I let her slump to the ground, the dry dirt gulping down the crimson like long-awaited rain.
5
The vampires noticed the seer was gone right away—apparently the old woman didn’t often leave on her own during the night. I watched them search for her. At first, they were irritated. My Obitraen was poor, but I could grasp fragments—profanities cursing that the old woman had been so absentminded. They thought she’d wandered away and was just late returning.
Eventually, he came out.
If the others were irritated by her absence, he was outright furious. When he emerged, all the others went silent. He demanded that they search for her, immediately, and not stop until she was found.
They did. A night passed.
I waited another night. Another. The search continued. The conqueror’s burst of fury faded to a constant simmer, obvious even from my distant vantage point, radiating from his presence like steam off hot coals.
Days passed. They were growing anxious. They needed to move on. But he didn’t want to go without her. I watched him snarl commands at his men every night, every few hours, when their search came up fruitless. But everyone knew, by now, that the seer was not coming back.
This, I decided, was the perfect level of desperation.
There was a town not far from here—or maybe “town” was a generous word. It was more like a little collection of trading posts and buildings. A single inn, a few marketplace stalls, a watering hole. At nightfall, I went there, ordered a drink, and waited.
Eventually, as I knew they would, the vampires showed up. Two of them—foot soldiers, it looked like. They came asking the businessmen about their seer, if she had passed through.
I sat there and sipped my wine, in my highly visible seat, right at the edge of the street.
Secretly, I was enjoying the wine. We didn’t often have it at the Keep, considering what it did to the senses. It was what a typical traveler would be expected to be drinking, though, so it was what I drank as well. I took only the tiniest sips, barely allowing it to touch my tongue.
The barkeep was not being cooperative, which the soldiers did not appreciate. After a heated exchange that went nowhere, they released him, and he staggered back against the wall with a gasping breath. They looked at each other—I could sense their mutual frustration, and even more powerful, their dread as to what they would find when they returned to camp empty-handed.
And then I felt their eyes on me.
I took another sip of wine, seemingly oblivious to them. But I didn’t move. Didn’t shy away from their gaze. I let them stare right at me—me, and my blindfold, and my dress that looked so perfectly befitting a seer of Acaeja.
Remember me, soldiers, I thought, waiting to smile to myself until they were gone.
Most of the time, my unusual appearance made things more difficult. I was, of course, happy to offer my goddess my eyes. Over the years, she’s taken my little finger on my left hand, too, and etched several scars into the skin of my abdomen. All gifts that I gave her freely, and it was an honor to allow my reverence for Acaeja to mark my flesh so permanently. There’s a strange sort of kinship in it, too, among my Sisters and I—we all turned ourselves into something foreign to the outside world, forever branded as Arachessen.
From a logistical perspective, though, sometimes being so prominently marked… had its challenges. We stood out. It was difficult to maintain any kind of disguise. The eyes, after all, usually gave it away quickly.
So, it was a nice change of pace that this time, my appearance worked in my favor. From the moment those Bloodborn soldiers saw me, they knew exactly what I was.
All I had to do was wait for them to come back for me.
I got myself a room in the inn that was the least secure place I could possibly choose—right in the front, with big windows that I left uncovered. The innkeeper didn’t even try to stop my would-be captor. I didn’t blame him for that. Some misguided attempt at noble chivalry wouldn’t be worth laying down his life.
The vampire didn’t knock before forcing open my door. Whatever he did to it made the rickety piece of wood fly open with a BANG, the iron knob gouging the plaster of the wall. If that was brute strength alone, I was almost impressed.
He stood in the doorway. I recognized him as one of the soldiers who had seen me the night before. He was stocky and broad, with pale skin and shaggy ash-blond hair, and a neat, trimmed beard. He wore the uniform of the Bloodborn soldiers—it had probably been a fine jacket once, dark red and double-breasted with silver buttons, but it was a bit worse for wear these days.