Page 59 of The Curse of Gods


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Just like they wanted.

“She looks a breath away from death,” the king muttered. There was irritation etched in his words. Aya traced it through the rigidity of his posture to the furrow of his blond brow.

“The healer who guards her assures me she is not,” Evie replied, that gentleness in her voice sharpening ever so slightly.

Aya kept quiet, the solid ground beneath her feeling more like the unsteady sea as her legs ached with the effort of keeping her standing. Evie held her gaze for a long moment before motioning to the far side of the room. “We have visitors. They say you are acquainted.”

Each of Aya’s movements felt slow and isolated: the turn of her head, the blink of her eyes, the knot of dread that pulled tight in her stomach as a desperate thought rose through the murkiness of her mind.

Please not him.

Relief and regret formed tangled vines inside of her as her gaze fell not on Will, but on a large group of people dressed in robes of gray. At the head stood a bald man with pale, weathered skin and a yellowed smile that widened as Aya met his gaze.

No. It was impossible.

She had seen him die—had flung out her power in her rage and her despair and watched as it lit him up like a tree struck by lightning before his body crumbled to the desert sand.

She had heard death rattle his voice.

And yet…

“Aya,” the man purred. His black irises haunted her dreams, even still, and they gleamed now with that same fanatic light she’d seen in the clay hut where they’d first met. The same light she’d recognized in Gregor’s eyes, she realized.

Tell me, Aya. Would you like to meet your soul?

“I killed you,” Aya rasped, her voice weak from disuse. “I killed you in the Preuve desert.”

The same desert where they had left her for dead.

The man laughed, and the hairs on the back of Aya’s neck rose with the sound. “Once again, your sight proves narrow, child. You saw me on the brink of death, true. But my devotion gave me new life.”

What did that mean? Had he been part of the illusions in the desert? Illusions that, Aya knew now, Evie was able to wield from within the veil. The magic of it escaped her, but Evie had all but confessed to her influence when one’s mind was focused intently on her. And with Aya sharing a kernel of her power, who else knew what sort of bridge that had built between them?

She didn’t know. But she did know that voice she’d heard in the desert had not been the darkness of her own mind. Not entirely.

Nor had it been the Vaguer.

Who are you, Daughter of Darkness?

“We’ve brought another friend of yours,” the Vaguer remarked, his reedy voice doused in amusement as he glanced behind him. The rest of the Vaguer shifted, the crowd parting down the middle until Aya could see the woman they had hidden in their midst.

Her wrists were shackled, her black hair, lined with more gray than when Aya had last seen her, limp. There was a bruise marring the tan skin of her cheek.

Aya’s blood went cold as the woman’s blue eyes met hers. Her face was as achingly familiar as it was different.

The Vaguer had come to Kakos.

And they had brought Will’s mother, Lorna, with them.

23

Will was eighteen years old when he learned his mother was alive.

He had spent three years mourning her death. Three years watching his father grow colder, and meaner, and more brutal without Lorna to temper him.

He hadn’t realized how much she had done that—the tempering—until she died, and Will was faced with his father’s attention in full force.

Except shehadn’tdied.