Their lovemaking had been fierce. Twilight could feel more than see Liet flinch as her fingers found a bruise here or a scratch there, but she did not care. She was furious, even as she took profound joy in him. Such conflict—the lay of her life.
Liet, half clothed, leaned against the wall. Twilight, her breeches and blouse flung carelessly aside, lay against him. Both were wrapped in his cloak. She’d wanted him to take his shirt off, but Liet had been adamant about his arms. Perhaps he found their sight too painful. Twilight understood a thing or two about pain.
After building Taslin a decent cairn and marking it with the remains of her sword, Slip locked the room as best she could. They spent the rest of the day exploring the sanctum listlessly. The magic had been long ransacked or ruined, either by passing tomb raiders, golems, or lizardfolk, and they found the place largely empty of anything of value.
The party found only a ratty pair of boots, to which the halfling had taken a liking. They were not magical by Twilight’s estimation, though she did not have the heart to disappoint Slip. They also discovered a set of three rather dull steel rods now carried by Liet, which the shadowdancer knew to be magical but could not sense anything other than their general purpose—altering something.
She wished they could alter that day.
And there was Davoren’s newly acquired scepter, and anything else the treacherous warlock had seized during the battle.
Half a dozen lizardmen had entered the sanctum at one point, and following Twilight’s better judgment—against her bitter anger—the five had hidden, not fought. That concession to discretion had grated on Twilight. More than anything else, she felt helpless in this barren place, with her allies being slain one by one, without any real direction. She felt a failure as a leader.
And now there was Taslin’s death, a death that could have been averted had she listened to her instincts.
“’tis not true,” said Liet. He slid his soft fingers along her welts and scratches, caressing her. Twilight winced a little, but she did not stop him. “Not true.”
It took Twilight a moment to realize what he meant—he was answering her last words. “Yes, it is,” Twilight said. “I shouldn’t have listened to you. Wanderer’s sand! I should have followed my instinct and gone back.”
“No one blames you,” said Liet.
She looked him in the eye. “For all your vigor, dear boy, you’re a terrible lover.”
“Why so?” he asked, hurt.
“You simply cannot lie.” She settled down with a sigh.
Liet smiled weakly. “Maybe, but you can, and you’re doing it to yourself. ’tis not your fault. ’tis no one’s fault,” said Liet. “The hangman was merely passing—”
“Passing over us, through the door. It attacked us in the mage’s chambers. Makes perfect sense.” Twilight’s voice was angry. “Whoever created that iron golem must have done it. Set it on us.”
“Mayhap. But none of us could’ve known of that … thing.”
Twilight let the silence linger. “Are you so sure?”
Liet fixed her with an odd look. “I don’t understand, lass.”
Twilight didn’t correct him.
“Too many coincidences,” she said. “The wights’ ambush, the tunnel of traps, the grimlock attack, the golem in wait that the lizards stumbled across, the rope golem.” She shifted. “We’re being watched. Someone’s luring us into ambush after ambush.”
Liet laughed—a forced sound. “You’re imagining this.”
“And whatever watches us left this where I could find it.” She fingered her star sapphire amulet. “Because it would make me believe it impossible.”
“The amulet that—ah …”
“Blocks scrying,” said Twilight. “Our keeper could watch directly, with magic—but the amulet protects me and anyone close by. Or it could watch indirectly, with a spy.”
“You’re jumping at shadows—thinking about this too much.”
Twilight found that ironic. “That’s why I told each of the others a different direction,” she said. “This way, I can see which one it is.”
“I’m dense,” Liet said. “Which what is what?”
“The spy,” said Twilight. “Think about it. How many weapons were in that chest? How much clothing? How many of us were there supposed to be?”
“Six sets of weapons, six sets of clothing, seven of us.” Liet shrugged. “I suppose that makes sense, but would that not make it … I don’t know, obvious?”
