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The Darkest Revenge

Page 47

by D. K. Holmberg


  Someone was on the other side of this door.

  He tested it but wasn’t surprised to find it locked.

  Could he Slide beyond this?

  He focused on the space behind the door.

  It was a strange, slow sort of Slide, different from any other he had done before.

  When he emerged, Daniel froze. Inside was a strange, circular stone cell. Within the cell was a man he had been taught to hate.

  Lareth.

  39

  Haern

  Haern waited for Galen. The other man hadn’t landed next to him, and while he wasn’t expecting him to suddenly appear, he did expect Galen to arrive at some point and help him. Could he be a Listener? That would explain why he hadn’t rushed in to assist when there was a risk of attack. Unless Galen didn’t see Rayen as dangerous. From what Haern had been able to determine, she probably wasn’t.

  The shadows retreated slowly. Rayen disappeared along the street, and as much as Haern was tempted, he didn’t dare follow her. He didn’t know what she might do and didn’t want to risk her wrath.

  There was a subtle movement, and Galen landed next to him. “What was that about?”

  “It was about me trying to convince Rayen to help us. Why didn’t you come help me?”

  “You weren’t in any danger.” Galen stared along the street, his brow furrowing. “Why would you think she could help? Rayen betrayed the Binders.”

  “That’s just it, I don’t think she has. I don’t know exactly what she’s been up to, but if she had intended to betray the Binders, she would have done so differently. She said that everything she’s done has been to support the Binders.”

  “And you believe her?”

  “I don’t have any reason not to. She’s angry at Carth, and she’s been accustomed to running the Binders herself over the last five years, so there is a certain level of distrust.”

  “That’s something I can understand,” Galen said.

  That wasn’t the expected response. “What now?”

  “Now we make our way back to the room and check on our captives.”

  “We still don’t understand why there have been so many Forgers in the city. They’re congregating, but they aren’t doing anything.”

  “From what I can tell, they’re preparing for something.”

  “An attack?”

  Galen’s eyes narrowed. He looked along the street, and Haern wondered what he could See. Galen was more talented than Haern, especially when it came to his Sight.

  “If they’re preparing for an attack, I wonder why here. The Forgers remain interested in the Elder Stones, but everything I’ve learned tells me there are no Elder Stones in Asador.”

  “What if there were?”

  “What are you getting at?”

  “My mother said there are Elder Stones in other places. They represent the ancient Elders, and they represent power. We have the sacred crystals in Elaeavn, and from what Carth has said, her people had Elder Stones. What if they have their own in Asador?”

  “I’ve never heard any rumors about any Elder Stones here.”

  “Would anyone outside of Elaeavn know about the sacred crystals?”

  Galen frowned. “There was a time when I would’ve said no, but now I’m not so certain. When the crystal was lost, others went searching.”

  “And the Forgers know about them.”

  “They do.”

  Haern looked over at Galen, meeting his eyes. “If there’s a sacred crystal here—or something similar to it—that could be what the Forgers are after. Maybe they’ve found it.”

  “If that’s the case, you need to send word to your new friend.”

  “I’m not sure Rayen would listen.”

  “She listened more than I was expecting. And if she still has control over the Binders, she might be the only way we have of getting word to the rest of them. We’ll need their help, especially if it involves securing something from the Forgers that might make them stronger.”

  “That’s not why I’m here, though.”

  “No. You came here for your father, and we have no word of him. The one person we thought might have a lead doesn’t. I’m no longer certain we will even be able to find him. We need to use everything in our power to ensure the Forgers don’t gain any more strength. If that involves preventing them from reaching Elder Stones that we didn’t know existed before, then we must do it.”

  Haern turned his attention to the street. “I’ll do this, but if we find word of my father—”

  “Then you can do what you must to rescue him. First we need to return to the tavern and ensure the Forgers don’t escape. We can find out what they know about Elder Stones that might be found in Asador.”

  “And Lucy.”

  They hurried along the street, and when they reached the tavern, there was a boisterous sort of energy and noise within it. Something left him unsettled, although there was no reason for him to worry. The Binders were here, but they’d had no conflict with them so far. And now that he had met Rayen and knew she was in charge of the Binders, he didn’t think they would have trouble with them.

  At the top of the stairs, there was a strange silence. Galen put his hand out, raising a finger to his lips.

  “What is it?” Haern mouthed.

  Galen shook his head. “I’m not sure.”

  He reached into his pouch and grabbed a pair of darts, quickly loading them with whatever toxin he could easily reach. Would it be merely a sedative, or something more abrasive—a dangerous poison that might burn away someone’s resistance?

  Did it matter? All that mattered was that it might be effective.

  Galen crept down the hallway in complete silence. Haern was reluctant to follow, fearing that he might make too much noise, but he needed to know. Maybe they were only being unnecessarily concerned, but what if they weren’t? What if there was activity here that put them in danger?

  Could other Forgers have come for them?

  It was possible, and Haern had no misconceptions about which of them would be necessary to stop the Forgers when it came to it.

