She put one foot on the steps, and then Micah was there, his hand at the collar of her shirt. He hissed, “Do not lie.”
Hunt staggered all of one step down the stairs before Sandriel stopped him, her wind shoving him back against the wall. It snaked down his throat, clamping on to his vocal cords. Rendering him silent to watch what unfolded on the screens.
Micah growled in Bryce’s ear, more animal than angel, “Do you want to know how I figured it out?”
She trembled as the Governor ran a possessive hand down the curve of her spine.
Hunt saw red at that touch, the entitlement in it, the sheer dread that widened her eyes.
Bryce wasn’t stupid enough to try to run as Micah ran his fingers back up her spine, intent in every stroke.
Hunt’s jaw clenched so hard it hurt, his breath coming out in great, bellowing pants. He’d kill him. He’d find a way to get free of Sandriel, and fucking kill Micah for that touch—
Micah trailed his fingers over the delicate chain of her necklace. A new one, Hunt realized.
Micah purred, unaware of the camera mere feet away, “I saw the footage of you in the Comitium lobby. You gave your Archesian amulet to Sandriel. And she destroyed it.” His broad hand clamped around her neck, and Bryce squeezed her eyes shut. “That’s how I realized. How you realized the truth, too.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Bryce whispered.
Micah’s hand tightened, and it might as well have been his hand on Hunt’s throat for all the difficulty he had breathing. “For three years, you wore that amulet. Every single day, every single hour. Danika knew that. Knew you were without ambition, too, and would never have the drive to leave this job. And thus never take off the amulet.”
“You’re insane,” Bryce managed to say.
“Am I? Then explain to me why, within an hour after you took off the amulet, that kristallos demon attacked you.”
Hunt stilled. A demon had attacked her that day? He found Ruhn’s stare, and the prince nodded, his face deathly pale. We got to her in time was all Danaan said to him, mind-to-mind.
“Bad luck?” Bryce tried.
Micah didn’t so much as smile, his hand still clamped on her neck. “You don’t just have the Horn. You are the Horn.” His hand again ran down her back. “You became its bearer the night Danika had it ground into a fine powder, mixed it with witch-ink, and then got you so drunk you didn’t ask questions when she had it tattooed onto your back.”
“What?” Fury Axtar barked.
Holy fucking gods. Hunt bared his teeth, still forbidden from speaking.
But Bryce said, “Cool as that sounds, Governor, this tattoo says—”
“The language is beyond that of this world. It is the language of universes. And it spells out a direct command to activate the Horn through a blast of raw power upon the tattoo itself. Just as it once did for the Starborn Prince. You may not possess his gifts like your brother, but I believe your bloodline and the synth shall compensate for it when I use my power upon you. To fill the tattoo—to fill you—with power is, in essence, to blow the Horn.”
Bryce’s nostrils flared. “Blow me, asshole.” She snapped her head back, fast enough that even Micah couldn’t stop the collision of her skull with his nose. He stumbled, buying her time to twist and flee—
His hand didn’t let go, though.
And with a shove, her shirt ripping down the back, Micah hurled her to the floor.
Hunt’s shout was lodged in his throat, but Ruhn’s echoed through the conference room as Bryce skidded across the carpet.
Lehabah screamed as Syrinx roared, and Bryce managed to snap, “Hide.”
But the Archangel halted, surveying the woman sprawled on the floor before him.
The tattoo down her back. Luna’s Horn contained within its dark ink.
Bryce scrambled to her feet, as if there were anywhere to go, anywhere to hide from the Governor and his terrible power. She made it across the room, to the steps up to the mezzanine—
Micah moved fast as the wind. He wrapped a hand around her ankle and tossed her across the room.
Bryce’s scream as she collided with the wood table and it shattered beneath her was the worst sound Hunt had ever heard.
Ruhn breathed, “He’s going to fucking kill her.”
Bryce crawled backward through the debris of the table, blood running from her mouth as she whispered to Micah, “You killed Danika and the pack.”
