suspect Ghislaine. None of the Thirteen talked. Ever.
But everyone knew about the Valg, and about Manon’s choice.
She strode into the dining hall, its black arches glinting in the rare morning sun. Already, the pounding of the forges was ringing out in the valley below, made louder by the silence that fell as she strode between the tables, headed for her seat at the front of the room.
Coven after coven watched, and she met their gazes, teeth out and nails drawn, Sorrel a steady force of nature at her back. It wasn’t until Manon slid into her place beside Asterin—and realized it was now the wrong place, but didn’t move—that chatter resumed in the hall.
She pulled a hunk of bread toward her but didn’t touch it. None of them ate the food. Breakfast and dinner were always for show, to have a presence here.
The Thirteen didn’t say a word.
Manon stared each and every one of them down, until they dropped their eyes. But when her gaze met Asterin’s, the witch held it. “Do you have something you want to say,” Manon said to her, “or do you just want to start swinging?”
Asterin’s eyes flicked over Manon’s shoulder. “We have guests.”
Manon found the leader of one of the newly arrived Yellowlegs covens standing at the foot of the table, eyes downcast, posture unthreatening—complete submission.
“What?” Manon demanded.
The coven leader kept her head low. “We would request your consideration for the duke’s task, Wing Leader.”
Asterin stiffened, along with many of the Thirteen. The nearby tables had also gone silent. “And why,” Manon asked, “would you want to do that?”
“You will force us to do your drudgery work, to keep us from glory on the killing fields. That is the way of our Clans. But we might win a different sort of glory in this way.”
Manon held in her sigh, weighing, contemplating. “I will consider it.”
The coven leader bowed and backed away. Manon couldn’t decide whether she was a fool or cunning or brave.
None of the Thirteen spoke for the rest of breakfast.
“And what coven, Wing Leader, have you selected for me?”
Manon met the duke’s stare. “A coven of Yellowlegs under a witch named Ninya arrived earlier this week. Use them.”
“I wanted Blackbeaks.”
“You’re getting Yellowlegs,” Manon snapped. Down the table, Kaltain did not react. “They volunteered.”
Better than Blackbeaks, she told herself. Better that the Yellowlegs had offered themselves.
Even if Manon could have refused them.
She doubted Ghislaine was wrong about the nature of the Valg, but … Maybe this could work to their advantage, depending on how the Yellowlegs fared.
The duke flashed his yellowing teeth. “You toe a dangerous line, Wing Leader.”
“All witches have to, in order to fly wyverns.”
Vernon leaned forward. “These wild, immortal things are so diverting, Your Grace.”
Manon gave him a long, long look that told Vernon that one day, in a shadowy hallway, he would find himself with the claws of this wild, immortal thing in his belly.
Manon turned to go. Sorrel—not Asterin—stood stone-faced by the door. Another jarring sight.
Then Manon turned back to the duke, the question forming even as she willed herself not to say it. “To what end? Why do all of this—why ally with the Valg, why raise this army … Why?” She could not understand it. The continent already belonged to them. It made no sense.
“Because we can,” the duke said simply. “And because this world has too long dwelled in ignorance and archaic tradition. It is time to see what might be improved.”
Manon made a show of contemplating and then nodding as she strode out.
But she had not missed the words—this world. Not this land, not this continent.
This world.
She wondered whether her grandmother had considered the idea that they might one day have to fight to keep the Wastes—fight the very men who had helped them take back their home.
And wondered what would become of these Valg-Ironteeth witchlings in that world.
21
He had tried.
When the blood-soaked woman had spoken to him, when those turquoise eyes had seemed so familiar, he had tried to wrest away control of his body, his tongue. But the demon prince in him had held firm, delighting in his struggle.
He had sobbed with relief when she trapped it and raised an ancient blade over his head. Then she had hesitated—and then that other woman had fired an arrow, and she had put down the sword and left.
Left him still trapped with the demon.
He could not remember her name—refused to remember her name, even as the man on the throne questioned him about the