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Synopsis
Bestselling author Jennifer Estep continues her Gargoyle Queen epic fantasy series where magic reigns, alliances are tested, and a dangerous attraction could tear down a throne. . .
Crown princess. Clever spy. Powerful mind magier. Gemma Ripley of Andvari is all those things—and determined to stop an enemy from using magical tearstone weapons to conquer her kingdom.
Gemma’s quest for answers leads her to a trade Summit between the various kingdoms. Among the other royals in attendance is Queen Maeven Morricone of Morta and her son, Prince Leonidas—Gemma’s charming and dangerous nemesis.
Gemma knows that Maeven always has a long game in motion, and sure enough, the cunning queen invokes an arcane tradition that threatens the fragile truce between Andvari and the other kingdoms. Despite her best intentions, Gemma once again finds herself thrown together with Leo and battling her growing feelings for the enemy prince.
When a series of deadly attacks shatters the Summit’s peaceful negotiations, Gemma realizes that someone wants to tear the royals down from their thrones—and that this enemy just might succeed.
Release date: May 3, 2022
Publisher: HarperCollins
Print pages: 464
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Tear Down the Throne
Jennifer Estep
Sometimes, I despise being a princess.
Don’t get me wrong. I know how fortunate I am. As Gemma Armina Merilde Ripley, the crown princess of Andvari, I have everything I could ever want, from beautiful gowns to sparkling tiaras to scrumptious foods. And I do those fine things proud. I am an excellent dancer, a moderately talented jewelry maker, and an enthusiastic connoisseur of toasted cheese-and-jam sandwiches.
I want for nothing, smile at everything, and can converse on a plethora of benign topics, from the mercurial Andvarian fall weather to the most famous Bellonan gladiator troupes to the unusual intricate patterns of Ungerian competitive ballroom dances.
Oh, yes. I bloody excel at playing the part of a pampered princess. Most of the time, I even enjoy it.
But this was not one of those occasions.
“. . . don’t you think, Your Highness?”
The deep, booming voice jarred me out of my snide reverie. Several lords and ladies were staring at me, as though I were a caladrius in a menagerie they had gathered around to gawk at. At times like these, being a princess was definitely its own sort of prison.
Today my gilded cage was a dining hall lined with white stone planters boasting evergreen shrubs. To my left, servants were clearing away plates from the table in the center of the room. To my right, musicians were performing beneath a white wicker arbor draped with green vines. Clusters of pink wisteria bobbed above the musicians’ heads, as if the flowers were dancing along to the low, soft tunes, including “The Bluest Crown,” my own cursed, unwanted personal anthem.
A dark gray banner featuring a black snarling gargoyle face—the Ripley royal crest—hung on one of the walls next to a forest-green banner with a gold oak tree with gold acorns dripping from its branches. The crest of Lord Eichen, the luncheon host.
“Don’t you think, Your Highness?” Eichen repeated, his trumpet of a voice much louder than before, as though I hadn’t heard him.
With his silver-rimmed glasses, dark brown eyes, wrinkled dark brown skin, and cropped iron-gray hair and mustache, Eichen looked like a kindly grandfather, and he was a longtime friend of my own grandfather, King Heinrich Ripley. The sixty-something Eichen was also a wealthy plant magier whose estate was within spitting distance of the Mortan border.
His booming voice drowned out all the other conversations, and this time, everyone in the dining hall looked at me. The musicians paused their playing, and even the pink wisteria seemed to peer in my direction.
The weight of everyone’s stares pressed against my chest like an anvil, but I smiled as though my ears weren’t still ringing from Eichen’s sonorous voice. With that ability to bellow, he should have been a gladiator ringmaster.
“You’re right,” I replied. “The Black Swan troupe will be the main rivals to our Andvarian gladiators heading into the winter season. Why, it wouldn’t surprise me if the Black Swan troupe once again won a championship or two.”
“They’ve won almost every bloody championship for the last sixteen years. Ever since Serilda Swanson returned to Svalin.” Eichen spat out the famed warrior’s name like it was the vilest curse. Several of his grandchildren competed for the Andvarian troupes, so he took the gladiator rankings, victories, and defeats much more seriously than most folks did.
