The Nightborn Isabel Cooper (free ebooks romance novels TXT) đ
- Author: Isabel Cooper
Book online «The Nightborn Isabel Cooper (free ebooks romance novels TXT) đ». Author Isabel Cooper
âWhatâs âruthlessâ?â
âItâsââ She thought, which was not the easiest task in her current state. âPeople who donât care who they hurt if it gets them what they want. Or what they think is best,â she added, not wanting to define the word too narrowly to include herself.
âHuh,â said the child. âYou want me to show you that place?â
Branwynâs head swam. Were she the only one at stake, she wouldâve refusedâor so she liked to thinkâbut her death or captivity would likely mean her would-be killer went unhindered. That in turn had a decent chance of endangering the world, which included Heliodar and the child waiting for an answer.
âPlease,â she said.
âAll right,â said the child. âWait here. Iâll be back as soon as I can get you a cloak. Maybe you shouldnât have stood up.â
âNo,â said Branwyn, leaning against a wall, âno, itâs better I get used to it now.â
She watched her would-be rescuer depart and thought the thing she hadnât said: that if the child brought back lawmen rather than a garment, sheâd need to be on her feet. It wouldnât do her very much good, but at times like that, the principle counted. It was really the only thing she had left.
* * *
âYouâveâŠheard, mâlord?â said the Rognozisâ butler, looking more mortal and less certain than Zelen had ever seen him.
âI have. My deepest sympathies.â Zelen eyed the half-open doors with no great enthusiasm. âIâve come to see if I might be able to find out more than the guard,â he went on. âDifferent perspective, you know.â
The butler nodded. âIf you can help find thatâŠwoman,â he said, clearly longing to finish on an obscenity but brought up short by his training, even in such circumstances, âthen gods bless you.â
The house was a strange shell of a place. Zelenâs footsteps didnât echo, but he felt as though they should have. âAre you expectingâŠâ he started, and then hesitated, consulting a mental chart to try and remember the Rognozisâ heir. Their marriage hadnât produced children, he knew that much.
âHis lordshipâs niece,â said the butler. âWithin a matter of days. Certainly sheâll be here for the burning.â
âYes,â said Zelen, a memory coming back to him. Marior: a short, dark woman, fond of horses. Heâd seen her off and on, but theyâd never talked much. She seemed an unlikely choice to secretly be the actual murderer, even were he grasping at straws.
He couldnât allow himself to do so.
The floor was gleaming. âYouâve cleaned up the tracks, Iâm sure.â
âThere werenât any, mâlord,â said the butler. âItâs quite likely the creature went out the window after committing herâŠdeedsâŠor simply took great care to clean her boots.â
Either was possible: Branwyn was careful, and a Sentinel could manage the climb from a second-floor window easily, particularly when there were trees outside. âI donât want to keep you,â said Zelen.
âNo, no, butâwell, Iâd as soon not see it again, mâlord, if itâs all the same to you. Weâll clean the bedchambers out properly tomorrow, and weâve gotten theâŠthe worst of it away, but otherwise weâve kept things as they were. Her room included. Itâs the second door on the right, upstairs. My lordâs was at the end of the hall, my ladyâs next to him.â
âMuch obliged,â said Zelen, and began his trek through the house.
Branwynâs room was neatly arranged, the bedclothes smoothed, all curtains and chests closed. Nothing there gave any sign of a murderous rampage or indeed of any other use. Zelen found clothing, two pairs of boots, and three books: The Triumphs of Aeliona, a small volume of poems about the seasons from a Criwathi-sounding name he didnât recognize, and a philosophical treatise that he did, albeit from many years ago.
The belongings spoke of an active mind and a woman who traveled light, who never really settled in any one placeâbut Zelen had known as much already. He searched the boots for concealed keys or knives or messages, but discovered only leather.
One of the maids was watching him. âSorry,â said Zelen, âbut nobody found a ball gown in here, did they?â
âNo, mâlord.â
âNo. Sheâs likely still wearing it, then. Or was.â That argued, strongly, for the theories Gedomir had suggested and Zelen wanted to believeâor at any rate against cold-blooded, deliberate murder. Nobody, much less a warrior, would of her own volition go kill people in a floor-length gown, then climb out a window to get away, not when she had plenty of time to change clothing. âWhat about a sword?â
The maid shook her head. âMustâve taken it with her.â
âYes, just so,â said Zelen absently.
Sheâd gone to the trouble of getting her sword but not of changing her clothing.
Nobody would have needed a sword, let alone a mystical one, to kill the Rognozis. Branwyn could have done it barehanded. Half the servants probably couldâve managed as much.
Barehanded murder would probably have been considerably less brutal than what had happened. The servants had, as the butler said, done their best to remove the worst remnants of the crime, but a certain sense of events was still very, very obvious from the Rognozisâ chambers.
The human body held a great deal of blood. In Lady Rognoziâs room, the stain spread not only across the floor near the threshold but up the walls as well. One small, distinct handprint stood out from the rest, clear against the gold-figured paper.
In Lord Rognoziâs room, the gore was more contained: a darkness that spread over the sides of the bed and trailed in rivulets down to the floor.
Zelen closed his eyes there and braced himself against the doorframe. Heâd seen people die, yes, and blood itself had long ceased to unnerve him, but this was too close to showing the exact circumstances of their deaths, their helplessness and terror.
Theyâd been his friends.
His heart was hot iron, shrieking
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