LOGINThe dagger goes in before she understands her consort is the one holding it. ——— My consort is the one holding the blade. I fall into the Forbidden Zone with his voice in my ear — *You were never going to be the queen this kingdom needed, Rose is everything you are not* — and every stroke downward the Hollow drinks my color, my voice, my breath. As I sink through the dark I understand, in a rising tide of memory I can no longer outrun, what I refused to see: my cousin Rose has been his lover for three years. My uncle Rick has been my father's killer for seven months. I hit the Hollow's floor among the skeletons of seven women who came before me. I should die there. A black pearl pulses in the dark and asks me one question. I say yes. What rises from the Forbidden Zone is not the princess they pushed. My scales burn blood-red shot through with molten gold and piercing teal, edged in obsidian. My voice shatters coral when I choose. I can drain a merfolk's power until their scales grey to driftwood, and I can shift any being between human and merfolk form. But the pearl hungers. Black veins creep across my chest with every life I take. And the throne I want back? It was never the prize. It was the trap. ——— Will Irene become the villainess her kingdom fears? Or will she remember the girl they buried long enough to choose what kind of queen to be? And the older sister who has been waiting two hundred years to use her — what happens when Irene decides the family she was born into is not the one worth dying for?
View MoreThe blade goes in before I understand that my consort is the one holding it.
That is the first sentence of my new life. I do not know yet that I am beginning a new one. What I know is this: the cold steel has entered the soft place between my third and fourth ribs, and my mouth has filled with a scream that will not come out, and the water around me has gone suddenly warm with something that is not current.
My name is Irene. I am twenty-two years old. I have been Queen Regent of Alastor for seven months and three days, and I was going to be married in three weeks. My wedding dress was finished by the royal weavers yesterday afternoon. I tried it on. Rose was there. She cried, and I thought she was crying because she was happy for me.
His name is Liam.
His free hand, the one that has traced the iridescent patterns of my scales on a hundred quiet nights in our private garden, the one that has cradled the back of my neck when he told me he loved me, is tangled now in my hair. Gently. Almost tenderly. The way a lover holds another lover in place for one last kiss.
We are beyond the eastern reefs. The outer markers of my kingdom are two currents behind us. He led me out here at dawn, smiling, telling me he had a surprise. A private place. A promise he wanted to make. The moonstone caverns his grandfather once took his grandmother on the morning of their engagement.
I wore my father's pearl-comb in my hair for him. I left the palace without my retinue because he asked me to. I broke Mabelle's rootwork-knot at the gate because Liam was waiting on the other side, and I did not want him to see me listening to her.
I am going to die because of every one of those small decisions.
"Irene," he says. His voice in my ear is the voice I fell in love with. Warm. Patient. The soft rasp of a man who knows he is being indulged. "You were never going to be the queen this kingdom needed."
The dagger twists. I feel the tip of it scrape something inside me that should not be scraped. My vision whites for three heartbeats. When it comes back, I am looking past his shoulder at the thing behind him, the thing we have been swimming toward since dawn without my realising, and my mind, which has been refusing to understand any of this, finally understands.
The Forbidden Zone.
It shimmers in the water twenty feet behind his tail. The cursed trench. The place no royal of Alastor has approached in a thousand years. It is the colour of ink poured into ink, and it has a faint hum that I can feel in my teeth. Nerida taught me. My father taught me. The oldest song of our kingdom teaches us. Nothing that falls into the Zone comes back.
This is not the moonstone caverns. This was never the moonstone caverns.
"Rose," Liam says, close to my ear, so close his words are warm against my gill-slits, "is everything you are not."
My name for my cousin, when we were children, was my other hand. Rose and I were born nine weeks apart. She braided my hair at my father's funeral. She wept into my shoulder when her first engagement broke last spring, wept because she wanted Liam and Liam was already mine, and I understood it too late. She sat at my right for every feast of my reign. She is the sixth name on my mother's sealed list. I have known what to do with that list for a week. I have been too afraid.