Micah smiled. “I enjoyed every second of it.”
The conference room shook. Or maybe that was just Hunt himself.
And then the Archangel was upon her, and Hunt couldn’t bear it, the sight of him grabbing Bryce by the neck and throwing her across the room again, into those shelves.
“Where is the fucking Aux?” Ruhn screamed at Flynn. At Sabine.
But her eyes were wide. Stunned.
So slowly, Bryce crawled backward, up the mezzanine stairs again, clawing at the books to heave herself along. A gash leaked blood onto her leggings, bone gleaming beneath a protruding shard of wood. She panted, half sobbing, “Why?”
Lehabah had crept to the metal bathroom door in the back of the library and managed to open it, as if silently signaling Bryce to get there—so they could lock themselves inside until help arrived.
“Did you learn, in all your research, that I am an investor in Redner Industries? That I have access to all its experiments?”
“Oh fuck,” Isaiah said from across the pit.
“And did you ever learn,” Micah went on, “what Danika did for Redner Industries?”
Bryce still crawled backward up the stairs. There was nowhere to go, though. “She did part-time security work.”
“Is that how she sanitized it for you?” He smirked. “Danika tracked down the people that Redner wanted her to find. People who didn’t want to be found. Including a group of Ophion rebels who had been experimenting with a formula for synthetic magic—to assist in the humans’ treachery. They’d dug into long-forgotten history and learned that the kristallos demons’ venom nullified magic—our magic. So these clever rebels decided to look into why, isolating the proteins that were targeted by that venom. The source of magic. Redner’s human spies tipped him off, and out Danika went to bring in the research—and the people behind it.”
Bryce gasped for breath, still slowly crawling upward. No one spoke in the conference room as she said, “The Asteri don’t approve of synthetic magic. How did Redner even get away with doing the research on it?”
Hunt shook. She was buying herself time.
Micah seemed all too happy to indulge her. “Because Redner knew the Asteri would shut down any synthetic magic research, that I would shut their experiments down, they spun synth experiments as a drug for healing. Redner invited me to invest. The earliest trials were a success: with it, humans could heal faster than with any medwitch or Fae power. But later trials did not go according to plan. Vanir, we learned, went out of their minds when given it. And humans who took too much synth … well. Danika used her security clearance to steal footage of the trials—and I suspect she left it for you, didn’t she?”
Burning Solas. Up and up, Bryce crawled along the stairs, fingers scrabbling over those ancient, precious books. “How did she learn what you were really up to?”
“She always stuck her nose where it didn’t belong. Always wanting to protect the meek.”
“From monsters like you,” Bryce spat, still inching upward. Still buying herself time.
Micah’s smile was hideous. “She made no secret that she kept an eye on the synth trials, because she was keen to find a way to help her weak, vulnerable, half-human friend. You, who would inherit no power—she wondered if it might give you a fighting chance against the predators who rule this world. And when she saw the horrors the synth could bring about, she became concerned for the test subjects. Concerned for what it’d do to humans if it leaked into the world. But Redner’s employees said Danika had her own research there, too. No one knew what, but she spent time in their labs outside of her own duties.”
All of it had to be on the flash drive Bryce had found. Hunt prayed she’d put it somewhere safe. Wondered what other bombshells might be on it.
Bryce said, “She was never selling the synth on that boat, was she?”
“No. By that point, I’d realized I needed someone with unrestricted access to the temple to take the Horn—I would be too easily noticed. So when she stole the synth trial footage, I had my chance to use her.”
Bryce made it up another step. “You dumped the synth into the streets.”
Micah kept trailing her. “Yes. I knew Danika’s constant need to be the hero would send her running after it, to save the low-lifes of Lunathion from destroying themselves with it. She got most of it, but not all. When I told her I’d seen her on the river, when I claimed no one would believe the Party Princess was trying to get drugs off the streets, her hands were tied. I told her I’d forget about it, if she did one little favor for me, at just the right moment.”
“You caused the blackout that night she stole the Horn.”