Manon listened with a cool, unruffled expression. As she did every morning. Weighing their words, listening to the wind that sang to her.
Imogen’s saddlebag snapped free of its tether. The witch hissed as she dismounted to retie it. How long these little delays could keep them here, he didn’t know. Not indefinitely.
“If we abandon these mountains,” Asterin argued, “then we’ll be far more trackable in the open lands. Both our enemies and the Crochans will spot us before we ever find them.”
“It’d be warmer,” Sorrel grumbled. “Eyllwe would be a hell of a lot warmer.”
Apparently, even immortal witches with steel in their veins could grow tired of the leeching cold.
But to go so far south, into Eyllwe, when they were still near enough to Morath … Manon seemed to consider that, too. Her eyes dipped to his jacket. To the keys within, as if she could sense their pulsing whisper, their slide against his power. All that lay between Erawan and his dominion over Erilea. To bring them within a hundred miles of Morath … No, she’d never allow it.
Dorian kept his face blandly pleasant, a hand resting on the eye-shaped pommel of Damaris. “This camp has no clues about where they went?”
He knew they hadn’t the faintest notion. Knew it, but waited for their answer anyway, trying not to grip Damaris’s pommel too hard.
“No,” Manon said with a hint of a growl.
Yet Damaris gave no answer beyond a faint warmth in the metal. He didn’t know what he’d expected: some verifying hum of power, a confirming voice in his mind.
Certainly not the unimpressive whisper of heat.
Heat for truth; likely cold for lies. But—at least Gavin had spoken true about the blade. He shouldn’t have doubted it, considering the god Gavin still honored.
Holding his stare with that relentless, predatory focus, Manon gave the order to move out. Northward.
Away from Morath. Dorian opened his mouth, casting for anything to say, do, to delay this departure. Short of snapping a wyvern’s wing, there was nothing—
The witches turned toward the wyverns, where Dorian would ride with one of the sentinels for the next leg of this endless hunt. But Abraxos roared, lunging for Manon with a snap of teeth.
As Manon whirled, Dorian’s magic surged, already lashing at the unseen foe.
A mighty white bear had risen from the snow behind her.
Teeth flashing, it brought down its massive paw. Manon ducked, rolling to the side, and Dorian hurled out a wall of his magic—wind and ice.
The bear was blasted back, hitting the snow with an icy thump. It was instantly up again, racing for Manon. Only Manon.
Half a thought had Dorian flinging invisible hands to halt the beast. Just as it collided with his magic, snow spraying, light flashed.
He knew that light. A shifter.
But it was not Lysandra who emerged from the bear’s perfectly camouflaged hide.
No, the thing that came out of the bear was made of nightmares.
A spider. A great, stygian spider, big as a horse and black as night.
Its many eyes narrowed on Manon, pincers clicking, as it hissed, “Blackbeak.”
The stygian spider had found her, somehow. After all these months, after the thousands of leagues Manon had traveled over sky and earth and sea, the spider from whom she’d stolen the silk to reinforce Abraxos’s wings had found her.
But the spider had not anticipated the Thirteen. Or the power of the King of Adarlan.
Manon drew Wind-Cleaver as Dorian held the spider in place with his magic, the king showing little signs of strain. Powerful—he grew more powerful each day.
The Thirteen closed ranks, weapons gleaming in the blinding sun and snow, the wyverns forming a wall of leathery hides and claws behind them.
Manon stalked a few steps closer to those twitching pincers. “You’re a long way from the Ruhnns, sister.”
The spider hissed. “You were not so very hard to find, despite it.”