Morven’s eyelids lowered a bit, as if he suddenly felt sleepy.
“I have the information you seek,” he said. Faint, brownish magic, like wisps of smoke, began to leak from his mouth.
Watching as his eyes darkened, I gripped the armrests of my chair, bracing myself for what Morven was about to do to me.
Chapter 8
A SILENT, UNSEEN vacuum seemed to pull the breathable air from the room. It wasn’t like the void of the netherwhere. It was much worse. There, I had no sense of my own lungs or need for oxygen, so the lack of it wasn’t bothersome. But here, sitting in the loft of an ancient Duergar pub, I was acutely aware of the sense of suffocation.
Morven’s grayish-brown magic filled the space like thick pipe smoke. I felt it creep into my ears, nostrils, and I swear it even went in through my tear ducts. And yes, you can bet your ass I was sitting there with my legs tightly crossed.
It was like having every orifice and pore invaded by tendrils of something awful and irritating. Steel wool. Pieces of fiberglass. Barbed toothpicks.
I ground my teeth and tried to stay as still as possible and ignore the sensation of a million probes and pricks. Any disturbance would just prolong the agony. But the full-body probing wasn’t the worst part.
Just as I was sure I’d keel over from lack of oxygen, the swirling sensation in my chest began. It was like my torso was a blender and Morven had just pressed “liquefy.” It literally felt as if my organs were being ripped from their cozy little pockets and churned into pulp.
I let out the tiniest of groans, more of a low hum in my throat, and a bead of sweat rolled down the center of my forehead and off the tip of my nose.
Then all at once the tiny probes receded and air flooded into my lungs. Dark blotches blotted out my field of vision. I slouched over, too weak to keep my spine straight. With my chin on my chest and my eyes squeezed closed, I focused on breathing and not vomiting. A sheen of sweat slicked my skin.
When I finally looked up, Morven had moved a bucket near my chair. I averted my eyes, refusing to look at it, while I waited for the nausea to subside. The muscle weakness and lightheaded feeling would take longer to go away.
Finally, I swallowed hard, faced forward, and looked him in the eyes. Every muscle in my body was trembling with the effort of staying upright.
“And the information?” I asked calmly.
I wasn’t angry or resentful that he’d just taken a bit of my magic. It creeped me out, sure, and it was extremely unpleasant. But it was a transaction I’d willingly agreed to, and I would survive. In a way, it was a bit like donating blood. It depleted you temporarily, but then you recovered.
He tipped his head down, looking at me from under his bushy brows. “You’re a tough one, Petra Maguire,” he said. “I’ve seen men twice your size writhe and scream and then lose their lunch for their trouble.”
The corners of my mouth twitched slightly at the compliment. I decided to ignore the familiar irritation that came when someone was surprised by my strength—either physical or mental.
“So,” he said, drawing out the word in his brogue. “You’re looking for Van Zant and his Fae companion.”
I nodded. No point trying to rush him, as I already knew Morven wouldn’t be rushed. I needed to sit there for a few minutes before I’d be able to stand, anyway.
“Bryna is her name. Duergar-Spriggan girl,” he said. I hadn’t specifically asked him to tell me her lineage, but one didn’t speak of Fae without mentioning such things. It confirmed what the nightclub owner had told me.
“Sworn to the Duergar kingdom?” I asked.
“That wasn’t part of your original request, but I’ll give you that as a wee bonus since you guessed it right.”
“How generous,” I said wryly.
“As for the vampire’s location, I got wind he’s lodging at the Cockburn with the girl Bryna.”
“Lodging there tonight?”
“Aye.”
My pulse bumped up a notch. The Cockburn was a hotel in an old Duergar mansion, and it wasn’t far from the Aberdeen.
“She’s the owner of the wraith,” he said.
My brows lifted. Now I knew for sure that the wraith was connected to Van Zant. And I knew who to thank for sending it to kill me in the netherwhere.
Morven rose. “Always a pleasure doing business with you.”
He gave me a little salute and then turned toward the staircase, leaving me alone in the loft.
I tipped my head back and closed my eyes, letting my full body weight sag into the chair while I mentally took stock of my condition. I’d managed to hold my shit together in front of Morven, but it had taken all my willpower to keep my spine straight. I was still sweating, though the chill from having a bit of magic torn from me was starting to set in, along with a pounding in my temples.
It was basically like an epic hangover, but without the fun part that comes before.
After another minute of deep breathing, I used the armrests to heave myself up, straightening gradually once on my feet. By the time I made it to the stairs, I was fairly sure I wasn’t going to throw up.
Down in the pub, several people eyed me with knowing looks. I lifted my hand at Morven as I walked gingerly past, and he returned my wave with his signature Santa Claus smile.
Outside, the night air was the perfect summer’s eve temperature. A deep breath of Faerie air, and I almost felt decent. I had a short walk ahead of me to the Cockburn, which frankly I needed to make sure my legs were in working order. The streets in this Duergar township were narrow, having been designed long before the advent of cars.
Everything here was very old, and as in the Aberdeen, all manner of Fae creatures roamed the streets. It was like walking through a Disneyland set or a fantasy-themed Vegas hotel complete with costumed characters. As I drew closer to the Cockburn, I skirted glances at the faces I passed, looking for Van Zant. I had no idea what his Fae companion, Bryna, looked like—maybe stocky, based on her Spriggan blood, but with mixed Fae races you never knew for sure.
It had been early evening in Las Vegas when I’d stepped through the MonsterFit doorway, but in this Scotland-anchored territory of the Faerie realm, it was just past midnight. The only people out and about seemed to be those who were pub hopping or heading home for the night. A raucous group of Cait Sidhe men was coming my direction on the other side of the street, and one of them tipped his head back and yowled up at the sky with an eerily perfect alley-cat call. The Cait Sidhe were felines at heart, even in their humanoid forms, but those noises coming from a person always set my nerves on edge.