Chapter 58

Fifty-Eight

Dacia

“My queen continues to make a compelling case for me to help you,” Lothaire told Kristoff as they sat on the villa balcony once more. The table that N?x had destroyed had been replaced in the ensuing months. Chessboards, a pitcher of bloodmead, and chalices awaited their play. “Mina’s heartfelt pleas for Furie did have some effect on me as well. Perhaps you will win tonight.”

Though Kristoff churned with excitement, he forced himself to say casually, “Then let’s begin.” He opened with his white knight.

“You wouldn’t believe where I’ve just been. We have a new visitor to the kingdom. You’ll meet him soon.”

When an enraged roar sounded from the dungeon, Kristoff observed, “An involuntary visitor.”

How many lives Lothaire toyed with! He moved a pawn. Fitting.

Any sympathy Kristoff had mustered in Nightside for his half brother had been crushed under the combined weights of impatience and resentment. “My old dungeon cell?” he asked, voice scathing.

“No. We needed one with a bit more . . . unique security.” He grinned as if at an inside joke, so Kristoff resolved not to ask him about it.

Instead they traded several moves, settling into their strategies.

Lothaire observed, “The taste of victory teases you. You must already be picturing your future. Yet your imaginings aren’t in the realm of reality.”

“Yes, yes. I’ve heard all this before. Furie is a crazed she-devil everyone should fear.”

Lothaire sipped his bloodmead. “Here’s something you might not be aware of. Rumor holds that she knew she would fail when she set off to assassinate Demestriu. Surely N?x would have warned her. But Furie’s rancor toward vampires drove her to hunt him regardless—because she would do anything for even a chance to kill a Horde king.” With an attempt at an innocent expression, he said, “Isn’t that the position you are currently applying for?”

Kristoff ignored that. “How did she go from assassin to captive?”

“Demestriu happened. She got the better of him and slew him, but he rose as if from the dead.”

“How is that possible?”

“Our uncle was old when I was young. Very old immortals develop interesting powers; basically they’re the pesky exceptions to all those fallible rules.”

Kristoff narrowed his gaze. “You admired him.”

“We had a complicated relationship. He ended up being more like Stefanovich than even I had anticipated. In a word: diabolical.”

“I discovered that when I exerted against him.” Seventy years ago, Kristoff had tried to take Helvita, but his Forbearer army had paid dearly, their numbers decimated.

“To be fair, you did better than most believed you could. No one predicted you would have the courage to take on Goliath.” Again Lothaire gave him that measuring look. “And five years ago, you seized a Horde castle. Perhaps you’re not utterly beneath my notice.” He poured more bloodmead.

Kristoff didn’t drink his own, wanting to stay sharp. Victory might or might not be here for the taking, but information certainly was. He starved for what Lothaire had in excess.

They exchanged a few moves; then Kristoff nonchalantly said, “Demestriu was known for his tortures.” Wanting to distract Lothaire, he asked, “What did you do to earn a burial in the Bloodroot Forest?” A burial that still torments you.

Lothaire’s eyes went hazy. “Nothing. I did absolutely nothing to him. But he wanted my vow to serve his interests forever, which I would never normally give. When he dug me out of the ground after centuries and threatened to plant me once more, I did anything he asked.”

“A vow took you off the board? Then he did to you what you’re proposing for me.”

“Yes.” Lothaire sipped his chalice. “Now that he’s been assassinated, only you stand in my way.”

“Not Cousin Emmaline?” Against all odds, their faint-hearted vampire/Valkyrie cousin had slain her own father, Demestriu.

“I’m not worried about Emmaline. She doesn’t want the crown, not like you and I do. I wonder if there’s a lesson to be learned from her?” Lothaire grew quiet in thought.

After a moment, both brothers spoke at the same time: “No.”

They glared at each other.

Kristoff didn’t want anything in common with this fiend. And yet, Lothaire was the closest family he had.

As they exchanged more moves, Kristoff realized he’d never hung on for this long. He conceived of a complex gambit that Lothaire would never see coming. Control your excitement. He can sense it like an animal.

“Uncle Demestriu did so love his cruelties,” Lothaire mused aloud. “He once smuggled a plague carrier into Stefanovich’s royal chambers in Helvita, where his Bride and heir slept under guard. One little scratch later . . .”

Kristoff’s jaw slackened. “Then Demestriu as good as murdered my mother? He was the one who did it?”

“It would seem so.”

“But someone sneaked me out as a babe. Who hid me among humans?—”

“Checkmate.”

That word. It’d come from nowhere. I thought . . . I thought I was winning.

Lothaire hadn’t tempered his stance, had only been toying with him. More games, more time, more sanity flowing away.

Checkmate. That word .

Wrath exploded. Speed and strength filled his body as he lunged across the table to overpower his brother. He had his fangs in Lothaire’s neck before the fiend could blink.

Blood. From the flesh.

With a bellow, Lothaire yanked him away, hurling him into the far wall.

Kristoff collided with stone. A bone snapped. Skull fracture? Didn’t matter. He’d already fed from the source. Even more power flowed through him, the transfer complete. He scrambled to his feet and bared his bloody fangs. “How’s that for a killer instinct?” He’d decided against this course after witnessing Lothaire’s insanity in Nightside, but rage had other ideas. “You’re right. We are very much alike. Especially now that we’ll share so many memories.” From all Lothaire’s victims and Lothaire himself.

“You fool, take them, then.” Pressing a palm against the gash on his neck, he stared at Kristoff’s eyes, which must be reddening. “You’ll choke on them. My memories will madden you worse than I ever could. Like our father, you are lost.”

“But she’ll be found.”

“Does Furie dream of air or fire? You have no idea what you’re about to bring to the surface.”

“My future.” With that, Kristoff traced away from Dacia forever. . . .

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