ââ he swallowed â âyouâre just a girl.â
I couldnât help a bitter smile. âIs that what I am now? And who are you ?â
âMe? Iâm â Iâm Kasper. Kasper Bator.â Seeing my baffled expression, he added, âNobody important.â He looked miserable. âI donât understand. Are you a witch?â
âA witch?â I echoed. Inside me a little seed of hope was growing. Why he had come I had no idea, but I knew that I must not let this chance slip away. âOf course Iâm not a witch. Though Iâve wished I was often enough. Is that what youâve been told?â
âYes,â he breathed, staring at me. âAn immortal feya witch who helped the Prince of Night.â
I gave a bitter laugh. âThe Prince of Night has his own power. Why should he need a witch to help him?â
He flinched at this. âI donât know. It is what we have been told.â
âAnd now?â I ask. âWhat do you think now?â
âAll I know is that I heard you â¦â
âPlease,â I urged him, âyou heard me where?â
âThis afternoon â I heard the Commander speaking to you.â
âWhat?â
âI heard him say you were to die on the morning of your eighteenth birthday. And I heard you .â He looked at me wildly. âI heard you ask why you had to die â¦â
âHow can that be?â I asked. âThe Commander told me that weeks ago.â I backed away from him. âIs this some kind of cruel hoax your people have devised?â
âWhat?â The young man paled. âNo. I swear by the Angels that I heard it today. When I was â¦â He passed a hand over his forehead, where beads of sweat had appeared. âI donât understand,â he said in a hollow voice.
âNeither do I.â
âThen itâs true? They want to â¦â
I reached for the comfort of the crystal heart and tried not to tremble as I spoke. âTomorrow, I am to die.â
âAngels preserve us,â he burst out. âHow can this be? If you are not the witch â then who are you? Why are you here?â
I looked at him, searching his face to see if he truly did not know. But all I saw was confusion and bewilderment.
Drawing myself up, I said, âI am Izolda, the only child of the Prince of Night, and I have been kept as a hostage in this Tower since my capture on my eighth birthday.â
âNo,â he breathed. âThe Prince of Night had a child, yes, but she died when she was only â¦â
âWhen she was only eight.â
âWhy has your father not ââ
âWhy didnât he move heaven and earth to find me? Why didnât he let it be trumpeted everywhere that humans had stolen his only child?â I bit off the words. âHe did not because he could not.â
âWhy?â he whispered.
âMy father knew that if he said one thing about it to anyone, or if he stirred one finger outside our country, the Supreme Council would kill me. That was the price they made him pay for the war he waged on your people. Those were the terms. My capture defeated him. My imprisonment has made him keep the peace â and the silence. He cannot ask for anyoneâs help. Not ever.â
The young man gave a heavy sigh. âWhy do they want to kill you now after all this time?â
âSome prophecy, I was told.â
âWhat prophecy?â
âI donât know. Oh, please, Guard Bator, whatever you were told about me, this is the truth â the absolute truth,â I cried. âLook into my eyes and tell me what you see.â
Our eyes met for a long moment. He gave a low groan and put his head in his hands. âIn the Angelsâ name, what have we done?â
âYou have done nothing,â I said, recovering from that long glance which had goose-pimpled my skin. And the tremble started in me