I try to say her name. I cannot. I try to say his. I cannot. I try to sing, just one note, the smallest warmth I know, the warmth I use on the commoners' babies in Songsquare. But the water has flooded the place my voice used to live, and what comes out of me is a cracked whisper that does not carry two feet.
Blood clouds the space between us. Delicate crimson threads. Mine. The current catches the threads and draws them up in a slow spiral toward the surface that is three hundred feet too far above, toward the bioluminescent spires of Coralspire Palace where my uncle Rick is sitting down to his dinner this very moment with the knowledge of exactly what his nephew-in-law is doing beyond the eastern reefs.
My father's pearl-comb slips from my hair.
I watch it fall past Liam's shoulder, tumbling end over end, the small pearl at its centre catching the last of the twilight. It was his. The only jewelry my father wore in private. He gave it to me on my twelfth nameday and told me it had been in our family since before Alastor had a throne. He told me a queen could keep one true thing, and one true thing only. A queen could keep her own name.
The comb disappears into the dark below, toward the shimmering veil of the Forbidden Zone.
I realise, with a calm that does not belong to a dying woman, that I will follow it.
Liam tilts my face up to his. He does this gently, with one hand, the way you tilt a lover's face to kiss her. His blue-and-purple scales are flecked now with my blood. His silver-tipped fins catch the last of the twilight the way the comb did. He is beautiful. He has always been beautiful. I hate him with a depth I did not know I had, because I am, or I have been, a queen who kneels in the market to sing babies to sleep and who has been told all seven months of her reign that she is too soft for this throne.
"Rose will know what to do with this kingdom," he says. His eyes search my face with what looks, I swear, like real affection. "You never did, my love."
I want to tell him that Rose will not rule anything. That Rick will not permit it. That whatever Liam thinks he has been negotiating for three years, he is going to find out, the moment my body stops floating, that he was never the prize either. I want to tell him what is on my mother's list. I want to tell him that my father's ghost visited me in a dream two weeks ago and pointed at a cup of wine. I want to tell him there are nine names on that list and that his is not even the worst of them.
I cannot say any of it.
I cannot say anything.
My gills have begun to fail. Not from the wound. The dagger has not reached my lungs. Something else. Something at the edge of my awareness. Something the Zone is already reaching up to take from me even though I have not yet crossed its veil. My hands have gone slack at my sides. Mabelle's rootwork-knot at my wrist, the small green binding she tied this morning at dawn, the one I broke pulling away from her, is coming undone in the current. A bright green thread drifts down into the black.
Somewhere, in a dungeon I do not yet know she is sitting in, my cousin Mabelle will feel the last of that knot break, and she will begin, wordlessly, to scream.
Liam turns me.
He does it carefully, the way a man turns a woman he loves in order to kiss the back of her neck. He removes his dagger from my ribs with a surgeon's patience. He rehearsed this, I understand in a rush. He has been rehearsing this in his own chambers for three years. He wipes the blade on my shoulder-scales before he tucks it away. He does not want to lose a good blade in the Zone. He intends to swim home.
He puts both hands on my shoulders. From behind me. Steadying me. Holding me upright against the current. His mouth is at the back of my neck. His breath is warm there. He kisses me once, one small, final, unbearable kiss at the base of my skull, and he whispers, in the voice I fell in love with, the voice I chose to trust over my mother's voice and my cousin's voice and my own dead father's voice, four words I will hear for the rest of whatever life I am about to have.
"Give Morrigwen my regards."
I do not know the name Morrigwen. Not yet.
He pushes me.
My tail is already limp. My arms will not rise. The current catches me and turns me the way it turned my father's pearl-comb three minutes ago, and I tumble, slow, undignified, scaled belly rolling up toward the surface, over the edge of the Forbidden Zone and into the black.
