Dhampir

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Dhampir Page 23

by Barb Hendee


  Leesil pushed her hand away, shaking his head. “We know that little beggar boy certainly touched this, and Ellinwood doesn’t have anyone like Chap.”

  “You should have told me,” Magiere said. Following Leesil, she crouched down next to the dog.

  “It was a gamble—my gamble,” Leesil answered. “And what you didn’t know, you couldn’t be held accountable for.”

  He held out the dagger’s handle, and Chap eagerly sniffed every inch of it.

  “Do you think he can track for us?” Magiere asked.

  “I don’t know for certain,” Leesil answered. “But, yes, I think he can.”

  She breathed in once. “Let’s get ready as well. We don’t have much time.”

  Leesil looked at her, puzzled.

  “The sun will be setting soon,” was the answer she gave to his unasked question.

  Neither one of them said the word “vampire.” While Magiere went to get her sword, Leesil broke his bedroom chair and fashioned the legs into makeshift stakes. He put them in the sack with his box and headed downstairs to gather further necessities for battle.

  For quite a while after Magiere had left him, Welstiel remained sitting in his chair, searching mentally to pinpoint an uninvited presence. He had slowly studied every inch of the room, but so far only books and shelves and his table registered in his sharp eyes.

  “I know you are here,” he murmured, more to himself than the presence.

  He sensed it. Why was it here, and what did it want? The three sparks of his orb cast a satisfactory amount of illumination. Perhaps more than that was needed.

  “Darkness,” Welstiel said, and the orb’s sparks immediately extinguished.

  With all light gone from the room, he immediately spotted a yellowish glow hovering in the far corner, but only for a moment. It vanished, leaving behind the faint emotional residue of fear and anger.

  The possibilities were too varied for comfort in Welstiel’s mind. It could have been anything from a spirit to an astral consciousness. But why? He closed his eyes and tried to feel for any kind of trail, any path in the residue of this unseen presence. The traces of fear and anger were gone. The presence had evaporated. He could follow nothing.

  Welstiel frowned.

  Chapter Twelve

  Magiere crouched outside the huge shorefront ware house, Leesil and Brenden beside her. The place appeared almost new, constructed of expensive, solid pine boards.

  “Why not just burn it?” Leesil whispered.

  “I already told you,” Brenden answered. “Hundreds of townsfolk make their living from this place in one way or another.”

  “Yes, but if we kill the owner, won’t that bring about a similar result?” Leesil shifted his weight to get a better hold on the squirming dog. “Chap, will you stop that?”

  Conversing at all was difficult as Leesil was busy holding onto Chap’s muzzle and his wildly struggling body.

  “Maybe . . .” Brenden hesitated. “Maybe not. At least their livelihoods might stay intact for a while, if someone else can step in to keep the place running.”

  On their way through town, Chap had led them on a wandering course down alleys and side streets, searching the ground with his nose. At the crossing of two roads, he’d lurched back, sneezing as if he’d caught a whiff of something that agitated his senses. He broke into a half-trot, then a full run. All of them were forced to hurry after him, making themselves ridiculously conspicuous. Magiere had cursed herself for not tying a rope around his neck.

  Chap ran straight for this warehouse, sniffing the outside floorboards and growling. Welstiel had said to use the dog. If he was correct, then this indeed was the right place. Heavily armed, they now hid behind a stack of crates, deciding on their next course of action and trying to avoid being seen by dockworkers. The sun was low in the sky.

  Magiere listened quietly, wishing Leesil and Brenden would stop arguing and let her think. The warehouse seemed a logical place to begin, especially since it matched Brenden’s claim that its owner was the one who attacked her. Chap’s reaction seemed to confirm their suspicions.

  Part of her agreed with Leesil. They ought to just wait until closing time when the workers went home, then pour oil all over the base and set it on fire. Brenden’s concern made sense as well. And what if the nobleman and the dirty urchin weren’t even inside? What if Chap were only reacting to old or faint residue from either of them passing this way? She had no idea how the dog was able to track these creatures or what was the extent of his abilities.

