"I told you "no noise"! You forced me out before my work was finished." That was only partly true-but Ratboy and Teesha didn"t need to know that.
"And who cut through your shoulder?" Ratboy opened his eyes wide in mock surprise. "Did she hurt you, my dear captain?"
Rashed dropped him and drew his fist back to strike.
Teesha grabbed it. The mere touch of her hands was enough to make him pause.
"This will not help us," she said. With light pressure he could have easily resisted, Teesha pulled Rashed"s arm down. "We have to get every trap set and hide as deeply as possible."
Of course, she was correct. There was nowhere to run until nightfall. Now he was the one playing the fool and right in front of her. Ratboy"s blundering had undone him in more ways than one. He quickly collected himself.
"Yes, you help Ratboy. I"ll set the devices and join you below."
Her tiny fingers brushed his face as if glad to see him in charge again. "Let me tend your shoulder."
"No, it"s all right. Just get deeper below."
Perhaps they would all survive until nightfall.
Leesil and Magiere waited in the common room for Constable Ellinwood to arrive. At sunrise, Leesil had accosted a pa.s.sing boy on the street and paid the youth to run to the guardhouse with the news of Beth-rae"s murder. His initial instinct had been to clean the mess up in the common room, but Magiere stopped him.
"All of this proves we were attacked," she said.
Everything was left where it had fallen the night before with two exceptions. Caleb had taken Beth-rae"s body to the kitchen and had not come out again. And then there was Ratboy"s thin-bladed dagger.
Leesil hadn"t even remembered it until he"d stepped around to the back of the bar to put away the crossbow, and found it lying on the floor. He quietly picked up the blade out of Magiere"s sight.
Ratboy must have used it to trip the latch on the common-room window. The blade was wide and unusually flat, making it thin enough to slip between shutters or into a doorjamb, and the width would provide strength when pushed against any metal hook or latching mechanism. Inspecting the blade, he found it well tended and sharpened, but with an odd shape to its tip. It wasn"t overt, and perhaps anyone else wouldn"t have noticed, but Leesil had slipped through enough windows in his life to know what he saw.
Near the tip, the edges were no longer straight, but indented slightly. Long use as a tool had worn down the metal and frequent resharpening had produced a slight inward curve in the edge on each side. Ratboy was not a common thief, whatever else he might be, but Leesil could see the beggar boy was practiced at unseen entry. A blade like this was a personal choice, sometimes specially made, and certainly a well-cared-for possession. And yet, Ratboy had obviously not entered the inn to steal anything, and his manner was not that of an a.s.sa.s.sin-the little creature might be cunning and stealthy to a point, but he had no finesse.
Leesil had serious doubts Ellinwood could even understand such things without them being pointed out blatantly and then explained. And he wasn"t even sure how it connected to the more unusual details of last night. If necessary, he"d show the dagger, but for now he rucked it under the back of his shirt. Magiere might not agree with this action, but he would handle that if and when it came up. He stepped around the bar into the open room, surveying the ruins of broken tables and chairs, fresh scars in the bar top, and dried pools of blood.
Magiere"s words made sense-everything needed to be left as it was to make Ellinwood believe what had happened, but he hated the thought of doing nothing. The bloodstained floor kept drawing his attention. Why hadn"t he initially held his ground and reloaded the crossbow? Why hadn"t he rushed the creature as soon as Beth-rae threw the garlic water? The scene played over and over in his mind as he examined every move he could have made differently. Scenarios taught long ago by his mother and father crept back into his conscious thoughts from places where he"d hidden them. He"d made so many mistakes, and now Caleb was a widower and little Rose had no grandmother.
Chap"s chest was almost healed, which in itself seemed too much for Leesil to think about, in addition to everything else that made no sense in their lives of late. Magiere"s facial wound looked days instead of hours old. Whenever Chap or Magiere fought these strange attackers, they healed with an unnatural quickness. Or had they always been quick to mend? It occurred to him that in their years together he"d never before been in such situations with either of them, so there was no way to be sure. He didn"t want to talk about any of it, but how much were they going to tell the constable?
"Magiere?"
"What?"
"Last night... your teeth," he began. "Do you know what happened?"
She walked closer to him, her black hair still a tangled mess of long waves and strands around her face. Scant light that filtered in through the windows. .h.i.t her from behind, and the highlights in her hair turned their usual red, almost a blood red, and that comparison made Leesil uneasy. Her expression was earnest, as if she wanted-had been waiting, even-for some reason or moment or encouragement to tell him something.
"I don"t know. Not really," she answered. Her eyes closed tight and she shook her head slowly.
Leesil noted her jaw shift, perhaps as she checked her teeth with her tongue yet again for the return of what he"d seen there. Her voice dropped low, near a whisper, though there was no one else nearby to hear her.
"I was so angry, worse than I"ve ever felt in my life. I couldn"t think of anything but killing him. I hated him so-"
A knock on the inn"s door interrupted her. She frowned in a mix of frustration and distaste, letting out a sigh.
"That must be Ellinwood. Let"s get this over with."
With a quick glance and nod to Magiere, Leesil went to open the door, but to his surprise it was not Constable Ellinwood on the other side but Brenden.
