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Our eyes meet.

My brow furrows as I study him. Metal helmet, dark leathers, a large sword strapped to his waist. My gaze sharpens on the Arbinji crest on his chest plate—a massive tree with a bolt of lightning struck through it. He’s not dressed like the crown prince I expected. No, he’s dressed like—

Realization washes over me in a frigid wave.

It steals my breath, frosting over my lungs like a sheet of ice.

The Dark Commander stops at the foot of the dais, his soldiers flanking him.

Life crashes back into the stunned hall with hushed whispers and muttered disapproval. The temperature in the room seems to drop once my people realize the Dark Commander stands amidst them.

There’s a good chance every person in this room mourns someone because of him.

Father eyes him with derision, lips curled with disdain.

“Prince Zevayr. We weren’t expectingyou. Has Prince Faramir been delayed?”

“Faramir sends his regrets.” His deep, gravelly voice is quiet, yet somehow still booms like thunder. “I’ll perform the ceremony in his stead and deliver his betrothed to Arbinj for the wedding.”

Deliver? I bristle at being likened to goods.

Father’s scowl deepens. “It is beyond insulting that Varad expects me to betroth my heir viaproxy.”

Zevayr gives a casual one-shouldered shrug. A wave of outraged murmurs sweeps the hall at his blatant disrespect.

“Prince Zevayr,” I say sharply before I can stop myself. His gray eyes snap to me. “Recently, several warriors returned severely injured from the border.Afterthe ceasefire was negotiated.”

Father stiffens, and the hall falls silent once more, like the quieting of the wind before a catastrophic storm.

The Dark Commander studies me with that cool, unyielding gaze. His helmet hides most of his face, but I catch it—a flicker of surprise in his eyes, quickly smothered by anger. The sky darkens, dimming the light in the hall.

Tides drown me.

He’s a stormwielder—he literally holds my greatest fear in the palm of his hand.

I swallow, refusing to break his heavy gaze.

“My apologies, Princess,” he finally rumbles. I blink in surprise. “We had reason to believe that particular battalion was planning an attack. I only received notice of the ceasefire afterward.”

I regard him carefully, then give a small dip of my chin.

“Shall we begin the ceremony, King Tormik?” Zevayr asks.

Father doesn’t respond, just rises from the throne and descends the dais, gesturing for Zevayr to take his place. As the Dark Commander climbs the stairs, I realize howmassivehe is—when he finally looms before me, his broad, muscled torso blocks out everything else.

He sinks into the vacant, too-small throne without a word of complaint. Once again, those unreadable gray eyes study me. I hate that I can’t see his face.

But I don’t wonder long.

He unstraps his helmet. I brace for a monster—for the ugly face of the murderer I know him to be.

My lips part in surprise.

His cheekbones are sharp, jawline chiseled and darkened with stubble. Black hair, mussed and slightly matted. He rakes a hand through his dark locks like he has all the time in the world.

He’s handsome. Irritatingly so. And I hate that more than anything.

The Dark Commander is a ruthless killer. A murderer.