Marlowe’s gaze shifted to the closed door behind me. “She’s…she’s a good woman.”
“She said you’re a good man.”
Those eerie eyes tracked back to me. “I won’t be a—” His upper lip curled, revealing one deadly sharp tooth. “I won’t be a good man much longer.”
“No, you won’t be.”
“I…I tried to do it myself, but…”
“It’s okay.” Slowly, I pulled the dagger out from under my cloak. The glow of the nearby candle glittered off the deep red blade.
Marlowe eyed the dagger. “Bloodstone.”
Before any signs of the curse, a mortal could be killed in any number of ways, but once there were signs, only fire and bloodstone could kill the cursed. Only bloodstone or wood sharpened into a stake from the Blood Forest could kill a fully turned Craven.
“I just…I just wanted to say goodbye.” He shuddered. “That was all.”
“I understand,” I told him, even though I wished he hadn’t returned here, but I didn’t have to agree with his actions to understand them. His pain was starting to return, rising in sharp pulses and then ebbing. “Are you ready, Marlowe?”
His gaze shifted to the closed door once more, and then his eyes closed. He nodded.
Chest heavy, and unsure if it was my grief or his that weighed me down, I shifted ever so slightly. There were two ways to kill a Craven or someone cursed as long as you had a bloodstone blade or wood from a Blood Forest tree. Penetrate the heart or destroy the brain. The former wasn’t immediate. It could take minutes to bleed out, and it was painful…and messy.
Placing my left hand against his too-cold cheek, I leaned over him—
“I wasn’t…I wasn’t the only one,” he whispered.
My heart stopped. “What?”
“Ridley…he was…he was bitten, too.” A wheezing breath left him. “He wanted to say goodbye to his father. I don’t…know if he took care of himself or not.”
If this Ridley had waited until the curse began to show signs, there was no way he would’ve been able to do it. Whatever was in the blood of the Craven—of an Atlantian—triggered some sort of primal survival instinct.
Gods.
“Where does his father live?”
“Two blocks over. Third home. Blue…I think blue shutters, but Ridley…he lives in the dorms with…the others.”
Good gods, this could be bad.
“You’ve done the right thing,” I told him, wishing he’d done it sooner. “Thank you.”
Marlowe grimaced, and his eyes opened once more. There was no more blue. He was close. Seconds. “I don’t have—”
I struck as fast as the black vipers that hid in the valleys that led to the Temples. The tip of the dagger sank into the soft spot at the base of his skull. Angled frontward and between the vertebrae, the blade pierced deep, severing the brain stem.
Marlowe jerked.
That was all. He’d taken his last breath before he even knew it. Death was as instantaneous as it could be.
I eased the blade out as I rose from the bed. Marlowe’s eyes were closed. That…that was one small blessing. Agnes would not see how close he’d come to turning into a nightmare.
“May Rhain escort you to paradise,” I whispered, wiping the blood from my dagger on a small towel that had been draped over the end table. “And may you find eternal peace with those who have passed before you.”
Turning from the bed, I sheathed the dagger and then replaced my mask and lifted my hood, tugging it over my head.
Ridley.
I started for the door.
If Ridley were still alive, he had to be within minutes of turning. It was nighttime, and if he was in that dorm where others who were off duty slept…
I shuddered.
No matter how well trained they were, they were as vulnerable as anyone else while asleep. Concern for a certain guard from the Rise surfaced, and fear pierced my chest and stomach.
A massacre could be minutes away from happening.
Worse yet, the curse would spread, and I more than anyone knew how quickly it could ravage a city until nothing but blood pooled in the streets.
Chapter 5
We left Agnes in the bedroom, her husband’s limp hand pressed to her chest as she carefully brushed his hair back from his face.
It was an image I wouldn’t forget for a very long time.
But I couldn’t dwell on it then. I’d learned from Vikter that there was a daughter, but luckily, she was staying with friends, having been told that her father was ill. Vikter saw no reason to not believe Agnes. I was relieved to know that my worst fear hadn’t come true. That the child hadn’t also been cursed. Once someone had been cursed, a bite from them would pass on the curse, and even though Marlowe hadn’t fully turned, he would’ve been prone to uncontrollable rages and thirst from the moment he’d been bitten.