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 | | From: | Teserk | | Subject: | [VampFiles] Chapter 8 - Medicine for the Soul | | Date: | Fri, 07 Jan 2005 16:31:54 GMT |
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 | Vamp Files. Written by Wade and Teserk
Archived at: http://www.geocities.com/cerebin/stories/Vamp_Files/index.html
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Chapter 8 - Medicine for the Soul
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[Griffin]
"Burning the midnight oil again, I see."
Commander Temkin, head of the Elite Forces unit of the Royal Guard tensed at the unexpected voice. It was a slight movement of the shoulders, a micro shrug that most men would probably miss, but Griffin knew Temkin very well.
"Still skirking about HQ when you should be out fulfilling your assignments?"
Temkin didn't turn from his seat at his desk. Instead, Griffin moved from his entry point of the secret door along Temkin's back wall to the wooden chair in front of the commander. He flipped the chair so its high back faced Temkin and straddled it as he sat down.
Temkin continued writing in an open logbook and the only sound for a few moments was the scratching of the quill pen.
"Surprised you, didn't I."
Temkin finished a line with a sharp poke of the quill then jammed the instrument back in its holder.
"Yes, and it annoys me to no end." Temkin gestured wildly at the wall behind him. "I have wards on that door, man. Strong wards! New wards. I set them myself. It is supposed to be secure."
Griffin chuckled. This had become something of a game between the two - Temkin trying to keep Griffin from entering his office unawares. Griffin had been getting the best of the commander as of late.
"That's the problem, sir. You set them yourself. How many times do I have to tell you that no matter how hard you try to mask it, your aural signature marks your work?"
"But the trap..."
"I saw that, quite clever actually. You wove the ward to warn if anyone with your signature tried to take it down."
"Then how...?
"Since you couldn't take down the ward without setting off the trap, there had to be another way. You enlisted a backup man. This time, that was Downy. I recognized his signature, too."
"Damn you and your damnable aura skills! You had better watch it. The next time I'll just rig up a fireball and fry your butt. I'm through with subtlety. "
Griffin could only smile.
Temkin sighed. "I assume you're here to report."
Griffin nodded and launched into a concise description of the day's activities. He didn't skimp on important facts, but intentionally left out certain things: specifically his injury and the subsequent visit of Kelisharii.
Temkin listened attentively then sat back in his chair.
"So you think there is a brood war brewing between weres and vampires."
"It's a strong possibility. Davian thinks such things occur with relative frequency."
"Not in my city," Temkin said. "What does he suggest?"
"He's going to check into things from the Guild's point of view. If we can determine when the weres started becoming active in the city, perhaps we can link it to some event that will give us a clue. I'm going to work it from the other end, try and figure out who in the government has been most opposed to the were-guild's interests."
"Going to visit the RAB?"
"I just might at that."
"Don't get caught. The thought of a brood war scares the pants off me and I'll need you if and when fat hits the frying pan."
----- [Davian]
It was reaching that time of the morning where the light starts to intrude itself into the night and creates larger and deeper shadows. Tonight was especially fickle, and Aspia led them along a wide open street in the quiet of the pre-dawn. Dew was settling over the cobbles in the roadways, making footing less safe, but erasing any sign of their passage. Neither had any trouble keeping quiet or moving down the roadways of the city.
Davian had asked, as politely as possible, as he would not have her serve him under duress, to find them a place to rest for a few hours. He needed some time to think and process the information Lian had fed him. She made no response but to turn and lead him through the gardens and back into the street. He guessed she probably assumed that he would ask for more than a guide. He would not, but if she offered he would certainly not refuse. Bae are not so different from humans in many ways.
They arrived outside of a hostel that was well maintained. The porch was swept, the boards glistening in the early morning dew. The eaves were free of debris and no trash fluttered about the slats. A fairly inviting place really. Aspia perfunctorily told him to remain outside, she would come back for him in a moment. Not wishing to cause waves, and knowing she would not leave him behind for long, he leaned against a support and waited. The hostel was dark, but soon a flicker of candle light shone through the material covering the window. A few moments later, at almost the same time as a ray of sunlight streamed onto the street she called him in, without coming out to get him.
