He wasn’t using any magic. The racing of her heart was all on her.
Since she’d been hoping to resume her tour, she’d been disappointed when the receptionist had led her straight to the small meeting room. The space was warm and friendly, with potted trees in the corners and rich wood to contrast the white walls. Lyre had joined her a few minutes later, and the verbal battle had begun.
He’d asked about the spell shop, and she’d recited the cover story she and Kassia had come up with—that she’d been scoping out different spell weavers before coming to Chrysalis. She wasn’t sure he’d bought her story.
She’d asked why he’d been at that spell shop. He hadn’t bothered to make up a story, instead firing back with another question of his own.
She’d asked for the rest of her tour. He’d refused, citing her safety. His exact words had included “walking catastrophe” and “enough damage for one day.” She’d asked him to bring some of their premium spells to show her. He’d refused that too. In fact, he’d refused to do anything she’d asked.
So here they were, her glaring while he silently laughed at her.
“Are you even going to try to sell me something?” she demanded.
“Do you actually want to buy something?”
Panic swooped through her middle, but before she could blurt out anything damning, she realized he was fishing for a reaction. He didn’t know she had zero intention of completing a purchase.
“My home is under threat from Ra. I’m sure even an Underworlder knows Ra’s reputation. We can’t only arm our warriors with explosive spells. Our forces are too few. We need something—something frightening.”
“Frightening,” he repeated dubiously.
“Something that will make Ra think twice about attacking us.”
“Such as?”
“Isn’t that your department? I tell you what I want, and you provide it?”
“Well.” He leaned back in his chair and laced his fingers behind his head. “If you’re looking for a magical trump card, we don’t have anything like that.”
She almost missed what he’d said, too distracted by his lounging stretch. He’d thrown his lab coat over the back of his chair when he’d entered the room, and his navy shirt clung to his torso in a most distracting fashion—thoroughly hinting at the muscular planes of his chest and abdomen.
Lowering his arms, he braced his elbows on the table, distracting her all over again with the way the long sleeves of his shirt were pushed up, leaving the hard muscle of his forearms, sheathed in lovely golden-brown skin, bared for her to see. It had to be his natural tone. It wasn’t like he could tan with no sunlight.
“So,” he continued, snapping her brain back on track, “I’m guessing ‘frightening’ means something that will make your limited forces seem undefeatable, or something so heinous that no one will want to meet your troops on the battlefield?”
“I would …” She swallowed. “I would prefer the first option.”
He raised an eyebrow. “Well, you know, if you start turning your enemies inside out, they won’t want to fight you.”
“You—you have a spell that can turn people inside out?”
“No. But it’s a good idea, don’t you think?”
“No!” she gasped, sick at the thought. “That’s the worst thing I’ve ever …” She paused suspiciously. “You’re not actually serious, are you?”
“Dead serious. I wonder what an inside-out person would look like. Do you think their skeleton would—”
She threw up a hand. “Would you stop?”
He smirked. “So no inside-out spells. What else then?”
“You don’t have any suggestions? Besides that one.”
He rolled his eyes toward the ceiling in thought. “Honestly, Clio, we don’t have any one spell that can win a war, and anything that might come close isn’t for sale anyway.”
Why did her name in his deep, hypnotic voice make her swoon? She surreptitiously passed her hand in front of her eyes to look him over with her asper. Aside from his usual arsenal of weavings, he wasn’t actively using any magic. Was she that helpless to resist him?
“Your best bet,” he continued, “is a clever combination of combat spells you can use to win your first few conflicts decisively. After that, you likely won’t see any further invasions.”
“Hold on. What was that about spells that aren’t for sale?”
“They aren’t for sale, so …”
“But what kind of spells are we talking about?”
“Who knows? I don’t keep track of every prototype ever conceived by a master weaver.”
Hmm. Lyre was good at controlling the direction of the conversation, but that response had been distinctly evasive. She was willing to bet a few more diamonds that he was well informed on these dangerous “prototypes”—and that he didn’t want her knowing anything about them.
“Can I see these prototypes?”
“Definitely not.”
“But—”
“Not happening.”
She scowled. He stared back seriously, but humor pulled at his mouth. Oh jeez. She needed to not think about his mouth. And why was he soundlessly laughing at her again? She should work on being more intimidating. Since he’d already seen her face, she hadn’t bothered with her elaborate costume, and had instead worn just the sleeveless-top-and-skirt combo for this second meeting.
“You’re not being very helpful,” she accused.
His smile broke free and she almost melted in her chair. “Since you can’t buy those spells, what’s the point in showing you?”
“It would put me in a good mood for negotiating spells I can buy.”
He leaned back and tapped a finger against his full lower lip, drawing her attention right back to his mouth. “I can think of better ways to improve your mood.”
Heat singed her cheeks and she quickly checked him again. Still not using magic. Damn it.
“Are you flirting with me?” she demanded, half panicking.
“That would hardly be professional.”
“And what about you has been professional so far?”
He smirked. “I wouldn’t say it’s your strong suit either.”
