Lorcan reached out and took the
drawing. He looked down at the picture of Evie and then up into this woman’s
stern eyes. “Luciana?” Lorcan whispered softly while she was leaning down close
to him.
The female soldier’s eyes narrowed.
That was all the warning Lorcan had before she swung out of her saddle, kicked
Lorcan in the head hard enough to send him sprawling into the dirt, and knelt
over him with her knee pressed hard against his throat.
Luciana pulled a wickedly curved
dagger from a sheath in her boot and ran it carefully along Lorcan’s cheek. A
miniscule trail of blood seeped out of the razor thin cut she left. “Now
citizen, let us try this again. How can you possibly know my name if you have
not seen my sister?” Luciana asked in the same calm, cold voice as before.
Lorcan tried to speak but could
only make a sickly gurgling noise with her knee pressing down on his windpipe.
Smiling vindictively, Luciana
pulled her knee back a fraction of an inch so that Lorcan could almost breathe
normally. “Better?”
Lorcan started to nod then
remembered the dagger still pressed against his face. “Yes,” he rasped.
“Where is my sister?”
“In the house. She was hurt and I
brought her back here after I bandaged her wound. She made me promise not to
tell anyone but you where she was!”
“Smart girl.” Luciana withdrew her
knee and knife before yanking Lorcan to his feet. “Surround the house. No one
gets out until I give the word,” she told the other soldiers.
Lorcan stumbled along as she pushed
him towards the house. “There’s really no need for this violence. I didn’t know
you were Evie’s sister at first and I was not about to go blabbing to every
stranger I met that I found an injured girl in the woods. I don’t know if
anyone has ever told you this, but you are a very scary lady! Not at all the
type of person you instinctively hand a frightened child over to.”
His little speech seemed to amuse
Luciana. “You’re either smarter than you look or a very vocal coward.”
“A bit of both, I think.” Lorcan
opened the front door and led them inside.
“Take me to her room. Quietly.”
Lorcan did as he was told. He kept
his ears alert for sounds of others moving through the house, but he heard no
one. Dammit, Pa! Why do you have to be
such a heavy sleeper?
They stopped in front of Lorcan and
Mandy’s room. “You first.” Luciana nudged Lorcan forward.
Lorcan opened the door and gestured
to his bed, where Evie was sleeping soundly. “There, safe and sound. Just like
I said.”
Luciana pushed him inside the room
and pulled a bit of rope from her belt pouch then quickly tied Lorcan’s hands
behind his back. “Kneel and stay still,” she commanded. “Move and you will be
dead before you reach the doorway.”
“You don’t really have a good grasp
on the concept of peaceful cooperation, do you?” Lorcan muttered as he did
exactly as he was told.
Ignoring him completely, Luciana
sat on the bed next to Evie and stroked her hair tenderly. After a moment
Evie’s eyes flickered open and her face lit up at seeing her sister.
“I knew you’d come!” Evie threw her
arms around Luciana’s middle in an enthusiastic hug.
Luciana put a finger to her lips.
“Quietly, now. We have to get you out of here. You aren’t safe. Uncle Arcon’s
men are searching for you. His allies are demanding that father turn you over
to the Justicars for a trial.”
“But…” Evie glanced sadly over at
the slumbering Mandy.
Luciana shook her head firmly. Evie
stuck out her lip in a pout, but did not argue further as she climbed out of
bed and hastily pulled on one of Lorcan’s cousin Sophie’s dresses over her
nightgown.
“Come on.” Luciana lifted Lorcan to
his feet—she was surprisingly strong—and pushed him in front of her and Evie
down the hall towards the front door.
In the living room Luciana was dismayed
to find three surly women in their nightgowns glaring vehemently at her.
Despite their angry faces, it was hard to find them all that menacing. Aunt
Sandra’s nightgown was bright blue with little duckies all over it. Great Aunt
Lorna was wearing one that was pink and covered in bear cubs touching their
noses like they were kissing. Of course, Great Grandma’s was the most
ridiculous with its preposterous amount of extra padding sewn in to keep her
warm, fluffy material, and bright yellow color she looked like an enormous crotchety
chick; she even had scrawny little chicken legs to complete the image.
Immediately, Luciana drew one of
her knives and pressed it against Lorcan’s throat. “I have no quarrel with you,
citizens. I am taking my sister and we are leaving. As soon as I am off your
land I will release your boy—unharmed so long as you do not provoke me.”
