House of Sand and Secrets (20 page)

Read House of Sand and Secrets Online

Authors: Cat Hellisen

Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult, #Vampires, #Mystery

“Ten,” Jannik counters. “And no more than that.”

“Gris, is this really the time to be trying to haggle him down? Give him the damn money,” I yell.

Mal lifts an eyebrow. “Bossy lady you got there,” he says to Jannik, even as he’s taking the coins.

Jannik mutters something under his breath.

“Now.” I lean forward and catch Mal’s chin between my thumb and fingers and force him to look directly at me. “That’s three days’ wages where I come from–”

“Where you come from – you never worked a day in your life.”

“Are they always this bloody rude?” I look over the top of the wray’s head and to where Jannik is watching us like a spectator at a street-opera.

“How would I know? Probably not.”

Mal struggles out of my grip and slides over to the corner of the seat, rubbing at his chin. “What’s your problem? I was going to tell you.” He’s not the least bit cowed by us, or by his life. He has a cocksure arrogance to him that I take for a front. He’s little more than a child, and this is what happens to the wray here. They are bought and sold. They learn their own masks just like I learned mine.

You can’t save everyone.
“All right.” I ease myself carefully closer to the door, blocking his way out. “Isidro was here, and now he isn’t. Where’s he gone to?”

Mal sniffs. “Why’d you want to know, anyway?”

“Sweet Gris.” I shake my head. “He is a – friend of ours, and we’re worried.”

“Is he happy?”

“What?” The question throws me. “How do you mean?”

The wray sighs and pulls his legs up tight to his chest. “He managed to snag himself a lord, and get himself bought out of this.” He waves one hand vaguely in the direction of the rookery outside. “But what’s the point? He’s still a slave.”

“He’s not–” Unable to lie, I look up to Jannik for support, who helps me not at all by looking away and out into the street instead. I curl my fingers into the folds of my skirts, and gather them forward, pushing the ridges of material together. “He was happy.” I don’t know if this is true, but I will suppose that they were happy enough before we came and upended their small world. “Life isn’t always a smooth glass sea,” I say finally. “And sometimes we’re not ready to face the storms. I think he saw something coming that he was scared of, and so he ran. Is that understandable?”

“You talk strange,” says Mal. “Can’t you just be plain and say, yes, he’s happy but he had a fight with his lord and now he’s in a snit?”

“Can’t you just be plain and bloody tell us where he’s gone?” Jannik says.

Mal looks over at Jannik and snorts. “She sold him again. I think he came back because he didn’t think she’d really do it to him twice. Not the brightest candle, that one. Pretty as a painting and about as much brains.”

He came back to her driven by whatever familial bonds he thought he still had. And she sold him. I don’t think it’s because he was stupid, I think it’s because he wanted to be wrong. He needed to be wrong.

Sold. The thought is enormous and disturbing. “Sold him to who?”

“The blond one from Eline.”

“Shit,” says Jannik. “Shit and fuck and Gris damn.”

Personally, I agree.

A SMALL TRUTH

We head back
to Harun with the news. I wonder how much he knows through the bond. He was confused enough when we left him, and there’s also a chance he’s done himself permanent mental damage. And now here we come to inform him his prize belongs to someone else. Sold. “You tell him,” I say.

Jannik has been deep in thought, frowning. He jerks up. “What – he already hates me.”

“Exactly.”

He tips his head back. “Ah,” he says with a sigh. “You do realize when this is all done we will never be welcome there again. We know too many of their dirty little secrets.”

And where then does that leave us – utterly friendless. There’s Carien, but she’s an Eline by marriage and I truly do not know the extent of our trust. Does she know of Garret’s recent purchase? Worse, was it perhaps her idea that he buy another? The next
bat
someone stumbles over in the warren of the Hob district could be one I know.

And I don’t hate him that much.

“We’re here.” I announce it needlessly. Neither of us wants to get out.

* * *

Harun clutches the
door frame as he lets us in. He smells sour and sick, worse than when we left him. It seems he’s been self-medicating with a bottle. He stumbles down the passage and leads us to the room where he tried for his Visions. The stench of vomit lingers. He collapses into a chair and sits there hunched over himself.