She couldn’t argue with that. By this point, the very concept of businesslike conduct was slipping from her grasp. She cleared her throat. “So, um, do you have any other suggestions besides inside-out spells that don’t exist?”
He shrugged.
“You know, you’re kind of terrible at this consulting thing,” she informed him.
“Funny you should mention it. This isn’t my usual job.”
Curiosity got the better of her. “If master weavers don’t normally do consultations, why are you?”
“It’s a long story. Suffice it to say, I’m not supposed to be enjoying it.”
She arched her eyebrows. “Am I that terrible to deal with?”
Oh no. Was she flirting with him now? No. She definitely wasn’t. Nope. Not flirting.
A slow smile spread over his face and her stomach dropped. Shit. She was flirting—and he’d noticed.
“Uh,” she stammered, desperately searching for the right words to get this discussion back on track. “You—I mean, I need … some … warfare spells.”
“So you’ve said.”
His voice had deepened, a purr caressing each word. Slow warmth rolled through her center. Those amber eyes were drawing her in, submerging her in heat, and she couldn’t look away. She wanted so badly to reach across the table and touch him, to feel that honey-tan skin and lean muscle.
Warning bells clanged in her skull and she squeezed her eyes shut. Popping them open, she looked at him anew—and saw the golden tendrils of magic uncoiling from around him like invisible smoke.
“Ah!” she shrieked, leaping to her feet.
He tried to leap up too, irises flashing black as shock triggered his defensive instincts. His chair tipped backward—and he went over with it. He and the chair hit the floor with a
raucous bang.
He pushed up on an elbow, glaring with shadowed irises. “What the hell?”
“You were using aphrodesia on me!” she yelled, pointing an accusatory finger at him.
His glower faltered. “I was?”
“You—” She blinked. Had he not realized he was doing it? No. He was an incubus. He was just feigning innocence. “You did. I know you did.”
Wincing, he climbed to his feet and pulled his chair up. Dropping into it, he propped an elbow on the table, his eyes safely amber again.
“If you could provide more detail on your kingdom’s military strategy,” he said, sounding properly businesslike, if still unfairly sexy, “I can prepare proposals on the most effective spell combinations.”
She blinked again. That was it? He wouldn’t admit he’d tried to use his seduction magic on her? He was going to pretend it hadn’t happened?
Grudgingly, she lowered herself back into her chair, watching him suspiciously with her asper still in focus despite the headache it would give her. His offer of spell combinations wasn’t what she needed. He’d admitted there were spells here somewhere, ones too powerful and dangerous to sell, and she needed to see them.
“How long will a proposal take?” she asked, buying herself a moment to think.
“Are you in a hurry?”
“Well,” she said dryly, “aside from the impending doom of my homeland, I don’t know how much of this never-ending night I can take.”
“Scared of the dark?”
“Hardly. But this unbroken pitch black is hard on my nerves. I miss the sun and the moon and the stars.” Only after speaking did she think maybe she shouldn’t have shared that kind of thing with her enemy.
Except Lyre didn’t feel like an enemy. And that was even more dangerous.
He studied her, and she had to look away before she fell under the spell of his eyes a second time. To her surprise, he pushed back from the table.
“Come with me.”
“What? Where?”
Without answering, he pulled the door open and walked into the hall. Clio followed him out, ogling his back appreciatively. The way that shirt clung in just the right way … too distracting. Her hormones were out of control. With a huff, she trotted a few steps to catch up to him and fell into step at his side.
He led her through a maze of interior corridors broken only by closed doors. When they rounded a corner and she glimpsed the reception area at the end of the hall, she thought he was sending her back to the inn. Instead, he stopped at a seemingly random door and pushed it open. Beyond the threshold, the pristine white walls ended and dull, dark concrete bricks took over. Dim lights flickered overhead, scarcely illuminating the metal stairway that descended deep into the gloom.
“Where …” She trailed off nervously as Lyre started down the stairs.
“It’s just a shortcut,” he said over his shoulder. “Hurry up.”
Biting her lip, she trailed after him. “A shortcut to where?”
Again, he didn’t answer. They descended what had to be the equivalent of two basement levels before the stairs ended at a small landing with a large, reinforced steel door. The most complex wards she’d ever seen were layered atop the metal.
Lyre stepped in front of her, blocking her view. “Whatchya looking at, Clio?”
“N-nothing.”
“No?”
Without looking away from her, he stretched his arm out and touched the wall to his right. She glanced over and saw a second, smaller door with a much simpler ward embedded in it. He swiped his fingers across it, sending the lines and runes of the spell dancing before the magic went dark. He’d disengaged the ward without a single glimpse to see what he was doing.
“Ladies first.”
She took a hesitant step toward the second door and he shifted, keeping his body between her and the heavily warded door—deliberately blocking her view. Did he know about her ability to read magic? He hadn’t suspected a thing during their last meeting. Maybe he was just being extra cautious.
With fear tickling the pit of her stomach, she opened the smaller door to reveal a narrow corridor swathed in darkness. Her feet rooted to the floor.
“I thought you weren’t scared of the dark.”
