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Chapter 29 – An Eye of Fire

  Well, this was a drum.

  My metal-thread-wearing intruder was moving into the warehouse with a ntern in hand. Given the anization of the shelves from the route he was taking, I could either leave now or stay and see if I could get some answers out of him.

  I crept around the er, following behind him, far enough back that a sudden turnaround wouldn’t immediately spot me. Unfortunately, it meant I couldn’t make out maails about him, not helped by him holding the only source of light in front of him.

  The back of his head was in the dark, but it felt like something was weird about it. After a few seds, I shook my head. Focus on the here and now, Malvia!

  Metal threads moved to the hidden trapdoor, staring down at it. Perhaps he thought I was still down there? He pressed a bit of the floor, and the trapdoor rose, revealing the violet fmes in the secret room as burning alchemical substances fed an unreal fire.

  He reeled back from the wave of heat, smming the trapdoor shut.

  I emerged from the shelves, flintlock trained on his head.

  “Well, if it isn’t he of the metal threads. Turn around slowly if you . No sudden movements unless you enjoy new holes put in you.”

  He turned slowly, a thin, reedy face looking at me with an exasperated expressioared down at me only a little, perhaps a few ialler than me.

  “Metal threads?” He asked incredulously. “Tis an improper name for one such as myself.”

  “It’s not like you left me a o call you,” I replied, keeping the gun trained on him. Had he been following me, or was this his warehouse? Would he be going through it in the middle of the night if it was his warehouse?

  “Josiah Hawkens,” he replied indignantly.

  “I’ll take your word for it. Katheryn Fara,” I said flippantly. That could not be his actual name.

  He said nothing, gring at me as if I’d wilt under his gaze. His hands were on something underh his coat, but it didn’t look like a pistol. A e, perhaps?

  He withdrew a e and, in a single swift motion, pulled on the handle, pulling a rapier’s bde out of the e.

  “Your name does not matter, for tonight you shall pay for the perfidy you visited upon me. I shall avenge my failure of the night before.”

  He followed that procmation with a flourish of the rapier, which glinted iern light as if on and.

  I cocked my head to the side. “Did you hit your head when I shoved you inside my closet? Because you definitely did not talk like this when you tried robbing me.”

  “Is it robbery wheakes from a thief?” He asked. “Or when one does it for a just cause?”

  “Pretty sure there’s plenty of people the courts have sentenced with more defined sob stories. Unless you want to eborate on why your cause is so just?”

  Hawken’s s me, flourishing the rapier again as he moved close to me. The damn thing glinted again, a shimmer of light traveling down its length. Had he ented the damn thing? Fug nobles.

  “Expnations are for peers, not for those beh me, which you do not t as, Malvia Harrow.”

  I blihen zily gri him. “Oh, that was exactly the wrong o say.”

  He shen opened his mouth to say something else.

  I moved the flintlock down, aiming for his leg. Whatever he would say died in his throat as he luowards me with the rapier.

  I was faster.

  The bullet shot into his khe leg folding as he colpsed to the ground, blood a spraying out the other side. He went down with a yelp, hands going over the bullet wound.

  “You’re lucky, don’t you know?” I asked. “I need answers. Otherwise, bits of your brain would be scattered on the floor instead of your knee. Mind you, that ge if you don’t drop the rapier.”

  “You shot me!” Hakwen whined. “Do you know how much these pants cost? This is the sed time I’ll hem repced, you brute!”

  “Maybe you and your friends shouldn’t have wrecked my b, my apartment, and my life,” I snapped back, reloading the flintlock with a pre-prepared powder package. “Drop the rapier. Last warning.”

  Hawkens dropped the rapier, eyes gring at me as he got into a position resembling sitting down.

  “You should tie off a tour above your knee,” I suggested. “I aimed a bit to the side, but no reason to risk bleeding out from an artery.”

  Hawkens stayed still, apparently pnning on defying me by bleeding to death.

  “Very well, not my life that’s at risk,” I said. “Well then, Mr. Hawkens, my first question is, what the hell were you doing trying to rob me in my b?”

  He snorted. “You must have me mixed up with one of those low-lives you assuredly deal with. Young dy, I have never met you before in my life.”

