“Were you able to visit with them?”
“No. She’d had a family emergency and went to see her family out of state. She’d left a note for me with a neighbor.”
At least she and her daughter had survived.
“What happened next?” Robert asked.
“When I stepped out of the neighbor’s house, there was an army on the street.”
You could hear a pin drop.
“There were warriors,” she said. “They wore full armor and they were killing people on the streets. The corrupted creatures served them like dogs. They ran into the houses and pulled the people out.”
“What did you do?” Robert asked.
“I am a Master of the Dead.” A cold fire flared in her eyes. “I did what I do. I killed as many as I could. Eventually my vampire and I were surrounded. I realized that I wouldn’t escape, so I sent my undead into In-Shinar’s territory. The warriors then dragged me down the street.”
And while they did that, she’d pushed her vampire as far as it could go and made provisions to secure it, so it wouldn’t slaughter anyone. And when a yeddimur chased her undead, she used her vampire to trap it. Ghastek’s team had recovered it and secured it in the Casino.
“I secured the vampire to avoid further bloodshed,” Rowena said.
I’d asked her where the pike in the vampire had come from. She didn’t know.
“What happened next?” Robert asked.
“Fire.”
We waited.
“Fire?” Jim prompted.
“A torrent of fire from the sky. When I woke up, I was encased in a pillar of molten glass.”
“And yet, here you are, unburned,” Nick said.
That was just about enough. “We were all there,” I said. “We all saw it. I had to call my father to get her out of it.”
The knight-protector leaned forward. “And there it is. All this time you’ve been giving lip service to how you’re getting ready to fight your father, and the moment things turned sour, you ran to Daddy.”
I would kill him.
“She ran to Daddy because the life of her friend mattered to her,” Curran said. “Just as the lives of all of you matter to her. And because she has enough brains to realize that Neig made this elaborate trap to prove to everyone that we couldn’t match his magic with ours. Now he knows we can.” He raised his hand and counted off on his fingers. “She killed his creatures and rescued Yu Fong. She killed his champion. She neutralized his magic and returned life to Kings Row. Has the Order made any progress in identifying the cause of the transformation in the body we sent you?”
“Don’t change the subject,” Nick told him.
“It’s a yes-or-no question, Feldman,” Curran said. “Yes or no?”
Everyone looked at Nick.
“No,” he said.
Ha! “Was the Order able to pinpoint the origin of the magic or find any other similar cases?”
“No,” Nick said.
“So, you have nothing to bring to this discussion,” I said. “You’re going to sit there and bitch and moan and push your private vendetta. Here is a thought; if I’m a princess, you’re a knight, Nick. It’s in your title. Knight-protector. How about you put on your shining armor and do some protecting against this dragon instead of relying on the princess to do your dirty work?”
Nick leaned forward. “You’re asking me to accept a mythical creature that nobody has seen for hundreds of years and which requires too much magic to survive invading us with his magical army. There is a simpler explanation.”
“I’d love to hear it.”
“It’s your father.”
The People and the Guild representatives collectively groaned.
“Will you stop?” I growled at him. “Just stop, Nick! Stop! It’s not Roland.”
“How do you know? There are two possibilities: either he is orchestrating this, or you are complicit in his machinations.”
“Shut up!” Rowena snapped at him.
“He has a point,” Phillip yelled. “There is no evidence of this supposed dragon. It is a magical impossibility. In fact, I wrote a paper—”
“Your paper was hogwash,” Luther cut in.
“Precisely,” Saiman added.
“I am the Grand Magus. I won’t be spoken to like this!”
The table erupted in screams.
“I’ll speak to you however I please!” Luther shot back.
“You’re a loose cannon, Luther!” Phillip shook his finger at him.
“It’s Dr. Loose Cannon to you!”
“Evidence!” Nick raised his voice, trying to out scream the others. “You have no evidence, no armor from these warriors, no scales, no evidence!”
“Tell them!” Grigorii pointed at Drest.
“Tell them what?” Drest asked.
“You know what,” Grigorii yelled.
“I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Drest shouted.
“Coward!” Grigorii spat.
“Senile fool!”
The druids and the volhvs banged their staffs on the floor, glaring at each other.
“We need to wake Yu Fong!” Phillip yelled. “He has actually seen the creature. We can ask him directly.”
“Over my dead body!” Dali snapped.
Everyone on the Pack side looked outraged.
On one side, Evdokia sighed and rolled her eyes. At the other end, Desandra clapped her hands over the cacophony, chanting, “Fight, fight, fight . . .”
I turned to Curran. “Do the roar thing.”
He shook his head. “Not yet. Let them scream themselves out.”
The front door burst open. Hugh d’Ambray strode inside, huge in a cloak and the black armor of the Iron Dogs. A beautiful woman followed him. She wore a blue dress and her hair was unnaturally white.
I’d left my sword in the parking lot. That was okay. I’d take him apart with my bare hands.
Julie squeezed in behind them.
My mind took a second to process the fact that Julie wasn’t trying to stab him in the back. In fact, she looked like she . . . Like they came in together. Like she went and got him.
Why me? Why? I couldn’t take much more of this; I really couldn’t.
D’Ambray raised a big bag and emptied it over the table. Metal clattered onto the wood: a skull in a helmet, a pair of daggers, amulets, photographs of Pictish symbols tattooed on human skin. I suppose I should be grateful he didn’t dump a rotting corpse on us.
The table went completely silent.
“I’ve come to help you with your dragon problem,” he said.
Nick turned the color of an eggplant. Next to me, Curran had gone completely still.
“Well?” Hugh grinned. “Don’t all of you thank me at once.”
The white-haired woman smiled and gave us a little wave. “Please excuse him. He forgets about manners sometimes. My name is Elara. You may know me as the White Warlock. I’ve heard so much about you. It’s so nice to meet all of you. I’m Hugh’s wife.”
The world stood on its hands and kicked me in the face.
* * *
• • •
HUGH D’AMBRAY HAD a wife. He owned a castle. He lived in the middle of Kentucky’s wilderness. They’d first encountered Neig’s troops over a year ago. They’d fought them and developed some strategies. He was glad to share those strategies with us. He had no doubt that Neig was a dragon. He could field three hundred of his Iron Dogs and personally lead them to assist us with this fight. He regretted he couldn’t field more, but he’d had to leave a force to guard the castle. In return, he expected the city of Atlanta to help him with some herb sales.
Herb sales.
I sat and listened to all of it as if I were under water. It didn’t seem real. It was so bizarre, my brain refused to digest it.
His wife was the White Warlock. I’d caught Evdokia’s glance once or twice. She didn’t seem shocked. The witches had known. Julie wouldn’t even look at me. They came in together. She went and got him.
Maybe he’s married and living happily in some castle somewhere.