The Inquisitor's Pet: A Cage of Silver and Sins
re wasn't a metaphor
robbed from the glare reflecting off the ivory stone of the Cathedral. I stood in the high inquisitorial box, the emerald velvet of my dress feel
nk," Linus
ls on his chest didn't look 'brilliant'; they caught the sun and threw the light
nst his side until I was forced to stand straight. To the thousands of people below, he was a protect
st my ear. "Don't look at the crowd. Don't look at the smoke.
of wood soaked in black, stinking oil. Three men were bound there, t
on uniform. He didn't look at the 'sinners.' He looked at me, his milky, cataract-filme
wasn't a command; it was
OS
are was instantly sucked toward the pyres, replaced by a
HHH
were high, wet, and raw-the so
my mother's feet. My lungs seized. The air felt like I was breathing in hot sand. The resonance in my blood began to scream, a hig, look
his massive frame blocking the view of the burning men. He seized my chin, his fingers col
"Think of the mat this morning. Think of how much you want
ly thing cold enoug
enaline. It was sharper than the fear, and it gave me a floor to stand on. I stopped shaking because I was too busy trying to figure o
f dark passion while the world turned to ash behind them. Malles's lip curled in a sneer of irr
kiss it like a lover. He gripped it hard, his lips pressing against my knuckles with a cold,
htingale," he whispered aga
old of his lips li
mic chanting. I turned my head. At the edge of the square, a wo
l to their knees as if she were a god walking the earth. She ignored the dying men; she ignore
er face. Only a clinica
a single, slow motion: a fing
ng in the marrow of my bones. It was the exact same frequency as the brass heartrs tightening on his vest. "Th
him, my voice
. it's the same technology. The person who turned tha
lling intent exploding in his gaze a
were ash. But as the smoke cleared,