Within the Flames

Within the Flames by Marjorie M. Liu Read Free Book Online

Book: Within the Flames by Marjorie M. Liu Read Free Book Online
Authors: Marjorie M. Liu
violence. Free from the dead.
    “Fire,” he said. “Will fire kill them?”
    “I don’t know. It’s been a hundred years since the last Cruor Venator. A lot could have been forgotten.”
    “But not the magic that made them. Who killed the Cruor Venator a hundred years ago?”
    “One of her own kind. It had to be.”
    “But after that, no sign of them. No deaths.”
    “The last Cruor Venator was famous for her cruelty. She hunted nonhumans specifically, because they made her so much stronger. She could . . . adopt some of their powers. But the one who stopped her was either better at hiding her nature—”
    “Or she just wasn’t a killer.”
    “She killed at least once,” Lannes replied. “No reason to think she stopped.”
    Eddie wasn’t so sure. “Could she still be alive?”
    Lannes arched his brow. “You want to find her, too?”
    “Well?”
    “Maybe. Witches can live a long time. But there’s always a price.”
    “Someone had to teach the current Cruor Venator. ”
    “Or maybe it’s the same witch who killed the last one.”
    “We need to know.”
    “You don’t look for a Cruor Venator. ”
    “Apparently you do if you need one dead.”
    Lannes stared. Eddie ducked his head and shoved his ha"0ehoved hnds in his pockets. Silence fell around them.
    “I’ll see what I can find,” Lannes finally said, quietly.
    “Thank you.” Eddie had trouble meeting his gaze, too aware of what he was asking of the gargoyle. It was one thing to put his own life on the line for a stranger, but Lannes and his family had already suffered too much.
    The gargoyle bound his wings again, then both men walked from the park. A large group of tourists mingled in front of them. Eddie and Lannes kept their distance. His gaze roved over open purses and backpacks, taking in expensive cameras and other small electronics belted to waists or tucked inside pockets. Out there, exposed. Like blazing targets.
    “You’re frowning,” Lannes said. “Still thinking about witches?”
    “I’m thinking that people never expect they’ll get hurt.” Eddie tore his gaze from the tourists and looked across the street, assessing, watching. His neck prickled. He felt exposed and uneasy, like something big was about to hit him. Big, like a fist. Big, like a wave.
    His gaze continued to rove left, where it stopped at the red light just before Eighth.
    A boy was marching across the intersection.
    Like a little soldier, his legs kicking out, each foot pounding the pavement with hard, decisive, steps. He wore an oversized sweatshirt and jeans and had dark floppy hair that he kept pushing away from his face. With his other hand, he clutched a backpack to his chest. A tiny, ugly, dog with huge eyes peered out.
    The boy held Eddie’s attention. There was something small and lost about him. The way he held that dog, with tenderness and desperation—heartbreaking. He reminded Eddie too much of himself at that age: clinging to pride, defiance, but always afraid. Always, and doing his best to hide it.
    It hurt Eddie to see. He wanted to know if the boy needed help, but there was no way. No way that wouldn’t come off as creepy or strange.
    And then he realized the boy wasn’t alone.
    A woman was with him. Eddie couldn’t see much of her. From his vantage point, just her profile: pert nose, rosy cheeks, a small, delicate mouth. She was wrapped in an oversized green sweater, patched together with hearts and stars made of multicolored satin and velvet scraps. It stood out, compared to all the black, monotone colors worn by every other New Yorker around her.
    The tail of a pink-checkered flannel shirt peeked from beneath the sweater’s hem. Her jeans were tight, tucked into heavy boots, and a brown newsboy hat covered her head. Loose strands of auburn hair flew out from beneath the long red scarf wrapped around her throat, a scarf that she kept touching and tightening with slender gloved hands.
    Eddie stared.
    He couldn’t see her face, but

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