The last thing I see of the world above is my consort's silhouette swimming calmly back toward the glowing coral spires of Alastor. He does not look down. He does not need to. He already knows how this ends. His purple tail sweeps a small competent arc against the current and carries him home.
Below me, the Forbidden Zone opens.
And as I fall, tail limp, blood spiraling upward in threads that will be gone before anyone at the surface can notice them, every bright hue in my scales beginning, very slowly, to drain, the Hollow begins to drink me.
The pink goes first.
And then, somewhere very far below me in the black, something much ol
der than pink begins, patiently, to wait.
"Do you want to live?""...Yes.""Then come."The voice is not a voice. The voice is pressure. The voice is what it would feel like if a closed mouth could speak by changing the temperature of the water. The voice is the inside of a held breath. It does not enter my ears. It enters my chest, the way a tide enters a tide-pool, the way a hand enters a glove that has been waiting for it.I have hit the floor.I think I have hit the floor. There is no sense of impact — only a softness, and then a stopping, the way a body stops moving when there is nothing left to push against. I am lying on something. The something is silt and bone. I am surrounded by skeletons, and not all of the skeletons are mermaids. Some are larger. Some are stranger. Some carry weapons in shapes my kingdom forgot a thousand years ago. They are arranged around me in a ring. The ring has eight spaces. The eighth space is the center. The eighth space is where I have landed.They have been waiting for me.Forty feet ahe
"What's wrong, my love?""Liam — my wrist — there is something — ""Take your time, sweetheart."He is smiling. We are at the edge of the Forbidden Zone. The black veil of it shimmers at his back, twenty feet away, the cursed trench no royal has approached in a thousand years. He is letting me read. He has stopped swimming. He has, in fact, taken my hand — gently, the way a groom takes the hand of his bride — and he is holding my hand still in the cold water while my shell-band shows me everything he has been writing to my cousin for three years.He wants me to read it. He wants me to know.He has wanted, for three years, the moment in which I would read it.*Liam: She held an open audience again today. The widow from the eastern reefs. I watched her cry over a commoner's shell-message like a girl reading her first letter. Rose, my love, are you sure I have to marry her? Tell me the wedding night part again. It is the only part that keeps me through the courtships.**Rose: The wedding
"Mother. Look at me.""Eat your fish, Irene.""Mother.""Eat your fish."She had not looked at me since I had arrived in Paria. The shell-band on my wrist is showing me this memory now, mid-fall, in a way the Hollow is letting it show me — Calisto's name pulsing on my mother's list, the band warming against my pulse, every conversation in the last two weeks I had wanted to forget rising into the light because the band has finally been given permission to play them.Two weeks ago, in Paria. The shallow-court of my mother's exile. A small dining-pool with kelp-glass walls that let the surface light in unfiltered. Queen Mirela of Paria, my mother, sitting at the head of a table built for four with the chair beside her empty for a husband she would not even pretend to seat. She was smaller than I remembered. Sharper. The lines around her eyes were new. She had not eaten her own fish in twenty minutes.She had not looked at my face once."Mother. Why won't you look at me?""Because I have
"Sweet-scale. Look at me.""Father — ""Look at me, Irene. I have less time than I did last time. Look."I look. I cannot do anything else. The water around me has stopped being water — it is a held breath, a pause carved out of my falling, a small bright pocket the dead are only allowed to make once. My father is in front of me. He is himself. Not the diminished thing that died in my arms on a bright morning seven months ago, but the king from before. Broad-shouldered. Full-scaled. The deep blue tail of House Thalor catching a light that has no source. His eyes are full of water. He is in pain. He is in pain and he is here anyway."Father, you came back two weeks ago. You spoke to me in a dream. Father, I — I did not understand —""I know.""You said *not the wine* and I thought you meant —""I know what you thought. Sweet-scale. Listen. I am going to say the four sentences again and this time I will not break in the middle. I have been preparing the breath for two weeks. I will not












Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.