The Cold Eye (The Devil's West #2)



Gabriel’s interruption was one of desperation, inserting himself where he had no right being, but the marshal had sense enough of her kind to not be a fool, for which Gabriel would ever be thankful. He could feel Isobel tense and then relax behind him as the marshal eased her hands away from her weapon and stepped back just enough to no longer be an immediate threat.

“Been a while since a Hand rode out of Flood,” she said, not taking her gaze off either one of them. Not a fool, but not fool enough to accept them at only their word, either.

Isobel stepped forward then, her left hand outstretched, palm up, so the marshal could see it better. She glanced once, then nodded, and Gabriel had cause to wonder if she’d seen the sigil in flesh before, the way she took it in stride once Isobel’d identified herself.

“So, what would you have done, Hand?” The marshal crossed her arms over her chest and eyed Isobel. “Unless you’ve some way to bind not one but two magicians and force them to answer questions . . . a honey pot seemed my only recourse.”

Gabriel should not have found her description of the trap amusing, but the visual—of the magicians as bear cubs with their paws caught in the sticky bait—forced him to press his lips together so he didn’t smile.

Isobel only scowled at the false crossroads, tugging at her braid with one hand. “How did you do it?”

The marshal—who had not yet given her name?—smirked a little at that. “Not all tricks are in the devil’s cards,” she said.

Isobel accepted that with a shrug of her own, circling—at what he hoped was a safe distance?—the two figures still stalking each other around the center of the crossroads. She paced them, then turned and walked the other way, going counter-wise.

That seemed to draw their attention away from each other, and Gabriel tensed, but other than one of them hissing at her when she drew close, neither made any move beyond that, and it seemed to Gabriel’s eye, at least, that they drew back into the crossroads, their movements slowing to an almost resigned pace.

He had no idea what she’d done and no desire to ask. Let them all keep their secrets; he wanted no part. He moved to gather Uvnee’s reins with Steady’s, rope-penning them with the mule. If they were truly panicked, it would be easy enough for them to pull up and run, but anything shy of that and the ropes would remind them to stay put.

Isobel circled around crossroads once more, then stepped away. Her hat hung from its cord down her back now, strands of hair escaped from her braid to curl around her face, and Gabriel thought that she looked very young if you didn’t know better.

“It will hold, for a while longer,” she said, and her voice was quiet, tired. “Enough time for us to talk, at least.” She turned and looked at Gabriel, the plea clear in her gaze; he nodded once and walked over to join them.

“Those two,” he said, tilting his head at the figures who had kept their distance. “You say they claimed insult?”

The marshal glanced at her companions, then turned back to them. Her arms were still crossed against her chest, but the rest of her pose had eased, and Gabriel was reminded suddenly of a professor back at William and Mary who would stand like that for the entire lecture. He’d been militia when he was younger, rumor said, and had forgotten how to sit down.

“These men have claimed insult given to them.” The marshal studied Isobel, ignoring Gabriel. Her eyes were light-colored, her skin tight against her bones the way some folk aged, sun-spotted, and he thought she’d been a handful and a half when she was younger and with more to prove.

“Insult, against magicians?” Isobel’s voice skirted scorn and amusement, but only just, and he thought that was a thing she’d sucked from the devil’s teat, for it to be that perfect.

The marshal extended one arm and flicked her fingers inward, telling the two figures to come closer. They did so, though reluctantly.

“Magicians are still men. You say they have no right to that claim?”

The younger man opened his mouth as though to protest the marshal’s question, but his companion—an older man, dark hair trimmed close to his scalp and greying at the temples—placed one hand on his shoulder, silencing him. Like Gabriel, he knew enough to stay out of this.

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