The Wish Granter (Ravenspire #2)(88)



Ari nodded because he seemed to expect it and raised her glass to her mouth, letting the liquid splash against her lips without passing her teeth.

“The king was insatiable. More rooms. More nights. More straw into gold. Always threatening to kill Samara in the morning if it wasn’t done. I couldn’t let my friend pay the price of her father’s foolishness, so I kept helping. Taking a loaf of bread, a patch of cloth, whatever she could spare as payment.”

“Why didn’t she just wish for the king to stop asking for gold?” Ari set her glass on the floor and looked for a safe place to set the pipe.

“That’s not how wishes work.” Teague sounded impatient. “I can’t modify someone else’s choices. I can only get them out of the way.”

“You can only kill them, you mean.” Ari shuddered.

“I can take a life, or I can spare a life, but a wish like that costs a tremendous price, as you are now aware.”

“It costs a soul.” Her voice caught on the words, and she swallowed hard.

He lifted his glass in salute. “As is proper. If you take a life, you should have to give yours up as well. I couldn’t do that to my friend. But my reputation was failing. Word had gone out that I was so busy helping a miller’s daughter, I was neglecting my duties at the Summer Court. It was obvious that Samara wasn’t paying my usual prices. My competitors were moving in on my territory. I had to do something. And so when the king announced that if Samara would turn one last enormous room full of straw into gold, he would marry her, I agreed to help but only in exchange for something worth the cost of the wish.”

He stared at the pipe in Ari’s hands. “She offered her firstborn child. Neither of us thought it would come to that. She hated the king. If he married her, she planned to drink a tea each month that would keep her from becoming pregnant.”

Ari’s heart sank. “He married her, didn’t he? And despite her precautions, she became pregnant.”

Teague’s smile twisted something inside Ari that felt like grief. “She did. And when the baby was born, our blood-signed contract brought me to her bedside. She was heartbroken at the idea of giving up her daughter. I didn’t want to make her go through with it, but we were both bound by the contract.”

Ari’s skin tingled, and the hair on the back of her neck rose. “She found a way to break the contract.”

The polished marble of Teague’s voice cracked, and rage bubbled out. “I told her how. I trusted that she would use it to spare her daughter and set us both free of the contract. Instead, she used the power I’d given her to banish me from Llorenyae forever.”

Ari pressed her spine into the back of the couch as Teague stalked toward her, but there was nowhere for her to go. Crouching in front of her, he blinked, and the rage that had filled his face was gone, banked behind the ice he wore like a second skin.

“I’m sorry that happened to you,” Ari said, her voice shaking as badly as the hand that still held the pipe he’d carved to remind him of the friend who’d betrayed him.

“I’m not,” he said softly, his eyes on hers. “It reminded me not to get involved in the affairs of humans unless they could pay my prices. And in case I ever feel myself softening because someone comes along who looks like she keeps her promises”—he smiled at Ari, cruel and cold, and her throat closed until it felt impossible to breathe—“I simply pull out the pipe I had carved from Samara’s bones after I had her taken from Llorenyae, brought to my new home in Súndraille, and killed in front of me, and I remember that humans are liars who can never be fully trusted.”

The pipe fell from her fingers, and he caught it before it hit the floor. They watched each other in fraught silence for a long moment, and then he said, “It’s late. You should get some sleep.” He offered his hand to help her from the couch.

She flinched as she took it, cringing at the way his pale, smooth skin reminded her of the ivory stem of his pipe.

And then she left him holding his creepy pipe and staring after her as she climbed the stairs on shaking legs and wished desperately that she could lock her bedroom door.





THIRTY-NINE


TEAGUE TOOK A long puff on his pipe and stared out the library window at the night sky. Things were coming along nicely. Sebastian had made excellent progress on the tasks set before him, and now Teague had a newly organized workforce with the most obedient, most ruthless employees at the top, and five warehouses full of goods marked for shipment to various kingdoms. He’d offered to toast Sebastian’s accomplishments, but the boy, upon seeing that the princess was already in her rooms for the night, had opted to go to bed.

Not that it mattered. One bout of drinking with a human was enough. He’d had a bit too much wine, shared a bit more with the princess than he’d wanted to, but the fear on her face when she’d left him made it all worthwhile.

Yet another object lesson to keep her obediently under his thumb until his plan was finished.

Teague took another puff on his pipe and considered the excellent progress he’d made at the trade summit. He’d moved freely among the most powerful echelons of society, granting wishes and signing contracts that all promised to benefit him greatly. He’d whispered suggestions in the right ears and planted the seeds for a harvest of wishes he could collect in the very near future.

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