And all she could think about was Raegar.
Was he thinking of her? Did he know she was on board the ship? Had he come to rescue her? Or had he come to accuse her for summoning the dragon that had destroyed his city and his hopes and dreams?
“It was not my fault, my darling,” she whispered, restlessly twisting the fingers of her cold hands as she paced the deck. “I was tricked. Hevis tricked me into summoning the dragon. Hevis knew I wouldn’t be able to control it. This is his doing.”
Treia tried to ignore the fact that she had not given Hevis his sacrifice. The god had demanded that she kill someone dear to her. In return, he would grant her the power to summon the Vektia dragon. Unfortunately, Treia’s choice of victims were sadly limited. She hated her stepfather, despised her mother, and intensely disliked all of her kindred clan. That narrowed her selection to two people: her lover, Raegar, and her sister, Aylaen. At that point, the choice was easy.
Treia loved Raegar with a soul-consuming passion. She would have sacrificed herself before him. Treia had loved Aylaen because Aylaen was the only person who loved her. Now that love was gone, and Treia hated her sister. Aylaen had been marked for death and she had perversely gone on living, ruining Treia’s deal with Hevis.
“Except that Hevis never truly had any power to give,” Treia muttered bitterly. “He gave me the ability to summon one of the Vektia dragons, when all the time he knew that in order to control one, I had to summon all five. He tricked me! None of this was my fault. Yet I am the one being made to suffer.”
Treia stared longingly through the hole in the hull at her lover’s war galley and cursed the gods who had given her such poor eyesight. The ship was a fuzzy, wood-colored blur. By squinting, she thought she could discern Raegar at the prow near the head of the dragon. She could tell it was him because he was taller by far than the people of Sinaria. Being Vindrasi, he was fair-complected, whereas the Sinarians were brown-skinned. And Raegar was bald, his head shaved in the manner of the priests, and he was wearing armor-both his bald head and his armor gleamed in Aelon’s blessed light.
Treia heard Skylan give the order for the Venjekar to chase and attack the war galley. Her lip curled. He was bluffing. He would never risk his own precious skin, nor that of his darling Aylaen. He wouldn’t risk harming the Vektia spiritbone, now that he had one in his possession.
She watched Raegar summon his Dragon Fala, sending her to slay Skylan and all the rest of the fools, and her heart thrilled. That would be an end to her ordeal. She would be reunited with her lover. Watching Raegar stroking the neck of the carved dragon that graced the prow of the war galley, Treia couldn’t help but wonder why Raegar had kept secret the fact that a dragon had come to serve him.
“If he truly loved me, he would have told me…”
The thought pained her. As a Bone Priestess who had summoned dragons before, she could have given him advice.
Such as never summon a fire dragon over water.
Treia watched in agony as the fire dragon burst into life above the war galley and watched with gloomy foreboding as the young dragon flew toward the Venjekar. Treia could almost hear the Dragon Kahg chuckling as the wet and demoralized young dragon flew away.
What now? Fear clutched Treia. Raegar was attempting to quell the panic on board his ship and hoist the sail. From the deck above, she could hear Skylan ordering the dragon to proceed with the attack.
Treia smiled in satisfaction. She could always count on Skylan’s stupidity and his arrogance. Raegar and his soldiers would make short work of Skylan.
And then the ship lurched beneath Treia’s feet. The Venjekar slowed and began to change course.
“No!” Treia gasped, as she caught sight of Raegar’s ship dwindling in the distance.
“We are going home.” Aylaen’s voice came down from above, echoed hatefully in the shadows of the hold.
Treia picked up the knife.
* * *
The Dragon Kahg was not about to make the same mistake Fala had made. He left the sailing of the Venjekar to the humans aboard the ship. He remained with the Venjekar in spirit-his red eye was a fiery slit in the dragonhead prow. He left his physical body, returning his spirit to the spirit bone.
The wind blew steadily. The sea was unsettled, lead-colored, and restless. Oily waves slapped the hull from all directions, tossing salt spray over the bow. Skylan shouted at Farinn to help him and together they raised the Venjekar’s sail, while Acronis took the tiller.
The sail flapped and then filled. The wind caught the Venjekar and carried the ship through the waves and Skylan breathed easier. He looked back at the ogre ship. They had caught the same wind and were chasing after him. He would win this race; his ship was lighter and more maneuverable, and he was a better sailor. Still he didn’t like to see that triangular sail dogging him.
“Why don’t they give up the chase and go home?” Skylan wondered aloud, annoyed.
“Because they’ll never make it home,” said Acronis. He pointed at the ogre vessel. “Their ship is taking on water. It’s sinking beneath their feet. It’s not us they want. It’s our ship.”
“By Torval, you’re right!” Skylan said, studying the ogre ship.
He was about to add, “They’ll never catch us-” when Wulfe gave a shrill, gurgling shriek. The piercing sound was inhuman and dreadful and Skylan nearly leaped out of the ship.
His heart pounding, Skylan rounded furiously on the boy. “Damn it, don’t ever do that-”
Wulfe had gone white beneath his tan. He pointed, his hand shaking.
Treia stood holding Aylaen, pressing a knife blade to her neck.
“Lower the sail,” Treia ordered.
“Skylan, don’t-” Aylaen began, and then gasped as Treia pricked her throat with the knife. Blood glistened on her skin.
“Farinn, lower the sail,” said Skylan, not taking his eyes off Treia.
Farinn ran to obey. The sail fell in folds. The Venjekar wallowed in the restless waves. Skylan glanced at Raegar’s ship, Aelon’s Triumph, now gaining on them. The ogre ship was gaining, too, but Raegar’s ship was faster and would reach them first.
“I’ve done what you asked, Treia,” Skylan said. “Let Aylaen go.”
“Give me the spiritbone of the Vektia,” said Treia. “If you don’t, I’ll kill her.”
“He can’t give it to you,” said Aylaen. “He doesn’t know where I hid it. If you kill me you’ll never find it.”
Treia glowered and jabbed Aylaen with the point of the knife. Blood flowed down her neck. Skylan could see that Treia meant what she said. In another moment, she would cut Aylaen’s throat.
“I’ll give you the spiritbone, Treia,” said Skylan. “Aylaen, tell me where it is.”
“I won’t!” Aylaen said stubbornly, through gritted teeth.
“Aylaen,” Skylan pleaded, “this is not worth your life. Tell me-”
He was interrupted by a growl, low and rumbling, primal and savage, sending a shiver through Skylan, raising the hair on his arms. Wulfe had disappeared. In his place was a beast-a wolf with yellow eyes and gray, scraggly fur. The wolf opened his mouth, his lip curled, revealing sharp fangs. His ears flattened back on his head. His tail swept slowly from side to side. He made no sound. Breaking into a lope, he ran at Treia, who stared at the man-beast with wide, terrified eyes.
Aylaen twisted out of her sister’s grasp. The knife blade sliced her neck as she escaped. Skylan met her, caught her in his arms.
The wolf had Treia penned like a sheep in the fold. She was backed into the bulkhead and there was nowhere to run. The wolf growled menacingly and slowly advanced, one paw after the other. Treia screamed and moaned.
“Wulfe, no! Stop!” Aylaen cried. “Don’t hurt her!”