Rohan crawls to his sister and holds her.
“I couldn’t let him hurt you,” Opal says.
The Voider yells in the distance. “Onward to Iresh!”
The army is moving out. I have to join them, or I could lose track of the prince.
“Does anyone else know we’re here?” I ask the Galers. Rohan listens to the wind and shakes his head. “Go, Opal. Find my family.”
“I’ll go too,” Rohan says, helping his sister up. “We’ll find them twice as fast with both our winds.”
Opal brushes away a piece of hair flopping in his face. “All right.”
“Be safe,” I say. “We’ll meet in Lestari.”
They run west through the trees. Although I want to go with them, my duty to the empire requires that I stay. I cannot leave until I have brought the prince to safety.
Great Anu, let Opal and Rohan find my family. Send them fair winds and the cloak of speed.
Manas has not moved. In a little while, he will wake up with an awful headache. I am not the least bit sorry.
I step out of the cover of the trees and jog toward the demon rajah’s army.
The late-day sun shines down on the soldiers’ gleaming machetes and khandas lifted to the sky. The demon rajah, visible by his glowing blue fire, leads the armed soldiers and civilians toward the city. Prince Ashwin marches near the front with him. I blend in with the amassed troops and fall in line with the ranks.
At the city gates, a line of elephant warriors, all bhutas, obstructs our way. A regiment of foot soldiers holds the line behind them.
“You cannot pass,” calls out a commander. He rides upon a large elephant with great tusks. He holds out his hand, and the ground trembles. A fissure opens up in the land, and a crack spreads, creating a gap between our army and his.
The demon rajah throws a stream of blue across the divide, striking the commander in the chest. He falls off his elephant, and the ground stops parting. The unnatural flame scares all the elephants, and they stampede away with their riders. The demon rajah jumps over the crevice to engage the rival regiment.
Our soldiers charge forward to defend their ruler, but he needs no aid. In one swipe, the demon rajah’s blue fire flattens the first line of men. Prince Ashwin leaps over the divide and joins his imposter father. I jump over the gap and rush after him. The opposing regiment breaks its line. Our troops barrel past them through the gate and into the city. I try to maintain sight of Prince Ashwin, but I lose him in the foray.
The demon rajah pushes into the roadways lined with huts, his blue fire burning homes and trees and markets. Crimson soldier uniforms fill the roads like streams of blood. Screaming women and children run everywhere. I spin around and spot the prince slipping between two huts. I run after him and seize him from behind.
Prince Ashwin points a dagger at my face, struggling against my hold, and then recognizes me from his peripheral view. I release him, and he lowers his blade. I identify the dagger’s turquoise handle as one of Kali’s.
“Did you rob that from the kindred before you abandoned her?” I growl.
The prince recoils from my rancor. “I only left her to draw away the Voider.”
“Don’t pretend you’re a hero. You unleashed this thing.”
A blast of blue flames illuminates the sunset sky.
“I had no other choice,” Prince Ashwin says, glowering.
“Tell that to the people whose city is being destroyed.” I check around the corner for the demon rajah. “A riverboat is waiting to take us out of here.”
“What about Kalinda?” the prince asks, eyeing the palace high up on the hill.
“She’s meeting us at the river. Try to keep up.”
I take off down the road. Prince Ashwin matches my speed, and we run downhill for the waterfront. Slivers of the dark-green river can be seen through the huts. Nearly there.
Blue flames explode at us from behind. The demon rajah casts another blast of fire at the hut in front of us, and the walls collapse. I haul Prince Ashwin out of the path of the raining debris, and we roll away. The prince turns onto his back and groans. He was struck in the forearm, his flesh burned white.
“I wondered if I would see you, Captain Naik.” Rajah Tarek’s voice sends a torrent of memories down upon me. I spent years serving this man. I saved his life over my brother’s during an attack. A small part of me still seeks his approval, but this is not Tarek. “I am unsurprised my son is with you. He has always been a disappointment.”
Prince Ashwin sits up, biting down on his pain. “Stop lying. I know you’re not my father. Tarek was the disappointment. He failed the empire.”
“Tarek’s work was left unfinished, but I have come to put everything right.”
The demon rajah collects a blue fireball in his hands. We cannot outrun him, so I hunch over the prince and prepare for agony.
Real fire flares above us, red as a sunset, and pushes away the Voider’s icy blue.
Kali plants herself between us and the demon rajah. Her hands are aglow, her face set in a defiant glare. Her soul-fire brightens her veins like rivulets of gold and reflects off her dark hair. Life and light glimmer around her, radiating supernal power, a beacon casting away shadows. Almost immediately, my eyes ache like I am staring into the sun. Kali resembles a goddess destroyer, terrifying and glorious.