“Serilda is a fine warrior,” I murmured, not wanting to further incite Eichen.
“That she is.” A smile split his face, and his mustache bristled with a happier mood. “Did I ever tell you that I once saw Serilda herself compete? I did! It was against a Mortan troupe, and she wiped the floor with every gladiator they set against her . . .”
Eichen launched into a long-winded tale about Serilda’s tournament. I kept smiling, although I once again tuned out his words.
As Princess Gemma, I was a traveling ambassador for the Ripley royal family, responsible for maintaining good relationships with wealthy nobles, especially those like Eichen with strategic holdings near the Mortan border. For the last three days, I had been visiting with Eichen and his family at Oakton Manor, oohing and aahing over his impressive gardens, and charming and ingratiating myself with everyone, from the wealthiest lady to the newest servant.
Today was the grand finale of my visit and included a luncheon with dozens of nobles, merchants, and guilders from the nearby city of Haverton. The actual luncheon had ended thirty minutes ago, and now the guests were indulging in some more wine before taking their leave to get ready for the ball tonight.
A few weeks ago, I would have enjoyed whiling away the afternoon with idle gossip, picking up information, and seeing who I could convince to keep me abreast of the goings-on in Haverton so I could expand my network of unofficial spies into this corner of Andvari.
Not anymore. Now every hour that passed increased the threat to my kingdom—
I still can’t believe she defeated a group of Mortan soldiers.
The stories must be lies. She’s a princess, not a warrior.
She can’t possibly be a mind magier. Otherwise, she would know exactly how ugly I think her dress is . . .
I kept my smile fixed on my face, as though nothing were wrong and I couldn’t hear what everyone truly thought about me.
The nobles were right—and wrong. I might be a princess, but a few weeks ago, I had defeated a group of Mortan soldiers. As for my being a warrior, well, that was debatable, but I was most definitely a mind magier who could hear each and every one of their deepest, darkest secrets.
Unfortunately.
People thought all the bloody time, and their mental musings constantly buzzed around me, like bees droning on and on in my ears.
Not only could I hear the nobles’ not-so-kind thoughts, but I could also feel their emotions, from the slightest bit of dull boredom to the sharp pricks of curiosity to the petty jealousy that scraped against my skin like sandpaper. Lady Kendra really did not like my dress, and the disgust rolling off her was strong enough to make my own stomach churn.
I drew in a deep breath and focused on myself, on my tiny internal ship that constantly sailed around on the sea of other people’s emotions. Slowly, that choppy sea smoothed out, Lady Kendra’s disgust faded away, and my ship righted itself.
Normally, I would have ignored people’s thoughts and feelings as best I could. But given the danger I planned on putting myself in later, I actually needed to hear people’s silent musings to make sure I could pull off my scheme—and that no one was spying on me the way I planned to spy on my enemies.
So I waited until Eichen launched into another story, then reached out with my magic. In an instant, I was leaning over the deck of my internal ship, dipping my fingers into that sea of emotions, and skimming the thoughts of everyone in the dining hall, from the nobles clustered around Eichen to the servants still clearing the table to the guards stationed in the corners.
This wine is awful . . .
Wish I could get closer to the princess . . .
Glitzma’s hands are ruined now . . .
That last snide, mocking thought, also by the dress-hating Lady Kendra, made my hands clench into fists. Glitzma was my unofficial nickname, and one I had thoroughly embraced for years, since the pampered princess persona had been the perfect cover for my secret missions. But as more time had passed, the nickname had started to annoy me, and now I utterly despised it, especially given the brutal torture I had suffered a few weeks ago.
Rage bubbled up inside me, and dull aches rippled through my clenched fists, while my fingertips tingled with hot sparks of remembered pain. Despite several rounds of healing, bright red scars still adorned my hands, front and back, as though someone had painted scarlet starbursts on my skin.
