Traitor Born (Page 19)

Reykin gracefully rises from his seat in a slow uncoiling of muscle and sinew. “I don’t believe we’ve met. I’m Reykin Winterstrom.” The other firstborns’ laughter sets my teeth on edge. They think he’s mocking me. No other firstborn here would think to stand for a secondborn. His outstretched hand is an invitation. I straighten my shoulders. Moving forward, I take his hand. He lifts mine to his lips, kissing the back of it. A small shiver slips through me.

“Roselle Sword,” I murmur with a small curtsy. His fingers linger on mine a bit too long. I pull my hand back.

The firstborn man next to Grisholm clears his throat. Pushing his chair out, he slaps the tops of his thighs with his hands. “Why don’t you come sit here, Roselle?”

The crowd erupts in laughter again, but it’s quickly silenced by Reykin’s frown. “You should be thanking her for her service, Charon.”

“Oh, I’d like to thank her for her service,” the Moon-Fated man replies, leering at me. He can’t be older than twenty. If he were a secondborn Sword, I’d simply punch him in the teeth, but these aren’t secondborns. Retaliation is ill-advised.

Reykin holds out his chair. The harmony of his skin over defined muscles is distracting. “You can have my seat.” I frown. I want to say no. He should probably be ignoring me, but maybe this is better. I don’t know that I can hide the intimacy between us, so establishing an acquaintance could conceal our true relationship. “Thank you,” I reply and take a step in his direction.

“No one sits here without a suit,” Grisholm drawls with a smug smile. “Even this highborn secondborn.” He mocks me with an oxymoron.

Reykin takes it in stride. “There’s a wardrobe closet just over there, Roselle. You can change while I order you a drink.”

“Get me one, too,” the redheaded woman next to Grisholm says.

“What do you want, Cindra?” Reykin asks.

“Something lethal,” she replies with a wide grin. Her ice cubes clink together as she raises what’s left of the last drink to her full lips. She watches me over the rim of her glass. Condensation drips onto her skin, sliding down the valley between the sides of her ruby-colored bikini top. She wipes it away with her finger. Her moniker resembles a carbon atom. Lights representing protons and electrons orbit over her hand.

Reykin nods. He touches his holographic shooting star. A command screen projects from it. He locates a bar menu and orders drinks. Flying mechadomes rise into the air by the bar, selecting bottles of alcohol and setting them on the glass in front of the automated bartender.

I drift away in the direction of the wardrobe closet. Entering it, I lock the door behind me. Facing the holographic mirror, I touch the menu on the side. My reflection wears the first bathing suit on the list—a tiny black bikini. I swipe it away. The next one is white and even more revealing. I scoff. After swiping twenty more to the side, it’s clear that the only suits in this program are meant for style rather than function—possibly for Grisholm’s special late-night “friends.” I settle for a shimmering metallic-silver bikini top with matching bottoms and a graphite wrap skirt.

The ensemble arrives in a silver box. Inside, the outfit is wrapped in delicate, lavender-scented tissue paper and tied with a graphite-colored satin ribbon. I lift the package from the box that ferried it through the air-driven conveyor in the wall, toss my clothes in, and send them back into the chute to be laundered.

Once suited up, I adjust my fusionblade’s sheath so that it wraps around my right thigh. Slipping the hilt of the sword into the black straps, I leave the wardrobe. Four of Grisholm’s friends grin as I approach. Grisholm, seated at the onyx table, scowls at me from head to toe. Reykin’s face darkens with a frown of disapproval. Cindra raises an appraising eyebrow. My fingers twitch near my fusionblade.

A hovering drone delivers a tumbler to the table in front of Reykin. A slice of lemon floats in the center of clear liquid and gold-leaf ice cubes. As I join him, he stands and holds out his chair. I settle in opposite Grisholm. Reykin pulls another chair away from a nearby table and squeezes it in between me and the ferret-faced man, making Simont scoot over. Reykin seats himself close to my side.

On the other side is a firstborn with a blond cowlick in front. His belly pushes down a rather loud, maize-colored swimsuit as he leans toward me. He extends his hand in a way that leaves me wondering if I should kiss its sun moniker or slap it away. I choose to do neither. His cheeks turn ruddy at the slight. “Ahem.” He clears his throat, dropping his hand. “Allow me to introduce myself. I’m—”

“Shove off, Milken,” the firstborn next to him says as he strokes his dark beard. The light from his aqua cresting-wave moniker makes it look as if one could surf his hairy chin. “She’ll never be interested in you.”

If Milken’s bluster is any indication, then he’s genuinely offended. “I’m a firstborn heir to the most powerful growing operations in the Fate of Suns! Why wouldn’t a secondborn be interested in me?”

The bearded man leans back in his chair, propping an elbow on the backrest. The wave of his Seas moniker crashes over and over. “I heard a rumor that she’s not going to be secondborn for long.” His appraising eyes make me feel more naked than the locker room in my air-barracks ever did, but I try to hide it. “She’s going to be The Sword one day, and your plantations won’t mean a thing when she’s in control of all of our armies.”

Milken’s soft cheeks puff out. “She’ll always have the secondborn taint on her, though. That never goes away.”

“True,” Reykin agrees. “A secondborn will always be inferior.” His knee nudges mine beneath the table—an apology. I step on his toes with my bare heel, grinding them as hard as I can. He stifles a small grunt and edges his foot from beneath mine.

I almost need to bite my tongue to keep from cursing Milken out. “Thank you, gentlemen, for your concern for my brother’s well-being, but he’s in good health and liable to outlive all of you.”

“Gabriel is as good as dead,” Grisholm replies with an amused look. “It’s time that everyone at this table knows it, especially you, Roselle. These are my closest advisors, part of my Halo Council, except for Reykin, of course. But he’ll be added soon enough. You’ll be called upon to advise us when you’re not presiding over the Sword Heritage Council. My father has already anointed you. Now it’s just a matter of killing your brother.” He says it as if he has accepted the truth of it. My stomach churns. I was counting on turning him into an ally on this one issue.

“I know you and Gabriel were never friends, Grisholm,” I acknowledge, “but he’s firstborn. He’d stand by your side and defend you—no matter what.”

Grisholm lifts an eyebrow. “You always surprise me, Roselle.”

That’s not difficult, I think. You never see anything coming.

“A plot is brewing,” Grisholm continues. For a moment, fear runs rampant through me. Does he know of my involvement with the Gates of Dawn?

“Please do elaborate,” I reply.

“Initial reports say Rasmussen’s death is assassination,” Grisholm says.

“Do you suspect his brother Orwell?” Reykin asks.

“It’s the logical choice,” Grisholm replies. “Secondborns murder us all the time for power. It’s in their nature.” I want to pull my hair out. It isn’t nature. Most secondborns accept their fates, no matter how unjust. “I’m bringing in an expert to get us answers.”