I refilled my glass, set the crystal decanter on the step behind us, and drank again. “I want them to be happy. All of them.”
“They will be.”
She said the simple words with such unflagging conviction that I believed her.
I arched a brow. “And you—are you happy?”
Mor knew what I meant. But she just smiled, swirling the liquor in her glass. “It’s Solstice. I’m with my family. I’m drinking. I’m very happy.”
A skilled evasion. But one I was content to partake in. I clinked my heavy glass against hers. “Speaking of our family … Where the hell are they?”
Mor’s brown eyes lit up. “Oh—oh, he didn’t tell you, did he?”
My smile faltered. “Tell me what.”
“What the three of them do every Solstice morning.”
“I’m beginning to be nervous.”
Mor set down her glass, and gripped my arm. “Come with me.”
Before I could object, she’d winnowed us out.
Blinding light hit me. And cold.
Brisk, brutal cold. Far too cold for the sweaters and pants we wore.
Snow. And sun. And wind.
And mountains.
And—a cabin.
Thecabin.
Mor pointed to the endless field atop the mountain. Covered in snow, just as I’d last seen it. But rather than a flat, uninterrupted expanse …
“Are those snow forts?”
A nod.
Something white shot across the field, white and hard and glistening, and then—
Cassian’s yowl echoed off the mountains around us. Followed by, “You bastard!”
Rhys’s answering laugh was bright as the sun on snow.
I surveyed the three walls of snow—the barricades—that bordered the field as Mor erected an invisible shield against the bitter wind. It did little to drive away the cold, though. “They’re having a snowball fight.”
Another nod.
“Three Illyrian warriors,” I said. “The greatest Illyrian warriors. Are having a snowball fight.”
Mor’s eyes practically glowed with wicked delight. “Since they were children.”
“They’re over five hundred years old.”
“Do you want me to tell you the running tally of victories?”
I gaped at her. Then at the field beyond. At the snowballs that were indeed flying with brutal, swift precision as dark heads popped over the walls they’d built.
“No magic,” Mor recited, “no wings, no breaks.”
“They’ve been out here since noon.” It was nearly three. My teeth began chattering.
“I’ve always stayed in to drink,” Mor supplied, as if that were an answer.
“How do they even decide who wins?”
“Whoever doesn’t get frostbite?”
I gaped at her again over my clacking teeth. “This is ridiculous.”
“There’s more alcohol in the cabin.”
Indeed, none of the males seemed to even notice us. Not as Azriel popped up, launched two snowballs sky-high, and vanished behind his wall of snow again.
A moment later, Rhys’s vicious curse barked toward us. “Asshole.”
Laughter laced every syllable.
Mor looped her arm through mine again. “I don’t think your mate is going to be the victor this year, my friend.”
I leaned into her warmth, and we waded through the shin-high snow toward the cabin, the chimney already puffing against the clear blue sky.
Illyrian babies indeed.