Magic Rises

Hugh struck forward, thrusting to the upper chest. Curran dodged left. Hugh flipped his sword and slashed at Curran’s neck. Curran thrust forward, fast, aiming for Hugh’s left side with his huge claws. Hugh clamped his arm and stabbed Curran in the stomach. The blade sank in almost to the hilt. Hugh let go and leaped out of range.

 

The blond was close enough. I shot up from my half-crouch. I couldn’t feel my leg, but it obeyed. I slashed across the blond’s chest, knocked aside his desperate thrust, and smashed my forehead into his face. He stumbled. I elbowed the other Iron Dog in the throat, stabbed him in the neck, spun about, and made a hole in the blond’s liver.

 

Curran was on his knees. His head sagged. Hugh was walking toward him.

 

I ran. My leg folded under me and I crashed.

 

“Wait your turn.” Hugh raised his sword.

 

Curran surged from his knees and grabbed Hugh, jerking him off his feet and pinning his arms to his body. Hugh smashed his head into Curran’s muzzle. Curran snarled, flipped Hugh into the air as if he weighed nothing, and slammed him over the stone parapet, back down. Hugh’s spine popped like a firecracker. He screamed. Curran heaved him up and hurled him into the flames.

 

Magic punched me, a bright blue explosion shooting into the night from the spot where Hugh plunged down. Curran looked down, rocked back on his feet, and fell.

 

I dragged myself to him and cradled his head in my arms.

 

The werelion shuddered and turned human. Gray eyes looked at me. “Hey there, ass kicker.”

 

“Hello, Your Furriness.”

 

I kissed his bloody lips. He kissed me back.

 

“The bastard teleported,” Curran grimaced. “Can you believe that?”

 

“Screw him. He’s weak.”

 

“I broke his back.”

 

“I heard.”

 

“He’ll feel it in the morning.”

 

I laughed. It came out a little bloody.

 

“Did our people get out?” Curran asked.

 

“Most of them.”

 

“You have to go now,” he said.

 

“No.”

 

“Yes. Both of my legs are broken and you can’t carry me.”

 

I brushed the soot from his face. “How the hell did you manage that?”

 

“He used magic. The bones fused wrong. It hurts a bit.”

 

It probably hurt like hell.

 

“Kate,” he said. “You’ll burn to death. Leave me and try to make it down into the yard before this place collapses.”

 

“In a minute I’m going to get up and drag you to the edge of the tower. Then we’re going to jump over the wall.”

 

“It’s fifty feet down,” he said. “That’s called suicide.”

 

“Or death on our terms.”

 

“Leave me, God damn it.”

 

“No. It’s my turn to save us. We’re going to jump.” I coughed. The smoke was eating my lungs. I was so tired. “I’m just going to rest half a minute. My arm hurts a little.”

 

I lay next to him.

 

“Will you marry me?” Curran asked.

 

“You’re asking me now?”

 

“Seems like a good time,” he said.

 

He deserved an honest answer. “If I marry you, then you’ll be my husband.”

 

“Yes, that’s how it works.”

 

Smartass. “I would be dragging you down with me.”

 

“I thought we covered that.”

 

“When the time comes, I can’t say, ‘Don’t fight him. He’s just someone who doesn’t matter.’ We would be married.”

 

“Do you expect that I would hide behind that?” he asked. “Is that how little you think of me?”

 

“No. I know you wouldn’t. I know it doesn’t matter to you, because you love me. It’s just something I tell myself when I wake up in the middle of the night and can’t fall asleep.”

 

The heat was closer. We really had to get off this tower.

 

“Is the offer still open?” I asked.

 

He nodded.

 

“It’s a yes. I would love to be your wife.”

 

I reached over. He took my hand and squeezed it.

 

Magic cracked. The stone floor under me dropped. A smooth stone slid open under me. We rolled down it, all the way to the road, coming to a gentle stop. I blinked and saw Astamur standing next to a cart drawn by a donkey. The donkey and the shepherd regarded us.

 

“Well?” Astamur asked. “Are you two going to lie there all night?”

 

It wasn’t English, but I understood him all the same. I stared at him, openmouthed.

 

“I would’ve rescued you sooner, but you were having an important relationship conversation.”

 

“What the hell . . . ?” Curran struggled to get up.

 

Now wasn’t the time to look the gift donkey in the mouth. I propped him up and half dragged, half carried him into the cart. He fell onto the boards. I fell next to him. The donkey moved, and the cart took us away from the castle.

 

Fire shot out above the stone. Slowly, as if hesitating, the castle walls came apart and crashed down off the cliff, breaking into thousands of blocks as they fell.

 

“Who are you?” I asked.

 

“I told you, I’m the shepherd. I watch over these mountains.”

 

“Are you immortal?”

 

“No. Nobody is truly immortal. But I was born a very long time ago, when the magic was still strong. Then the magic waned and for a while I had to sleep. Now my power is back, and I am one with the mountains again.”

 

“Why did you save us?” I asked.

 

“Your father is cooked,” Astamur said. “I’ve known him for a long time. We met when the sea and the mountains were younger. No matter what time and the world do to him, he won’t change. He is what he is. You’re not so bad. You try too hard and you lust for blood, but your heart is good.”

 

I didn’t know what to say.

 

“One day you will have to decide where you stand,” he said. “I have hope for you, so I tell you the same thing I told your father. If you come to these mountains with open hands, I will welcome you, but if you come holding a sword, you will die by it.”

 

“What did her father decide?” Curran asked.

 

“He chose not to come at all, which is an answer in itself. There are ancients in the world, like him and me. They are waking up. Your father, he will want to use you. Soon you might have to make a stand.”

 

“Do you think I can win?” I asked.

 

“Against your father? No, not now.” Astamur said. “Perhaps in time. A smart warrior chooses the time of battle.”

 

“I will remember that.”

 

The donkey clopped, his hoofbeats really loud. Salty wind bathed my face. I realized we were on the pier.

 

“The ship has pulled away but there is a boat coming back. They are planning on rescuing you from the castle,” Astamur said. “It’s nice to have friends.”

 

I raised my head and saw Andrea and Raphael in the boat.

 

Ten minutes later we were hauled onto the deck of the Rush. Andrea sat me down gently by the cabin. I leaned against the wall. Curran lay down next to me. His legs didn’t look right. They would have to be rebroken. My bones hurt just thinking about it.

 

Derek rested on his stomach, his back covered with burns. Keira was bloody. Eduardo’s whole body was covered with soot and burns. Mahon cradled George, tears in his eyes. Her arm was missing. Shit.

 

“It will be fine, Dad,” she told him.

 

“What will I tell your mother . . .”

 

“You will tell her that I saved a woman during childbirth.” George glanced to the length of sailing canvas where Desandra curled with two naked babies.

 

Barabas asked me quietly, “What about Desandra?”

 

“What about her? Unless she wants us to drop her off somewhere, we’re taking her with us. Where else is she going to go?”

 

Everyone was bloody, beat up, and grieving.

 

“Finally,” Saiman said. “We can be under way.”

 

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