“We’re supposed to think that,” Twilight said. When Liet frowned, she sighed. “Whoever’s watching us did it—the clothes, the equipment, my Shroud—purposefully, so that we’d wonder if there were a spy, and guess that there must not be, because it would be too obvious. What more perfect way to cover up a spy?”
Liet blinked at her and Twilight sighed. Her mind was simply faster than his.
“There were enough supplies for six, and the spy makes us seven. That’s one.” Twilight put up one finger. “The wards on the spell chamber were penetrated from our side, and that door was one-way.” Two fingers. “And from the golem’s tracks—whoever released it must have done so through magic, from under our very noses.” Three. “Whoever the spy is, he or she is still with us.” She eyed Liet pointedly.
“Are you accusing me, ’Light?” he asked carefully.
“It could be you,” Twilight said. “Why such a reaction?”
Liet smiled and Twilight read him, as she had read so many in her century of life. She noted every tic of his body, every twitch of his fingers, every flick of his eyes. She could see the rising warmth in his cheeks and hear his heartbeat. Twilight would know if Liet lied to her.
“Well?” she asked.
“I’m no spy,” said Liet. “Whether you believe me or not is your prerogative.”
Twilight allowed the faintest of smiles to tickle her cheeks.
“We shall see.” She knew, though, that he told the truth. Another thought occurred to her. “Now. Back to your blankets.”
Liet looked at her hard, as though searching desperately for a jest and finding none. Then he rose and walked stiffly away, hurt in his every step. Why didn’t he fight?
“Liet,” Twilight breathed. “Wait.”
The youth turned back, arms crossed.
She wanted to apologize. She wanted to say that he was right, that she trusted him, that she needed him, but nothing of the sort came out. She couldn’t lie now, but neither could she tell the truth.
Instead, all she managed was a question—a question she had no right to ask.
“Whence the scars on your arms?”
Liet bit his lip. “If you trusted me,” he said. “If you’d share your scars with me, maybe I’d share mine with you.” Turning purposefully, he walked away.
“It would make this all easier if you’d express your anger,” Twilight whispered to the closing door.
She desperately wanted to tell Liet that she believed in him, that she knew he wasn’t a spy and a traitor, but she resisted the impulse. The logical, reasoning side of her nature, by far the dominant facet of her being, knew that admitting such a thing to him would endanger the stability of the group.
How can equality be maintained, Twilight mused, if not by mutual antipathy?
With a shiver, she realized that it sounded like something he would say.
In that moment, she felt legacy stab like a thrust from Betrayal. And in that moment of defiance—despite all her emotional defenses, despite her rage and pain—Twilight almost called Liet back. She almost let her walls drop, almost let him in. She almost reached out to another. She almost loved him—or more appropriately, let him love her—in that moment.
But she did not.
Every one of Twilight’s carefully cultivated fears and confirmed doubts came back in full force, and she was alone once more. She didn’t need anyone. No one could hurt her—not again.
She found herself thinking of Taslin, of how noble the sun elf had been, and how
close they had come, just as Twilight had with Liet. She remembered how Taslin had looked in the breath before the hangman’s attack, beautiful in her anger.
Twilight scowled. The gods toyed with her—one in particular.
“Damn you, Erevan,” she murmured as weariness claimed her. “Damn you.”
The useless one paused outside her chamber, not quite within Gestal, where he stood watching. “’Light?” he called through the open door.
No response.
Gestal waited, watching as she lay. He was certain she slept, but that was not all he awaited. The large one went off for watch, and the small one stirred in her blankets. She looked in his direction, eyes wide, then rolled back and huddled.
Satisfied, Lord Divergence entered, closed the door behind them, making sure it was locked, and stood over the one he wanted. She hadn’t bothered to dress, but had fallen to slumber in clad only in her cloak. He knelt and traced the hands a hair above the soft, lithe body. He passed over her curves, made note of her scars. Their eyes lingered.
The elf’s lip trembled and her face went white, but she did not wake.
“I could be your lover,” he whispered. “I understand. I see.” No response.
“I see through your lies,” Gestal said.
