“The refrain of the helpless and needful,” Morland sneered. “Do not seek to draw parallels between your fate and mine. Now take your banalities and be gone.”
Amric gave him a wintry smile and spun away, striding from the room with the others on his heel.
It was a short time later, as they sat in the carriage clattering its way across the bridge leaving Morland’s estate, that Bellimar leaned toward him.
“He was lying,” the old man said.
“I know,” Amric said.
“What made you test his awareness of the black things?”
“I do not know,” the warrior admitted. “Nor do I know yet why he would conceal his knowledge.”
Bellimar nodded, frowning in thought. “The man is involved in something he does not want known,” he mused. “He has found some way to profit from the suffering of others.”
“Do the wealthy do aught else?” Syth remarked. “And what of the subtle spell you wove back there? He was drawn to reveal more of his plans than he meant to. The man parts with nothing unless he can sell it dearly.”
The vampire turned to him, lips peeling back into a smile. His eyes were scarlet embers in the shadowed interior of the carriage. “My curse is not without its benefits, thief.”
Late the following night, the same carriage rumbled away from the southern gate of Keldrin’s Landing. A score of soldiers on horseback surrounded the vehicle, and the torches they held aloft formed a flickering halo against the pressing blackness as the procession snaked its way along the southbound road.
Within the carriage, Morland stroked his clean-shaven chin as he stared out the window into the night. Beside him sat the mercenary Vorenius, scratching his dark, unkempt beard like a boorish reflection of his urbane relative. On the opposite bench sat the twin Elvaren assassins, Nyar and Nylien, lounging with an insolent air of boredom. One of the twins-Nyar, thought Morland, though he could never be certain-appeared to be dozing sitting upright, while the other seemed engrossed in the study of his fingernails on one pale hand. Vorenius shifted in his seat, casting surreptitious looks from the merchant to the assassins. Morland ground his teeth, striving to ignore the man’s irksome presence. Vorenius leaned forward to peer out the window, chewing his lip. Morland flicked an irritated sidelong glance at him, and unfortunately the man noticed and took it for an invitation to air his vapid thoughts.
“Since when does one have to ply the gate guards with a pouch of gold merely to exit the city?” he demanded, scratching again at his beard.
Morland sighed, mourning the broken quiet. “Since I do not want them sharing news of my comings and goings,” he said. “You saw their reactions when I dismissed their warnings about venturing out after dark.”
“So I did,” Vorenius muttered. “And I have to admit, I heard merit in their arguments. I do not understand what could be important enough to draw us out here. There was no attack on the city last night, but there is nothing to say it will not come tonight, nor that the next assault will be restricted to the eastern wall.”
“Do not seek to question my decisions,” the merchant snapped. “The reward will warrant the risk, and that is all you need know for now.”
The man sat back, raking his lower lip with his teeth. Opposite him, the assassin looked on with evident amusement, twirling locks of his white hair between his fingers.
“It is quite agitated, is it not?” the Elvar murmured.
The mercenary leaned forward, coarse features twisting in anger as he jabbed one thick finger at the assassin. “No one asked you, you pasty-”
“Vorenius,” Morland said in a sharp tone. “Let your tongue be still, for once.”
Vorenius flinched at the rebuke. “I am sorry, uncle. I-”
“And do not call me uncle,” Morland interrupted, his lip curling. “I am a distant cousin at best, and it strains my belief at the best of times that we share blood at all.”
“Of course, u-Morland,” the mercenary stammered. “I do not mean to be ungrateful. You are gracious to give me this chance to redeem myself in your eyes.”
“You handpicked your best men for this trip, as I asked?”
“Yes, all except for the handful which are from your personal guard.”
“Good. Fear not, Vorenius, you will prove your worth yet.”
Morland watched the man’s twitching movements in throwing another look outside the carriage. How did the fool think himself a leader of men, when he had a spine of water?
“What is my role to be in this venture, then?” Vorenius asked. He swallowed and hastened to add, “So that I may serve you better.”
“I reached out to powerful allies, and they have accepted my overtures,” Morland replied. “You will be an instrumental part of securing their trust. This alliance is an important step toward achieving the loftiest of my goals, Vorenius. Tonight’s meeting will be a pivotal point in my plans.”
Vorenius eyed him and gave a rapid, earnest nod. “I will not fail you, Morland.”
“I trust you will not,” the merchant said with a brittle smile.
They traveled in silence for a time, the carriage rocking over the rutted road. At last it slowed and lurched to a halt, and the languid demeanor of the Elvaren changed in an instant. The eyes of the dozing assassin snapped open, and he curled forward and slipped through the door in one liquid movement. His twin vanished out the other side with equal alacrity, leaving Vorenius craning his neck back and forth in a vain effort to see what was transpiring outside. Morland sat with hands folded neatly in his lap, eyes closed and head tilted back to rest against the carriage wall behind him.
Voices carried to them, men’s voices and something else, something deep and rough like granite boulders colliding. Minutes later the assassin Nylien reappeared at the carriage door, holding it open. The merchant climbed down and his mercenary cousin followed, with the assassin close behind.
Morland looked back at Keldrin’s Landing. Good, the city was little more than a glow in the distance. His men’s torches might be seen faintly from the city walls, if the guards there happened to look in this direction, but it was too great a distance to distinguish more than that. He strode forward, passing the front of the carriage where the driver struggled to calm the team of horses. All the soldiers’ mounts were tethered at the rear of the carriage, and they were nervous as well, snorting and prancing in place. A handful of men remained there with them, a hard-bitten lot with torches held high and scarred faces set in grim, impassive silence. None of them sought to make eye contact with the merchant.
Ahead, the remainder of the men formed two standing lines across the road, facing something further down the road. Morland approached with Vorenius at his heels, and the guards parted to allow their passage. As they passed through, a strangled gasp escaped the mercenary.
A large shape waited in the center of the road, a dozen yards away. What little light reached it from the ring of torches was all but absorbed by its dark hide, but Morland was able to discern a hint of its outline. It was a huge form, squatting or perhaps kneeling, with long, thick arms that reached down to knuckle the ground. Its front was smooth and matte black, though a forest of protrusions jutted from its back and shoulders; whether they were spikes or tentacles of some kind, Morland could not tell without getting closer, and he had no intent of doing that. Just being out here was a show of faith on his part, but past a certain point promises and alliances were just empty words without actions to prove them.
Nyar stood several paces ahead of the wide-eyed array of guards, and Morland drew abreast of him. Vorenius halted a pace behind, his face drawn and pale. Nylien stood at the man’s elbow with a smirk twisting his fine Elvaren features.
“I am here,” Morland announced.
An elongated head shifted toward him. He tried to pick out its eyes amid that nightmare countenance, but it was a futile effort. Every bit of the thing was black, just as the previous representatives had been. An eerie, grating sound emanated from the thing in a grotesque parody of human speech.