Read Blightcross: A Novel Online
Authors: C.A. Lang
“I thought you wanted to own a restaurant. You can do that anywhere. If you were smart, you'd do it here in Blightcross. The business growth here seems unprecedented.”
“I never said I wanted to own anything.” But before she could drift into fluffy visions of her plans, she found the street in question and began to search for the address written on her hand. “It should be right here...”
She scanned the block for any sign of the grey-haired man they were to meet. She found him pacing in front of one of the townhouses, cracking his knuckles and wringing his hands.
“Sir! My colleague and I have decided to accept your offer.”
“Ah. Are you sure?” He looked at Dannac for a moment, and the questioning lines in his forehead smoothed, as if the Ehzeri's presence had answered a silent question about how this woman was going to perform an eviction.
Capra extended her hand to the man. He ignored the gesture. He ignored her altogether, and she couldn't understand why, since he had given her his attention at the lunch counter.
“Now,” the man said to Dannac, “I should tell you that this man has dispatched two bailiffs previously.”
“What do youâ”
Dannac raised his hand and cut her off. “Just the one man?”
“Of course.”
“I have dealt with worse.”
The man's eyes flicked to Capra. “She one of your healers? Is that your edge?”
Dannac nodded.
She tried again. “Butâ”
“Just one condition. I want all of the money up front. You can stay here and watch. I can assure you the fight will not last long, if he chooses to start one.”
The man chewed his lip and fiddled with the buttons on his coat. All the while, Capra's gaze flitted between both men, and she wondered if she had stepped into a vivid dream where she had become a phantom. The men seemed to have an understanding, or at least Dannac was pretending that they did. Had the man thought that Capra were just a runner, just a secretary, for Dannac?
It was unthinkable.
But, she reminded herself, the rest of the world was not used to new ways of the Valoii.
“Fine.” The man dropped four coins into Dannac's palm. She was about to snatch her share from him, but by now realized that the act was important.
Dannac kicked open the iron gate, and there was the sound of snapping metal. Capra skittered behind.
“Try not to damage the new wainscoting!”
She assumed that Dannac would know what that meant, because he casually raised his hand and said nothing to the man. They stopped at the door, where he pounded four times on the deep red wood.
“Can you see inside?” she asked.
“I can. There is only one person inside, upstairs.” He knocked again. “And he is not moving.”
“Maybe he's dead?”
He raised an eyebrow. “The dead appear differently to me, unless freshly deceased. This man is as orange as you or I.”
Only now did she realize the implications of having left everything behind on the ship. She had no weapons, except the switchblade she always carried hidden in the ornamental band on her left arm.
Anyway, it was just one man who couldn't afford to pay his own rent. She wouldn't need an arsenal for that.
“Why did you ignore me just now?”
“The man expected it. Most do, Capra.”
“It seems worse here. Back in theâ”
“This is not the Little Nations.” He gazed around the side of the house. “I think we should go around back.”
So they left the porch, while the man from the lunch counter stood with his arms crossed and puffed on a metal pipe. They ducked under clothes flapping in the breeze, and nearly tripped over a couch that was inexplicably lying askew on the grass at the rear of the house. Dannac gave a quick nod, then smashed open the back door with his boot.
It would be quick, especially since Dannac could pinpoint the man's location through the walls. His strange sight almost made up for his attitude.
He couldn't see the colour of a person's skin, or pick up on their finer features. Still, he knew she was a Valoii. Why had he chosen to stay with her?
He took point, and went straight for the front of the house, as if he already knew the layout. She followed and fell into her usual role of sharp observer, which usually meant watching for panels in the floor that didn't look quite right, or authority-types closing in on their rear. But this time, she saw only dirt-smudged floorboards, empty shelves, and rubbish strewn about. There were no authority-types to watch for. This time, they were the authority. An uncomfortable thought.
They went upstairs, and Dannac's footsteps boomed throughout the house. Capra stepped lightly out of habit, and reached to her armband to retrieve the switchblade.
