Chapter 108: The Other Sphere (1/2)

When I arrived in camp, dysentery did not rate high in the list of probable causes of death for Richard. That was underestimating mortal stupidity. The army made camp on the banks of the Rio and waited for reinforcements before heading south. Between June and July of 1846, its ranks swelled from two to ten thousand with an influx of volunteer regiments.

The newcomers are a rabble of unsanitary louts.

The stench of their squalid dens alone can be smelled from a mile away, five if I stand downwind. Between this, the Rio Grande’s waters, and the sweltering heat, the camp at Camargo has become a haven for all sorts of diseases. I end up bringing a medical mage from Marquette just to make sure my relative would not end up as a dehydrated corpse wallowing in his own refuse.

Fortunately for me, though unfortunately for them, volunteers are the first victims of their own lack of preparations. Most of the regulars remain untouched.

When it becomes clear that Taylor will not campaign at the height of summer, I relax my constant surveillance and agree to my first mission for the Natalis.

This land is warm. Even now at night, I can smell the remnants of heat on the yellowed grass, the cracked earth. Shrubs of darkened wood speak of a day without shade or respite. An open-air oven. Metis’ steps cause little puffs of dust to pop in the air.

Lord Jarek mentioned a cult of spellcasters hiding near the Rio west and north of Fort Texas, and he sent me to investigate. They did not choose to live near an existing town, so I had to locate them by trailing one of their supply convoys.

The only problem I notice as I approach the clearing where they made their camp, is that they appear to have been massacred. The stench of death and the buzz of flies would have warned me if the towering columns of black smoke had not been enough.

Frustrating.

Someone stole the prey. Well, the more mundane, boring prey.

“Cover me,” I order John who follows me on foot. My faithful servant angles to the side of the dirt path to find a vantage point, silent as he goes.

I follow the narrow path surrounded by dried out trees at a leisurely pace, taking the time to expand my senses. I quickly taste the remnants of a fire spell in the smoke and embers. A lone human heartbeat thumps angrily in defiance to the desolation around. Its owner remains hidden to my left when I pass by the wreck of the first carriage.

A body lies near, half of its chest ravaged by buckshot. A flash of recognition at its garb sends a wave of fear in my heart before I realize that I am not in danger. The body wears a purple cloak with gold filigree just like the victims in the complex I visited with Malakim. Thankfully, both he and Nirari left the region. The cult remains, or at least some of it does.

All three carriages were left in a line by the side of the open ground while the center is occupied by a cooking fire. Only the last item was ever meant to be ignited. Cultist handymen in simple clothes lie here and there while their four guards still grab their weapons with the stiff grip of rigor mortis. They certainly put up a fight, but they only managed to fell two of their attackers. There were three.

On the other side of the clearing, near the first shrubs that cover the hill, I spot the corpse of a man who fell where he fought. He gazes at the stars with his one remaining eye. A lucky shot caught him right in the head.

Another was dragged against a desolate tree, exsanguinated. His lifeblood smears his shirt and improvised bandages, shining a delicate shade of crimson against the steady fire. The pool around his prone figure shows that the efforts to save him were in vain. He is young.

I lightly nudge Metis and she stops. I stare at the lone survivor’s hiding place until he stands up cautiously, red-coated hands strangling a shotgun.

“Well, I’ll be. A woman.”

Fantastic tools of deduction there.

I make no effort to move or breathe. He is a lone human under no particular protection, my staple food these days.

“And what’s a pretty thing doing alone, here at this hour?” he demands.

I inspect him with some interest as he does the same. He is a man of medium size, well built, with light brown eyes and a magnificent dark mustache that splits his head in two like an axe wound. He wears a long duster powdered with red earth, caked blood up to his elbows, as well as a wide-trimmed hat. A revolver hangs by his side and he bears on his breast the star of a marshal. A lawman! How quaint.

“Are you an officer or are you a bandit?” I retort with innocence.

The man is cautious, and I respect him for that. He alternates nervously between Metis, me, and some unidentified threat at our back with his gun brandished as if daring us to act.

“Marshal Sheridan, ma’am, Texas Ranger. Now I’ll ask you to kindly tell me what the hell you’re doing out here,” he says, and lifts a hand to grab Metis’ bridle. My precious Nightmare lifts her head, suddenly interested by five potential crunchy snacks.

“I would not try that if I were you,” I suggest, and his hand falls away. I can see the telltales of a man at the end of his rope. His nerves are raw and exposed, visible in the erratic movements of his hands and the bloodshot quality of his eyes.

