The Witch's Eye (15 page)

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Authors: Steven Montano,Barry Currey

BOOK: The Witch's Eye
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Cross looked at the boy while he answered Flint.

“Your son?”

Flint hesitated before he answered.

“Yes.”

Cross nodded.

“I’m sorry,” he said.  “I won’t put you in danger again.  Not if I can help it.  But Flint…I
have
to get out of here.  And not just for me.  Someone needs me.”

“Someone needs me
, too,” Flint said.  “And I’m not going to let him die on account of someone else.”  Flint’s eyes were cold and hard.  Cross saw years of pain in that gaze. 

He nodded.

 

They crossed fields of ironstone and pyrite slate
turned red beneath the bleeding sky.  The land looked burned.  They passed bone-white trees and shallow pits filled with salt and shale.

Cross knew
the area.  He’d been there before: they were a day’s ride north of Dirge.

The wagon groaned to a halt just before dusk.  Clouds of dust
covered everything in a dry white cloak.  The slavers made camp for the night.  The horses were tied, watered and fed oiled grains and oats. 

Dry
rations were passed among the jailors.  Krayker brought the prisoners cupfuls of beans and rice that had been mixed to the consistency of paste and rendered utterly tasteless.  Each prisoner was handed their own tin, so long as they were able to take hold of one; those who couldn’t because they were too wounded or fatigued to get to the bars in time were simply ignored.  Each prisoner was also handed a dram of water. 

Some minor scuffling occurred between some of the larger
slaves as they tried to bully or take each other’s portions, but Cross, Flint and Shiv were left alone, likely out of fear as to what would happen if anyone meddled with Cross again, since he’d clearly been singled out for protection by Tain.  Flint and Shiv seemed to be safe so long as they stayed close to him.

Cross had to
eat slowly in order to keep his food down.  His tongue was so dry it soaked the water up like a sun-burned sponge, and before he knew it most of the liquid was gone and he didn’t feel like he’d even taken a drink. 

Night fell
quickly.  The slavers lit a small fire and circled round it with their weapons ready.  The distant brays of Bloodwolves echoed through the black skies. 

Flint and Shiv huddled together for warmth, while Cross sat and rubbed his arms with his hands
while he shivered.  The smell of urine was strong as prisoners relieved themselves through the bars.  He was happy that’s all they did.

The camp
was in clear sight of the wagon.  Cross saw crackling flames and pots of beans and armed criminals sitting and laughing and jeering at one another.  A Vuul named Saul walked a perimeter with a 12-gauge shotgun.  The grey-skinned brute towered over them all, and he occasionally glared at the prisoners as he circled the wagon.  The empty and open plains were so dark and vast it seemed like the wagon teetered at the edge of nowhere.  Cold wind cut through the bars. 

Cross faded. 
He drifted in and out of sleep. 

“Wake up.”
  He looked up and saw the woman, Kala.  Her stark face and high cheekbones were wreathed in shadow, and her dark hair had been pulled into a top knot.  “Tain wants to see you,” she said.

The cage door opened
.  Saul kept his shotgun aimed at Cross.  Cross was surprised no one made any attempt to rush the door in spite of the gun – several of those men had looks in their eyes like death would have been preferable to spending another day locked in that cage.  Cross was almost one of them. 

Kala wrapped steel wire around his
wrists, which she secured so tight he thought he’d lose circulation in his hands.  She led him stumbling past the campfire.  His muscles felt gelatinous.  The wagon wasn’t tall enough on the inside to allow anyone to stand completely straight, so he’d been sitting or squatting for what felt like ages. 

The other slavers laughed as he
passed them by, joking about “fresh meat” and “not wanting to be in his shoes”.  Krayker made a throat-slitting motion at Cross and smiled. 

Kala led him out into the darkness. 

Tain sat at his own campfire, a small blaze that billowed dark smoke.  The warlock’s personal camp was a good twenty meters away from his men.  The small tent seemed exposed, especially considering the array of beasts that stalked the Bone March, but if Tain was concerned he didn’t show it.  The mage sat cross-legged in front of the fire with his ringed hands crossed on his lap.  Shadows flooded the inside of his hood, and the crackling firelight barely lit his lower jaw.

The warlock
nodded, and Kala turned and left them alone.  Cross tensed his fingers.  The wire loosened, just enough that blood flowed back into his hands.  The ground was uncomfortably hard and covered with bits of bone and twig.  A single pale tree hung over Tain’s tent like a jutting wishbone.  The Bone March stretched all around them, vast and silent, cold and dark.  Cross tasted rot in the sharp cool wind.

He
waited for Tain to speak.  He’d been summoned there, and wanted to see how Tain would approach him.  Making threats or demanding to know what was going on wouldn’t get him anywhere, and Cross knew it.  Tain had all the markings of a hard man.  He dominated his subordinates with magic, which in many ways made him the Southern Claw’s worst nightmare.  Mages were humankind’s most efficient and valuable weapon against the vampires of the Ebon Cities.  Every mage – and their numbers were not so great as some imagined – was an invaluable commodity, and the White Council did what they could to secure the loyalties and talents of each and every one from a very young age.  But mages were human, and in spite of the call of service not all desired a life in the military, or felt any real loyalty towards the human race.

Cross
somehow had the sense the warlock knew exactly what was running through his mind.  Tain’s spirit coiled around the man’s body like a pulsing electric snake.  The hairs on the back of Cross’s neck raised as she reached out at him with liquid tentacles.  He tasted ozone and cold air.

