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Cruel Beauty
Cruel Beauty
Cruel Beauty
Ebook336 pages5 hours

Cruel Beauty

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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If you’re excited about the upcoming Disney film Beauty and the Beast, starring Emma Watson, don’t miss Cruel Beauty.

The romance of Beauty and the Beast meets the adventure of Graceling in this dazzling fantasy novel about our deepest desires and their power to change our destiny.

Perfect for fans of bestselling An Ember in the Ashes and A Court of Thorns and Roses, this gorgeously written debut infuses the classic fairy tale with glittering magic, a feisty heroine, and a romance sure to take your breath away.

Betrothed to the evil ruler of her kingdom, Nyx has always known that her fate was to marry him, kill him, and free her people from his tyranny. But on her seventeenth birthday when she moves into his castle high on the kingdom's mountaintop, nothing is what she expected—particularly her charming and beguiling new husband. Nyx knows she must save her homeland at all costs, yet she can't resist the pull of her sworn enemy—who's gotten in her way by stealing her heart.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJan 28, 2014
ISBN9780062224750
Author

Rosamund Hodge

Rosamund Hodge grew up as a homeschooler in Los Angeles, where she spent her time reading everything she could lay hands on, but especially fantasy and mythology. She got a BA in English from the University of Dallas and an MSt in Medieval English from Oxford, and she now lives in Seattle with a mountain of books and the most beautiful dog in the world. Visit her on the web at http://www.rosamundhodge.net/