“You and I were after the same quarry, except that I intended to follow them to their base and you… removed that option.”

“Those men were mad!” he suddenly screams, “Mad as hares the lots of them! Lunatics! I’d never… never…”

The shotgun in his hands aims down. A great shiver shakes his tired frame. A dam opens.

“They never gave us the time. We were just asking questions… I have been a ranger for four years and I have never seen such a… Logan. James. I am sorry.”

As quickly as it appeared, the weakness is hidden behind a curtain of steely resolve. Sheridan regains control of his emotion with visible effort.

“That ain’t here or now. Lady, you are confusing me. Quarry you say? That doesn’t sound right at all.”

“And yet,” I reply with amusement, “here we are, and I would bet solid gold that an armed woman is far from being the strangest thing you have witnessed tonight hmmm? A bit of wizardry, perhaps?”

“How did you know?” he asks with distrust.

“I told you. We are after the same people. What differentiates us is that I knew exactly what I was going to face.”

I did not exactly lie. I exaggerated. Exaggerating is a form of gloating, and a perfectly acceptable occupation for a respectable young vampire.

“Devilry…” Sheridan mutters. He resumes his inspection, this time more thoughtful than wary. His gaze travels along my travel dress, the lightly armored kind, my rifle, and to the revolvers on my hips.

“Do you even know how to use those?” he scoffs.

I draw and shoot his cap off.

“JESUS… FUCK!” he screams as he falls on his behind and scrambles away.

I do not move, except for patting the gun I used to unhat him. Metis snorts, as is her wont when someone gets humiliated before her august presence.

Sheridan climbs to his feet and recovers the mishandled headdress. He shoves a finger in the newly made ventilation hole — you are welcome Sheridan — and shakes his head for what must have been the twelfth time.

“I must be mad.”

“I find it amusing that you would face a flame-tossing wizard, yet a girl with a gun aggravates you.”

“I had heard about flame-tossing wizards before…” he grumbles, before stepping back. “The world has turned on its head. Or I was indeed shot, and I am lying in some ditch hallucinating the whole scene.”

“Or perhaps someone came to answer your call in your hour of need.”

“Do you bring salvation?” he asks, hope flaring.

“Perhaps…”

“Are you… an angel?” he says with uncertainty.

I give him my most unmoving, cold smile. I let the dancing lights of the improvised funeral pyre shine on a hint of fang, red and shiny. Just enough to make him flinch. Metis rakes the ashes beneath her with a heavy hoof.

“Do I look like an angel?”

I get a great answer. Sheridan scrambles back, white as a sheet. He signs himself in his terror as his succulent heartbeat drums a merry tune to compliment the crackle of the fire.

I missed this.

“If you are here for my soul…”

“Nothing so crass, I assure you. As I said, I am here to, shall we say, purify this land of their presence. Us meeting here was merely… divine providence.”

I taste ash on my tongue as the religious terms cross my lips. The world does not like it when I skirt the rules. It lets me know in no uncertain terms.

“You want me to pair up with you? A witch? Never! The lord is with me and I will never align with the forces of evil!”

“Ah, so you would leave those who murdered your friends unpunished. I understand.”

“I know that I won’t forfeit my immortal soul!”

“I already told you. It is not yours that I am here to collect.”

I am genuinely curious now. Will he take the bait? I have never worked with someone who sees themselves as virtuous and possesses an inkling as to what I am. The possibilities intrigue me. And if things come to a head, well…

I can always use a snack.

Sheridan considers my offer with more seriousness than I expected. His attention turns to the bodies of his previous allies and only now do I see the glint of a star on their chests. At the sight of their lifeless forms, his body hardens. It gains an iron quality I have seen in humans who will pursue a goal to its bitter end. Vengeance has overtaken justice.

“You are not after my soul, you swear?”

“I am simply not interested in it and I will not go after it. You have my word.”

What is it with humans and souls? I cannot even eat those. Pah.

“Well…”

His gaze hardens.

“Dammit all. I have to complete my mission. At any cost.”

Our eyes meet.

“Any cost. I will go after those loony heathens, and hell will come with me.”

“That it will, Mr. Sheridan, that it will.”

In the next few minutes, I silently assist Sheridan with the gruesome tasks of preparing the bodies of his friends. He places them on planks of wood he recovered from the wreck and covers them with mostly unburned tarp. I stand at a distance as he mutters a few prayers, then stand where I am as he climbs up the valley to recover his horse. I am lucky to have absorbed Erenwald essence or this partnership would have ended here and there, with a horrified horse. Instead, the poor gelding is merely made nervous by Metis’ scent.

