A shriek tore from my chest as Kai surged forward. They collided in a whirl of flexing limbs and labored breaths. Vick swung; Kai swung back. Fists connected, followed by grunts of pain.
Fear slicked my insides. I could hardly tell what was happening, only that Kai seemed to have a minor advantage. Or he would have, if he hadn’t been so focused on keeping Vick’ssword in its sheath. Every time the man went for his blade, Kai wrenched his hand away. Which told me that if the blade came out, this would be over.
I edged sideways and grabbed a candelabra off my vanity. I resolved to whack Vick over the head with it, cause some damage. But they were grappling in earnest now, the fight carrying them out of the room and down the hall.
I dashed after them. Amryssa’s door creaked open as I passed. Olivian emerged, shouting for someone to explain themselves.
At the top of the spiral stair, I slowed, because Kai had Vick’s chest pinned to the wall. “I want you gone,” he growled. “Not just from this house, but out of Oceansgate. I’ll name someone else as my successor. Anyone but you.”
Vick’s expression darkened. Kai took him by the scruff and marched him down the stairs. I dropped the candelabra and followed, my breath a fiery torrent. We would throw Vick out. Tell Merron and the stewards to make sure he didn’t come back.
And it would’ve worked, maybe, if Vick hadn’t halted at the top of the grand staircase, forcing Kai to stop with him. When Vick turned his head, chilly calculation flashed in his eyes.
“Watch out,” I warned. “He’s going to?—”
Too late. Vick flung himself down the steps, taking Kai with him.
They tumbled, limbs tangling. Kai’s coattails pinwheeled as bodies thudded against the carpeted stairs. I winced and bolted after them, coming to a halt when they settled at the bottom.
Because somehow, Vick had unsheathed his sword.
And now he stood behind Kai, his blade pressed to my husband’s throat.
30.
Behind me, Olivian bellowed. “What’s the meaning of this?”
I didn’t move, too caught in the grip of my terror. Kai held my eyes, but the way he craned his head told me some part of him believed Vick would actually cut his throat.
My stomach hollowed out. No. No, no, no. If Vick killed Kai, I’d hunt him to the ends of the earth. I’d murder him in the most inhumane way possible, then feed the leftovers to the alligators.
I stumbled down another step.
“Just stop right there, Princess.” Vick flashed a smile. “I don’t want that dagger of yours getting too close.”
I halted, my blood congealing in my veins. Kai gazed at me without blinking.Steady, he seemed to say.I’ll be all right.
ButIwouldn’t. I wanted to throw up. Or pass out. Or hurl my dagger and bury the blade between Vick’s eyes, which I probably would have tried for, if he hadn’t been standing so close to a man I’d rather have lopped off my own hand than hurt.
“What’s the meaning of this?” Olivian yelled to Vick, the question even frostier than the fear chewing through my insides.“Do you have any idea what the penalty is for cutting a royal throat? For eventhreateningto cut a royal throat?”
Vick snorted. “Considering your lawmen are a distant memory, nothing. We all know no one’s coming. Besides, this is between me and the keymistress.”
“Thekeymistress? What does she have to do with this?”
“Very little, actually.” Vick’s smile turned feral. “Except that I want that dagger of hers.”
My grip snuck to my waist. The knife hummed, Zephyrine’s magic flowing into me.
Stand down, I ordered Vick.Lower your blade and step away from him.
His forehead creased. His sword dipped, but stabilized a moment later.
I screamed a silent curse. Just like with Kai at breakfast that morning, it wasn’t enough.
“Try that again, Princess, and you’ll be mopping his blood off the floor. Now, hands off the knife. I know what it can do.”
My molars ground together, but I raised spread hands.