“Get Ashwin to the boat,” she says.
The river is not far, but upon a closer look, Kali’s side is bleeding, and one of her legs is misshapen. My fears warn me that if I leave now, I may never see her again.
The Voider collects more blue flames for attack, his powers endless.
Kali bends into a fighting stance. “Deven, go! Protect the rajah.”
The rajah. My ruler. Our future.
I heave Prince Ashwin to his feet and push him into a run. He cradles his burned arm, the scent of charred flesh rank, but he meets my speed. We dash around the corner for the riverfront, and I lose sight of Kali.
31
KALINDA
My fire streams through the Voider’s blue flames, dispersing them to plumes of smoke. Deven and Ashwin depart, on their way to the boat. I was there moments ago but ran back when I saw how close the demon rajah was to us. Indah is still at the vessel, waiting with the others, including Natesa and a fatigued Yatin.
The Voider starts toward me, his hands glowing with aberrant powers. “You are bold, Kalinda.”
I lock my trembling knees, rooting myself to the ground. I hoped, prayed, I would be given the opportunity to stop the flood of wrongs I undammed by killing Tarek. Ending his life was the gods’ will—fate. So this must be fate too.
“I’ve been waiting for this,” the demon rajah says.
“So have I.” The Voider has been plaguing me through my nightmares of Tarek. My burning hands and the eerie eyes I saw were signs of my real tormentor, this demon. Whether my soul is tied to Tarek’s or not for eternity, I am done with him in this life.
No more Tarek. No more guilt. No more mercy.
I throw a blast of fire. The Voider wisps it away as he would a pesky fly.
“You cannot earn redemption, Burner. None of this would have happened if you had been a dutiful wife. Tarek is very angry with you. He yearns for you to suffer for your betrayal.”
“You don’t strike me as the type to fight a mortal man’s battles.”
“This is my battle too, a vendetta as old as the ultimate betrayer, the sky-god Anu.” The demon rajah thrusts another blue flame at me. I blast it away with a stream of fire, and our tangled flames strike a row of huts. My flames attack the houses, feeding off the bedlam. “Anu ripped this world from Abzu and Tiamat and then left it to weaklings. Bhutas are an abomination, created to ease Anu’s conscience for abandoning the mortals he enslaved. No longer will demons be confined to the shadows.”
Smoke from the raging fire stings my eyes. Inside the flames, serpentine dragons slither. I extend my fingers to them. Protect me.
On my command, the serpents encircle the Voider, lunging and snapping at him. The demon rajah fends them off with his powers. One by one, the fiery dragons shriek and puff to smoke.
“You cannot hurt me with fire. Tiamat created the First-Ever Dragon. The demon Kur is my master. I am born of fire and venom.”
The demon rajah knocks me back with a blue burst. I hit the wall hard, rapping my head. With temples pounding, I reach for my power and throw heatwave after heatwave to slow his approach. He bats away the searing strands of light and gains on me. I brace against the wall. My injured leg aches sharply, and my side has begun to bleed once more. Indah’s pain blocker is wearing off.
He steps up to me and brushes the hair from my face. “So pathetic. So weak.”
He slams me against the wall with more frosty fire. While I am pinned by numbing cold, he presses his lips to mine and blows blue fire into my mouth. Icy flames flow inside me, chilling me so deeply my soul-fire begins to suffocate. He steps away, yet the wintry inferno still burns through me, freezing my veins.
I crash at his feet, immobilized by excruciating pain.
“My fire would have burned a mortal to ash by now. But you . . . I could leave you in this blistering misery forever.” He bends over me as I shiver in agony. “Wait here, love. I will end your dear captain and prince and then return to usher you into the evernight.”
The demon rajah starts for the waterfront. Shards of ice pierce my lungs. I search inside for my soul-fire. Only embers remain. The frosty blaze will fester until it smothers my powers completely.
A chunk of burning rubble falls near me, blowing ash into my face. I wait for Jaya to appear, searching for the same shining spirit that visited me when I was drowning, but she does not come. I must not need her, for she has never failed me.
Nature-fire feeds off the debris, the serpents staying near. I stretch out my fingers. Come for me. Nothing happens, so I direct the last of my strength to lifting my hand and pulling at them harder. You will obey.
They shed off of the firestorm and slink over, dancing around me. Their warmth radiates into my limbs and thaws the worst of the Voider’s chill.