Burning Glass (Burning Glass #1)(116)
My body seized with terror. My pulse flooded my ears. I spun to face the jail master. He would show me no mercy. His entrails would be ripped from his body if Anton and Tosya escaped under his watch.
The jail master advanced on me. His dagger dripped with blood. I had no weapon. Yuri’s knife was out of reach. Still, it was my only hope. I turned to dive for it, but it was gone.
A fleshy thud punched the air. The jail master gave a harsh, stunned grunt. I drew in a shocked breath and clutched my stomach, momentarily feeling his pain. Eyes bulging, the man careened over as his life drained out of him. I shuddered and looked about me, trying to make sense of what had happened.
Anton—the pacifist prince—was on his knees, one hand grasping an iron bar while the other jutted past it, fresh from flinging Yuri’s knife.
Tosya’s expression of amazement surely reflected my own.
“Anton,” I gasped, marveling that I was alive and, moreover, that he had actually killed someone to save me.
“You must go.” His face was ashen at what he had done. “Others will soon be coming.”
I knelt before him on the other side of the bars. I wrapped my fingers around his shaking hands. “I won’t leave you.”
A dull roar filled the air. Dust fell from the mortar of the stone-lined ceiling. Anton swallowed and looked from me to Tosya, who glanced upward. “It has begun.”
I regarded both of them, knowing they were trapped here while I was free, that they were willing to die for this mad dream—a dream neither one of them had wanted to end in violence. The least I could do was honor them by trying once more to end Valko’s reign peacefully. I would be risking my life, but it had always been at risk . . . from the moment I’d committed myself to the revolution, and even before, when I was brought to the palace in forced servitude. In truth, my life was compromised when I was born an Auraseer. This was my opportunity to break the chains. Or die trying.
“Do you really believe he deserves to live?” I asked.
Anton knew whom I meant. “No,” he admitted. “But I see in him every day what I could have become if the throne hadn’t been taken from me. If I were in his place, I’d like to think I would have a chance at redemption.”
I nodded slowly. “Then I will go to him one last time.”
He held steady to my hand, and his gaze searched through me. “Are you certain? Is this your choice, Sonya? I don’t want my desires to ever persuade you in anything.”
There was so little difference now between his aura and my own. We both knew what we must do. “Trust me,” I said, and laced my fingers through his. “And trust what is in my heart. My feelings for you are here when I am alone, when you are miles from the palace. I keep you with me. I choose to. You are the most impossibly stubborn person I have ever met. You are also the most honorable, the most caring. I love every part of you.”
A tremor ran across his brow as I said the word love. Even now, I felt him guarding himself from me.
“Our souls are fitted for each other, not because an old Romska woman foretold it, but because we choose them to be.”
The prince’s chest rose and fell. The indomitable barrier around his heart, at last, came crashing down.
“This feeling inside me is mine,” I said. “I am blessed to know you share it.”
Behind him, Tosya softly smiled and turned away, granting us the only measure of privacy he could. Anton reached past the bars to cup my face. Every time he’d beheld me in the past, his eyes had carried a measure of pain. And now that pain transformed into the ache of luminous joy, only dimmed because this might be our last moment together.
I would not waste it.
Tears blurred my vision. “I love you, Anton.”
He pulled me close, as close as the bars would allow. The space between them was just large enough for him to kiss me. And he did.
He gave me every breath of his aura. It filled my body with light, with strength, with a beauty I had never known. It couldn’t cleanse away everything I had suffered, every dark mistake I had made, every loss. Nor could mine erase his, all his loneliness, all the betrayals of those he had trusted. But our union was a haven from it all, a place for healing and hope. It felt like home. A home neither one of us had been able to depend on until now.
When he drew away, it wasn’t with any regret for the vulnerability he’d just allowed himself. His light still reflected within me and sang through my veins. “Please go now, while you can,” he said, kissing me briefly one last time.
I nodded and stood with more iron in my bones, more resolve to do what had to be done—and, for the first time, with unequivocal determination. I removed the jail master’s cloak and Yuri’s cape and draped them over their bodies to give them what honor I could and what peace I could offer Anton and Tosya, who must share this room with them awhile longer. I already sensed the guilt eating away at the prince for having had to kill a man.
Teeth gritted, I slid the knife out from the jail master’s belly and retrieved the dagger from his hand. I took Yuri’s pistol from his holster and tossed the weapons into a bed of straw past the bars. “Swear to me you will defend yourselves, if necessary.”
“We will,” Tosya answered for both of them. “Be careful, Sonya.” His aura held me with brotherly affection.
I nodded and stepped over the dead bodies, my heart clenching for Pia’s lost soldier. At the threshold of the open door, I turned my gaze once more to Tosya and Anton. “I will come back.”