“About her surrendering—”
“The baneblood broke our deal!” Meliai cried, storming into the barroom. The crowd began to quiet. “Instead of bartering, he robbed me of a treasured possession! He threatened me and the entire covey!”
“Is that true?” Dalli asked.
Nod. He unslung his bow and nocked an arrow, readying for a return to Val Hall.
Dalli raised her face to him. “You are yet again the coveys’ most wanted man—but for an entirely different reason.” Just before he traced, she mouthed, I am so proud of you.
SIXTY-THREE
As more and more power gathered inside Jo, low creatures in the surrounding swamps fled with whimpers.
They should flee. Nïx had compared Jo to a nuclear weapon.
Ah-ah, Valkyrie, try supernova. No longer did Jo wish for a power emergency brake; she let her telekinesis mount.
The force was as strong as steel, yet light as air. Just like her, it was hot and cold, alive and dead.
Black clouds gathered above that eerie red funnel, mushrooming. Lightning bombarded the property, striking the copper rods.
With a wave of her hand, she raised one rod and launched it at the wraiths. They shrieked even more piercingly, but repelled her javelin. With both hands, she telekinetically lifted all the rods, letting them hover menacingly. The wraiths tightened their ring, bracing for impact.
“How’s this for a white flag?” She hurled half of them at the wraiths. The red tempest jolted and recoiled with each hit, but managed to reform.
Hmm. All this pretty lightning . . . She brought the remaining rods to the very edge of the Scourge, positioning them just so—
BOOM! The first lightning bolt struck a rod; the metal channeled sizzling electricity straight to the wraiths.
Jo grinned. Fires had always been free fun, but this was so much better.
Rune didn’t know what shocked him more: the sight of his mate attacking Val Hall, or the presence of Blace, Sian, Darach, and Allixta with Curses. He’d spotted them watching from a distance.
Josephine had arranged copper rods in the air, using the Valkyries’ own lightning against them. She looked so small and delicate to be wielding such power. Those black tear tracks were like war paint against her ghostly white skin, highlighting her uncanny eyes. Her outline shimmered between bolts.
And I thought I would need to save her?
He wanted to trace to her side, but knew she’d unleash her fury on him. Though he deserved it, he needed to be in one piece once the Valkyries attacked.
Any second now, they’d spill out.
Seeming bored with the lightning, Josephine let fly all the rods, a volley of spears. The Scourge shrieked as one.
Then her attention fell on the closest oak tree. Immense, old. Probably filled to the brim with eavesdropping nymphs.
Josephine waved her hand, and the tree shot into the sky, roots exploding from the earth, like a rocket dusting off.
Nymphs within screamed, which she seemed to enjoy. When the tree plummeted, she batted it into the wraiths.
It connected in an explosion of groaning wood. She teed up another oak, then another, batting them one at a time, a barrage of cracking trunks and limbs.
Rune traced to the other Møriør. Never taking his eyes off her, he asked them, “What are you doing here?”
“We’re watching your mate,” Sian said. “Well done. She’s horrifyingly lovely.”
Rune slung his bow over his chest and returned his arrow. “How did you know Josephine’s mine?”
“Orion told us days ago she would be revealed this night at Val Hall,” Blace said. “He suggested you might need our a.s.sistance.”
Rune needed all the help he could get. On his own, he was f.u.c.king up the most important thing that had ever happened to him. It’d taken him this much anguish just to realize he could be the male his mate needed.
Sian scratched his head. “I can’t believe I asked how we would know her. I’d say one female is calling our attention.”
“What is she?” Blace asked, staring at her.
“Half vampire, half phantom.”
Sian whistled. “Those are rare.”
“And powerful.” Blace tore his gaze from Josephine. “If she’s your mate, why is she attacking alone? And why do you smell like a nymph’s bed at night’s end?” Blace had always been amused by Rune’s exploits; now he looked disappointed. “You’re mated, and you’re still with your tarts?”
Allixta sneered, “Once a wh.o.r.e, always a wh.o.r.e.”
Rune growled at her—hitting too close. “I was going to sleep with a nymph in exchange for a way around the wraiths. Josephine’s younger brother is trapped inside. She’s been separated from him for more than half her life.”
“I gather she wasn’t on board with the nymph plan,” Sian said. “Does she know she’s your mate?”
Rune nodded. “I bungled this. I hurt her. I ended up stealing the prize I’d sought instead of bedding the nymph”—they raised their brows at that—“but it was already too late.”
“What can we do?” Blace asked.
“If the Valkyries allow Josephine entry, she’ll storm the lion’s den without hesitation. I’ll try to stop her, and in her present mood, she’ll put me into the ground.” He pictured her breaking his bow and planting it over his grave site. Rune dug into his pocket, taking out the fire-red feather. “I must be able to follow her inside.” He needed his new arrow ready—now. Sweating, he split the feather with his claw.
Allixta said, “Is that what I think it is?”