“Will you return for the bodies?” I finally ask.

“We have patrols in the area. They will be found within one or two days with the smoke. I hope. I can do nothing for them anyway.”

I should not have mentioned it. The weather is very warm. The stench of carrion is sure to attract a multitude of animals eager for an easy meal.

“You did not seem too surprised by the presence of a witch among our foes,” I idly remark.

“There have been rumors lately. We were told to fear more than the curses of the savages. Strange creatures. Abnormal beasts. The world is getting stranger and darker,” he complains.

Ah.

I was expecting that.

For a long time, magic had been a misunderstood and mysterious part of the world. Soldiers and peasants in the middle ages accepted magic as a fact of everyday life, making few differences between the potions of an herbalist and the hexes of one burnt at the stake. Even madmen or epileptics were part of the supernatural world on the level of gnomes, elves and korrigans.

Enlightenment and the rise of the natural sciences have lifted the veil of mystery over many phenomena. Thunderbolts are electricity. Epilepsy is merely a disease. The potions of herbalists are chemical compounds with salutary effects on the flesh of man, and so on and so forth. The winds of change have stripped away much of the fog of superstition, but what remains now only stands in sharper contrast. Worse, the development of reliable means of communication, the multiplication of newspapers and centralized governments now shed light on magical creatures and their true capabilities.

Most communities make a good attempt at remaining hidden, so the mortals in power probably underestimate the size of the supernatural population in their midst. The status quo will not last forever.

I believe it is only a matter of time before we are revealed in a world that abhors differences. We must prepare.

Creating bonds with mortal agents might be a first step towards protecting ourselves. I will treat my cooperation with Sheridan as a proof of concept and converse with Sephare. She has her fingers in a great many pies, and she understands politics better than most. If anyone knows how to manage the transition when it happens, it will be her.

As I ponder, we follow the lone track away from the encampment and towards a series of hills in the distance. The night is as bright as a winter day, with a gibbous moon on a cloudless sky. I find myself bubbling with questions.

“So, have you hunted witches before?”

“Only once,” Sheridan intones, “we chased a group of Comanches who had abducted women from an isolated farm. We hung the lot and the oldest of them cast a curse upon us. Lo and behold, five months later George was completely bald. Terrible thing, that.”

“Uhu,” I answer noncommittally.

Nevermind.

“And there was that time where we had to kill a buffalo that was twice the normal size! And it could destroy a house by charging through it!”

“Ah yes. I am familiar with the oversized fauna.”

Truth be told, they are much less amusing to hunt than feral werewolves. They lack the vicious cunning that makes the bipedal prey entertaining, with the notable exception of that alligator that almost ate me.

Sheridan’s mood collapses. My distraction only pushed his grief and suspicion away for a moment. I am, once more, inspected from head to toe.

“Are you really a witch?”

“Of a sort.”

“So… you… and the devil…”

It only takes me an instant to know exactly which myth he is referring to.

“What? No! Noooo. That is not how it happens!”

“Then what happened? What pushed such a nice young thing like you to… do whatever you do?”

His tone is gruff, yet strangely nonjudgmental.

I remain silent for a while, searching his face for signs of disgust and finding none. Whether out of misplaced chivalry or true curiosity, his interest appears genuine.

It is, I believe, the first time in my life that someone asks me this question. The men and women I interact with either do not care or know better than to ask. There has not been a single Devourer turned consensually since the first one. We were only allowed to die after being broken and humiliated.

“It was not by choice,” I begin, and falter under this stranger’s full attention.

I never considered how to explain it.

“It was not by choice,” I try again, “I met someone at a social event a long time ago.”

“The devil?”

“The closest thing this world has to the devil. He was mature, handsome, and charming. He was also an acceptable prospect for a well-to-do young woman. Champagne and sweet wine made me daring, and my audacity amused him enough to garner his attention.”

“What happened then?” Sheridan asks softly.

“He killed me and turned me into something like him.”

“He turned you into one of his servants.”

Did he?

“Not even that. I was made out of one part convenience and two parts fun.”

“For fun?” he exclaims.

“For fun.”

“That sounds like a tough deal alright. Any chance you can, you know, redeem yourself?”

“Not even death can redeem us because we already died once.”

My companion is not the best conversationalist, as I should have realized before. He ruminates on my words. Actually, he is ruminating on a piece of tobacco chew he removed from a breast pocket. I still appreciate the concern.

“You were dealt a bad hand, miss.”

He chews pensively.

“… but you seem alright. My father used to say you got yourself and you got the world. If you were turned into some kind of demon lady in waiting or something and you still decided to go after faithless heathens like the fellows we’ll soon meet, well, you’re alright in my book.”

