Chapter Fourteen...
Soul Forge (Book One of the Soul Forge series)
âStep back!â Elda demanded, brandishing the dagger. Julian raised his hands to show he meant no harm and moved away to stand beside the tulpar demon, laying his palm on its right flank. Elda moved closer to Sypherâs fallen body and sat beside him.
âHe needs to be warm. I can help you move him closer to the fire.â
âDonât you move! I can do it myself,â she snapped. She stuck the tip of the dagger in the dirt, eyeing Julian warily before tucking her hands under Sypherâs arms. Moving him was hard work. He was at least a foot and a half taller than her, and layered with toned muscle, which meant he was heavier than she expected. At barely five feet, it was like lifting a corpse in a lead suit, but she dragged him, inch by inch, until he was close enough to the fire.
âIâm surprised you managed that,â Julian stated.
âIâm under orders to stab you if you get too close,â she warned. The Vampire chuckled, folding his arms across his chest and leaning one shoulder against his mount.
âFeisty. I like you already.â
âI hope you can forgive me for not returning the sentiment.â She unclipped her cloak and laid it over Sypher, snatching the dagger back up and sitting on the ground right beside him. âWhy did the rune on his neck light up when you were near?â
âItâs a tracking rune. I have the same one on my arm.â He rolled his sleeve back to show her an identical black mark imprinted on the inside of his elbow. âIâm sorry your first impression of me is a bloodthirsty monster. Iâm really not that bad, I promise.â
âYou just killed my husband.â
His face went slack. âI killed your what?â
âMy husband.â
âHe married you? Voluntarily?â Elda nodded. Julian let out a low whistle. âIâll be damned. How did that happen?â
âItâs a long story and youâre a stranger.â
âWe have all night. He wonât wake up until the sun comes up.â
âYou must make a habit of draining him then,â she accused.
âNot if I can help it.â Julian patted the tulpar demon. It folded itself into a comfortable position on the ground, nickering happily when he settled against its side again. âCome on, tell me the story. I have to know how this asshole bagged himself a wife.â Elda looked down at Sypher, brows pulling together at the sight of his pale face. He wasnât breathing, but sheâd seen his body die before and wake up again. She remembered his warning and glanced up at the Vampire.
âTell me something first.â Julian inclined his head in agreement. âWill he wake up as the demon again?â
âYouâve seen the demon soul?â She nodded. âWhen did he marry you?â
âAbout two days after he named me Keeper.â
âAnd youâve seen it already?â She nodded again. âHuh. Normally he manages at least a few months at before his Keeper finds out about that.â
âWe ran into some trouble on the first day of our journey and fell a long way,â she shrugged. âHe broke my fall. I need to know if heâs going to attack me when he comes round.â
âIt depends on the severity of the injury, and the situation. The demon has accepted that Iâm not technically dangerous to him, so itâs unlikely heâll wake up like that this time.â
âYou killed him.â
âNot permanently.â He smiled impishly. âYour turn.â Elda sighed and recounted the story of their engagement. Julian watched her intently the whole time, nodding when she was done. âI see. Horthan really rubbed him up the wrong way,â he chuckled. âIt doesnât surprise me that Sypher proposed just to annoy him.â Eldaâs stomach growled loudly, interrupting their conversation. âYou hungry?â
âIâm fine.â
âSure you are,â he scoffed, getting to his feet. âIâll find you something to eat.â
âWe didnât pack any food.â
âAnd? Iâm going hunting. Why donât you say hi to Syd while you wait?â He patted the tulpar demon fondly and disappeared off into the trees before Elda could object. She gripped the dagger tighter, returning her attention to Sypherâs face and praying the demon stayed where it was.
It only took a few minutes for it to get curious, rising to its hooves and clopping quietly across the clearing. She leaned away from it when it bent to sniff at Sypherâs prone body, nosing his cheek gently. It snorted when he didnât move, lingering a second longer and then turning its attention to her. She froze, squeezing her eyes shut when the nose touched the side of her face, huffing breaths gusting across her cheeks. A heavy thud sounded. Elda opened her eyes to find the tulpar demon settled on the ground right beside her.
âYouâre not going to attack me?â The demonâs ears flicked forwards, listening curiously. âJust donât bite me.â Elda tucked her knees up to her chest and waited, eyes fixed on Sypherâs face.
By the time Julian returned, her eyelids were drooping and Syd snoozed peacefully beside her. He had the corpse of a large hare slung over his shoulder. Elda didnât watch him prepare it, but the sound of it being skinned made her feel sick. Thankfully, the nausea faded when the smell of food cooking reached her. Syd lifted her nose and sniffed.
âI hope youâre hungry, Princess,â Julian said eventually, holding out her dinner.
âElda.â She accepted the rabbit leg, biting gratefully into the tender meat. âThank you.â
âItâs the least I could do after frightening you like that.â
âAnd killing my husband.â
âHe had it coming.â
âSay that again when I can stand, asshole,â Sypher groaned. Elda dropped her food in her haste to stop him sitting up too quickly, and Syd wasted no time in snatching it off the ground.
âThat wasnât for you!â Julian chastised, scowling at the tulpar demon. It nickered back at him like it understood him.
âYou should stay lying down for a while,â Elda insisted, putting a hand on Sypherâs chest to push him back down. âJulian thought youâd be asleep until morning.â
âI might have if heâd used the thrall.â
âEven feral, I know not to try that,â the Vampire answered with a shrug. âThe last thing I remember was flying down here on Sydâs back.â
âWhatâs the thrall?â Elda asked.