“Time to give it up,” Dannac said. His voice echoed in hall.
He approached a doorway, to which he gestured with a jerk of his head. He stepped into the room.
“Don't make meâ”
There was a sudden charge in the air, and a chill crawled beneath Capra's skin. There was an undefined grunt from Dannac, and thunderâ
Dannac flew from the room and slammed into the wall across from Capra. She gripped her little knife and, after she saw Dannac shaking his head, showing he was still alive, crept around the doorway.
She poked her head around first. But a confused breath caught between her lips once she saw inside. She didn't expect that the force that had slammed Dannac out of the fight would be an obese, sweaty man, nearly passed out in the corner of a bare room. All around him there were smoked glass bottles, and a host of metal utensilsâspoons and other devices she was too anxious to place.
“Whatever you do, do it now!” Dannac's voice was gravelly and weak.
She gulped. The man was just lying there, eyes bloodshot and mired by a sickly cloudiness, and she did not want to accept that he was also drooling. He raised a hand, muttered something, and she felt it againâ
A buzz, a thrill, something to which she had been taught by her countrymen to react with deadly force...
It triggered her senses and training so that she dodged the man's etheric attack, and leaped across the room faster than the man's pathetic eyes could track. The room took on a surreal qualityâit was the first time in nearly a year that she had needed to use the
vihs
sensitization instilled in her by the army. This man was an Ehzeri. A powerful one.
The skin on her forearms prickled, and she watched him for the subliminal cues she instinctively scrutinized every
vihs-
capable Ehzeri for by sheer habit of her training. She brought the knife into a ready position and widened her stance.
There was a dust storm that day, and her platoon had donned their dark green head scarves. The suspected Ehzeri compound was not much of a compound at all, just a collection of tents baking in the sun...
Her mouth turned dry, and she hesitated to strike. “Look... you've got a problem... I can see that...”
Dannac called out from the hall: “Don't talk to him, kill him!”
She ignored him. “There must be a place you can go.”
The man shifted and knocked over several bottles. “Need more of it. Got to. You?”
What was he asking for? Medicine? No, there was something else wrong with him. She tried to think of her training, of what this kind of erratic
vihs
discharge could result from. Emotional turmoil, illness, inebriation, old ageâ
Whatever the cause, she had to act before the charge racing through the air and tingling her skin reached its critical point and the man attacked her once again.
She flipped the knife around, and was about to dart in close enough to put the man into a hold, when it came.
All she saw was a crackling light spread across her eyes. When a breath later she opened them, she lay crumpled in the corner opposite the Ehzeri. Her head ached, and any amount of light only acted as a hammer to pound the pain deeper into her skull.
Fat man, magic gone awry, paid in full...
There still pressed in her palm the reassuring bulk of her knife. There was still time toâ
A metallic glint sailed through the room, followed by a meaty thud. She gathered herself, recoiled once she found the Ehzeri spewing blood from his head. A small hatchet stuck from his forehead.
Dannac stumbled in and helped her stand. “I told you to kill him.” Her legs cramped, and she was instantly reminded of the familiarization training, of being intentionally attacked by a magic wielder. “You should be dead.”
She leaned on her thighs and tried to catch her breath. “I didn't think we'd be sent to remove a
vihs-
capable squatter. I didn't think there was any of that going on here.”
“Me neither.” There was a hard note in his voice, more than usual.
“Do you gain satisfaction from taking down someone from a family who still has power? With a dull hatchet, no less.”
He pulled the weapon from the dead man's wound and dropped it. “Come on, the man outside paid us to remove this person. He may be dead, but he is still here.”
Vasi's nose twitched at the smell of the ancient book pressed against her face. Her eyes felt stiff and her heart jolted at the sudden awakening. When she opened her eyes, she found herself sprawled across one of her lab's many benches.
A pounding arose from the door. Frantic pounding. “Vasi, open this door right now. Are you in trouble in there? Hm?”