Great Grandmother cackled and
slapped her thigh. “Oh, you silly, foolish girl! We are the witches of Weyrd
Mountain. We will dictate the terms
of your departure. Now, release my great grandson or I shall be very
perturbed.”
Lorcan noticed that the mention of
witches made Luciana pause. Not a fearful pause, which would have been the sane
response, this was something else. Like she was intrigued.
“I have a dozen men outside ready
to attack at a moment’s notice,” Luciana warned.
“Phaw!” Great Grandma scoffed.
“Take a look out the window, girly.”
Everyone turned to peer out the
open window to where the three visible soldiers were slumped against their
horses’ necks and snoring loudly.
If seeing her men fall victim to a
spell annoyed Luciana in any way, she did not let it show. “Very well, what are
your terms for allowing my sister and me to leave?” She was still standing
directly behind Lorcan with her knife against his throat.
Great Grandmother looked
disappointed. “Aw, you already want to be reasonable? Are you sure you don’t
want to struggle some more? I do
enjoy a good struggle!”
“Sorry to upset you. What are your
terms?” Luciana repeated.
Great Grandma looked to Lorna and
Sandra. “No one’s ever been reasonable before. Usually they have to break down
in tears before they’re willing to make a deal. She’s got me all flustered!
What were our terms again?”
“Release Lorcan immediately,” Aunt
Sandra prompted. She was still doing her best to look intimidating even with
ducklings sewn to her pajamas.
“Oh, yes! Wait…really? It seems
like a lot of trouble just for Lorcan. I think we should demand something
better. Any ideas?” Great Grandma whispered in her usual none-too-quiet
fashion.
Lorcan sighed. “I can hear you.”
“Was I whispering loudly again?”
Great Grandmother asked.
Lorna and Sandra nodded.
“Damn. Still, what do we want
besides Lorcan?” Great Grandma rubbed her chin thoughtfully.
Lorcan groaned. “You know what?
Just go,” he told Luciana. “I’ll help you wake your men up and you can be on
your way. Once Great Grandma gets distracted all her vengeful witch instincts
go out the window.”
Reluctantly, Luciana pulled her
knife away from Lorcan’s neck and cut the rope that bound his hands behind his
back.
“Wait! No! The standoff can’t be
over yet!” Great Grandmother pleaded.
“Come off it, Mom. It’s too early
for your dramatics,” Great Aunt Lorna muttered groggily and turned toward the
kitchen.
“You make the tea and I’ll get the
pancakes started,” Aunt Sandra said eagerly as she followed Lorna.
“No! Traitors! Where did you go? I
really am blind, remember?” Great Grandma waved her cane around trying to
determine where everyone was heading. She hobbled off after them into the
kitchen.
“Congratulations, you’ve survived
your encounter with the dreaded witches of Weyrd Mountain.” Lorcan sighed and
motioned for Luciana and Evie to follow him out of the living room.
It had started raining while they
were inside, so Lorcan handed Evie a cloak to keep her dry from the wall lined
with coats and cloaks next to the front door. He offered one to Luciana, but
she shook her head. Lorcan donned his long coat and wide brimmed hat before the
three of them stepped out onto the front porch.
“Are there other witches in the
Reach?” Luciana asked.
Lorcan arched an eyebrow at her.
“The Reach?”
Luciana looked at him as though not
sure whether he was mocking her or not. “Yes. This region of the Empire is
called the Reach.”
“He’s not very smart,” Evie
explained.
“I doubt that,” Luciana said. “So,
Lorcan, are there other witches nearby?”
Lorcan could sense that this was of
particular importance to Luciana for some reason, which intrigued him. Most
people—those with a decent sense of self preservation, anyway—wanted nothing to
do with witches. Despite the feeble show that his relatives had given earlier,
any one of them could be devastating if she was sufficiently angered to the
point of becoming violent. When a group of men had hidden in their woods after
raping a girl in the village, Lorcan had seen Great Aunt Lorna burn them to
ashes with only a thought. And Great Grandma was supposed to be even more
powerful.
“Not that I know of, but then again
I’ve never been anywhere except these woods and the village below.”
“And you…you haven’t followed in
your Great Grandmother’s footsteps, have you?” Luciana asked politely.
Lorcan chuckled at how delicately
she asked such an insulting question. “Am I a warlock? No, I should say not.” Though
he knew little of magic, Lorcan had read that while a very rare family trait
allowed some women to use magic, the only way for a man to do the same was to
make a Dark Bargain.