“You should be getting better,” I say to him. The worst of the scriv will have faded and begun to work itself out of his system. At the very least, he shouldn’t look so clammy, like something dug out from under a rock. I wonder if this has anything to do with Isidro – if the vampire is drugged, beaten. Worse. Between the two of them they are looping pain and guilt and anger and love and only Saints know what else. What does that do to a mind? To a body?

He glares at me. “Where’s he?”

Jannik coughs. “He’s been . . . .”

“Been what? Stop prevaricating, you Gris-damned bat.” Harun winces and half-doubles, his hands grabbing at his stomach

Anything could be happening to Isidro right now. Is this the after-effects – or simply Harun’s own body giving out? I don’t know if the bond weakens with distance, or is instead stretched out like a silk thread until it snaps and the two people it joined are left to die alone.

“You should lie down.” I hate feeling sorry for him. He’s an idiot for taking that much scriv. He’s an idiot for treating Isidro like a bauble to own.

“Stop telling me what I should be doing and give me a fucking answer.”

My breath heats in my lungs, the bellow of my heart fanning the flames of my anger. Instead of giving in to the satisfaction of screaming at him, I hold myself calm and say simply, “Eline has him.”

Harun pauses, then straightens a little. His already pasty, sweaty skin has taken on a sallow tone I do not like. He’s poisoned his blood, or worse. “Pour me a drink,” he says.

“And which servant are you speaking to?” I say even as Jannik sighs and gets up to unstopper a pear-shaped bottle of distilled wine. “You shouldn’t be drinking.”

“You are not my nursemaid, Pelim.” He accepts the snifter Jannik pours him with a mumbled thanks, and drinks deep. When he sets the glass down his hand is curiously still, the earlier shivers gone. “You’ve proof?”

“We have,” I glance at Jannik, who is shaking his head very slightly, “word from a trusted source.”

“Let me guess,” says Harun. “The cat herself.”

“You mean Splinterfist?”

“I mean your dear little friend, Carien,” he says, then shudders. He folds his hands together and presses them against his mouth. When he talks, the words come out obstructed, as if he wants to push them back in and swallow them down. “He’s scared,” he says. “It’s dark, and he can smell the others, the smell of their blood.”

“Dammit,” Jannik says and pours himself a glass of Harun’s liquor. “Felicita?” He raises the bottle.

“Oh Gris, yes, why not.” A headache is sparking in my left temple, throbbing small and tight. I rub my thumb hard into the spot and wait for my vision to clear. “We need to find a way to get to him in the Eline house – if he’s even there.”

Harun’s breathing is harsh, and he coughs into his fist. The fit seems to take forever, and when he is done, there are smears of blackish blood on his palms and fingers. “I -” He hacks again, then manages to swallow down the clotted phlegm. “We need to get him, I’ll do what I can – what I need to.”

What good he’s going to be now is beyond me – I’d be surprised if he could walk more than a few paces without falling down and breaking his nose. But we can use his help, and I suppose there is no better – or worse – time to pry into Harun and Isidro’s mess of a love. “How much can you see – or sense – or whatever it is your bond allows?”

“Not enough.” Harun lowers his hands and traps them between his knees as if he doesn’t trust them. “We’re not complete–”

Jannik slams his glass down so hard that the foot splinters and distilled wine goes spilling over the glass table. I start back as the cracks spread across the table’s surface. Both Harun and I stare in shock.

“When were you fucking planning on doing it then?” he says, ever so softly.

“Who do you think you are–” Harun begins, but Jannik is seething; he stalks forward, eyes like eclipsed suns.

“Her I understand – she’s playing her own little game, but why can’t you submit?” Jannik’s magic is pressing in on me, making my breath stick.

“What are the two of you talking about?” I’m out of my depth and, thanks to the lashing anger of Jannik’s magic all around me, more than a little faint. “What–”

“He won’t feed off Isidro,” Jannik says. His voice is calm now, but I can see how much this restraint is costing him in the way his fingers are shaking. “Why?” he says to Harun. “Is it because then you are finally too much like us? Too much like a fucking bat?”

Harun merely stares.

“You revolt me.” Jannik walks past both of us and leaves us alone in the room.

The air is lighter, releasing me from his spell. I press one hand to my breast in an attempt to settle my heart into a more steady rhythm. “I’m sorry,” I say breathlessly. “The damages – I’ll have the table replaced.”