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Reviews for Cruel Beauty

Rating: 3.8656885237020315 out of 5 stars
4/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Well before her birth Nix has been betrothed to Ignifex, after all that was the deal that her father made with the ruler of their Kingdom. It was never even a choice between Nix and her twin sister. Her father would never give up Astraia. But Nix won't be a dutiful bride, she won't put on a fake smile and do as she is told. No. She has a plan. She will kill the evil ruler of Arcadia, she will kill Ignifex and free her land. She will prove to her sister and her father that she deserves to live just as much as Astraia.Amazon - Barnes and Noble - Book Depository______________________________________________________ "Cruel Beauty" is suppose to be a mix between Beauty and the Beast and Graceling. While I haven't read Graceling I'm think it must lean more towards that. While I could see how it resembled Beauty and the Beast (if I squinted and tilted my head) it wasn't enough for me to warrant the 'retelling' description. I'm not sure how to describe this book. First off I hate retelling's, I don't know why but they drive me crazy, if a book is marketed as one I tend to stay as far away from it as possible. But I'm trying to branch out a little bit and read books I wouldn't have previously picked up. So keeping that in mind I was very hesitant going into this book, but after finishing it I found myself surprised by how much I really liked it.It was strange, I won't deny that, but strange in the best possible why. It has the perfect mesh of darkness and light, you're always wondering who Nix should trust and who she should run screaming from. The descriptions of the ever changing castle and it's vast rooms left me breathless and I found myself insanely jealous of a library filled with books that no one could read, which is crazy.All through the book I thought it was going to be three stars. It was a good story, with good characters and a good plot but the second I finished those last few chapters I knew three stars just wasn't enough. I only wish the first 2/3 had been as enchanting and mesmerizing as the last 1/3. That being said I am planning on reading Rosamund's next book and hopefully this will open the door to even more retelling's. Until next time, Ginger
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Nyx lives in Arcadia, a land that has been taken over by the Gentle Lord. Nyx's father has negotiated that she will marry him to free the people of Arcadia. Nyx has trained all her life for this. She has felt anger toward her dad, her sister, and her aunt. Why has she been chosen to do this, even if it means almost certain death? As her marriage begins, she falls for Ignifex and finds herself torn between love and duty. Can she find a way to make it work where she doesn't have to die, doesn't have to kill Ignifex, and she can still save Arcadia? Lots of confusion and twists and turns.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Random Thoughts•Greek Mythology mixed with Beauty and the Beast - truly unique and highly readable•Fabulous opening paragraph. Hooked me in right away and didn't let me go•Characters are extremely flawed which makes them all so interesting.•You are never really sure where the story is going and it keeps you on your toes and totally enthralled•Some great uses of dark humour•I fell in love with Ignifex right away, but I have always had a thing for the naughty boys - yup even married one•Thoroughly enjoyed the ending•Nyx was so unusual for YA fiction and I think that is why I enjoyed her so much. She is fierce, defiant and at times very wicked, yet so broken inside that you cannot help to feel for her•Reminded me of times of the Bluebeard tale, which was a personal favorite of mine growing up•Fantastic cover - I know you shouldn't judge a book by its cover, but lets face it, a good cover makes you pick it up & in this day and age, it makes a difference in terms of sales•Pretty impressive for a debut novel•Nothing is ever as it seems and it makes you think and would be a fabulous book for discussion Memorable Quotes/Passages"He had seen me, in all my ugliness, and never hated me, and in that moment, nothing else mattered.""That's what makes you my favorite." He reached up and wiped a tear off my cheek with his thumb. "Every wicked bit of you.""We finish the bottle." I passed it back to him.Ignifex held it up to the light, squinting to see how much was left. "Mortal customs are more fun than I thought.""They said that love was terrifying and tender, wild and sweet, and none of it made any sense."4 Dewey'sWe received this at work from HarperCollins and I am in no way required to review or promote
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Cruel Beauty was my second attempt with this author. Once again my weakness for eye catching covers lured me in spite of my previous experience. On one hand I was actually able to make it through the entire book which is more than I can say for [book: bright smoke, cold fire] where within 20 minutes of listening to the audio book I was left wondering baffled as to what the hell I had just listened to without enough curiosity to try and sort it out and continue. I found myself having the same issues with the authors writing as I did that first time I read her work. It felt like she was trying so hard to come up with something "new" while also recycling old tales/mythology but instead somehow ends up a tale that's both bizarre and predictably boring. Imagine beauty & the beast Sophie's choice some Titan/Pandora mythology, & a very literal case of multiple personality disorder. The cherry on to all of is is that everything about the world this story inhabits pretty much sucks. The land is cursed, the main character's family are simply awful and everything is so depressing and miserable that the "happy ending" isn't really enough to counter everything that came before it. I think this story could have been so much more enjoyable of she had gone with a retelling of one tale rather than off this off the wall mashup.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I got an advanced reading copy of this book to review through the Amazon Vine program. I love fairy tale retellings and this retelling of Beauty and the Beast was described as a mix of Graceling meets Beauty and the Beast. It ended up being a decent book, there were some things I really loved about it but also some things that could have been done better.Nyx’s father made a deal with the Gentle Lord and as a result Nys will pay for his bargain. Nyx has been destined to marry the Gentle Lord since her birth, the Gentle Lord is basically a Prince of demons and shadows and is greatly feared by all. Nyx’s father has been training her since birth to kill the Gentle Lord and bring down his nine hundred year old kingdom which has kept their kingdom of Arcadia trapped in an isolated world. However when Nyx finally meets the Gentle Lord, Ignifex, she finds out that things are not quite how she has been lead to believe.Nyx is an interesting character, she is obviously scared to meet her new husband. She is also a bit bitter against her sister, Astraia, who is allowed to live peacefully with the family because she takes more after her mother than her father. Nyx is determined to complete her mission of assassinating the Gentle Lord, but also strangely drawn to Ignifex’s strange mix of tenderness, dark humor, and cruelty. Nyx is a character that is very flawed and hard to like, but her cruelty paired with her compassion make her fascinating.Ignifex is also a fascinating character. You don’t really know what to expect from him. He is more indifferent and playful than cruel in the beginning of the story. As the story continues we start to see more aspects of his personality, he is cruel, he is powerful, yet he can be kind and he is somewhat vulnerable. Of course he is handsome and dashing.This book is mostly about the relationship between Nyx and Ignifex, and I have to say they are pretty excellent together. They each have a blend of cruelty and tenderness that compliments the other. They both are very flawed and they both do good and evil things. The world is an interesting one. It seems to be based on Greco-Roman culture. There are a lot of mythology references throughout. In some ways this book is not only a retelling of Beauty and the Beast but also a retelling of Pandora’s Box and Cupid and Psyche. There are a lot of elements from Beauty and the Beast in here as well. Although it is a bit twisted. Initially you think Nyx is Beauty and Ignifex is the Beast, but the roles could be reversed...Nyx does some truly beastly things as well and Ignifex is supposed to be a creature of sublime beauty. Nyx does get permission to leave to visit her family at one point (just like in Beauty and the Beast) and this triggers some momentous events (just like in the original Beauty and the Beast story). There were a few things I didn’t like about this novel. It was very predictable, there is a bit of a love triangle at the beginning of the book but you can quickly figure out what is going on here and it is very predictable. I found the characters a bit hard to engage with at times and especially in the beginning of the book they weren’t very likable. I also felt like they were a bit 2D and could have been filled out a bit more, maybe it is just that the writing style isn’t as descriptive or flowing as it could have been.The last thing I didn’t like was the fact that Nyx can do magic called Hermetic workings but they are never all that well explained and not used a ton throughout the book. The magic system between the Hermetic workings sounds fascinating and I really wish it had been expanded upon. Additionally Nyx doesn’t use this skill a ton throughout the book, it seems like a skill Nyx really values and I didn’t understand why she didn’t make more use of it.The writing was a bit stark and simple for me, this made the book feel a little dull and lackluster at points. The story didn’t come alive and it was hard to picture some scenes in the book.Overall this was a decent fairy tale retelling and a quick read. I liked the premise behind the book and throught the world was interesting. Although I liked the idea behind Nyx and Ignifex I really had some trouble engaging with them. I did enough the mythological elements throughout and thought this book did a decent job of retelling Beauty and the Beast in a unique way. There was just something about the writing style that made the book feel a bit dull for me, maybe it was that the writing style was a bit stark for this type of story. When I finished this book I kind of felt like, “Huh, well that was okay but it could have been better.”
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As I read this, I was struck by how many assumptions I had apparently made when I first heard about it. I'd made assumptions about Nyx's skillset and mindset that turned out to be quite wrong. She's been trained to destroy the Gentle Lord, but that training has been Hermetic techniques (which is to say, magic) rather than in weapons; she doesn't identify as an assassin.And Nyx is incredibly angry about her fate. She's angry that she is sacrificed because of a bargain her father made while her twin sister is spared. Her anger and her complicated relationship with her sister, who Nyx loves yet resents, made Nyx a compelling character I immediately cared about.I enjoyed the way Cruel Beauty draws upon more than just the Beauty and the Beast story - there are references to, and echoes of, other familiar stories, too. This brings a richness to the worldbuilding and to mysteries Nyx has to solve. Despite the familiarity of Beauty and the Beast, I couldn't predict how this story would unfold.The Gentle Lord is an ambiguous figure, contrary - Nyx knows about his evil rule over Arcadia and yet she's unprepared for his personality.Banter is exactly what I want from Beauty and the Beast retellings.There were a couple of things that, halfway through the book, I really wasn't sure about, but once I saw how they played out, I appreciated them better (and suspect I might appreciate them better upon rereading this.)This isn't going to win the award for being my favourite Beauty and the Beast retelling, but I liked it, more than I expected to.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this in one sitting (well, and lying down, since I finished it in bed). I loved the completely non-traditional heroine--angry, hard, dealing with major family issues--bartered away to the Gentle Lord, the Lord of the Demons. The plot of this book gets complex, much more so than Nyx, the heroine, had anticipated. The mantra drilled into her from childhood, "Revenge your mother, kill the Gentle Lord," becomes much more difficult as the Gentle Lord is a match for her anger and rage and has his own story behind his behavior. Nyx is an angry young woman, but she has a conscience. As both sides of the story start to become clearer (as clear as they can), she starts to realize what it's like to be accepted for being herself. It's a well-developed story with fully drawn characters, all of whom hide things from themselves--either by choice or because they've been made to forget. I found it a fascinating story and want to read it again since I read it so quickly to find out what was going to happen, I know I missed things.