Kingdom of Ash
He’d thought he’d known everything about the female body. How to make a woman purr with pleasure. He was half-tempted to find a tent and learn firsthand what certain things felt like.
Not an effective use of his time. Not with the camp readying for travel.
The Thirteen were on edge. They hadn’t yet decided where to go. And hadn’t been invited to travel with the Crochans to any of their home-hearths. Even Glennis’s.
None of them, however, had looked his way when they’d prowled past. None had recognized him.
Dorian had just completed another walking circuit in his little training area when Manon stalked by, silver hair flowing. He paused, no more than a wary Crochan sentinel, and watched her storm through snow and mud as if she were a blade through the world.
Manon had nearly passed his training area when she went rigid.
Slowly, she turned, nostrils flaring.
Those golden eyes swept over him, swift and cutting.
Her brows twitched toward each other. Dorian only gave her a lazy grin in return.
Then she prowled toward him. “I’m surprised you’re not groping yourself.”
“Who says I haven’t already?”
Another assessing stare. “I would have thought you’d pick a prettier form.”
He frowned down at himself. “I think she’s pretty enough.”
Manon’s mouth tightened. “I suppose this means you’re about to go to Morath.”
“Did I say anything of the sort?” He didn’t bother sounding pleasant.
Manon took a step toward him, her teeth flashing. In this body, he stood shorter than her. He hated the thrill that shot through his blood as she leaned down to growl at him. “We have enough to deal with today, princeling.”
“Do I look as if I’m standing in your way?”
She opened her mouth, then shut it.
Dorian let out a low laugh and made to turn away. An iron-tipped hand gripped his arm.
Strange, for that hand to feel large on his body. Large, and not the slender, deadly thing he’d become accustomed to.
Her golden eyes blazed. “If you want a softhearted woman who will weep over hard choices and ultimately balk from them, then you’re in the wrong bed.”
“I’m not in anyone’s bed right now.”
He hadn’t gone to her tent any of these nights. Not since that conversation in Eyllwe.
She took the retort without so much as a flinch. “Your opinion doesn’t matter to me.”
“Then why are you standing here?”
Again, she opened and closed her mouth. Then snarled, “Change out of that form.”
Dorian smiled again. “Don’t you have better things to do right now, Your Majesty?”
He honestly thought she might unsheathe those iron teeth and rip out his throat. Half of him wanted her to try. He even went so far as to run one of those phantom hands along her jaw. “You think I don’t know why you don’t want me to go to Morath?”
He could have sworn she trembled. Could have sworn she arched her neck, just a little bit, leaning into that phantom touch.
Dorian ran those invisible fingers down her neck, trailing them along her collarbones.
“Tell me to stay,” he said, and the words had no warmth, no kindness. “Tell me to stay with you, if that’s what you want.” His invisible fingers grew talons and scraped over her skin. Manon’s throat bobbed. “But you won’t say that, will you, Manon?” Her breathing turned jagged. He continued to stroke her neck, her jaw, her throat, caressing skin he’d tasted over and over. “Do you know why?”
When she didn’t answer, Dorian let one of those phantom talons dig in, just slightly.
She swallowed, and it was not from fear.
Dorian leaned in close, tipping his head back to stare into her eyes as he purred, “Because while you might be older, might be deadly in a thousand different ways, deep down, you’re afraid. You don’t know how to ask me to stay, because you’re afraid of admitting to yourself that you want it. You’re afraid. Of yourself more than anyone else in the world. You’re afraid.”
For several heartbeats, she just stared at him.
Then she snarled, “You don’t know what you’re talking about,” and stalked away.
His low laugh ripped after her. Her spine stiffened.
But Manon did not turn back.
Afraid. Of admitting that she felt any sort of attachment.
It was preposterous.
And it was, perhaps, true.
But it was not her problem. Not right now.
Manon stormed through the readying camp where tents were being taken down and folded, hearths being packed. The Thirteen were with the wyverns, supplies stowed in saddlebags.
Some of the Crochans had frowned her way. Not with anger, but something like disappointment. Discontent. As if they thought parting ways was a poor idea.
Manon refrained from saying she agreed. Even if the Thirteen followed, the Crochans would find a way to lose them. Use their power to bind the wyverns long enough to disappear.
And she would not lower herself, lower the Thirteen, to become dogs chasing after their masters. They might be desperate for aid, might have promised it to their allies, but she would not debase herself any further.
Manon halted at Glennis’s camp, the only hearth with a fire still burning. A fire that would always remain kindled.
A reminder of the promise she’d made to honor the Queen of Terrasen. A single, solitary flame against the cold.
Manon rubbed at her face as she slumped onto one of the rocks lining the hearth.
A hand rested on her shoulder, warm and slight. She didn’t bother to slap it away.
Glennis said, “We’re departing in a few minutes. I thought I’d say good-bye.”
Manon peered up at the ancient witch. “Fly well.”
It was really all there was left to say. Manon’s failure was not due to Glennis, not due to anyone but herself, she supposed.
You’re afraid.
It was true. She had tried, but not really tried to win the Crochans. To let them see any part of her that meant something. To let them see what it had done to her, to learn she had a sister and that she had killed her. She didn’t know how, and had never bothered to learn.
You’re afraid.
Yes, she was. Of everything.
Glennis lowered her hand from Manon’s shoulder. “May your path carry you safely through war and back home at last.”
She didn’t feel like telling the crone there was no home for her, or the Thirteen.
Glennis turned her face toward the sky, sighing once.
Then her white brows narrowed. Her nostrils flared.
Manon leapt to her feet.
“Run,” Glennis breathed. “Run now.”
Manon drew Wind-Cleaver and did no such thing. “What is it.”
“They’re here.” How Glennis had scented them on the wind, Manon didn’t care.
Not as three wyverns broke from the clouds, spearing for their camp.
She knew those wyverns, almost as well as she knew the three riders who sent the Crochans into a frenzy of motion.
The Matrons of the Ironteeth Witch-Clans had found them. And come to finish what Manon had started that day in Morath.
CHAPTER 56
The three High Witches had come alone.