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Page 81
Page 81
“I know I was.” Her eyes shone with fierce conviction. “I could not tell you I was a witch—and for that, I apologize—but you knew me, Auguste. As one soul knows another, you knew me, and I knew you. What we shared was real. Our child was born from love, not from lust or—or obligation. You must rethink this blind hatred and remember. I am the same now as I was then. See me, mon amour, and see him. He needs our help—”
Auguste did touch her now, twisting her lips between his fingers. He pulled them a hair’s breadth from his own. “Perhaps I shall torture you too,” he whispered. “Perhaps I shall see which of you breaks first.”
When she glared back at him, resolute, pride swelled in my chest.
Love.
“Why doesn’t the hemlock work on you, mon amour?” He released her lips to stroke her cheek. They could’ve been the only two people in the room. “How do you remain unaffected?”
She lifted her chin. “I’ve injected myself with hemlock every day since the day we met.”
“Ah.” His fingers tightened, clawing her skin. “So much for it being real.”
The door to the cabinet burst open, and a liveried man swept in. “Your Majesty, I’ve delayed the priests as long as possible. They insist we begin Mass immediately.”
Auguste stared at my mother for a second longer. With a sigh, he released her and straightened his coat. Smoothed back his hair. “Alas, it seems our conversation must wait until after the festivities.” Donning black gloves with practiced efficiency, his mask slid back into place. His persona. “I shall call for the two of you when they’re over—if she hasn’t arrived by then.”
“We’ve told you.” I closed my eyes to stop the spinning. To stop the nausea. When the darkness made it worse, I forced them open once more. “Morgane is already in the city.”
“I speak not of Morgane, but of her daughter.” His smile emanated through the room, casting shadows in my heart. The first flicker of fear. “If you love her as you say, she will come for you. And I”—he patted my cheek as he strode past—“I will be waiting.”
If possible, the dungeons were colder than even the air outside. Icicles had formed in the corner of our cell where water had dripped down the stone. Pooled on the earthen floor. I slumped against the iron bars, muscles weak and useless. Though Madame Labelle’s hands remained bound, she rubbed her sleeve against the ice to wet the fabric. Knelt beside me to clean my face as best she could.
“With the emetic and your body mass,” she said, trying and failing to soothe, “the effects of the injection should wane soon. You’ll be fit as a fiddle when Louise comes to rescue us. We can only hope she realizes what has happened before we’re eaten by rats.”
“She isn’t coming.” My voice rang hollow. Dull. “We had a fight. I told her she was like her mother.”
Beau broke off an icicle and shattered it against the wall. “Brilliant. That’s just brilliant. Well done, brother. I can’t wait to see how your spleen looks when a rat opens you up.” He whirled to Madame Labelle. “Can’t you—I don’t know—magic us out of here somehow? I know you’re bound, but all it takes is a twitch of your finger, right?”
“They’ve coated our irons in some sort of numbing agent. I can’t move my hands.”
“Can you use your elbow instead? Perhaps a toe?”
“Of course I could, but the magic would be clumsy. I’d likely do more harm than good if I attempted it.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Manipulating patterns requires dexterity, Your Highness. Imagine tying a knot with your elbows or toes, and you might grasp the difficulty. Our hands—our fingers—enable us to signify intent with much greater specificity.” Color rose on her cheeks as she scrubbed my own. “Also, though it has clearly escaped your great mental prowess, there are four huntsmen standing guard at the end of this corridor.”
He prowled the cell like an angry cat. Hackles raised. “So?”
“Mother’s tits.” She dragged her forehead across her shoulder in exasperation. “So I realize that I’ve accomplished many extraordinary magical feats in our time together, Beauregard, but even I must admit defeat when confronted with escaping prison, defeating four huntsmen, and fleeing the city with only my damned elbow.”
“Well, what are we supposed to do, then?” Beau flung his hands in the air. “Sit here and wait for my father to feed us to his rats? Excellent plan, approaching him, by the way,” he added with a snarl. “He loved me once, my ass.”
“Beau,” I said when Madame Labelle flinched. “Shut up.”
“He isn’t going to feed you to his rats, Your Highness,” she said. “Despite his bluster, I don’t think he means you any real harm. You’re his only legitimate heir. The law dictates he cannot pass the kingdom to Violette or Victoire.”
Beau whirled to face the corridor, crossing his arms angrily. “Yes, well, forgive me for no longer trusting your instincts.” I stared at his profile as the pieces clicked into place. Her rose-colored glasses. He’d worn them too. Despite their unhappy relationship, Beau had still dreamed for more with his father. Those dreams had publicly shattered on the floor of the throne room.
I’d lost the idea of my father. Beau had lost the real thing.
“Hang on.” Beau gripped the bars abruptly, his eyes fixating on something at the end of the corridor. I turned my head. Eased myself up the bars as panicked cries resounded from behind the door. Hope swelled, sharp and unexpected. Could it be . . . ? Had Lou come for us, after all? Beau grinned. “I know that voice. Those little shits.”
Footsteps pounded away from us, and with them, the shouts faded. The corridor door creaked open.
A mischievous face poked through. Violette. I didn’t know how I knew it was her rather than her sister, but I did. Instinctively. She skipped down the corridor toward us with a smirk. In her hand, she swung the guards’ keys. “Hello, taeae. Did you miss me?”
“Violette.” Beau thrust his face between the bars. “How are you here? Why aren’t you at Mass?”
She rolled her eyes. “Like Papa would let us outside the castle with Morgane on the loose.”
“Thank God for small mercies. Right. We need to hurry.” He held his hand out insistently. “The huntsmen could be back any second. Give me the keys.”
She settled a hand on her narrow hip. “They won’t be back any second. I told them Victoire accidentally impaled herself on her blade, and the idiots dashed upstairs to help her.” She scoffed. “As if Victoire would ever accidentally impale someone.”
“Yes,” he said impatiently, “but when they don’t find Victoire bleeding to death, they’ll know you tricked them. They’ll come back down—”
“No, they won’t. There’s quite a bit of blood.”
“What?”
“We snuck into the apothecary’s stores and stole his lamb’s blood. Victoire was a bit heavy-handed with it on the carpets, but she has several more vials. She’s leading the huntsmen on a wild-goose chase. It should keep them busy for a few moments at least.”