“Rogan…”
I puled at the door but it was worthless. Ignoring the prick of tears behind my eyes I peered through the bars. There was nothing there to see. Just a narrow, dark staircase leading upwards into the house. I whirled around, my eyes narrowing on the window. I ran at it but couldn’t reach it. I twisted around to glare at Wolfe. “Can you get your ass up for a minute to see if these bars wil shift?”
He pinned me to the wal with a disgusted look. “I’m the Captain of the Royal Guard, Rogan, not an idiot. I tried the window and the door as soon as they left us in this damn celar.”
I deflated instantly, but refused to show my fear. “Wel, we have to do something.”
“The only chance we get is if they let us out of here.”
Reluctantly hearing the wisdom in his statement, I nodded and made my way back over to my spot at the wal. I slumped down to the ground and stared straight ahead. It was then I became aware of how much I needed a bath. I wrinkled my nose. Being kidnapped was not fun.
Wolfe grunted and muttered a curse under his breath.
“If you’ve got something to say, say it,” I snapped.
“Oh it’s nothing,” his words were laced in heavy sarcasm, “Just relaxing, you know, thanking my fortunate stars for being the one who was put in charge of protecting you.”
“Hey!” I whipped around to scowl at him. “No one asked you to protect me! To folow me!” He roled his eyes. “I’m the Princezna’s Captain, Lady Rogan, and you are the most important person in her life. Not to mention the last of the Azyl and the only bloody person who knows where the Somna Plant is! It’s my job to protect you. And you make it
very
difficult.”
“I went for a walk!”
“And got us kidnapped by creepy… Iavi… people!” He spat.
“Oh dear haven,” I groaned, and leaned back against the cold brick wal, closing my eyes. “Wil you get over it, already?” He spluttered, “Get over it? Get over it? Do you have any idea what this could do to me? What if I can’t get us out of here, Rogan?! What if something happens to you?!”
“Relax. It’s not like they’l blame you and you’l lose your job.” I sighed heavily. “I can’t believe I got kidnapped with Captain Wolfe Stovia. Talk about fun.”
“You are such a brat.”
I smiled, glad I was annoying him. “And you are such a pompous, untrustworthy snake.” I felt his indrawn breath without looking at him, and determinedly squished the guilt that seized my body.
Before he could reply, the key turning in the door made us both sit up, alert and wary. A huge, burly man with long dark hair puled back into a messy queue stroled into the celar. His intimidating figure seemed to take up the entire space as he watched us like a predator, studying its prey.
“We’ve brought ye food.” He had a slight accent, his words roling and unrefined. He nodded at someone and a young man came into the room carrying a tray.
“One move and I run ye through,” the big man warned, his hand going to the hilt of a sword strapped to a belt around his hip.
I looked at Wolfe for guidance but he just kept his eyes trained on the larger of the men. The young man came forward, keeping his distance from us, and laid the tray down on the ground. He looked up at me as he picked one bowl off of it and slid it towards me. As he did the same for Wolfe’s bowl, his eyes never left me, and I squirmed under his strange regard. He watched me with a clinical interest that was extremely disturbing. I waited for Wolfe to do something. But he just sat there.
“I need to use the… I have need of… I need to relieve myself,” I finished, blushing at my impulsive outburst.
“Relieve yerself?” The big man grinned. “Ye mean ye need to use the piss pot?”
I flushed even harder at his crassness but nodded, hoping he would let me out of the celar enough for me to find my bearings.
“There’s one in the corner.” He grinned even harder. “Behind the changing screen.”
I was horrified. “You are jesting?”
He shook his head. “If ye’re that desperate, ye’l use it.”
Disgusted, I could do nothing but wait with bated breath for them to leave and then I turned on Wolfe. “Why didn’t you do something?” He shrugged and grabbed the bowl and bread that had been left for him. “He had the upper hand. Plus… I’m hungry.” I think my jaw may have hit the ground at how blasé he was. Infuriated with not only him but myself, wishing I had somehow had a life that prepared me more for the kind of hogwash that kept happening to me, I snatched my bowl up and bit out, “Wonderful. Just wonderful. Let me know when you decide to start working on that whole protecting me bit you keep spouting.”
He threw me a look but didn’t retort… which annoyed me more than I would have liked.