  They reached the door to their room. Galen rested his hand on it, breathing slowly, and Haern tensed, everything within him ready for the possibility of an attack.

  Galen pushed the door open in a burst.

  He rolled back behind the wall, ducking out of the way. If he hadn’t, the knife that came shooting out of the room would have sunk into his chest.

  Someone was inside.

  Haern looked over at the knife.

  It wasn’t a knife. It was something else.

  A barb.

  He recognized the weapon.

  A Forger weapon.

  “Galen. It’s Forgers—”

  Haern didn’t have a chance to say anything more. A Forger appeared in the door, and Galen spun, jamming one of his darts into the man’s chest.

  The man collapsed, but not before striking out, bringing the weapon around to attack.

  Haern lunged and grabbed the Forger’s arm, wrestling it down before he managed to strike Galen.

  Galen spun off and dropped to the floor, rolling forward. He threw something out, and by the time Haern managed to push the Forger off him, he looked up to see another Forger dropped to the floor.

  The captives were no longer captives.

  One of the men was beginning to get up, and the other—the one who had resisted the most—glared at Galen, watching him for a moment before disappearing in a shimmer.

  The other Forger started to rise and lunged toward Galen.

  Haern Saw it and jumped.

  His elbow caught the man in the head, and he dropped to the floor, collapsing on top of the other man’s head.

  Galen looked at him. “What about your ability with lorcith?”

  “I didn’t think about it.”

  Galen grunted. “It was effective. You may want to get off him before he bleeds all over you.”

  Haern got to his feet and saw that the man he�
��d attacked wouldn’t be getting up, certainly not anytime soon. Blood pooled around his head.

  The inside of the room was in a bit of a disarray.

  “How would they have found us?”

  “The Forgers have many ways. I had thought we would be able to get through this in time, but unfortunately, we’ve now lost him.”

  “He knows what we’re looking for.”

  “He knows, as do these two.”

  “But you killed them.”

  “No. A sedative, that’s it. I intended to dose them with more of the slithca to ensure they can’t Slide, but once they come around, we can ask questions.”

  Galen grabbed one of the men and dragged him into the room. He worked quickly, injecting the poison into first one Forger and then the other.

  Haern stood in the doorway, half-expecting someone to appear, worried that the Forger who had escaped would return.

  “We won’t be able to remain here, will we?” Haern asked.

  “I’m going to go down and find us an alternative room.”

  “You intend to stay in this same place?”

  “There’s no reason not to. They might come to this tavern, but they won’t expect us to have stayed. Besides, until we get back to Carth, I’m not sure how much I want to be moving locations.”

  “You just intend to interrogate them?”

  “You say that as if I should be ashamed of it.” Galen looked at the fallen Forgers. “All that matters is that we manage to get the information we need. If it leads us to Lareth or your friend, then so be it. If it leads us to whatever the Forgers are after, even better.”

  Haern breathed out. It would have to be enough.

  When they had the men bound and secured, they headed down to the main part of the tavern. Haern stood off to the corner, watching the activity within the room. There was a certain energy, and it was happy, carefree, not the same way that he felt. He was anxious and tense. It had been a long time since he had felt carefree like that.

  Galen spoke softly to one of the women. She had dark skin and dark hair and she wore a rich chocolate-colored dress that accentuated her figure. He leaned in, speaking intently, before turning back to Haern.

  When Galen rejoined him, he pressed a hand on Haern’s shoulder, guiding him back up the stairs, this time to the third level.

  “What did you tell her?”

  “Only that we needed an extra room so that you could enjoy yourself.”

  “Galen—”

  Galen shrugged. “It needed to be believable. Besides, I’m not giving up the other room. We can use it to set a trap.”

  “What if it doesn’t work?”

  “It might not, but that doesn’t mean I won’t try.”

  Galen checked the room, pausing in the doorway. It was a little smaller than the one they had occupied before, and he searched the space, ensuring there was nothing there that the Forgers might be able to use.

  When he was satisfied, he motioned for Haern to follow him. They headed down the stairs, back toward the first room, when another of the serving women caught them.

  “You’re here?”

  “We are here. Why?” Galen asked.

  “There was just someone here looking for you.”

  “Who?” Galen asked. He reached into his pouch, and Haern half-expected him to pull out one of his darts and attack the woman.

  “What can I say? He had your height and eye color,” she said.

  Someone from Elaeavn, but who?

  “What did he look like?”

  “I just told you what he looked like,” she said.

  “What did he say?”

  “He was talking about Carth and the network.”

  Galen nodded. He paused at the door to their room, glancing back at Haern. “That’s your friend.”

  “Should we wait for him?”

  Galen frowned. “I’m not sure we can. The only problem is, I don’t know quite how to find him.”

  “I might be able to help with that.”

  “How?”

  “Lorcith.” They stepped into the room, and Haern tried not to look down at the fallen Forger as he grabbed one of the Forgers who was still alive, though motionless.

  “You think you can detect lorcith on your friend from a distance?”

