Nesryn stepped forward. “We come with grave tidings from the south, Great Khagan. The kharankui are stirring again, called by their dark … master.” Many stirred at the term she’d used. But some glanced to each other, confusion in their eyes, and Nesryn explained, “Creatures of darkness from the Valg realm. This war has already leaked into these lands.”
Murmuring silence and rustling robes.
But the khagan didn’t tear his eyes away from his unconscious daughter. “Save her,” he said—the words directed to Yrene.
Hafiza nodded subtly to Yrene, motioning her forward.
The message was clear enough: a test. The final one. Not between Yrene and the Healer on High. But something far greater.
Perhaps what had indeed called Yrene to these shores. Guided her across two empires, over mountains and seas.
An infection. A parasite. Yrene had faced them before.
But this demon inside … Yrene approached the sleeping princess.
And began.
65
Yrene’s hands did not tremble as she held them before her.
White light glowed around her fingers, encasing them, shielding them as she picked up the sleeping princess’s hand. It was so slight—so delicate, compared to the horrors she’d done with it.
Yrene’s magic rippled and bent as she reached for the false wedding ring. As if it were some sort of lodestone, warping the world around it.
Chaol’s hand settled on her back in silent support.
She steeled herself, sucking in a breath as her fingers closed around the ring.
It was worse.
So much worse than what had been within Chaol.
Where his had been a mere shadow, this was an inky pool of blackness. Corruption. The opposite of everything in this world.
Yrene panted through her teeth, her magic flaring around her hand, the light a barrier, a glove between her and that ring, and pulled.
The ring slid off.
And Duva began screaming.
Her body arched off the couch, Sartaq and Kashin lunging for her legs and shoulders, respectively.
Teeth gritted, the princes pinned their sister as she thrashed against them, shrieking wordlessly as Hafiza’s sleeping spell kept her unconscious.
“You’re hurting her,” the khagan snapped. Yrene did not bother to look toward him as she studied Duva. The body the princess slammed up and down, over and over.
“Hush,” Hasar hissed at her father. “Let her work. Someone fetch a blacksmith to crack open that damned ring.”
The world beyond them faded into blur and sound. Yrene was distantly aware of a young man—Duva’s husband—sprinting up to them. Covering his mouth with a cry; being held at bay by Nesryn.
Chaol just continued to kneel beside Yrene, removing his hand from her back with a final, soothing rub, while she stared and stared at Duva as she writhed.
“She will hurt herself, ” Arghun seethed. “Stop this—”
A true parasite. A living shadow within the princess. Filling her blood, planted in her mind.
She could feel the Valg demon within, raging and screeching.
Yrene lifted her hands before her. The white light filled her skin. She became that light, held within the now-faint borders of her body.
Someone gasped as Yrene reached her glowing, blinding hands toward the princess’s chest, as if guided by some invisible tug.
The demon began to panic, sensing her approach.
Distantly, she heard Sartaq swear. Heard the crack of wood as Duva drove her foot into the arm of the couch.
There was only the thrashing Valg, scrabbling at power. Only her incandescent hands, reaching for the princess.
Yrene laid her glowing hands on Duva’s chest.
Light flared, bright as a sun. People cried out.
But as quickly as it had appeared, the light vanished, sucked into Yrene—into where her hands met Duva’s chest. Sucked into the princess herself.
Along with Yrene.
It was a dark storm within.
Cold, and raging, and ancient.
Yrene felt it squatting there. Squatting everywhere. A tapeworm indeed.
“You will all die—” the Valg demon began to hiss.
Yrene unleashed her power.
A torrent of white light flooded every vein and bone and nerve.
Not a river, but a band of light made up of the countless kernels of her power—so many they were legion, all hunting out each dark, festering corner, each screaming crevice of malice.
Far away, beyond, a blacksmith arrived. A hammer struck metal.
Hasar snarled—the sound echoed by Chaol, right at Yrene’s ear.
Half aware, she saw the black, glittering stone held within the metal as they carefully passed it around on a vizier’s kerchief.
The Valg demon roared as her magic smothered it, drowned it. Yrene panted against the onslaught as it pushed back. Shoved at her.
Chaol’s hand again began to rub down her back in soothing lines.
More of the world faded away.
I am not afraid of you, Yrene said into the dark. And you have nowhere to run.
Duva thrashed, trying to unseat Yrene’s grip. Yrene pressed down harder on her chest.
Time slowed and bent. She was dimly aware of the ache in her knees, the cramp in her back. Dimly aware of Sartaq and Kashin refusing to offer their position to someone else.
Still Yrene sent her magic flowing into Duva. Filling her with that devouring light.
The demon screamed the entire time.
But bit by bit, she blasted it back, blasted it deeper.
Until she saw it, curled within the core of her.
Its true form … It was as horrific as she’d imagined.
Smoke swirled and coiled about it, revealing glimpses of gangly limbs and talons, mostly hairless gray, slick skin, and unnaturally large dark eyes that raged as she looked upon it.
Truly looked upon it.
It hissed, revealing pointed, fish-sharp teeth. Your world shall fall. As the others have done. As all others will.
The demon dug claws deep into the darkness. Duva screamed.
“Pathetic,” Yrene told it.
Perhaps she spoke the word aloud, for silence fell.
Distantly, that bond flowing away … it thinned. The hand on her back drifted away.
“Utterly pathetic,” Yrene repeated, her magic rallying behind her in a mighty, cresting white wave. “For a prince to prey on a helpless woman.”
The demon scrambled back against the wave, clawing at the dark as if it would tunnel through Duva.
Yrene pushed forward. Let her wave fall.
And as her power slammed into that last remnant of the demon, it laughed. No prince am I, girl. But a princess. And my sisters shall soon find you.
Yrene’s light erupted, shredding and cleaving, devouring any last scrap of darkness—
Yrene snapped back into her body, collapsing against the floor. Chaol shouted her name.
But Hasar was there, hauling her upright as Yrene lunged for Duva, hands flaring—
But Duva coughed, choking, trying to twist onto her side.
“Turn her,” Yrene rasped to the princes, who obeyed. Just as Duva heaved, and vomited over the edge of the couch. It splattered Yrene’s knees, reeking to deepest hell. But she scanned the mess. Food—mostly food, and speckles of blood.
Duva retched again, a deep, choking noise.
Only black smoke broke from her lips. She retched again, and again.
Until a tendril dribbled onto the emerald floors.