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Compelled

Page 18

by Shawntelle Madison


  “He’s gone,” the woman murmured.

  “I don’t see him either, Royse,” another man said.

  The tall man stormed across the clearing and roared at us. “Are you the magician who set us free?”

  “I think so.” Saying anything else seemed kinda dumb.

  “Why did you keep us there?” he asked with a hard edge as he pointed to my stomach with a sword.

  “I barely saved you,” I mumbled. The weakness in my limbs clung to me. I couldn’t even stand.

  Behind him, the woman the man called Royse looked up at the night sky. She walked a bit forward and her mouth opened wide. “Oh, no. It’s been so long, Vasili.”

  “What are you saying?”

  “It’s not cold anymore. And the stars have moved. At least four moon cycles. What happened to Kyjev?”

  My heart dropped for them—even if they did point their weapons at us. “It’s been longer than that. It’s been over seven centuries,” I said.

  “Centuries?” For a werewolf, she was a strange sight. She had Russian features, yet a smattering of Asian ones. Her eyes were light blue, almost white. But her most striking feature was her thick black hair that had been piled on top of her head in a haphazard fashion.

  “Many, many moon cycles.” I did the math for her. “Thirteen moon cycles equals one year. Seven hundred seventy-four years is over ten thousand moon cycles.”

  One of the men sank to his knees. His narrow gray eyes honed in on me. He rubbed his hand from his nose to his prominent cheekbones with sadness. “Then we have lost much more than Ulricslav. What of Kyjev?”

  Tyler and the twins remained silent. So I choose to speak. Hopefully, they understood enough of my words. “Batu-Khan took Kiev in 1240. He massacred nearly everyone and continued east to kill more people.”

  Vasili swore again.

  I think they got it.

  “But you have a chance to help again. The wizards who needed your help before need it again. The warlocks have made war with them. A much bigger fight than the fights they had before. They have surrounded wizards north of here because those men have found a way to turn the tide for the war.”

  Vasili glanced at Royse, and she turned away.

  “Seven hundred seventy-four years and the world looks just like we left it,” one of the men said.

  “Shut up, Tomislav,” Royse said, not appreciating his sardonic humor.

  “We shouldn’t stay here or help those wizards,” Vasili snapped. “We need to find Elric and avenge our families for his treachery.”

  “What did Elric do? Was he the man who disappeared after I set you free?” I asked.

  Vasili harrumphed. He glanced at Tomislav, the quiet one who appeared to be the lowest ranking member. “Track him now. Find his trail and come back when you have his position.”

  Tomislav nodded. He scanned the ground and then sprinted east. As to how he caught a trail by scent or sight, I was curious.

  “Who is Elric?” I asked again.

  Vasili ignored me. He went from person to person, whispering to them to ask of their health and wellbeing. I’d guess shocked would be the perfect answer for all of them.

  It was Royse who finally answered me. “We were on our way to Kyjev through the snow. While we were camping, one of the men overhead Elric speaking to a rock. He was telling the rock that he would fulfill his obligations to the warlocks and poison us to prevent us from reaching Kyjev.”

  My eyebrow rose. A rock, huh?

  “His treachery ran deep and our suspicions were confirmed when he prepared dinner that night. He made us a strange stew, but no one ate it.” She took a step closer to me. Up close, I could make out her cream-colored skin and her graceful build. “When our leader Ulricslav confronted him about it, he tried to attack us with a death spell.” Her eyes glazed over a bit and I sensed her anguish. “If it wasn’t for Ulricslav, we all would’ve died. He sacrificed himself, throwing his son out of the way, and trapped us in that horrible place. A place where apparently there is no time.”

  “So the man who disappeared was working for the warlocks?” I asked.

  She nodded.

  Tomislav appeared in the middle of the field like a whisper. One minute he wasn’t there and the next he was. These werewolves were amazing. Did they possess the same powers as wizards?

