Her bewilderment was priceless.
For once he felt the subtle caress as Grace finessed his mind and met resistance. Her technique was opposite to his -- where he went in with an arrow, she sent out tendrils of mist. Satisfaction brought a twist to his lips; he'd blocked her from his thoughts and discovered something about her.
If only he'd remembered the charm earlier; an ancient relic with warding power that had hung in the temple for eons, thick dust encrusting the chain. Now it was tucked under his shirt beside his cross, humming with energy.
He vaulted his horse with a lithe spring, feeling carefree, almost young again. A silent summons sent a whir of black racing past the horses -- the beast hounds would accompany them, skulking in the shadows at the four points of the compass. Travelling long distance with a vampire and a child he was taking no chances.
They set off; the ladyfolk riding in tandem behind him, their mare tethered to Lanzig his grey stallion, with the pack horse following behind. Wintervaden lay five nights to the East; they would ride through the dark and make camp before dawn. Grace could not travel in sunlight, and stopping at night with the scent of a child would draw all manner of evil.
Liam rode with his mind stretched out before them, probing the approaching landscape for surprises. The hounds ran likewise, reinforcing his psychic guard, staying in a constant mind meld with each other. They formed a protective shield that only the ignorant or mad would dare penetrate. It took extraordinary concentration to maintain, more so than usual. He put it down to the feminine whispers of his companions and silenced them with a harsh reprimand, satisfied they wouldn't connive behind his back.
Skirting the ruins of an obsolete city, they passed toppled skyscrapers and collapsed houses. The giant statue of the White Lady, so magnificent in its time, lay on its side in the mud, both arms sheared off. Those alive today didn't know the meaning of the word 'bomb', but Liam knew what the countless gaping craters signified. He was one of the few men on earth who remembered electricity, computers, cars that ran on oil... The world had since moved on, leaving nothing but cold memories and weed infested rubble.
Many eyes were upon them -- vampires, demons, mutants -- none brazen enough to interfere with their passage. The fear he inspired kept them at bay, at least for this night. The crumbling city presented a warren of hides where evil could go to ground. Soon he would launch an assault on its citizens but for now his mind passed over and on, letting the monsters be.
As night wore on they came to a refuse dump stretching leagues to the north. Polluted and dead it housed no life, not even the smallest insect. Justine became agitated, forgetting his call for silence, speaking for the first time in hours.
"A klear pit," she cried, making protective wards in the air.
"No child," Grace corrected her. "The word is nu-clee-ar."
Liam started in surprise, craning his neck to face her. "Can you read?" he asked with a frown, his question causing a perceptible crack in her composure. He sensed no small amount of frustration for giving herself away.
"No," she shook her head, her gaze not meeting his.
Un-fooled he brought Lanzig to a halt, studying her with narrowed eyes. "Who taught you?" Literacy had died out centuries ago. Only those with supreme power maintained the art.
"I don't know."
It was a lie. He knew it and she knew he knew it.
He had a sudden impulse to haul her from her horse, to beat her until her skin burst open and the truth bled out of her. He told himself, were it not for the little girl, he would do exactly that -- vent his rage without mercy. If Justine were absent he would force Grace to her knees and extract what he wanted...
Liam's violent thoughts switched to erotic images of Grace on her knees in the dungeon, her ruby lips forming a tight seal around his manhood. Cursing under his breath he turned away, urging Lanzig on. His determination to coerce the truth from her kept him moving forward, his thoughts simmering over her falsehood as the moon rose and fell above them. Soon they would camp and Grace would have nowhere to run.
They entered the Glede Forrest and crested a long, low rise, emerging in a clearing that Liam knew well. He dismounted Lanzig and reached for the girl; Justine was light as a dandelion. He set her beside a rock and came back for the woman.
Raising her skirt she swung her leg over the mare, gifting him a glimpse of creamy thigh and moulded calves, distracting his mind with the thought of other, sweeter jewels beneath her clothing. Catching her around the waist, he brought her to the ground, his stomach clenching as her hip slithered over his. Quickly he moved away before -- God forbid -- he pressed her to his reckless cock.
The hounds settled in the shadows, guarding the perimeter as he made camp in silence, spacing the two tents with a calculated distance, watching as Grace carried the child to bed. "Wait." He stopped her as she edged inside. "You will bed with me."
His news was greeted with joint protests, but the hard bite of his eyes brought silence. He sent the child in to deep sleep with one mental push. Grace reluctantly left her charge, meek until the tent flap closed behind her.
"You can trust me with the child," she declared, following him to bed, her chin set at an obstinate angle.
"We have opposing definitions of trust." Lifting his shirt over his head he shrugged it off, noting the way her eyes roamed over his body. His expression turned hard. "I bet my life on the fact that you can read. What else have you lied about?" he asked.
The angle of her jaw, her pupils flickering up and down, were omens that she wasn't as sweet tempered as she seemed.
"Only that which you are sure to disbelieve or misunderstand."
"Riddle upon riddle," he scoffed, seating himself cross-legged on his bedroll. "Like the preposterous statement that you can be trusted with a child."
"I can."
"Of course you can," he agreed, but his pale eyes raked over her. "The question is why? You can read, you refuse to partake in human flesh, you have kept yourself pure." It wasn't his way to acknowledge she would still be pure if it wasn't for him. He locked eyes with her, considering. "You have a conscience of sorts."
"Yes." She said it with conviction; and a hint of impatience with him for labouring the obvious.
"You may sit," he indicated the foot of the bed. It was early for proper ceremony -- by rights he should stand her for ten turns of the clock -- but somehow, traditions seemed to dissolve around Grace. "You must be hungry."