  “He’s not my friend.” He said it far more forcefully than he intended. “He carries a lorcith sword, and I think it’s one my father forged. I think I can find it if I focus.” Finding lorcith in the city—and from something that he hadn’t forged—would be difficult, but if it meant figuring out what Daniel had been up to, Haern would need to do it.

  Galen grunted as he lifted the other Forger, and they headed out of the room, locking the door behind them. “Once we find him, we have to reach him.”

  “Without any way of Sliding, it will take longer,” Haern agreed.

  Galen clenched his jaw, and they grunted as they hurried up the stairs to their new room. When they were up there, they tossed the two men off to the side, leaving them there.

  “Go to it,” Galen said.

  “What about you?”

  “I’m going to go make the body more tempting.”

  “Why?”

  “The other Forger will return, and he needs to think that we’re still staying in that room. When he comes back with whatever help he intends to bring, we need to be ready.”

  He didn’t like the idea of drawing Forgers here. He didn’t need to cause trouble in this tavern, but at the same time, they needed to know what the Forgers were after and whether there was an Elder Stone in Asador.

  When Galen was gone, Haern took a seat on the end of the bed and began to focus on lorcith. As he had told Galen, there was a connection to lorcith he’d forged before. It was unique, and it seemed to call to him so that as long as the lorcith was nearby, he would be able to use that sense and draw to it. If only the sword was one that he had forged.

  Still, with enough lorcith, he could reach for the metal, and considering the fact that there wasn’t nearly as much lorcith in Asador as in other places, he might be able to detect it. Plus he’d pushed on it before. That should help him.

  As he reached, his mind wandered. He thought about his connection to lorcith. It would have been easier had he been the one to forge it, but his weapons weren’t nearly as impressive as those his father had made. Those were almost as decorative as they were useful. Connecting to lorcith like this reminded him of being in the smithy, working at the metal, trying to do what his grandfather instructed.

  It wasn’t his strength. He didn’t love forging metal the way his father and grandfather did. Haern hadn’t known what he wanted to do and had only stuck with blacksmithing because he had no other options.

  The things that Galen knew were intriguing. Not the healing—that wasn’t terribly exciting, and if he wanted to learn that, he thought he could acquire the knowledge from someone like Darren—but the knowledge of poisons, and of how to acquire information that was otherwise difficult to gain. That interested him.

  Shaking away those thoughts, he continued to keep his focus on the sword.

  There was lorcith throughout the city.

  That realization came to him first and was nearly enough for him to lose his connection. He ignored the lorcith nearest him and found a familiar sense of the metal.

  The sword. It had to be.

  It was distant, but not so distant that he couldn’t pick up on it.

  At least Daniel was still in Asador. The sword was there, but growing fainter. And then suddenly, it disappeared.

  Galen returned, and Haern jumped to his feet. “We need to go.”

  “Go?”

  “The sense of lorcith…”

  “You were able to find it?”

  “I was, but then it disappeared.”

  “With your friend’s ability, that’s not surprising.”

  “Not my friend,” he said again. “And I don’t think he Slid. I’ve never known lorcith to simply disappear when s
omeone Slides. It grows more distant, so faint that it’s almost nothing, but this… it completely vanished.”

  “Are you sure?”

  “I know what I detected, Galen.” Would he have to argue with Galen the same way he argued with his parents?

  Galen glanced over to the fallen Forgers. “It seems we have to leave them a little sooner than I expected. Hopefully the sedative lasts until we return. Otherwise we will have to deal with these two again.”

  “We’re going to have to deal with the Forgers again regardless,” he said.

  “I know, but we need to know if they’re attempting to claim an Elder Stone.”

  They hurried out of the tavern, and Galen nodded at the woman who had told them that Daniel had come.

  Out on the street, there were a handful of people, most hurrying from place to place. None were suspicious. Haern had begun to watch for signs of shifting shadows, but he saw none of that now. There was no evidence of Carth—or Rayen.

  “Which way?” Galen asked.

  Haern barely had to focus to remember from which direction he had detected the sense of lorcith. “North.”

  “North? Why would he have gone there?”

  Haern could only shrug. “I don’t know. That’s where I detected the lorcith.”

  “There isn’t much there other than the coast and some of the more luxurious manor houses—nothing really beyond there.”

  Which made Haern a little more nervous. If there wasn’t anything beyond there, what would Daniel have done? Where would he have gone off to?

  A troubling thought came to him. There had been someone who had betrayed the city. Could it have been Daniel? Could that be why he was here in Asador?

  “We should get moving.”

  Galen paused a moment to search through his pouch, manipulating a few things within it before finally nodding to Haern.

  “Were you getting darts ready?”

  “Not knowing what we might face, I thought it was prudent.”

  “You said there isn’t anything to the north.”

  “There’s not, which is why I’m concerned. Beyond the city, you reach the shores of the sea. Unless he would Slide across the sea—”

  Haern shook his head. “I don’t think he’d ever left Elaeavn before.”

 

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