Kane looked up at him.

“ No? Wait…could you repeat the question…?”

“ Shut up!” Black snapped.

For as often as they hit him, Cross thought, I’m starting to wonder if he doesn’t actually enjoy it.

Gregor looked at Cross.

“ Who the hell are you?”

“ Cross.”

“ You work for Black Scar? You don’t look like a Revenger.”

“ I’m not.”

Gregor and the shotgun carrier exchanged looks.

“ Fine,” Gregor said after a moment. He pointed at Cross. “You can help her take Lucan and the vampire inside. Follow Keegan.” The lantern bearer took a step forward. “The rest of you will wait here with me.” He looked at Black. “I’d behave if I were you. If anything goes wrong, your dyke girlfriend is dead. Mercer is a hell of a good shot.”

“ Who’s Mercer?” she asked.

“ The sniper who gets to blow your lesbian bitch’s skull off if you screw this up. I’m only sad that I won’t get to do it myself.”

“ Gregor,” Vos said. “I’d advise you to shut up.”

“ Still got a crush on your boss, there, Vos?” Gregor laughed.

“ Keep laughing,” Vos smiled. “I’ll be the one who kills you.”

“ The dyke will go first,” Gregor laughed.

The look that Black gave Gregor would have killed a small animal. Gregor just smiled. He wore a number of knives in a harness slung over his aviator’s vest, and he had a pair of six-shooters secured in a hip-strap around his waist.

Black turned and nodded at Cross, and he took the reins of Lucan’s horse. Vos moved to secure Kane and Ekko.

“ Take care of yourself, Chief,” Vos told Danica.

“ You, too.”

Black rode ahead first. The vampire floated silently in her wake, a blazing beacon, and they followed the wordless Keegan into the temple structure.

Cross and Vos exchanged nods, and Cross led Lucan into the building. The lamp faded into the shadows behind them as he and Lucan followed Danica Black into a deeper dark.

SIX

TRADES

Cross’ and Danica’s spirits swirled and twisted around one another as the mages rode down the tunnel. Cross kept his as contained and as close as he could, but she was anxious and almost out of control again, and reining her in made his head throb and his eyes sore. She pushed with skin-chilling force as strong as a hard wind. Her incessant whispers drowned his senses. He could almost make out her words, and they were less than friendly.

The horses’ hooves clattered on the cracked stone as they rode the length of the rubble-strewn corridor. The walls were ancient crumbling sandstone decorated with hieroglyphs, which as far as Cross could tell were random and nonsensical: whorls and spirals and collapsing eyes, discs and curved fangs, moons that fell from idiot skies. The ceiling was just out of sight, a yawning strip of eye-numbing black, and the way ahead was a perpetual hole. The tunnel walls seemed to press in on them. Every sound was a deep and hollow echo.

Glassy frost reflected the light of the vampire’s chains, which lit their way with a flickering orange glow. Keegan walked a good distance ahead of them. Cross tried to remember the names and number of Cradden’s gang, which Black and Vos had given to he and Dillon when they’d put together their strategy outside of Shul Ganneth.

That prick we just met, Gregor. Syn, a swordswoman. Maddox, a Doj. Keegan the silent lantern bearer. A gunman named Taske. Cradden himself. And now this Mercer, who sounds like he’s a sniper. Hopefully Cradden Black doesn’t have any more surprise allies.

They came to a wide and open chamber, a massive courtyard surrounded by collapsing columns and dark alcoves. Felled statues of wolf gods and bits of broken rock littered the ground. Above them hung darkness so rich it could have been mistaken for a night sky, but it was just the underbelly of the cracked dome. The air smelled and tasted of mold.

Two men waited near the center of the enormous room. They rested against a massive stone wolf’s head that must have once belonged to a much larger statue; the stone bust lay cracked and on its side, half of its face smashed away. One of the men was a Doj, a mountainous and broad-shouldered humanoid nearly eight feet tall. The Doj’ muscles bulged beneath a brown flak jacket, and his tanned flesh was covered with tattoos and runes. The blade strapped to his back was nearly as long as Cross was tall.

The second man was unquestionably Cradden Black. His resemblance to Danica was impossible to miss: red hair, sharp eyes, angular cheekbones, and a sour grin. Even with his tightly trimmed beard he was almost a reflection of her. He even wore black leather armor.

“ Hey, Sis.”

Danica didn’t say anything. She stopped her horse a good twenty paces away from her brother and the Doj, who Cross surmised was the infamous Maddox.

“ So…” Cradden said with a smile. “I get the silent treatment tonight?”

“ What the hell do you expect me to say?” Danica snapped. “It’s taking all of my willpower to not shoot you in the face.”

Cradden nodded, and kept smiling.

“ Who’s your friend?” he asked.

“ Hired help,” she answered.

“ Your hired help is a warlock,” Cradden said coolly. “Aren’t you, friend?”

“ Cross,” he said. “I’m not your friend. But I am a warlock.”

Cross sensed Cradden’s spirit, which was hostile and close. It was fast and surprisingly stealthy for a female spirit, and it circled the room like a darting lizard. Cross held his own spirit in check, which he’d been forced to do a lot more than normal over the past few days. If he allowed her to manifest into a combat-ready form Cradden would sense it, and Cross didn’t want to start any trouble until they at least knew where Cole was. Cross sensed Danica exercise the same restraint with her own spirit, but, like Cross’, Danica’s was angry and on edge, and she only barely had him contained.

All three spirits in the chamber bristled at one another’s presence. They pulsed and prodded, tensed their ethereal skin and pricked each other with sharp tendrils of arcane power. The air was volatile. Cross felt like he stood near a pool of gasoline with an open flame in his hand.

“ Hello, Lucan,” Cradden said to the captive warlock. “Do you remember me?”

Lucan Keth’s eyes opened, but only just. If he recognized Cradden Black, he made no sign of it.

“ Why is there only one vampire?” Cradden asked.

“ We had trouble. We crashed.”

“ Yeah, I saw that…”

“ Any idea how that might have happened?” Danica pressed.

“ Nope.”

“ You know, you could’ve helped us out. Bro.”

“ It wasn’t my problem,” Cradden said with a shrug. “You were told to get all of the merchandise to us on time. That was your job. Sis.”

Cross lost track of Keegan. The shotgun-toting mercenary vanished after he’d led them into the courtyard.

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