Nell shrugged.

Selena flew under the portcullis into the open. Shots rang out, and she spun and landed back next to them, shifting to human. “There’s too many of them.”

Millicent rose, looked past the thick stone wall, and blinked. Hundreds of men stood just beyond the castle, clustered on each side of the roadway that led out of the cavern. Although men might not be an accurate description for some of the beings. Ghoulston must have scoured the Underground for guards. Ogres and dwarves and golems usually kept to themselves, but they had joined the ranks. Other experiments of the sorcerers faced them as well, creatures made from spells which altered man into horrors that usually avoided any contact with others.

“Ghoulston must have paid them a lot,” said Nell.

“But their hearts won’t be in it,” replied Gareth. “They’ll run at the first sign of opposition. And I doubt if Ghoulston exhausted his magic or money by coating all their bullets and blades with silver.”

Nell’s mouth dropped open. “Ye can’t be serious. I’ve never seen so many ogres in one place in me life. They won’t run—ogres like a good fight.”

Gareth narrowed his eyes, studying the far entrance that lay across the vast cavern. “What we need is a distraction.”

“What we need is to turn around and go back,” said Selena.

Gareth shook his head. “I’ve faced heavier odds than this.”

Millicent did not doubt his words. But she could not lead Nell into such danger. She grabbed the old woman’s skirt with her teeth and tugged.

“Ogres or no, we ain’t goin’ back,” snapped Nell, yanking her skirt out of Millicent’s teeth. “Ye may not care about Country and queen, Millie, but I do. We must get word to that sweet gel about Ghoulston’s evil plan. Can ye imagine spending yer life in love with the likes of him?”

“The were-cat’s right for a change,” injected Selena, curling a hand around Gareth’s muscled arm. “Stay here with me, love. I’ll make sure you are happy.”

Millicent scratched her front claws along the ground, rucking up grooves in the hard-packed earth. Sometimes she liked being unable to speak in were-form. It saved her from joining in frustrating conversations.

The small army that faced them suddenly began to sway, a murmur of sound rising like a wave through the throng. They had been seen. Yet, the guards did not advance. Perhaps they had been ordered not to unless Millicent and her companions tried to escape.

Perhaps they had time to wait for Bran and his gang to show up.

Two ogres stepped forward onto the road and began to swing their battle-axes in showy maneuvers. The ogre with the green hair missed his last catch, and his ax dropped on the other ogre’s head. A growling argument ensued, followed by swinging fists and then serious injuries. Small fights began to break out in the group of watching creatures.

Or perhaps not.

“Ogres are so stupid,” grumbled Gareth.

“Ghoulston brought them here fer a fight and they been itchin’ fer one,” added Nell. “Dunno if Bran will manage to get here before they get too restless.”

He nodded. “You’re right, ladybird.” He turned his fierce blue-eyed gaze on Millicent. “I will provide the distraction. Take your Nell and escape. I will join you as soon as I can.” And he stepped beyond the protection of the portcullis.

“No,” said Selena, grabbing his sleeve and trying to stop him. But Gareth shrugged her off as easily as he would a gnat and strode boldly out onto the road. Selena turned and glared at Millicent. “This is all your fault. If he wasn’t so worried about protecting you, he wouldn’t be taking such risks.”

Millicent growled softly. Risks? The man was committing suicide. He knew he would die, but he counted on his reemergence within the relic. But she had seen the pain he went through when he had died before. Nothing could be worse than experiencing one’s own death. And yet he offered himself for her yet again. She wished he would stop. She felt unworthy of his sacrifices.

She suspected he tried to change her by example. Tried to make her a better person… to make her a hero like him… to care for others. And she feared he might be accomplishing it. How could she cope with the responsibility of caring for so many?

Gareth strode boldly up to the ogres and they stopped fighting and bent down to listen to him. Whatever he said made them laugh, causing another ripple of sound and movement to flow through the crowd. Gareth stepped back a few paces, drew his sword, and balanced on the balls of his feet. The ogres began to circle him, making quick feints with their weapons to judge their opponent. Millicent could hear the crowd calling out wagers.

“I ain’t watchin’ that boy die again,” muttered Nell.

