Peta (An Elemental Series Novella, 3.5) Read Online Free Page A

Peta (An Elemental Series Novella, 3.5)
Book: Peta (An Elemental Series Novella, 3.5) Read Online Free
Author: Shannon Mayer
Tags: Urban Fantasy
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ear.
    Without any warning, she wriggled about, forcing Cactus to grab her ankles. Fear laced each breath I took as I dug my claws in deep to her leather vest so I wouldn’t fall. What was she thinking? Had she lost her mind?
    None of my other charges had been this reckless . . . no that wasn’t entirely true. The first had been like this.
    Yes, Talan had been exactly like this, reckless and bold to a fault. It was why I’d lost him.
    I stared at the Terraling’s hands as she gripped the rock. The stone molded under her fingers, making perfect handholds.
    From what I knew of Terralings that was an old ability. One that had been lost long before my time even.
    “We need to discuss this later. You shouldn’t be able to mold rock like that,” I said.
    Using her handholds she flipped over the edge and dropped in a crouch to the floor below the ledge.
    The smell of firewyrms overwhelmed me. Dirt Girl leaned forward, cooing softly to two hatchlings. Like tiny, sinuous white dragons, they stared at us, hissing. I could understand them, but the shocking part was, so could she.
    How in the name of the mother goddess was that possible?
    A thump behind us snapped my head around.
    Mouse turds.
    Coal, the Ender she thought was a traitor stood behind us. So much for keeping them apart. “Get back, idiot, you don’t know what they are capable of.”
    He grabbed Dirt Girl’s arm and jerked her hard enough to send us tumbling ass over teakettle, right out into open space. I let out a screech as I dug my claws deeper into the leather.
    No matter what, I wasn’t letting her go. Even if it meant I would fall to my death with her.
    A flash of white scales and our momentum was stopped and we were being held above the ground.
    The male firewyrm had us and scrambled us back up to the ledge.
    What we saw when we peered over was the young female firewyrm lying on the ground, blood pooling around her and staining her white scales; Coal stood over her with his black club raised.
    “Get away from her,” the Terraling snapped as she scrambled forward. She called the earth and it threw Coal backward into the wall, smacking his head hard enough to knock him out.
    She ran to the firewyrm, laying her hands on her side.
    “Spirit can heal, Dirt Girl. I don’t know how, but I know it can. If it isn’t too late,” I said softly. I was sure she wouldn’t try. To use Spirit was to lose a piece of yourself every time you did so. For her to try on a creature of no consequence, someone she didn’t even know, was beyond unlikely.
    Dirt Girl closed her eyes and Spirit flickered through her, pumping into the lifeless body. She would try and save her?
    Now do you see the value in Larkspur?
    I did see it, and it still scared me. More than if she were like the others. Because if she was this strong of heart and soul, this sound of mind and morals . . . how much worse would it be when I lost her?
    The answer is simple, my cat. Don’t lose her.
    Don’t lose her.
    I licked Lark’s cheek, swiping away tears she didn’t seem to know were there. “You can’t save her, Dirt Girl. She’s gone too long. That is why Spirit fights you, I believe. I think she was already beyond your reach.”
    Saying goodbye to Scar, as she so aptly named him, she climbed up onto the ledge to find Cactus out cold with a goose egg on his head. Without hesitation, she healed him, though I felt the dip in her energy.
    Our bigger problem was Fiametta showing up.
    The queen surprised me, but more so because Jag, her familiar was behind her. His eyes met mine and he slowly shook his head. There was nothing he could do to stay her hand.
    I’d already known that.
    Coal pulled himself up behind us.
    I knew what was coming, there was no way around it. Coal would fight us on this, would try to make it look like Lark was a troublemaker. I whispered into her ear, “He will not go down easy. Be wary.”
    Coal walked right into the trap we’d set, laying claim to hurting Cactus which only
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