When we had finished eating he finaly said, with a mischievous smile in his voice, “You know if you need to…
relieve
yourself… I could hum, or sing… so you’re not embarrassed, you know by the noi-”
I blushed so hard my face could have warmed the guard around a camp site. “I understand your meaning.” I stopped him.
“I’m just saying I-”
“You could sing, yes, yes, very funny.”
He nearly choked himself to death laughing when three hours later I made him do just that, as I darted behind the changing screen to use the chamber pot.
Worse stil, he actualy had a very nice singing voice.
“I realy am getting tired of people manhandling me,” I murmured, covering my fear with bravado and ignoring the bite of the dagger at my neck. I tried not to think how ironic it was that only a few days ago I had someone else in the position I was now in.
“Rogan,” Wolfe murmured back in warning.
I shrugged and the gypsy at my back pressed the blade harder against my skin and I winced as it cut.
“Hey!” Wolfe growled in outrage, making a move toward me. The two huge gypsies holding him in their grasp reeled him back in.
“I told ye, the girl gets it if ye make a move to attack.” The man holding me was the one from yesterday with the messy queue and hand-me-down gentleman’s clothing. The hand he wrapped around my waist tightened and he puled me back against him so I was flush with his body. “And ye,” he whispered softly, threateningly in my ear, “Keep it quiet. Or I’l find a far more pleasurable way to occupy yer mouth.” Aghast and repulsed, humiliated at being treated this way in front of Wolfe, who eyed the gypsy as if the man had just signed his own death warrant, I immediately decided it would be best if I shut up. The four men in the celar with us were huge. What on havens did these people eat?
“Now,” the gypsy continued, “We’re going for a little walk outside. And ye’re both going to behave.” I noticed how measured his words were, as if he had to concentrate on his enunciation.
I tried to catch Wolfe’s eye to see if he had a plan but the gypsy pushed me ahead and I stumbled, my throat nearly catching the blade edge again.
A menacing growl rumbled from behind me. “If you want me to behave, you better stop putting her life in danger,” Wolfe warned in a tone that would have intimidated a lesser man.
The gypsy grunted but he was more careful with me as he took us upstairs. The overwhelming light made my eyes tear. I realy only caught a glimpse of a cosy parlour as we were taken out the front door of the modestly sized farmhouse we were being kept in. As he dragged me down the porch stairs, my eyes widened at the fields in front of me. Dozens of tents scattered the farm; dogs, cats running around, horses grazing leisurely, some sheep and cattle off in the distance. In the centre was a huge stone campfire, unlit, but stil surrounded by the comings and goings of the gypsies.
“Come on,” the gypsy grunted and pushed me ahead. We made our way past a few tents, people stopping to stare at us curiously. Finaly he stopped us at a smal tent made from blue, purple and red patchwork and dropped the dagger from my throat.
“Vrik,” a soft, seductive voice caled to him and we al turned as a dark haired beauty sauntered over to us, her hips swishing her drab skirts back and forth. The worn blouse and grey skirt did nothing to detract from her exoticness. My spine stiffened in insult as she looked over me distastefuly and instantly dismissed me. Worse, she turned to Wolfe and her eyes widened appreciatively – she even licked her lips. “Are these them?” she asked Vrik without taking her eyes off Wolfe.
The gypsy behind me answered, so I assumed he was Vrik, “Yes. Selena wants to see them.” She nodded without question and then turned back to undressing Wolfe with her eyes. My heart picked up pace as I watched Wolfe stare back at her, expressionless. “Can I have this one, Vrik, when ye’re done with him?”
He snorted. “Scarla, we haven’t even sent the message off to Javinia that we have them. A little patience, please.” She flashed her black, cat-shaped eyes at him. “But I want him!”
“I’m sure the lad wil be more than happy to see to ye when we reach an agreement with Markiza Raven. But until then he’s a prisoner, alright.” Scarla pouted and reached out to trail a hand down Wolfe’s chest. Wolfe flinched. “I’m not happy about this, Vrik. Perhaps I should speak with papa?”
“Papa wil tel ye the same thing. Now leave, Scarla.”
It was obvious these two il-mannered being were siblings. Scarla huffed a little more and then went up onto her tiptoes to whisper in Wolfe’s ear. I don’t know what she said but I don’t think I had ever seen Wolfe blush before. My heart thumped and my own cheeks flushed. I looked away quickly, gritting my teeth.
