Authors: Sara B. Larson
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Love & Romance, #Action & Adventure, #General
order, and we recognized it.
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“Of course, Your Highness,” I said. “We will do as you wish.”
He lifted an eyebrow at the use of his title again but didn’t tell
me to call him Damian this time. Instead, he stood up and strode
out of the tent without another word.
“Didn’t that woman tell us to all stay here if we didn’t want to
be knocked out again?” Rylan asked.
“Apparently, he didn’t think that threat applied to him.”
There was no sound of fighting, no impact from his body hit-
ting the ground unconscious, so he’d obviously assumed correctly.
“Do you get the feeling that something strange is going on
here?” I asked Rylan.
“Yes. I just have no clue what it could be.”
I sighed. “Neither do I.”
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twenty-one
T
hat night, I lay on my back, staring up at the canvas
above me, willing myself to fall asleep in the muggy humid-
ity, which lingered even though the sun had gone down hours ago,
when the entrance to our tent rustled. Alarmed and instantly alert,
I sat straight up on the hard ground, straining to see in the dark.
Beside me, Rylan’s breathing was steady and deep.
It wasn’t Eljin, or even Lisbet. Instead, I stared up at the tall,
shadowed form of Prince Damian in the darkness. A wave of heat
cascaded over my body when he met my startled gaze and silently
motioned for me to follow him out of the tent. Before, when he’d
come to speak to me at night, I’d believed that he thought I was a
boy. He was right — having the truth out in the open changed
everything. My blood pulsed through my body as I rose and crept
out after him.
The camp appeared to be asleep, except for two men who
stood watch by a campfire across from us. The f lames undulating
in the black shadows of the jungle reminded me of the jaguar
attack and I shuddered. Damian passed one finger across his lips
and silently walked between a few tents and then out toward the
line of trees beyond the small clearing in which our captors had
made camp.
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Had he changed his mind? We couldn’t leave Rylan. I refused
to. And there was no way I was heading into the dark jungle com-
pletely unarmed.
Finally, Damian stopped and glanced back at the camp. No
one was coming after us; we’d managed to slip away unnoticed.
Above us in the trees, a bird screeched, making me jump.
The scent of plants and earth and even a hint of something
f loral surrounded us. My skin was sticky from the humidity and I
reached up to push my damp hair off my forehead.
“What is it — what do you want?” I asked, at last, when
Damian didn’t speak. I never would have dared be so bold before,
but I was exhausted, embarrassed, and frustrated. With him in
particular. He hadn’t returned the rest of the night, leaving me to
vacillate between being worried about him and angry with him for
not getting sent back to our tent with his tail between his legs. So
much for Lisbet’s threat.
“I needed to talk to you,” he said, his voice low. “To apolo-
gize, first of all. I
am
sorry if I made you upset. But how was I supposed to tell you that I knew my best guard — the undefeated
Alex — was a
girl
?” He looked down at me with those piercing eyes of his, and an unfamiliar heat blossomed deep in my belly.
“How long have you known?” My body thrummed with
tension.
He lifted one hand slowly and I froze. He took a lock of my short
hair and rubbed it gently between his fingers. “I’ve always known.”
“Always?” I repeated dumbly. His gaze was so intense, I was
having a hard time concentrating.
“I know you believed me to be spoiled. Arrogant. But that
didn’t mean I wasn’t observant — more so than most. I watched
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all of you. I had to. As I told you before, I’ve been trained not to
trust anyone.” He paused, searching my face. My mind f lew back
to the night when he told me how he’d been raised, when he said he
wanted to trust me. When he asked me if I had any friends to con-
fide in. “From the moment you joined my guard, I knew something
was different about you. Just because I seemed oblivious didn’t mean
that I actually was that callous and uncaring. That I didn’t see
you
.”
I stared at Damian, my mouth suddenly dry. “I . . . I don’t . . .”
“Tell me about the jaguar attack,” he said abruptly, dropping
his hand and taking a step back. “What happened — why were you
gone for almost two days?”
Relieved to be on safer footing, I quickly told him everything
that had happened, including Borracio’s cryptic message for him.
He listened intently, his expression pensive. When I was done, he
sighed.
“If they hadn’t found you in time . . .” A shadow crossed his
face, and he continued, his voice lower, “I’m so relieved they were
able to heal you. I . . . I need you, Alex —
Alexa
.”
Hearing him speak my true name sent another jolt through
me. My heart thudded in my chest at his words. The prince —
Damian
— needed me? I felt my mouth part, but no words would come. Finally, I managed to force out just one. “Why?”
He hesitantly stepped closer to me. His fingers brushed mine
in the darkness, sending a bolt of heat up my arm. I couldn’t have
moved if I wanted to. “Because you understand. More than any-
one. Because you know what it’s like never to trust anyone — to be
completely alone, lost in a disguise of your own making. Because . . .
because for quite some time I’ve —”
“Don’t move!” a woman shouted suddenly.
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We jumped apart and I spun around to see someone aiming an
arrow directly at my chest. At first, I couldn’t quite believe it, but as the figure walked closer, there was no denying who it was. What
was she doing? My heart raced, and I wished there were some way
to go back in time, to stop her from interrupting us. Damian had
been so close to admitting something —
“I found them,” Tanoori shouted over her shoulder, then she
met my disbelieving gaze directly. “Hello again,
Alex
.”
“Tanoori?”
“You know her?” Damian looked at me in shock.
“We grew up in the same village,” I admitted.
“Funny how quickly the tables can turn, isn’t it? One minute,
you’re threatening me and waiting for me to hang. The next, I’m
the one who might shoot you.” Tanoori glared at me in the dark-
ness. Gone was the trembling girl tied to a chair.