Gestal stayed, their eyes not an inch from her own. He wouldn’t touch her—not any part of her body. No, Gestal would do far worse.
He bent low, their lips just a hair’s breadth from her throat. The elf’s hands shook and she sobbed in her sleep. “Lilten,” she murmured.
“No,” Lord Divergence said. “A better lover.”
Twilight’s eyes snapped open. It was dark and quiet—so still that she might have awakened in another world. Somehow, the tranquility was not tranquil, and she shivered. Something wet and cold was upon her, like sweat. She brushed idly at her face and her hand came away sticky.
She realized she had not dressed. Instead, she had fallen asleep wrapped in the roughspun cloak upon which she and Liet had held one another.
“Silly wench,” she chided herself. “Don’t you realize that’s not safe?”
Then she looked at her hand and froze. Blood was on her fingers.
It wasn’t her own blood, she knew. She immediately fell into awareness of her body—no injury, no soreness. Nothing had damaged her—not physically, anyway.
The room suddenly seemed much larger, and she was terribly aware of her solitude. “Liet …” she whispered. Her voice came soft and weak—vulnerable.
Hardly daring to move, Twilight looked at her bare chest and belly. Her eyes widened. Bloody handprints covered her—hands on her breast, hands on her stomach, hands on her arms, hands on her legs. She felt the stickiness on her throat and face. The prints were not violent—they were what might be left by the caress of a lover, but they were not Liet’s hands. The blood she didn’t know, but the hands …
The hands were Taslin’s.
“No,” Twilight said, searching her skin. “That can’t … can’t be …”
She thought she heard laughter, soft and hidden, behind her.
Twilight shrieked and scratched at herself, desperate to get it off, but it only smeared. She tore open the precious waterskin and splashed it over her. She scrubbed, furiously, with the sweaty cloak, cleansing herself as best she could. All the filth of days trapped in these caverns came back to her, and she moaned and cursed the cloak that it would not cleanse her—not fully. She looked to her tinderbox.
Then something slammed into the stout, locked door. She screamed again and scrubbed harder. Harder. Knuckles split, and the scratches drew blood.
She didn’t stop, couldn’t stop. She couldn’t let them see. Couldn’t let them …
Gargan finally bashed the door open and Liet tumbled in, sword drawn, to defend Twilight from whatever could be attacking her. Slip danced in behind him, mace in one hand and obsidian dagger in the other. Even Davoren was there, scepter in hand.
Liet saw Twilight standing nude in the center of the room, Betrayal in both hands. Scratches covered her body. Shaking, midnight hair wild, she stared at them with terrible vehemence. In the corner of the chamber, something burned smokily.
“’Light?” He thought to sheathe the sword, but wasn’t sure it was prudent.
“Stay away,” Twilight snapped. “Stay back! Traitors! Liars!”
Liet stepped toward her. The rapier pointed at his face. “Back!” she screamed.
There was tense silence punctuated only by her heavy breathing.
“Davoren,” Liet said quietly. “Davoren—give Slip your cloak.”
For once, the warlock did what he was bid. Despite a weighing smile, he stripped off the black fabric, tattered as it had become, and handed it to the halfling.
“Slip,” Liet said.
She hesitated, trembling.
“Slip, please.”
The halfling looked up at Gargan for support, and the goliath nodded. Slip crept into Twilight’s chamber and proffered the cloak. As Liet had thought, the elf did not attack her. She accepted the garment, looked at Slip with something like thanks, then collapsed like a discarded marionette.
They rushed to her side.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
In her own clothes, having had some water from Liet’s skin, Twilight felt more herself, though the shudders hadn’t quite passed. Of course she hadn’t told the others what happened—a nightmare, she said. She wasn’t even certain that had been a lie, though she suspected not; she smelled like blood. She worried they noticed.
Davoren stretched and moved about his tasks of the morning with a spring in his step that had nothing to do with the lack of food. “I halfway enjoy life in this labyrinth without the golden bitch constantly whining,” said the warlock. “Ah, silence.”
