every second connected from the moment they were conceived until
 
 they turned five years old. That was when his father decided it was
 
 time for the warrior to learn to be a king. He discounted the
 
 importance of Cian’s input. In their father’s mind, the warrior was all
 
 that mattered. Cian was an afterthought. Beck often wished he could
 
 trade places with his brother.
 
 Meg was suddenly staring out a palace window. In the
 
 background, there were men droning on about something or other.
 
 They usually complained about taxes or crop yield. Beck’s seven-
 
 year-old self didn’t care. He gazed out the window and watched Cian
 
 running after their cousin, Dante. He caught the young vampire and
 
 screamed something about him being “it.” Beck wanted to run and
 
 play, but his father had explained that he was different. He was better.
 
 He could best his brother at running and fighting. He could best
 
 anyone at those things. He trained only with the greatest warriors. His
 
 physical skills were not things to play with.
 
 But Beck wanted to play.
 
 Beck was only twelve the first time he killed a man. It was the
 
 first time someone tried to assassinate him. He could still remember
 
 the feel of the bright sun of his face as he followed after his father.
 
 There was an Unseelie ambassador in town, and it had almost caused
 
 a riot in the square. His father was trying to normalize relations with
 
 the Unseelie, but there was a faction of sidhe who would never accept
 
 it. They hated the Unseelie tribe. Many had lost relatives in the wars.
 
 Beck shadowed his father through town. His father was arrogant
 
 and sure of his peoples’ love for him. He only brought one guard with
 
 them. His name was Geary, and he’d been the one to teach Beck how
 
 to play cards. Geary had been sympathetic to Beck, sometimes
 
 slipping him a candied fig. He had two sons of his own, after all.
 
 The arrow hit the guard