MYTH
Key in one hand, knife in the other, Myth made sure to keep her eyes forward as the barge approached the island. Iqiohr would expect her to behave as usual, which meant staring at him adoringly. Keeping her face expressionless took all her concentration. All she wanted to do was weep. Norrix would have taken away. Freedom was so close. But it was illusion. She'd never leave her daughter behind. The brief stint of independence made accepting walking back into this cage bitter, but her life was here as long as her daughter was. The sooner she forgot about Norrix, and all the impossible things he made possible, the better for her and Fable.
When the fog cleared Iqiohr stood at front of a crowd of his soldiers on the end of the dock, arms crossed over his chest. His white hair and eyes stood out against the darkness of the night, beacons leading her back into prison.
The barge stopped and Myth stepped onto the platform. Iqiohr held out a hand. Myth placed the key and the knife in his palm. His other hand lashed out, seizing her chin in a crushing grip. Her eyes watered as Iqiohr's white, lifeless gaze bored into her, like he could read all her secrets.
After an eternity he released her without a word and dismissed her with a slight tilt of his head. The men split, opening a path for her. Careful not to touch any of them, Myth backed towards the entrance to the house, unsure if this was some sort of test. Iqiohr wasn't acting quite right. He turned to his men, holding the knife high. They cheered.
Why was the knife so important? What had she done? Myth closed her eyes. There was no point in wondering since she would do anything to save Fable.
Myth wandered. Iqiohr moved Fable around so Myth never knew where to find her. No one stopped her. No one followed her. Whatever Iqiohr was planning had to be big. Maybe they'd all be too busy with that to pay attention to her. Myth had searched everywhere she'd found Fable before, heart sinking further with each empty room. Myth crept downstairs. These lowest levels were always dark and smelled damp. No one wanted to come here, where the monsters lived, but it was the only place left to look.
Torchlight cast spooky shadows on rock-hewn walls. The doors in these corridors all locked from this side to keep the monsters out of the palace. Myth wrestled with the bolts on each one, opening the doors only enough to thrust the torch in and whisper Fable's name. Iqiohr had robbed Fable of her voice, but they could share story images. Fable wasn't here, either.
When the previous Scorpion-Mage had given Myth to Iqiohr, they'd stayed in the palace, but it would be years before an eight year old boy could assume the mantle of Scorpion-Mage. Fable had magic though. With her own bound, Myth hadn't been able to bind Fable's, something she regretted not figuring out sooner. Had Iqiohr really let the boy's family take Fable away? He wielded their daughter to control Myth though, so why let that sort of power over her go? A sinking sensation froze her in place. Her vision blurred and she covered her abdomen with one hand. Iqiohr wouldn't give away power, but he would transfer it to something else he could use. If she was pregnant, if she carried his son, he didn't need Fable anymore.
She needed to find her daughter and get out of this place. Fable deserved a better life than this, and for the first time Myth had hope. No one had searched her. She returned the key Iqiohr gave her to get to Ashana, but not the one to Norrix's room. She needed her daughter and a barge. They would be safe in Ashana if she could just get them there.
An arm shot out of a doorway, taking Myth by the elbow and dragging her into a library. Shocked that someone here dared touched her, Myth didn't make a sound. She stared at the hand clamped around her arm, but she didn't need to. The touch was cool, but her blood heated. Norrix.
Her eyes tracked from the fingers, to the wrist, up the arm, to his face and his eyes that saw into her. His hair and clothes were wet. Had he swum in the lake? That was insane.
Norrix slid his hand down her arm and took the torch from her. He wrapped his other arm around her and pulled her to his side. "I am here. I came for you. We'll get you and—"
"No, no, no!" Myth whispered. "How are you here? You can't be here!" She pushed away, opened the door behind him and motioned him inside. As soon as Norrix entered the room she pulled the door closed and locked it. "I'm sorry. You shouldn't have followed me."
For all Norrix's talk of Dragas and love, he didn't know she had a daughter by one of the mages he so hated. And now it was possible Myth was carrying a mage's son. She couldn't tell Norrix that. Couldn't bear to think of his heart beating with disgust rather than love. She'd cherish the one time she'd known pleasure, been touched with desire and reverence, maybe even love. But now she was on her own.
<><><><><>
NORRIX
Norrix slammed a fist into the closed door. "Myth!" She hadn't let him tell her he knew about her daughter and would get them both out. Hadn't let him say anything. Dragas were infuriating!
She didn't answer. Her light footsteps pattered away.
Why was she doing this? He'd seen the hope and happiness in her topaz eyes when she first saw him, but her emotions shut down. His heart gave a desultory flutter as she closed off, as he saw anger and despair when she looked at him.