The sight of the ugly marks made more rage bubble up inside me, along with my magic, both of them burning even hotter and fiercer than the phantom sparks of pain still twinging my fingertips. I blinked, and from one instant to the next, the dining hall vanished, and I was staring down at my own body chained to a table. Ribbons of fire rippled through my back, while white-hot agony throbbed in my hands and blood dripped out of the gruesome wounds in my palms—
“What do you say, Your Highness?” Eichen’s voice blasted over me yet again, shattering my memory and snapping me back to the here and now.
All eyes turned toward me. I loosened my fists, flexed my fingers, and picked an imaginary piece of lint off my skirt, even as I rewound Eichen’s words in my mind. Princesses learned at an early age to always listen with half an ear.
“Oh, yes,” I replied. “The Haverton troupe does have a good chance of advancing to the championships, especially given the impressive performance your grandchildren treated us to earlier.”
Several gladiators had sparred in an outdoor fighting ring before the luncheon. The warriors had been skilled enough, but I had seen far better. Serilda Swanson, Paloma, and of course Queen Everleigh Blair. Still, it would be rude to insult my host.
Eichen’s chest puffed up with pride. “Thank you, Your Highness! I appreciate the vote of confidence. Perhaps King Heinrich will allow some of our more accomplished gladiators to serve as your guards and escort you to the upcoming Summit. After all, we wouldn’t want the Morricones to get their hands on you again.”
All around us, the other nobles froze, and Lady Adora, Eichen’s gladiator granddaughter, sucked in a strangled breath. I kept my smile fixed on my face through years of practice and sheer force of will.
A few weeks ago, I had been undercover, trying to figure out who was stealing tearstone from a mine in the Andvarian city of Blauberg, when I had encountered Prince Leonidas Morricone. Even though Leonidas was a childhood enemy, I had still saved him from being murdered by Wexel, a Mortan captain. Later on, Leonidas had saved my life when Conley, the Blauberg mine foreman, had shoved me into a chasm and left me for dead.
Leonidas had taken me to Myrkvior, the Mortan royal palace, to be healed, and I’d stayed there under an assumed name in hopes of figuring out who had stolen the Andvarian tearstone—and what they planned to do with it. While at the palace, I’d had a series of dangerous, disastrous encounters with both Queen Maeven Morricone and her firstborn son, Crown Prince Milo Morricone.
Maeven had assassinated Emperia Dumond, one of her bitter rivals for the throne, and blamed me for the noble lady’s murder. After I’d discovered Milo was making barbed arrows out of the stolen tearstone, he had taken great pleasure in torturing me. First, he had lashed my back with a whip made of coral-viper skin. Then, he’d driven his cursed arrows through my hands.
And Leonidas . . . Well, his betrayal had been the cruelest, most calculated one of all.
He had made me believe he actually cared about me.
Eventually, I had escaped from Myrkvior and returned to Blauberg, where I had faced off against Milo, along with Captain Wexel and numerous guards. Using my mind magier magic, I had driven the Mortans out of the city and warned Milo that I would kill him if he set foot on Andvarian soil ever again.
Tales of my supposed heroism during the Battle of Blauberg, as it had been dubbed, had quickly spread through Andvari. Rumors abounded about exactly what had happened, but my family and I had taken control of the story as best we could and had (mostly) told the truth. Officially, I had tracked some stolen tearstone to Myrkvior, where I had been held as a political prisoner by the Morricones, before escaping, returning to Blauberg, and driving some rogue Mortan soldiers out of the city. Despite my obvious scars, we’d downplayed my suffering and the conflict with the Morricones, so as not to appear weak to our nobles or worry our citizens.
The curiosity of Eichen and his friends didn’t surprise me, as I’d heard more than one silent speculation about my part in the battle, but so far, no one had been brave, bold, or stupid enough to mention the Morricones—and my ordeal at their hands—out loud to me.
Adora rammed her elbow into Eichen’s side. His eyes bulged, and his mouth gaped as he realized his mistake.
“Your—Your Highness!” Eichen sputtered. “Please forgive me! I meant no offense!”
