Arc 1: Chapter 18: The Dhampir
Oathbreaker: A Dark Fantasy Web Serial
Arc 1: Chapter 18: The Dhampir
Catrin stared at me, bloody eyes wide with shock. She lifted the fingers of her left hand and studied them. They were blackened and blistered, trailing smoke. The same fingers sheâd touched me with.
Her true form was very different from the âgirl next doorâ look sheâd had before. Her hair had bleached to silver, her skin corpse pale, her eyes vermillion in the roomâs dim light. Even the sclera had darkened to red. The pointed ears and narrow features made her look like a gothic artistâs paranoid depiction of an elf.
Her fangs had been so close to my neck. I breathed to calm my racing heart, aware how close Iâd just been to disaster. Fool, I berated myself. You let your guard down in the enemyâs own house.
I expected her to attack, tensed for it. I knew she could move faster than the human eye could track, perhaps even do nastier things like assume a bestial form or become a devouring mist. There was no room for mistakes or hesitation.
She didnât do any of those things. Instead, Catrin clutched her burnt hand to her chest, wincing. âThe fuck was that?â She asked, distress coloring her voice. âAre you some kind of priest? That hurt.â
The pain and disbelief in her ghoulish features were genuine enough to give me pause, despite my better sense. I frowned, watching her. Another trick? Trying to get me to let down my guard?
âBastard!â Catrin scowled at me. âAnd Iâm not a vampire, fucker. Rip your arms off if I was. Ow.â She shook the injured hand, wincing.
What is this? I stepped to one side, giving myself space from the bed so I could move more freely. âIâve faced your kind before,â I growled. âYou were about to go for my neck.â
Catrinâs transformed features shifted into something almost petulant. âI mean, sure. I might have gone in for a sip, but I wouldnât have hurt you. Not much, anyway. Already fed tonight.â
âYou were in my head,â I snarled. I could still hear her voice in my thoughts, drifting there like a stain of oil through water.
The fear struck fast and venomous as a viper. Not again, I silently pleaded. Never again. I took a step forward and amber flame boiled along the axe, causing the vampire to flinch away.
âIt was just a trance,â Catrin corrected hastily. âNot so different from being drunk, really. Itâs not like I can read your thoughts or anything. Never quite managed to pick up that trick. And you were being so vague, dodging all my questions or giving me half answers.â She patted down her dress and sat against the window, folding her arms. âI got impatient, you know? I shouldnât have gone in for the whole dark seductress act so hard. Iâm sorry, alright? So can you put the axe down?â
The axe remained between us, dimly burning with golden flame. I did not lower it. âI should kill you,â I said. âYouâll go right to the baron.â
âI wonât,â Catrin insisted. She stood then. When I tensed, she lifted both of her hands in a gesture of surrender. Her vampiric form was starting to fade away, I noted, her hair darkening to its normal chestnut hue, her skin taking on a healthier pallor. âListen, big man, everything I said to you was true. Besides, from where Iâm standing youâre pretty short on friends â you want to make it out of this alive?â
She studied me a long moment, one eyebrow lifted. She finished when I kept my silence. âItâs only a matter of days before his lordship hears about what happened in Vinhithe and takes the half-step of logic he needs to figure out youâre the same man who killed Red Leonis. If youâre really here to bring him down, then I can help you⦠but youâre going to need to put the cutter down and talk to me.â
âI canât trust a word out of your mouth.â I took another step toward the door â I wouldnât let her retreat to rouse the castle. She was near the window. I didnât think using a cant to stop her would be very effective â the magic she used to lower my guard was stronger than any command I could muster, and mine were only effective on an unsuspecting foe in any case.
Vampires were proto-fiends â not quite demons, but most of halfway there. Damned souls fashioned in the world rather than in the boiling darkness of the Abyss, hungering for blood, undead, vicious. Iâd faced my share of the creatures, and had learned to hate them.
They were repelled by sanctified aura same as demons too, which was a fine thing to me. My magic was made to fight such creatures. I showed the intruder that power. âYou chose the wrong man to try to make your thrall,â I growled. âIâll send you back into the Dark.â
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Catrin rolled her red eyes. âAlright, Iâm certain of it now. Youâre some kind of knight, arenât you? Warrior priest, maybe? Had my suspicions about it. Should I call you milord?â She dipped into a mocking curtsy and â in the same motion â stepped back into the shadows. And vanished,
sinking into the wall itself.
I waited, expecting her to emerge from another shadow and go for my throat.
âIf I wanted you dead,â Catrin said from right behind me, âI could make it happen. You ready to talk?â
I spun, swinging my axe with a single hand.
