silvery birch. The floor was carpeted in a two-tone beige. The overall effect was stylish but not
Rikai’s study was lit by only two candles—a fat pillar on top of the fireplace mantel, and a beeswax taper on a short table near the door. They barely illuminated the full wall of glass-front bookcases, a desk scattered with unidentifiable objects, and two chairs that were somehow ominous. Maybe Jay was simply crediting the atmosphere to the chairs, but he didn’t want to sit down.
It took a moment for him to realize Rikai was even in the room, partially because her long black hair matched a body sheathed from neck to ankle to wrist in more black, but more so because his mind registered
Jay had occasionally met people who could put up walls against him, or who tried to fight his power. He had rarely met an individual who was a complete blank.
“Jay Marinitch,” she said. Her voice had a soft lilt, lower than he might have expected, like the sound of ocean waves moving over sand. “Of the Marinitch witches. Please, sit.”
Jay looked to the chair nearest him, and hesitated.
“The power you’re sensing isn’t intended for you,” Rikai said. “If you can’t bring yourself to overcome your instincts enough to sit in a chair to speak to me, you might as well leave now.”
Jay sat, even though doing so made his skin crawl. The chair was nice enough, but whatever power Rikai had going on here made his teeth ache.
Rikai leaned back in her deep, plush chair, stretching her legs out in front of her and propping her feet on some kind of twisted sculpture that apparently doubled as a footrest. Her dark eyes had a strange shine to them as she looked at Jay.
“So. Why do you want to know about the Shantel?”
“Do I need a reason?” he asked. He wasn’t coy by nature, but he hadn’t expected to be asked
“You’re a witch, an empath, and a hunter. You are not a scholar. You
“Such as?”
“Answer my question, and maybe I’ll answer yours.”
She leaned forward, bending at the waist, reminding him of a praying mantis. He had a powerful feeling that it would be unwise to lie to her.
“I think I’ve met a Shantel,” he answered. “Specifically, a
“Out of pure idle curiosity, oh?” Rikai replied. “How very SingleEarth, but utterly unlikely for
Cautiously, he said, “Answering that question may put you at risk, which I would rather not do.”
“Sweet of you.” Did she ever say anything sincere? “If something you say to me here travels beyond my home to cause me problems, it will be because
Nope. That didn’t comfort him.
“I suspect she used to be a slave in Midnight,” he explained. “I believe she was taken into Midnight before the fall of the first empire, and somehow remained—”
“Oh,” Rikai interrupted. “Pet.”
Jay stiffened. That was what the shapeshifter remembered the trainer calling her. He had been the only one with the audacity to name the
“Before they were shapeshifters, the Shantel were a Native American tribe whose magic came from their connection to an earth elemental. After Leona claimed them, the combined powers made them strong enough that even Midnight was never able to fully control them. At any given time, the Shantel had dozens of trained witches, but their true strength was wielded through their
“But Pet is … well, nothing, anymore. Midnight’s trainers did their jobs well. That woman hasn’t had a spark of free will in her for more than two hundred years, and since her power requires that she be neither owned nor named, it’s impossible for any would-be master to use her power for his own purposes. Last I heard, she belonged to Daryl.”
“What if she was fixed somehow? Healed?” Jay asked. “What would she be capable of?”
He wanted to ask outright,
Rikai scoffed at his question. “Anyone who has ever tried will tell you it can’t be done.”
“Even if through some miracle Pet were restored to her former state, the
“I think the Shantel elemental spoke to me, through Pet,” Jay said.
“It
Moment of truth?
Not yet. “I’d rather not share. But it didn’t seem weak.”
“A weak elemental is still the strongest thing you will ever encounter in your life, short of a stronger elemental or a bona fide god, should such a thing exist,” Rikai answered. “Even now, the power it left on you from your brief encounter is dripping off you in buckets.”
“It’s the only reason you and your ‘rather not share’ are still sitting in my study,” Rikai answered with a smile that was more predatory than pleasant. “You have traces of half a dozen different magics on you, which I suspect you gained by wandering into areas where you were not welcome. For Xeke’s sake, I’ll warn you that some of those spells learn. Escaping them will prove more difficult next time.”
“Thanks,” he whispered. It had been hard enough to escape them last time. “Xeke mentioned me?”
“No.”
Rikai laughed. “Little witch, most elementals think of themselves as
So the Shantel elemental probably couldn’t do anything. It hadn’t been strong enough to reach its
Simultaneously disappointed and relieved, Jay rose to his feet, saying, “Thank you for your time. You’ve been very helpful.”
Rikai didn’t bother to stand. “I had thought your question might be more interesting.”
“I’m kind of glad it wasn’t,” he answered.
Jay couldn’t help the shapeshifter unless she asked for his help. In the meantime, if the
Honestly, if he awoke after two centuries of slavery to discover his entire culture had been destroyed, Jay would probably be willing to throw away his life on a hopeless quest for vengeance, too. What did she have to