A Book of Spirits and Thieves (Spirits and Thieves #1)(31)
He was surprised that seeing her again had quickly cast a measure of lightness into this gloomy dungeon cell.
“You’re still here,” he said, fighting a smile.
“What?” Livius snapped. “Of course I am, you fool.”
Becca shrugged. “I did say I’d haunt you forever, didn’t I?”
Maddox ignored his guardian and focused on the girl. “You said you would if I didn’t help the witch.”
She drew closer, her worried gaze locking on his. “I thought for a while I was only having a bad dream and that I’d wake up eventually, but this is real. You’re real. He’s real. . . .” She glanced at Livius, her expression souring. “He’s a total dick, by the way. How can you let him abuse you like that, without getting fed up and kicking his ass? You’re not five years old. You’re, like, my age. At least.”
Kicking his ass? He responded to this suggestion with an involuntary laugh. Livius didn’t own a mule.
“You’re talking to yourself.” Livius peered at him with his good eye. “Are you mad, boy?”
“That would be an excellent explanation,” Maddox said, nodding.
“Or perhaps . . .” Livius scanned the cell. “You see a spirit in here, don’t you?”
“Yeah, he does, you jerk,” Becca said, her hands now on her hips. “I swear, if I could, I would knee you so hard in your—”
“I don’t see anybody in here but you,” Maddox said quickly to Livius before Becca could finish.
He pointed at the door. “Break it down and get us out of here.”
“You know I can’t control my magic that easily. Even if I could, I don’t think I could use it to break down a heavy dungeon door.”
“If you controlled it at the festival, then you can control it now.”
“In case you were wondering,” Becca said, “the guard woke up. Let’s just say he was really pissed off.” She shot Maddox a smile, but it faded as quickly as it had appeared. “But I didn’t realize it would get you into so much trouble. When the guard hit you . . .” She studied his temple with a pained expression. He touched it, feeling the dried blood. “I—I thought they were going to kill you, and all I could do was stand there and watch.”
“They didn’t kill me.”
At least not yet, he thought.
She played absently with her honey-colored braid as if she couldn’t keep her hands still. “My aunt taught me and my sister some self-defense moves once. I tried to punch him, but it didn’t work. My hand went right through his ugly face. I was so scared you were going to die.”
No one had ever been afraid for his life before. It made him oddly happy that this strange and beautiful girl seemed to care about him. That was, until he gave it a little more thought.
“Why were you scared I might die?” he began. “Because if I did, I wouldn’t be able to help you get back to your home?”
Her concerned expression vanished and was replaced by annoyance. “That wasn’t what I meant.”
“I thought that was all you wanted from me.”
She crossed her arms tightly over her rose-colored tunic. “Actually, it is. But you never agreed to help me. Remember?”
“If I were dead, I couldn’t agree to anything. I’d be dead.”
This earned him a sharp glare. “If you’re trying to be funny right now, I’m not laughing.”
He glared back at her. “I’m not feeling all that amusing at the moment, actually.”
Livius regarded him sourly. “You’ve either gone mad as a nightbird or you are communicating with a spirit in an oddly friendly manner. Which is it, boy?”
“Madness or maddening spirits. Neither can help us at the moment.” Maddox tore his gaze from Becca’s and went to the door, in which a small, fist-sized window allowed a modest glimpse at the dark hallway. He could hear the moans of fellow prisoners coming from other cells.
“Is there a spirit in here or is there not?” Livius’s tone turned icy. “You’re avoiding my question.”
His annoyance at being trapped in a dungeon with two of the most frustrating people he’d ever known grew. “Me? Avoid your incredibly important question that helps us not at all, Livius? I’d never do such a thing.”
“You insolent little bastard.” Livius grabbed Maddox and slammed his head against the hard, metal door. Fresh pain screamed through him. “If I hadn’t come into your life, you’d be nothing. You’d have nothing. You would have starved to death long before now.”
“Wrong. My mother provided for me fine before you arrived.”
“Ha! Before she lost her looks, she made most of her coin by taking men to her bed. I imagine your real father was just another face in the night.”
Blood dripped into Maddox’s narrowed eyes from Livius’s most recent blow. “My mother is not a whore.”
Livius grinned, an unpleasant flash of white teeth. “If you believe that, you’re more of a fool than I thought you were. How do you think we met? She offered herself to me for two pieces of silver. A very good deal, I thought. She was worth at least three.”
Maddox turned a look of pure fury on the man, and then, as if a large, invisible hand shoved him, Livius staggered backward and hit the stone wall. He gasped and clutched at his throat.