Hunt the Darkness (Guardians of Eternity #11)(56)
Sally clenched her teeth. This was going about as well as she’d expected.
“Just help him.”
There was a chilled breeze as the male vampire returned. “There’s no one else in the vicinity.”
The female nodded her head toward Roke. “Take Roke to his lair and call for the healer. Tell her that he might be poisoned.” The blue eyes narrowed as they remained locked on Sally. “Or it might be a spell.”
The male moved obediently forward, scooping Roke off the ground with a gentle care that eased a small part of Sally’s thundering terror.
Whatever their fury with her, it clearly wasn’t directed at their chief.
“What about the witch?” the male asked as Sally scrambled to her feet, trying to put some distance between them.
The female strolled forward, her lips twisted with disgust. “Unfortunately, we have to keep her alive until we know if she’s put a spell on Roke. If she did, she’s the only one who can break it.”
“A pity,” the male muttered.
The female shrugged. “Until then, I get to do something I’ve waited weeks to do.”
Sally parted her lips to assure them that all she wanted to do was help Roke when the female lifted her hand and with a casual motion slapped Sally with enough force to make the world go black.
Styx watched Siljar as she leaned over the dead fairy, her black, almond-shaped eyes unblinking and her hands folded at her waist.
She’d been in that precise pose for the past ten minutes while Styx impatiently paced the stone floor and Viper kept watch at the mouth of the tunnel.
He still wasn’t sure if he’d made the right decision to bring Siljar into the investigation. Sure, she’d been the one to start the ball rolling. But he couldn’t deny there were questions of whether she might actually be involved.
It’d only been after he and Viper had discussed every angle of the investigation that he realized they’d come to a dead end.
What choice did he have but to ask the powerful Oracle for help?
At last the tiny demon straightened, her braid nearly brushing the floor.
“His magic has been drained,” she pronounced.
“And that killed him?”
“Yes.”
Styx frowned. That seemed . . . hideous.
“How?”
“There are demons who feed off magic, but it’s a rare talent,” Siljar explained.
“Good. That narrows down the field of suspects.”
Siljar arched a brow. “Law & Order or NCIS?”
Styx shrugged, refusing to be embarrassed. “Law & Order. Darcy is an addict.”
“How very odd.”
Maybe it was a little odd for a centuries-old vampire to snuggle on the couch with his mate and watch Law & Order, but he didn’t give a shit.
If it made Darcy smile he was fully on board.
“Are there any Oracles who suck magic from their victims?” he asked.
Siljar stilled, her black gaze studying him with unnerving intensity. “You instantly assumed it was an Oracle. Why?”
Styx grimaced. Sometimes he forgot just how perceptive the tiny demon truly was.
A serious mistake.
“I have my Ravens spread through the area.”
She appeared unconcerned by his reluctant confession. “I expected as much.”
“Only three people entered the caves before we found the corpse. Viper, myself, and the fairy.” He glanced toward the fairy who was rapidly disintegrating. Another hour and he would be nothing more than pixie dust. Literally. “Whoever killed him was already here. Unless they have your ability to travel.”
“Not without alerting me,” Siljar said without hesitation. “No one beyond me and my daughter, Yannah, traveled out of these caves for the past week.”
Styx nodded. It’s what he expected, considering the effort the demon had expended to try to do his disappearing act in the middle of the woods.
“But there are Oracles who share your talent?” he pressed.
Siljar tilted her head to the side. “Why do I suspect that is more than a casual question?”
“One of my Ravens spotted a cloaked figure leaving the caves and disappearing a few miles away.”
“The figure disappeared, it didn’t just disguise its presence?”
Styx folded his arms over his chest, offended by the question. “No disguise could fool my Raven.”
Indifferent to Styx’s icy tone, Siljar tapped a finger against her chin.
“Are your Ravens still out there?”
“Of course.”
“Has the creature returned?”
Styx had checked with Jagr only minutes before. “No.”
“I believe I will call the Commission into session.” Siljar headed toward the opening of the cavern, her pace surprisingly swift for such a tiny demon. “It should prove interesting to see who is here.”
“Or not here,” Styx added.
“Precisely.”
Chapter Fourteen
Brandel hurried through the secret tunnel, still struggling to hold his corporal shape.
Goddamn that stupid witch. She’d ruined everything despite his clever plan.
After the previous fiasco he’d realized he couldn’t just charge in and grab the box.
He’d spent hours creating the perfect poison and loading it in the dart, then more time devoted to tracing the ancient magic to locate the box. Time well spent he’d assured himself as he caught sight of his prey trying to escape.
Alexandra Ivy's Books
- What Are You Afraid Of? (The Agency #2)
- Alexandra Ivy
- Blood Assassin (The Sentinels #2)
- Born in Blood (The Sentinels #1)
- Sinful Rapture (The Rapture #2)
- First Rapture (The Rapture #1)
- My Lord Immortality (Immortal Rogues #3)
- My Lord Eternity (Immortal Rogues #2)
- My Lord Vampire (Immortal Rogues #1)
- Predatory (Immortal Guardians #3.5)