Bloodleaf (Bloodleaf #1)(6)



“You’ll be safe in Achleva,” Mother said. “We just have to get you there.”

Simon beckoned. “Give me your hand.”

I reluctantly removed my gloves and placed my upturned palm in his. He paused, taking in the sprinkling of thin, white scars that crisscrossed it, before drawing a new line with his knife. As the blood began to well up from the cut, he put the bowl beneath my hand to catch it.

“Now repeat what I tell you, word for word. ‘My blood, freely given.’ Say it.”

“I thought blood magic doesn’t require incantations.” I swallowed. “I mean . . . that’s what I’ve heard.” Stupid.

He gave me a sidelong glance, eyebrow raised. “Is that so?”

I shrugged. “A rumor, I guess.” To cover, I added, “My blood, freely given.”

“Good.” He held a bandage against my palm, to stanch the flow. “We’ll fix it up better once we’re done. This will have to do for now.”

He placed the knife in my hands and folded my fingers over it. Then he reached into his breast pocket and retrieved a velvet purse. He tugged at the drawstrings, and three clear, strangely cut stones tumbled into his palm. “These stones are called luneocite.” He held them out for me to see, but I already knew what they were. The Tribunal called them spirit stones. To be caught in possession of them was the same as a direct confession of witchcraft—?probably the quickest way to earn yourself a rope necklace for the next spectacle in the square.

He placed the stones in a large triangle in the center of the room, and the air felt suddenly charged, like the atmosphere of a lightning storm. Simon placed a bowl in my other hand and then guided me into the center of the stones. As I stepped over them, they gave off a momentary flash of blue-white and then dimmed back down. Lights were darting in front of my eyes, and my ears were buzzing, the silver knife and bowl growing warm in my hands. “Luneocite is rare and precious, and can only be found in seams beneath the ley lines—?the paths the Empyrea traveled when she descended from heaven to journey across the earth. Luneocite is, in many ways, the crystalized remnants of her power. We use it like a prism, to enhance our spell, and as a boundary, to contain the magic within our designated parameters.”

He stood at one of the luneocite points of the triangle, and my mother and Kellan took their places at the others. The buzz in my ears became a breathy hum—?almost like a distant whisper.

“Go to each of us in turn. Draw some blood from our palms and drip it into the bowl, just the same as I did for you.” Speaking to Mother and Kellan, he said, “As she does this, you must say, word for word, ‘My blood, freely given.’”

We all nodded in assent, and I took two steps toward my mother. She calmly opened her palm, not even wincing as I drew the knife across it. As her blood dripped into the bowl, mingling with mine, she said, “My blood, freely given.”

The whispering whir in my ears grew louder as I moved to Simon. He held out his long fingers, and I made the cut. “My blood, freely given,” he said with determination.

I faltered on my way to Kellan. There were lights zigzagging across my eyes, colliding and converging into vague shapes.

“Something’s wrong,” I said.

“We’re toeing the border between the material and spectral planes,” Simon said. “There might be some discomfort. Push through it.”

I took the final steps to face Kellan. He held my gaze, and focusing on his face allowed me to ignore the feathery, hissing voices that no one seemed to notice but me. The sound carried with it a cold foreboding that made my hands shake. Aurelia. I heard my name in the hum. Aurelia . . .

“Aurelia.” Kellan held out his palm, and my knife hovered above it. “It’s all right,” he said. “Do it.”

“No,” I said, lowering the knife. As I did, the sounds faded. “I’m sorry, but I can’t.”

“We need to finish this!” Mother cried. “We need to—?”

“It’s too late,” Kellan said, leaving me to look out the window. “The guards are already returning. Our time is up.”

“Get her out of here,” Onal barked, “so we can clean this up before someone comes and sees it. My neck is too delicate for a rope.”

“Act as if nothing has happened,” Mother directed. “There’s a banquet tonight to welcome Simon to our kingdom; you will attend, Aurelia, but only after you’ve spent a good long while in the sanctorium considering your improprieties. We need people to see you in humble worship. We need to let them witness your devotion to the Empyrea. To see you being normal.”

“So pretend,” Onal sniped, smiling.

I couldn’t even muster a decent glare at her as Kellan led me away.





?3




While the rest of the castle was preparing a feast for our royal visitor, I adjourned to the alcove where the royal family went to worship in elegant seclusion. Indeed, it seemed that while the Empyrea demanded humility and simplicity from her worshipers, her own tastes ran more toward the lavish and opulent. The sanctorium was draped in silk and satin, trimmed with gold, and lined on each side with tufted velvet chairs. Polished marble columns rose to a concave ceiling painted to look like the night sky, with smiling cherubs flitting merrily among the constellations as dark, devilish figures stalked them from below. The painting was supposed to represent our human impulses, the righteous ones above and the immoral ones below, but I always thought it misrepresented the truth of things: Sins were welcoming and charming, like the cherubs. And with their bared teeth and hungry eyes, the devils looked alarmingly like the fervid mobs that frequented Tribunal rallies.

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