Rebel Spring (Falling Kingdoms 2)
He’d already been on his way to see Melenia when it happened. His steps were focused, his mind clear. There were matters that needed to be discussed and they couldn’t wait another day.
As she stood from the seating area, her diaphanous robes swished around her curves. Her eyes were blue—a vivid sapphire shade that no one could ever mistake as mortal.
“I’m glad you’re here,” she said before he had uttered a single word. He was struck by her beauty, as he always was. She held her hands out to him as he drew closer. “You can celebrate with me another sign of our success. We’re close now. So close I can taste it.”
“And what does it taste like?”
“Like sweet victory. At long last.” Her smile fell as she saw he did not look pleased by this. She reached up to press her cool hands against his warm cheeks. This woman seemed so small and fragile before him, but he knew she was anything but. He’d never known anyone stronger in his entire existence. For so long, he had admired that strength. “What is wrong? You look so troubled.”
“I am troubled. The princess awoke from her deep slumber earlier.”
“I see. And now it will be more difficult for you to access her dreams.”
“That’s not it.”
She watched him carefully. “Then what is it? Unburden yourself to me, Alexius. You know you can trust me. We share all of our secrets, don’t we?”
So many secrets, he’d lost count of them all. “Two disasters in the mortal world. The tornado and the earthquake. It’s unfolding exactly as you said it would.”
“Yes.”
Melenia was a very special immortal, different from the others. More powerful in so many ways. She could see many things the others couldn’t—that which happened here in the Sanctuary and beyond into the mortal world. Her sight was clear and focused and always had been.
“And you continue to visit the king’s dreams?” he asked.
There was a pause this time before she spoke. “Not recently. He already knows what I need him to do.”
It was another of Melenia’s many secrets. Elders did not possess the ability to enter the dreams of mortals. Such a task was never easy, and was always draining of one’s magic and physical strength. But for an elder, it was impossible.
Except for Melenia.
“It won’t be long before my road is finished,” she said. There was joy in her voice.
Yes, her road. A road that had to be swiftly built by mortal hands. A road that needed to pass certain locations along its twisting path.
And, of course, since it wasn’t only a road, one mustn’t forget that there needed to be a great deal of blood spilled on it.
Blood—everything depended on blood. It was elemental. It was magic. Even when it flowed from the veins of mortals.
And when the road was finally completed . . .
“I need to know if there’s another way,” Alexius said, the words thick in his throat.
Melenia’s brows drew together. “Another way?”
He raised his gaze to meet hers, trying to shield the ache in his chest beneath his golden, swirling mark. Other immortals didn’t know of Melenia’s plans, but he did. He’d agreed to them when originally enlisted to her cause. He’d been certain he could stay the course.
Now he doubted himself.
Understanding entered her blue eyes. “I wanted you to make contact with her. To speak with her. To establish whether or not she was truly the sorceress prophesied by Eva so many years ago. You did as I asked of you perfectly.”
“She’s an innocent, Melenia.”
“No mortal who lives and breathes more than a day is innocent.”
“Help me understand. How are you so certain that your plan is the only one there is to find the Kindred? To release us from this prison? How are you so sure of it?”
Her jaw tensed as she swept past him toward the edge of her chambers, indicating the walls with a wave of her hand. Etched into the silver and crystal were the symbols of the elements— earth, fire, air, and water. It was her shrine to the Kindred, one many immortals had in their living quarters. They prayed to the symbols, hoping for answers, for guidance in the long days, years, centuries that had passed with no change and no escape.