Beyond the Red (13 page)

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Authors: Ava Jae

BOOK: Beyond the Red
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She doesn’t look up from the pages. “
Sha,
but I prefer something a little more tangible.”

I frown and turn to the bookshelves lining the walls. I can’t read Sephari, and my written English is pretty shaky, but even if I
did
know how to read well, I can’t imagine I’d ever have the time to read all these books. “Have you read all of these?”

“Not yet. But I intend to.”

Anja knocks on the door and informs us that supper is prepared. Kora thanks her and tucks her book away.

Then she turns to me and sighs. “My brother and Jarek will be present at supper, and they will not be pleased to see you. You are not to say a word unless I instruct you otherwise. Is that understood?”

I nod.

“When I enter the room, you are to pull my cushion out for me—I sit at the apex of the table—and serve me water from the pitcher. Then you will stand against the wall behind me.”

“Okay.”

She nods. Pauses. “Don’t let my brother intimidate you. He has no power over you anymore.”

“Your brother doesn’t intimidate me.”

“Good.” She steps out of her room and I follow.

The moment we enter the expansive dining hall, Dima and Jarek stand. But their eyes aren’t on Kora as she strides confidently toward her seat—they’re on me.

I step in front of Kora and pull out her cushion from under the hovering table for her, like she instructed. She sits on her heels and I take the stone pitcher and fill her glass with purple water, then return the pitcher to the table and step against the wall as Iro lies down beside Kora. Dima and Jarek are still standing when Kora takes a sip and arches an eyebrow at them.

“I take it the two of you will be standing as you eat, then?”

“What is that?” Dima snaps, the full force of his glare leveled on me. I meet his eyes, but keep my face expressionless.

“His name is Eros,” she says coolly. “I believe you two have already been acquainted.”

Dima scowls, but Jarek kneels at the table. Dima follows suit, kneeling next to him, but he looks like he’s just smelled something rancid.

“He’s a half-blood,” Dima grits out. His hands are squeezed into fists as nearly identical servants flood the room with enough platters of steaming food to feed a couple camps. But while Dima does little to hide his distaste, Jarek sits calmly beside him, his face blank and his posture upright but relaxed. But I know a front of apathy when I see it. I’ve practiced it myself way too often to miss it.

“He is,” Kora says as a servant fills her plate with dark meats, spotted vegetables, and striped fruits—a little from every platter.

“I assume you’ve reason to keep him,” Jarek says smoothly.

“I had need of a second personal servant to take over when Anja is occupied with her side work.”

“He’s a boy,” Dima says.

“Really? I hadn’t noticed. That would explain his lack of breasts.”

I smirk for just a mo, then force it off my face.

“Don’t be disrespectful, Kora,” Dima says. “You seem to forget who you’re speaking to.”

“Naï,
brother, I think
you
forget who you’re speaking to. Last I checked, I was still
Avra
and deserving of your utmost respect.”

Dima glares, but Jarek gives him a look and her brother takes a breath. Exhales. Relaxes his hands. “Were there not enough female pureblooded servants to take care of your needs? Surely you could have chosen one of the women from the outpost you recently raided before you decided to release them all.”

Kora chews her food slowly. Takes a long drink. “I chose Eros, so I had little use for those slaves.”


Kala’
s grace, Kora. You’re on a first-name basis with the
half-blood
?”

Kora tries to shrug, but the movement is stiff. She cuts a square of meat and keeps her eyes focused on her plate.

“You truly couldn’t find a way to use the new servants?” Jarek asks carefully.

“I saw little need to keep extra servants. The effort alone to train the lot of them, assign separate tasks, and feed and clothe them wasn’t worth the unnecessary added labor.”

“And yet you just claimed to have need of a second personal servant,” Dima says.

“I had a need and I filled it. I didn’t need hoards of women to fill the position.”

“Or perhaps you seek fulfillment of a different need,” her brother says with a wicked glint in his eye. “One that a woman could not fill.”

Kora chokes on her food as Dima levels his gaze on her. She gulps down water and slams her glass down. “
That
is
disgusting.

Heat rushes to my face and I resist the urge to scowl.

“I thought it a logical jump, considering your insistence that this particular male half-blood is the only one who could serve your ‘needs.’”

Someone’s utensil scrapes against their plate, and a grating screech sends chills down my spine. Dima jumps slightly and glances at Jarek with an arched eyebrow, so I guess the bulky soldier is the offender. Jarek glances back at him and lifts a shoulder before he resumes eating.

“Clearly, I don’t use my servants the same way you do,” Kora says stiffly.

“Well, perhaps if you did, there would be an heir to the throne—albeit an illegitimate one. Or do the council’s guidance and the people’s demands mean nothing to you?”

Jarek frowns slightly and Kora goes very still. I can’t see her face, but I can imagine the look she must be giving him. But her brother jumps in again before she can respond. “Speaking of which, do you know
why
the people were rioting earlier?”

A pause. “I saw the feed.”

“They want a man on the throne, Kora,” Dima says smugly. “Not that I can blame them. They have little confidence in your ability to rule, or right to do so.”

“I was born with the right,” Kora snaps. “Had
Kala
wanted you on the throne, you would have been born before me.”

I expect Dima to lose all composure at that, but instead he just smiles, cuts into his meat, and brings it to his lips. “Perhaps” is all he says, but the gleam in his eyes echoes something more.

