flared
and guttered. It filled him; it hollowed him out. Anger was still foreign and corrosive in his body. Without
knowing it, he crossed the grassy hill, until he stood over Corayne, tall as a mountain.
She held her ground.
“And I certainly loved your father,” he said. “Like a brother, like a son. I was there for his first steps, his
first tooth, his first words, screaming as they were. The first drop of blood to fall.” Inside he roared,
seeing it all over again. “And the last.”
Corayne’s mouth pressed to nothing; her questions finally failed her. Over her shoulder, Sarn’s open
eyes were two burning candles.
“Go back to sleep, my lady,” he whispered, turning his broad back on Corayne.
She was happy to oblige, settling down with a very mortal huff. She stilled quickly, eyes firmly shut, but
Dom could hear her heart beating rapidly, her breath uneven. Across the clearing, Sarn’s heart thumped
a steady, slow beat. Her eyes did not close.
He was tempted to sneer at her, but an odd smell stopped him cold.
Smoke.
He stilled, head raised to the air. There was smoke, somewhere close, its scent curling around him in a
phantom wind. He could not see it, but he could smell and taste the acrid burn. It was not woodsmoke,
nor a brush fire. Nothing common.
But it was not unfamiliar.
This was the charring of flesh, hands cracked to bone, skin flaking to ash.
Terror lashed down his spine.
Sarn was already on her feet, her hood torn away, her body coiling with tension. She glared at him,
reading the fear as it crossed his face.
“Corayne, get up. Sarn, the horses,” he barked, already at Corayne’s side. He took her by the shoulders,
pulling her upright before she could open her eyes.
The Amhara made for the animals without argument, but froze at the tree line. The sword at her side
sang free of its sheath. Her grip adjusted and she raised the blade high overhead, the steel like a bird of
prey poised to strike from the sky.
Dom could hear the horses, undisturbed in their sleep, as if nothing were amiss. The smell of burned
flesh only deepened, until Corayne clapped a hand over her nose, her eyes watering.
“What is it?” she said, her voice shaking. Dom did not answer, but moved in front of her, one hand still
on her arm.
Sarn took measured steps backward, careful to keep her footing with her sword still raised. Her focus
locked ahead, on the shadows wavering beneath knotted cypress. Dom did not need to stand in her
place to know what she saw.
It was only a question of how many.
Corayne bit back a gasp of fear as he pulled his own sword free, its keen edges cutting the air. He
wished for armor, but leather would have to do, for as long as it could.
How did he find us? How could he know? Dom cursed, searching the trees for the scarlet-robed wizard
and Taristan himself. In Dom’s mind, he was still painted in Cortael’s blood, laughing as it bubbled over
his lips, with the Spindleblade in hand, more taunting than any smile.
The corpses, the corrupted creatures of the Ashlands and Asunder, wove up the hill in their lumbering
steps. White faces leached of color, burned to the bone, their lips torn and cracking, their armor black
and greasy with oil, like chicken fresh from the skillet. At the sight of their weapons—rusty knives and
broken swords, notched axes and splintered shields—Dom nearly fell to his knees. By the grace of
Baleir alone did he remain standing, though every piece of him wished to crumble. Corayne’s arm felt
cold in his hand. They could run, but without the horses they might be driven into an ambush at the foot
of the hill.
The first came through the trees with a lipless smile, leering at Sarn and her sword. It plodded on twisted
limbs, undeterred in its path. The Amhara moved in time, keeping her distance as she retreated across
the clearing, her eyes wide and unblinking. Twin spots of color rose in her cheeks, the only evidence of
her own fear. Still her heart beat slowly, as if she were only sleeping.
Six more followed, with other shapes wavering through the trees. They smelled like a pile of burned
bodies, like a rotten inferno.
“Elder,” she hissed through gritted teeth. “Can they be killed?”
Despite all, Dom felt the tug of a grim smile.
“Yes, they can.”
Sarn stopped moving, her feet set.
“Good.”
All lethal grace, she moved in a
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