  “Elric went north,” he gasped, appearing a bit out of breath as if he ran. “I followed him until I spotted warlock troops hiding among the trees. There are hundreds of them along the lake shoreline toward an island.”

  “Stolobny Island,” I whispered. Elric had gone straight to the enemy.

  “Is this the place you speak of where the wizards are trapped?” Vasili asked me.

  “Yes, they’ve trapped the wizards there for the past week. They need your help.”

  “So you set us free just to help them?” His right eyebrow rose to mock me.

  “I didn’t know you existed before then. I didn’t even know how to get you out without the help...”

  Luda stepped forward. “Leave her alone. She’s trying to do the right thing to save these people. She has repeatedly sacrificed her life to protect your people and get you here. The least you can do is listen to her and not turn on her for the mistakes someone else made. If you want to get mad, then go north, find Elric, and kick his ass.”

  Wow. Luda had a mouth on her when she wanted to speak up.

  Even Royse smiled a bit.

  “Why should we help them?” one man asked quietly.

  “Let me think, you fool.” Vasili stood there for a moment and I wondered if he was about to tell us all to go to hell and tell his friends to go their own way. “We can’t go after him, yet, Gostislav. We need to be smart about this, since we’re in foreign territory. We don’t know the terrain or what we’re dealing with, but I want revenge.”

  “I agree,” Gostislav said.

  He turned to me. “What’s your name, girl?”

  Now we were getting somewhere. “I’m Natalya Stravinsky, daughter of Fyodor Stravinsky.”

  Before we went anywhere, Zoya produced her map so the group could get their bearings. They weren’t too keen on just following us anywhere.

  Tyler suggested that Luda go into town to find a house off the lake for everyone to stay for a short period while they planned. In the meantime, Gostislav gathered wood and created a fire as the chill from the early morning hours set in. Royse, Vasili, and I looked over the map.

  “So much has changed,” their leader said stiffly.

  “Yes, cousin,” Royse said. “All these new settlements that never existed before.”

  “The scale here is different.” He stared at the map as if memorizing it. “You said 5,280 of my feet equal a mile?”

  I nodded. The dude had pretty big feet, so the scale worked.

  He sighed. “We still have conflicts to face. I thought the day we’d be freed, I’d be able to keep the promise I made to myself to find you a good husband so I could travel the world.”

  Royse chuckled. “How do you know I didn’t plan to find you a good wife and then see for myself what lies beyond the rising sun?”

  His shoulders shook with laughter. “And that is why we follow the same path.”

  The two continued to discuss the map while I rested. The others sat around the fire, adjusting to their new circumstances. Seeing these amazing people filled me with hope. Just thinking of what their deceased leader Ulricslav did to save them meant they had potential.

  Luda returned soon with a place for us to stay not far from the camping site. We trekked on through the night to a small cottage not far from the shoreline. The spellcasters approached the house with curiosity.

  “Now this is a curious structure,” Royse observed. “Look at those lanterns. And not a single candle. Far brighter than many fires.”

  “Those are lights,” Luda said softly.

  Royse approached the taller twin. “You’re a curious sight. How long have you been like that?”
r />   Like what?

  Luda’s smile faded and she took a step away from Royse. “A while—please come inside.”

  I was on my way into the cottage, but grabbed Luda instead. “Is everything all right?”

  “Just fine.” She shrugged off my worry and tugged me inside.

  The look of concern on Royse’s face was obvious, but, based on how Luda turned her back on me, she had no plans to reveal what Royse saw.

  I even tried a few times, but she clammed up.

  Once inside, it was strange to see the spellcasters poking around everything. One man broke a picture frame and I moved to intervene. They were gonna trash the place.

  “Just leave them alone,” Tyler remarked as he added some food into the fridge. “They’re going to need to explore. They’ve been through a great deal. I’d want to keep moving and learning the ropes.”

  So I turned on the radio. There weren’t many stations and I avoided the ones with pop music or anything modern. A Russian folk station seemed appropriate.

  “Are there spirits trapped in there?” Vasili asked about the radio.

