She heard the soldiers before she saw them. They were dressed in black and bore down on them with murderous intent. What could she hope to do against an entire squad of trained men? Teja looked back at the frightened, tired children.
Teja turned around and met them with her sword drawn. Heat soared through her and she felt a surge of strength.
It was only after, as she stood in the center of her fallen enemies’ charred bodies, that she noticed her body had become a beacon of its own.
Those she protected stared at her with more fear than they had of the soldiers.
Claw thought of her dream again. It had seemed so real. She remembered the fatal stroke. Hell, she could feel it. Dusk had spoken of previous lives. Claw believed in reincarnation, like most. Was this who she had been, this Raederle?
The conversation caught her attention and she sighed. They were arguing again. Or Dusk was arguing. Leviathan never seemed to raise his voice, but by now Claw could detect the agitation. Dusk had lived a life of knowledge, privilege, and respect. Leviathan was more familiar with the struggle to work and support his family. Claw understood both of them, but didn’t fit with either. She lay somewhere in the middle. She’d had only a basic education, and the only family she cared about was long dead. She’d thrown herself into her life as a soldier, only to have that taken away as well. Now this Anathema business.
She thought again of Raederle. A powerful warrior and a mother. And there was some connection with that Wraith. Claw wondered that, if Raederle was her from the First Age, would she be that women again? Were fate and destiny strong than her life experiences and choices?
