The monster screeches, alerting the slayers, if not the entire city, to its presence. It wrenches in midair and lands on its side atop the city, then rolls down toward me.
Shrieking, I duck low, wedging my toes into the crevice. The monster’s body bounces, jarring the wall, and flies over my head into the canyon below. The first monster screeches and scurries in the same direction, blood dribbling from its neck. Unach must have gotten in a blow when its companion distracted it.
All of Cagmar quakes as the creature pads down its side, leaps to a cliff wall, and flees into the shadows.
My bones quiver. My blood feels thick as honey, but I have enough wits about me to reach into the belt around my hips and yank out a sling before the slayers’ attention shifts from the monsters to me. Carefully, knees weak, I stand, still gripping that single handhold. I meet Unach’s startled gaze and hold up the sling.
“Lucky sh-shot,” I stutter. My heart thumps so swiftly I can’t tell one beat from the next. But it will subside. Fear always does.
I drop down, sitting on the lip of the city, giving my spent body a moment of reprieve. But in truth, I want to make myself less visible.
I don’t want to see the stinging suspicion etching lines in Unach’s face.
Chapter 8
Unach is unharmed. She was born a Montra, but she deserves every bit of the title.
It’s late. Very late. The sun sets before I finish climbing down to the dock. I sit there for a long time, cold and weary. Unach and the others say nothing, only pull off their harnesses and set about their normal tasks, as though we’d just had a regular evening of scouting.
Azmar looks more curious than suspicious as he listens to the story of what happened, regarding me nearly the entire time.
Unach glances my way. “Did it with a sling. Never seen her use one before.”
I manage to shrug. “Haven’t had a reason to.”
Azmar offers to carry me home, but my body still buzzes with uncomfortable energy, so I walk.
When we reach it, Unach controls the lift and deliberately passes my floor. A silent invitation—or, more likely, a demand.
She lights the fire in her apartment and starts boiling water for that spicy drink she and Azmar like. I settle on the floor near the flames to warm myself. That, and I don’t want to get too comfortable with their few pieces of furniture. I’m earning my place, yes, but I do not yet feel I have won it. I settle on the floor by the fire, relaxing as the heat soothes away the near-constant gooseflesh that Cagmar’s chill breathes onto my skin. Azmar flops down on an overlarge pillow across the room, laying his head back and rubbing his eyes. Unach slips into the kitchen, returning with a single mug. Grabbing one of two wooden chairs, she drags it toward the corner where my pallet used to be and sets the mug on it.
To my dismay, she then pulls a sling and a hard bead of iron from her pocket, which she brings to me.
“Do it again.” It isn’t a request.
Keeping my face smooth, I play innocent. “Do what?”
Unach drops both sling and bead into my lap. “Hit the cup off the chair.”
Azmar lifts his head.
“I . . . I’ll break it,” I protest.
“I don’t care. I’ll glue it back together.” She grasps my upper arm and hauls me to my feet, then jerks her chin toward the opposite wall. “Let me see you hit it. It’s not far. Should be easy, right?”
My mouth dries. In truth, I’ve never used a sling in my life. I’m not sure I can get the iron bead close to its target, let alone hit it. And I’m certain Unach knows it.
“Lucky shot, Unach,” I press, tensing.
Unach’s fists rest on her hips. “Just do it, Lark.”
I pull the sling through my hands, my heartbeat picking up again.
“Unach.” Azmar’s voice slides under the building tension. “We’re all exhausted.”
“It’s one shot,” she argues.
Azmar sits up and rests his elbows on his knees. The long cords of his hair spill over his shoulders. “Based on your own account, Unach, she saved your life.”
Unach frowns.
He tips his chin toward the cup. “We shouldn’t waste resources. Leave her be.” He meets my gaze. “Go down and rest, Lark. You need it.”
I self-consciously touch the largest of the bruises on my face, wishing Azmar could read the immense gratitude I have for his intervention.
I start for the door—I have food in my apartment—when Unach settles onto the rug and says, “Rare that they breach.”
I pause. “They broke through the wall?”