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It wasn't until we reached the highway that I felt some of the tension that was threatening to choke me start to ease. Bronx didn't turn on the radio and I was content to listen to the sound of the car cruising down the smooth concrete while the streetlamps flashed overhead. As dire as my own situation was becoming, I found my thoughts centering on Gideon and his young daughter. She would be turning seven soon.
"You asked about Sofie," I started, and then stopped. Bronx patiently waited while I attempted to organize my thoughts. It wasn't so much that I was trying to censor myself, but that it was simply better if he didn't know certain things. Swearing softly, I reached up and touched the ceiling of the car while whispering a quick word, creating a protective bubble over the car so no one could magically overhear me. d.a.m.n, I was getting paranoid.
"Gideon has a daughter," I confessed after another lengthy silence.
"Is that a bad thing?"
A smile quirked the corners of my mouth. "Witches and warlocks aren't permitted to marry or have children. It's seen as a weakness and a liability."
"What does Gideon's daughter have to do with Sofie?"
"His daughter has either exhibited some magical talent or he's afraid she will. If so, she has to be trained, and he can't send her to the Towers. They would know in a heartbeat that she was his daughter."
"And Gideon, his daughter, and eventually his wife would be killed," Bronx concluded.
"Yes."
"But if Sofie was changed back to human, would she stay here or would she rather return to the Towers?"
I stared out the pa.s.senger-side window and frowned. "I don't know."
I had known Sofie in human form only briefly while I was living at the Ivory Towers during my apprenticeship to Simon Thorn. She had been nice and motherly, albeit a little meddlesome. Somewhere along the way she had run afoul of a witch or warlock, and had been turned into a big Russian-blue cat. As far as I knew, she couldn't return to human form until the person who cursed her died. After spending several years as the pet of an elderly woman, she was now living fat and sa.s.sy with Trixie.
Unlike Gideon, Sofie gave no indication that she didn't approve of how things ran in the Ivory Towers. The only reason she had left was that she felt more vulnerable in cat form. Her ability to use magic had been severely limited. I feared that if Sofie were human again, she would happily return to the Towers, which would be of no help to Gideon and his daughter.
There wasn't much I agreed with when it came to the beliefs of the witches and warlocks of the Ivory Towers, but I thought they were right when it came to training all human children who possessed magical talent. It was for the children's protection and those around them as much as it was about spreading knowledge. An untrained child who could unconsciously tap magical energy was a serious danger. In moments of fear or anger, people died around the child without the child intending it to happen.
Gideon knew that. If Sofie couldn't train his daughter, he had few options. He couldn't do it himself without risking others finding out. Training was an intensive, full-time gig and Gideon was already working for the council as a guardian. But if Bridgette wasn't trained, she'd have to be killed.
I closed my eyes against the ugly thought but it was still there. For a brief second I thought that I could at least teach her a few basic things about control and protection, but I crushed the thought before it fully formed. What the f.u.c.k did I know about caring for a seven-year-old girl? I was an outcast former warlock-in-training now a tattoo artist who moonlighted nights doing odd jobs for the local mob. Not a great role model. Sofie was the best choice. I'd have to convince her of it.
"As much as I hate to ask after all the fun we've had tonight," I started, shoving my thoughts back to my most immediate problem, "but what are the chances that Reave doesn't know about tonight's events?"
"Oh, he knows," Bronx said as he took the exit ramp off the highway. "He definitely knows by now."
"Retribution?"
"Oh, yeah. Expect pain."
I leaned my head to the side, hitting it against the window. It was my fault. Bronx had nothing to do with my decision to free the pixies but I knew that Reave would punish him along with me. "d.a.m.n it! I'm sorry."
"For what? The pixies?"
"Yeah."
"Do you regret it?"
"No."
"Then don't apologize," Bronx said. He slowed the car to a stop at a red light and glanced over at me. "You saved lives tonight, and if you didn't do something, I would have."
"Thanks."
He shrugged. "It's been a rough night. You want me to drop you at Trixie's?"
"You think it's safe?"
"Reave's going to need time to realign his distribution network after tonight's escapade. We've got a day or two. Besides, I'm sure he knows about Trixie and you. Staying away won't protect her if he wants to attack you from that side."