âNope, you can take that one,â Sypher said immediately, closing his eyes again and pulling up his hood to hide his face.
âOh gee, thanks,â Julian muttered, turning reluctantly to Elda. âDo you know anything about Vampires?â
âOnly that Malakai was supposed to have killed you all a long time ago.â
âSomething like that,â he nodded, casting an odd look at Sypher. âBefore any of that happened, we had a city. Nova was a desert oasis, sustained by our technology. We welcomed anyone to live tax free in our city, as long as they agreed to be a donor to the Vampire population. All they had to do was give a small amount of blood every so often. If they changed their mind, they could leave whenever they wanted, or pay taxes.â
âPeople willingly let you tear into their necks?â Elda asked, wrinkling her nose.
âThey used to. And we didnât tear into their necks,â he explained defensively. âWe had a few options for donating. They could have their blood drawn at a clinic, or they could choose to donate the old fashioned way.â
âWhy would anyone choose to be bitten?â
âSpirits, youâre taking way too long to explain this,â Sypher muttered. âThe thrall makes the bite feel pleasurable for the donor. Thatâs why people chose to get bitten.â
âWay to ease her into it,â Julian sighed. âNow look what you did.â Sypherâs head swivelled slowly to find Eldaâs face beetroot red, right to the tips of her ears.
âItâs fine,â she mumbled. âIs that why you were okay with feeding him?â Sypher propped himself up on his elbows with a groan, shifting slowly to a sitting position. He took the hood down so she could see his face, revealing the ragged bite mark at his throat.
âI feed him when heâs desperate because I owe him a life debt.â
âDo you like it when he bites you?â
Sypher blinked. â...Are you asking me if Iâm attracted to him?â
âThatâs how it sounds,â Julian chortled. âI donât blame you. Iâm irresistible.â
âShut it, ass,â Sypher scowled at his friend. âIâm not involved with anyone, if thatâs what youâre getting at.â
âYouâre married,â the Vampire snorted.
âI thought I told you to shut it!â Sypherâs eyes flashed, the fire in them burning brighter with his temper.
âOoh, scary.â
âYou still didnât answer my question,â Elda cut in before they could continue bickering. âI asked if you liked getting bitten.â
âYou asked if I liked him biting me,â he answered, âbut no. Iâd rather he didnât use the thrall, as long as he warns me first.â
âWhy?â
âYou ask a lot of questions,â Sypher noted.
âAnd youâre being your usual evasive self,â Julian remarked. âHe doesnât like me using the thrall because he thinks he deserves it to hurt. Itâs his way of atoning.â
âFor what?â Elda frowned.
âDonât you say another word,â Sypher hissed, the red in his eyes almost disappearing. âI mean it, Julian.â
âAlright! Jeez.â
âIs this another secret you wonât tell me until you know you can trust me?â Elda asked. Sypher nodded. âWell then, Iâm sure Iâll find out soon.â
âDonât count on it,â he muttered, laying back down and turning away from both of them.
âI get it,â Julian nodded. âHe thinks youâll do what the others did.â
âYou know what heâs talking about?â
âI do. Unfortunately, I like living too much to let you in on the secret.â He passed her another rabbit leg, eyeing the tulpar demon in warning when it started sniffing. âSypher, you should eat something.â
âIâm fine.â Julian rolled his eyes, but didnât push it. Elda frowned and looked down at the meat, then dangled it in front of Sypherâs face.
âYou need to eat,â she insisted.
âI said Iâm fine.â
âIf you want me to irritate you for the rest of the night, I can. Or you can eat the rabbit leg.â He turned onto his back to look at her.
âI feel like marrying you was a mistake, somehow.â
âCanât go back on it now,â she grinned. He took the rabbit leg and sat up again, swaying enough that she reached out to steady him. He looked down at her hand on his shoulder until she took it away. âNo touching, I know. Sorry,â she said sheepishly.
âItâs fine,â he sighed. âIâm getting used to it.â Elda smiled when he bit into the rabbit, glad he was eating.
âThereâs more left if you want the rest,â Julian said from the other side of the fire. She accepted the meat heâd stripped from the carcass, watching as he tossed the remains to Syd. âHere you go, greedy beast.â He smiled fondly when the demon scarfed down the food, bones and all.
âHow did you find a demon horse?â Elda asked curiously.
âBy accident. She took a liking to me when I bumped into her outside of Bratus about ten years ago. Weâve been together since.â
âYou werenât afraid of her?â
âNot all demons are evil,â Sypher interjected. âSome are balanced, like Syd. Dragons were considered the same before they vanished.â
âI didnât know there could be good demons.â
âSheâs not good, she just isnât a violent demon. She doesnât have a concept of good and evil,â Julian explained. âThe ones that understand the difference and choose not to be good are the ones you want to watch out for.â
âYou mean like me?â Sypher asked, arching an eyebrow.
âPerhaps, although youâre a weird case.â Elda looked between the two men, expecting the Soul Forge to be offended by the answer. Instead, he nodded. âYouâre only scary when the demon soul goes nuts.â
âDoes that happen a lot?â Elda squeaked, alarmed.
âNo.â Sypher finished eating and tossed the bones to Syd, who eagerly crunched them to pieces. âWe should sleep. Iâm half dead and we still have more travelling to do tomorrow.â He inclined his head towards the Vampire. âI assume youâre coming too?â
Julian grinned. âI guess I can tag along.â