And just like that I have been vetted. I do not think I will ever grow used to how strangely accepting some people are of my nature. Papa was the first and there were others too, like Cecil Rutherford Bingle. Perhaps they are trying to make sense of the world through acceptance, or perhaps they simply have an open mind.

“We should plan,” I finish.

“Right. What do you know about those lunatics?” he asks.

“They are part of an unnamed decentralized cult made of several cells that cooperate for supplies and knowledge. My associates and I believe that they trade with Comanche raiders for funds, among other things. From the size of the supply convoy and the regularity of the runs I would say that their base has between fifteen and twenty people, plus the ones you already eliminated, with at least five being women and untrained for war. They will have at least one other spellcaster of unknown strength. I expect the camp to be hidden over there,” I say and point to the hills in front of us.

“You can see a bit of smoke trailing over the vale right behind that cliff there. We can expect sentinels that we can dispatch if we are careful. As for weaponry, they can have anything from antiquated Brown Bess to Models eighteen forty-one cap locks they filched off some rich victims so you must remain careful.”

I stop and turn to Sheridan who is no longer chewing. His mouth hangs open.

“You sure know your business, huh?” he finally says.

“I always prepare if it is at all possible. Why? What put you on their trail?”

“Kidnapping. Lots of settlers around here. Sometimes, some go missing. Bandits, raiders, sometimes they just get lost or die from diseases. We help whenever we can. I suppose we found what other source of financing they use heh?”

“Ransoms? No. Abduction is a strange choice for them. Relatives may try to locate them to rescue the captives and they already have an efficient way to recruit new minions if they must. Hmm. I hope this is not what I think it is.”

“What do you mean?”

“There are more than a hundred pounds of edible tissue in an average person.”

“Jesus woman, I hope you’re joking!”

“So do I.”

Cannibals disgust me. Only those who have devolved to less than humanity would stoop so low. They also share a dreadful tendency not to wash themselves, which makes feeding a much less pleasurable experience. Also, lice.

My latest remark sours the mood. Sheridan does not object when I lead angle off-track and dismount a short distance away.

“We will make our approach on foot under the cover of the shrubbery. If they have even one sentry, they will be watching the road.”

I pick up my newest rifle from Metis’ harness and place a hand on the girl’s neck before she can take off.

“No eating his colleagues,” I warn her.

She shakes her head in an equine ‘maybe’. I can never be sure exactly how smart Metis is. I highly suspect that she is sharper than she lets on and pretends not to understand when it fits her temperament and her stomach. A bit like a cat if cats shattered rib cages for fun.

“You are not tying her up?” Sheridan asks.

“No need. She will be here if I need it.”

“So… a magical horse?” he asks, and Metis snorts as she trots away.

“Yes. She comes with increased stamina and sass.”

“Huh. Say, I have one more question.”

“Do tell.”

“It’s just that I have never seen real magic. I mean, I saw street magicians who could guess cards and the likes but I suppose that it’s all tricks. So, magic. Can you show me some? Because so far all I have is your word for it, and I feel a little bit like a fool. No offense.”

“None taken. Light.”

A small orb of purple light emerges from the center of my gauntlet, hidden beneath my sleeve. Sheridan fixes the selfish lantern with his sad brown eyes, then turns his attention to me. He studies my face now basked in the treacherous radiance and I meet his gaze with my own.

“You are older than you appear, are you not?”

“Excellent guess, Sheridan.”

He now turns a bit sheepish.

“So…. How old are you exactly?”

“Ranger!” I tsk, “You should never ask a lady’s age!”

“Sorry! I’m just curious, is all.”

Oh well. If I am going to be honest to see his reaction, I might as well go all the way.

“I am sixty-four.”

“Wow! Just like my nanna then!” he realizes. The exclamation turns his face a delicate shade of tulip.

“Just like your nanna,” I parrot, amused, but he now stares at the orb once again.

“It’s pretty enough, I guess,” he whispers. “Not what I expected from, well, devilry.”

“I get my powers from being what I am. Most other folks have powers because their ancestors frolicked with fairies. No devil involved.”

“Really? With fairies?”

“To be fair,” I remark while thinking about a specific amber-eyed villain, “they can be rather seductive.”

“Right. That’s… a lot to take in.”

I hang my rifle over my shoulder.

“Then take it in on the way. We have a busy night and must be done before morning. I have a very sensitive skin. The sun is bad for it.”

“What, will you burst into flames?” he laughs.

“Yes.”