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Man, this was a great book! Beauty and the Beast is my favourite fairytale and the author did such a great job retelling it. I loved the take on it, and the magic and everything. It was so good that even though the romance was basically the main story line to the book (and to Beauty and the Beast), I didn't mind because it was written so well and the background was just amazing. Truly a great read :)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I liked it, but the comparison to Beauty and the Beast doesn't seem accurate...Jekyll and Hyde mixed with Rumpelstiltskin is more like it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I read this book in two days.Beauty and the Beast is one of my favorite fairy tales (and the Disney version still ranks number 1 on my list). When I heard that Cruel Beauty was likened to the story, I immediately downloaded from my library. From the very first chapter, I was captivated by how different and surprisingly similar the story was.Nyx is sent to marry the Gentle Lord of the country as part of a bargain her father had made to save her mother. The young woman is sent to the ruinous castle as his bride and assassin, and from the get-go, she’s feisty, cruel, and dangerous. As time passes she and the Gentle Lord, Ignifex, get to know one another, and despite everything, Nyx becomes torn in her emotions to save or kill him.I very much appreciated the Greco-Roman influences found throughout the debut novel, and found it even more captivating because of it. One downside is: knowing the fairy tale extremely well, and so the plot was a bit too predictable. But even so, Hodge creates just enough differences to bring a breath of fresh air to the classic. I found myself tearing up at the last five chapters, wondering if there would even be a happy ending.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Review courtesy of Dark Faerie TalesQuick & Dirty: Beautifully written story filled with mystery, romance, and interesting characters. It was slow moving at times, but overall it was a good read.Opening Sentence: I was raised to marry a monster.The Review: Nyx has spent her whole life knowing one very important thing. When she becomes of age she will marry the Great Lord, the ruler of their kingdom, and then she will find a way to kill him. When she was young her foolish father made a bargain with the Great Lord and the payment was to give one of his daughters to the Great Lord to become his next wife. Nyx has spent her whole life training to rid her country of the tyrant that rules their country and she is willing to sacrifice everything to fulfill her duty.When she turned seventeen she leaves everything behind and marries the powerful Ignifex. But to her surprise, Ignifex is very different than she expected him to be. He is surprisingly kind and the more time Nyx spends with him, the more she learns to care for him. Nyx always resented her family for never trying to save her, and she was never really ever able to be herself around them. But with Ignifex she doesn’t have to hide who she is, and for the first time in her life she feels free. Unfortunately, her mission hasn’t changed and she will have to decide what is more important, the kingdom she was raised to save or the man that has stolen her heart?Nyx is a very complex character. On the outside you see the perfect daughter that has done everything in her power to do what she must, but underneath that there is a girl that just wants to be loved. She has a side to her personality that is dark and twisted, but all her life she has always kept it at bay. She is full of determination and drive, but there is a lot of hatred in her soul as well. I honestly found her fascinating and very intriguing. She wasn’t the easiest person to connect with, but I felt that I understood her.Ignifex is charming, sexy, and very mysterious. One moment he was cruel and heartless, and then the next moment he was sweet and caring. You never knew what to expect from his character and I loved that he kept me guessing. As his story slowly unfolds throughout the pages, I found myself totally taken with him. His relationship with Nyx was sweet and real. They were able to be themselves with each other and they were able to look past the others flaws. Their romance was beautiful and timeless. Ignifex was a great character that was easy to fall in love with.This was a wonderful story full of mystery and romance. Now I can’t deny that it is written beautifully, but it moved really slow for me. The writing style is very descriptive and lyrical, but there were times I had to reread parts to understand what was going on. So for me, the book felt like it dragged, and I got a little bored with the story at times. The best part about this book was the complex characters. Both Nyx and Ignifex have so many sides to their personalities and not all of them are pretty. I loved the depth you see in them and how their relationship brought everything to light. The setting was completely magical, with a castle that is ever changing and a mystery within its walls. While I was reading, I could vividly imagine the fascinating world that Hodge created. Also, the cover for this book is gorgeous, and it fits the story perfectly. Overall, this was an enjoyable read, I just wish it would have flowed better for me. If you are a fan of retelling or mythology, I would highly recommend you give this book a try. I think you will find it interesting and a good read.Notable Scene:If I thought of the house as a maze, I had no hope. I still got lost in Father’s box-hedge maze; I’d never solve this labyrinth.But if I considered it a riddle . . . The house was a Hermetic working. And I had trained to master those all my life.There is an ancient Hermetic saying: “Water is born from the death of air, earth from the death of water, fire from the death of earth, air from the death of fire.” In their eternal dance, the elements overpower and arise from one another in this order, and every Hermetic working must follow it.Maybe I had to unravel the house’s mysteries in this order too.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A variation of the Beauty and the Beast story. I enjoyed it. I liked Nyx. She is not flattered or cowed by what is happening to her. She reads people very well. She's confused with Ignifex and why he doesn't kill her. She has to stay on her toes with him but they are a good match. At times I was not sure whether what was happening was real, a memory, a dream, or something else. There are twists here that surprised me. Nyx's family were less than sterling. She was the best of the bunch. A quick enjoyable read of one of my favorite fairy tales.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    CRUEL BEAUTY was an interesting reading experience for me. I am not sure what I think about the story. There were parts of the book I found tedious and I found myself putting the book down frequently to go do something - anything - else. But there was something, beyond my commitment to Amazon Vine to read and review all the books I pick, that kept me picking up the book again.This book bears some similarities to Beauty and the Beast. Not in the characters though. Beauty was loving, selfless and honorable while Nyx was angry, resentful, and conflicted. Beauty was raised by a loving father; Nyx's father raised her to be a tool for his vengeance for a mistake that he made. Nyx never felt that he loved her or even saw her as a real person. The Beast was the victim of a curse; Ignifex was the victim of his own bargains. The story takes place in a fairy tale world cut off from the real world. It is ruled by a demon called the Gentle Lord. Because of a bad bargain her father made, Nyx is required to marry the Gentle Lord which is a fate that frightens her. She has been trained to assassinate him which her father and his group believes will free their world to be part of the real world again. When Nyx enters the castle she discovers her new husband who tells her to call him Ignifex and learns that she can be free if she guesses his name but will die if she guesses incorrectly. As they spend time together, Nyx begins to fall in love with him despite her vow to kill him. After all, he is the only one who sees all of her, both the evil and the good, and loves her anyway. But she also meets Shade who is Ignifex's shadow and who only becomes human at night. His kindness and willingness to help her to the limits of his ability makes Nyx fall in love with him too. There were no heroes in this story. Everyone was some shade of villain. While this makes the story more realistic, it does make it harder to know who the reader should root for. Also, no one was quite who they seemed to be. Since the story is told in the first person from Nyx's point of view, we get to know her best. The only problem is that she doesn't know herself very well and she is so conflicted about what she wants to do. She is torn between her vows for vengeance and her love for Ignifex, her concern for the fate of her world and for her own happiness.The story is complex and based on Greco-Roman mythology. Nyx needs to unravel clues and explore the castle to find out if she can keep her vow and kill Ignifex without destroying her whole world. While I resented the infodump that consumed the first two chapters of the book, it did provide necessary information about the world and the characters. I just think it could have been integrated more seamlessly into the story. My favorite parts of the book were the conversations between Ignifex and Nyx as they were sparring and getting to know each other. They were like gold nuggets sprinkled through the story.Readers who are fans of lush language and fantasy will enjoy this debut novel. While I didn't find it completely successful, I know I will be thinking about it for a long time.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really enjoyed this book. I found it refreshing to read about characters who weren't "good" but knew who they were and were apologetically themselves. I did, however, find the love story quite Stockholm Syndromey and I didn't quite understand how or when Nyx actually fell in love. But then again, who really understands how/when/why people fall in love to begin with. The premise was very interesting because it was never really a battle of good and evil although it played that way in parts. It wasn't until I looked into whether or not there would be a sequel that I learned that this is essentially a re-imagining of Beauty and the Beast (which I totally see how, looking back). With that knowledge I think I enjoyed it a bit more. Im interesting in reading the other stories in this universe (I know there is a Red Riding Hood retelling and a Cinderella novella).
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Rewriting a fairy tale or putting your own spin on it is not easy. There is a lot to think about when it comes to character development, whether or not the new circumstances will work for the characters, and is this storyline just as original to the old one?Hodge gives YA readers and fans a new hero to root for: Nyx. She's not the beauty we've heard from the Disney storybooks. She's flawed, jaded, and resentful of her entire family. She has darkness inside, and even though she at times tries to hide it - eventually it comes out.With a beautiful twist of the classic French tale, where transformation occurs and things are not as quite as they seem, to Incorporated Greek myths and folklore - all of it encompasses a world of magic and mystery. My only complaint with the book is that, although sex was alluded to within the book, I wish it wasn't overlooked as it was in a historical context. In fact, I wish that Nyx originally would have been more upset by it. In these "ancient" times, marriage was a bartering system: a lord gives a man his daughter in exchange for a heir. Women were currency, and I wished that the author could have had Nyx voice her opinion more on it. Also, I wished that Nyx could have displayed her sexuality more positively in the story. The intimate moments are all well and good, but the author could have gone further.But I enjoyed reading about a dark hero who encompasses more complex ideas and schemes, who wants to educate herself and do more with her life despite her fate... who even shows her vulnerability when she is at the lowest point in the story.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Thanks to Edelweiss and Balzer Bray for allowing me access to this title.