  Yes, finding their prey was the first obstacle to surpass, but once that was accomplished, she and her small group were prepared for fighting undeads, although none of them had used the word. Welstiel had mentioned Brenden’s strength. She assumed he meant physical strength, but now she wasn’t so sure. Her red-bearded companion crouched calmly, without fear, holding a crossbow in one hand and balancing himself on the packed ground with the other. He’d soaked all his quarrels in garlic water and tucked six roughly sharpened wooden stakes into his belt alongside dangling skins of water. One stake at the center of his back was longer, more like a half-length spear. She didn’t know him at all, but was beginning to believe there was more to him than met the eye.

  Leesil was now fairly weighted down by a bag tied to his back across his left shoulder. She’d watched him pack and repack it a few times. He had brought a crossbow, several garlic-soaked quarrels, and a long, wooden box. He also filled four small wine flasks with oil, tightly sealed their stoppers, and placed them in the bag, along with a flint. Then he had fashioned two short torches, which he tied to his back as well. She knew he typically carried various stilettos and other bladed weapons somewhere inside his clothes.

  She, on the other hand, traveled light, carrying nothing besides her falchion. Her role in this macabre play was to fight Rashed, while the others dealt with the smaller creature called Ratboy, should both their targets be discovered together.

  “How are we going to get in?” she asked finally, surveying the warehouse wall up and down. “We can’t exactly walk in the front doors and ask the workers, ‘By the way, where do your masters sleep?’ And I don’t fancy trying to enter after dark.”

  “There’s probably a hidden door in the back wall,” Leesil answered.

  She blinked. “How do you know?”

  He hesitated. “Because I’ve seen this type of construction before. I’ll know what to look for.”

  He’d broken into warehouses before? Magiere’s curiosity was piqued, but this was not the time or place. “All right,” she said. “Stay behind the crates.”

  Stacks of wooden crates surrounded this side of the building, which made it possible to move around to the back without being seen. All the workers were inside and few people wandered about on the pier. Once in position, Leesil passed Chap off to Magiere, who grabbed the dog by the scruff of his neck.

  They watched as Leesil’s hands moved lightly across the base of the warehouse. Brenden seemed confused and leaned forward.

  “What are you looking for? There’s no door here.”

  Leesil didn’t answer and kept moving his fingers across the wood. Magiere began fidgeting after a while, making it harder to keep the dog from doing the same. Her eyes never left Leesil, though they narrowed suspiciously as she tried to figure out what her partner was doing. Finally, Leesil stopped and remained motionless with his hands firmly against one spot. Then his head tilted slightly to one side and his eyes half closed.

  Magiere craned her neck, trying to see what Leesil had found. It was just a blank space of wall. Leesil pulled his hands away, but remained crouched as he reached into his sack and pulled out the long box, glancing up at her in concern.

  “Do you trust me?” he asked.

  The frank question caught her off guard and she hesitated. “Of course,” she answered.

  Long, yellow-white hair fell forward across his face as he leaned down.

  “Then don’t ask me to explain anything
about this.”

  When he opened the box, she regretted agreeing to his request.

  A wire loop with small steel handles at each end and two stilettos with blades narrow as knitting needles were the first items she saw. The sight of the wire made her swallow hard. She’d never actually seen such a thing firsthand, but she had once witnessed a criminal executed by strangulation and could guess how the item was used.

  The narrow stilettos were another matter. Too slim for any blade-to-blade fighting she could imagine, she couldn’t be sure what they would be used for. But looking back to the wire again, she didn’t particularly want to know. What she did want to know was how and why Leesil had come by them, and she didn’t care for the guesses that flashed through her mind.

