Cinder briefly lowered her gaze to compose herself, then held her hand toward him. “Please, Kai. We don’t have much time. I need your wrist.” Her voice was gentle and kind, and somehow that gave him greater pause than anything. Lunars—always so convincingly gentle, so deviously kind.
Shaking his head, he pressed his vulnerable wrist against his side. “Cinder, look. I don’t know what you’re doing here. I want to believe you have good intentions, but … I don’t know anything about you. You lied to me about everything.”
“I never lied to you.” Cinder stole another look at the foot. “I maybe didn’t tell you the
He frowned. “Of course I can blame you. You had plenty of opportunities to tell me the truth.”
The words seemed to surprise her, until she fisted her hands on her hips. “Right. And what if I’d said, oh, sure, Your Highness, I’d
Kai looked away.
“You never would have talked to me again,” she answered for him. “You would have been mortified.”
“So you were just going to keep it hidden forever?”
“
He was surprised how much the words stung. She was right. There wasn’t room for such absurdity between them—an emperor. A cyborg. Her words shouldn’t have hurt at all.
“What about being Lunar?” he said. “When was that going to come up?”
Cinder huffed, and he could tell she was growing exasperated. “We don’t have time for this.”
“How many times did you manipulate me? How much of it was just brainwashing?”
Her jaw fell open, as if she were appalled he could even suggest it. Then a fire stoked behind her eyes. “Why? Are you worried that you may have had actual feelings for a lowly cyborg?”
“I’m just trying to figure out what was real, and who
Cinder clenched her fists, but as his angry words settled, her eyes caught on something over his shoulder. The enormous picture window overlooking the Eastern Commonwealth. Her expression became distant. Calculating.
She took another step toward him. Kai flinched.
“I’m on
He curled his fingers. “My responsibility is here. I have a country to protect. I’m not running away from that, and I’m certainly not running away with you.” He tried to lift his chin, though it was difficult when Cinder’s glare was making him feel about as important as a grain of salt.
“Really?” she drawled. “You’d rather take your chances with
“At least I know when she’s manipulating me.”
“News flash: I have
Then she raised her hand and shot him.
Fifty-Two
Within seconds of the dart hitting Kai’s chest, his eyelids fluttered closed and he collapsed into Cinder. The adviser yelped and stood, but Iko intercepted him, pressing the man back as Cinder eased Kai’s unconscious body onto the floor.
For a moment, she was paralyzed, her mind reeling from the things she’d just said—at what she’d just done.
“Cinder? Are you all right?” said Iko.
“Fine,” she muttered, trembling as she propped Kai against the table and pulled out the dart. “He’s going to hate me when he wakes up, but I’m fine.” She couldn’t help glancing up again, at the big picture window hung with heavy silk drapes. At her own reflection looking back at her. At the girl with one metal hand and messy hair, wearing the uniform of a servant.
She let out a slow, head-clearing breath, and pulled Kai’s hand toward her.
“What are you going to do to him?”
Cinder paused long enough to look over at the adviser. His face was red with fury.
“We’re taking him somewhere safe,” she said. “Somewhere Levana can’t get to him.”
“And you think there won’t be repercussions for that? Not only for you, but for everyone on this planet. Don’t you realize that we are in the middle of a
“We’re not in the