His apology blasted through the dining hall, drawing even more unwanted attention. Everyone stared at me again, and their thoughts slapped up against my mind, threatening to capsize my internal ship and render me frozen and useless.
I gritted my teeth, glanced down, and focused on the pendant that lay against my blue dress. The silver base featured small pieces of black jet that formed the Ripley snarling gargoyle crest. Tiny, midnight-blue tearstone shards made up the gargoyle’s horns, eyes, nose, and teeth, turning the crest into the face of Grimley, my own beloved gargoyle. Alvis, the Andvarian royal jeweler, had made the necklace for me when I was younger and first learning how to control my power.
Everyone in Andvari and beyond knew that Princess Gemma always wore her famed gargoyle pendant, but it was far more than just a pretty bauble. The pieces of black jet helped to block people’s mundane thoughts, while the blue tearstone shards would either store my own magic or deflect an enemy’s power.
Dozens of thoughts crowded into my mind, causing the bits of black jet to heat up. I grabbed the pendant and rubbed it between my fingers, concentrating on the sharp pricks of the hot jewels against my skin instead of the snide, sympathetic, and speculative musings buzzing in my ears.
I used to be almost totally reliant on my pendant to block other people’s musings and keep their feelings from overwhelming me. But ever since the Battle of Blauberg, I had been relying more on my own skill and willpower to control my mind magier magic, rather than shoving my power down as I had for so many years. Now I could usually keep my internal ship from capsizing in the sea of thoughts and emotions that constantly roiled around me. As for controlling and using the storm of my own thoughts, emotions, and magic that continuously churned inside me . . . Well, that was still a work in progress.
But there was no hiding from the nobles still silently wondering how I would react to Eichen’s words, so I released my pendant and lifted my head. The lord’s face was pinched tight with worry, and I decided to put him out of his misery.
“No offense taken,” I replied. “Your offer of gladiators is quite kind, but Grandfather Heinrich, Prince Dominic, and Captain Rhea have already seen to our security needs for the Summit.”
Rhea had done most of the planning, since my stepmother was the leader of the royal guards, but I didn’t remind Eichen of that fact. It would be lost in the red-hot embarrassment pounding through his body and burning in my own cheeks.
“I’m relieved to hear that,” Eichen replied, his voice softer and more subdued than before.
Eichen cast a desperate glance at Adora, as if hoping she would introduce a new topic of conversation to break the awkward silence.
“Princess Gemma! There you are!” a light, feminine voice sounded.
Heels clattered on the flagstones, and a woman glided forward, her quick, purposeful strides easily cutting a swath through the nobles as she stepped up beside me. She was a couple of inches shorter than I was, with a lean, strong, muscled body. Her long black hair had been curled into fat ringlets that danced around her head, while gold shadow and liner brought out her vivid emerald-green eyes. Dark red berry balm stained her lips, further enhancing her golden skin and pretty features.
The woman was wearing a long formfitting green jacket covered with flying dragons done in gold thread. A gold pendant, also shaped like a dragon, dangled from the gold chain around her neck. Emeralds glittered as the dragon’s eyes, while jet and ruby shards spewed out of its mouth, as though it were exhaling jeweled fire.
Lady Reiko Yamato, my friend and fellow spy, smoothly threaded her arm through mine. I glanced down at the dragon face with green scales and black eyes that adorned her right hand. The dragon gave me a mischievous wink, although Reiko’s features remained schooled in a polite mask. All morphs had some sort of tattoo-like mark on their bodies that indicated what larger, stronger creature they could shift into. My friend had transformed into her dragon during the Battle of Blauberg, and she had been a fearsome sight to behold.
I just hoped she wouldn’t have to do it again before the end of our mission.
“Are you ready to stroll through the gardens?” Reiko asked. “You’ve been spouting the benefits of long, contemplative walks for weeks now.”
The same mischief that her inner dragon had shown me filled her green eyes. I resisted the urge to stick my tongue out at both of them.
Eichen frowned. “But I showed you both the gardens when you first arrived. Princess Gemma sneezed quite violently throughout the tour.”
