Yet Lysandra remained at his side. Made no move to run.
“Please,” he said to her.
Lysandra only linked her fingers through his in silent answer. And challenge.
His heart cracked at that refusal. At the hand, shaking and cold, that clung to his.
He squeezed her fingers tightly, and did not let go as he faced his commanders. “We—”
“Wyverns from the north!”
The screamed warning shattered down the battlements, and Aedion and Lysandra ducked as they whirled toward the attack coming at their backs.
Thirteen wyverns raced from the Staghorns, plunging toward the city walls.
And as they shot toward Orynth, people and soldiers screaming and fleeing before them, the sun hit the smaller wyvern leading the attack.
Lighting up wings like living silver.
Aedion knew that wyvern. Knew the white-haired rider atop it.
“HOLD FIRE,” he bellowed down the lines. His commanders echoed the order, and all the arrows that had been pointed upward now halted.
“It’s …,” Lysandra breathed, her hand dropping from his while she walked forward a step, as if in a daze. “It …”
Soldiers still fell back from the city walls as Manon Blackbeak and her Thirteen landed along them, right before Aedion and Lysandra.
It was not the witch he had last seen on a beach in Eyllwe.
No, there was nothing of that cold, strange creature in the face that smiled grimly at him. Nothing of her in that remarkable crown of stars atop her brow.
A crown of stars.
For the last Crochan Queen.
Panting, rasping breaths neared, and Aedion glanced away from Manon Blackbeak to see Darrow hurry onto the city walls, gaping at the witch and her wyvern, at Aedion for not firing at her—her, whom Darrow believed to be an enemy come to parley before their slaughter.
“We will not surrender,” Darrow spat.
Asterin Blackbeak, her blue wyvern beside Manon’s, let out a low laugh.
Indeed, Manon’s lips curved in cool amusement as she said to Darrow, “We have come to ensure that you don’t, mortal.”
Darrow hissed, “Then why has your master sent you to speak with us?”
Asterin laughed again.
“We have no master,” Manon Blackbeak said, and it was indeed a queen’s voice that she spoke with, her golden eyes bright. “We come to honor a friend.”
There was no sign of Dorian amongst the Thirteen, but Aedion was reeling enough that he didn’t have the words to ask.
“We came,” Manon said, loud enough that all on the city walls could hear, “to honor a promise made to Aelin Galathynius. To fight for whatshepromised us.”
Darrow said quietly, “And what was that?”
Manon smiled then. “A better world.”
Darrow took a step back. As if disbelieving what stood before him, in defiance of the legion that swept toward their city.