Total pages in book: 204
Estimated words: 193124 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 966(@200wpm)___ 772(@250wpm)___ 644(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 193124 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 966(@200wpm)___ 772(@250wpm)___ 644(@300wpm)
This is going to require two hands.
But what hasn’t.
My jaw is getting tired and my teeth are sore from biting down on the torch’s girth, but I’m nearing the end of this.
This part, at least.
Pushing my weight into the goddess’s smooth wrist, I reach up and over the edge of that palm—
It happens so fast, I cannot track the sequence.
Just as my hands capture the smooth, cold ruby in a grab as if my life depends upon it …
The first of the dragons, the red and black one, explodes out of the swirling mist and we’re face-to-face.
I stare into its mouth, rather than its eyes, those fangs a far more immediate threat than whatever death it’s going to face. With perfect aim, it’s come right at me, its great wings splitting the mist such that the waning light in the sky gives me perfect vision.
Of what’s going to eat me—
Except it doesn’t go for my head and shoulders. It plucks the torch right from my teeth with its stumpy forearm, delicate as a lady taking a tea cake from a silver platter.
Off it goes, into the clouds.
And with it, the swirl of fire I was using to protect myself.
Eighty-Two
Falls of Choice.
The golden light thrown by the torch is sucked away into the mist, and the spiders waste no time. Their black bodies and those red-tipped legs scurry up at me. I clutch the ruby to my chest as they crawl over each other, zeroing in, silk already releasing into the wind where it’s swirled away. That won’t last. As soon as the next gust comes from the opposite direction, the webbing will be blown into me and I’ll be caught.
I look down toward the street, so far, far away that I can’t see it for the clouds. I think of the cocoons, and know that their prey is still alive in some, kept paralyzed but aware that sometime soon, they will be sucked dry—
A spider crawls up onto my feet and rears onto its back legs, revealing its bulbous, hairy belly. As I see the silk glands and know what getting trapped will mean for me, I make the decision just as the sticky web spins out to capture me.
I jump off the statue.
The free fall is a terror I’m resigned to. I’d rather go out on my terms, staring the bastards in the face, falling to the marble below for an instant death, than be kept as a meal for fates only know how long.
Tears spring to my eyes and my hair streaks up past me as the wind resistance on my back and legs offers a cushioning, but no real help. To have come so close, to have the ruby … but did I really think this was going to work? Did I honestly think I could pull this off?
And now Merc will die, too.
I had to try, though. Sometimes, all we can do is—
Whooosh.
All at once, and without warning, the rush of air hitting my body is stopped with a bump.
My first thought is that I have made impact before I expected and death is painless. But that’s when the rhythmic rocking registers … and I see the tips of the wings.
Scrambling around, I find myself in the curve of a dragon’s back, right behind the horned and horrible head. There’s a divot at the nape, and just as the ruby was centered on the goddess’s palm, so I’m cradled as the beast flies over the ruins. Through breaks in the mist, I see down below, the streets with the broken statues and the tumbled columns, the strings of webs, a stray spider here or there.
I twist around and look over my shoulder. The goddess’s head is obscured by the mist, but her body is visible.
Her draping clothes are made of spiders, teeming in confusion.
It’s as I turn back that my eyes catch the wing rising up.
Green and purple … with a tear through the base, an injury that has healed.
A numbing shock goes through me that has nothing to do with the fact that I’m freezing cold and lengths upon lengths above the ground.
Could this be the dragon I saved? The one whose eyes I stared into, whose throat I cut, whose life I returned to his body?
I think about the distance I traveled away from my village—so far for me, but I know for them it’s but a coasting upon the airways: They’re known to nest on the snowcapped mountains to the west of my village, yet travel extensively to mate or find food.
The coloring is right. The healed wound is right.
And he must … remember me.
Splitting my legs, I sit astride just above the shoulders as if on a horse as we soar out past the front entry with the decaying statuary and over the marshes. The dragon makes a big circle above the shoreline of the sea and then dips down close to the ground.