Chapter 18

Braith liked Addolgar’s hammer. She liked it a lot. It fit her somehow. Knives, swords . . . no. All that slashing steel and shoving pointy ends into things did nothing for her. But battering that hammer onto a Lightning’s head gave her a perverse pleasure. She got hit a few times. A couple of cuts. But nothing she couldn’t handle.

At one point she stopped and took a look around. Her aunts were mostly delegating. Ordering their daughters on which Lightnings to kill and, sometimes, how. Heledd walked among the bodies, looking at each one. Braith didn’t know what her cousin was looking for until she saw her gaze move back to the cave opening.

“What is it?” Braith asked her cousin.

“There’s some missing.”

There were so many, Braith wondered how she knew. If she truly knew. “Are you sure?”

“I’m sure.”

From what Braith understood, the Lightnings would have no interest in the hatchlings, even the female ones. They at least respected that particular boundary. But they were probably more than happy to come around and attack from behind . . . and yet they hadn’t.

“Addolgar,” she said, looking to Crystin. “Addolgar!”

Braith raced past her kin and back into the cave. She heard Crystin behind her, yelling at her daughters and Owena to follow. Braith didn’t wait for them. She couldn’t.

She charged down passage after passage, trying not to think too much about poor, defenseless Addolgar. She never should have left him. She never should have deserted him!

She finally hit the passage that would lead her to the main chamber, and ran full out around that last corner—where she stumbled to an awkward stop, her kin running into the back of her and nearly knocking her on her face.

Together, they stood and stared, watching Addolgar—on one leg only—swing his ax down, taking the head off some Lightning. Then using his wings to move, he spun, and swung his ax again, cutting into the side of another Lightning. He tore the blade out, swung again, this time into the Lightning’s neck. Another Lightning came up behind him, but Addolgar threw his wings out, knocking his enemy into the wall. He turned, brought the ax up, tearing the stunned Lightning open from groin to belly. Addolgar yanked the blade out, and the Lightning’s intestines fell to the floor in a nasty pile.

That left only one Lightning. A rather young one by the looks of him. Addolgar faced him, hopped toward him on his good leg. He took his blood-covered ax and pressed the blunt head against the youngster’s throat. He pushed until the Lightning was backed up against a wall.

“Cadwaladr trash,” the youngster hissed, trying to hide the fact he was terrified.

“Go home, Lightning,” Addolgar told him. “Go home and tell them what happened here today. They’ll not only face the Penardduns if they are ever stupid enough to come back here, but they’ll also face Cadwaladr trash. Now leave my sight, boy, before I get testy.”

The Lightning slid against the wall, moving away from that ax head. Once he was far enough away, he turned, and ran out the way Braith assumed those Lightnings had all come in.

Owena sat back on her haunches, crossed her forearms over her chest and said, “You shouldn’t be playing around on that bad leg, Mountain.”

Addolgar’s back tensed at Owena’s words. “I’m not playing around on my leg, and stop calling me Mountain!”


Addolgar turned around, ready to tell Owena what she could do with her bloody nicknames when he saw Braith. She looked . . . happy. As happy as he’d ever seen her.

He grinned and announced, “Look at you, Braith of the Darkness, all covered in Lightning blood! My father would be so proud!”

“Thank you.” Braith held up his hammer. “Can I keep this?”

“Absolutely,” he said, hopping over to her. “You’ll need it.” He reached her and pulled her against his body, hugging her tight. He let out a breath at having her safe with him again. Even better . . . she hugged him back.

“I was so worried,” she told him, “when Heledd told us we hadn’t gotten all of them. I realized they must have come in through another way.”

“Lightnings like the sneak attack. Too bad for them, I love killing Lightnings, so it all worked in my favor.”

“Good job, Mountain,” Crystin praised. “Your father would be proud of you, too, I think.”

“And I thought you knew my father.”

Braith leaned her head back and looked up at Addolgar. “Wait, why do I need your hammer?”

“It’s your hammer now. At least until we have one made for you. And you’ll need it for when we go after your bastard father.”

Braith broke out in another smile that warmed Addolgar’s heart. She was whole now, wasn’t she? Truly whole.

Crystin stepped up to them, placed her claw on Braith’s shoulder. “We’ll clean up this gods-damn mess, take care of the hatchlings, and head out tomorrow morning to find Emyr.”

Braith studied her aunt. “You don’t have to, Aunt Crystin. This is my fight.”

“You’re a Daughter of the House of Penarddun, Braith, which makes this our fight.”

“Plus,” Owena casually tossed in, “your bastard father’s pissed us off for the last gods-damn time.”

There was agreement from Braith’s other aunts and cousins.

“He sent Lightnings after us like we’re some bloody cattle to be auctioned off,” Caron growled.

“Which is bad enough,” Ffraid added. “But he also sent them after his own daughter. If my Da was here right now, he’d be losing his mind.”

“Let’s not involve your fathers,” Owena said. “You know how they are when they get cranky.”

“And they’ll just blame us,” Aledwen muttered.

“Besides, they’re encamped closer to Dark Plains than they are the Outer Plains so it’ll take them days to get here. And, to be honest”—Crystin studied her blood-and-brain-covered sword—“I am so very ready to end your father, Braith of the Darkness.”

Braith looked at Addolgar, then her aunts and cousins. “Then that’s what we’ll do.”

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