  I sighed. “Yes, because my life has room for more than one person with preetals threaded in their clothing. Who also has a box stolen from me in their possession. And who also resembles a certain person who gave a tip to Mr. Halmon of Halmon’s Alchemical Solutions on the location of a retly deceased and puarded wyvern. Excuse me if I don’t accept ygestion as fact. Do you care to revise anything you’ve said?”

  He remaieadfastly quiet, and I sighed.

  “Mr. Hawkens, I don’t have all night, and frankly, whatever web you’ve chosen to weave around me has worn my patience very thin, so if you tio lean on it-”

  Hakwens sprang from the ground with none of the awkwardness demanded from his position or having a fug bullet wound in his knee. One hand snatched his rapier, the other reag out to grab me.

  I pulled the trigger on the flintlock.

  The bullet went right between his eyes, blood and gore exploding out of the bad as the bullet exited.

  He kept on ing, and I flung myself to the side.

  Hawkens came to a plete halt and pivoted, the rapier’s bde smag into my hand. Pain jolted up my forearm, but I kept ahold of my saber.

  I didn’t bother trying to strike back, running for the window. If whatever Hawkens was could take a bullet between the eyes, I wouldn’t waste time trying to sword fight him.

  Coward, rot him to waste!

  Yeah, I was not doing that either. I leapt, eling Diabolism. The wood holding the window together was already dead, but that didn’t mean it couldn’t rot or decay further.

  The entire window fell apart, wood deg while gss simply fell. I went through the open space, rolling as I nded on the far side.

  My shoulder hit the cobbles, and I cursed as pain burst across it. Too far out of practice for this, I still reached my feet within moments, running. Behihe warehouse groahe spell still w on parts of the warehouse before fading out.

  Holy, it’s not the worst that could have happened from using Diabolism. Retively benign. As opposed to the ends of my arms, where veins cut paths of fire burning through me. I kept moving, biting my too prevent a scream as it spread up my arm.

  I’d drawn too much diabolism in too short a time through a body I’d sculpted to have as hard a time as I could make eling magic. Without reverting or using my tools, it wouldn’t handle any more of it well.

  And the rot was the simplest of tricks. Doing anything trickier would do far worse to my body.

  I got to my feet, running. Fet interrogating Hawkens; the papers in my bag would illumihese events by themselves. Instead, it was time to retreat and hole up for the evening.

  I was halfway down the length of the warehouse when I saw Hakens burst out of a window further down. I turned, avoided sliding on the cobbles, and started heading the other way.

  Damnations. How could he even stand? He hadn’t swallootion, and the bullet had gohrough straight between his eyes! Was he a mage? I doubted ah something as rare as a healing talent would be skulking around here at night, which left priests.

  I turned around, barely avoiding tripping as I raher way. I could hear shoes on cobbles behind me, and just when I was about to round the er, something flew beh my legs.

  As I shut my eyes, my head met cobbles in a collision of flesh and stone. Everything hurt, from my to the base of my horns, which ached. At least they hadn’t broken from the impact.

  Tangled up with my feet was the e sheath Hawkens had kept his rapier inside, and I hurriedly turned over as Hawkens stalked closer.

  Hawken sneered down at me, bending over slightly to stare me in the eyes. He looked taller, the well-fitting suit from before stretg across him, a foot of calf visible from pao the shoe. One hand still grasped his rapier.

  “Surprised, creature of diabolism? Let this mystery be the st thing your mind puzzles before you-”

  I shed out with a hoof, hitting Hawkens right on the nose. Something ched underh, and he reeled back, screaming.

  I took advantage of the momentary distra to cut with my saber. It bit into his wrist, but he still wouldn’t release the rapier.

  He bliears out of his eyes, rec fast from the blow. Whatever magic had healed the gunshot, it worked fast on his nose, resetting it with a painful crack. I had little time.

  I headbutt Hawkens, driving my hardened forehead and my horns right into his face. It wouldn’t be as effective as it had been as Malvia, but it still sent him reeling, his nose broken once again.

  Mind you, I could hear the bone g as it reset itself.

  I charged him, horns smashing into the underside of his head as a hand grasped one of his arms. It took just a moment of tact for the power to well even as it scorched my veins, then traveled into Hawken’s arm.

