Anarchy. He fears your family and wants to be a part of it, whatever the cost.”