  The metal of the wire and blades was too pale and bright for common steel. Some other metal had been used, and these were expensive items of a questionable nature no one would buy openly from some weaponsmith. There were only hints of blemishes on the polished blades. Though carefully tended at one time, they had not been taken out for a long while. As much as the items in her companion’s possession made Magiere nervous and wary, and even angry, she felt an unexpected wave of anxious concern for Leesil. Pushed aside and hidden, these distasteful possessions had enough meaning for him that he’d kept them shut away for an unknown number of years.

  Leesil hesitated, and Magiere saw his back rise and fall in a deep breath before his narrow fingers pressed some hidden spot on the box’s inside. He then grabbed the base of the lid near the hinge, and an inner panel folded open to expose a compartment inside the lid itself. Therein, tucked in cloth straps, was an array of shaped wires, long, needle-small hooks, and other similar delicate items crooked, bent, and shaped like a set of tiny tools, the purpose for which she couldn’t guess. And again the metal was of a polished silver hue too pale for steel.

  “What are those?” Brenden asked.

  Leesil ignored him, picking out a thin wire strut that ended in a right-angle turn. The bent end stuck out less than half a fingernail’s length and was flattened to be thinner than the longer shaft or handle. He felt carefully around the base of the wooden wall, and then pressed his first finger against a spot that looked exactly like every other place on the vast wall. He attempted to insert the wire directly above his fingernail.

  To Magiere’s shock, the wire strut’s head passed right through the wood, and a panel as wide and tall as her arm slid open.

  “Let me go first,” Leesil said. “There may be traps.”

  His body was so tense and face so serious that she hardly recognized him. He knew what he was doing, but somehow to take these actions was a strain on him, as if he forced himself.

  Her thoughts stopped and retreated one step. He knew exactly what he was doing. How?

  “Leesil . . .”

  When he turned, his slanted, amber eyes pleaded with her.

  “Trust me,” he said.

  He snapped the box shut, slid it back into his sack, and crawled through the secret door. She had little choice but to follow.

  Once Brenden crawled down the shaft after Magiere and emerged into a plush sitting room, the first thing he noticed was a candle in the shape of a deep, red rose. Wax roses were hardly what he expected. Leesil was already searching the walls and floor by sight and fingertips. Two oil lamps attached to the wall provided small flames of light. Last summer, if someone told Brenden that he’d soon be in the company of a vampire hunter and a professional thief, tracking down the undead murderers of his sister, he would have thought the speaker quite mad. In fact, it really did sound mad, and that thought made the hairs on the back of his neck stand up.

  And when he first met Magiere, he had despised her, thinking her a selfish and cold woman, whose only interest was in turning a profit from her tavern. His opinion of Magiere had altered a great deal since then. For all her strength and carefully guarded face, he could see pain and uncertainty buried inside. She did not hide in her tavern because of selfishness but something else, and he did not know her well enough to ask what that was. Now, she had overcome this mysterious obstacle and was standing beside him with a sword, ready to fight and kill or die. He admired her courage, and the clean lines of her features and her long black braid were not lost on him either. Strength, beauty, and fighting ability in the same person seemed a rare combination to him.

  Then his thoughts turned back to Eliza, his fragile sister, and the smoldering anger in his chest made him focus on their current goal.

  And on this room . . . curved couches upholstered in green velvet, a fine painting of the northern seacoast, braided rugs, and a variety of silver ornaments sitting on polished tables registered in his eyesight all at once. He walked over and picked up a sewing basket. Inside, he found fine needlework. The works-in-progress were more like vivid scenes come to life than mere embroidery. He held a half-finished scrap of muslin that depicted a huge sun surrounded by clouds, setting over the ocean.

  Chap was slinking around, sniffing everything and growling softly.

  “There’s a woman,” Brenden said flatly.

  “What?” Magiere appeared somewhat confused by his statement.

  “We aren’t just dealing with the nobleman and that street urchin. And the things in this room are too personal for a servant. Servants don’t sit for hours at needlepoint.”

  Leesil stopped his current task of pulling all the rugs up. “Or maybe one of the men is just artistic with truly fine taste in decor.”