  He didn’t yell, kig me back even as skin rotted away, flesh stripping itself from bone as it ate its his arm. Hawkens spared just a g it, and then suddenly, the arm fell off at the shoulder while the rot was still at his elbow.

  He didn’t bleed, didn’t scream. There was nothing there but seamless flesh.

  The rapier jabbed at me, and I parried it owice, thehird time, it slipped through, pung into my shoulder. I shrieked, trying to grasp Hawken’s hand with my free one, calling pain.

  He pulled ba a siion, expression fident. Where his arm had detached, new flesh was growing, bones f its way out and flesh pushing out to join it. The old one finished rotting on the ground, bone, patches of skin, and lumps of flesh.

  Too slow. I had arick. Ohat I didn’t evehe imp to warn me would e dearly.

  I lunged forward, taking the rapier point through my saber-wielding arm, the pain as the bde scraped along the bone only a hint of what was to e as my free hand grasped Hawken’s face.

  “Burn,” I hissed even as my fingers burst, blood turning caustid eating its way out of my flesh.

  His head burst alight, bck fmes f on the surface of his skin. He shrieked, a sound that drove pinpoints of pain into my ears as he filed. Skin charred, flesh underh crag as it spread across skin even as I pulled back, a scream bursting from my throat.

  My fingers poured blood, veins pumping out the paths eaten through my flesh.

  Hawkens stopped shrieking, still burning but running my way. I had seds.

  I fixed my gaze on him, willing energy once more. Diabolism leaped out once more out of the duit. Hawken’s burning flesh rotted as well, and iurn, my right eye boiled.

  I screamed, my hands reflexively going to it even as Hawken’s colpsed into a shrieking mess, Diabolism eating at the wailing mess of flesh in two different ways.

  Whimpering, I fell onto the ground, eyelid shutting, hands g over my eye as it tio cook ihe socket. Even so, it leaked out, falling onto the ground as the socket still burned.

  I y there as that burning faded from excruciating to agonizing. It took three attempts to get up, my limbs colpsing. After the first attempt, I tore some cloth off my shirt, ing it around my fingers. I got arip over my y socket, stopping the agony of the breeze. The bleeding stopped, cut short by searing the veins closed with more diabolism. The Imp ed in my ears, tellio re-earn my strength by eating Hawkens.

  I didn’t even have the energy to tell it no as I forced myself onto unsteady hooves, stumbling towards the rotted and burnt remains of Hawkens.

  Everything hurt, especially the exposed inside of the socket. I ighe little spsh of white on the ground even as my nerves tio burn and my gait was unsteady. The world felt smaller, my window into it shrunken as I forced myself to focus on what was left of my oppo. Tears wouldn’t stop p from my other eye.

  The rotted and roasted remains still moved, as what remained of his limbs wriggled, skin stretg back over as flesh reformed. Fmes still licked at the flesh, but what it ed tio grow back—much more slowly than before, which might mean he was near his limits.

  My saber cut three times, earning nothing but groans as I severed ks of the flesh. Hawken’s movements did not stop, and I couldn’t risk waiting longer, so instead, I gathered one of the severed ks, colleg a small sample into a vial. Somehow, my hip fsk remained secure, the vials inside undamaged in their straw packaging. The bags had e loose during that, and I grabbed them both.

  By then, hands were f across Hawken’s flesh, over a dozen. Stubby fingers poked out of charred flesh, wriggling as they pushed their way out. Shuddering, I turned my ba Hawkens and moved away, hoping to find a pce to lick my wounds. Quickly.

  ***

  I couldn’t tell where I was.

  I had goumbling off, barely aware of the outside world as pai me, aually, exhaustion forced me to break into another warehouse. It hadn’t been subtle. I’d o leave before dawhey’d e and find me led in a er, a stolen b drawn up around me.

  Someone else had e in. I’d heard the door swinging open. I’d debated running, but decided against it. If it was Hawkens, freshly healed, I put my odds low. If it was someo ected to this, I’d beg for their charity. Anyone else, and well…my optiohere. Somewhat.

  They came into sight, the both of them. One of them was almost eager, the other as cautious as their partner was enthusiastic. They both had revolvers trained on me as soon as I came into sight.

  I grinned as they halted outside of easy lunging distance. “Mr. Voltar, Mr. Dawes. A pleasure to see you both!”

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