The room was decorated sparsely, but with good taste. A large firepit dominated the back where cookpots hung dry. No continuously produced stews in this place to disagree with your stomach. There was no one else about, the owner had left the candle on the counter.
"You may have the room for a day's time. I will find you, here, at the setting of the sun." He tried to look closely at her face, but it was mostly hidden from view in shadow.
"You are not staying here?"
She raised an eyebrow, turned toward the back, and said again, "I will find you here this evening." She must have moved quickly after that, for as Davian moved toward the door she had vanished down, there was no more sign of her. Blowing out the candle on the counter, he scooped up the key, labeled with the picture of a bird or bat and wandered up to find his room and rest.
-----
[Griffin]
Griffin didn't head straight for the Royal Administration Building. It was unlikely he would unearth anything of value in the maze that was the RAB in the dead of night. Chances were greater he would run into the vampire who would promptly eliminate a stupid guardsman for thinking he could intrude upon its territory without adequate preparation. Instead, Griffin headed somewhere he had rarely been in the last several years - his own residence.
The small apartment was located in a quaint Almedean market district named Hensignton Square after the trading family that had first set up shop there some fifty years previously. The businesses in Hensington Square were wildly varied in what they sold, from simple dry goods and household necessities to children's toys to jewelry and exotic spices. The shops were all relatively small and well tended and were frequented by Almedea's growing middle class. Frequent guard patrols - aided by a quaint, but effective neighborhood watch system - kept the area quiet and free of major crime. From his first days in Almedea, Griffin had appreciated the peaceful quality of the square and had chosen to make his permanent residence there. The fact that he was so rarely home made his visits that much more pleasant.
Griffin turned down a small side street, anticipation of a clean, soft bed foremost in his mind. He was so tired he was having trouble even thinking straight. He had been awake for almost forty straight hours now and the fatigue had finally caught up with him. The sight of a familiar external stairway leading to an upstairs apartment brought a smile to his face. Home.
He mounted the worn wooden steps slowly, failing to muster the energy to move any faster. It was only after he had crossed the small balcony to the door and began to fit the key into the lock that he noticed the light. A small golden flicker escaped from crack at the bottom of the door. With a shock he realized someone was inside.
Griffin was jolted into full awareness. He cursed himself for relaxing his guard before he was safely at home behind locked and warded doors. If the intruder was the least bit perceptive he was sure to have heard the scratching of the key in the lock. Rather than give the person time to prepare, Griffin turned the key in the lock and burst inside, his sword already clearing the scabbard.
He stopped short and stared. His sword slowly lowered as a musical voice met his entry.
"Do you always make such grand entrances to your own home?"
Kelisharii stood before his fireplace, his teakettle in one hand and the fire poker in the other.
"Are you going to come in, or do you intend to stand in the doorway all night?"
Griffin recovered from the shock of finding the gypsie in his apartment and quickly closed the door. He reset the lock then pulled the internal bolt. Having secured the door, he slammed his sword back into its sheath.
"What are you doing here?" It came out more as a demand than a question. Kelisharii responded with the infamous gypsie temper.
"What am _I_ doing here? The more appropriate question is 'What are _you_ doing here?' I believe we had an appointment." She set the teakettle down hard enough to splash steaming water onto the small kitchen table. "I was there on time."
Griffin fought the urge to respond in kind. He wasn't angry with her for being here - he was angry with himself for his lapse in vigilance. He sighed.
"I'm sorry. Please don't take offense at my tone. I'm very tired, but still very happy to see you."
The heat in her eyes diminished as he pulled out a chair and collapsed into it.
"How did you find me?" He didn't bother to ask her how she had gotten inside. Gypsies were good at many things other than healing.
Kelisharii seated herself in a chair opposite him and pulled a small packet from a pouch at her waist. She pulled some oddly shaped leaves from it and rolled them between her hands as she spoke.
"When I saw the mess at the hostel I knew you wouldn't return there tonight. This is the only other place of yours I know of. I naturally assumed that you would meet me here."
Her eyes dared him to contradict her.
"Naturally."
The edges of Kelisharii's mouth turned up slightly. She dumped the leaves - which had been reduced to a stinking green pulp - into the teakettle.
"Where's your partner?"
Griffin rubbed at his eyes. Now that the surprise at finding Kelisharii had worn off, his fatigue was returning. A dull throbbing in his temples indicated the commencement of a headache.