  Magiere half-smiled at the flippant comment, and Brenden shook his head. He’d figured out by now that Magiere often hid behind a mask of cold hostility, and Leesil behind his humor, caustic or otherwise. He understood Magiere’s defenses, but as much as he’d come to like the half-elf, Leesil’s shifts between ill-timed humor and unexpected compassion, between rapid wrestling abilities and now burglary were getting to be quite unnerving.

  Leesil examined a clearly visible hatch door in the center of the floor.

  “What are you waiting for?” Magiere asked.

  “This one is different,” he said almost to himself. “Whoever put this place together never expected anyone to find that outside entrance, and probably never used it, so there wasn’t a real need for active safeguards.” His head rose until his gaze settled upon Magiere. “We have to go down. I don’t know any more about this kind of hunting than you, but I’m sure they’ll be sleeping somewhere underground.”

  “What do you mean you don’t know?” Brenden asked. He looked at Magiere. “Wasn’t this how you earned a living before Miiska?”

  The half-elf grinned weakly. “No time to explain. Both of you stand back.”

  Brenden stepped back and then did so again, until his back was nearly against the wall. Leesil slowly walked around the hatch door as if memorizing every part of it. The blacksmith experienced a wave of discomfort after quite a bit of precious time passed and Leesil still continued his study.

  “We need to hurry,” Brenden said. “The sun will be down soon.”

  “Daylight won’t help us if we’re dead,” came Leesil’s answer.

  A small hole had been cut in one edge of the door to form a simple handle. All one need do was slip his fingers through and lift. Leesil crouched down to dig in his bag, but rather than his box of strange tools, he pulled out a stake.

  “Both of you get down behind one of the couches. And hold Chap tight,” he said. “I’m going to use a stake to open this slightly. When I do, a poisoned needle is going to jab the point. After that, I’ll try to lift the door, but there may be further surprises.” He paused. “I once saw a general rig poison gas to a door like this. If I yell, get into the shaft, no matter what.”

  Brenden looked back and forth between his two companions, who were now staring at each other. It was obvious that Leesil was displaying skills and knowledge previously unknown to Magiere. Her expression was more than a little troubled, but she moved back and hid behind a richly upholstered couch. Brenden did the same,
peering around one side to watch.

  “Be careful,” Magiere called.

  “No, really?” Leesil said and gently pushed the stake’s point through the opening. A loud click followed.

  “Got the needle,” he said, and then he flattened himself low to the floor, one leg folded underneath, presumably so he could dive aside if need be. “Keep your heads down.”

  He levered the stake to lift the door’s edge, then gave a quick, sharp thrust and pulled back as the hatch flipped open.

  A crack sounded out twice from the opening. Well shielded behind the couch, both Brenden and Magiere still ducked quickly in reflex as two crossbow quarrels shot out. The first passed over Leesil, aimed where a person would lean down to pull the door open. The other now protruded from the front of the couch behind which Brenden and Magiere hid. Brenden peered at it over the top of the couch.

  “Wait,” Leesil said, holding one hand up. “I’m not sure that’s everything.” He disappeared down the hole.

  Magiere didn’t do as he bid, but rather crawled around the couch and over to the opening, carefully peeking over the edge. “What are you doing?”

  “Just making sure.” Leesil’s voice was mute and dull coming from somewhere below. “I think you can come down now.”

  Brenden joined Magiere, contemplating how to lower Chap, but the dog solved his problem by jumping through and landing next to Leesil. Magiere followed, and the blacksmith went last.

  He found himself standing in a narrow tunnel. Always interested in devices and gadgets, he examined the two cross-bows sitting in iron supports and carefully aimed upward to the opening.

  “It’s a simple trick really,” Leesil said. “You just mount them solidly, load them up, and then run a wire or string from the door to the firing mechanisms.”

  “If you two have finished admiring these would-be murder weapons,” Magiere interjected in a low, irritated voice, “we need to move on. Light a torch.”

 

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