  “No, it’s a device that captures signals in the air created by machines.” I went on to explain how over the centuries, people had gone from wagons to machines that use chemicals and complex gear structures to take them from place to place. It was technology and not magic that made all this happen.

  “Fascinating.” Out of the group, Vasili assimilated everything the fastest. He made a natural leader.

  A wonderful smell filled the air as Tyler grilled burgers and sausages. A few men hovered around him, eager to offer a hand like any hungry werewolf would.

  But it was a knock on the door that startled everyone in the sitting room.

  “Did you hear or smell anyone?” Vasili asked Royse.

  “No, I didn’t, cousin,” Royse said. She pulled a knife from a sheath along her leg.

  “Let me answer the door,” I offered. If it were a poor human asking for sugar or milk, it would be really awkward to have them gutted by twelfth-century werewolves on the attack.

  I didn’t expect to find Dr. Frank. The bearded, white-haired wizard grinned down at me. “You made it, Natalya.”

  “Dr. Frank,” I whispered.

  Vasili and Gostislav peered behind me. Their eyes full of suspicion.

  “We’re good,” I told them. “This is a wizard friend of mine named Dr. Frank.”

  Dr. Frank gave a curt bow of his head and then he spoke in flawless Russian. Hints of old Slavic touched his words. “I am Gustav Frankenstein. I am pleased to make your acquaintance.”

  Vasili visibly swallowed. “Greetings to you, wizard.”

  “May I come in?” Dr. Frank was always polite. “I’d prefer not to have our conversation out in the open.”

  “Please. Please.” I got out of the way and the men behind me followed suit.

  “Oh, wait.” He turned behind him. “I found some friends along the way and they’re catching up, since I walk a bit fast.” He gave me a wink.

  My eyes widened to see three men walk up to the house: the acolytes.

  “Oh, God!” I left the house and limped to meet them. Leg be damned. “You made it.”

  The boys appeared worse for wear, but just seeing them, filled me with hope.

  “I didn’t know if Cato Fillian…killed you,” I said.

  Chestibor made a rude noise. “He barely escaped us.”

  Dragomir cocked a grin at Chestibor. “So you’re going to leave out the fact that you told us to retreat?”

  “She doesn’t need to know that,” Chestibor said, brushing past us toward the house. “Do I smell a feast cooking?”

  The three acolytes ran into Vasili first. With eyes averted, they approached him and introduced themselves. The old magic leader nodded with approval and everyone went inside.

  Our little gathering had grown in size. Who stood out the most was Dr. Frank dressed in a dark gray suit. It was almost as if the folks in regular clothing were the strange ones.

  A werewolf offered Dr. Frank a spot in one of the chairs. Others took a seat on the floor.

  Vasili remained standing. His cousin hovered near him, looking Dr. Frank over.

  “I’m so proud of what Natalya has accomplished. Setting you free was one of the hardest things she has ever done.” Dr. Frank glanced at me, and I blushed.

  “How does she know you?” Vasili asked.

  Now that question took me aback.

  “I’m her mentor...of sorts,” Dr. Frank replied. “Over the years, I’ve come to offer guidance during her times of trouble.”

  Dr. Frank would never outright say I had OCD, but every time I gave in to my compulsions, I hoped I didn’t stand out. None of the werewolves had complained when I kept cleaning after them, and they probably assumed I was subservient to Luda, Tyler, and Zoya.

  Vasili nodded, accepting the explanation. “And what brings you here—other than to bring these acolytes?”

  “I’m sure you’re aware of what has happened on Stolobny Island.” Dr. Frank went into detail on the last couple of months of the war between the warlock and the wizards. How the warlocks had finally found a way to poison wizard weapons and render them ineffective. “We’ve tried again and again to clean up their messes, but their thirst for domination has no end.”

  “Those swag-bellied little prick bastards haven’t changed one bit.” Vasili spat on the carpet. Instead of losing my damn mind, I chose not to so much as twitch. Dr. Frank appeared proud.

