“Theirs, though, was not an act of sacrifice or self-abnegation. They used blood magic to take immortality for themselves. They became immortal as well, and their powers are similar to ours. And so some might say that there is little difference between us. But there is an inherent darkness in what they are and in their crafting. They are corrupt in the truest sense of the word. I have heard it said that they rarely appear to humans or even to ordinary weremystes, because the stench of decay clings to them still, even after so many centuries.”
“So, you’re telling me that there’s a war between the runemystes and these other . . .”
“My kind call them necromancers: beings who have taken power from the realm of the dead. And yes that is what I am telling you. Surely you knew much of this already.”
I shook my head, blew out a long breath. “I thought there were weremystes who were dabbling in dark magic. It never occurred to me that they would have allies as powerful as you.” I tapped a finger on the steering wheel, thinking. “So then Cahors was one of them?”
“No. As I told you at the time, Etienne de Cahors was a runemyste, but he chafed at the limitations placed on my kind by the Runeclave.” Namid paused, appearing uncomfortable. “What I did not tell you then is that he was lured into disgrace by the necromancers. He was to be their prize. He could have told them much about our craftings and how they might be overcome.
“They gave him aid at the beginning, instructing him in the uses of blood magic. But he soon tired of their control. He wished to be beholden to none, to be free of the Runeclave and also of the dark ones. But he was important for other reasons.”
Something in the way Namid said this caught my ear. “What reasons?”
“They invested much in him: decades of wheedling, secrets of their evil magicking, their darkest aspirations. When he abandoned them, they were enraged. Their one consolation was that my kind were even more enraged. Their loss was great; ours was greater. We were thirty-nine. When we lost him we were thirty-eight. This pleased them, and more, it gave them a glimpse of a possible path forward from their failure. Equally important, they took note of how he died. And at whose hand.”
“Mine,” I said.
“Just so.”
“This is why they’re so interested in me. Because I killed Cahors.”
“Because you are a weremyste who killed Cahors. The necromancers long were contemptuous of weremyste power. They have subordinates of your kind-weremancers, we call them. But they have never considered them more than servants to their cause. Your victory over Cahors has forced them to consider the weremancers anew, to imagine a new role for them in this war.”
“And what role is that?”
The myste shook his head. “This I do not know.”
I wanted to believe him, but I wasn’t sure that I did. He’d kept too much from me over the years.
“Do you know who was in the car that came after me right before you showed up?”
“I know it was a weremancer, but that is all.”
“So a weremyste was able to attack my heart that way?”
He shook his head. “No. I felt a second presence as welclass="underline" a necromancer. It was she who attacked you. I believe the weremancer was here to . . . to finish you, as you would put it.”
I found this comforting in a strange way. I couldn’t have seized another person’s heart with magic the way the necromancer seized mine. I didn’t want to think there were other runecrafters like me out there who could. “I warded my heart from her attack. If her magic is comparable to yours, I shouldn’t have been able to do that.”
“You may have surprised her with your warding. Or she may still be familiarizing herself with your craft. Do not count on such spells working a second time.”
I nodded at that, my mind already turning in a new direction. “It’s necromancers who are hurting my father, right?”
“I do not know, Ohanko. I believe it is possible, assuming that Leander Fearsson’s suffering is not-forgive me-the product of delusion.”
“It’s not.”
“You know this?”
“I feel it,” I said. “I’m going to see him now. You’re welcome to stay with me and see him for yourself.”
“Thank you. Perhaps I will.”
We drove in silence for a minute or two. I had more questions for the myste, but I wasn’t sure that I wanted to ask them, not because I thought he would refuse to respond, but because I didn’t think I’d like his answers. It didn’t take long for the cop in me to decide this was a piss-poor reason not to ask.
“Since the day I met you, you’ve been telling me that you and your fellow mystes are forbidden from interfering in our world.”
“And we still are.”
“Even now?”
“Our laws have not changed.”
“But circumstances have. You can’t expect weremystes to fight off these necromancers without help.”
“Our expectations are irrelevant.” I started to argue, but he held up a translucent hand, stopping me. “We are what we are. Our laws help to define us. To ignore them out of expedience diminishes us, makes us little better than those you would have us fight on your behalf. We can help you, prepare you, guide you. But we cannot intervene. To do so would compromise too much.”
“You intervened with Cahors,” I said, knowing what he would say.
“This I have explained to you as well. Cahors was an anomaly, one of our own who escaped our notice. He acted on your world in large part because our vigilance slackened. We did what was necessary to undo some of the damage he wrought. This is different.”
Not the answer I had been hoping for, but I had to admit that there was a certain logic to what he said. That logic was likely to get me killed, but, hey, at least the runemystes were sticking to their principles.
“You’re putting a lot at risk,” I said. “They may be your laws, but it’s our lives you’re wagering.”
“Not yours alone.”
I frowned, looked over at him. “What do you mean?”
“Think, Ohanko. What is it the necromancers want?”
I shrugged. “Power?”
“Yes, of course. But what lies in their path to power?”
I thought about it for all of three seconds before the answer became obvious. The runemystes wouldn’t intervene directly, but what other beings would the necromancers fear? Weremystes could fight them; many of us would. We didn’t stand a chance, though, without the runemystes doing all that Namid had said they would: training us, preparing us, guiding us.
What did they want? They wanted to destroy Namid and his brethren.
“It’s you who are at risk,” I said. “I’m sorry I should have understood. The necromancers see the thirty-eight of you as the only obstacles they have to overcome.”
He nodded, solemn and slow. “That is our belief as well. You should know, however, that there are now but thirty-seven of us left.”
CHAPTER 15
I gaped at him. Cahors’s betrayal was one thing, but to lose another runemyste . . . I didn’t know how that was possible.
“What happened? Did another of your kind . . . go over to the dark side?”
I regretted the wording as soon as I said it. Fortunately Namid rarely caught my pop culture references.
“No,” he said. “As far as I know, there was no betrayal. At least not as you mean it. A runemyste was murdered.”
Which was far, far worse.
“Do you know who did it? Or how?”
“We do not know. We know only that one of her weremystes was killed as well. They died together, perhaps battling a necromancer and his or her servants.”