voice, low and calm, promising that he’d murder Maddox’s mother very slowly if he ever tried to run away again.
Maddox knew Livius was a man of his word.
He swore he’d protect his mother until his last breath. After Livius was through with him, after he’d used Maddox’s special skills to help pay his many debts, Maddox prayed that he’d be freed to start a life far away from the cruel, heartless monster.
Until then, he knew he had to play along.
“Let’s make haste.” Livius’s words were cold. “Defy me again, brat, and I swear to the goddess I’ll break both of your arms.”
“Yes,” Maddox said slowly. “I can feel it. Your villa is besieged by an evil spirit that has escaped from the dark land beyond death.”
Lord Gillis gasped, holding his hand to his mouth. “I knew it. I knew it! I heard it over and over in the dead of night. It’s frightened my family nearly to the point of madness. A . . . just an evil spirit? Are you sure that’s all it is?”
“Positive,” Maddox lied. “Why? Did you believe it to be something else?”
The lord twisted his hands. “This villa has only recently come into my possession. Years ago, the gardens in the back were allegedly used as a meeting place for immortals to work their magic.”
“Allegedly?” Livius repeated.
“Yes. I, of course, did not witness such sacred meetings myself.”
“No, of course not.” Livius smiled patiently as if dealing witha foolish child who chased butterflies and called them demons. “What an honor and an accomplishment to have purchased such a valuable landmark.”
“Yes. Yes, it is.”
Maddox had no time to think of the immortals, who were said to exist side by side with the citizens of Mytica before he was born. Once the goddesses arrived and took their thrones, there had been no more talk of any other immortals sighted anywhere in the land.
Regardless, Maddox preferred to focus all his attention on spirits—whether or not they were real.
“I can rid your home of this dark presence,” Maddox said.
Lord Gillis nodded enthusiastically. “Yes, wonderful. Please do.”
He hadn’t yet seen the gardens, but Maddox now walked along the hallway of one of the grandest villas he’d ever been invited inside. The floor was a mosaic of bronze and silver tiles that must have cost several lifetimes of a regular working man’s earnings. Portraits of Gillis and his ancestors lined the walls.
Livius stood nearby, his arms crossed over his chest, watching. Waiting.
“Allow me a few more moments to strengthen my contact with the spirit,” Maddox said. “We can’t merely scare it away or it will disappear, only to return again to torment you after we’ve left.”
“Yes, yes,” Lord Gillis said, running a nervous hand over his bald, sweaty scalp. He wore robes—dark orange with elaborate gold embroidery—that swished around his fat legs. “Please, take all the time you need.”
Maddox returned to the hall where the lord had said he first sensed the malevolent entity, and glanced up at the high golden ceiling. Seeing the difference between this elegant home and hismother’s modest cottage caused bitter disappointment to rise in his throat. He would never be able to afford such a fine home for her.
“The spirit’s presence is strongest in this room,” he finally said.
“Do you know who it is? Perhaps this spirit has some sort of grievance with me?”
“Do you have many enemies?” Livius asked.
“No. I mean, I don’t think so.” Lord Gillis glanced nervously at Livius. “None I can think of offhand who’d choose to haunt my home.”
“Maddox?” Livius prompted, his face in an expression of patience and encouragement. He faked sincerity with such ease that sometimes he fooled even Maddox.
“Well,” Maddox began, “even if it
is
someone you know, once a spirit is devoured by the land of darkness, their essence becomes twisted and malformed. Even if they manage to escape, they’re never
Janwillem van de Wetering