Page 26 of Ride the Storm (Cassandra Palmer 8)
In fact, sheâd risked her life to come here and warn me about the imminent return of Ares, and the pleasure that seemed to give five of her colleagues. Then, in quick succession, sheâd gotten scared by a coffee machine, yelled at a senior-level vamp, intimidated another into taking her shopping for the young girls who formed the rest of my court, and fed, comforted, and defended them fiercely until I got back. And then panicked and teared up when she thought I was going to kick her out for being useless.
And all that had been in the first couple days. Since then, sheâd continued to show flashes of both timidity and excessive bravery, and I never knew which I was going to get. I thought the former might be the false front, acquired over a lifetime of being ignored and discounted at the court her mother had presided over, because a Pythian love child doesnât exactly have it easy in the world.
But frankly, a little timidity would stand her in good stead right now. Despite being a pretty formidable witch, she wasnât going to beat these odds. Excess bravery right now was going to get her killed.
âDonât look so concerned,â the dark mage said, watching me. âI assure you, I donât mean any harm to Ms. Silvanus here. In fact, I fully intend to return her to you.â
âIn exchange for?â
âYou have a piece of our property,â he said gently. âWe would like her back.â
âLizzie.â
He inclined his head.
We were talking about Elizabeth Warrender, one of Agnesâ old acolytes and my current rogues. Out of the original five, three were now dead, oneâJo Zirimisâwas missing, and then there was Lizzie. Who had turned dark and started playing for the other team apparently without realizing that her team considered her expendable.
The other rogues had sent her here yesterday to take me out of commission while they raided a vamp stronghold in New York. One that contained a potion capable of boosting an acolyteâs power enough to rival mine. And possibly enough to shift Ares past the barrier of my motherâs spell.
Lizzie had succeededâsort of. I still didnât understand how sheâd known when Iâd be back, stepping out of thin air at almost the second I returned, beat up and bleeding, from Wales. But she had, and, like Gertie today, sheâd jammed a needle in my leg before I could stop her.
If it had contained poison, I wouldnât be here now. But it hadnât, because Lizzie was a little slow, and a lot fixated on becoming Pythia, while her savvier rivals had known the truth: once Ares returned, there wouldnât be a Pythia. There wouldnât be any magic workers, since he planned to kill us all.
I supposed that was one way to make sure no one ever challenged him again.
But they hadnât let Lizzie in on their insight, and she hadnât figured it out herself. Which meant sheâd been under the impression that she couldnât kill me, since no one who kills a Pythia can ever be one herself. So sheâd drugged me instead, and been captured in the process. And I had woken up in time to prevent the acolytesâ plan in New York, mainly because theyâd turned on each other while I was out, each wanting to end up as Aresâ champion.
And to become the goddess heâd promised to make the victor.
I almost felt sorry for Lizzie. Everyone else had been going after godhood, and sheâd just wanted to be Pythia. And still did, I assumed, since Iâd left her alive and drugged upstairs, intending to deal with her later.
Only it looked like somebody else had decided to do the same thing.
âAnd if I refuse?â I asked.
The dark mage made a small moue of disappointment.
âKilling Rhea wonât do you any good. Youâll still have to battle your way through the wards on the upper floors to get to Lizzie, and they were created by some of the best wardsmiths the Silver Circle has,â I told him, talking about the worldâs leading magical organization and the parent body of the War Mage Corps. âI doubt youâll find them as easy to fool as these.â
âOh no,â he mused. âI shouldnât think so.â
âAnd even if you surviveâall two or three of youâyouâll have my bodyguards to deal withââ
âWho I hear are not feeling well today.â
ââand who are still master vampires of Mirceaâs family line! Theyâll drain you before you get in the door.â
; âHmm.â The mage nodded slowly. âYou may have a point.â
âAnd the Circleâs men will be here soon, in force, and this whole thing is about to explode in your face. But if you give me Rhea nowââ
âOh, I couldnât do that.â
âWhy not?â I asked, trying to keep my voice steady. âIf I wonât trade for her, sheâs of no use to you. But if you give her to me now, unharmed, I promiseââ
âNo use?â the mage broke in, those blue eyes opening wide. âA Pythian acolyte is no use?â