Lyre’s purring voice whispered right in her ear and she whipped around to find him standing almost on top of her. He raised a hand. A glowing sphere appeared above his palm, and he tossed it past her into the corridor.
His light preceded them into the darkness. Inappropriate thoughts about him were the last thing on her mind as she wondered if he was leading her into a trap. But why would he? Why now? It made no sense.
The tunnel-like corridor took a couple minutes to traverse, but it felt like hours. At the end, it opened into a stairwell. They climbed two stories to ground level, but the stairs kept rising, turning and turning again as they ascended even higher. They passed a least four doors in the stairwell, but he ignored them all. There were no windows, no glimpse of the outdoors to hint at where he was taking her.
Finally, the stairs ended at another door. This one wasn’t warded at all.
He grabbed the handle and swung it open. Light flooded the stairwell, blinding her as she stepped through the threshold after him. A warm, fresh breeze danced across her skin and tugged at her ponytail.
She was outside. And it wasn’t dark anymore.
Her mouth fell open as she stared. She was standing on a rooftop, and spread before her was Asphodel in full daylight.
Wooden structures with red-tiled roofs and black cobblestone streets formed a twisting labyrinth. A block away, the Chrysalis building sprawled, and the nearby canal sparkled in the sun. But it was the view beyond the estate walls that captured her attention.
Towering mountains of dark stone raked the sky with snow-capped peaks, surrounding the valley where Asphodel was nestled. Trees with tall, ropey trunks and spiky leaves dotted the hillsides, and dark greenery that wasn’t grass—something more like thick moss—covered the ground.
She turned in a slow circle, taking in the surrounding summits. On one side of Asphodel, a deep canyon opened like a dark scar across the valley floor, spanned by the single arching bridge they’d crossed on arrival. On the other side, the valley stretched away. Low hills embraced a winding river that eventually met the walls of the estate and fed the network of canals that webbed across it.
It was beautiful—a dark, fierce, dramatic beauty so different from the lush, vivid Overworld.
Lyre moved to her side, his gaze on her face rather than on the view. “Better?”
“It’s—” She turned to him. “But how? It was pitch black when I walked over here—no sign of dawn at all. How can it be full daylight so quickly?”
“Our days and nights aren’t as predictable as on Earth.” He glanced up. “Looks like the clouds will burn off in a few more minutes. Watch.”
She craned her neck back as the pale layer eddied in strong winds high above. Patches of blue appeared, and a beam of golden sunlight broke free, streaking down into the valley. She squinted. Peeking from the clouds was something else.
The clouds swirled and dispersed, and she was suddenly lightheaded.
Filling a portion of the sky was a huge, thin crescent, like Earth’s moon except five times the size. But it wasn’t a moon. It was a planet. White and gold clouds swirled across its alien surface, and beside the massive crescent, two sister suns glared blindingly.
There was a planet in the sky, but it wasn’t the shock of something so unexpected that had stolen her breath. It was because she’d seen it before.
“Lyre.” She grabbed his arm. “Lyre, that’s—that’s—”
He nodded. “The same planet you can see in the Overworld’s sky.”
“But—how did you—what …” She fell silent, unable to compose her thoughts enough to speak coherently.
“We’ve had Overworld clients before,” he said with a shrug. “So I’ve heard the comparison. The going theory is
that both our worlds are moons of the same planet.”
“I can’t believe it,” she whispered. “Why have I never heard about this before?”
“The handful of Overworlders who’ve been to the Underworld didn’t come here for a nice vacation, so you can imagine the reasons they might not want to advertise their insider knowledge.”
The planet was so painfully familiar that her insides twisted with longing and tears pricked her eyes. “It’s so beautiful,” she whispered, scarcely making a sound. “It’s been so long since … it’s almost like being home again.”
“So long since … you’ve been to the Overworld?”
Realizing what she’d said, she jerked straight. She also realized she was still clinging to his arm and snatched her hands back. “I … I’m just homesick.”
“Already?” he said dryly. But the way his gaze drifted thoughtfully across her face belied his tone.
She gestured at the sky. “How do your days and nights work?”
“The eclipse just ended,” he explained. “We’ll now get the equivalent of a ‘day’ of sunlight before going into a very long night—about twenty-four hours of complete darkness. Following that, another ‘day,’ then the eclipse will repeat, which is about nine hours of darkness. The full process is called a cycle, and it’s the equivalent of three days on Earth.”
“A twenty-four-hour night?” she repeated disbelievingly. “So how much daylight versus darkness do you get here?”
“Hmm, well, if you include the long twilight periods as part of the night, each cycle is about one-third light and two-thirds dark or near-dark.”
“Wow.”
“There’s a reason it’s called the night realm,” he said, amused.
“Doesn’t it bother you? So much darkness?”
“Nope. I like the dark. It’s cooler, quieter, the air is fresher. It can get pretty hot on clear days.”
“Huh. The Overworld is more like Earth. Days and nights are equal length.”
“Technically, our days are the same length as our nights too. There’s just a really long eclipse in the middle.”