Pain from just one of the injuries she’d given him.
Get her to safety; refrain from murdering her.
In a short while, the smoke started to thin. Fewer rocks fell.
Melanthe peered around her. “It’s clearing! Faster, Thronos!”
Instead he stopped dead in his tracks, kicking up gravel. He’d caught a scent. Can’t be right.
When he set her to her feet, she demanded, “What is wrong with you? The way back is blocked; we’re almost out!”
But the threat was already in.
“Is something coming? Tell me!” Her sense of smell wasn’t nearly as keen as his.
An eerie howl echoed down the tunnel. Others joined it.
“Are those ghouls?” she asked, a quaver in her voice.
Even immortals beware their bite. The mindless beasts grew their numbers by contagion. A single bite or scratch . . .
The ground vibrated from their approaching footfalls. Must be hundreds of them.
He would have to fight a swarm of ghouls—underground. Did Lanthe comprehend the danger they faced? Had he captured his prize only to lose it?
Never. He shoved her behind him, flaring his wings.
“You brought me this way! You’ve doomed us.” Oh, yes, she understood the danger. To herself, she muttered, “I was so close to escape. As usual, Thronos ruins my plans. My life.” She snapped at him, “My EVERYTHING!”
He swung his head around, baring his fangs. “Silence, creature!” His old familiar wrath blistered him inside—the wrath that sometimes made him wonder if he mightn’t just kill her and spare himself this misery.
Melanthe is misery. He knew this well.
“All my life, I’ve just wanted to be left alone,” she continued. “But you keep hunting me . . .” She trailed off when an eerie green light began to illuminate the shaft. The glow of the ghouls’ skin as they neared.
From behind him, she said, “I wish to the gods that I’d never met you.”
With all his heart, he told her, “Mutual.”
There was no way she and Thronos could get past this throng without a single contagious injury.
Though he was now a battle-tested warlord, attacking hotbeds of Pravus in between his searches for her, he was weaponless, about to fight in his least advantageous surroundings. Lanthe’s powers were neutralized; she didn’t even have her sword. She splayed her fingers out of habit—to wield sorcery she couldn’t tap—and awaited an unstoppable attack.
In these seconds, she swept her gaze over Thronos, as she hadn’t been able to do for years.
He had on dark boots and broken-in black leather pants that molded to his muscular legs. His white linen shirt had cutouts in the back—they buttoned above and below the roots of his wings. The humans must have taken his customary trench coat.
She glanced up at his silvery horns. Though many demons had two, Vrekeners usually sported four. But two of Thronos’s had been removed—probably because of how damaged they’d been in his “fall.” The remaining pair were larger than normal, curving around the sides of his head like those of a Volar demon.
He lowered his hands, his black claws curling past his fingertips. As all the muscles in his body tensed for combat, he brought his wings close to his sides. The top joints were so gnarled, she could almost hear their movements catching and grinding.
When he was young, he’d been able to pin his wings down along his back, until they were undetectable under a coat. Now, because of his injuries, those flares jutted by his sides.
His formerly black wing talons had been “silvered” once he’d become a knight—honed, smoothed, and sharpened until they’d turned color.
Few of her kind ever got close enough to a Vrekener to know what those wings truly looked like; well, at least not the Sorceri who’d lived to tell about it. She remembered how startled she’d been to discover what covered the backs—
One bloodcurdling howl sounded from ahead. A ghoul battle charge?