Authors: Cheyenne McCray
Surprisingly, the rope moved closer to Copper's fingertips. He flew off it and then back to itâharder this timeâswinging on it as it came even closer to Copper's hand. Familiars were stronger than their forms, and obviously Zephyr had more strength than she'd realized. “A little more, Zeph,” she said.
He buzzed off, then rammed his little body into the rope, causing it to swing close enough for her to grab.
With relief she gripped the rope. “Thank you, Zeph.”
The fingers of her other hand slid across the boulder's surface.
She lost her hold.
Her feet slipped out from under her.
Copper cried out as she fell.
She clenched her fingers tightly around the rope. It burned her palm as she slid a few feet down. She grabbed the rope with her free hand and with a jerk and a cry she brought herself to a halt.
Copper clung to the rope, tendons stretched tight, her arms aching. She brought her knees up around the rope and crossed her feet at the ankles as she'd done in gym class all those years ago when she was in high school. Her whole body was coated in sweat now and her heart beat like crazy. She wanted to rest, but her muscles burned and her body cried for relief. Good thing she'd been doing all those pull-ups during her imprisonment.
“Okay.” She sucked in her breath as her familiar landed on her ear. “Here we go, Zeph.”
She started to slowly ease down the rope. One hand under the other. One hand under the other.
How much farther?
she asked herself.
The tension in the rope vanished.
The rope dissolved in her fingers.
She dropped.
Copper screamed as she fell. Wind rushed past her face. She braced herself for the impact she knew was coming.
She fell. And fell. And fellâ
With a
thud
and a
whack
she landed on her ass. A snapping sound. She fell back. Her skull struck the hard-packed earth. She swore she saw little lights sparking in her mind. Her entire body ached, from her head to her back to her tailbone.
Groaning, she pushed herself to a sitting position. It was pitch-black . . .
Copper's pulse jumped as she realized she'd just landed on her wand. Her hand shook as she reached back and withdrew her wand from her back pocket. Already she could feel that it had been flattened in the middle since it was only made of copper. Heart sinking, she brought it in front of her, focused her magic on it. Rather than a quick illumination, it slowly grew just faint enough that she could see. She looked closer at her wandâ
The quartz-crystal point had cracked. The tip had fallen off.
“Nooooooo!” She shook it, as if that would possibly fix it, and peered at it again. “Fuck, fuck, fuck!”
Again she tried to make it work, but nothing helped.
She crouched on her knees and wrapped her hands around her belly. “Now what am I going to do?” she whispered. “Now how am I going to help Silver?”
Zephyr buzzed up to her ear and he sounded more than sympathetic, he sounded incredibly worried.
She had to have her wand to do magic. She wasn't any good at hand witchcraft like her sister was. When she became proficient with her wand at a young age, she had completely relied upon it.
Copper held the wand up and the meager light glinted
on the broken crystal quartz on the floor of the cave. She scooped it up from the dry dirt and her stomach pitched as she stared at the piece in her hand. Maybe a spell could fix it. The round crystal at the other end of the wand was unscathed, so maybe it would help.
Her hands trembled as she tried to fit the shard to the broken crystal at the end of the wand. Ignoring the pain in her back, neck, and head, and the burn from the rope on her hands, she sat cross-legged on the floor of the tunnel and held the shard between her thumb and forefinger as she said her spell.
What was broken will be remade,
For this crystal is needed to aid.
In fighting the evil this way come,
With this wand good shall be from.
By the earth and fire will this be forged,
So that all that is evil may be scourged
.
Copper held her breath as the broken part of her wand glowed. A soft gold, not the brilliant light she was accustomed to. The glow reflected through the broken shard, casting fractured light throughout the huge tunnel. Her fingers that held the shard felt a horrible burning sensation. Tears of pain prickled at the backs of her eyes.
When she didn't think she could take any more, the wand light went out. The crystal shard fell from her fingers and into her lap. “No, no, no, no!” she shouted and her voice bounced against the walls of the cave.
This time a tear did roll down her cheek, and with one fist she pounded the earth beside her in frustration, anger, and fear. This hadn't happened in her dream-vision. She'd had her wand,
dammit
!
