her better, gashing his neck on the manacle, but he didn't care.
She had concealed herself with a rich cloak over her body and hair, and she seemed to be
Her movements were odd—too smooth yet aggressive at the same time. Malkom swallowed as she neared. Her shining boots ... weren't touching the ground.
For the first time, he could believe she was one among the eerie witches from olden tales who cooked men's hearts and brewed noxious potions—all for a fee.
When she floated up the steps, he grated, 'Carrow, leave ... this place.' But his mouth was almost too dry to speak.
Instead, she stood beside him. When she pulled back her cloak, the crowd grew hushed. He was speechless.
She wore garments fit for an empress, a crown as well. Though his eyes were seared by the sun, he couldn't look away. The light reflected off her gleaming blue-black hair. Her pale skin glowed amidst the filth of this place.
Her green eyes glittered menacingly. She was so beautiful, yet at the same time she looked deadly.
Malkom was awestruck.
'What gives you the right to do this?' Carrow asked Ronath—in
Now she spoke his tongue? Or was it another spell? Her very voice sounded altered, her words delayed, coming out of her mouth as if filtered.
Ronath snapped his slackened jaw shut, then answered, 'What business is it of yours, stranger? This is how we punish criminals in Ash. Especially one like him.'
'One like him, Ronath?'
The armorer frowned at the casual use of his name just as Malkom was wondering if she knew the demon somehow.
Ronath recovered, saying, 'He owes us his death for a dozen crimes.'
'There are two murders he must atone for and—'
'
Ronath was all too happy to tell her, 'He killed our prince. And before that, he murdered his own mother.'
Carrow raised her brows at Malkom, but he could deny neither. So long ago, when he'd taken command of Kallen's rebellion, he'd journeyed back to the slums to his mother's hovel. He'd wanted her to see what he'd made of himself.
How would Carrow react?
She tilted her head, as if trying to make a decision about him.
Ronath said, 'And there are many more crimes.'
Just as he took a deep breath to list them all, Carrow raised her gaze—
'Release him?' Ronath thought this comical. 'Why do you not reveal your name, or join him?'
'I'm Carrow Graie of the Wiccan mercenaries.' The crowd grew restless with a witch in their midst. And I want Malkom Slaine freed. If he killed anyone, I'm sure he had good reason.'
Now Malkom's jaw slackened. With her slim shoulders back, she was standing up before all. For him. Aside from Kallen, no one had ever taken his side, ever stood up for him.
'Unchain him. At—once,' she ordered imperiously. As Ronath tried to calm the crowd, she turned, catching Malkom's gaze to give him a furtive
He jolted in the chains, stunned anew. Though his body was a mass of injuries, he began straining against his bonds. Now that she was beside him...
Ronath demanded, 'What business have you with him?'
'He is my male.'
Hers? Declared before all! Murmurs sounded in the crowd. They were all shocked that such a female as this had claimed him in public.
More struggling. The chains began to loosen.
Ronath squinted at Malkom. 'Your heart beats.' He turned to Carrow. 'So you are the whore who brought him back to life?'
With her palms beginning to glow, her expression turned lethal. In a chilling voice, she said, 'And you
A hail of blazing light struck Ronath, hurtling his body into the crowd.
Realizing that Ronath would never release him and that she and Malkom wouldn't merely walk away from this place, Carrow let diplomacy fall by the wayside.
And launched a kill shot.
They were running out of time anyway. Malkom was weakening with every moment in the sun, with each drop of his blood spilled.
The throng began surging up to the stage, yelling for her head and demanding Malkom's sacrifice in the fire.
With one hand, she used magic to propel those demons back; with the other, she directed more energy, beginning to work on Malkom's intricate bonds.
'Carrow, free me,' he grated.
'I'm working on it.'
'I will protect you.'
'Little busy, love,' she muttered as she kept a bloodthirsty demonic crowd at bay while simultaneously picking a mystical lock.
Normally, she would have fallen back to regroup, but she could never leave Malkom without protection from this mob. They looked like they wanted to rip him limb from limb.
'What did you
'Kept them without water,' Malkom bit out. 'They're dying of thirst.'
'Ohhh. Good one.'
As she was finishing up with the chains, she realized that she couldn't fight off all these raving demons. Neither could Malkom.
Time to freak them out. She began chanting a spell ... to turn day into night.
Once darkness fell, they stilled. Cries rang out. 'Release him!' 'We'll all die!' 'Let him go!'
Malkom yelled, '
Wild-eyed guards stalked her from the back. She blasted them with searing beams of magic, punching holes into their chests, felling them one after the other.
Still she worked to free Malkom. 'I've almost got—'
'Carrow, to your left!'
Too late, she pivoted.
Ronath's spear.
He'd traced to the stage, his armor still smoking from her attack. The metal around his neck had saved him from a kill strike. 'You belong with him, witch! Burned in the same fire.'
Pain radiated out from her wound. Shock yielded to fury. 'You son of a bitch!'
Malkom went ballistic, roaring with rage. His fangs were bared, elongated for a kill. He thrashed with all his strength, nearly getting loose.
'Malkom, I'll be all right.'
'Then free me, Carrow! I