"Then Trixie's would be great," I said with a sigh. "You can come up too. She won't mind."
Bronx chuckled. I knew that trolls were naturally solitary creatures, but sometimes I worried about him feeling lonely even if my worry was unrealistic. "I'll be fine. I've had enough fun for one night. I don't need another session of strip Chinese checkers burned into my brain."
I gave a snort of laughter. "We don't have to play that. Trixie said she's been working on a way to make a drinking game out of The Princess Bride."
The troll rolled his eyes, one corner of his mouth quirking in a half smile. "Let's save it for this All Hallows' Eve. Go spend some quality time with your girlfriend."
Smiling, I relaxed in my seat as we got closer to Trixie's apartment. Beautiful green eyes. Musical laughter. A soft touch that soothed the tears in my heart and the holes in my soul. Tonight, I would fall asleep holding Trixie and I would deal with the rest of the world tomorrow.
3.
REAVE SURPRISED US as we reached Trixie's apartment complex. Escorted to a large, dark warehouse in a not-so-nice part of Low Town, we stood in an open area with large wooden crates lining the far walls. Reave's black clothes and liquid black hair allowed him to nearly disappear into the shadows. Streetlights leaked through the dirty second-story windows, but he avoided the light for the most part.
To say that Reave was p.i.s.sed would be an understatement. The Svartalfar wasn't raving and stomping around the room while intermittently throwing things at us. Dark elves, like their Summer and Winter Court brethren, didn't show emotion like that. But the telltale muscle spasm at the corner of his eye and the constant fisting and unfisting of his hands said it all.
"Why do it, Gage? That's all I want to know," Reave said in a low, even voice. He almost sounded reasonable.
I shrugged, fighting to not look over at Bronx. "I'm not sure I know what you're talking about. You wanted the house protected from intruders. I protected it."
"While destroying my supplies in the process." Each word was ground between clenched teeth. "There are consequences for every action."
It happened too quickly for me to react. Two pairs of hands roughly grabbed my arms, jerking me away from Bronx while at the same time turning me so I could easily see him. Five large trolls stepped out of the darkness toward Bronx and began beating on him. He fought back for a few seconds, ducking blows and swinging his meaty fists, but they were too many and too strong. Trolls can take a beating, but even they will start to fold under so much abuse from their own kind. As Bronx was knocked to the ground, I increased my struggles against the hands holding me while screaming at Reave until I was hoa.r.s.e as they kicked Bronx in the ribs and stomach.
The dark elf jumped from the shadows; a long curved blade winked in the faint light before it was pressed against my throat. The sharp edge bit into my skin, sending a trickle of blood down my neck.
"Easy, warlock," Reave snarled in my ear. He was taller than me, forcing him to bend his head down and press it against the side of my head so that I could hear his ragged breathing. The knife sawed into my neck while he crowded close, but my eyes were locked on Bronx as he tried to regain his feet under the punishing blows. "Hold it together. We wouldn't want any accidents."
"Let him go, Reave!" I shouted. "You know he had nothing to do with what happened at the house. It was me. Punish me."
Reave chuckled in my ear, tilting the blade so that it slipped a little deeper into my throat, sending more blood down my neck. "Does it really feel like you're not being punished right now? If you want to break a man, you hurt the ones he loves first."
"Stop it! You've f.u.c.king won!" I couldn't pull my eyes from Bronx. He had stopped moving and was lying on the dirty warehouse floor, curled into a fetal position as he tried to protect his head and gut.
Reave pulled the blade away and smiled at me as he stepped into my line of sight. "I won months ago. You're just slow to realize it." As he turned from me, he snapped his fingers. The trolls stopped beating Bronx and stepped away while the hands on me fell from my arms. Pressing one hand to my throat to slow the bleeding, I hurried over to Bronx and knelt beside him. What I could see in the darkness wasn't good. His face was b.l.o.o.d.y and swelling so that he could barely see out of either eye. I couldn't tell if his nose was broken because it had always looked somewhat broken to me, but I figured it was a safe guess that it was by his labored breathing through his mouth.
"I warned you, Reave," I said in a low voice. "I warned you that I wasn't going to do anything that would hurt someone else. I'm not going to kill anyone for you, and leaving that house as it was would have meant killing pixies. I don't regret what I did. And if I find another one of those f.u.c.king fix houses, I'm going to do it again."
