The Blacksmith Queen Page 32

“You have eight legs.”

“So?”

“It’s strange. Don’t you think it’s strange?”

“I’m a centaur god. So no, I don’t think it’s strange.”

“But the centaurs only have four legs, soooo—”

“Can we stop talking about my legs?”

Keeley was about to tell him not to yell at her, but her furry friend did it for her. Rolling onto his belly, snarling and snapping at the god; eyes of fire blazing.

The centaur god leaned down from his extremely high position and bellowed, “You’re not even supposed to be here!”

“Why not?” she asked.

“It’s not one of the hells.”

“So? He’s here for me.”

“Your ancestors wait over there,” the god pointed out.

“I know. I can hear them. But I am not ready to face them.” Keeley bowed her head. “In my shame.”

“Oh, for the love of me, stop it! You are not to blame for your sister, idiot woman.”

“Then who is? I raised her more than my parents did. They were busy trying to put food on the table. So I took over . . . and she is what I created.”

“Is that why you sit here? Feeling sorry for yourself? When others wait for you. Wait for your return!”

“Why would they wait for me? I’m a failure.”

“Dammit, woman, how could you raise a creature that had no soul to begin with? Your sister was born the way she is. A soulless thing with only one ambition. To fill up the emptiness inside her with power. Nothing else will mean anything to her. You were taught blacksmithing by your mother and to respect the power of animals by your father. But your love of nature and people . . . that came from within you. From your soul. Your sister will never have that.”

“It doesn’t matter. I’m dead now.”

“You are not”—he cleared his throat, stopped bellowing—“You are not dead, woman. That’s why you sit here and not with your ancestors. Because you’re not dead. You just refuse to go back. So you sit here, on your rock with your pet demon wolf god—”

“Are you a god?” she happily asked her fur-covered friend. “Aren’t you the prettiest god ever?”

“—and pretend that you can just stay here forever rather than facing the remainder of your life!”

“What do you want me to do?” Keeley finally asked.

“To face your future and your sister.”

“I won’t kill my sister. Despite what she’s done, she’s still family.”

“She tried to kill you. If she were slightly stronger or you were a little weaker . . . you’d be dead now.”

“She’s blood. I won’t kill my own blood. Besides”—she sighed out—“I won’t say I deserved it, but sometimes I can be difficult. A little hard-headed. Sometimes unreasonable.”

“Wow.” The god blinked wide. “You really do care about your family. I’ve had several of my siblings attempt to destroy me and I’ve never made excuses for them.”

“But you are kind of an asshole, so is it really surprising they tried to—”

“You can stop now.” He glared down at the wheezing demon wolf god that seemed to be laughing at him. “Both of you can stop.”

“Are you sure I’m supposed to live?” Keeley wanted to know. “Are you sure you haven’t done something to me? You and my sister bringing me back, half human and rotting.”

“Trust me, woman, when I say that you are not my first choice for anything. If you had died, I’d have let you die. It would have meant nothing to me. But,” he added, “a wound like yours can take months to truly heal and even longer for you to be at your best. I have sped up that process so that you can hit the ground running. Because Beatrix is not waiting. And whether you kill her or not, you need to realize one thing: She is still a danger to you—”

“I don’t care—”

“—and the entire world.”

Keeley’s breath caught; she stared at him.

“What? You think a woman willing to kill the sister who’s always protected her would think twice about destroying whole kingdoms to get what she wants? She is determined, your sister, to rule this world. And she will not let anyone get in her way. Even if she fails, many will die. Many will die anyway, but you could help minimize the number. At the very least, give all those worthless humans something to hope for. Unless,” he added, glancing down at the demon wolf god, “it’s only your precious animals you care about.”

Keeley took in a deep breath and then told the centaur god her true feelings....

“I don’t like you. At all.”

He smirked. “Woman . . . I’m a god. I don’t give a fuck.” He turned his giant horse-and-human body so he could walk off with his eight legs, but not before he tossed at her, “Of course, Beatrix thinks of herself as a god too. So imagine what her feelings are about anything.”

CHAPTER 17

Keeley opened her eyes and quickly realized she was in a tent. She wasn’t alone either. She could hear someone humming.

