“We have to get this off him. I mean . . . unless he always looks like he is . . .”
“Dying.” Zoya shrugged. “He looks like he is dying.”
“He is dying,” Nina confirmed. “But a Dragonwitch will need to remove this. A powerful one.”
“Fine,” Kachka said. “Then we will take him back to the Dragon Queen. She is Dragonwitch.”
“He will never reach Southlands,” Nina said. “He will be dead by time we get there.”
Now they all looked down at him and stared. After a moment, the Dragon King looked up and his weak eye widened a bit. “What?” he asked.
“We should kill him here,” Zoya said. “Put him out of his misery.”
“I’d prefer you not,” he said simply.
“Quiet, penis-haver.”
He smirked. “You say that like it’s a bad thing.”
“We cannot kill him,” Tatyana immediately argued.
“So we should let him die in agony?”
“He is weak, but I would not say he is in agony,” Ivan noted.
“No one speaks to you,” Zoya snapped. “Useless boy.”
“We are not killing him,” Kachka cut in. “I know where we can take him for help.”
“It must be someplace close. We have maybe . . .” She glanced down at the dragon. “. . . two days. Possibly three. But that is stretch.”
Kachka looked up at the sky, studied the stars. “Two days . . . we can do. But we need to leave now.”
Zoya rolled her eyes. “What about boar?” she demanded.
“We will eat on way! Do not irritate me, Zoya Kolesova!”
Zoya grinned and patted Kachka on the back, nearly breaking the bone where her neck and spine met. “Do not worry, little Kachka Shestakova! I will help you take dying dragon to his final resting place! And everyone will say you at least tried!”
Marina stood next to Kachka, rubbing her forehead and watching as Zoya took the time to gather whatever gold and silver the now-dead slavers had on them. “I am so very glad she volunteered for this job.”
Kachka, unable to deal with this anymore, crouched beside the dragon again.
“Because you helped my sister when she needed it most, lizard, I will try to help you now.”
“You’ve already helped so much, Kachka. Because trust me,” he said, glancing at the priestess Kachka had killed, “wherever she was taking me . . . I was going to be in for a very long, very bad time.”
Chapter Four
They rode for two more days as Kachka used the suns and her own memory to guide her. For a Rider, two days on horseback was nothing, but watching the Iron King waste away before her eyes made the trip seem interminable.
He could barely even sit on the horse they got him, and was sometimes forced to lie facedown across the beast. A few times, she feared the dragon had stopped breathing.
The evening before they arrived at their destination, they had stopped for a few hours’ rest before the suns rose. Zoya had carried the dragon in human form to a spot near the fire they built, unceremoniously dumping him onto the ground.
Tatyana had hissed at her before surrounding him with everyone’s travel furs and using her own pack to support his back. Kachka hadn’t been able to tell if Tatyana truly felt bad for him, however, or if she was just dazzled by his rank.
Once he’d been settled, Kachka had sat down beside him and given him some of her water, putting the flask to his lips.
“I need you to do something for me, Kachka Shestakova,” he’d said once he’d gotten his fill.
“And what is that, lizard?”
He’d smirked, seeming to appreciate that she wasn’t treating him like he would surely die.
“Because of the power of this torc, I cannot reach my sister.”
“Yes. That thing you dragons do with your mind.”
“Right. So when I die, I want you to tell my sister. No one else.”
“Zoya Kolesova may already be treating you like a corpse, lizard, but I have not given up hope on you yet. You royals have a way of surviving when everyone thinks you should have died off long ago.”
“I know. But my father always taught me to prepare for the worst. And I don’t want Annwyl or, even worse, Rhiannon telling my sister about my passing. I am almost positive that the alliance we have between our people would not last.”
“And you think sending me will help?”
He’d reached out then and looped one of her curls around his index finger, studying it.
“Help?” he’d asked. “No. Keep Annwyl and Rhiannon away from my sister? Yes. But you have to give me your word, Rider.”
“I swear on my honor. But I am surprised you have so little faith in me, lizard.”
He’d managed a small smile. “Oh?”
“That you think I would just let you die so easily. You know my sister. She does like to whine. Like big baby. But you helped her adjust to her missing eye, and now she has loyalty to you. So unless I want to hear that whine . . . and I do not . . . then I must at least attempt to keep your disgusting scales healthy.”
“You’ve never even seen my scales. They’re quite beautiful.”