Millicent whined, torn between protecting Nell, and joining Gareth in his battle. Oh, she had no doubt her knight could handle a few ogres. But he would continue to challenge any comers until he fell, trying to buy them time until Bran managed to get here. Gareth had taken the first opportunity for escape, knowing Millicent had already waited too long to free Nell, and now it might cost him great pain.

A sudden burst of light and heat made Millicent jump back, slam into the bumpy stone wall of the gateway. She blinked at the roiling ball of fire that had once been her Nell, and blinked again when the explosion settled into licks of flame surrounding a magnificent bird. Millicent had seen Nell take her were-shape only a few times, and the sight still awed her. Brilliant red feathers burned with orange flame, and an elegant tail draped behind her like the train of a ball gown. Nell’s were-creature took on a bulk of four times her size, just as Millicent grew larger in her were-shape. The old woman’s appearance now matched her personality.

That graceful yellow beak opened and spat a stream of liquid fire, which spread down the roadway like an uncurling carpet of blazing fury.

Gareth had the distraction they needed. As one, the crowd of guards turned to stare back at the castle and its now-blazing gateway. The ogres took advantage of the knight’s inattention, and closed on Gareth. Millicent could swear she saw the knight’s white teeth flash in a grin as he cut the knees out from under the two Goliaths in quick succession.

Selena’s black eyes glittered with shock, and then fear, as she stared at what once had been a harmless old lady. Then she shifted to bat and took wing.

Millicent waited for the flames in the road to die before she leaped forward, confident Nell could now fend for herself. As she had feared, several more fighters attacked Gareth, stepping over the ogres’ fallen bodies to get to him.

Her knight moved with such grace and beauty he appeared to be dancing. His sword emitted quick flashes of silver in the muted beams of the fairylights on the cavern ceiling. His hair flowed around his face like a swirling river of gold, and his feet moved so quickly he often appeared to be flying a few inches above the ground.

He was simply the most beautiful thing Millicent had ever seen. And she did not want to watch him die again. She did not want to see that lithe body broken and bleeding, his handsome face white with pain.

She screamed, her cry of challenge echoing off the cavern walls, and plunged into the crowd of fighters now challenging Gareth. Millicent guarded the knight’s back, used her claws to slash at her assailants, only her long reach and speed saving her from getting sliced by a sword time and again. She heard an occasional shot ring out, but they fought too closely for the guards to avoid hitting their own people with a bullet, and few were foolish enough to try it.

A flash of red streaked from above, and a stream of Nell’s fire sent more than one monster running for their lives. Nell appeared to be concentrating on the guards who stood outside their fighting circle, careful that her lethal flame would not accidentally fall on Millicent or Gareth.

Millicent’s world narrowed down to the awareness of Gareth at her back, the next monstrous attacker to loom before her to be cut down, and the pile of fallen guards at her feet, which managed to at least slow down the next creature before it attacked.

Despite her were-strength, Millicent began to tire. She marveled at Gareth’s endurance, for he had nothing but his human abilities to draw on.

“We cannot hold them off much longer,” gasped Gareth from behind her. “Run, now, Millicent. Take ladybird out of here before—”

A creature with an enormous bald head, bulging eyes, and tentacles for hair tried to get past Gareth’s guard. Her knight lunged forward, struck quickly, and danced back again. At the same time, a volley of shots rang out, and Millicent glanced up.

A ball of fire twirled to the ground, landing with a flurry of sparks.

Millicent screamed; leaped in the direction that fallen star had landed. Some of the creatures were smart, and got out of her way. Some, she tore through. Nell had been taken down by one of their bullets, despite the distance the firebird had maintained above them, nearly touching the cavern ceiling. Despite the horrible aim of pistols, and how few of them held silver bullets. She should have taken Nell out of here. She should not have allowed the old woman to fight. Of course they would use their guns on her—and it took only one lucky shot. How could she have been so stupid? So careless with her friend’s life?

She could hear Gareth fighting behind her, trying to follow. But she had no thought but to reach Nell.

A black shape swooped above her. Selena. She had forgotten about the were-bat. Where had the sly girl been hiding? For despite the love potion, she had not gone to Gareth’s rescue.