    I love retold fairytales. And at the top of that list would be Beauty and the Beast. While this is not an exact retelling of that fairytale, the flavor of it remains the same. There is a mixture of mythology and fairytale and magic that is an original story of its own.

    What isn't to love about a story where the princess gets to save the prince instead of the other way around?
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    2.5/3

    It started off well but the end was just twisted and confusing it was meh.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A great retelling of Beauty and the Beast with a healthy dose of Greek mythology mixed in. What I especially liked, however, was Nyx's ability to see herself exactly as she was - with all her flaws and her tendencies to hurt those that she loved. It's not just the beast's journey to being a better person, it's hers as well, with as many bumps on the road. Fun reading, but then I'm always up for a Beauty and the Beast retelling!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Nyx's father made a deal with the prince of demons, and now the time has come for that deal to be kept. Nyx will wed the Gentle Lord and live with him in his castle until she dies, in return for protection for the land and the life of her lovely twin sister. Nyx has known of her fate for most of her life -- and the bitterness and resentment that has built up within her has not been assuaged by the training her father has given her that may allow her to defeat the Gentle Lord and bring his reign to an end. She will take on the role of obedient wife, all the while searching the castle for the four "hermetic hearts" that hold the castle together. Nyx knows her duty -- but what she does not expect is the attraction she feels for her husband, the way the bitterness and malice within her seem to call out to the darkness and sarcasm in him.Grounded in mythology and legend, this story hearkens back to the Cupid and Psyche myth that is the root of the Beauty and the Beast fairy tale. Elements of both make this the strongest Beauty and the Beast retelling I have read in quite some time. All of the characters are complex and thought-provoking, none entirely evil or entirely good. While I love a traditional Beauty and the Beast retelling where Beauty's purity of heart enables her to save the day, I found this version fascinating. Readers who enjoy classical mythology, complicated characterization, and new takes on traditional stories should certainly give this book a try.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Retelling of Beauty and the Beast. Nyx was betrothed at birth to the evil Gentle Lord, ruler of demons who hide in the shadows. Her father bargained with him for his wife, who wanted children. The deal cost Nyx's mother her life, and Nyx has prepared her whole life to marry the Gentle Lord, and then attempt to assassinate him on their wedding night. Nyx has always resented her twin sister, the one who has their father's love and who gets to live. Nyx follows through, but marriage to the Gentle Lord isn't what she expected, and she is the only one who can find a way to save the world from the Kindly Ones, beings even worse than demons!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This mash-up between Beauty and the Beast, Rumpelstiltskin, Greek mythology, and Celtic mythology is unique and fun, with plenty to keep the reader guessing right until the end.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I've said it hundred of times: I have a thing for fairy tales... especially retold ones.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I’m a tad perplexed by my feelings for Cruel Beauty. There are some aspects about it that I really appreciated and enjoyed and there are a lot that just didn’t work for me. I love retellings, mythology and fairy tales so I should have loved Cruel Beauty. I should be raving about this book and recommending that everyone read it but I’m not really there. I make lists for just about everything in life so I guess I may as well make a pros and cons list for Cruel Beauty. Perhaps upon completion of my list I will be able to determine my feelings overall.

    Cons:

    It was extremely hard for me to get into this book.
    I felt like there were too many instances where the story relied on the telling of other stories. There were so many pages full of these random myths that really didn’t seem to propel the story forward in any way.
    The romance just wasn’t really there for me.
    The characters confused me, especially Nix. Her actions never really aligned with her motives. I like to see characters evolve and change but I don’t appreciate characters who are wishy-washy.
    Pros:

    I appreciate that Cruel Beauty explores the complexity of human beings. There is good and bad in all of us and sometimes our various circumstances drive us to display more of one side of ourselves than the other.
    The house in this book is both terrifying and awesome! I loved that it was always changing. It would probably give me a slight panic attack but every single day was sure to be an adventure.
    I really liked that it was unclear who Nyx should trust when it came to her love interests. Cruel Beauty kept you guessing which I really appreciated.
    This was far more than a retelling. Cruel Beauty felt fresh and unique from the tales it was inspired by.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Cruel Beauty was a book that I honestly didn't expect to like, where as I might not have loved it , I cant say that I hated it. Cruel Beauty has a lot of similarities to Beauty and The Beast, but Rosamund Hodge took the best bits and made it completely her own.Eveyone knows the story of Beauty and The Beast right? Young girl agrees to stay in a castle with a hideous beast in her fathers place? Well in Cruel Beauty, Nyx unlike Belle, has always knows that she would end up with Ignifex for a husband. Ignifex is known as the Gentle Lord, the price of demons and Nyx has been training since birth to kill the Gentle Lord and free Aracdia from the curse that was put on the town decades ago. Nyx's mother and father, like so many others, went to Igifex for a favour and came away with much more than they bargained for, leaving Nyx's mother dead and Nyx betrothed to someone before she could even walk.Once they are married, Nyx starts to see another side to him. Yes he is as cruel as everyone thinks, yes he doesn't seem to have any remorse for the pain he causes people but Nyx finds a piece or her self that connects with the cruelty we see in Ignifex. As we get a little bit deeper into the story we see that Cruel Beauty also has similarities to Rumpelstiltskin, which we see as Ignifex ask his wife every night after dinner before bed, to guess his real name. And in doing so he will be free of his job role of Gentle Lord. At first it seems like just another game, as guessing wrong would leave her dead, but soon we realise that he is just of a prisoner as the rest.During the day Nyx spends her time with the mysterious Shade, searching for clues to who her husband is, any help to kill him, and the secrets behind the doors that were once looked before she stole the keys. As she comes closer and closer to not only the truth, but the new men in her life, she tries to come to terms with the fact that things aren't how the seem and will never be the same again.Want to know why I liked it? I guess part of the reason was because I expected to dislike it, I know its bad of me to judge a book before I've even read it but honestly, I don't know what else to tell you. I also loved Ignifex, his character at times was a little bit tiring, but as a whole I really liked him. I didn't like Shade much, or Nyx, I mean don't get me wrong, their character's were well written but at times I just couldn't connect to them. I would have liked if the story was dragged out over maybe 3 books. Towards the end I found the story to be a bit rushed but everything else seems to be spot on, the character development and world building were perfect. I just myself really enjoyed the story and I'm glad I had the chance to read it :)
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Such a sweet re-telling of beauty and the beast. I felt like I was falling in love right along Nyx. I was hooked from the very first sentence " I was raised to marry a monster." I felt like it was pretty easy to figure out the mystery of Ignifex and his orgins. I adored Ignifex and Shade , by the end you could see the softer side of Ignifex and think of him less as a monster. I would love to see a little mermaid retelling ." Though mountains melt and oceans burn, The gifts of love shall still return."
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Hands down. I. LOVE. THIS. BOOK.Plot: I’m all for classic re-tales. In fact, I’m always looking for the next great read in this area. And then this book fell in my lap and OMG, it’s amazing. If you read the synopsis then you know that this is a re-tale of Beauty and The Beast. I think the creativity for this story, the development of the characters and the world around it is an success.Love: This is the part that captured me the most. The reader is introduced to the Gentle Lord, who is cursed. I enjoyed the way the reader got to know this guy. At first he is all business making snide remarks, but then his shell starts to peel away one by one, and were left with a guy who is not who we thought he is. I also really enjoyed Nyx’s growth as well. She is funny, strong, and her snarky comments kept me snickering through out the book. She too begins to understand that her plan will not go through as expected. She things differently and it changes her.Ending: I love the ending. I like how Nyx stood up and fought for what she believed in. She took everything in with stride, throwing it back out at others. She captures the readers pulling them along for a ride that is different and unique.Overall, I’m very happy and impressed with this story. I can totally go back and read it again. Smart and sophisticated, Cruel Beauty is an memorable read. Crafted with the beauty of deception, magic, and love, the story is an never-wavering inspiration. Profounding and engaging, Cruel Beauty steals the show!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I LOVED this book. I am glad that it is a stand alone. Sometimes it is nice to read a book that is not part of a series. It is the author's first book and I really liked it a lot! The story is about a girl who has been raised her entire life to hate our hero, and taught that she is the only hope for saving her village, and getting revenge on her mother's murderer. However, all is not as it seems. As she marries and lives in her new husband's home, she begins to discover that he is not the monster that everyone believes him to be. The book is a cross between Rumpelstiltskin, Beauty and The Beast and Ursula, the Sea Witch from The Little Mermaid. I originally picked up the book because of the cover, stunning red and black, a spiral staircase and the two lines written on the cover pulled me right in. They are. "Her mission was to kill him. Her destiny was to love him" What can I say? I am a sucker for a good romance.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Not quite sure what we have here in this young adult novel. I think I liked it. It seems to be a combination of Rumpelstiltskin (guess my name), Greek mythology and the young girl attracted by the bad boy theme (in this case two). The heroine, Nyx, has been trained her whole life to seek out and kill a demon of sorts who she feels is responsible for killing her mother. When she finally gets to meet him a strange hate/love relationship develops in which she continues to vow to kill him while at the same time craving his love and kisses. This is the "bad boy" theme to the hilt. I think you killed my mother but give me another kiss. This is why I think I liked it but maybe you could talk me out of it. Well written though.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Nyx Triskelion is angry and rightfully so. Due to an idiotic promise from her father, she must marry the Gentle Lord, the monstrous demon responsible for ruining countless lives (including her own), countless deaths, the destruction their royal line, and the state of their home city of Arcadia being separated from the rest of the world. Nyx knows she is condemned to the sick whims of her husband and will most likely die after attempting to assassinate him, but she must try for the sake of her family and her people. Nyx resents everyone, but does her duty. The Gentle Lord defies most of her expectations and she develops an attraction to him even as she makes attempts on his life. Will she be strong enough to destroy him or will her emotions trap her and her people?I was honestly not expecting a lot from Cruel Beauty. I expected lots of whining and an abusive love interest, but that's not what I got. Nyx is angry and resentful. She's been raised mostly without love of affection with the clear knowledge that she is a glorified sacrificial lamb. She was chosen over her twin sister for this purpose, so she had to sit by and see her sister treated as a father treats his daughter while she is held at arm's length. I completely understand her feelings and I don't blame her for being so bitter and negative. This type of character is usually a doormat, but Nyx makes all her own decisions and she's strong willed. It's ironic that the person she was told all her life that she has to kill, the Gentle Lord Ignifex, is the one who led her to experience love and happiness. It doesn't start out all roses and perfection. She is totally dedicated to her goal even if she has to commit loathsome acts. Ignifex is much nicer than she thought and never forces himself on her like she expects. They develop a real relationship with the occasional assassination attempt mixed in. One key scene between them is when Ignifex needs help to his room after dark because it causes him crippling pain. Nyx leaves him there and briefly celebrates his pain, but then feels regret. She pulled herself back from becoming a monster and went back to help him to his room. Losing her humanity and celebrating in another's pain wasn't worth getting closer to her goal. Nyx's journey and her development made over the course of the book made it impossible to put down.Ignifiex and Shade are the two love interests in this love triangle. I usually hate love triangles, but this one had neither person being perfect and it is resolved in a very unexpected, but satisfying way. Ignifex and Shade look alike except that Ignifex has red cat eyes and a crueller visage. Right off the bat, Shade seems to be the meek, kind, long suffering prisoner while Ignifex seems to be the powerful, cruel demon. These expectations are subverted, showing Ignifex's softer side and Shade's cruel and even evil side. I like that these two men are people: not perfectly good or completely evil. Both are a mix. Nyx is conflicted because she likes both and has to come to terms with both of their good and bad qualities. All of the characters have a varying degree of the darker side of human nature. Some, like Nyx's father or many of the people lining up for Ignifex's dubious bargains, have an abundance, but no on is perfect and I'm glad the book reflects that.The world where Cruel Beauty takes place really caught and kept my interest. The city of Arcadia in Greece is encased in a parchment-like bubble, secured away from the rest of the world for hundreds of years and ruled by the Gentle Lord. The people still worship the Greek pantheon of gods and some even practice Hermetic magic. Demons, supposedly from Tartarus, populate this world as well, including Ignifiex, his superiors who give him orders, and the Children of Typhon who escape Ignifex to drive people mad. The mixture of European fairy tales with Greek myths creates a different flavor of fairy tale book than usual. Greek myths are delved into much deeper than I would have thought and they include Cronos's downfall, Typhon's entrapment, the myth of Hades and Persephone, and the list goes on. Cruel Beauty is mainly a retelling of Beauty and the Beast, but has shades of Rumplestiltskin (Nyx can guess Ignifex's true name each night) and Bluebeard (Ignifex's 8 dead and weirdly preserved wives and his only allowing her to explore certain rooms of the castle for her own safety). I love the world and that is does go through some crazy changes.Cruel Beauty is a detailed, well written retelling of Beauty and the Beast with shades of other fairy tales and a healthy dose of Greek mythology thrown in for good measure. My only complaint is that the ending isn't super clear and could have been a little more descriptive. Other than that, I'm eager to read the next book in the series, although it's not a straight continuation of this story.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Nyx's father made a bargain with Ignifex so that his wife could bear children, but he forgot to make sure she would survive bearing children. For this bargain, he must give Ignifex one of his daughters for marriage. Nyx has trained to kill Ignifex since she was young. Her plan is to seduce him and then destroy his castle. After arriving, Nyx learns why destroying the castle won't work and what the truth is about Ignifex. In addition, Ignifex isn't what she's been told and Shadow (one of the evil shadows Nyx has been taught to fear) is kind to her and deepens the mystery of the castle. Nyx is told that if she guesses Ignifex's real name, she will be free. He doesn't even now his real name. If her guess is incorrect, she will die and join the other wives as a corpse in a room. The castle itself is weird in that it constantly changes. Halls and rooms move. I liked this novel after it got started. The beginning was too distracting b/c the author was building her "world" and it took too long with too many stories. After Nyx gets to Ignifex's house, it gets much more interesting.