“No, you won’t,” Harun says. “He’s right. It just cost me a fucking irreplaceable Reyhan to drive the message home.” He laughs bitterly. “You shouldn’t let him go, unless you feel like mimicking my stupidity.” His laughter catches in his throat and chokes. Harun slumps down, hiding his face from me. It takes me a moment to realize that he is crying soundlessly, his shoulders lurching.

“No,” I say. “I– we’ll find a way to get him back,” I promise him as I stand. “We will.”

I leave Harun a sobbing mess, staring at his broken table and splintered glasses, while I go to rescue what I can of my own damaged relationship. Jannik thinks that I am playing a game with his feelings, and it is clear to me why he would see it that way. I have never allowed him to see my true motives for anything. So scared of letting myself be hurt, I have hurt others instead.

* * *

The carriage is
still waiting. Perhaps Jannik has more faith in me than I do. Jannik is shaking and I don’t know if it’s anger or fear or something else completely.

I’m not happy about leaving Harun like that, but I have no choice if I am to prove to Jannik that he is important to me. Harun was torn and desperate and barely able to do anything.

My fingernails dig into the leather as I clutch on the edge of the seat. I can feel it giving way under the neat filed ovals of my nails and I want to scream. I want to do something. I raise my head and meet Jannik’s eyes.

He’s staring at me, his face set. “What?”

“What do you mean what?” I say back.

He grimaces. “What are you going to do – I can see your mind ticking away, I know that look on your face.”

“I have no idea,” I say. And I mean it. There’s no way Harun will be of any use in his current state, and all the will in the world doesn’t mean I can fight my way into House Eline and pull Isidro out. Eline Garret might be a Saint, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t War-Singers in his family, or that he has no other defences. And I haven’t touched scriv in months.
Magic – it’s always there, waiting for me to renounce Jannik and reclaim it. “Do you want me to save him – this love of yours?”

“What?” Jannik half-rises in the seat. “Damn it all, of course I want you to save him. Even if he wasn’t anything to me.”

“And is he?”

He covers his face with one hand. “Do you want him to be?” The words are mumbled, tired.

“No.” But it’s too late for that now. “There’s – I – need a dealer,” I say, and shudder.

“Scriv?” Jannik drops his hand and shakes his head. He’s still looking at the floor of the carriage rather than my face, and his voice is thick. “Speak to Harun.”

I snort. “He’ll want to know what I plan to do with it.”

“And I don’t?” Jannik says.

“You trust me.” Or at the very least, he trusts in what I can do when I put my mind to it.

“Is that what you think?” It’s not really a question, and he laughs drily. “You must know where the dealers are in MallenIve.”

I make sure he can see my face, see the truth of it. “It never occurred to me to find out. I wanted nothing more to do with scriv. It hurts too many people.”

“Oh,” he says, and picks at his thumbnail. “You’ll never get any now.” The moonlight drenches him in deepest amethyst shadows, and ivory glints.

“In the morning then.” I want to cry. Gris knows what tortures Garret and his cohorts are devising for Isidro – Carien said they tasted better when their emotions were heightened by fear or pain. My brain clicks over lust, because somehow, I don’t think that’s Garret’s style. It might be Isidro’s. After all, he grew up a boy-whore in the Splinterfist rookeries, I’m sure he could fake his way through a performance.

It’ll be pain. They do not care who they kill. They are rich, and they are men. I push my fist against my mouth and stifle a sob, grinding the knuckles against my teeth until I can taste blood in my mouth. What if it had been Jannik who was still a slave, who could be bought and sold on no more justification than the lack of a symbol of ownership – it could be him in Eline’s grasp. They could be tearing him apart with kicks and caresses, just to feel the magic gather on his skin. I picture Jannik wide-eyed, bloody. There were iron-burns around the neck of the corpse.

Right this moment, Jannik could be collared, screaming in pain.

Isidro probably is. My stomach lurches, and fierce needles stitch tears into the corners of my eyes.

“Felicita.” Jannik grabs my gnawed hand, pulls it away from my mouth. “What are you doing?”

“I’m scared.”

He says nothing.

“I don’t know what to do – how to do it.” And, though I’ll never admit it – there’s a part of me that wants Isidro to suffer, because he took what was mine. The thought makes me suck in a sharp breath. Mine. And why does it take this to make me realize it? We’re so close, him on his knees as the carriage jerks us through the city. My hand in his, held so tight that the blood has dried.

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