“The Seelie have magic that we do not,” Frost said.
“The sluagh have magic that the Seelie have never possessed,” I said. I touched Sholto’s arm. He flinched, but didn’t pull away. I squeezed his arm, and wanted so badly to hold him, to try to chase this pain away. I rested my head against his bare arm. My throat closed up, and I was suddenly choking on tears. I began to weep, clutching at his arm. I couldn’t stop.
He pulled me away from him enough to see my face. “You waste tears on me—why?”I had to struggle to speak. “You are beautiful, Sholto, you are—don’t let them make you think otherwise.”
“Beautiful now that he’s butchered,” Segna said, looming over us, pushing her way past the uncles.
I shook my head. “You broke in on us in Los Angeles. You saw what I was doing with him. Why would I have been doing those things if he was less than beautiful to me?”
“All I remember from that night, white flesh, is that you killed my sister.”
I had, but by accident. That night, in fear for my life, I had lashed out with magic I hadn’t known I had. It had been the first night that my hand of flesh had manifested. It was a terrible power—the ability to turn living beings inside out, but they did not die. They lived on, impossibly on, with their mouths lost inside a ball of flesh, and still they screamed. I’d had to cut her to bits with a magical weapon to finally end her agony.
I don’t know what shadows showed on my face, but Sholto reached for me. Reached for me, to hold me, to give comfort, and it was too much for Segna. She shoved the other two guards away as if they were straw before a storm wind. She struck at me, shrieking her rage.
Suddenly there was movement behind me, and in front of me. All the guards moved at once, but Sholto was closest. He used his own body to shield me, so Segna’s razor claws sliced his own white skin. He took the brunt of the blow meant for me, and even what was left of that strike staggered me backward, numbing my arm from shoulder to elbow. It didn’t hurt, because I couldn’t feel it.
Sholto pushed me into Doyle’s arms, and pivoted in the same movement. The movement was so fast that it surprised Segna, made her stumble nearer the edge of the lake. Sholto’s good arm was a pale blur as he smashed into her. The blow sent her over the edge. She seemed to hang there in midair, her nearly naked body revealed by the wings of her cape. Then she fell.
CHAPTER 12
SHE LAY JUST ABOVE THE LOW WATER, IMPALED ON A SERIES OF spiked bones jutting out of her from throat to stomach. She hung there, caught, bleeding, like a fish caught on some terrible hook.
I think Sholto’s guards expected her to simply draw herself off the spined ridge of the boned creature. Agnes, especially, seemed to be waiting, patient, unworried. “Come on, Segna, get up.” Her voice was impatient.
Segna lay there and bled, her legs flailing, exposing her most intimate parts as she struggled. The hags wore a leather belt from which hung a sword and a pouch, but that, and their cloaks, were all. Her body was both larger than a human’s and more wizened, as if she were a shrunken giant.
I saw the wide eyes, the fright on her face. She wasn’t going to just get up. Sometimes, being mortal, I recognized real damage faster, because on a visceral level, I knew it was a possibility. Creatures who are immortal, or nearly so, don’t understand the disasters that could befall them.
“Ivar, Fyfe, go to her.”
“With due respect, King Sholto,” Fyfe said, “I would stay here, and send Agnes down.”
Sholto started to argue, but Ivar joined the argument. “We do not dare leave Agnes up here with you alone. The princess will have guards, but you will be unprotected.”
“Agnes would not hurt me,” Sholto said, but he was staring at Segna as if he were finally realizing just how bad it might be.
“We are your guards, and your uncles. We would be poor at both duties if we left you alone with Agnes now,” Ivar said in his bird-like voice. People always expected the nightflyers to have hissing, ugly voices, but Ivar sounded like a songbird—or how a songbird might sound if it could speak as humans do. Most of the nightflyers sounded like that.
“Segna is a night-hag,” Agnes said. “A mere bone will not bring her down.”
“I tripped on such a bone coming into your garden,” Abe said, and raised his cloth-wrapped arm at her. Blood had soaked through much of the cloth.
“The bones hold old magic,” Doyle said. “Some of them are things that hunted the sidhe and the other sluagh before they were tamed by your early kings.”
“Do not lecture me about my own people,” Agnes said.
“I remember a time when Black Agnes was not a part of the sluagh,” Rhys said, softly.