Reiko’s lips twitched, as if she was holding back a grin, and she arched an eyebrow, indicating that I would have to lie my way out of this. My friend had a very large competitive streak when it came to our spy games, and she was always giving me little tests just to see if I could keep up with her quick wits.
“Oh, yes,” I purred, rising to her challenge, since I too had a very large competitive streak. “I did promise Lady Reiko that we would stroll through the gardens.”
I glanced around, as though making sure no one was listening, even though everyone was clearly straining to hear what I would say next. Then I leaned a little closer to Eichen and dropped my voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “Lady Reiko has a personal . . . affliction, and I thought some herbs in your gardens might prove useful. You don’t mind if we pick a few, do you?”
Reiko stiffened. This time I was the one who had to hold back a grin.
Eichen eyed Reiko like she’d suddenly grown another head and not-so-subtly sidled away, lest he catch the dragon morph’s mysterious affliction just by standing next to her. “Of course not. Take whatever you need.”
Reiko smiled at him, but magic swirled around her body, and long black talons sprouted on her fingertips. She curled her hand a little tighter around my arm, her talons digging into my skin, even as her inner dragon glared at me.
What’s the matter? I sent the thought to her. Is your affliction flaring up again?
Reiko winced, still not used to me mentally communicating with her, but she muttered in her mind. The only affliction I have is you and your bloody lame excuses.
I winked at her before turning back to Eichen.
“Thank you ever so much for the delicious luncheon,” I purred again. “But Lady Reiko’s condition needs immediateattention, so please excuse us.”
Eichen’s eyebrows drew together in confusion, but he shot Reiko a wary look and scuttled back a few more steps, clearly not wanting to be exposed to whatever was wrong with her.
Reiko’s talons dug a little deeper into my arm, but I was grinning as we left the dining hall.
* * *
Reiko and I strolled through the manor house. All the noise, commotion, and conversation in the dining hall quickly faded away, leaving us in both physical and mental silence.
Reiko dropped my arm and slapped her hands on her hips. “Affliction? Condition? You made it sound like I had the clap!”
“You’re the one who suddenly wanted to stroll through the gardens. Don’t blame me for arranging it the quickest and easiest way I could think of. Besides, Eichen won’t try to follow us now. Neither will any of the other nobles once word of your condition spreads.”
Reiko harrumphed, spun around on her heel, and stalked away. I grinned again and fell in step behind her. Still, my merriment quickly faded away. As much as I enjoyed teasing my friend, we had come to Oakton to do a job, and it was time to get on with it.
Reiko and I returned to my chambers. The servants were still cleaning up the dining hall, so no one saw us slip inside, strip off our luncheon garb, and don more practical clothes.
“Did you find out anything new?” I asked, stuffing the bottoms of my black leggings into the sides of my matching boots.
“Unfortunately not.” Reiko’s voice floated out of her room, which adjoined mine. “I talked to every noble at the luncheon, along with several servants and guards, but no one has heard anything about Mortans being in Haverton.”
I ground my teeth in frustration. Ostensibly, I had come to Oakton Manor to visit Lord Eichen, but really, I was here because my network of spies had passed along some rumors that Mortan guards had been spotted near an abandoned tearstone mine in the area.
Over the past several weeks, Milo Morricone had engineered the murders of dozens of my countrymen and -women so he could steal thousands of pounds of tearstone from places all along the Andvari-Morta border. Then, more recently in Blauberg, I’d seen Captain Wexel buy tearstone ore from Conley, the treacherous mine foreman.
Grandfather Heinrich had increased the guards and security on all the active tearstone mines, especially those near Morta, but dozens of abandoned, unguarded mines dotted the Spire Mountains—like the one close to Haverton. I still didn’t know exactly what Milo wanted to do with the magical ore, but I didn’t want to let him steal another bloody shard of it.
Reiko strode into my room. She had donned dark gray leggings and boots, along with an emerald-green tunic and matching cloak. She leaned against the wall while I laced up my boots.
“This could be another one of Milo’s schemes,” Reiko pointed out. “He could have ordered Wexel to spread those rumors just to lure you here, Gemma.”
