The Merciful Crow - Margaret Owen Page 0,72

shoulders and set off, not bothering to wait for royal permission.

“We’ll hole up and you can fix yourself,” Fie muttered, as much to Tavin as to herself.

“If I didn’t know better, I’d think you’re worried.”

“Worried I’ll have to hide your body.” That was a half-truth.

Tavin forced a crooked smile around clenched teeth. “You’re getting sentimental on me.”

“Aye, and that sentiment is ‘don’t leave a trail of bodies,’” she said, grim.

“That’s”—he sucked in a breath as they slid down a tricky bit of path—“touching.”

Fie waited for him to keep chattering off his sauce and nonsense. He didn’t.

“We’ll hole up,” she mumbled again. “Don’t go leaving a trail.”

“Yes, chief.” His voice scarce rose above the rattle of stone.

She half dragged Tavin past the first few trees sturdy enough for them. “First place they’ll look, likely,” she grunted in answer to the prince’s sprouting question. “Too easy.”

The tree she settled for was a cedar sheathed in bark ragged enough to swallow the marks of nailed soles. This time the prince helped push Tavin up and followed on his own. No sooner had Fie steadied herself on a branch than the slow pound of hooves dripped into the air.

These weren’t night-bold Oleanders looking for a scapegoat. She wasn’t crawling past bribe-fattened gate guards anymore, either. The queen’s own Vultures, the best skinwitches in Sabor, were out for her hide.

Fie drew two Sparrow teeth from her bag, rolled them between sweat-sticky palms, and closed her eyes.

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

OFF THE ROADS

Harmony.

The two Sparrow teeth flickered to dissonant life. Fie wrestled with both until the chord struck and prayed it would be enough.

Fie saw the gaze before she saw the Vulture, lit up by the Sparrow teeth. The skinwitch’s attention flicked and pried about the trees like a forked tongue, lingering on any snapped twigs or traces of nail-lined soles. This was the true face of the Vulture Birthright, the hunger of a predator stalking a scent. The jingle of bridle and creak of saddle leather slid into a creeping dirge, measured in the drumbeat of hooves.

What had Tavin said of the queen’s Vultures a week past? Tatterhelm wasn’t the best of the trackers. He was all twelve hells to cross just the same. He had Rhusana’s favor.

And likely he had Fie’s family.

Fie didn’t know if she wanted to see Tatterhelm, or a Vulture who was a few less hells to cross.

The branch shivered as Tavin shifted. She caught a muffled hiss—and then quiet. The Hawk alone knew true how bad he’d been wounded. But if healing himself burned as much as when he’d healed her, for once, she didn’t envy him.

He’d be fine. He’d be back on his feet soon enough, armed with his short swords and his smiles deadlier still, back to vexing her at every turn.

He’d saved her life. Broken her fall.

He had to be fine.

The skinwitch rode into sight, below ragged curtains of needled boughs: Tatterhelm.

For a heartbeat Fie was back in another tree a week before, watching an Oleander lord try to smoke them out. Where the lord had shouted and cursed and threatened, though, Tatterhelm spoke not a single word. Instead he paced, studying the forest about them with the patience of a man certain of victory. And with good reason: she could see his gaze alight upon one track after another, drawing closer to their tree.

One of Tatterhelm’s fists stayed clenched tight around a strange fistful of dried leaves.

The string of teeth twitched at her throat. Fie started. Her own fingers had already plucked at a Phoenix molar.

Give him fire.

That voice didn’t even sound like a Phoenix’s anymore.

Tatterhelm dragged on the reins. His mount grunted and stopped, pawing at the needle-strewn ground. Sharp pine resin wafted up the warm air.

Now, her own damned head urged. Give him fire. Teach them you’re not to be crossed.

Give him fire and you bring the whole rutted lot of them down on you, her Chief voice snapped back. Pick that fight when your Hawk isn’t in pieces.

And a dreadful mutinous part of her yet wondered when she’d started calling Tavin her Hawk.

The Sparrow teeth squawked and slid out of tune.

Harmony, Pa’s voice chided as she scrambled to push the teeth back into order, fingers digging into the uneven bark.

The skinwitch’s searchlight crept up toward her.

She ground her teeth, holding the harmony as steady as she could. It wavered as the Vulture picked and peeled at the slippery edges of the Sparrow teeth’s refuge. Panic simmered in her gut and clawed finger by finger up her

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