The half circle of crystal in Benedetta’s hands crumbled to dust. She staggered, stunned—her head strangely light, as if the weight of the crystal around her neck all those years had held her down. She dropped to her knees, and the jagged shards of qva’avaq bit through the fine mesh of her gown.
“Etta!” Corso’s hoarse call sounded distant through the roaring in her ears.
The room tilted. Was she falling?
No. Corso lifted her up out of the broken circle of crystal, his arms wrapped around her in a full embrace. His bleeding hand left a dark blur on her pale skin.
“It broke?” Her own voice was fuzzy. She sharpened the note. “Did it truly break?”
“It broke. Benedetta, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean—”
“I wasn’t sure I could do it.” She straightened unsteadily. “The crystals don’t break.”
He swore again as he deposited her on the bed they’d so recently enjoyed. “Why did you take it off? Why did you want to break it?” He knelt beside her and snapped open a lume stick, defying his own blackout order. “Let me see your knees.”
“It’s nothing.”
He lifted back the hem of her gown and brushed gently at the shards of crystal speckling her skin. He winced as the sharp facets shredded his fingertips—silver shining through his blood—but he did not stop. “Benedetta...”
“I don’t feel it. Not at all.” Maybe she’d never feel anything again. Perhaps that was the price of shattering the qva’avaq bond. She blinked hard against the chemical glow of the light stick that left halos in her teary vision.
But the bond could never have been completed because she would not allow Corso Deynah to be compelled through crystal or tears or the looming threat of death.
It should be by his choice alone. As she’d made hers.
“Etta?” He gave her a light shake. “Talk to me. Is the crystal connected to you? Will breaking it like this hurt you?”
“I don’t know.”
“How can you not know?” His voice rose. “How could you break it without knowing?”
“No one’s ever broken one before.”
He raked one hand over his hair, leaving more bloody streaks and a few sparkling shards of crystal across his forehead. “I need to get you up to the Asphodel. Jorr can do a full scan.”
“It doesn’t matter now, Corso. There’s nothing you can do.” She pushed herself to her feet.
“Princess—” He dropped to his knees in front of her.
For a confused moment, she stared down at him. Then the roar reached her ears and a flash of hellish red outlined the door and windows. Her knees had been shaking so badly, she hadn’t even felt the detonation that knocked the captain off his feet.
Corso was yelling—not at her, she realized, but at his distant crew—his hand cupped over his ear comm. “It’s not the mortar drop. Wrong blast size. There’s a ship up there, playing with us. Find it. I want the Asphodel in position before they contact the planet. We need negotiating space.”
Benedetta struggled to focus, but all her crystal lines seemed vague and strange, like the icy dust of the planetary rings drifting outward. The qva’avaq had never felt so far away. She edged toward the door and put her hand out.
Behind her, Corso was still talking.
“Injuries unknown. First strike was aimed at the temple, but there aren’t enough l’auraly here to be the target. The raiders are eliminating infrastructure, not people. Probably trying to wipe out any alternate sources of the crystal.”
Benedetta laughed, a hollow sound in her ringing ears. “I got a start on that tonight, didn’t I?”
Corso looked up and met her stare. “Etta, do not go out there.”
She’d already begun the destruction. What could be worse? She swung open the door.
The main temple building was ablaze, the Hall of Mute Crystals a jumble of broken sticks. She couldn’t tell which had taken the brunt of the strike, but flaming debris had scattered all around.
Once, a brazier had tipped over, setting a curtain afire. Yecho had rung the temple bells and the villagers had come at a run to fight the fire. The temple bells were melting now, and no one was coming.
Well, not entirely true. Corso charged out the door behind her, pulling her under his arm as if the width of his shoulders could keep all harm away.
But truly, though she had done the breaking, he had caused the pain, and somehow, the crack of the crystal had freed them both. She shrugged away from him and bolted across the temple grounds.
She knew he followed but at least he didn’t try to stop her. Instead, he pointed across the yard. “Yecho and the girls were in there.”
Side by side, they raced toward the smoldering building. She fought the sense of having lived this before, but she and Corso worked in perfect harmony to wrench open the door, swing through the smoky interior, and retrieve the disoriented old man and the terrified girls.
As they exited, Icere pelted across the yard toward them, his tablet clutched to his chest. “I saw the targeting signal and almost had a fix to hijack their code, but I couldn’t deflect.” Anguish deepened his voice, and Benedetta mourned the adulthood coming too fast tonight.
“We can’t go back into the temple grounds,” Corso was saying into his comm thread with the Asphodel. “Obviously they have the area targeted and locked. Can’t head to the village either; same reason. Too obvious to launch the pod under these conditions.” He tilted his head as he listened to the response from his crew. “Then that’s the best we can do. Keep working on it. We’ll stay low.”
He glanced over at Benedetta. “We need a place—”
“L’auralya,” Yecho said sharply. “Where is your key?”
She touched her neck, as if she’d forgotten. “Gone. Destroyed.”
Icere gasped. “In the bombing?”
“I did it,” Corso said harshly. “And the rest of us are doomed to the same fate if we don’t get moving.”
All the l’auraly, even Benedetta herself, started at him with mouths agape.
“He didn’t do it,” Benedetta corrected. “I did.”
But no one was listening to her. Icere sputtered. “Why—why would you do that? How did you do that? The crystalline structure is nearly indestructible.”
“Not to me apparently,” Corso growled. He sounded so harsh, so hateful, Torash and Alolis started to cry in harmony. But Benedetta heard the pain tightening his voice as he took the blame. But why would he feel badly when all along he’d spoken plainly about what he saw as slavery?
