Imogen froze at the sound of Ivan’s name. Her back was still to him, but the tension in her shoulders was enough to betray her mood. Gods, how she hated this man.
Slowly, she turned to face him, her expression sour, chin tilted as though daring him to push her further.
“How am I supposed to do what you ask of me if you won’t let me out of your sight?” she countered, her tone tense.
She knew the names he spoke of. Gods, she'd never have thought herself capable of siding with a marked one of all people, but the more Ilir spoke, the more she wanted to protect every single one of them simply out of spite.
My enemy’s enemy is my friend, she thought bitterly.
Since her father’s death, Imogen had lost something of herself. He had never given her cause to fear him. She had never feared Ivan either, and she had stood up to her brother every single time he tried to bully her. Their bond had for the most part, been a loving one. But now? Now he seemed so terrified of watching House Celreos crumble that he had become someone so cold and calculating she hardly recognised him. He’d taken to frightening her, cornering her, forcing obedience with the weight of his strength and his title.
But how angry could he truly be if his sister reminded him that she was just as strong as he was? That she could stand up to any man, even
Ilir Malennis? How angry could he be if she murdered her betrothed rather than submit to a life chained to this man?
Ivan had warned her again and again, his threats plain: if she stepped out of line,
he would kill Greydon himself.
And that,
that, was what stopped her from doing something very, very stupid. Because for some cursed, ridiculous reason, she cared. Each time she thought of Greydon failing to return from the front lines, something inside her chest ached in a way she could not explain. She barely knew him, and yet in every moment she’d been near him, she’d felt more alive than she had in her entire life.
Her voice softened, though her words were measured and deliberate.
“Your sister is to become a Solherre. Greydon revoked the Malennis name. The House is yours, it will be
ours. I will help you keep it safe. I will give you the sons you need…” she said, though her stomach twisted painfully at the promise.
Her green eyes locked with his in the mirror.
“But I think you are making a mistake in having him killed. Eira cares for him, and unless he dies on the front lines, she will know it was your doing. And she will turn on you with the strength of her friends, and of House Solherre behind her. Perhaps it would be wiser to let the jarlax do the job for both of us.”
The words tasted like ash on her tongue, but she forced them out with a calmness that surprised even her.