But she didn’t feel unsafe. She didn’t feel frightened. Just angry.

She sat up. The woman humming had her back turned to Keeley, busy doing something with herbs at a wooden table. Keeley silently swung her legs over the side of her bed. The demon wolves were in the corner. She held her finger to her lips and they settled down, silent.

Her hammer rested against the bed and Keeley picked it up, stood . . . and walked out of the tent.

* * *

Petra turned away from her table with a potion-filled cup that she hoped would help the human woman awake. But when she looked at the bed, that woman was gone.

Her gaze searched the tent but Petra didn’t see her patient. She scowled at the demon wolves that had refused to leave while she had tended the human.

After several moments of mutual staring, she asked them, “Did you eat her?”

* * *

Quinn was just clearing the tree line near the lake when he saw her. She stood ankle-deep in the water with a ridiculous hammer in her hand, staring out over the water. She only wore a cotton shirt and nothing else. She didn’t seem bothered, though, by the cold.

He looked around, expecting to see his brother and sister as well as the woman’s own sister and cousin, but she was alone.

With a shrug, Quinn began to move toward her but she abruptly turned and walked out of the lake and over to a large boulder. He watched in fascination as she took the handle of her hammer in both hands, lifted it above her head, and brought it down, again and again, on the boulder. She battered that boulder for several minutes, but what Quinn couldn’t believe was that as she did, she broke the bloody thing into pieces with nothing more than that hammer and brute force.

Finally, after the boulder was nothing but rubble, she let out a terrifying scream filled with rage and pain and utter despair.

When the scream faded out over the river, Quinn heard, “Keeley?”

The woman’s back straightened but she didn’t turn around. She simply pointed her hammer with one hand and asked, “What did you know and when did you know it?”

The War Monk briefly closed her eyes. “I didn’t know she was going to try to—”

“What did you know and when did you know it?” the woman asked again, not to be deterred.

“My order found out about her from our seer. A few days before I arrived at your shop. That she would be named queen. None of my leaders told me, though, because they planned to have her killed. One of the elders, a friend, warned me. But . . . she’s still my sister, so . . .”

Now Keeley faced her. “You deserted your order for Beatrix?”

“Well, if I’d known she was mad, I guess I would have just let them—”

“Did you tell the boy?”

Gemma’s head twitched a bit. “What?”

“Did you tell the boy that he’d be giving up his place in your order by following you?”

“Of course I did. He insisted.”

“Good. I’m glad to hear you didn’t lie to him.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“He’s a loyal boy; he deserves a good life.”

“And I don’t?”

“I didn’t say that.”

“But you’re thinking it!”

“Oh, am I?”

“I wasn’t the one who tried to kill you! That was your precious fucking Beatrix!”

“I am aware that she tried to kill me! I can still feel where she shoved her knife into my gut!”

She suddenly swung her hammer, now pointing toward him. “And who the fuck is that?”

Gemma leaned over to look past her sister. She sighed. “That’s Quinn. Caid’s brother.”

“His brother?” Keeley looked around. “We’re in centaur territory? Why?”

“A lot has happened, Sister. A lot.”

Keeley lowered her hammer and her head.

After a brief moment, she looked at her sister and calmly said, “Tell me everything.”

Gemma nodded. “Come on. Let’s find Laila.”

* * *

Caid had been gone a total of twenty minutes, if that long. His father had insisted on an update and didn’t care that Caid had not left Keeley’s side since she’d been wounded. And yet, in those twenty minutes, the gravely wounded Keeley had disappeared and no one had seen her. Petra was convinced the demon wolves had eaten her but Caid had seen them eat . . . they would have left a lot more blood and gore behind.

Then, there she was . . . stalking out of Laila’s tent, with that stupid hammer clutched in her fist. He’d never been so happy to see such a ridiculous weapon once again gripped in her very-much-alive hand.

“Keeley! Wait!” Laila and Gemma yelled, rushing up behind her.

“With us,” Keeley ordered him as she stormed past, while Laila and Gemma continued trying to talk her out of something. But before Caid could move, there was Quinn.

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