She shook off her confusion. “The captain is correct. We need to find a safe haven to wait this out while the Asphodel targets the attackers.”
Icere straightened. “How can you still believe in them—in him—after what he has done?”
“Because we have no choice,” she said simply.
Corso paled, and she realized if she’d wanted to hurt him, she couldn’t have found a better way than with her distracted words. The captain, who valued his freedom above all else, who had rejected all she stood for, thought he’d taken her choice from her.
Couldn’t he understand she was giving them a chance?
She wanted to shatter all her ingrained grace and decorum and demand that he see past the silver in her skin…except her thoughts suddenly whirled.
Perhaps the captain thought her fate had always been in others’ hands, but she’d been taught that her own touch still had power, a power reflected in the ritualized gestures of the l’auraly. So she’d been taught by…
She turned slowly to Yecho. “Where is Rislla?”
He shook his head. “I haven’t seen her since… I can’t remember now.” He frowned.
Icere gripped the tablet to his chest. “She followed me after we talked at the clearing. I wanted to ask her again about undergoing the key ceremony early, and she told me it was over, that I’d never have my key. She just walked away, and that’s when I went to the Hall of Mute Crystals. I didn’t see anyone again until you and the captain earlier tonight.”
Corso clenched his fist. “Doesn’t sound like she had too much faith in our victory.”
Benedetta nodded, her body tightening in matching outrage. “Because she thought she already knew the outcome. Why didn’t I see it?”
“Didn’t see what?” Icere’s plaintive voice tried to cut between them. “What are you talking about?”
But Corso, of course, knew what she meant and touched her arm. “Why would you have known? She’s one of you.”
Yecho shook his head slowly. “Not quite.”
The l’auraly stared at him in shock. Benedetta shook off Corso’s comforting hand. “What do you mean?”
“She never left Qv’arratz to be with her a’lurilyo.”
Icere frowned. “But why? Once Rislla was keyed, she should have stayed with him forever.” He blushed a little. “Well, forever until her a’lurilyo died.”
Yecho glanced at Benedetta, encompassing Corso with the look. “Rarely—so rarely there haven’t even been legends—a keying fails. Perhaps a flaw in the crystal matrix that prevents true resonance. In the last century, we’ve worried that as the rock vein thins, more of the crystals will be flawed.”
Icere pursed his lips. “That explains why the survival rate has declined over time. The quality of the crystals has declined too.”
Yecho bowed his head. “We think that could be so.”
Corso swore. “And still you exposed your children?”
“It’s who we are,” Yecho protested. “It’s all we have.”
Benedetta shook her head slowly. “And that is gone. Or will be soon. Except now we have to prevent the infection of the universe.” She paused. “Rislla sent them the location of the qva’avaq mine. That’s where she is. That’s where she went to send her message.”
Corso swore. “They are keeping us pinned down and occupied while they move in and take the crystals.”
Benedetta looked at Icere. “I need your tablet for a moment.”
He handed the device to her. “What are you doing? I’m almost done with the program that will hijack the raiders’ launch codes.”
“This will only take a moment.” She tapped the screen. “I’m sending the vein coordinates to the Asphodel.”
Yecho and Icere protested, their voices tumbling past each other in agitation.
“It’s over,” Benedetta said. “Not just for me, for all of us, if the crystals are used as weapons.” She took a breath. “And it might be over anyway.” She gave Icere a steady look. “You and the girls were the only acolytes to survive initial crystal exposure. Since you know the statistics on keying so well, tell me, which of you will survive the keying ritual?”
“Maybe all of us.” He hesitated. “Although more likely just two of us.”
“And Torash and Alolis are bound by a triplicate crystal. If one of them dies, the remaining l’auraly crystal and the a’lurily crystal will both be muted. Dead. Or would you rather it were you to suffer that fate? And will it matter, in the end, with none coming up behind us? The qva’avaq legend is dying. Whether we die too is all that remains to be seen.”
Corso looked at her steadily, but she could not read his expression. Were her sensitive l’auraly gifts fading with the loss of the key? Or did she just not care to know what he was thinking about their future chances?
He cocked his head, obviously listening to his comm link. “The Asphodel is in position over the coordinates you set. They have a second ship in sensor range, running dark and anonymous. The Asphodel can stay hidden in the dust rings for now, but they’ll have to come out to engage.” He kept his gaze trained on her. “According to the coordinates you sent, the mine is close to here. It’s possible we can get to the crystal before them.”
Immediately, Yecho and Icere clamored to go. Benedetta didn’t look away from Corso’s unwavering stare.
Despite her unwillingness to read him, she did know exactly what he was thinking, what he was offering. He would do anything, risk everything, including his beloved ship, to keep the crystal—the source of the entrapment he had despised—from falling into the wrong hands.
Her heart ached at the unspoken pain in his dark eyes. But she did not want to bind him with guilt anymore than qva’avaq. The deaths at L-Sept had sent him running for the stars; she would not lure him back with the false promise of a life in crystal chains.
The hint of possible resolution had energized Yecho and Icere. Though Corso suggested leaving the girls behind, there was no place they were guaranteed safety. So all together the group sped for the crystal mine.
Yecho huffed along in the back, keeping up despite his age. When Corso suggested he return to the temple, Yecho shook his head. “Rislla and I were acolytes together. There was nothing I could do to prevent the failure of her key, but I can stop her from making this terrible mistake.”
A mistake made of her own free will, Benedetta mused. She wondered what Corso would say about that sort of freedom.
Although she hadn’t known him long, she knew him well enough to guess; mistakes—even terrible ones—were the price of freedom.
Somehow, he had infected her as thoroughly as the crystal.
Except now she’d thrown away the qva’avaq bond. And maybe lost the captain along with her key.