House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2) by Sarah J. Maas
So Hunt said, “You’ve been enlightening. Thanks for your time.”
But Bryce didn’t move. Her face had gone stony. “Where’s the green and sunlight you showed me? Was that another comforting lie?”
“You saw what you wished to see.”
Bryce’s lips went white with rage. “Where’s the Pack of Devils?”
“You are not entitled to speak to them.”
“Is Lehabah here?”
“I do not know of one with such a name.”
“A fire sprite. Died three months ago. Is she here?”
“Fire sprites do not come to the Bone Quarter. The Lowers are of no use.”
Hunt arched a brow. “No use for what?”
The Under-King smiled again—perhaps a shade ruefully. “Comforting lies, remember?”
Bryce pressed, “Did Danika Fendyr say anything to you before she … vanished this spring?”
“You mean before she traded her soul to save yours, as you did with your own.”
Nausea surged through Hunt. He hadn’t let himself think much on it—that Bryce would not be allowed here. That he wouldn’t rest with her one day.
One day that might come very soon, if they were caught associating with rebels.
“Yes,” Bryce said tightly. “Before Danika helped to save this city. Where’s the Pack of Devils?” she asked again, voice hitching.
Something large growled and shifted in the shadows behind the Under-King, but remained hidden by the mists. Hunt’s lightning zapped at his fingers in warning.
“Life is a beautiful ring of growth and decay,” the Under-King said, the words echoing through the Sleeping City around them. “No part left to waste. What we receive upon birth, we give back in death. What is granted to you mortals in the Eternal Lands is merely another step in the cycle. A waypoint along your journey toward the Void.”
Hunt growled. “Let me guess: You hail from Hel, too?”
“I hail from a place between stars, a place that has no name and never shall. But I know of the Void that the Princes of Hel worship. It birthed me, too.”
The star in the center of Bryce’s chest flared.
The Under-King smiled, and his horrific face turned ravenous. “I beheld your light across the river, that day. Had I only known when you first came to me—things might have been quite different.”
Hunt’s lightning surged, but he reined it in. “What do you want with her?”
“What I want from all souls who pass here. What I give back to the Dead Gate, to all of Midgard: energy, life, power. You did not give your power to the Eleusian system; you made the Drop outside of it. Thus, you still possess some firstlight. Raw, nutritious firstlight.”
“Nutritious?” Bryce said.
The Under-King waved a bony hand. “Can you blame me for sampling the goods as they pass through the Dead Gate?”
Hunt’s mouth dried up. “You … you feed on the souls of the dead?”
“Only those who are worthy. Who have enough energy. There is no judgment but that: whether a soul possesses enough residual power to make a hearty meal, both for myself and for the Dead Gate. As their souls pass through the Dead Gate, I take a … bite or two.”
Hunt cringed inwardly. Maybe he had been too hasty in deeming the being before him not evil.
The Under-King went on, “The rituals were all invented by you. Your ancestors. To endure the horror of the offering.”
“But Danika was here. She answered me.” Bryce’s voice broke.
“She was here. She and all of the newly dead from the past several centuries. Just long enough that their living descendants and loved ones either forget or don’t come asking. They dwell here until then in relative comfort—unless they make themselves a nuisance and I decide to send them into the Gate sooner. But when the dead are forgotten, their names no longer whispered on the wind … then they are herded through the Gate to become firstlight. Or secondlight, as it is called when the power comes from the dead. Ashes to ashes and all that.”
“The Sleeping City is a lie?” Hunt asked. His mother’s face flashed before him.
“A comforting one, as I have said.” The Under-King’s voice again became sorrowful. “One for your benefit.”
“And the Asteri know about this?” Hunt demanded.
“I would never presume to claim what the holy ones know or don’t know.”
“Why are you telling us any of this?” Bryce blanched with horror.
“Because he’s not letting us leave here alive,” Hunt breathed. And their souls wouldn’t live on, either.
The light vanished entirely, and the voice of the Under-King echoed around them. “That is the first intelligent thing you’ve said.”
A rumbling growl shook the ground. Reverberated up Hunt’s legs. He clutched Bryce to him, snapping out his wings for a blind flight upward.
The Under-King crooned, “I should like to taste your light, Bryce Quinlan.”
30
Ruhn had grown up in Crescent City. He knew it had places to avoid, yet it had always felt like home. Like his.
Until today.
“Ephraim must have arrived,” Ithan murmured as they waited in the dimness of a dusty alley for Cormac to finish making the information drop. “And brought the Hind with him.”
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