This room was abyss dark. His vampire vision couldn't pick much out, even with the torch. The wall under his hand felt like rough stone. Norrix scented water, something musky, and decay. He pulled his phone from its waterproof pouch and turned on the flashlight app. Flashing the beam around revealed the cavern Myth had locked him into. People, or what had once been people, lay scattered on the floor. They were missing eyes, teeth, fingernails, and all their bones, the skins that remained looking like deflated balloons.
The lapping of the water changed. Something was walking through the shallows. The light reflected red eyes. He was locked in with an Ahuizotl. No, there were a dozen red eyes looking back at him. This was a pack of them. Did Myth know they were here? Did she mean to kill him? Ember hadn't killed Stryx even after their tumultuous start, Norrix refused to believe he would be the first vampire killed by his Draga.
The ahuizotls stalked towards him, growls morphing from menacing to confused as they neared. The closest one snuffled his boots. Mush had smelled the Ahuizotl on him, but he hadn't been immersed in water them.
"That's right. I'm a friend. We rescued an Ahuizotl like you from a different Mage. He's at my house. Are you missing one from your pack? I think you can understand me, can't you? I should have finished reading Thoth's book so I could talk to animals. If you don't kill me I'll bring him here. I'll show you."
Norrix dialed Xenos. No answer. He tried Zeke. Same thing. Ciaran. Nothing. Jael's number gave him a message the phone was out of the service area. How far had Jael gone to be out of the service area? Stryx wouldn't be home yet. Ember had left Idris in her Draga space. The Ahuizotls were getting restless. Of all the times for no one to answer their phones. Drake and Sabien weren't at the compound. As a last resort he called Alaric, who answered. "Are you at the compound?"
"Yes. Why?"
Norrix forced the words out. Alaric would never let him live this down, and these were dangerous words to say to Alaric in particular. "I need a favor. Take your phone to the underwater spring and get the Ahuizotl on your screen."
Alaric was silent.
"I'm locked in a room with a pack of them and I'm hoping he'll put in a good word for me. Will you hurry, please? He seemed to like you."
"He slobbered on me, you mean. How did you get locked in with a pack of them?" Alaric asked. "Is there a Draga involved? This seems like something that happens when a Draga is involved."
"And just a couple days ago you were wishing for quadruplet Dragas. Are you walking as you're talking?"
Alaric huffed. "No matter what everyone thinks I'm really not just a pretty face."
"I have never said your face was pretty."
The screen went from buttons to a view of Angelic-Alaric as the call switched to video. "Well, maybe as repayment of this favor, I'll say you have to tell me how pretty my face is everyday."
Norrix glanced at the largest Ahuizotl. Its red eyes gleamed, but Norrix didn't feel animosity, more like pity. "You see what I'm working with." The Ahuizotl chuffed.
"Slobber-beast," Alaric's voice echoed in the cavern under the compound. "Phone call for you." The view rotated as Alaric aimed his spot one towards the water.
Norrix crouched, slowly turned his back towards the Ahuizotls and held his phone up, screen facing them.
The calm surface of the water was broken as two dark ears surfaced, swiveling like radars.
The Ahuizotls behind Norrix yipped and the spring erupted as the massive Ahuizotl surged from the water. He bounded at Alaric, who judging by the crazily slewing screen, fell on his ass.
"Stop licking the phone, Slobber-Beast. Get off me! Ugh, this is so gross."
The largest Ahuizotl nudged Norrix's hand. "Turn the phone, Alaric. All we can see is the ceiling."
After a bit more scuffling, the screen showed the Ahuizotl, Alaric's palm planted on its broad head to hold it away from him. "You owe me for this, Witness."
"Fair enough, Fae."
The Ahuizotls yipped and growled back and forth, ending their exchange with whines Norrix didn't need Thoth's book to understand.
"I know you miss him. Help me get out of here and I'll bring him back to you."
<><><><><>
Norrix hated being underwater. The only exit, aside from the door, was at the bottom of a flooded tunnel that descended to the bottom of the lake. It was the only way back to Myth though, so he stumbled five hundred feet below the surface, an Ahuizotl on each side to guide him. They bit his boots when he veered off course. He was definitely going to need new shoelaces after this. After an interminable ten minutes of stumbling around, the Ahuizotls put their big, blocky heads under Norrix's hands. He curled an arm around the neck of each one and they swam up.
They deposited him on a beach at the back of the ostentatious gold palace. He lay there, doing his best impression of a rock, as strength flowed back into him. He inhaled, searching for the scent of apples that would lead him to Myth. It was faint with so much water around, but he could track it.