There are vamps more powerful than me at the Directorate. I replied absentmindedly, my gaze on the hall beyond. It was small, pitch black, and smelled of dust, damp, and magic. Dark, distasteful magic.
Which is warning enough that even one such as me should never get on the wrong side of the Directorate. Or her hunters.
If you want to continue living the free and easy life of a killer for hire, then that's a mighty good idea.
I don't always kill, he said mildly. Sometimes I guard.
Guarding killers isn't that much of a step up the ladder. I slipped off my stilettos, then blinked on my infrared vision and stepped into the hall. The faint, metallic scent of blood flavored the air, and with it the stench of flesh beginning to rot. Maybe they hadn't had time to get rid of Billy's body after all.
Well, when it comes to Blaise, your pack alpha, I'd have to agree. He let the door close and darkness swamped us. Not that it mattered to me.
Then why did you take the job? I moved forward cautiously. I might be able to see in this inky blackness, but magic was crawling across my skin, pinpricks of fire that sent a continuous shudder of revulsion through the rest of me.
Because he paid more than the usual rate, and because I was intrigued to meet the woman who had him so scared.
I snorted softly. Blaise was never scared of me.
Then why did he hire me?
You know why-to protect his precious son, Patrin, from the death threats he was receiving.
Kye smiled. It swirled across my senses.
There were never any death threats. It was you and Rhoan he feared.
I snorted softly. Blaise and his precious sons spent most of their lives using the two of us as their expendable punching bags. Why the hell would he be scared of us before we beat the crap out of him?
Because he feared what you could become-what you did become. He hesitated. There is magic up ahead. And Blaise will seek his revenge for what you and Rhoan did to him.
We'd guessed that. Blake wasn't the type to forgive people-especially when they'd embarrassed the hell out of him. So is this ability to sense magic another skill you're siphoning from someone?
I felt Kye smile again. No, this time it's a talent that's inherited from the pack.
This would be the pack that supposedly has no psychic skills whatsoever?
That's the one. I'm sensitive to the presence of magic, but I cannot use it like I can psychic talents.
But that's how you tracked that sorcerer to the warehouse?
That and the smell of death.
I nodded. At least it explained how he'd come to be watching the sorcerer from within the shadows of her black wall rather than walking straight through it and getting sprung as I had.
But then, I hadn't expected to find hellhounds or a sorcerer-just a dead man walking. Kye obviously had a better idea of what was going on than I did when he'd walked into that place.
The farther we moved down the hallway, the staler the air felt, and I had the odd sensation that we were moving down into the earth itself. There was little noise in this place, and the silence felt heavy, as if it was carrying a weight that it didn't want and we couldn't see.
The floorboards beneath my feet gave way to colder concrete, then to a mix of dirt and stone. Grit wedged in between my toes, forcing me to pause every now and again to shake it lose. Despite the earth flooring, the walls and ceiling were still concrete-although it was rough looking, as if it had been slapped on in a hurry, and without care.
The crawl of magic began to get stronger, its touch stinging like angry gnats. Something stark and white appeared in my infrared. I switched to normal vision, saw a flickering golden glow begin to seep through the darkness ahead. It framed a rough-hewn archway that had only been half concreted.
I couldn't sense anyone or anything waiting, but my uneasiness grew.
Looks like the sort of light you get from a torch, Kye commented. Though his mind voice was flat and without emotion, his tension rolled over me, increasing my own. It's an odd choice when were under the earth and there seems to be little ventilation.
I cant smell any smoke, though. And I don't think our sorcerers would be too worried about air quality.
Or life, for that matter.