This
Tanoori seemed very capable of murder.
“I never wanted you to die,” I said softly.
Tanoori pulled her bowstring back even farther and I tensed,
waiting for the hit.
“You will not shoot her,” Damian commanded.
Tanoori lifted an eyebrow at him. “Should I finish the job I
started last week instead?” She turned her aim on him, making my
heart leap into my throat. “I’m still not convinced that keeping
you alive is the right thing to do.”
“You won’t be shooting anyone tonight.” Another voice came
from behind me, and for the first time since I’d met him, hearing
Eljin was actually a relief. “You may go.”
Tanoori stared at us for a moment longer, hatred clearly visible
on her face.
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“Now,” Eljin said.
With a sneer, she lowered the bow and walked away.
It seemed that now I had to watch my back to make sure
Tanoori didn’t put an arrow through my heart when I wasn’t
looking.
“I suggest you return to your tents,” Eljin said. “I’d hate to
regret my decision not to keep you tied up at all times.”
“I
am
rather tired,” Prince Damian said. “By the by, Eljin, you may want to keep better control of your little band of rebels
here.” And with that, he sauntered away, without looking back at
Eljin. Or me.
I gaped at Damian for a moment, then snapped my mouth
shut. Eljin stood stiff ly next to me, and rather than waiting for him to remember I was there and decide to punish me, I hurried
back to my own tent. The arrogant, insufferable, maddening . . .
I didn’t care how handsome he was or how he made my heart
race, the next time he came to drag me out of my tent in the
middle of the night, I was rolling over and ignoring him.
Though I was exhausted, it was a long, sleepless night. When I
finally did manage to doze off, I had horrible nightmares. A jaguar
lashed out at me, its eyes glowing in the dark as it swiped at my
head, my throat, my heart, tearing through my f lesh and bones.
And then it wasn’t a jaguar anymore. It was Eljin driving a sword
through my gut, but he had Damian’s crystal clear blue eyes as he
stood over me in triumph. Clutching my belly, I turned and saw
Marcel lying next to me, staring unseeingly. Past him lay Rylan
and Jude, also dead. I tried to scream but the blood filled my
throat, my mouth, my nose —
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I sat up straight on my bedroll in the gray light of dawn, gasp-
ing for air. I couldn’t remember where I was or why. I twisted
around, expecting to see my brother sleeping across from me, but
when I saw Rylan instead, reality came crashing down on me.
Rather than trying to go back to sleep, I stood up and crept
toward the opening to our tent, willing my heart to calm down,
for the vestiges of the nightmare to go away. When I parted the
f laps, I was surprised to see Damian standing by the long since
dead fire. His arms were folded across his chest and he stared out
at the jungle. Mist wound through the camp, silent and eerie,
shrouding the ground. It wrapped around his boots, making him
look almost like a specter. Without his usual pomade, his hair was
thick and wavy in the humidity. Despite myself, my heart picked
up speed again.
I thought about how he’d left me the night before at the mercy
of Eljin and nearly let the f lap fall shut. But the last few years of training were too well ingrained. That’s all that drove me to leave
my tent and wind my way silently across the camp toward him. Or
at least, that’s what I tried to convince myself to believe.
I stopped a few feet away.
“It’s beautiful, isn’t it?” he spoke softly, without turning to
face me.
“The jungle?”
“My country —
this nation of Antion. It’s beautiful and
deadly. But the people here are strong.
My
people are strong. They survive — you could even say many of them
thrive
, despite the dangers.”
I studied his profile as he spoke, the strong outline of his jaw
and the curve of his lips. “Yes, the people of Antion are strong. We
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refuse to give up — even when our own king is causing us as much
suffering as our enemy.” I snapped my mouth shut, horrified I’d
spoken treason to the king’s son.
But rather than reprimanding me, he nodded slightly. “How
long can it last, though? As you say, the king is driving my people
to their deaths with this never-ending war.” He finally looked at
me, and with the gentle light of dawn caressing his face, I couldn’t
help thinking that the most beautiful thing in Antion right now
was him. “If there was a way for me to stop the war, to put an end
to the suffering, would you condone me doing it?”
“Of course,” I replied without hesitation. I’d never heard him
speak like this before; it was thrilling and a bit unnerving to real-
ize how much he really did love his kingdom.
“No matter what it was?”
His eyes searched mine, making me acutely conscious of the
fact that he knew I was a girl, and that only a couple of feet sepa-
rated us.
“Without knowing what the cost was, I couldn’t say,” I finally
replied, falling back into my habit of making my voice gruff to
cover how f lustered I was. My heart beat fast and unsteadily. Why
did he make me feel this way? This was the
prince
.
“Have you ever heard the theory that it is better for one man
to die than an entire nation to suffer? Do you believe that to be
true? Is it ever okay to take a life in hopes of saving others?” He
took a step closer to me, so that I had to tip my head back farther
to keep looking up into his eyes. I’d never felt so aware of just how tall he was before.
“I think so.” I didn’t know what to do with him standing so
close — close enough that I could feel the heat from his body. My
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heart beat erratically and my fingers tingled for some reason. I
forced my face to remain impassive. I drew on all of my training,
all of the practice I’d had over the years pretending to be a boy to
maintain my composure. With a much steadier, lower voice, I said,
“Whose life are you thinking of taking?”
“Don’t do that with me,” he replied, staring down at me with
a look of almost hunger on his face. “We’re too much alike to pre-
tend with each other. At least when we’re alone, let’s be who we
truly are.” The intensity of his gaze nearly made me tremble.
No one knew me as I truly was, except for Marcel, and he
was gone.
But here was Damian, the strikingly handsome, sometimes
capricious, sometimes gentle prince of Antion, asking me to allow