“Move,” Annwyl ordered softly. She didn’t dare scream that order. If she started screaming, she wouldn’t stop until everyone in the room was dead.
“We insist you stay, Queen Annwyl,” the priestess said from behind Annwyl, that warm note still in her voice. “We’re not done talking, you and I.”
Finally, Annwyl’s smile was real. Because now she had something to focus on. Something . . . disposable.
“Yes,” Annwyl replied, already feeling the relief in her muscles and brain. “I guess you are insisting.”
The winds rose up around them and Brastias looked to the skies to see two of his brothers-by-mating drop to the ground.
He walked away from his men and closer to Briec the Mighty and Gwenvael the Handsome.
“Brothers,” he greeted.
“I thought we told you not to call us that,” Gwenvael reminded him, tossing his overly long, golden locks off his face. The gold dragon had been forced to cut that hair to his shoulders in the last war, and since then, he’d let it become quite the unruly mane.
“What is wrong with that female?” snapped Briec, the perpetually complaining silver dragon. “Fearghus leaves for one bloody day, and she does something stupid. Is her whole purpose in life simply to irritate me?”
“Yes,” both Gwenvael and Brastias said together.
“Quiet,” he spit between his fangs. “Both of you.”
“Where is she, Brastias?” Gwenvael asked.
“She’s inside with Baron Pyrs.”
“Alone?”
“She’s still my queen, Briec. If she orders me and the guards to stay outside—”
“You ignore her! Why is that so hard for you weak humans to understand?”
Brastias looked to Gwenvael, and the Gold smirked. “That wasn’t rhetorical. He actually expects you to answer that question.”
“Well.” Briec sighed dramatically, the entire world apparently on his silver shoulders . . . or at least he seemed to think so. “I guess we have to go in there and get her.”
Without shifting to human, Briec stomped across the courtyard toward the front castle doors. But as he reached the steps, two swords rammed through the hard wood, blood streaking down both blades so that some of it hit Briec in the face.
Brastias winced, but Gwenvael just laughed.
“That can’t be good,” Gwenvael joked.
Briec looked over his shoulder at Brastias. “Do you see?” he bellowed, his claw wiping the blood from his eyes. “Do you understand now why I say the things I say?”
“Because you’re a mean bastard?” Brastias asked, which made Gwenvael laugh more. Something Briec didn’t appreciate in the least. But before he could swipe at Brastias with his tail—as he’d done more than once since Brastias had committed his life and love to Briec’s sister, Morfyd—the front doors opened and Annwyl walked out.
Drenched in blood—she’d always been a messy fighter—and carrying four heads by the hair, Annwyl came down the steps toward her horse. She walked under Briec like he wasn’t even there, easily maneuvering around his tail.
“What have you done now, ridiculous female?” the silver dragon snapped at her.
“Not what you think.” She gave a short whistle and her big horse lowered himself so that Annwyl could get onto his back without releasing her new heads.
Once in her saddle, her horse stood and Annwyl took hold of the reins in her free hand. Without another word, she turned her horse around and headed out.
Brastias motioned to her guards and they immediately followed after their queen. Not that she needed them to keep her safe. Her barely contained rage should do that until she got back to Garbhán Isle.
“Well, well,” Gwenvael said, his gaze on the castle steps. “The lovely Priestess Abertha.”
Brastias swung around to see that Gwenvael was correct. The lovely—and infinitely cruel—Abertha stood on the steps of Baron Pyrs’s castle, her white robes pristine, the suns shining down on her head, casting her in a glow that brilliantly hid her true evil nature.
But, at least she was alive. Alive! Shocking, to be honest. Brastias had always thought if Annwyl had the chance, Abertha would be the first person she would kill. Ten years ago, it wouldn’t have even been a question. But it seemed that Dagmar Reinholdt’s work with the queen had been effective.
As he looked past the priestess, the only bodies Brastias saw were of her guards. A “misunderstanding” that could easily be explained away, unlike the death of an important and “innocent” priestess.
“My dear lady,” Gwenvael noted, smirking, “you seem . . . disappointed. Did Queen Annwyl not give you what you crave?”
Abertha tried to smile, but all she could manage was a small grunt as her lips sort of turned up in the corners. It was not attractive.
Briec, seeing Abertha alive, turned away from her without speaking, but he swung his tail out and, instinctively, the priestess dropped to the ground before the sharpened tip could slash her face or toss her slim human body into the unforgiving stone walls.
“I’m going home,” Briec said, shaking out his wings. “I suggest you do the same, Brastias.”
Brastias agreed. It was never a good idea to linger after Annwyl had one of her “moments” as Morfyd liked to call them.
He mounted his steed and briefly watched Priestess Abertha get to her feet. As she did, Baron Pyrs ran down the steps toward Brastias. Now that Annwyl and the dragon brothers were gone, the baron wasn’t afraid to venture from the safety of his castle walls.