"And risk putting Bronx in danger again?" Reave asked lightly. His voice echoed across the warehouse, dancing through the shadows. He was walking, but I couldn't see him.
Energy crackled around me as I grew angrier with each pa.s.sing second. I wanted to burn away every shadow and dark corner in that room so Reave had nowhere to hide. I wanted to run him to ground and beat him the same way Bronx had been beaten. But I did nothing because I couldn't afford to draw the attention of the Towers, and Reave knew it. "No. This was the last time you'll ever touch Bronx. I promise you."
Reave laughed. The sound was like razor blades across my back, leaving me gritting my teeth until my jaw ached. "You're right. I'll leave Bronx alone. You've got plenty of other people in your life that you care about."
I kept my mouth clamped shut, fighting the urge to warn him off of Trixie. He knew about her. There was no reason to prove my feelings for her even more, deepening the danger. My jaw throbbed from my clenched teeth while I mentally repeated to myself, If you use magic, the Towers will kill you. Everything was insane right now in the Ivory Towers, and they would jump on the opportunity to string me up in hopes of reining in the chaos. Gideon wouldn't be able to protect me.
My death meant that Bronx would be trapped working for Reave. A dead Gage meant that Trixie was in danger and on the run from the Summer Court. If I kept my temper and was smart, I could stay alive and help my friends.
"If you have no more use for Bronx as leverage, then release him from your little organization," I said when I had my emotions somewhat under check. "You only need me."
Bronx groaned softly. "Shut up, Gage."
"The troll is right. Shut up, Gage. I have plenty of uses for Bronx. I'd hoped that he might be a voice of common sense for you, but he has failed at that endeavor. I guess I'll have to find something else to do with him."
"You've got plenty of others to do your dirty work. People who want to be here. Let him go."
Bronx shifted beside me, slowly uncurling his body, but still remaining on his side so that his back was to Reave. "I work with Gage or not at all."
The dark elf stepped close, moving away from the shadows to the edge of a square of light. His expression was blank as he stared at Bronx's inert form. I tensed, waiting. If Reave did anything more than breathe, I would jump the b.a.s.t.a.r.d. My friend had been hurt enough because of me. I wasn't about to let Reave inflict more harm.
"Fine. Rein him in," the dark elf bit out. There was an "or else" left hanging in the air. We both knew that if I crossed Reave again, Bronx would be killed regardless of whether he could stop me.
He paced away, brushing his hands against each other as if wiping away the distasteful business that had brought Bronx and me to his doorstep that night. I wished he would leave so I could work on healing Bronx. A handful of healing spells could fix the worst of his wounds, but he would still need to get home and rest. The cold concrete floor that he was currently lying on didn't seem like the best option.
"Now then, since my first task seemed too difficult for you to handle, I've got a new job for you," Reave began, as if he was content to wipe away all the previous unpleasantness. I frowned, keeping one rea.s.suring hand on Bronx's shoulder. I wanted to tell this a.s.shole where to shove his new job, but I kept my mouth shut. Obviously Reave was done trying to get me to cooperate through beating me. He was going to drag in one person I cared for after another and beat them until I agreed to his terms.
He paused and turned to look at me, waiting.
"What job?" I asked through clenched teeth, earning a grin from the dark elf.
"I'm so glad you asked." Reave chuckled and resumed his pacing. "I have someone that will be doing an important errand for me and he needs some added protection. Unfortunately, he can't travel with the usual a.s.signment of muscle. It's too conspicuous. As a result, you will be giving him a tattoo that will provide him with the needed protection."
It seemed too easy and it appeared as if it would be legal as well. "What kind of protection does he need?"
"I think that will best be decided by you."
"How can I do that? Who am I protecting him from? What's this job that he's doing for you?"
"Delivery." I waited for Reave to elaborate, but he didn't say anything else. I sighed, running my free hand through my hair, leaving it standing on end. It was turning out to be a long f.u.c.king night.
"Fine. Am I to meet this person somewhere or will he come to my shop?"
"He'll stop at your tattoo parlor for the work."
"When?"