“I know, but I have to check them out anyway. Especially since Alvis still hasn’t figured out what Milo is planning to do with all the tearstone arrows he’s made. Seeing if the Mortans are lurking around the old mine and potentially picking up new information about Milo’s plans is worth the risk.”
Reiko eyed me. “You’ve been saying that more and more. Risking more and more.”
I sighed. “That’s because I keep getting more and more desperate, especially with the Summit coming up.”
The Summit was a yearly meeting where royals, nobles, merchants, and guilders from the various kingdoms came together to hammer out trade agreements for goods, services, and the like. Everything from coal to lumber to wheat would be discussed, bartered for, and sold to whomever could pay the asking prices.
“You don’t have to attend,” Reiko replied. “Prince Dominic and Captain Rhea can handle things.”
I shook my head. “No, I have to go, just like I usually do. Andvari cannot afford to appear weak right now, especially not during something as important as the Summit. Rumors are still flying fast and furious about my trip to Myrkvior. I have to show everyone that I survived my time in the Morricone palace relatively unscathed.”
Reiko’s gaze dropped to my scarred hands. Her face remained expressionless, but her inner dragon winced, as if it hurt them both just to look at the red marks.
My hands clenched into fists, strangling my bootlaces and making the tight scars stand out that much more vividly, like volcanoes of blood about to erupt out of my pale skin. The sudden angry motions caused those dull aches to ripple through my hands again and reignited the hot sparks in my fingertips. People often experienced phantom pain from old injuries, but thanks to my magic, the sensations were as intense and as vivid as when my wounds were first inflicted. I had never particularly enjoyed being a mind magier, but at times like these, I cursed my magic and all the bloody misery it caused me.
Reiko remained silent, although her dragon’s wince melted into a sympathetic look. I ground my teeth again and finished tying my bootlaces. Then I straightened up, spun away from her, and tied a dark gray cloak on over my matching tunic.
Reiko had already cinched a sword and dagger around her waist, and I grabbed my own weapons belt, which also featured a dagger. My dagger was made of pale gray tearstone, which was surprisingly lightweight, and the hilt bore the same snarling gargoyle crest made of black jet and blue tearstone that my pendant did.
I buckled the weapons belt around my waist, then picked up two other items from a nearby table—the tearstone arrows Milo had used to torture me.
The shorter-than-normal projectiles stretched only from my wrist up to my fingertips, but the pointed tips were razor-sharp, and the two arrowheads themselves were unusually large and lined with curved barbs that looked like fishing hooks. Milo had driven the arrows through my hands, then used them like lightning rods to conduct his hot, electric magic throughout my body. And then, for a final cruel touch, he had ripped the arrows out of my hands, causing the hooked barbs to tear through even more of my flesh.
For the second time in the past hour, the room around me flickered and vanished, and I saw my own body stretched out on a table, blood pooling under my damaged hands. My muscles tensed with brutal remembered pain, even as my heart pounded and sweat pricked the back of my neck—
“Gemma?” Reiko’s voice dragged me back into the present. “Are you okay?”
“Fine,” I lied, struggling to make my voice light, although it still came out as a harsh rasp. “Just thinking.”
“About what?”
“Why the arrows changed color.”
It was the first thing that popped into my mind and a question that had been nagging at me for weeks now. I held the two arrows up to the light streaming in through the glass doors. In addition to absorbing and deflecting magic, tearstone had another dual nature—it could change color, shifting from bright starry gray to dark midnight-blue and back again.
Before Milo had used the arrows on me, they had been a light gray, just like the tearstone dagger on my belt. But after he’d punched the weapons through my hands, they had turned—and still remained—a dark blue, as though Milo’s lightning magic had somehow changed the innate properties of the tearstone itself. There had to be some clue in that about Milo’s ultimate plan for his wicked weapons, but so far, I hadn’t been able to puzzle it out.
Perhaps I would ask Milo—before I killed him.
Back in Blauberg, I’d warned the crown prince that I would kill him if he ever set foot on Andvarian soil again, but that was a lie. I was going to murder the bastard anyway. Something else I needed to figure out how to do, along with sussing out his true plans for the stolen tearstone.
