Total pages in book: 103
Estimated words: 97071 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 485(@200wpm)___ 388(@250wpm)___ 324(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 97071 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 485(@200wpm)___ 388(@250wpm)___ 324(@300wpm)
I jerk my gaze up to her face, determined not to stand here ogling an unconscious woman, but there’s no relief to be found. She has round cheeks, a full mouth, and wide-set eyes. Her skin is pale enough that I want to get her under cover before the sun has its way with her, and her hair color is hard to determine while wet, but I think it is a few shades lighter than my own.
A spear flashes into view. I throw out my hand to stop it, but I’m too slow. “Fuck!” I tense, but it hovers in the air, its point a mere inch from her chest. A flare of violet magic surges and then disappears and the spear clatters to the deck.
I spin on Miles. “What the fuck are you doing?”
“My job,” he says flatly. “She’s not one of ours.”
No, she certainly isn’t. I don’t recognize the magic, but based on her human looks, I’d wager she’s a witch. No reason for that to intrigue me. It just means she’d be an asset if we turn her. “Our job is to offer a choice.”
“The Cŵn Annwn have no use for women like her.”
I open my mouth to tell him where he can fuck right off to, but her eyes fly open, stalling me. She takes us in with a single look and then slams her hand to her chest. Magic rises in a wave that pushes me back a full yard before I get my magic up in a shield. Several of my people aren’t so lucky. Splashes sound, quickly followed by the call, “Man overboard!”
Miles goes for the spear, but she flicks it away before he can get his hands on it. “Where the hell am I?” Her voice is hoarse, as if she had been in the sea longer than I realized.
“You, don’t move.” I point at her and then turn my glare on Miles. “Get our people out of the water. Now.”
For a moment, I think he might argue, but he finally gives a sharp nod and starts snapping commands to the crew. Within a few minutes, we’ve fished out the fallen crew and ensured there was no permanent damage done to the ship itself.
While I’ve been dealing with this, the woman has done some looking of her own. She surveys my ship in a way that makes my skin tight, like she’s assessing every inch visible for value. I know what that look means.
Thief.
Sure enough, she has something in her hand that she’s fiddling with. I recognize it instantly, and my hand goes to my hip where my flask usually is. Gone now, taken by her quick hands while I assumed she was unconscious.
Maybe Miles is right about her.
I shake my head sharply. That’s dangerous thinking. A choice. We always offer a choice. It’s the very essence of what separates us from the monsters we hunt. Their victims are not offered anything resembling mercy.
She catches me watching her play with the flask and grins, completely unrepentant. “Should I call you Captain?” Her voice is throaty, and she puts enough innuendo into the question to sink the Hag.
I take a step toward her before I catch myself. This woman is no siren—they’re all but extinct, thank the gods—but she has a pull all her own. “You’re aboard the Crimson Hag, a vessel of the Cŵn Annwn.”
Interest sharpens her eyes. I belatedly realize they’re a green that makes me think of magic and lush forests. She leans closer and makes a show of looking me up and down. “Funny, but you don’t look like a hound.”
“A hound,” I repeat.
“Mmm.” Her gaze snags on my chest and stays there. “Hounds of Annwn, the Wild Hunt, and all that. I know my Welsh myths.”
I have nothing to say to that. We aren’t a myth. We never were. But history has a way of becoming myth if given enough time and distance. There are stories about the Cŵn Annwn in a lot of realms. As long as there’s been Threshold acting as its given name between the realms, there have been the Cŵn Annwn, protecting it. If the originals occasionally shifted forms and hunted in other realms …
Well, we try not to draw attention from the originals for a reason.
The rest of us who make up the fleet of ships that sail under crimson banners are mortal enough. Even the Council, who squat back in Lyari, ruling Threshold in the originals’ absence, tend to be only slightly more long-lived.
Not that I’m about to give this stranger a history lesson on my people. “You have a choice. Join the Cŵn Annwn or be given back to the sea.”
“Wow, that’s an interesting choice, very original and not at all overdone.” She rolls her eyes.
It strikes me that she’s not at all afraid of me. I blink. I don’t know what to do with that. Even the people in Threshold, the ones it is our entire purpose to protect, are wary of us. It’s a careful balance of respect, and I do my best to ensure I never abuse my power, but this witch doesn’t know that. She doesn’t know anything about me. “It’s the only choice you have,” I snap.