"What are you doing here?" Magiere demanded.
"I told him he could come by," Leesil interjected, having actually forgotten about it until this moment.
"I heard what happened," the blacksmith said sadly. "I came to help."
Leesil had never seen anyone with such vivid red hair as Brenden, and with his matching beard, he seemed like a broad head of fire in the doorway. His black leather vest was oddly clean for someone who worked with iron and horses all day. Magiere just looked at the blacksmith as if she honestly didn"t care whether he stayed or not.
"Ellinwood"s useless," Brenden went on in the same sad voice. "If you tell him what really happened, he"ll bury the case and never discuss it unless you force him to. Nothing will be done."
"Fine," Magiere said, turning away. "Stay if you like, go if you like. We aren"t expecting any a.s.sistance from the constable anyway. Beth-rae was murdered last night, and the law requires us to inform the authorities."
Leesil remained quiet through this exchange in the hope that Brenden and Magiere might actually speak to each other, see one another as individuals. The blacksmith was one of the few people in town they"d met so far who was willing to speak about anything related to the attack on the road or what had happened last night. The result of his presence wasn"t all Leesil had hoped for, but at least Magiere hadn"t ordered him off the premises. Leesil stepped back and urged him inside.
"I"ll make us some tea," he said.
"How"s Caleb?" Brenden asked, staring at the bloodstained floor by the bar.
"I don"t know. We haven"t seen him since just after..."
The tavern suddenly felt cold, and the half-elf busied himself by making a fire and boiling water for tea. He could have done it in the kitchen, but he didn"t want to leave Magiere. And Caleb was in the kitchen with Beth-rae"s body, which Leesil could not bring himself to look at right now.
Somehow the three of them managed to make small talk. Brenden seemed hesitant to question too much concerning the night"s events, likely not wanting to wear out his welcome now that he"d regained some acceptance. Magiere avoided giving any complete answers to the few questions asked. Enough of that would be covered all over again once Ellinwood arrived. With Magiere running out of evasive answers and Brenden short on acceptable questions, the room became oppressively quiet until another knock sounded.
"That will be him," Magiere said with distaste. "Leesil, can you get the door?"
This time the visitor was indeed Constable Ellinwood, clearing his throat in place of a greeting and looking somewhat put upon in fulfilling his duty. His vast, colorful form filled the doorway like that of an emerald giant gone soft through years of idleness.
"I hear you had some trouble," he said, his tone that of someone wishing to take command, yet preferring to be somewhere else. Dark circles under his eyes suggested he hadn"t slept well, and his fleshy jowls appeared even looser than usual.
"You could say that," Leesil answered coldly. He turned away without even a gesture for the constable to enter. "Beth-rae is dead. Some lunatic tore out her throat with his fingernails."
Ellinwood, entering behind him, sputtered at the bluntness of Leesil"s statement. Then he spotted the dark stain on the floor at the bar"s far end.
"Where"s the body?"
"Caleb took her into the kitchen," Leesil answered. "I didn"t have the heart to tell him no."
"Why don"t you ask them what happened," Brenden said, his arms crossed, "before you start looking for "clues" for something you know nothing about."
"What"s he doing here?" Ellinwood demanded.
"I invited him," Leesil answered in a half-truth.
Up to this point, Magiere had drifted closer to the fireplace and simply stood by watching and listening. Now she turned away from all three men.
Leesil experienced a wave of pity followed by concern. He had many unanswered questions regarding Magiere, but those could wait until a better time. She was dealing with too much already in too short a s.p.a.ce of time. They all were, for that matter. And as much as he wanted answers, he didn"t want to see her pushed over the edge any further.
"You start, Leesil," she said softly. "Just tell him what you saw."
Leesil began recounting everything as clearly as possible. For the most part, it sounded like little more than a vicious thief interrupted during a botched robbery-except for the quarrel the beggar boy had pulled out of his own forehead. Strangely enough, Ellinwood did not react to this with more than a raised eyebrow. Then Leesil reached the part where Beth-rae ran in from the kitchen.
"She threw a bucket of water all over him, and he began to smoke."
"Smoke?" Ellinwood said, shifting his heavy weight to one foot. "What do you mean?"
"His skin turned black and began to smoke."
"Garlic water," Brenden interrupted. "It"s poison to vampires."
The constable ignored him.
Leesil grew more suspicious. He still didn"t accept the idea of vampires, and hadn"t actually said or implied any such thing, yet the details were there. Ellinwood did not appear even slightly shocked, neither denying nor accepting Brenden"s implied conclusion. Leesil held that thought to himself for the moment.
"Then what happened?" Ellinwood asked.
"He rushed her, struck her, tearing her throat with his fingernails, and breaking her neck," Leesil continued. "Then he escaped through the back door in the kitchen."
A few more questions and answers followed, all of a similar matter-of-fact and what-happened-next nature, each of which led to no further real exchange of useful information. The constable was casual, almost bored, and always slow to ask his next question. Somewhere along the way, Leesil noted that Ellinwood had not asked about any motivation for the intrusion. The concept of burglary or theft had not even come up. Not that it should have, since it was obviously not a burglary, but the constable hadn"t even tried to pa.s.s it off as such. When Leesil described the intruder, he did note that Ellinwood fidgeted slightly before resettling into complacency.
