The Spider(Elemental Assassin series)

5





Mab paused, almost as if she were posing to let everyone in the room get a good look at her in all her glory. Then she did the worst thing possible.

She walked toward the windows.

Mab moved closer and closer to the glass, her green gown rippling out like water around her, the fabric swirling away and then settling back against her body, every fold and drape perfectly in place once more. She walked slowly, carefully, deliberately, as though every step were a great debate of some sort—probably about whether Cesar and Sebastian lived or died.

And me too if she spotted me.

I froze, scarcely daring to breathe, but Mab kept coming and coming, heading right toward the windows—and me. Five more feet, and she’d see me hanging on to the shutter. It was no longer a matter of if she noticed me but when. Four feet . . . three . . . two . . . one . . .

Mab stopped.

She clasped her hands behind her back and peered straight out through the glass, her black eyes scanning the ominous clouds and the lightning that was still crackling in the distance.

I stayed exactly where I was, hanging on to the shutter, my toes perched on the ledge below the windows, not moving so much as a single muscle, not wanting to do anything that might catch her eye. I wouldn’t have even breathed if I could have managed it.

Because if Mab noticed me, if she realized that I was eavesdropping, she would raise her hands and incinerate me with her Fire magic. Everyone knew that Mab was the most powerful person in Ashland. Some even said that she was the strongest elemental born in the last five hundred years. I might have scoffed at the rumors before but not now—because I could feel exactly how powerful she really was.

My magic was self-contained, in that another elemental couldn’t sense that I had any power at all unless I was actively using it in some way, like making an Ice knife or shattering a bit of rock. But others, like Vaughn, continually emanated magic, like heat shimmering up from the pavement on a summer day, even when they weren’t doing anything more strenuous than blinking.

And Mab did too.

The hot, pulsing feel of her power blasted right through the glass and stone that separated us, as though I had stuck my face into a furnace. Dozens of tiny, invisible needles stabbed into my skin, each one leaving behind a burning pinch of pain, and the sensation only intensified the longer she stared out the windows. My breath came in shallow pants, and sweat dripped down my face, streaming into my eyes. I bit my lip against the hot, phantom pain and focused on maintaining my grip on the shutter and the ledge, which was doubly hard now when all I wanted to do was let go, if only to get away from the horrid feel of her magic washing over me again and again.

Mab kept gazing out through the glass, as though she were contemplating all the secrets of the universe. All she had to do was turn her head to the left a few scant inches, and she would see me. I bit my lip again, but I stayed where I was, knowing that even the slightest movement might make her dark gaze shift to mine—and mean my death.

A minute passed, then two, then three, and still, Mab kept staring out the damn windows. My fingers twitched, my legs trembled, and my muscles ached from holding the same position for so long, but I stayed put. I didn’t have any other choice.

At first, I wondered what Mab could possibly find so fascinating about the approaching storm, but then I realized that it was all just a ploy to make Vaughn and Sebastian sweat. It was working too, judging from the fine sheen of perspiration on Vaughn’s forehead. I wondered if he could feel her Fire magic the same way that I could, and realized how easily she could scorch him to death with it.

Finally, Mab turned away from the glass and walked back toward the two men, taking the hot, stabbing feel of her magic with her. I let out a soft sigh of relief and slowly eased my fingers and toes this way and that, shifting my weight and trying to ease the burning sensation in my muscles. That had been the longest five minutes of my life.

“So the inspectors haven’t found anything yet?” she asked.

Vaughn’s head whipped back and forth as he hurried to reassure her. “No, nothing. Nothing to indicate that the accident was anything other than that.”

“Nothing that you can be held accountable for as the builder?” Mab asked, her smoky voice dipping even lower.

He kept shaking his head. “No, nothing. Nothing at all. I’ve told you before, and I’ll tell you again, I don’t even know what happened. I don’t know what went wrong. If I did know, I would tell you. I would tell everyone.”

Mab studied him, her black eyes taking in everything from his clenched jaw to his stiff posture to the fact that he was dry-washing his hands again. Sebastian, Dawson, and Slater stayed where they were, as frozen as I had been a moment ago. They knew as well as I did that Cesar Vaughn’s fate was hanging by a thread, one that Mab could char to ash if she wanted to, right here, right now.

“Well, then,” Mab said. “I’ll ask Jonah to look into things to make sure that you stay blameless in all of this. But if things take a turn for the worse, I may have to go through with my original plan to sever all ties with Vaughn Construction. And you know what that would mean.”

Vaughn couldn’t hide the shudder that rippled through his body. “Of course. I understand.”

