Page 31 of A Flame of the Phoenix (An Heir Comes to Rise #6)
CHAPTER THIRTY
Reylan
S he was most perfect thing he’d ever laid eyes on. He hadn’t been able to stop thinking it since he’d apprehended her in the Rhyenelle town. How beautiful she was, and how he’d never seen her before then—or at least he couldn’t remember if he had, because in his chest…something familiar awoke.
Marvellas wanted her, and he was her servant.
Now he’d brought her to the Spirit he’d begun to grow anxious. Angrily, confusingly so. He’d done what was asked of him, and it had been easy. Too easy. Why hadn’t Faythe fought him harder?
She shouldn’t be here. No—she was something to be protected and loved. A soul worth waiting lifetimes for. Worth trekking across realms for.
Her blood…he couldn’t be sorry for taking it when it was the single most divine thing he’d ever tasted in his life. He wanted her to give it to him willingly, anticipating it would be even more incredible if she did.
Conflict grew in his mind. A frustrating influence tried to banish his desire for Faythe’s touch, taste, and mere presence.
All he did was stand and watch as Faythe faced off with the Spirit. When she pulled a dagger and went crashing down on top of Marvellas, Reylan could hardly stand his ground. He didn’t want to pull Faythe off to save Marvellas; he wanted to save her from the Spirit’s wrath that came next.
She undressed the finery she wore, but it couldn’t diminish how she shone more brilliant than a pure diamond in nothing but her own flesh.
His chest was pounding, and an itch to do something, anything , had his fists clamping tight when they began to tremble.
They sliced her wrists, and Reylan almost broke to snap their necks for it.
He shook his head that battered with confusing, conflicting emotions. He had to leave this room, but he only twisted a fraction before…
Her scream ? —
It obliterated the world around him.
Her agony shattered a hold on his mind he wasn’t aware of.
Reylan blinked, and what he saw, what he realized was happening, snapped a rage so volatile he lunged.
Fae tried to restrain him, but at Faythe’s scream he’d snapped two necks that had attempted to stop him.
He’d let them take her. Restrain her.
His Faythe. His Phoenix.
“I’m going to tear the head from your fucking neck,” he snarled, snapping feral eyes up to the wicked Spirit who watched his mate writhe in agony as if it were all a spectacle.
“You’re stronger than I thought,” Marvellas said. No emotion. Nothing. “To resist my influence with the ruin inside you. I have to admit, you continue to exceed my expectations.”
He would kill her. No—that was no longer enough for all she’d done to Faythe.
Reylan was helpless to watch, but he kept trying to fight off the fae to reach her.
The battle of fire and ice from the Magestone being clamped around his wrists, then his neck, was nothing compared to the ear-splitting cries from Faythe that brought him to his knees. Reylan wept, utterly broken at that sound, this sight, he would let haunt him for the rest of his days.
“Reylan.” Kyleer was here. His rage targeted his friend, his brother in everything but blood, and though part of him wanted to feel sympathy for his capture, all he harbored was resentment. Ugly, perhaps unfair resentment that Kyleer had failed Faythe just as much as he had by being caught here with her.
Kyleer’s face was desolate. Pleading and straining to say something else.
Marvellas approached, and he snarled, animalistic at the sight of the flaming beauty that torched a rage so scorching he thought it could set fire to the world to watch her burn within it.
“Come back to me, Rey,” she cooed. As if she couldn’t hear Faythe’s torture. The scent of her blood tainted the air, and Reylan wished it were his. Would bleed every drop to this floor now if it would spare her.
Marvellas’s touch hovered over the dark thing she’d sunk into his flesh, and the world turned absolutely silent. Every sense was stolen by the power that consumed him. Every scream, every image, every memory. Reylan was nothing.
Nothing but her servant.
When he blinked and found the world around him again, he didn’t know why he was here. Only that he belonged to her. This creature of triumph and conquer.
“There you are,” she said, pleased.
Reylan bowed his head. His ears rang with a high pitch though everything was soundless. He got to his feet, not remembering when the manacles around him had been placed there.
“Take her to the tower,” Marvellas instructed him, walking away as if boredom became her. She added to other guards, “And take him to the cells far below.”
Two dark fae began to drag away a fae male. “I’m sorry,” he said in Reylan’s direction over his shoulder.
Two words that meant absolutely nothing.
Reylan found a beautiful fae on the ground, so still and quiet. Peaceful, were she not bleeding so much, lying on crimson-painted stone that made the sight of her devastating. Reylan took her into his arms, not knowing why there was a nagging within him at the harm done to her.
Reylan walked and walked; he didn’t want to reach the tower cells. He didn’t want to let her go. But he had a duty, and his Goddess wanted this.
He set her on the small bed. It wasn’t enough. Her form was so vulnerable in the bloodstained, thin white undergarment. He unfolded the feeble blanket and laid it over her. It still wasn’t enough. So he unclipped his cloak and draped that over her delicate body too.
“You’re not to give her anything,” a guard outside the cell warned.
Reylan didn’t think twice—the power that was too much within him rejoiced at any flicker of emotion it could strike out to. He wasn’t sure what the entity was, only that it was an ending to everything it touched. A silent delivery of death, though not a painless one. All it took was a look from Reylan, a thought, and the guard barely made a sound as the life drained from him. Hollowing his cheeks, turning his skin to paper, revealing his veins that dried out slowly. Then he fell as nothing more than a skeleton barely given flesh.
He turned back to the sleeping fae, reaching to brush the hair from her face.
“Faythe,” he whispered. The name came to him as a distant star in the darkness of his mind. He decided to keep the small flicker of light alive.
Reylan left, closing her cell, but the twist of the key was like a knife in his chest for a reason lost to him. He pulled up his hood, grabbing the back collar of the dead dark fae to drag him out.
Every step away strained something within him—a tether he should sever to be rid of the madness it grew in his mind. But for some reason, he didn’t want it gone. He wanted to protect it.