"Soon," Reave called over his shoulder as he started to walk out of the warehouse with his flunkies following behind him.
"Hey! You never told me his name!" I shouted, lurching to my feet.
"You'll know him when you see him." Reave's comments were soft as they floated across the empty expanse toward me.
I stared at the door that slammed shut behind the last thug as he exited the warehouse, leaving me alone with Bronx. My heart thudded in my chest and a chill crept down my spine. I'll know him when I see him. Yeah, that sounded bad. I knew a lot of guys who were involved in some shady s.h.i.t, most of them being tattoo artists. But as far as I was aware, none of them had these kinds of dealings with Reave and his sort. I wanted to pretend that Reave hadn't found another way to strike at me, but even my imagination wasn't that good.
Bronx groaned as he rolled onto his back. The pain left him panting heavily and I could see sweat-or blood-shining on his wide brow in the faint light.
I knelt at my friend's head and hastily pulled off my light jacket. Fall was just settling on the city and the nights were still warm, but I had grabbed it more out of habit than real need. I rarely remembered to glance at the weather report most days and I had learned from experience that weather in Low Town was unpredictably strange on the best of days. I placed my hands on either side of Bronx's face and angled his head so that he was staring straight up at me. He winced at the movement, but didn't make a sound. Quickly folding my jacket, I gently placed it under his head.
"Where's the pain?"
"My body," Bronx grunted.
"A little more help, please."
"Get me home. I need some rest." His words were labored between bursts of heavy breathing. Each breath was wheezy and slightly liquid, making me think that one of his lungs had been punctured, possibly by a broken rib or two. If I had to guess, he had internal bleeding from several organs and broken bones, and a concussion. From what little I knew of trolls, they weren't the quick-healing type like shifters or vampires. If I didn't do something, Bronx would drown in his own fluids.
"You need a lot more than rest, but you don't seem the take-me-to-the-hospital type."
"Go to h.e.l.l, Gage." Bronx gasped as he tried to move, clenching his eyes shut.
"Already there," I said, but my mind was elsewhere, focused on setting up the cloaking spell I needed in order to do my work. I was planning to do a whole lot of loud magic and I wasn't stupid enough to do it right out in the open to draw the attention of every Merlin and Morgana in the Ivory Towers. Gideon might not have been actively hunting my a.s.s, but that didn't mean others weren't watching for me to f.u.c.k up.
The cloaking spell wasn't without its defects. No one would be able to see what I was doing, whether they were using magic or not. To the naked eye, we were invisible. When I was using magic, a warlock or witch would simply see us sitting on the warehouse floor, but at the same time there was an energy void around us. Voids were anomalies created by magic spells, which would raise questions should a warlock or witch stumble upon us. My plan wasn't foolproof, but without the cloak, my healing spells would be like fireworks in a frigid winter sky.
"You using magic?" Bronx asked.
I sighed as the cloaking spell fell easily into place with a wave of my hands and a couple of whispered words. "Just a bit."
"Don't. You've . . . got enough problems."
"Stop talking. You don't want to distract me," I said, earning me a low growl. "Got to heal you. I'm not carrying your heavy a.s.s to the car."
"f.u.c.ker."
I smiled and closed my eyes as I placed both my hands on his shoulders. "Just a warning: this might not work. I've never tried it on a troll."
Bronx stiffened under my fingers, sucking in a ragged breath. "Great."
Truth was that I had never tried this healing spell on anyone but myself. Warlocks and witches were more concerned with their own survival. h.e.l.l, when we were learning to heal wounds, it was always the hard way. Our mentors beat us until we were barely conscious and then left us alone in an empty tower. You learned to heal yourself or you died overnight from a ruptured kidney or drowned in your own blood as it poured into your lungs.
Focusing on the spell, I sent a wave of energy coursing through Bronx's body, kicking off the first phase of the spell. Organs were mended so that they were no longer losing vital fluids and were returned to normal functioning levels. They were still battered, bruised, and extremely sore, but no longer in danger of failing him. As the spell moved through him, I could feel each organ as it healed. One lung had been punctured and flooded with blood, the other bruised. A kidney had been badly damaged and it looked like his spleen was on the point of rupture. A few blood vessels had been crushed, but were now open again, sending blood through his body.