Book preview

Cruel Beauty - Rosamund Hodge

1

I was raised to marry a monster.

The day before the wedding, I could barely breathe. Fear and fury curdled in my stomach. All afternoon I skulked in the library, running my hands over the leather spines of books I would never touch again. I leaned against the shelves and wished I could run, wished I could scream at the people who had made this fate for me.

I eyed the shadowed corners of the library. When my twin sister, Astraia, and I were little, we heard the same terrible story as other children: Demons are made of shadow. Don’t look at the shadows too long or a demon might look back. It was even more horrible for us because we regularly saw the victims of demon attacks, screaming or mute with madness. Their families dragged them in through the hallways and begged Father to use his Hermetic arts to cure them.

Sometimes he could ease their pain, just a little. But there was no cure for the madness inflicted by demons.

And my future husband—the Gentle Lord—was the prince of demons.

He was not like the vicious, mindless shadows that he ruled. As befit a prince, he far surpassed his subjects in power: he could speak and take such form that mortal eyes could look on him and not go mad. But he was a demon still. After our wedding night, how much of me would be left?

I heard a wet cough and whirled around. Behind me stood Aunt Telomache, thin lips pressed together, one wisp of hair escaping from her bun.

We will dress for dinner. She said it in the same placid, matter-of-fact way that she had said last night, You are the hope of our people. Last night, and a thousand times before.

Her voice sharpened. Are you listening, Nyx? Your father has arranged a farewell dinner for you. Don’t be late.

I wished I could seize her bony shoulders and shake them. It was Father’s fault that I was leaving.

Yes, Aunt, I whispered.

Father wore his red silk waistcoat; Astraia, her ruffled blue dress with the five petticoats; Aunt Telomache, her pearls; and I put on my best black mourning dress, the one with satin bows. The food was just as grand: candied almonds, pickled olives, stuffed sparrows, and Father’s best wine. One of the servants even strummed at a lute in the corner as if we were at a duke’s banquet. I almost could have pretended that Father was trying to show how much he loved me, or at least how much he honored my sacrifice. But I knew, as soon as I saw Astraia sitting red-eyed at the table, that the dinner was all for her sake.

So I sat straight-backed in my chair, barely able to choke down my food but with a smile fixed on my face. Sometimes the conversation lagged, and I heard the heavy ticktock of the grandfather clock in the sitting room, counting off each second that brought me closer to my husband. My stomach roiled, but I smiled wider and gritted out cheerful nothings about how my marriage was an adventure, how I was so excited to fight the Gentle Lord, and by the spirit of our dead mother, I swore she would be avenged.

That last made Astraia droop again, but I leaned forward and asked her about the village boy always lingering beneath her window—Adamastos or some such—and she smiled and laughed soon enough. Why shouldn’t she laugh? She could marry a mortal man and live to old age in freedom.

I knew my resentment was unfair—surely she laughed for my sake, as I smiled for hers—but it still bubbled at the back of my mind all through dinner, until every smile, every glance she darted at me scraped across my skin. My left hand clenched under the table, nails biting into my palm, but I managed to smile back at her and pretend.

At last the servants cleared away the empty custard dishes. Father adjusted his spectacles and looked at me. I knew that he was about to sigh and repeat his favorite saying: Duty is bitter to taste but sweet to drink. And I knew that he’d be thinking more about how he was sacrificing one half of his wife’s legacy than how I was sacrificing life and freedom.

I surged to my feet. Father, may I please be excused?

Surprise caught him for a moment before he replied, Of course, Nyx.

I bobbed my head. Thank you so much for dinner.

Then I tried to flee, but in a moment Aunt Telomache was at my elbow. Dear, she began softly.

And Astraia was at my other elbow. I can talk to her for just a minute, please, can’t I? she said, and without waiting for an answer she dragged me up to her bedroom.

As soon as the door had closed behind us, she turned to me. I managed not to flinch, but I couldn’t meet her eyes. Astraia didn’t deserve anyone’s anger, least of all mine. She didn’t. But for the past few years, whenever I looked at her, all I could see was the reason that I would have to face the Gentle Lord.

One of us had to die. That was the bargain Father had struck, and it was not her fault that he had picked her to be the one who lived, but every time she smiled, I still thought: She smiles because she is safe. She is safe because I am going to die.

I used to believe that if I just tried hard enough, I could learn to love her without resentment, but finally I had accepted that it was impossible. So now I stared at one of the framed cross-stitches on the wall—a country cottage choked in roses—and prepared myself to lie and smile and lie until she had finished whatever tender moment she wanted and I could crawl into the safety of my room.

But when she said, Nyx, her voice was ragged and weak. Without meaning to, I looked at her—and now she had no smile, no pretty tears, only a fist pressed to her mouth as she tried to keep control. I’m so sorry, she said. I know you must hate me, and her voice broke.

Suddenly I remembered one morning when we were ten and she dragged me out of the library because our old cat Penelope wouldn’t eat and wouldn’t drink and Father can fix her, can’t he? Can’t he? But she had already known the answer.

No. I grabbed her shoulders. No. The lie felt like broken glass in my throat, but anything was better than hearing that hopeless grief and knowing I had caused it.

But you’re going to die— She hiccupped on a sob. "Because of me—"

Because of the Gentle Lord and Father’s bargain. I managed to meet her eyes and summon a smile. And who says I’ll die? Don’t you believe your own sister can defeat him?

Her own sister was lying to her: there was no possible way for me to defeat my husband without destroying myself as well. But I’d been telling her the lie that I could kill him and come home for far too long to stop now.

I wish I could help you, she whispered.

You could ask to take my place.

I pushed the thought away. All Astraia’s life, Father and Aunt Telomache had coddled and protected her. They had taught her over and over that her only purpose was to be loved. It wasn’t her fault that she’d never learnt to be brave, much less that they’d picked her to live instead of me. And anyway, how could I wish to live at the price of my own sister’s life?

Astraia might not be brave, but she wanted me to live. And here I was, wishing her dead in my place.

If one of us had to die, it ought to be the one with poison in her heart.

