was grinning.
It would take some time, but not much of it, for in preparation, The Drakkar had moved them close, when there was a murmur waving through the crowd.
And then the flapping could be heard in the distance.
But the noise grew eerie, sinister, threatening, as it got closer.
And closer.
Suddenly, she could see.
Frey had sent three, and seeing their huge, dark shapes, webbed wings, long necks and tails, and spiking scales flying through the night sky sent a chill down Melisse’s spine.
But when they opened their mouths and rained fire on the castle, she winced and turned her head against the blinding brightness of the orange-red blaze.
The heat wafted toward them so strong, it blew back her hair and made her brace her feet to stay standing.
She heard the calls and shouts of shock and fear all about her.
These along with what sounded like suffocated explosions, as if they began and ended in the blink of an eye.
When the heat ceased as quickly as it came, she opened her eyes to see the dragons rounding in the air to fly back to where they came.
And the village raced to Riverburn Castle.
Much more slowly, Melisse, Lena, Jorie and his males followed them.
Jorie and his trident got them through the crowd to the front.
Indeed, Jorie, with his trident, the crowd parted for them.
And they stood, staring at the three, long, wide, deep craters of scorched earth with their still-glowing embers that used to be Riverburn, but now not even a stone of it remained.
“It is time to return,” Jorie decreed.
Lena moved to one of his males and latched onto him.
Melisse took hold of Jorie.
When he had his arm about her waist, Jorie heaved his trident through the air.
And in a whirl, they went with it.
146
The Visit
Teddy
The Town of Trevor’s Gorge
WODELL
“We will come back to this country, and often, when it is cold, so that we can enjoy drinking this.” Faunus lifted his earthenware mug filled with thick liquid chocolate cream. “And eat these.” He indicated the pile of pastries in the middle of the table that were laced with white icing, the flaky dough folded over thick, sweet cheese.
He turned a contented, but heating gaze to Teddy.
“And so we can curl up under heavy rugs in the chill of night with needs be to keep as close as possible in order to stay warm.”
Teddy enjoyed Faunus’s look, but he then shook his head at Saturn in a teasing way that he hoped would take Saturn out of his mood.
It failed.
Saturn scowled at Teddy and reached to the pile of pastries. And although Teddy wasn’t counting, he believed that would be Saturn’s fifth.
“After you deal with Teddy’s arse of a father,” Moira put in, munching her own pastry, oblivious to Saturn’s mood, and her being the cause of it (that said, it was important to note that she was not oblivious to Saturn by any stretch of the imagination). “We will go to the shops and buy the goat’s cheese of this region and some red onion marmalade with some fresh-baked Dellish loaves. Mum, before she died, would splurge on the cheese of Trevor’s Gorge for Nippenlas. And because of it, that was always my favorite holiday. We will sup on that and think we’ve reached the heavens.”
Her eyes skittered over Saturn, and she went on to ask him, but in a manner it seemed as if she was asking them all.
“Do you like goat’s cheese?”
Faunus and Teddy replied in the affirmative.
Saturn merely grunted.
Moira looked to the table.
Although he did not like seeing his friend downcast and wished to shake by the shoulders his other friend who was making her downcast, this was, to Teddy’s way of thinking, an excellent segue.
“And speaking of my father—” he began.
“Yes, speaking of his father, when we see him, can I cave his head in?” Saturn requested of Faunus.
Moira lifted her head and stared at Saturn with wide eyes.
She did this as Teddy beat back the urge to kick him under the table, for he was making no headway in winning her (the reason for his constant scowl) and expressing a tendency toward violence would not aid in this mission.
“I have not decided what we shall do,” Faunus decreed. “This is why we sit and drink thick goodness and eat pastries that will make our bellies round instead of going to his farm.”
“I would like to state at this point that visiting the Gorge has been a pleasant sojourn,” Teddy began. “But I do not think there is