Page 70 of The Ballad of Falling Dragons

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Such a strange feeling when all I see are smiles …

Siharna’s eyes thin as she studies Kaan, her posture stiffening. “Are you well?”

“Perfectly,” he murmurs, still smiling at the youngling—the lie tumbling from his lips so easily my brows almost jump off my face. “Raeve, this is my cousin Korie.”

That’ll explain the resemblance.

Siharna’s frown deepens.

She moves around Kaan, poking at him with her pointer finger. It only takes three jabs before he flinches, like she just plugged one of his wounds.

I slowly drape my cloak over my bleeding thigh as Siharna yanks at Kaan’s collar, looks down past it, then mutters something in a language I don’t understand. She lifts Korie, passing her off to who I suppose is her puffed minder. “Please take her home for her middae nap,” she says, still leering at Kaan. “I’ll be down soon, once I’ve had awordwith my nephew.”

Kaan hangs his head.

Dipping into a curtsy, the minder carries Korie past the Moltenmaw, toward a stairway carved in the cliff—all the while hushing the youngling’s boisterous objections. The moment they’re out of earshot, Siharna prods Kaan in the shoulder again. “Lie to me again, Kaan Vaegor, and I’ll throttle you black and blue.”

Well.

Kaan sighs, puts his fist against the ground, and presses his weight forward, using it to help him up. “I didn’t want Korie to know I’m wounded,” he drudges out. “She’s been through enou—”

“If I wrap her in feathers, she’ll never survive this world. It’ll beat her down until she forgets she has a spine and a voice and the power touseit.”

Kaan drops his gaze in silent submission, and I realize there’s a weight here. Something I don’t know the shape of. “My apologies. I shouldn’t have presumed.”

Siharna hisses, dashing her hand. Like she’s physically shoving the topic aside. “I’m guessing your carter was left behind?”

“Unfortunately. I’ll need to—”

“I sent a lark the moment Rygun leapt from the burrow. Not long after you left, to be fair. Couldn’t stop him if we tried. He obviously anticipated something would go wrong, which”—she screws up her face—“based on the filthy, bloody state of you both, I see that it has. What are they? Pins?”

“An inconvenience.” Kaan folds his arms, probably trying to hide the fact that his hands are shaking. Have been since those cracks around his eyes smoothed. He lifts his chin. “Unfortunately, I’m now a liability to this village. I fear the Tri-Council will not rest until my head is on a pike.”

They’ll have to get through me first.

Kaan’s gaze whips to me, hitting with all the might of an erupting volcano—eyes aflame, jaw stiff, his chest and arms seeming to swell like he’s fresh off the battlefield. All the while, Siharna regards me from beneath an arched brow.

Realizing I said the words aloud, I avert my gaze, the tips of my fingers flaring with so much itch I have to do exactly what Kaan’s doing.

Cross my fucking arms.

“Well, there will be nohead-pikingon my watch.” Siharna juts her chin at me. “Nor hers, it seems. You’re still more than welcome here while you wait for the Moonplume.”

My heart hitches as I realize she’s speaking about Líri … makingthisthe village Kaan mentioned in his lark.

“I’ll scatter extra patrols to ensure nobody accidentally stumbles upon the place.”

Kaan dips his head in gratitude. “We’re happy to take some of the spare rooms in the hutchkeeper’s hut so we don’t cause a stir.”

Siharna blanches, looking at Kaan like he just caused her a mortal wound. Or offended her, which in this case, I think might be worse.

“Thehutchkeeper’s hut?”

I wince.

She shakes her head and turns, charging toward the path her daughter was just carried down with a boisterous amount of sway. “You’ll stay with us at the family roost or on a path in the snow,” she tosses over her shoulder. “Your pick!”

I decide Kaan’s correct. Wearesafe here.