She glared at him. “And I remember a time when you had other names, white knight.” She spat in his direction. “We have both fallen far from what we once were.”
“Go with Ivar, Agnes. Go see to your sister,” Sholto said.
She glared at him. “Do you not trust me?”
“I once trusted the three of you more than any other, but you bloodied me before the Seelie got hold of me. You cut me up first.”
“Because you sought to betray us with some white-fleshed slut.”
“I am king here, or I am not, Agnes. You either obey me, or you do not. You will go down with Ivar to help Segna, or I will see it as a direct challenge to my authority.”
“You are gravely wounded, Sholto,” said the hag. “You cannot win against me in this weakened state.”
“It is not about winning, Agnes. It is about being king. Either I am your king, or I am not. If I am your king, then you will do as I say.”
“Do not do this, Sholto,” she whispered.
“You raised me to be king, Agnes. You told me that if the sluagh do not respect my threat, then I will not be king for long.”
“I did not mean—”
“Go with Ivar, now, or it ends between us.”
She reached out to him, as if to touch his hair.
He jerked back and yelled, “Now, Agnes, go now, or it will end badly between us.”
Fyfe threw back his cloak, revealing his weapons, and each of his hands touched a sword hilt, ready for a cross-draw.
Agnes gave Sholto one last look that was more despair than anger. Then she followed Ivar down the steep slope of the lake, using her claws to dig into the soil, so she wouldn’t slide into the bones that spiked the earth.
Ivar was already wading through the still water. It came above his waist, which meant the water was deeper than it had looked. He had to strain to lay a hand over Segna’s heart between the hanging weight of her breasts. He turned that lipless, unfinished face to look at Sholto, and the look did not communicate good news.
Agnes was taller than Ivar, and had an easier time in the water—it came only to her thighs. She waded to the other hag, and when she reached her let out a wail of despair.Sholto collapsed to his knees on the side of the lake. “Segna,” he said, and there was real grief in his voice.
I knelt beside him, touched his arm. He jerked away. “Every time I am with you, someone I care about dies, Meredith.”
Ivar called up, “I am not certain she is dying. Gravely injured. She may yet live.”
Agnes was petting her sister’s face. But I could see the gaping mouth, the labored breathing. Blood bubbled from the chest wound when she breathed, poured down her mouth. It would have been death to most.
“Can she survive it?” I asked, softly.
“I do not know,” Sholto said. “Once it would not have been a killing blow, but we have lost much of what we were.”
“Abeloec’s wound from the bones is still bleeding,” Doyle said.
Sholto’s head drooped, hiding his face in a curtain of that white hair. I was close enough to hear him crying, though so softly that I doubted anyone else would hear it. I pretended not to notice, as was only respectful for a king.
Segna reached out to him. She spoke in a voice thick and bubbling with her own blood, “My lord, mercy.”
He raised his face, but kept his hair like a shield on either side, so only I, kneeling beside him, could see the tracks of tears on his face. His voice came clear and unemotional; you would never have known the pain in his eyes from that voice. “Do you ask for healing, or for death, Segna?”
“Healing,” she managed to say.
He shook his head. “Get her off the bones.” He looked at Fyfe. “Go help them.”
Fyfe hesitated for a moment then slid, carefully, down the slope to join his brother in the still, thick water. The three of them managed to slide Segna free of most of the bones. One of them seemed caught on Segna’s own ribs, and Agnes snapped that spine so that they could lower her into their arms. She was writhing in pain, and coughing blood.
Agnes raised a tearstained face. “We are not the people we once were, King Sholto. She dies.”
Segna reached a shaking hand out to him. “Mercy.”
“We cannot save you, Segna. I am sorry,” said Sholto, for it now seemed clear that this was the case.
“Mercy,” she said again.
Agnes said, “There is more than one kind of mercy, Sholto. Would you leave her to a slow death?” Her voice managed to be both tear-choked and hot with hatred. Such words should burn coming out.
Sholto shook his head.
Ivar’s high-pitched voice came. “It is your kill, Sholto.”
“Their kill—the king’s and the princess’s,” Agnes said, giving me a look of such venom that I fought not to flinch. If a look could still kill among us, I would have died from that look in her eyes. She spat into the water.