  “First, they helped that swine Batu-Khan and now you’re telling me they want the world.” Vasili appeared thoughtful.

  Zoya kept Tyler in the loop by translating everyone’s words. He finally spoke up. “Once the wizards are taken down, it will be dwarves and elves next. The fairy folk will hide like they always do, but some of my brothers might make a stand.”

  Gostislav made a snorting noise. “The wizards have always been the ones to make a stand. There’s no way the wizards would stand a chance without a united front. The supernaturals bicker among themselves as it is.”

  “Maybe times have changed,” Royse said.

  “Not really,” Zoya and I said at the same time.

  I’d met too many goblins, brownies, and fairies to know they didn’t give a rat’s ass about each other. It was an each-supernatural-for-themselves kinda deal.

  “So why are you here?” Vasili always got to the point.

  “You and your men—and woman—are needed north of here to get onto the island to help our brothers who have uncovered how to help the wizards turn the tide. Any wizard who gets too close will have his weapons rendered useless. We will need your help to get on the island first.”

  “You need us to clear the path,” Vasili said. “To take the first arrows up the ass.”

  “In a way, you could say that,” Dr. Frank said.

  “What do you think, cousin?” Royse asked Vasili.

  Before he could answer, someone knocked on the door again.

  Chapter 23

  “Who the hell is at the door now?” Vasili shouted.

  “There went the element of surprise,” I said with a sigh.

  I went to the door again, but Tyler slowed me down. “Be careful.”

  “Don’t worry,” Dr. Frank said. “They’re not here to harm you.”

  He must’ve known who was coming. I opened the door, and a familiar scent came to me.

  It was Tamara.

  “Hello, Natalya,” she said with a smirk.

  For once, I was happy to see her.

  “You made it,” I said.

  “So did you.”

  From behind me, the twins shoved me out of the way to reach their grandmother. She hugged them as they surrounded her with affection.

  “Why didn’t you answer us when we tried to call you, Grandma?” Luda chided.

  “I had to add some distance to protect everyone. And I can see you did just fine without me.” When she said, “did just fine without m
e,” she was looking at me, though.

  She gave me a short assessment, and, in return, I gave her a short nod. I got out of the way to extend my hand to let her in.

  “How did you know we were here?” I asked her.

  “Let’s just say I have my ways to keep track of my young ones. Keeping track of you isn’t possible, but when I noticed they were so close to where the wizards were trapped, I wondered what was happening, so I came to investigate.”

  “And here we are,” Zoya said.

  “Yes, here you are,” their grandmother said softly.

  Once we joined the others in the living room, Dr. Frank gave her a respectful nod.

  He even got up to offer her a seat.

  “Thank you.” She sat.

  “Do you know each other?” I finally asked him.

  “It was a long time ago, but yes, we have met,” he replied.

  Tamara chuckled. “You’re not going to tell them how we know each other, Gustav?”

  So Tamara even knew his first name. How many folks knew him on a first name basis?

  “That’s was another time, another place, Anastasia,” he replied.

  Another set of looks passed between them.

  “Either way, I’m here now for the twins,” Tamara said. “I might as well stay and offer my help in your cause.”

  “Speaking of the wizards, have you decided?” Royse asked Vasili again. “I wanted to know before we were interrupted.”

  Vasili ran his fingers through his wavy hair and his face formed a hard edge. “Ulrichslav, our alpha, was betrayed. We must avenge him for our honor. Elric must be found and killed for his actions.”

  Royse nodded as well as the other old magic spellcasters and the acolytes, who appeared eager to please.

  “If he hid among the scum to the north, we need to find his hiding spot among the ticks and pluck him out,” Vasili said with a sneer.

  The others agreed with shouts and encouragement.

  “Kill the bastard!” one shouted.

  “So when do we make our move?” Royse asked.

  “We’ll approach from the water instead of going by land. From there, we clear the path and destroy anything in our way.”

 

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