I don’t hate you, I said, and I almost believed it. "I could never hate you," I said, remembering how she clung to me after we buried Penelope beneath the apple tree. She was my twin, born only minutes after me, but in every way that mattered, she was my little sister. I had to protect her—from the Gentle Lord but also from me, from the endless envy and resentment that seethed beneath my skin.

Astraia sniffed. Really?

I swear by the creek in back of the house, I said, our private childhood variation on an oath by the river Styx. And while I said the words I was telling the truth. Because I remembered spring mornings when she helped me escape lessons to run through the woods, summer nights catching glowworms, autumn afternoons acting out the story of Persephone in the leaf pile, and winter evenings sitting by the fire when I told her everything I had studied that day and she fell asleep five times but would never admit to being bored.

Astraia pulled me forward into a hug. Her arms wrapped under my shoulder blades and her chin nestled against my shoulder, and for a moment the world was warm and safe and perfect.

Then Aunt Telomache knocked on the door. Nyx, darling?

Coming! I called, pulling away from Astraia.

I’ll see you tomorrow, she said. Her voice was still soft but I could tell her grief was healing, and I felt the first trickle of returning resentment.

You wanted to comfort her, I reminded myself.

I love you, I said, because it was true no matter what else festered in my heart, and left before she could reply.

Aunt Telomache waited for me in the hallway, her lips pursed. Are you done chatting?

She’s my sister. I should say good-bye.

You’ll say good-bye tomorrow, she said, drawing me toward my own bedroom. Tonight you need to learn about your duties.

I know my duty, I wanted to say, but followed her silently. I had borne Aunt Telomache’s preaching for years; it couldn’t get any worse now.

Your wifely duties, she added, opening the door to my room, and I realized that it could get infinitely worse.

Her explanation took nearly an hour. All I could do was sit still on the bed, my skin crawling and my face burning. As she droned on in her flat, nasal tones, I stared at my hands and tried to shut out her voice. The words Is that what you do with Father every night, when you think no one is watching? curled behind my teeth, but I swallowed them.

"And if he kisses you on— Are you listening, Nyx?"

I raised my head, hoping my face had stayed blank. Yes, Aunt.

Of course you’re not listening. She sighed, straightening her spectacles. Just remember this: do whatever it takes to make him trust you. Or your mother will have died in vain.

Yes, Aunt.

She kissed my cheek. I know you’ll do well. Then she stood. She paused in the doorway with a damp huff—she always fancied herself so beautifully poignant, but she sounded like an asthmatic cat.

Thisbe would be so proud of you, she murmured.

I stared straight ahead at the cabbage-roses-and-ribbons wallpaper. I could see every curlicue of the hideous pattern with perfect clarity, because Father had spent the money to give me a Hermetic lamp that shone bright and clear with captured daylight. He would use his arts to improve my room, but not to save me.

I’m sure Mother’s proud of you too, I said evenly. Aunt Telomache didn’t know that I knew about her and Father, so it was a safe barb. I hoped it hurt.

Another wet sigh. Good night, she said, and the door shut behind her.

I picked the Hermetic lamp off my bedside table. The bulb was made of frosted glass and shaped like a cabbage rose. I turned it over. On the underside of the brass base were etched the swirling lines of a Hermetic diagram. It was a simple one: just four interlocking sigils, those abstract designs whose angles and curves invoke the power of the four elements. With the lamp’s light directed down at my lap, I couldn’t make out all the lines—but I could feel the soft, pulsing buzz of the working’s four elemental hearts as they invoked earth, air, fire, and water in a careful harmony to catch sunlight all day and release it again when the lamp was switched on at night.

Everything in the physical world arises from the dance of the four elements, their mating and division. This principle is one of the first Hermetic teachings. So for a Hermetic working to have power, its diagram must invoke all four elements in four hearts of elemental energy. And for that power to be broken, all four hearts must be nullified.

I touched a fingertip to the base of the lamp and traced the looping lines of the Hermetic sigil to nullify the lamp’s connection to water. On such a small working, I didn’t need to actually inscribe the sigil with chalk or a stylus; the gesture was enough. The lamp flickered, its light turning red as the working’s Heart of Water broke, leaving it connected to only three elements.

As I started on the next sigil, I remembered the countless evenings I had spent practicing with Father, nullifying Hermetic workings such as this. He wrote one diagram after another on a wax tablet and set me to break them all. As I practiced, he read aloud to me; he said it was so that I could learn to trace the sigils despite distractions, but I knew he had another purpose. He only read me stories of heroes who died accomplishing their duty—as if my mind were a wax tablet and the stories were sigils, and by tracing them onto me often enough, he could mold me into a creature of pure duty and vengeance.

His favorite was the story of Lucretia, who assassinated the tyrant who raped her, then killed herself to wipe out the shame. So she won undying fame as the woman of perfect virtue who freed Rome. Aunt Telomache loved that story too and had more than once hinted that it should comfort me, because Lucretia and I were so alike.

But Lucretia’s father hadn’t pushed her into the tyrant’s bed. Her aunt hadn’t instructed her on how to please him.

I traced the last nullifying sigil and the lamp went out. I dropped it in my lap and hugged myself, back straight and stiff, staring into the darkness. My nails dug into my arms, but inside I felt only a cold knot. In my head, Aunt Telomache’s words tangled with the lessons Father had taught me for years.

Try to move your hips. Every Hermetic working must bind the four elements. If you can’t manage anything else, lie still. As above, so below. It may hurt, but don’t cry. As within, so without. Only smile.

You are the hope of our people.

My fingers writhed, clawing up and down my arms, until I couldn’t bear it anymore. I grabbed the lamp and flung it at the floor. The crash sliced through my head; it left me gasping and shivering, like all the other times I let my temper out, but the voices stopped.

Nyx? Aunt Telomache called through the door.

It’s nothing. I knocked over my lamp.

Her footsteps pattered closer, and then the door cracked open. Are you—

I’m all right. The maids can clean it up tomorrow.

You really—

"I need to be rested if I’m to use all your advice tomorrow," I said icily, and then she finally shut the door.

I fell back against my pillows. What was it to her? I wouldn’t ever need that lamp again.

This time the cold that burned through my middle was fear, not anger.

Tomorrow I will marry a monster.

I thought of little else, all the rest of the night.

2

They say that once the sky was blue, not parchment.

They say that once, if ships sailed east from Arcadia, they would reach a continent ten times larger—not plunge with the seawater down into an infinite void. In those days, we could trade with other lands; what we did not grow, we could import, instead of trying to make it with complicated Hermetic workings.

They say that once there was no Gentle Lord living in the ruined castle up on the hill. In those days, his demons did not infest every shadow; we did not pay him tribute to keep them (mostly) at bay. And he did not tempt mortals to bargain with him for magical favors that always turned to their undoing.