Yeah, we all knew exactly what Mab meant—that Vaughn would be the one to suffer if anything else happened that displeased her in the slightest way.

Fletcher didn’t need me to kill Vaughn. Neither did whoever had hired us. Mab would probably take care of Vaughn herself in a few more days, maybe weeks, if he was lucky.

“I’m glad we understand each other.” Mab smiled at him, but the only warmth in her face was the Fire magic burning in her eyes, making them seem as dark and hot as two black, smoking coals. “For your sake, I hope that the building inspectors continue to find you . . . blameless.”

Vaughn paled, his tan skin taking on a sickly, sallow tint, but he slowly squared his shoulders and gave her a respectful nod.

Her warning delivered, Mab swept past Vaughn, unlocked the doors, threw them open, and strolled out of the library, with Dawson and Slater getting to their feet and trailing along behind her.

? ? ?

Vaughn and Sebastian stared at the open doors. Then Vaughn stumbled forward, clutched the back of a nearby chair, and sagged against it. He plucked a white silk handkerchief from the breast pocket of his suit jacket and dabbed the sweat off his forehead. But he was made of sterner stuff than I thought, because he tucked the bit of damp silk away and straightened back up.

“Well, that went about as well as could be expected,” he grumbled. “I suppose I should be grateful that she didn’t use her Fire magic on me to really make her point.”

“Well, there is that small favor,” Sebastian drawled.

Vaughn eyed his son, as if he was surprised by his snarky tone, but he didn’t respond. Instead, he paced back and forth before striding past the desk and walking over to the windows, coming even closer to the glass than Mab had.

I grimaced and gripped the shutter and ledge more tightly, trying to press myself even closer against the wall so that he wouldn’t look to his left and see me hanging right next to him. What was it with everyone coming over to stare moodily out through the glass tonight? You’d think that they’d never seen the great outdoors before.

Sebastian strode over and put his hand on his father’s shoulder.

“It needs to stop, Papa,” Sebastian said, his voice kinder than it had been before. “You need to stop blaming yourself for what happened at that restaurant. You did nothing wrong. When the inspectors release their report and say so, everyone else will realize it too. It was just an accident, just a freak occurrence, nothing more. There’s no one to blame, nothing you could have done to stop it, and nothing you can do to make it right now.”

His impassioned words showed his loyalty to his father, even if Vaughn didn’t deserve it. I wondered if Sebastian knew what his father was doing to Charlotte, how Cesar was hurting her whenever the mood struck him. I wondered what he would think of his beloved papa then.

Vaughn shrugged off his son’s hand. “We’ll see what the inspectors find. Until then, I’m not discounting any possibility. Perhaps a bad batch of materials got mixed in with what I had ordered, after all. It could still be my fault, whether I know it or not. All of those people, their families . . . their loss, their pain, their suffering . . . it could still be because of me.”

The sad, wounded, defeated tone in Vaughn’s voice made me frown. He seemed genuinely upset by all the deaths and injuries that had resulted from the terrace collapse. Not how I would have expected him to feel, but maybe the guilt had finally overwhelmed his greed, if he had, in fact, cut corners on the job. But it didn’t much matter. My assignment was to kill him, not speculate about who wanted him dead.

Vaughn turned away from the windows. “Anyway, I must return to the dinner. I wouldn’t want the others to think that something is wrong.”

“Oh, no,” Sebastian drawled again. “We wouldn’t want that.”

Cesar gave his son another odd look, then strode out of the library. Sebastian followed him, although he was walking much more slowly.

Since there was nothing else to do or see here, I let go of the shutter, gripped the stone with my fingers again, and headed back in the direction from which I’d originally come.

The climb back was much quicker, and I made it across the wall and in through the open window without any problems. Dust and dirt from the stone had smeared across my white tuxedo vest and black pants, and I wiped it off the best I could, hoping that no one would notice the faint stains or the tiny tears in the white silk from where bits of rock had scraped against the thin material. I also untucked my shirt and used the ends to wipe the sweat off my face before stuffing the fabric back down into my pants again.

When I was more or less presentable, I headed toward the end of the hallway. I’d gone ten feet before I realized that I’d forgotten the most important thing: the tray of champagne that I was supposed to have been circulating through the dining room twenty minutes ago.

I grumbled, turned around, and grabbed the tray from where I’d set it down on the floor. I hoisted it into position in the crook of my elbow and scurried down the hallway toward the main corridor. I was about to round the corner when someone stepped into view in front of me.

Sebastian Vaughn.

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