The woman bowed her head. “I am forgetting myself. If you only knew how long we’ve been waiting for this day…but then, you will know soon enough.”
Eliana looked up as the woman stretched to her full, translucent height—eight feet, at least. Her elongated limbs reminded Eliana uncomfortably of a spider.
“I am Zahra,” the woman said, “and I am a wraith. And you are Eliana Ferracora, the Dread of Orline, the last of House Courverie, daughter of the Lightbringer, heir to the throne of Saint Katell, the true queen of Celdaria, and…” Zahra spread her long arms wide. Her dark smile was full of joy. “You are the One Who Rises. The Furyborn Child. You are the Sun Queen, Eliana, and I have come to bring you home.”
37
Rielle
“Katell’s writings show that, out of all the godsbeasts, she most favored the chavaile. Perhaps due to its similarity to the white mare that carried her into battle against the angels. Perhaps because its wings reminded her of her beloved Aryava and brought her comfort after his death.”
—A Chronicle of the Godsbeasts by Raliquand d’Orseau, First Guild of Scholars
The chavaile did not stop until Rielle began to heave on its back.
They touched down on a small rocky cliff dotted with stubby tufts of grass and sheltered by boulders as big around as King Bastien’s carriage. Rielle slid to the ground and managed to crawl a few paces away before violently emptying her stomach.
After, hollowed out, she dragged herself toward the rocks, seeking shelter from the wind. Every movement sent shocks of pain through her body. The poison had done fine work; she felt as though she’d been hammered up and down every muscle and bone. She hoped she had gotten it all out—and not too late.
Then, lumbering hoofbeats approached.
She looked up. The chavaile had crept close. Bigger even than her father’s largest warhorses, with an elegant arched neck, a long unkempt black mane, and bright, intelligent eyes, it behaved like a horse—and yet it did not. Its nostrils flared as it sniffed the air around her; its ears pricked forward curiously.
But then it cocked its head to the side, as a human might when trying to understand something new. There was an ancient weight to its presence that Rielle had felt surrounding no other living creature.
“Hello.” She reached out feebly with one shaking arm. “You’ve always been my favorite.”
A sharp blast of mountain wind slammed into her. She collapsed, shivering.
Beyond her closed eyelids, the light shifted. Then, at the sound of movement, she opened her eyes and watched blearily as the chavaile lowered itself to the ground between her body and the open sky. It extended one of its enormous feathered wings—it must have been at least twenty feet long—and gently scooped her close to its body.
Wedged between a shell of gray, black-tipped feathers and the warm swell of the chavaile’s belly, Rielle breathed. The beast’s coat was impossibly soft, speckled gray as a storming sky.
“Are you real?” she whispered, placing her hand against its stomach. “Where did you come from?”
In response, the chavaile settled its wing more securely around Rielle’s body, then tucked its head underneath its wing. Rielle felt the hot press of its muzzle against her back, followed by a warm breath of air as it let out a contented grunt.
It was a strange nest, but too cozy to resist; Rielle fell into a fitful half sleep. Her shapeless dreams burned black.
? ? ?
When she woke, her mind was clear and the chavaile was watching her.
So. She hadn’t been hallucinating.
She remained still, comfortable and warm beneath the canopy of its wing, and stared up at it.
“I thought all the godsbeasts were dead,” she said at last. Hesitant, she placed her hand on the chavaile’s muzzle. “Why did you save me?”
Its nostrils flared hot between her fingers. She stroked the long, flat plane of its face, the swirling tufts of hair between its wide black eyes.
“I wonder if you have a name.”
The chavaile whickered softly and pushed its nose into Rielle’s palm.
“Well,” she said, beaming, “then I’ll have to give you one.”
And that was when she remembered:
That thin voice, right before she’d fallen. No, not fallen. Right before she’d been pushed.
She remembered it now, and she knew to whom it belonged.
“Will you take me home?” she asked. “I need to kill a man.”
The chavaile watched her, motionless.
“It’s all right,” she added quickly. “He deserves it. He tried to kill me.”
The chavaile grunted and rose to its feet. The chill hit Rielle hard, but she ignored it, climbed up a boulder with teeth chattering, and slipped onto the chavaile’s back.
The chavaile looked back at her, ears pricked.
“Well?” Rielle wound her fingers through its wild black mane. “How do I get you to go?”
At once the beast launched into a gallop, snapped open its wings, and leapt off the mountain into the sky.
? ? ?
They approached Baingarde fast from the north, soaring low over the treetops covering Mount Cibelline, and then circled around the castle to the broad stone yard in front. It was full of people: Rielle’s father and the city guard, her own guard, pages and stable hands hurrying horses to their riders. Her father shouted instructions; a team of four mounted soldiers took off for the yard’s southern gates.
He was organizing search parties, she realized with a swell of satisfaction.
There was Audric, swinging up onto his stallion, and there was Ludivine, reaching up to touch his arm, and there—
Ah. There he was, the sniveling little shit.
The rage that had been boiling in Rielle’s heart erupted.
She tugged gently on the chavaile’s mane and shifted her weight, turning the beast left and down. Its wings flattened against its sides as it dove. She lowered her body against its neck, closed her eyes. The wind raced past her, and she tugged the power from it like plucking a fiddle’s strings. When the chavaile landed, the crowd scrambling to part around it with cries of horror, Rielle did not wait for the beast to stop before jumping to the ground.
She stormed across the yard, thrust her palm in front of her. The wind snapped rigid in her hand like an executioner’s noose. Her prey watched her approach in disbelief, cowering and white-faced. She flicked her wrist. The noose of wind caught the man around his neck. Still a good twenty feet away from him, she slammed shut the massive twin doors of Baingarde’s front entrance, then pinned Lord Dervin Sauvillier against the closed doors—and squeezed.
He gasped for breath, clawing at the invisible hand closing around his throat. Rielle watched him with a hard grin, raising her hand higher. Lord Dervin’s body slid up the doors until he hung some ten feet off the ground, feet kicking wildly.
“Lady Rielle,” he croaked, his face reddening, “what—why—?”
“Shut your mouth, you filthy coward,” Rielle snapped. “You know why.”
Audric ran to her. “Rielle, what are you doing?”
“Stop!” Ludivine threw herself in front of the doors, reaching in vain for her father’s feet. “Rielle, you’ll kill him!”
“He tried to kill me.” Rielle squeezed her fingers closer together. Lord Dervin squirmed, gagging. “He drugged me, brought me up into the mountains, threw me off a cliff. I’m merely returning the favor.”
Dimly, she heard soft cries of shock among the gathered crowd.
Ludivine turned, mouth open in disbelief. “You’re lying.”
“Tell her, Lord Dervin.”
When the man did not reply, Rielle took two furious steps forward and clenched her hand into nearly a complete fist. “Tell your daughter the truth,” she shouted, “or I will execute you for your crime right here, right now!”
Eyes bulging, face gone a deep, vivid purple, Lord Dervin at last gasped out, “It’s true. I tried to kill her.”
Ludivine’s hands flew to her mouth. Dismayed exclamations rippled through the crowd.
And still Rielle did not move. Her lungs were afire, the hand that held the noose shook white-hot, and a fringe of bright gold swirled around the edge of her vision.
Kill him, screamed her heart.
Kill him, roared her furious blood.