After this day of beatings and abuse and being made to feel worthless, Nic was finally being given a choice. By someone he’d hated since the moment he’d first learned his name.
A Paelsian savage driven by vengeance.
A rebel leader who’d failed many more times than he’d succeeded.
The alleged murderer of Queen Althea.
The kidnapper of Cleo.
Jonas Agallon was about as trustworthy as a slimy sea snake.
And no decision in his life had ever been easier.
CHAPTER 14
LYSANDRA
AURANOS
She remembered when the boys in her village would pick on her when she was six, maybe seven years old. Once, one particularly mean boy had tripped her on her way back from the forest, her arms weighed down with the wood she’d been sent to gather.
She hadn’t seen his foot. And she hadn’t noticed the mud puddle beneath her until she landed face-first in it, the firewood flying out of her grip and falling into the muddy water after her. Ruined.
“Lysandra’s a crybaby,” another boy had taunted as her tears began to flow. His friends joined in his laughter. “Boo hoo! Cry, Lysandra! Cry harder!”
They’d run away when Gregor approached, but she could barely see him through her tears. The firewood was spoiled and it had taken her forever to gather enough dry twigs and branches. Without it, there would be no dinner. No warmth.
She didn’t try to get up. She sat there, her skirts soiled, and she cried.
“Stop it,” Gregor had said.
But she couldn’t. She couldn’t stop crying, no matter how much she’d wanted to.
“Stop it,” he said again, grabbing her wrists and pulling her roughly to her feet. “Stop crying!”
“That boy—he pushed me. He’s so mean!”
“And you’re surprised? He’s mean to everyone who lets him. C’mon, little Lys. I thought you were better than this.”
His words surprised her. “Better?”
“Maybe you are a crybaby.”
“I am not!”
He shoved her until she staggered back and dropped into the puddle again. She stared up at him with shock.
“You’re going to let me do that?” he demanded.
“Wh-what?”
“Get up!”
Shock gave way to anger as she got to her feet. She glared at him, her small fists clenched at her sides, her tears forgotten.
“That’s better,” he said. “You don’t cry when someone pushes you down. You get up. You get up and you fight back. And pretty soon nobody’s going to shove you anymore because they’ll see it’s not worth it. You won’t let anyone push you around and make you cry. Got it?”
At the time, Lysandra didn’t understand what he’d been trying to teach her. All she knew was that her skirts were muddy and her mother would be angry that she’d spent so long gathering nothing but dirt.