For some reason, Luciana’s eyes
darted to Evie’s side and then back to Lorcan. She was getting soaked by the
increasingly heavy rain.
“You’re going to catch a chill,”
Lorcan scolded. “Here, take my hat and coat.” He pulled his hat off and
attempted to put it on Luciana’s head.
She darted back, lightning fast, to
avoid Lorcan’s hat. “No, thank you,” Luciana said rather tersely.
“What’s the matter?” Lorcan asked. “I
swear, I’m not going to hurt you or your sister.”
Still eying the hat as though it
were a poisonous snake, Luciana took a deep breath. “Your relatives have
obviously not taught you much about their craft. Certain spells are triggered
by transferring a possession from the witch or warlock to another, particularly
when it is placed on the target’s head or over their heart. I apologize for my
rudeness.”
Lorcan’s curiosity finally overcame
him. “Why are you so interested in witches and warlocks anyway? Smart people
steer clear of them.”
“Our father is here looking for
witches,” Evie told him.
Luciana glared daggers at her
sister.
“Sorry!” Evie gulped.
Still glaring at her sister,
Luciana nodded. “She should not have told you that, but it’s true. The Emperor
sent several Senators to the Reach. Their mission has something to do with
witches, but as mere children we know nothing
more than that.” Luciana said the last part with special emphasis that was
no doubt a message to Evie to keep quiet.
Lorcan didn’t much care what else
there was to know. He pitied anyone foolish enough to come after his Great
Grandmother and actually attempt to do her harm. “So I guess you’ll tell your
father about the witches here and he’ll come conduct whatever business he has
with them.”
“Something like that,” Luciana
answered carefully. Lorcan did not much care for the look she was giving him.
“Aaaand we’re back to you being
creepy and vague. Come on, let’s wake your men up so you can get out of my
hair.” Lorcan put his hat back on, walked across the lawn to the first soldier,
and shook him awake.
Luciana tried to do the same thing
to the next man in line, but he refused to rouse. She looked questioningly at
Lorcan. She shook him again and even shouted in his ear. A third, much more
vigorous shake still yielded nothing.
“It’s not that hard. Just shake
him.” Lorcan did so and the soldier perked up immediately.
“That is exactly what I did to him.”
Luciana backed away slowly, pulling Evie behind her.
“You honestly think I’m a warlock?”
Lorcan asked her, slightly annoyed. “Would a warlock have let you kick him in
the head, cut his face, and tie him up?”
“Those who have made the Dark
Bargain are notoriously crafty.” Luciana pursed her lips and yanked Evie’s
cloak off, throwing it at Lorcan’s feet.
“Hey!” Evie grumbled.
Lorcan was growing tired of this
foolishness. “Woman, you are being insane! And trust me, I live on Weyrd Mountain
and I know exactly what insanity
looks like!”
“Just wake the others and let us
be,” Luciana told him, her hand resting on her sword’s hilt.
Muttering to himself about the
idiocy that seemed to prevail in his life, Lorcan went down the line of
soldiers surrounding the house and woke them up one at a time. When the last
man stirred and he had gone in a circle back to where Luciana and Evie waited,
he shouted, “There! I have freed them from my Great Grandmother’s evil spell
with my magical powers of shoulder shaking!”
“Mock me all you want,” Luciana
replied coldly. “You may not know what you are. Some—the truly devilish—include
the removal of their memories in their Bargain so that they can walk among us in
complete secret until the time is right.”
Evie tugged at her sister’s sleeve.
“Please, Anna, Lorcan isn’t like that! Just because Mason was evil doesn’t mean
everyone is!”
“Be silent!” Luciana hissed. She
drew her sword and pointed it at Lorcan. “Father is here searching the Reach
for a warlock who lives with three witches. I have no idea what he wants with
you, but he has given orders that you are not to be killed. So consider
yourself lucky, warlock! I won’t be killing you…today.”
What should Lorcan do?
2) Let them go then confront Great Grandmother
about the things Luciana said about him.
3) Cast a spell that turns Luciana into a warlock and three witches, then remind her that he's not a warlock.
ReplyDeleteI pick option 1. Evie's dad probably wants to give him a lot of money, and the sooner he invests that money, the more he'll make in the long run.
ReplyDeleteI vote for 2, but only because his family amuses the crap out of me.
ReplyDeleteI'm going to give the first tie-breaker to Jordan, because either way we'll be seeing more of the Moon family.
ReplyDelete