Crissa slipped the orb into a pocket of her dress, peering about the room.
Peris was examining the witch's body closely, but moved as if fearful.
"She's quite dead," said Crissa. "I slid a dagger between her ribs."
The petite noblewoman looked over her shoulder at Crissa, almost as if for the first time, truly seeing the tall, golden-haired sorceress.
Crissa was nearly staggered by the fear she felt from Peris. The girl was afraid of
her
. A demon-beast lay on the floor next to a formerly invisible sorceress, and Peris was afraid of Crissa.
A smaller measure of that same fear came from Kennet. It was vague, thought, and may well have simply been general fear, which was perfectly reasonable.
"Peris," said Crissa, suddenly very desirous of the girl's trust, "I only did what I had to."
The girl moved the sorceress' body into a loose approximation of a funereal pose, with her legs together and arms crossed over her chest. She then covered the corpse with a sheet from over one of the cabinets which were all draped against dust. Blood immediately soaked through the thin cream-colored linen.
Kennet did much the same for the demon's body, if simply to remove it from sight.
The mood in the room was somber, and the fear was almost palpable to Crissa, and it smelled bad to her, almost made her angry. Her showing anger right now would only amplify that fear, she knew.
"Pack your things back up, we're leaving," said Crissa.
"To go where?" asked Kennet. "We've fled from spot to spot, and nowhere seems safe."
Crissa curbed the flash of anger that welled up inside her with an effort, an effort both her companions saw. Though he had questioned the order, Kennet was shoving loose items into a sack. Peris had not even questioned her, she was even more fearful of Crissa.
A motion in the corner of her vision caught her eye and Crissa turned to see that the piece of furnishing that Kennet had fished off a cloth from was a small wardrobe, out of place in the common room. It had a tall, slender mirror on the top. Regarding her reflection in the mirror, she saw a tall, stark woman with callous, angry eyes staring back at her.
Do I truly look like that
? she asked herself, and the reflection softened the tiniest fraction with a trace of worry.
One save me, no wonder they are fearful
. She had little reassurance to offer them, though, and no comfort.
"That's all of it," said Peris, standing from her packing, lifting a rather meager looking sack of goods.
Crissa had managed to stuff all she had brought with her back into the sack, which was still spilled across the floor from the fight. They pulled on their cloaks, again, kindly provided by Charel, and slipped from the apartment. The people across the hall were peering from behind a cracked door, and she knew the watch was on its way.
Such a disturbance in a law-abiding home would bring down the watch with certainty.
With haste, they slipped across the street into the very alley in which had lurked the witch prior to her attack on Crissa. The sounds of booted feet came clomping up the cobbled street as they moved hastily through the muddy alleyway. "Move quickly," hissed Crissa, wanting to change directions again as soon as possible. Surely the helpful neighbors in the building would soon point the guards toward that alley.
"In here," said Crissa in a low voice and they turned into another alleyway just as three guardsmen stormed into the muddy alley. Two had torches and flickering light illuminated the alleyway.
Crissa stood at the mouth of the side alley, as if she were denying the existence of the guards and the main alleyway. Her arms were outstretched and her fingers splayed, along with her long legs. Even her toes pointed outward. It was as if she were a cat, trying to make herself larger than she really was.
Peris watched the concentration on Crissa's face as she stood.
The guards ran right past them, though they were not ten feet away, and easily within the illumination of the sputtering torches.
The guards stopped at the far end of the alley and their voices came drifting back. They sounded oddly muffled, like they were speaking through a wall.
"One's blessing, what was that thing?" asked one of the guards.
"Looked like a skinned dog to me," said a second.
The third barked a laugh. "No dog I've ever seen has teeth like that," he said. "It was a magical beast."
The other two nodded assent. "And the woman with the dark hair?" asked the first again, apparently full of questions.
"No idea Derlen, no idea," said the authoritative-sounding one. "But, mark my words, she was a sorceress, you saw the markings."
Crissa saw her companions look fleetingly at her. With her arms stretched for the sky, her sleeves had slid up to her shoulders. No markings marred her smooth, fair skin.
The guardsmen moved away from the mouth of the alley, their torchlight with it, casting the trio into darkness. Crissa slumped forward and lowered her upstretched arms.
"You hid us?" asked Peris.
Crissa was breathing as if she had run a mile. "Yes," she said between gulps of air, "but I didn't know if I could."
"Invisibility," said Kennet, awe filling his voice.