He knocked lightly. "She's arrived, sir."
Without waiting for an answer, he opened the door and ushered her inside, closing it quietly behind her.
Welstiel sat in the same chair as before, but he seemed to be brooding rather than reading this time. The room had not changed. However, his expression actually flickered in surprise at the sight of her. Not that she cared what he thought, but she knew her appearance was that of a barmaid who'd been rolled in the hay.
"How long since you've slept?" he asked.
"I don't remember. I didn't come here to discuss my sleeping habits."
She'd never noticed how black his eyebrows were before. They contrasted sharply with the white patches at his temples.
"Why did you come here?" he asked, without moving from his chair.
"I thought there might be a slight chance you'd actually offer some help instead of your usual riddles."
The absence of windows and the unnatural light from Welstiel's glowing orb now unnerved her slightly.
"I heard a rumor. Of course, I'm sure it's just a rumor," he said, "that you had enlisted some of the fishermen and dockworkers."
"It's no rumor."
He stood up, and his tranquil face showed a hint of anger.
"Send them home. All of them. You are dhampir. Involving commoners will only cause chaos. This whole affair should have been finished days ago."
Magiere crossed her arms. "Fine, then you and Loni carve some stakes and come fight with me."
Welstiel's flicker of anger disappeared, and he smiled.
"I'm afraid that isn't possible, my dear. I once thought you clever, but perhaps you still don't understand. You are the dhampir. Your purpose, your existence, revolves around destroying the undead."
A mix of fury and frustration filled her, and on impulse, she drew her sword.
"I'm so tired of your games! If you know half as much as you pretend to, then spit it out now."
His dark eyes looked down to the falchion's edge and back up again.
"Can you feel the rage building? Every time you battle one of these vermin, does your strength not grow?" His tone dropped low. "Have you ever heard a foolish old saying that evil can only be conquered by good? It's a lie. Evil can only be conquered by evil. These bloodthirsty creatures are unnatural and have no place in the land of the living. However, one of them must have been wise enough, unselfish enough, to create you."
She lowered her sword. "What does that mean?"
Welstiel stepped a little closer.
"I have studied the ways of vampires at length. In the first days after being turned, it is still possible for one of them to create a child. One of your parents, probably your father, was undead. Half of you belongs to the dark world, a negative state of existence that needs to draw in and consume life in order to exist. But your mortal side is stronger. In dhampirs, this imbalance creates a hatred for their own unnatural half that they cannot control. By drawing on the powers of their black side, they become the only living weapon capable of battling and defeating vampires. Do you understand now?"
His words cut like a blade. She did not want to believe him, but could not deny recent events.
"How did you know, about me, I mean? How can you tell?"
He pointed to the leather thong and chain just visible around her neck. "Those amulets, hiding inside your dress. Who gave them to you?"
She paused and several pieces of the puzzle began to shift reluctantly into place.
"My father, or so I was told. He left the armor and the falchion as well. But if he were a vampire, why would he create me and then leave me weapons to destroy his own kind?"
Welstiel's hand impulsively reached out and then it stopped. Perhaps he sensed the sorrow she felt. "Sit down," he said.
She didn't move.
"Some vampires revel in their existence. They welcome it," he said, "but others are sometimes created against their will. I believe it is possible for a vampire to hate its own kind."
He seemed to be speaking with candor, and Magiere did not know whether to be grateful or regretful. She'd spent her life blotting out her past as thoroughly as she could. As it was, there was so little of it worth remembering. Her father abandoned her and her mother was dead. Both gone from her life before she was old enough to even remember their faces. At times, she had even envied Leesil for knowing who he was and who he came from, even if he was reluctant to speak of it. Now this arrogant madman believed she was born of the same kind of creature as the ones she'd been trying to destroy ever since arriving in this town.
She didn't want to share such thoughts with Welstiel, but he seemed to know more of her than anyone. If he was right, or even partially so, then somewhere in this world her father might still… exist.
"You think my father was turned against his will, and he made me as some kind of weapon?"
"It is possible."
"Then why would he leave me? He left me in a village of superstitious peasants who hated the sight of me." She would never cry, had never cried, but her voice broke slightly. "Why would he do that?"
"I do not know," Welstiel answered. "Perhaps to make you strong."
She studied his face and the intelligence in his eyes. "How do you know any of these things? Tell me, please."
He paused. "I study and I observe, and I've traveled many places. I heard a hunter of the dead was coming to live in Miiska, and I had to see for myself. The first time I saw you, I knew. Do you remember? You were in the tavern, wearing that dress, although it was in much better condition, and you tucked those amulets out of sight."
"Yes," she said. "I remember."
"Sit." He gestured to the end of the small bed.
This time she obeyed. He pointed again at the neckline of her dress.
"Have you figured these out yet?" he asked.
She looked down, but did not pull her amulets into view.
"I'm not sure. The topaz seems to glow when I'm near a vampire."
He nodded. "Yes, like the dog, it is an alarm, of sorts. It senses the presence of negative existence. The bone amulet is different. I've read of this, but yours is the first one I have seen. Undeads who feed on blood are actually feeding on the life force. They are an empty vessel that constantly needs to be refilled. A negative life force, if you will. Consuming life maintains their existence and causes them to heal so easily.
"However, you are still a living being," he went on. "This bone was endowed, enchanted, so that contact with a living being allows that mortal being to also absorb the life force and use it in the same way as the Noble Dead. The only living creature I know of who can consume blood the way you have already done is a dhampir. That amulet allows such an act to become more than feeding on blood; it allows that feeding to become the consuming of life energies directly."
"Where would something like that come from?" she asked.
He frowned. "You said your father left it for you. I don't have all the answers. But if I could do what you can, I would not be sitting here chatting with me. I would be preparing to fight."
"I'm still losing every time I fight Rashed. How do I win?" she asked.
"Don't resist yourself. Become one of them. That is why they fear you, because you can use all of their strengths against them. Fight without conscience or morality. Use every one of your gifts."
His advice was not what she wanted to hear. And she suddenly felt some anger toward him for being honest, as if blaming the messenger would bring comfort. She knew she should not blame him. But being in the same room with him was difficult now. She stood up and walked to the door.
"I won't see you again," she said. "After tonight there won't be a need."