But pondering the elusive, frustrating secrets of Milo’s arrows wasn’t helping anything, so I returned the weapons to the table, then strode over to the glass doors in the back of the room, opened them, and let out a soft, low whistle.
Several seconds later, a shadow zipped through the air, briefly blotting out the afternoon sun, before landing on the stone balcony outside and taking on the familiar shape of a gargoyle.
Gargoyles were as common in Andvari as wild horses were in Flores, and the creatures often roosted on the roofs of homes and shops, both in the cities and out in the countryside. Several gargoyles nested on the towers that topped Eichen’s manor house, but this creature had come with me all the way from Glitnir, the royal palace in the capital city of Glanzen.
This gargoyle was roughly the size of a horse, although his body was much thicker and stronger, and his powerful, muscled legs were set much lower to the ground. His eyes burned a bright sapphire blue in his dark gray stone face, and tiny bits of blue also shimmered throughout the rest of his body, like pinprick stars embedded in his skin. Two curved horns jutted up from his head, while broad wings fanned out from his shoulders. Black talons protruded from his large wolflike paws, and an arrowlike point tipped his long tail.
The gargoyle yawned, revealing his razor-sharp teeth, then blinked sleepily. “I don’t see why we have to do this in the middle of the afternoon,” Grimley grumbled, his voice sounding like bits of gravel crunching together. “I was just about to catch a whole warren of rabbits in my nap.”
“Because I want to be able to actually see what the Mortans are doing. Not trip over them in the woods in the middle of the night.”
“Which we could have easily done this morning, without spoiling my afternoon nap,” he grumbled again.
“You should know by now that my spy work is never done, and neither is yours.”
Grimley shot me a sour look. I grinned and scratched his head right in between his horns, just where he liked.
He sighed and leaned into my touch. “Very well. Let me summon Fern—”
Thump.
Another shadow swooped down from the sky and landed next to Grimley. The shadow popped up, also morphing into a gargoyle, although this creature’s face was more rounded, and her jade-green eyes matched the tiny veins of green running through her light gray skin. She too had come here all the way from Glitnir.
“Hello!” Fern chirped in a much lighter, feminine voice than Grimley’s low, gravelly grumble. “Ready to fly, Princess Gemma?”
I grinned again, then scratched Fern’s head as well. She also had two horns, although hers were a bit smaller, since she was younger than my Grims and not yet fully grown like he was.
“Almost, Fern. And I’ve told you countless times to call me Gemma.”
The female gargoyle reared back, a horrified look on her face. “But you are a princess—our beloved princess—and you should always be addressed as such.”
Grimley rolled his eyes. Fern kept smiling at me, even as she lashed out with her tail and snapped the flat edge of the arrow on the end against Grimley’s shoulder. He glowered at her, but Fern merely sniffed in return and sat upright, perching on her paws as prettily as a cat.
Reiko stepped out onto the balcony and closed the doors behind her. “This is a bad idea,” she muttered.
I arched an eyebrow. “Don’t tell me that Reiko Yamato, skilled warrior, fierce dragon morph, and accomplished spymaster, is afraid of flying on a gargoyle?”
She huffed. “Of course I’m not afraid of flying. I flew on a strix when I followed you and the Mortans back to Blauberg, remember?”
“But?”
“But the strix had a saddle and reins and harness straps.” Reiko eyed Fern with wariness. “This gargoyle has none of those things, which exponentially increases the odds of me falling to my death.”
“Don’t worry. I’ve ridden on Fern plenty of times, and she is an excellent flier. Saddle or no saddle, she won’t let you fall off. Besides, this is the quickest, easiest way to reach the mine.”
“Very well.” Reiko stabbed a finger at me. “But if I die, then I’m coming back to haunt you. Dragons are good at that.”
I grinned again. “I would be delighted to be haunted by the great Reiko Yamato. Now, let’s go see if the rumors are true. If any Mortans are lurking around Haverton, then I want to thoroughly fuck up whatever they’re doing here.”
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