Ride the Storm (Cassandra Palmer 8) - Page 5

“I didn’t start it! I had nothing to do with it!”

“And yet there you were. There you always—”

“This isn’t about me!” I yelled. “You have to be the most selfish, uncaring, infuriating man since—”

“Emrys?”

“Pritkin! It’s Pritkin, you prick! And he’s nothing like you!”

“He’s exactly like me,” Rosier said, scrambling across the bed to get in my face. “He doesn’t want to admit it; he’s never wanted to. You saw him, mooning over those damn fey. Ooooh, look, a Sky Lord! When they’re nothing but insane murderous bastards, every single one—”

“No arguments here.”

“—living in one measly, intensely creepy world—”

“Says the man from hell.”

“—when he could have thousands. And the knowledge of millennia, time out of mind. But always, always that perverse boy was attracted to every damn thing besides his own birthright!”

“The fey are his birthright, too. You saw to that yourself—”

“A fact I’ve regretted every day since!”

“—and, in fact, pretty much every problem Pritkin has can be traced back to you, can’t it?” I asked. “From leaving him to grow up with zero guidance, to taking him from earth before he was ready, to putting him in a terrible situation as your heir—”

“You understand nothing!”

“—to placing that damn prohibition on him—”

“To save his life, you wretched, wretched—”

“—to dragging him back to hell again, when you knew damn well—”

“That was your mother’s fault!” Rosier moved like lightning, wrapping his free hand around my neck. “She took my sire, long before I was ready to fill his shoes! She left me and my people vulnerable. She forced me to have to find a way to increase my power, and now her daughter is trying to take him away! I hate you! I hate your whole damn family!”

The door burst open, a fact I was grateful for, since I wasn’t entirely sure Rosier remembered that we were acting. Two war mages stood there, with their long leather coats and butt-kicking boots and annoyed expressions not looking all that different despite the era. But they didn’t come any closer.

Maybe because one of them had a blowgun.

“Well, fuck,” Rosier said as a dart caught him in the neck. He face-planted onto the bed. The door slammed.

I looked at it for a moment, then at my passed-out companion. And then I sighed and pulled the pillow back over my head.

Chapter Two

“There’s always option two,” Rosier said, sometime later.

At least, that was what I thought he’d said. But whatever knockout drug they’d given him was making his tongue loll, and it was kind of hard to tell. I looked up, but he just lay there and drooled at me. I waited for a minute, then went back to fiddling with the metal around my wrist.

It wasn’t part of the handcuffs.

I’d given up on those. They were solid steel and probably overlaid with spells to make them extra hard to pick, given experience. Not that it mattered; I wasn’t Houdini.

Of course, I wasn’t a dark mage, either, but I didn’t have a lot to work with here.

Tiny silver daggers, like links in an especially deadly chain, slid under my fingertips. I assumed Gertie had relieved me of my only weapon when I got here, but it didn’t matter. I’d tried to get rid of the little bracelet a hundred times myself, after finding out that it had once belonged to a dark mage. But every time I took it off, it was back in place moments later, spit-shined and gleaming, to the point that I could swear it was smirking at me.

It kind of looked like that now, winking smugly in the light of a nearby lamp, like it knew what I was thinking. On a positive note, it could throw out little ghostly knives that looked about as substantial as mist but cut like well-oiled steel. On the negative, I didn’t always control what they cut.

Tags: Karen Chance Cassandra Palmer Fantasy
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