"We got separated. I'll find him again in a few days."
There was a short pause. "You don't look so good."
"I'm just tired." An acrid smell began to emanate from the teakettle. "What is that stuff?"
"Wolf's Bane."
Griffin suddenly remembered the reason for their appointment. Gods, he must be tired if he was forgetting something like that. He rubbed at the wound on his arm.
"Smells awful."
"Most potent medicines do."
"Is it going to work?"
The pause this time was longer. "I don't know. I hope so."
They sat in silence for a few minutes. Griffin's headache was getting worse. He rubbed at his temples.
"Would you get a teacup for me?" Kelisharii asked.
Griffin hauled himself out of the chair and shuffled to the cupboard. He found a teacup inside and returned with it to the table. Kelisharii took the proffered cup and deftly filled it from the teakettle, then pushed the drink across the table to him.
The concoction smelled vile. It tasted even worse. Griffin finally managed to gag it down.
"You didn't tell me it was going to be so bitter."
"I didn't know. I've never had it before."
There was another lapse in the conversation. Griffin's head pounded more forcefully now and his eyes began to swim.
"You really look tired," Kelisharii said. "You had best lie down before you fall asleep on the table."
Griffin protested weakly as Kelisharii guided him to the bedroom. "Can't yet...wards...."
"The wards will wait."
He made to protest again, but his mouth had seemed to stop working. His body was becoming lethargic. He felt himself helped onto something soft. It was the most natural thing in the world to lay down. The pain in his head was going now. Kelisharii's face filled his vision for a moment and he felt a pleasant wetness on his cheek before the world went dark.
-----
[Kelisharii]
Kelisharii unbuckled Griffin's swordbelt and slid it from beneath him. She set the weapon next to the headboard and then went to work on removing Griffin's boots. It might not have been wise to slip the bitter sleeping herbs into the tea as he went for the cup, but she hadn't been able to help herself. He had been dead on his feet and knowing the lieutenant like she did, he would only have slept for a few hours before duty would have had him back up and about. He needed time and rest if the Wolf's Bane was to do its work and he wasn't going to get that unassisted.
The gypsie placed the boots on the floor then returned to the kitchen. She dumped the remaining tea in the fire. Wolf's Bane infusions were only effective when fresh - at least that's what she had been told. Her hands began to shake and she was forced to set the teakettle down to avoid dropping it.
Lycanthropy. The word echoed around inside of her. Gypsie folklore held firm to the belief that Wolf's Bane, properly prepared, would stop the dreaded disease if administered before the first transformation. Kelisharii had faith in the traditions of her people, but she was concerned nonetheless. What if she had made a mistake? What if her preparations had not been sufficient? What if Griffin succumbed?
Kelisharii pushed such thoughts from her mind and forced herself to calm. She had to trust in her abilities. What other source of reassurance did she have?
She plucked the candle from the table and walked back into the bedroom. The room was cold, she realized. She placed the candle on a bedside stand and pulled a heavy comforter up and around Griffin's slumbering form. The worn, care-troubled look had faded from his face leaving only the peace of deep sleep.
How long she stood there watching him, Kelisharii didn't know. She knew she should go, but the worries in her heart kept her rooted in place. When she finally did move it was not towards the door.
Kelisharii undressed down to her shift. She blew out the candle then slipped beneath the blanket. With one arm across his chest, her head pillowed on his shoulder, she clung to him in the dark drawing comfort from his warmth. Sleep was a long time in coming.
-----
[Davian]
Sunlight streamed in through the cracks in the slats that served as shutters over the window. He heard the everyday ramblings of people in the building: the shuffling of feet, the scuff of heel on stairs, the clatter of crockery. Nothing unusual at all, but he still could not sleep. He remained on the bed, lying perfectly still with his hands folded on his stomach. He had taken off his boots and had cleaned and then replaced his clothing in the nearby basin. He watched dust motes lazily blink in and out of existence as they passed through the thin beams of sunlight and continued to think about recent events.
Finding a Bae in charge of the city's thieves guild made things at once more complicated and more understandable. He would have to tread lightly around the man, he would not break the sanctity of the organization. But, that would not stop him from digging, as best he could, for the filthy vampires that seemed to be crawling about the city.
