old magic places. Very old, very wise, very—other.'
The man standing next to her took his eyes away from the thing in the glass jar. 'A risky game you're playing, Elizabeth. Chernobog is mighty, and the powers on Corfu are, as you say, very old.' His middle-aged face creased into a slight smile. ' 'Very old' often means 'weary'—even for such as me. Those ancient powers may not be enough to snare him. The demon's power is nothing to sneer at. And then what?'
She dimpled, exactly like a maiden who had just been given a lapdog puppy. 'Corfu is a terrible place for any
Crocell's gaze came back to the thing moving restlessly in the jar. 'Hence . . . this. Yes, I can see the logic. It must have been quite a struggle, to get two disparate elementals to breed.'
'Indeed it was.' She grimaced at the memory, as well as the thing in the jar. 'Nor is their offspring here any great pleasure to have around. But when the time comes, it will serve the purpose.'
Crocell gave a nod with just enough bow in it to satisfactorily acknowledge her skill. 'You will use your nephew as the tool, I assume.'
'Emeric is made for the purpose. My great-great-nephew is such a smart boy—and such a careless one.'
Crocell shook his head, smiling again, and began walking with a stiff-legged gait toward the entry to the bathhouse. 'I leave you to your machinations, Elizabeth. If nothing else, it's always a pleasure for us to watch you at work.'
Countess Bartholdy followed. 'Are any of you betting in my favor yet?'
Crocell's laugh was low and harsh. 'Of course not. Though I will say the odds are improving. Still . . .' He paused at the entryway and looked back, examining her. 'No one has ever succeeded in cheating him out of a soul, Elizabeth. Not once, in millennia, though many have tried.'
Her dimples appeared again. 'I will do it. Watch and see.'
Crocell shrugged. 'No, you will not. But it hardly matters to me, after all. And now, Countess, if I may be of service?'
He stepped aside and allowed the countess to precede him into the bathhouse.
'Yes, Crocell—and I do thank you again for offering your assistance. I'm having a bit of trouble extracting all of the blood. The veins and arteries empty well enough, but I think . . .'
Her face tight with concentration, Elizabeth studied the corpse of the virgin suspended over the bath. The bath was now half-full with red liquid. A few drops of blood were still dripping off the chin, oozing there from the great gash in the young girl's throat. 'I think there's still quite a bit more resting in the internal organs. The liver, especially.'
Hearing a sharp sound, she swiveled her head. 'Do be a bit careful, would you? Those tiles are expensive.'
'Sorry,' murmured Crocell, staring down at the flooring he'd cracked. His flesh was denser and heavier than iron, and he always walked clumsily, wearing boots that might look, on close inspection, to be just a bit odd in shape. They were—more so on the inside than the outside. The feet in those boots were not human.
* * *
Crocell was helpful, as he always was dealing with such matters. He was the greatest apothecary and alchemist among the Servants, and always enjoyed the intellectual challenge of practicing his craft.
He left, then, laughing when Elizabeth offered to share the bath.
His expression did not match the laugh, however, nor the words that followed. 'I have no need for it, Countess, as you well know. I am already immortal.'
The last words were said a bit sadly. Long ago, Crocell had paid the price Elizabeth Bartholdy hoped to avoid.
* * *
After her bath, the countess retired to her study, with a bowl of the blood—waste not, want not, she always said. There was still another use for it, after all, a use that the bath would actually facilitate. The blood was now as much Elizabeth's as the former owner's, thanks to the magical law of contagion.
She poured it into a flat, shallow basin of black glass, and carefully added the dark liquid from two vials she removed from a rank of others on the shelves. Then she held her hands, palms down, outstretched over the surface of the basin. What she whispered would be familiar to any other magician, so long as he (or she) was not from some tradition outside of the Western Empire. All except for the last name, which would have sent some screaming for her head.
Rather insular of them, she thought.
A mist spread over the surface of the dark liquid. It rose from nothing, but swiftly sank into the surface of the blood. The liquid began to glow from within with a sullen red light. And there, after a moment, came the image of her conspirator.
Count Mindaug's face was creased with worry. 'This is dangerous, Elizabeth.'
The countess laughed at him. 'Don't be silly. Jagiellon is practically a deaf-mute in such matters; he acknowledges no power but his own except as something to devour. He won't overhear us. Besides, I'll be brief. I received a letter from my nephew yesterday. He's clearly decided to launch his project.'
Mindaug shook his head. 'The idiot.'
'Well, yes.' Elizabeth's laugh, as always, was silvery. 'What else is family good for?'
Mindaug grunted. He was hardly the one to argue the point, since his own fortune had come largely from his two brothers and three sisters. None of whom had lived more than two months after coming into their inheritance.