It was then Leesil decided he would keep the issue of the dagger to himself. Ellinwood"s disinterest was obvious. He was playing his role and giving lip service to his duties- and he was hiding something. Why this was so, Leesil couldn"t yet tell, but the dagger might be more useful in his possession than handed over to be stowed away and forgotten.
The constable turned to Magiere.
"And while all this was going on, you were attacked upstairs?" he asked.
"Yes," she managed to answer. She turned and looked directly at Ellinwood as she spoke. "He was very tall and striking, with dark hair close cropped and nearly clear eyes with a tint of blue. He was dressed as a n.o.bleman in a deep blue tunic, cloak, and high boots. And he carried a long sword, which he used as if trained and experienced in combat."
Magiere continued, trying hard to remember more details of her a.s.sailant. His expressions and manner of superiority, the way he moved, the way he spoke. Slowly, the constable appeared less bored. His complexion shifted and began turning paler, until his flesh had a sickly white cast to it. Brenden, however, added more wrinkles to his brow, eyes narrowing as if he were trying to focus Magiere"s description in his mind and recognition was beginning to settle upon him.
Leesil began to see that Magiere, as well, had caught the fact that Ellinwood had lost his disinterest. And now he looked openly nervous. Magiere grew more intent, turning to questions instead of answers.
"How many men in this town can that describe?" she asked. "I don"t know why that didn"t occur to me until now. You must know everyone here, yes? This one was dressed too well for a common ruffian looking for some quick coins in his pocket."
"He owns Miiska"s largest warehouse," Brenden answered softly. "I don"t know his name, but I"ve seen-"
"Quiet!" Ellinwood shouted at the blacksmith in a voice that squeaked with strain, surprising them all. "Keep your foolish conclusions to yourself. There are hundreds of tall, dark-haired men in this town and new ones come in port every day."
"Hundreds?" Leesil asked, mockingly.
Ellinwood ignored the goad, focusing on Brenden.
"I"ll not accuse a respected businessman just to please you!"
"You"re a coward," Brenden said, more in resignation than anger. "I can"t believe what a coward you are."
"Quiet, both of you!" Magiere snapped, looking more like the caustic tiger Leesil remembered as she stepped between the constable and the blacksmith. Ellinwood backed away, scowling, trying to maintain an air of righteous indignation, but Magiere didn"t even notice.
"I"m not reporting this because I expect or desire any help," she said to him. "I"m only behaving like a law-abiding citizen. If you want no part of this, you"re free to go back to your guardhouse or breakfast or whatever else you do with your mornings." She turned to Brenden. "And no one asked for your counsel, blacksmith."
Ellinwood made no move to continue his investigation, neither inspecting the room nor making any pretense to go survey the body or the second level of the inn. Leesil began to think it was likely that the constable didn"t need to do any of those things. The repulsive man probably knew much more than anyone else in this room. Beating the truth out of him was somewhat tempting, but would only add to their troubles. At least for now.
The constable puffed his cheeks out, attempting to gain control of the situation.
"I"ll have my men do a sweep of the town, looking for anyone matching the descriptions you"ve provided. You"ll be informed if anything is discovered."
"Yes, you do that," Magiere said in dismissal.
After the constable left, the three remaining occupants in the room stood looking at each other.
"I seriously doubt we"ll hear anything," Leesil said. "Or at least we won"t be the first."
Brenden merely grunted in agreement.
Several tables lay in broken heaps around them, and Leesil remembered they would have to replace Magiere"s bedroom door and window. For the time being, he would settle her in his own room, and then bed down himself on the bar or by the fireplace.
"It"s not over. We have to hunt them down ourselves," Brenden said to Magiere. "You know that, don"t you?"
Oh, by everything holy, was he mad? Annoyance, possibly more than annoyance, hit Leesil for the first time.
"Just leave that alone!" Leesil half shouted before controlling himself. "She"s had enough already for one day."
"I know," Magiere answered in a whisper, ignoring Leesil"s outburst. "I know."
Ratboy believed that vampires fell dormant during the day, like inverted plants or flowers. Of course, he kept this opinion to himself, and would never relate such a fanciful thought in front of Rashed or Teesha.
As the sun rose, he always collapsed into dreamless sleep. But not today. Today.
How long since he"d even considered a term with the word "day" in it? He could not remember. Lying in his coffin, in the dirt of his homeland, deep in the tunnels under the warehouse, he could not sleep. His body still burned from the garlic water, even though Teesha had fed him, and his spirit burned from Rashed"s harsh words.
Would that arrogant sand-sp.a.w.n ever take responsibility for his own mistakes? Ratboy doubted it. Every action, every decision Rashed made was motivated by his consuming love for Teesha. And what was so comical-so tragic- was that he"d never be able to acknowledge the force that drove him. He played the father and the protector. But he"d never admit anything so pathetic as love, even to himself. Especially to himself.
Not even for Parko.