“Well, it’s a good thing that this fairy tale involves a self-saving princess then, isn’t it? I’d hate for you to be repressed in your own story.”
“This isn’t a fairy tale. If this were a fairy tale, then I’d have fallen in love with the handsome prince, not with the dragon.”
“Then I guess that it’s a good thing that you’ve decided this isn’t one of those stupid, completely sexist fairy tales.” Winston brushed his nose against mine. “Because I’d hate to have to start roasting princes to keep them away from my girl.”
“Ahem.” John coughed. I jerked back from Winston, surprised that I’d forgotten my father was still standing there and even more surprised that Winston had forgotten, too. “Not that this isn’t fascinating, but we do have a war to be getting on with.”
“Right. Let’s do this.” I straightened my shoulders and lifted my chin, trying to at least look like I was sure of myself even if I wasn’t.
Winston and John both stepped forward, reaching for the door handles, and began to pull on the heavy double doors. Once they were open all the way, I took a deep breath and stepped forward. I let my eyes travel over the seething mass of humans and mythic creatures standing in formation in front of my palace.
“Her Majesty Queen Alicia Wilhemina Munroe the First!” Kilvari roared and then banged his staff against the stone stairs. “Golden Rose of Nerissette, Divine Protector of the Pleiades, and Blessed of All the Light Touches!”
He dropped to one knee in front of me, and the soldiers behind him followed suit, the entire field dropping three feet in height as the sound of thousands of knees all hitting the ground at the same time echoed through the front garden like a gunshot. I looked out over the mass of people in front of me, their heads all bowed and their eyes focused on the dirt, and then shifted my gaze back to the dragons, who also had their heads bent low. Goblins and nymphs had both bowed, too, the latter with their hands pressed in front of them as if in prayer. The remaining seven Firas were on both knees, their long robes puddling about their legs as they lowered their heads to the ground in front of me.
“I—”
I heard a cough and turned to see my father and Winston both on down on one knee beside the patio. Behind them I could see Mercedes and Kitsuna on their knees as well, gripping each other’s hands tightly.
“Thank you,” I said quietly, humbled as I stared at all the people who had come forward, willing to fight for me. For our home.
“Thank you!” I yelled this time. “Thank you all.”
Winston lifted his head and winked at me before smiling and lowering his head again. Crap, I needed to say something besides thank you. I needed to say something inspiring or moving or something not stupid sounding at the very least.
“We’re leaving today to cross the White Mountains,” I said, immediately feeling dumb. This wasn’t at all inspiring. “We’re going to cross the mountains and enter Bavasama’s kingdom. I don’t know what we’re going to find there. There could be armies that stretch as far as the eye can see. There could be monsters. None of us can know what we’ll face when we get to the other side of those mountains.”
I stopped and looked over at Mercedes who was staring back at me. I took another deep, steadying breath and turned back to the crowd.
“We may not all come home. Maybe none of us will come home, but you should all know this: when the fighting is over, no enemy will cross our borders again. We are not going to be bullied. This is our home, and we will defend it and each other. We are a family, and no one kicks the crap out of this family. Not if they want to live to see the sun rise again.”
The soldiers in front of me stood almost as one and bayed in approval, rattling their swords and stomping their feet. The dragons roared, and I watched as the courtyard exploded in a brilliant riot of sounds.
“So.” I turned to look at Mercedes, remembering the first time we’d been in this position. Stuck on a roof, watching an army mass outside our walls. We’d listened to Rhys giving the army a pep talk, psyching them up to fight, and I’d asked Mercedes if it would inspire her to fight for him.
“So?” She looked at me.
“How did I do? Did I inspire you to fight for me?”
“No.” She shook her head. “Only an idiot is willing to die for pretty words.”
“So why are you? Fighting, I mean?”
“Because you’re right.” She nodded to the soldiers in front of us who were starting to quiet down. “We’re a family, and no one kicks the crap out of your family but you.”
“Precisely,” Rhys said as he bowed low before me. “The army is ready to move at your command.”
“Good. That’s…” I swallowed as I stared out at the seething mass of warriors, all prepared to do battle in my name.
“Allie?”
I turned to look at Winston.
“It’s time.”
“Right, um, do you intend to shift? Here, I mean? Or are you going to the aerie to shift and then come back?”
“I’ll shift here,” he said and then stepped into a cleared spot in the middle of the porch. A black light surrounded him, and I watched as the boy I loved shifted and grew, twisting inside the flames as he moved from human to dragon, stretching and changing as the flames flickered around him.
I kept my eyes on his as his face elongated and his eyes narrowed, turning to dark golden slits inside a midnight-colored face. He didn’t blink, just kept staring until the flames died away and he stood there in full dragon form.
Rhys folded low and then backed down the stairs toward the army. “Men!” he called out. “Prepare to march.”
There was a sharp crack as all the soldiers clicked their heels together simultaneously, and I watched as they began to form two long lines.
There was a creak, and then I heard the sound of horses stamping and snorting. The supply wagons began to roll toward the gates, Woodsmen with bows on their backs surrounding the wagons. Two other dragons stepped forward, and my best friends scurried down the stairs to scramble onto their backs. Winston lowered his head enough for me to climb onto his back. I moved to grab his spikes to pull myself up when I felt tight hands grip my waist.
“I can—” I turned my head to see my father behind me, lifting me up so that I could climb onto my Crown Prince’s back.
“Be careful up there. It’s a long fall if you slip,” he said quietly, not meeting my eyes.
“I know.” I remembered the first battle of the Crystal Palace and what it had felt like to tumble off the back of a dragon. I swallowed and tried not to let my hands shake as they gripped Winston’s neck.
“Be careful,” John repeated.
“You, too.” I wanted to reach out and hug him, but I didn’t know how that would be taken. We didn’t really have much of a father-daughter relationship going, and besides that, John didn’t seem like he was much of a hugger unless I was in mortal danger. Maybe it was better if we didn’t touch at all.
“Here.” He pulled the combs he’d given me earlier out of his pouch and tucked them into my hair, just above the band of my crown. “Your maid gave them to me.”
“I didn’t want to risk losing them. If we get into a battle, I mean.”
“And I don’t want to risk losing you,” he said, holding my gaze. “You may be the Golden Rose of Nerissette, but you’re also a daughter of the Leavenwald, and our magic may help protect you when the magic of the Pleiades fails.”
He stepped away, and I watched as he swallowed, letting his eyes travel down the length of Winston’s side. “All right, then.” He started to step away, his eyes still trained on me.
I felt my chest clench, and I flung a hand out on instinct. “John?”