She stood, dazed for a moment. The dream was still there, like a translucent blanket draped over her perception. Blackness, like in that horrible painting she had been analyzing... complete blackness, as if she were in the painting's presence and being drawn into its abyss.
“Vasi!” More pounding.
Sevari. What did he want? She braced herself and concentrated on the heavy door's locks. It took more effort to move them than usual, thanks to the black dream dampening her thoughts.
Sevari stormed in, all polished boots and crisp brown uniform. He made a quick tour of the lab, heels thudding and hands laced at his back.
“What took you so long?” He picked up a book, began to page through it.
“Sorry, Leader. I was... indisposed.”
“There is something off about you. Are you ill? Should I send for a surgeon? I had thought that your kind could heal yourselves, but perhaps there are some things best left to the medical profession.”
“No. I am fine. I just...” Lying to Till Sevari was a bad idea. “I think the painting is affecting me more than I had thought. Even though it's locked in your museum, I felt drawn into it.” She turned away.
“Damned Helverliss.” He put his hand on her shoulder, which made her cringe. “All the more reason I need you to unravel the mad artist's secrets.” He resumed his stomping. “Although, perhaps your visions may be a clue. Perhaps the painting's power is communicating with you. Or even some buried aspect of the artist himself. Maybe we could even manipulate him through this link...”
She thought for a moment. Sevari knew more about his obsessions than anyone, but even to an Ehzeri with farfetched abilities, this seemed a bit silly.
He held his fist to his lips and paced. “What did you see?”
She shrugged. “It was just a crazy dream, Leader. Iâ”
“What did you see, Vasi? Hm? Tell me. It may be important. It may be the secret we both need to understand Helverliss and his horrible artwork.”
That biting tone, that impatience, gave her a cold shiver. This change in pitch often preceded executions. “Okay, let me think. It was black, just like the painting. The abyss.” Closed eyes, forced serenity. Sevari's agitated breath beat against her neck. Damn his nonexistent personal boundaries...
She relived the blackness, a sucking void that lived inside the enchanted painting. Nothing new.
“It's just the same thing over and over again, Leader. I doubt my impressions of the void is of any use to us.”
Sevari snorted and shuffled his feet. “This project is taking far too long. How can one insane artist evade my entire research wing? Hm? I have studied for decades, and still this damned fool's work eludes me.” With a sigh, he resumed his stomping course through the laboratory.
“We'll get it. It's notâ” Like a bolt of lightning, an image shattered the void. An image of deep blue, of sensuous curves. She gasped.
“What is it?”
She barely heard Sevari, and was more concerned with focusing on the figure. Not a figureâa person. With... wings?
“It's an archon.” Her voice trailed off. Of all things to see, why did it have to be this?
“A what?”
The archon turned, lashing its forked tail like an annoyed lion. A beam of moonlight splashed its face, illuminated sharp fangs. Vasi's chest rattled. She muttered, hardly audible, “I vowed never again...”
“What is this?”
She stumbled over her words. “An archon. She's beautiful. But...” An uneasiness came over her, and the image disappeared. Still a presence lingered inside her, as if the archon were watching. “Perhaps you call them angels. Whatever you call them, one must take notice if they see one.”
“An omen, you say?”
She rubbed her temples. “I am not sure what it means. It could just be my overworked mind.”
“Nonsense. Everything has meaning, Vasi.” He hummed to himself, and his strange thought processes reared once again in his nervous tapping and jiggling. “Angels, really. Perhaps they are trapped in the painting, and waiting for us to release them. If he has trapped shadows inside, why not angels?”
“I don't know thatâ”
Sevari clapped loud enough that she flinched. “I had, in my studies, begun to doubt that these angels, or any divine force, really existed. Of course, there are the worldspirits, but those are merely ideas that move us, not actual beings with tails and fangs. Perhaps these archons, as you call them, are agents of the worldspirits.”
“I really think thatâ”