It cut nothing but air.
âWhat do you want?â My hand clenched tightly around the haft of my axe. âYou wonât be able to get into my head again, not now Iâm wise to it.â
Catrinâs voice drifted from the shadows. âI wonât try that again, trust me. Didnât realize you were hallowed.â There was a thoughtful pause before she continued. âMy employer wants to see Orson Falconerâs faction undone before itâs properly formed. And Iâ¦â here she hesitated, her disembodied voice fading into a weighty hush. âI want revenge.â
âRevenge?â I asked.
âPreoster Micah was a good man,â Catrin said. âA kind man. One of the few priests Iâve ever met who wasnât a right cunt. It was the Baron who gave the order to have him killed.â
âHow do you know this?â I asked, turning a slow circle to try and pinpoint the source of the fell presence she exuded.
âHe told me,â she said. I paused, taken back, and I almost sensed a sad smile from the unseen vampire. âI spoke to his ghost a few weeks back. That witch, Lillian, kept his soul from departing. I guess the Baron was worried his plans might get out that way.â
She waited for me to absorb all of that before saying, âand thatâs all I know. Really. I was sent to observe and report, nothing more, but I canât leave things as they are. I owe Falconer a bit of payback, and youâre the only one here who I think might be willing and able to help me. So will you put the damn axe down already?â
I bared my teeth, jaw clenching, fighting to keep hold of the anger in me. Anger at having my thoughts and will tampered with, mostly. I couldnât trust her, not if she could affect my mind.
And yet, I sensed no deceit in her words. If she was telling the truth, my time was even shorter than Iâd anticipated.
The baron himself had said it â there was no room to look a gift chimera in the mouth.
But working with a Thing of Darkness⦠the idea made my stomach churn.
âYou tried to make me your thrall,â I said to the shadows. âWhatever your reasons, thatâs a damned sour way to start an alliance.â
There was a long pause. âYouâre right. Itâs justâ¦â
I heard the rustling of cloth at my back and turned. Catrin stood there, fully human again, her hair a bit disheveled so it half covered one eye. She took a long, shuddering breath. âIâm not going to pretend like I donât make impulsive decisions sometimes.â
âYouâre a blood drinker,â I accused. âYouâre driven by impulse.â
Anger hardened the malleable edges of Catrinâs face. âIâm a changeling, you cockwart. I was born this way. Now do you want my help or not?â
That gave me pause. Changeling. It was a catch-all term for any variety of creature with nonspecific origin. They might be a Sidhe switched out with a human child in the cradle, raised by unsuspecting human parents, or a half-breed born of mixed ancestors. Sometimes a darker entity could corrupt a seed in the womb, giving birth to something terrible, a parasite with unknowing human parents who became little more than haunted victims to the demon babe.
Regardless of the kind, they were often preternaturally strong, driven by unnatural hungers, and difficult to destroy. Their most dangerous ability, however, was their predilection for creating a masque â a nearly perfect human disguise. They learned the trick in infancy in order to survive and got better at it as they aged.
But they were not all wholly evil. Not always, anyway. Unlike true vampires, who were little more than hateful souls bound inside a corpse, changelings were misbegotten children tossed into the world. Thereâd been one in the woods near the village Iâd grown up in. Old, mad, and harmless as a leaf.
Catrin was not harmless. Even if everything she said was true, sheâd still tried to subdue my will with her own. Sheâd tried to taste my blood.
When I still hesitated, she let out a contemptuous snort and turned back toward the shadows.
I grit my teeth. âWait.â
She stopped and half turned to glare at me.
âDo you have some kind of plan?â
The smile that touched the corners of Catrinâs lips was sharp as razors, revealing teeth sharper still. âMaybe. If youâre still alive by sundown tomorrow, weâll talk again. Keep your head until then, big man.â
Then, before I could stop her, she walked into the wall and vanished. I took a step forward, lifting a hand as though to grab her shoulder, but it was too late.
âShit,â I said aloud. My eyes went to my axe, which was still dimly burning with amber flames. I quenched the flow of power and let them fade. I set it down against the wall by the bed and then sat myself. I took a few minutes to calm myself and think, twisting the ring on my right forefinger in idle habit.
Had I just made a devilâs bargain? Because Catrin was certainly a kind of devil. I wasnât certain exactly what she was. There was a veritable legion of vampiric beings in the world, though relatively few who could wield supernatural charm or travel through shadows.
A dhampir, I thought grimly. It wasnât the only possibility, but the most likely one. Very dangerous. I would have to keep my guard up, and hope I hadnât just been duped.