"I don't know," she said, clearly stumped. "Chroniclers only document the games. She probably ruled over men as a goddess. And relived her most glorious victories."

So the Empress had spent centuries gazing at the twenty-one icons on the backs of her hands. I'll pass. The more I thought about the game, the more I saw my battle against Richter as a one-way ticket. I didn't expect to walk away unscathed from a murderer who leveled mountains and bled lava.

And I'd never stop until he was dead. "Gran, would you rather that I live happily for a few months or be miserable for hundreds of years?"

"We don't have time for silly questions," she said, exasperated. "Your immortal life will be a tribute to the gods. You will be the winner. You must be." She waved at the vines seeming to pulsate all around us. "And why shouldn't you win? You've already made brilliant plays. Your alliance is well-picked for the most part. Though Circe can be tricky." A sudden gust of wind spattered rain against the window. Her eyes darted toward the glass. "The Flash must have weakened her. Her attack on the Emperor would have too. But she regains her strength with every single drop." Gran met my gaze again. "At least that little Fauna will be easy to remove."

My claws sharpened at even the imagined threat to Lark. The vines on the ceiling skittered. Enough. "I need you to understand some things. I didn't turn out like you hoped. Given the choice, I would never fight or play this game. These icons on my hand disgust me--I have them only because I fought for my own life. I'll help take out the Emperor and his allies, but I could never hurt my friends."

Her eyes went wild. "Friends? Friends? They will betray you at the first opportunity!" Spittle dotted her lips. "The only reason Death might not is because his lust is stronger than his age-old need to kill." She leaned in aggressively. "Do you think they care about you?"

I squared my shoulders. "Yes, I do."

"You won't for long," she promised me. "Not after you've read our chronicles from front to back."

"What are you talking about? We don't have written chronicles."

"You know we do."

Mouth gone dry, I shook my head hard. "You would've . . . you would've shown them to me."

"Evie," she said in a measured tone, "I did."

23

The Hunter

"Coo-yon?"

A light neared, getting brighter. A lantern? Shadows wavered over the rock walls. I raised a hand to my forehead, shielding my eyes. Hadn't seen this much light in weeks.

I squinted. Blinked. Blinked again. The image remained.

Before me was two of . . . Matthew. "Hunter!"

"You a ghost? You goan to take me to hell?"

He frowned. "Do you know the way?"

Sounded like something he'd say! Could this truly be coo-yon? My heart got to pounding--made my leg throb like the devil. "You real?"

In a too-loud voice, he said, "We're leaving."

"Shhh! You are real." I choked out words: "Did Evie . . . d-did my girl . . . live?" I held my breath, waiting for his answer. The next few seconds would decide whether I hoped for a future--or accepted the end of a life that already felt too long.

Every moment of my existence seemed to lead up to this strange kid's next words. All the pain. All the confusion. And then that sweet, sweet time when Evangeline Greene was all mine . . .

"Empress lived. Her smile died."

"Ah, God, my girl's alive." Relief made me even more lightheaded. "Alive." I shuddered, and my eyes grew damp. Couldn't control my emotions, me. "How? I thought I got her killed like the rest."

"Tredici saved her."

"Tre-what?" Was he talking about Dominija? I'd figured as much.

"Death!"

"Quiet, coo-yon." I slept apart from the other captives, but somebody would hear him before long. "I gotta get to Evie." I tried to scramble up on my good leg. Only busted my ass.

Waves of dizziness hit. I had to gnash my teeth to keep from blacking out. "How'd you sneak past the guards?" Shackled slaves could move around down here at the terminus, but two armed guards kept anyone from getting near the mine elevator.

Coo-yon shrugged. "Mad skillz."

"Who's with you? They comin' in guns blazing?" I was going to get free of this hellhole! I'd get back to my girl.

He lowered his lantern. "I'm rogue."

I tried sitting up again, slowly. "What's that mean? Is Evie close?" God, let her be.

"I'm alone."

The fuck? "No other Arcana with you? Then I'm trapped here. And soon you will be too if you doan go." I sank back against the stone wall. "Tell her I love her. Tell her . . . tell her I'll see her again. Somewhere, someway. Now leave!"

He shook his head and covered his lips with a forefinger. He was shushing me? After he'd been so loud? "Time for you to go."

Started to ask him if he was crazy. Already knew the answer to that, me. "You must mean I'm about to die. You here to see me out?"

Both Matthew and Selena had said my line chronicled, but I'd thought the knowledge had been passed down verbally or something.

After Gran's revelation, she'd dug an ancient-looking book out of her bag, having trouble lifting the weighty thing. The battered leather of the cover looked like the skin of a Bagman.

She'd been stunned by my lack of recognition, sinking down on her bed, looking ten years older. "No wonder you hesitate to kill them," she'd said, as if explaining the worst tragedy. . . .

Now she watched me like a hawk. "Nothing?" I shook my head. "How could you not remember?"

"I was only eight when you went away, and I was forbidden to talk about anything you taught me." Young as I was, I'd been old enough to know that Mom had banished my grandmother for her beliefs. Why wouldn't I have pushed Arcana stuff from my mind to avoid a similar fate? "When I got older and I had visions of the apocalypse, Mom blamed you, so she sent me to a head-shrink place, like the one you went to. I got . . . deprogrammed."