When Scarla left, Vrik grabbed my arm tight and thrust me into the tent, the other men and Wolfe at our backs. Immediately my eyes adjusted to the dimness of the tiny tent. I stopped, startled by the sight of the older woman in front of me. Inside was bare; grass beneath my feet, no furniture, except to my complete bemusement a gorgeous old library desk that would have looked more at home in a study at the Palace. The old woman sat patiently behind it.
“Here ye are, Selena. Our prisoners.” Vrik pushed me towards her and I caught myself on the desk. “Let us know if ye see anything that’l tel us about any future land agreements that we may come to with that damn Rada.”
Selena looked at him blankly, as if he were below her interest. “Take the girl back outside. I wish to speak with the boy first.” As I was dragged back outside, past Wolfe, I threw him a questioning look. But he was staring avidly at Selena. Who an earth was this woman? What was going on?
Finding myself at the mercy of other gypsies’ curiosities, I turned so my back was facing camp. Vrik just stared at me, his arms crossed over his chest.
“What’s going on?” I asked, more than a little impatient now.
“Be quiet.”
“Who is Selena?”
“I said be quiet.”
“You know you’re realy rather rude.”
The beast actualy bared his teeth and growled at me. “And ye are getting on my last nerve, Princezna.” Trying to pretend that his animal behaviour didn’t bother me, I sniffed. “I’m not a princezna.” He made a face. “Ye look it and act it.”
I did not, I huffed. I think al and al I had been taking my kidnap extremely wel. Especialy considering the terrible memories it brought back of being carted off by Wolfe’s father. I hardened in remembrance and growled back at him. “You haven’t seen anything yet.” Vrik raised an eyebrow, looking me over. And then he had the audacity to grin. “Ye might be fun after al, Princezna.” Before I could offer a disgusted retort, Wolfe was pushed out of the tent with the two gypsies at his back.
“What happened?” I asked quickly, moving towards him. Vrik instantly gripped my arm and wrenched me back.
Wolfe snarled at him and then turned back to me, his lip stil curled disdainfuly. “Nothing. The old woman’s useless.” One gypsy waloped Wolfe across the back of the head.
“Hey!” I yeled at the offending gypsy, and was rewarded with a bewildered look from Wolfe as I was shoved past him and back into the tent.
“Anything?” Vrik asked Selena without any niceties as I was forced to stand before her.
Selena’s narrowed eyes found Vrik and she shook her head. “He was blocking me somehow.”
“Blocking ye?” Vrik asked, stunned. My head swiveled between them, completely at a loss as to what they were discussing.
“Hmm,” she answered. “Keep a careful eye on him.”
My patience snapped. “What is going on?” I demanded, my eyes burning into the old woman.
She arched an eyebrow at me and then smirked at Vrik. “We’ve got a live one here.”
Vrik chuckled, a dark, sinister kind of chuckle that sent shivers slithering down my spine. “Seems so.” Selena smiled at me and I got the strangest feeling she liked what she saw. “Give me your hands.” I tucked my hands behind my back. “Why?”
She winked. “I’m not going to hurt you. Just give me your hands… or I’l make Vrik hold you while we do this.” I snapped my hands out so fast she cackled. “Don’t think she likes you too much, Vrik, so I wouldn’t be getting any ideas.” Vrik grunted behind me.
Selena snatched my hands in her extremely cold ones, and I felt every wrinkle and crevice of that sandpapery touch shoot through me.
She was a mage.
Seeing the question in my eye, Selena nodded. “I’m one of the Glava, little Azyl.”
Dear haven, they had one of the Glava and a Dravilec among them. I immediately wondered if they had been colected as Syracen had done with me, Valena and Kir. “Your specialty?” I asked softly.
“I’m a reader.”
“You read people’s minds?”
“No. Just their future.”
I gulped and shook my head, trying to withdraw my hands. “I don’t want to know my future.” She cocked her head curiously, her eyes washing over me as she gripped them tighter. “What happened to you, girl, to make you so afraid of the future?”
“Wel for a start I was kidnapped by the Iavi.”
Vrik smothered a chuckle behind me as Selena glared.
“
We
won’t hurt you, girl. No. You fear something else.”
“You said you can’t read minds.”
She laughed softly, condescendingly, like I was a smal child before a teacher. “I don’t need to read minds to know that a young, inteligent, pretty girl with her whole life ahead of her should be excited at the prospect of the future. You clearly aren’t. So why are you frightened instead?”