His thoughts paused as a set of softer clad feet moved past the door and the click of a door told him the person had moved on.
Aspia kept creeping her stealthy way back into his thoughts. It had been some time since he had found a woman who caused that reaction. Perhaps it was her training around Lian that made her that much more attractive. Perhaps he was just feeling his hormones. He cleared the thought from his still mind and moved back to the subject of dealing with vampires. The sun had passed beyond the slats of his room and still he had no answers and no real direction. The only conclusion was that he would have to rely on Aspia and the guild to help get him back on a hot track. He hoped Griffin was having more luck.
Allowing himself to drift off to sleep, Davian kept his mind open to strange sounds and smells. To anyone entering the room unnoticed, he would have appeared more like a zombie than a tall human at this point. He breathed, but it was long and slow, barely discernable.
---
Davian awoke to the sound of kids playing in the streets. Judging that this must be the last rush of kids to play before dinner, he stood and stretched. Rest was always good when it could be found. Davian pushed the bed to the side of the room to give himself more space, then spun and pulled his twin lengthy daggers. His pace only accelerated as he ran through the forms he used to train his muscles. As his body heated, he removed articles of clothing without breaking speed on the forms, the blades continuing to move in wicked patterns about his body. Soon he was covered with nothing more than his leather breaches, his muscles rippling with the strain of common movement. It was these forms, their repeated use, that drilled movement into his body. Conscious thought played little role as his body arched and struck outward.
The click of the latch, which he had locked when he entered the room, brought both of his blades forward, stopping within inches of Aspia's neck. She never flinched, merely raised an appraising eyebrow in his direction.
He finished the form and placed the blades on the bed, aware of her, but not paying her much attention. She closed the door and waited, no word said, but he knew she was following his every move. He rinsed his face and torso in what remained of the water from the basin, cleaned his weapons of sweat so they wouldn't rust, then dressed himself.
"I've seen those same body markings on Lian." The comment was the most personal and questing he had yet heard from her.
He looked her over. She looked a bit tired, as though she had not slept enough. "You are early."
She glanced briefly at the lack of light from the shutters but said not a word. Not wanting to seem gruff and unapproachable, Davian continued, "These tattoos are old thieving marks. A brotherhood of sorts." Her eyes looked to his torso where those marks were now hidden.
"That explains Lian's willingness to assist you, although if you were here for thieving, I imagine he would have taken your life without blinking. Tralian doesn't permit interlopers."
Her familiar use of the man's full name surprised him. He would have thought that would be something Lian did not readily share. Perhaps this one shared his bed and knew more than others. If so, he must indeed trust her. Her scent was not as clear this day, but that lavender smell was still there. Davian would have to trust this woman himself it would seem.
"I'm in need of food," Davian told her. "Let's go get something and discuss what comes next."
-----
[Griffin]
Griffin awoke to muted sunlight through the curtained windows of his bedchamber. He was a little surprised to find himself in his own bed, but he always felt that way after a long assignment away from home. The familiar sounds from the market played at his ears while the slight scent of lavender tickled his nose. It was nice to be home.
Wait, lavender? That didn't fit. He sat bolt upright in bed, his eyes playing warily about the room. He was alone. A quick inspection revealed that the lavender scent was coming from his own clothing on his left hand side.
Kelisharii? It had to be. He searched his memory of the previous night to see if she had been wearing a lavender perfume, but his recollection was hazy. That in itself was strange. His memory of such details was generally very good. Griffin lifted the curtains and gauged the time. It was past noon. This, too, startled him. It wasn't like him to sleep for so long. It seemed that Wolf's Bane had more effects than just preventing lycanthropy. Well, there was nothing for it. He had wasted half the day and there was work to be done.
Griffin washed his face with water Kelisharii had conveniently left in a pitcher near the bed. A search of his closet produced an outfit worthy of a clerk of the Royal Administration Building. He donned it quickly and set about creating the disguise he normally used when hunting for information at the RAB.
Ten minutes later he was in the kitchen, making quick work of some fruit and rolls Kelisharii had left on the table with a note stating that she would be back that evening to administer a second dosage of the Wolf's Bane. Griffin couldn't remember when he'd ever had such service. He rather liked it.
(To be continued...)
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