This is what they say:

Long ago, the island of Arcadia was only a minor province in the empire of Romana-Graecia. It was a half-wild land populated only by imperial garrisons and a rude, unlettered people who hid in thickets to worship their old, uncivilized gods and refused to call their land anything except Anglia. But when the empire fell to barbarians—when the Athena Parthenos was smashed and the seven hills burnt—Arcadia alone remained unravaged. For Prince Claudius, the youngest son of the emperor, fled there with his family. He rallied the people and the garrisons, beat back the barbarians, and created a shining kingdom.

No emperor before nor king after was ever so wise in judgment, so terrible in battle, so beloved of gods and men. They say that the god Hermes himself appeared to Claudius and taught him the Hermetic arts, revealing secrets that the philosophers of Romana-Graecia had never discovered.

Some say that Hermes even granted him the power to command demons. If so, then Claudius was truly the most powerful king that ever lived. Demons—those scraps of idiot malice, begotten in the depths of Tartarus—are as old as the gods, and a few have always escaped their prison to crawl through the shadows of our world. No one but the gods can stop them and no one at all can reason with them, for any mortal who sees them goes mad, and demons only desire to feast on human fear. Yet Claudius, they say, could bind them into jars with a word, so that in his kingdom nobody needed to fear the dark.

And perhaps that was where the trouble began. Arcadia was greatly blessed, and sooner or later, every blessing has a price.

For nine generations, the heirs of Claudius ruled Arcadia with wisdom and justice, defending the island and keeping the ancient lore alive. But then the gods turned against the kings, offended by some secret sin. Or the demons that Claudius had bound at last broke free. Or (but few dare say this) the gods died and left the gates of Tartarus unlocked. Whatever the reason, what happened is this: The ninth king died in the night. Before his son could be crowned the next morning, the Gentle Lord, the prince of demons, descended upon the castle. In one hour of fire and wrath he killed the prince and rent the castle stone from stone. And then he dictated to us the new terms of our existence.

It could have been worse. He did not seek to rule us like a tyrant, nor destroy us like the barbarians. He only asked for tribute, in exchange for holding his demons in check. He only offered his magical, wish-granting bargains to those who were foolish enough to ask for them.

But it was bad enough. For on the night that the Gentle Lord destroyed the line of kings, he also sundered Arcadia from the rest of the world. No more can we see the blue sky that is the face of Father Uranus; no more is our land joined to the bones of Mother Gaia.

Now there is only a parchment dome above us, adorned with a painted mockery of the real sun. There is only a void about and below us. In every shadow, the demons wait for us, a hundred times more common than they were before. And if the gods can still hear us, they no longer raise up women to prophesy on their behalf as sibyls, nor have they answered our prayers for deliverance.

When light glowed through the lacy edges of the curtains, I gave up trying to sleep. My eyes felt swollen and gritty as I staggered to the window, but I ripped the curtains apart and squinted stubbornly at the sky. Just outside my window grew a pair of birch trees, and sometimes on windy nights their branches clattered against the panes of glass; but between their leaves I could see the hills, and three rays of the sun peeked over their dark silhouette.

The ancient poems, written before the Sundering, said that the sun—the true sun, chariot of Helios—was so bright it blinded all who looked upon it. They spoke of rosy-fingered Dawn, who painted the east in shades of pink and gold. They praised the boundless blue dome of the sky.

Not so for us. The wavy, golden rays of the sun looked like a gilt illumination in one of Father’s old manuscripts; they glinted, but their light was less painful than a candle. Once the main body of the sun was risen over the hillside, it would be uncomfortable to look upon, but no more so than the frosted glass of a Hermetic lamp. For most of the light came from the sky itself, a dome of cream veined with darker cream, like parchment, through which light shone as if from a distant fire. Dawn was no more than the brighter zone of the sky rising above the hills, the light colder than at noon but otherwise the same.

Study the sky but never love it, Father had told Astraia and me a thousand times. It is our prison and the symbol of our captor.

But it was the only sky that I had ever known, and after today I would never walk beneath it again. I would be a prisoner in my husband’s castle, and whether I failed or succeeded in my mission—especially if I succeeded—there was no way I could ever escape those walls. So I stared at the parchment sky and the gilt sun while my eyes watered and my head ached.

When I was much younger, I sometimes imagined that the sky was an illustration in a book, that we were all nestled safely between the covers, and that if I could only find the book and open it, we would all escape without having to fight the Gentle Lord. I had gotten halfway to believing my fancy when I said to Father one evening, Suppose the sky is really— And he had asked me if I thought that telling fairy tales would save anyone.

In those days, I had still half believed in fairy tales. I had still hoped—not that I would escape my marriage but that first I could attend the Lyceum, the great university in the capital city of Sardis. I had heard about the Lyceum all my life, for it was the birthplace of the Resurgandi, the organization of scholars that was officially founded to further Hermetic research. I was only nine when Father told Astraia and me the secret truth: after receiving their charter, in the very deepest room of the Lyceum’s library, the first Magister Magnum and his nine followers swore a secret oath to destroy the Gentle Lord and undo the Sundering. For two hundred years, all the Resurgandi had labored toward that end.

But that was not why I longed to attend the Lyceum. I was obsessed with it because it was where scholars had first used Hermetic techniques to solve the shortages forced upon us by the Sundering. A hundred years ago, they had learnt to grow silkworms and coffee plants despite the climate and four times as fast as in nature. Fifty years ago, a mere student had discovered how to preserve daylight in a Hermetic lamp. I wanted to be like that student—to master the Hermetic principles and make my own discoveries, not just memorize the techniques Father thought useful—to achieve something besides the fate Father had given me. And I had calculated that if I completed every year’s worth of study in nine months, I could be ready by age fifteen, and I would have two years for the Lyceum before I had to face my doom.

I had tried telling Aunt Telomache about that idea, and she asked me witheringly if I thought that I had time to waste growing silkworms when my mother’s blood cried out for vengeance.

Good morning, miss.

The voice was barely more than a whisper. I spun around to see the door cracked open and my maid Ivy peeking through. Then my other maid, Elspeth, shoved past her and bustled into the room with a breakfast tray.

There was no more time for regrets. It was time to be strong—if only my head would stop aching. I gratefully accepted the little cup of coffee and drank it down in three gulps, even the grounds at the bottom, then handed it back to Ivy and asked for another. By the time I finished the breakfast itself, I had drunk two more cups and felt ready to face the wedding preparations.

First I went down to the bathroom. Two years ago, Aunt Telomache had decorated it with potted ferns and purple curtains; the wallpaper was a pattern of clasped hands and violets. It felt like an odd place for the ceremonial cleansing, but Aunt Telomache and Astraia waited on either side of the claw-foot tub with pitchers. Last winter, Father had installed the new heated plumbing, but for the rite I had to be washed in water from one of the sacred springs; so I shivered as Aunt Telomache dumped ice-cold water over my head and Astraia chanted the maiden’s hymn.

In between verses, Astraia darted shy smiles at me, as if to check whether she was still forgiven. No, she wants to make sure you’re all right, I told myself, so I clenched my chattering teeth and smiled back. Whatever her concern, by the end of the ceremony she seemed entirely comforted; she sang out the last verse as if she wanted the

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