“You said that already,” growled Slip from her cloak.
“Ah yes,” Davoren replied with a smile. He bent down next to her and looked her in the eye. “I just wanted to make sure my point came across quite fully.”
The halfling bristled but said nothing, prompting the warlock’s grin to widen. Slip shoved the rest of her gear in her pack and scurried over to where Twilight sat against the wall, clasping her arms about herself. Twilight met the halfling with an easy smile.
“Good morn, little one,” she said as Slip thumped down with a sigh. She reached over and put an arm around the halfling’s shoulders, as one might a child. Since her horror of the night before—which might have been a dream, anyway—she had found nothing as comforting as the small one—not her clothes, not her sword, not Liet.
After a time, Slip spoke, quietly and hesitantly. “’Light, I’ve a favor to ask.” Her innocent voice sounded particularly meek in the dark cavern.
“I’m a great proponent of conversation. Say on.”
“Well,” the halfling started. She contemplated the dark spot she was busy scuffing on her boot. “If I paid you enough … would you … kill Davoren for me?”
Twilight bit her lip, not a little stunned. Slip was always so compassionate, so loyal, so … good, for lack of a better term. Twilight could hardly believe the little woman could ask such a question.
“What could you possibly have to pay me?” asked Twilight.
“I could save the strongest healing magics of me lord for you,” the halfling said. The words sounded so blatantly strategic. “If you’d do this thing, I—”
“Firstly, there can be no alliances,” Twilight said. “If any of the others perceive us as partners, or even as friends, it will spark a schism. I do not want to worry about the others plotting against me, or you, or both of us.”
“But—”
“No alliances. If I’m wounded, it’s just the same as if Gargan, Liet, or, aye, even Davoren were wounded.” She clutched Slip’s arm tightly. “I want your word on that.”
Slip’s eyes fell and she sniffed. “Fine,” she said, defeated.
“Secondly, do I look like an assassin?” asked Twilight. “Gods, no. I’m a thief, just
like you. I don’t kill for coin. Might as well be a dinger, or a fen, for that matter, winning with brute force and manual labor what I couldn’t get through finesse.” That she slipped into cant, referring to a thug and a prostitute, should have told Slip something. From her blank eyes, it didn’t, so Twilight stopped. “I have a little more self-respect than that.”
It was difficult to tell if Slip was pleased or disappointed.
“And thirdly, the prime reason you can’t pay me to kill Davoren,” said Twilight, leaning in close. She adopted a cold tone. “I’d gladly do it for free.”
Slip giggled and Twilight grinned, though she didn’t laugh. Slip was more than she seemed, and something she’d said had struck Twilight as wrong, but damned if she could place it. She was too tired.
The events of the previous night had drained her and left her numb—empty. She knew, however, what the others expected of her, and she could use it to her advantage. She felt like her old self again—or one of them, anyway. Taslin’s blood had been a shock. Things couldn’t continue as they had. Something had to change.
She hugged the little halfling tightly. Nervous about Liet, Twilight was glad of Slip’s companionship. Perhaps she had her mysteries, and perhaps she was less than stable, but at least Twilight could rely on her to be mysterious and less than stable. And if there was a spy, she would need someone she could trust.
“We go by the south door,” Twilight announced when they were ready to depart.
The reactions were myriad and telling. Liet bit his lip. Davoren rolled his eyes. Gargan shrugged noncommittally, and Slip balked. Liet thought they were past this, but whatever had happened to her this morning must have changed that.
“B-but,” Slip said. “You said …”
“It matters not what I said,” replied Twilight. “But let us be more specific. You four shall take the route south of the sanctum, which I know leads up.”
“How?” Davoren snapped.
Twilight flashed him a whimsical smile. “I wouldn’t be much of a thief if I didn’t scout ahead,” she said. “The door, which I have unlocked, leads steadily upward until it arrives at a trapdoor hidden in the ceiling, inscribed with the inverted Netherese runes we saw before. There, you will find your way.”
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