How could she get out of this mess? Then her chest seized. She had to get to Silver. She had no choice. What if
her sister lay dying at this very moment? What about Silver's baby?
Pain shooting through her body, Copper eased to her feet and stuffed the shard in her pocket. She raised her stupid wand high enough that its minimal glow let her see that she was in a huge tunnelâbig enough for the giant to travel through. That was different from her dream, too.
She wiped her hands on her jeans and started down the tunnel, which led in only one direction. The other side was blocked. Rocks crunched beneath her feet and the smell of freshly dug earth was strong. No doubt the giant had widened the Drow tunnel when he'd made his way to the top.
It seemed as though she had been walking for an hour before she finally saw an opening into some kind of chamberâand heard noises. She got down on her hands and knees and crawled toward the opening, certain her wand light was too dim for anyone to see. Her thumb and forefinger still stung from when she'd tried to repair the wand, and the dirt beneath her fingers and palms magnified the pain from the rope burn.
When she reached the edge of the chamber she blinked in the darkness. Her eyes had become adjusted to seeing with very little light, and her heart caught in her throat as she saw four giants. Two lay dead in the center of the chamber, their bodies riddled with arrows and holes the arrowheads had made when they exploded in the giant bodies. Their throats were slashed, too. Copper recognized those arrows. They belonged to the Drow.
Like the other giant Tiernan and the Drow had fought, these giants were hunchbacked, had skin of bark brown with stringy mosslike brown hair. Their eyes were all a brilliant green and their teeth mossy green and jagged.
Scattered on the floor were shields the same size as the one the other giant had used, as big as a garage door. Two
clubs the size of a commuter plane lay haphazardly near the giants.
The two living giants carried nothing. However, they were making grunts and other sounds of fury as they looked upon what must have been guards to the gatesâgates that surely led the Drow closer to Underworld.
Each of the enormous beasts grabbed a dead giant by the foot and began dragging it across the floor of the chamber to a huge tunnel on the other side of the room. Big ponds of blood remained behind and some streaked the floor as the bodies were hauled away. The smell of the giants and the blood was like garbage left out in the sun too long.
The blood looked fairly fresh, so the Drow must have passed this way not long ago. That thought actually gave her some hope. Maybe she'd still reach them before it was too late.
Adrenaline rushing through her body, heightening her senses, Copper scrambled from out of the tunnel and onto the dirt floor of the giant chamber. She bolted across it, dodging the pools of blood, and running toward the opposite wall where she saw another large tunnel. Goddess, it was so far!
When she reached the midpoint of the chamber, she heard the rumble of a giant nearby. She cast a look in the direction the two giants had gone through and her blood rushed in her ears when she saw that one of the giants had come back. Thanks to being a track star when she was in high school, she was able to double her speed.
Earth pounded and it shook dirt and rocks loose from the ceiling of the chamber as the giant rushed toward her, its huge steps giving it an advantage she didn't have. Terror knifed through her as the beast drew closer.
Copper was almost to the tunnel. She pushed herself harder, faster, and slipped through its entrance. The barely glowing wand kept her from smacking into walls as she
ran, and she prayed there wasn't a wall that ended this passageway.
The only problem was that the tunnel was large enough for the giant to crawl in after her. Chest heaving and sweat pouring down her brow, she continued to run. Her thighs burned, her lungs burned. She ran straight into a cobweb and wiped it out of her face as she heard the grunting and panting of the giant still behind her. It was a tighter squeeze for the giant, but it was gaining on her.
She felt Zeph leave her ear and she didn't have time to stop to call him back. What if he got caught in the cobweb? Did he have enough magic to free himself?
In the next moment she heard the giant bellow. The pounding behind her ceased as the giant cried out in obvious pain and fury.
Zephyr! The familiar had attacked the giant, probably stinging it in the face multiple times. Goddess, how she loved that little guy.
Even though she could barely breathe, and her body ached, she kept running until she was positive nothing was behind her.