Tain sat perfectly still.  Cross tried his best to match
the effort, but he was weary and sore.  Blood still flowed through his mouth from cracked lips and cut gums, and his head throbbed from the beating he’d taken.  It was sometimes easy to forget he was older now. Even though his mind seemed to regard his imprisonment at Margrave’s ethereal hands as a flash of moments, the fact remained that twenty years had passed.  Usually he didn’t notice, but sitting there in the uncomfortable dark, bereft of rest and healing, Cross felt like an old man. 

“The sword,” Tain said.  It has been so long since Cross had sat
down it took him a moment to register the man’s voice.  The fires of the larger camp were behind them, seemingly a world away.

“What
about it?”

“Watch your
tone, warlock,” Tain said.  He must have seen a reaction on Cross’s face, for he added: “I know you aren’t a mage anymore…but you were once.  I’ll have you tell me about that, too, sometime.  But for now, I just want to know about the sword.”

“Why?” Cross said.  “It
’s just a blade.”

A spirit
’s razor caress hugged his skin.  She stayed liquid, an ethereal shape, but at the same time she was sharp.  A fog with teeth.  Intangible points pressed against Cross’s throat, eyes and wrists.  She could have closed in if she wanted to, and splayed him open.

“You were saying?” Tain
whispered.  The man’s voice was cool and emotionless.  His spirit roiled with anger, but the warlock who commanded her just sat impassively.  He looked like he’d just as soon eat a turnip as torture Cross, and that he’d get as much enjoyment from either act.  “I know the blade has arcane potential.  But it’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen. 
You
know what it is.  You’ll tell me, or I’ll turn you inside out.  My spirit will keep you alive while I remove your organs, one by one, and feed them to you.”

The casual voice chilled him.  Cross breathed deep,
and tried to think.

“It was made for me,” he lied.  He was a terrible liar. 

Hopefully I can figure out how to lie well
really
fast.

“By who?”

“The Crimson Triangle.”  That was a gamble.  The renegade outlaws controlled a massive cartel of slaves, drugs, assassins and black magic in the southern Ebonsand Sea, and they always took the Southern Claw by surprise with their ingenuity and cunning.  Alchemical solutions and arcane drugs unheard of on the mainland had a way of appearing out of the Triangle’s oceanic territories.  While Tain was likely well traveled, very few people actually dealt with the Triangle. 

And i
f you’re wandering around the northern wastes, you probably haven’t been that far south.  I hope.

Tain said nothing.  His spirit didn
’t relent. Cross felt ice press against his skin like glacial knives. 

The mage reached into the darkness and pulled out a long piece of cloth. He unwrapped it on the ground in front of him, and Cross saw the glint of
the harlequin blade, deep black and pure white steel fused together at the core, a hand-and-half weapon with a pommel bound in leather.

“What is its purpose?” Tain asked.

“It contains my magic,” Cross said.  “My spirit was ripped away by a Rakzeri shaman.  A priest-thaumaturge in Blacksand offered to help me recover it.  As it turned out, he worked for the Crimson Triangle.”  He nodded at the blade.  “It wasn’t cheap.”

Tain was silent, considering
Cross’s words.  Cross tried to steady his breathing and maintain his composure. 

Danica would be proud.  She was always a better liar than I was.

“How did you wind up in the Carrion Rift after you were in Blacksand?” he asked.

Cross laughed. 

“You wouldn’t believe me if I told you.”

To his surprise, Tain laughed, too.

“You’ll tell me anyways,” he said.  “Tomorrow.  When you show me how to extract your power from the blade.”

Kala was at his back.  Cross hadn
’t heard her approach.  She reached down and hauled him to his feet by his bound wrists.  She was surprisingly strong for such a lithe woman. 

“Wait,” Cross said.  “Why would I do that, when you just plan to sell me
in Dirge?”  His heart leapt into his throat as Tain’s spirit wound her way up his legs like a slithering serpent and coiled around his testicles.  Pain shot up his stomach and into his chest.


If you don’t do as I say, I’ll make you eat them,” Tain said calmly.  “And then I’ll spread your two new friends in the wagon wide open.”

He released Cross and went back to admiring the blade, playing his fingers along it
s length like he caressed a long-lost lover. 

Kala led Cross back to the wagon and locked him in.

Flint woke at his return, and cast him a sideways glance.

“Nice chat?”

“Be ready,” Cross whispered.

“For what?”

“We’re getting out of here.  Tomorrow.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

EIGHT

CLAW

 

 

She rested in a pool of blood.

Crimson steam thickened the air of the limestone bath chamber.  Tall archways led off to dark corridors filled with the sounds of song and running water. 

Her eyes were
heavy.  Dragon’s bath was filled with arcane fluids and necrotic unguents provided by zombie theurgeons and local mage-scholars.  Lorn had once been a city of learning, a place of arcane experimentation and historical research, and great advances had been made in the art of regeneration.  That was a long time ago, before Lorn had surrendered itself to the Ebon Cities, but most of those same mage-scholars were still there, plying their trade under the careful supervision of the vampire regime. 

Dragon
’s mind raced with images of broken ruins at the edge of the wastelands, subterranean realms controlled by wolf-headed sorcerers with sawblade teeth and shadow cloaks.  She walked through a cold necropolis and swam through seas of blood, basked in the light of midnight stars and watched pale dancers on a vampire shore.

These were a
ncient places, distant places.  The visions were difficult for her mind to hold onto.  Some she remembered, most she forgot. 

She couldn
’t even remember her own name.

Every now and again, m
emories would almost come to her, but when they did Lynch brought her to the bath chambers, where zombie doctors took her to the specially prepared blood pools. 

Her body healed, and
she grew stronger.  Her steel limb was removed when this happened, so she sat calm and quiet, naked and one-armed in the freezing liquid.

Her mind f
ell away.  She dreamed.

 

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