I snap awake, shivering and dripping with sweat. Kicking off the cover of my bedroll, I stand. Cool air calms my heart as I push the echo of screams and crackling flames into the deep recesses of my mind. The moons filter white light through the translucent curtain over the large window, and Iro lays curled up at its base, his tail twitching as he sleeps.

I get up and walk over to the window, leaning against the sill. I try to breathe in outside air—there isn’t glass or a screen to block it—but all I get is cold, processed air. Leaning farther out the window, I stick my head outside. As I pass through the opening, warmth surrounds my skin and fills my lungs. It feels a little odd—my shoulders and the rest of my body are cool, while my head takes in the desert air—but the unprocessed oxygen is calming.

When my pulse returns to normal, I lean back inside and inspect the window. The only sign of any kinduv barrier is a thin line of sand running down the center of the sill. I extend my fingers past the line and the outside warmth surrounds my fingertips. So whatever barrier is used to keep the cool air inside also blocks out the sand, but allows larger objects to pass through.

I’m no scientist, but I’m willing to bet it has something to do with nanites.

Mystery solved, I run a hand over my fuzzy scalp and turn back to my bedroll—I should get some sleep while I can.

A soft moan rolls through the night and I squint through the darkness. Kora seems to be asleep, but she’s twisted in tossed sheets and hugging her knees to her chest. I take a few hesitant steps forward—she’s trembling, and whimpers carry through the quiet. I frown and nudge her shoulder, but she doesn’t wake. The light of the moons catches her wet cheeks. Maybe I should let her handle this on her own. We all have personal demons, and we have to face them, one way or another.

But the whimpers and tears don’t stop. I can’t leave her like that.

I sit on the edge of her bed and ignore the way it dips slightly under my weight. Now is not the time. I gently tap her cheek, then take her shoulder and keep my voice low. “Kora, wake up. You’re having a—”

She gasps and sits up, her eyes wide as she pulls the covers to her shoulders. It doesn’t cover much—the thin material does nothing to hide the perfect curve of her breasts or the smooth line of her bare shoulder. I hadn’t even realized she was sleeping naked. I guess I shouldn’t be surprised—I mean, I only kept my pants just in case I had to get up quickly in the middle of the night.

“Sorry,” I mutter, ignoring the warmth spreading through my veins. “You were having a nightmare and I just—”

“You’re touching me,” she whispers, staring at my hand on her shoulder.

I drop my hand to my lap. Take a breath. “Sorry. I was trying to wake you, you seemed like … forget it.” I stand and turn away, but her fingers clasp around mine. A flash of heat races through me, and my breath catches. I glance back. Tears are streaming down her cheeks as she stares at me.

“Could you … stay? For a few minutes?”

My gaze drops to the small twin bumps of her nipples beneath the sheet. I gulp. Stare at her face, not her breasts or the silvery moonlight painting her smooth collarbone and the curve of her neck. She wants me to stay? While she’s….

Okay, I need to relax. It’s not like I’ve never seen a naked woman before. And besides, she’s mostly covered … by a ridiculously thin sheet.

Her fingers squeeze mine just slightly. She must really need some company if she’s asking me to stay. I can handle it. I’m not fourteen. This isn’t a big deal.

I sit on the edge of her bed again.

She pulls her hand away and pulls her knees to her chest, which is good because, between the sheet and her legs, most everything is covered. See? No big deal.

“Did I wake you?”

I shake my head. “I was having nightmares of my own.” A pause. I hadn’t really meant to admit that. I bite my lip and she nods.

“How do you do it?” she whispers.

“Do what?”

“You say you have the dreams as well, and yet you don’t seem bothered.”

I smile weakly. “I’ve been trained to internalize emotion.”

“From the military?”

I nod. Kora scoots to the side and glances at the now empty spot on the bed. I take the silent invitation and shift closer to her. Our arms are just barely touching through the sheet and the almost-contact buzzes on my skin. I want to move closer. Without fabric separating us. I want to trace her collarbone and feel her breasts and taste her tattoos. I want our skin together, our—

Stop. She killed my family. I’m not attracted to her—she’s Sepharon, and a murderer and the embodiment of everything I’ve ever fought against and this needs to stop.

“Do you miss it?” she asks. “Your home?”

I hesitate. “I miss my family and the open air and endless sands. But the camp itself?” I shrug.

Kora looks down for several moments, then takes a breath and turns her gaze back to me. “I am truly sorry. About your family. If I could go back I would … do things differently.”

My eyes sting and I focus on her desk on the other side of the room. I don’t say anything. Her apology means nothing because we can’t go back, we can’t do things differently, we can’t return the lives we’ve taken or take back the pain we’ve caused. There’s nothing to say.

She sighs. “I miss my old life, when Dima and I were children, before the pressure of the throne drove us apart. He was my closest friend, for a time.”

When I look at her, her gaze is distant. Caught somewhere in the past, I guess. “What happened?” I’m not sure why I asked that. I don’t care. I don’t want to get to know her. I don’t want her to be anything but a symbol of everything I hate.

And yet, when Kora bites her lip and looks down at her knees, my anger slips away.

For a long moment she’s silent, probably because she has no business telling me anything and, honestly, I shouldn’t be asking. I shouldn’t be giving her the opportunity to explain herself.

But then she says, “No one has ever asked me that before.”

I blink. “No one’s ever asked you about … you?”

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