She bent over, hands on her thighs, her head dizzy, legs and arms trembling. Her braid flopped over her shoulder. She straightened and tipped back her head, trying to control her breathing and slow down the racing of her heart. Just like when she'd raced in track meets in high school, she knew she had to walk off the run. Her face was hot and her chest still burned.
Copper braced her hands on her hips and walked forward, barely able to see because her damaged wand was peeking out from her clenched fist at her side.
She took a step forward. Her shoe met nothing.
With a scream she tumbled into darkness again.
Hawk met up with Tiernan outside the brown gates of the court with Keir at his side. Keir was Hawk's bastard-born half brother and held little love for Hawk. Keir was a formidable warrior, had a scar across one cheek, and fought like the hounds of Underworld. He had returned to Other-world after Samhain to attend to the training of additional D'Danann warriors who were to join them in Copper's world.
“I have enlisted more of our brethren. They will join us shortly,” Hawk said to Tiernan. His features were still twisted with anger, his hand clenched around his sword hilt. “I shall kill Darkwolf with my bare hands when we meet. And if Silver or our babe is injured, I shall kill him again.”
Keir's arms crossed his chest and his look was thunderous. He might have no love for his half brother, Hawk, but he obviously respected and cared for Silver.
Tiernan felt the same way about Silver. And Copper . . . he couldn't find the words to express himself.
Hawk gave Tiernan a long measured look as they waited
for the warriors. Tiernan could hear the men and women coming in the distance.
“You have been trifling with Copper's heart,” Hawk said. “If you hurt her, D'Danann brother or no, I shall have to flay you.”
“I deserve that beating. I have already hurt her.” Tiernan gave a great sigh as Hawk's eyes darkened. “However, I hope she will have me once I explainâand now that I have freed myself from my responsibilities of the court.” He raked his hand through his hair and scrubbed his scalp in frustration. “I broke my vow to Airell. I gave all my wealth to Urien so that he may rise in stature within the courts to wed her. My parents have disowned me, but what is important to me is Copper.”
Hawk raised one brow. “All your wealth? Your stature?”
“My responsibilities. My honor.” Tiernan pushed his fingers through his hair. “If Copper does not take me, then I will choose to live the warrior's life with the rest of the D'Danann.”
Tiernan was just about to ask Hawk how many D'Danann would be joining them when Urien came tearing through the gates, a Faerie riding on his shoulder. “Tiernan! This Faerie has news for you.”
“Riona?” Tiernan's belly churned when Urien reached him. For the Faerie queen to bring tidings herself, the news she carried would not be good. “What brings you this way?”
The Fae cousin to the D'Danann used her tiny hand to push her black hair from her face. She looked as if she were winded from a long flight. Lavender Faerie dust sprinkled Urien's shoulder with every movement her wings made.
“Copperâ” The Faerie sounded tired, which surprised Tiernan further. “Balor has blocked Elvin entries and exits from Copper's world to Otherworld. Cassia, the other witchesâno one was able to follow. Copper has gone
alone to face Darkwolf and the Drow to save Silver. Her sister is in mortal peril.”
Shock arrowed through Tiernan's chest.
“Speak, Faerie,” Hawk commanded, obviously impatient for news of his mate.
The queen gave him a haughty look and flew straight from Urien's shoulder to buzz in front of Hawk's nose. “I will answer your questions only because Copper is friend to the Faeries and we fear greatly for her safety.”
The other warriors arrived and the situation was quickly explained to them. “How shall we get to this place? Is it a long journey?” Tiernan asked.
Riona nodded. “It is far, and it was only due to magical flight that I was able to arrive as quickly as I have.”
“Then how shall we reach her?” Tiernan said between gritted teeth.
The queen looked from Tiernan to Hawk. “You will need to go to the Elvin transference point and ask the aid of the Great Guardian.”
Immediately shouts of agreement and disagreement broke out among the D'Danann warriors. Tiernan watched for a moment as Hawk started forward with no hesitation. His first wife, who had passed to Summerland, had been half-Elvin, and Hawk had maintained his ties to the Elves despite the animosity between Fae and Elves.