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Institute of Magic (Dragon's Gift: The Druid Book 1) by Linsey Hall (6)

6

As Lachlan had said, the climb down was worse. I hadn’t slipped, thank fates, but was still wobbly when I reached the bottom.

Muffin had stayed at my side the whole time. The little gremlin pressed his paw to my hand every time he thought I was faltering, and muttered helpful things like Don’t quit now, lily butt. I had no idea what a “lily butt” was, but I’d be lying if I said it hadn’t helped.

We hit the ground running—me on shaky legs and Lachlan on much sturdier ones. Fortunately, we didn’t alert the hellhounds to our presence. Or maybe they were scared off by the sight of our feline guardians.

Lachlan had recognized the location of the intersection, so I followed him, racing along the rainy streets of Paris, past fashionable people with dark umbrellas and silk scarves that cost more than my yearly income back in Death Valley.

When we reached the intersection, I stared. “Crap.”

“That is a lot of traffic.”

“Understatement.”

The cars whizzed by, headlights golden in the rain. As expected, right in the middle of the intersection was a manhole leading to the sewers.

“I can buy us a minute,” he said. “Exactly a minute, so follow everything I do.”

I glanced at him. “What do you mean?”

But he was already holding up his hands, magic surging on the air. I loved the scent of it, so fresh in the middle of the city.

Then the air became thick, almost difficult to breathe. I sucked in a gasp, grateful when it slowly filled my lungs.

The cars in the street began to slow. The people around us, too. Finally, the cars stopped, yellow lights frozen in the gleaming rain.

“Holy fates. Telekinesis?” I asked. If so, it was the most powerful I’d ever seen. Moving one object was hard. But hundreds?

“Not quite. I can slow time around myself.”

“Why don’t you do this in a fight?”

“It wouldn’t matter. I can’t interfere with the objects that I’m controlling, or something terrible could happen. But come on. We don’t have long.” Sweat dotted his brow. Clearly, this took some serious effort.

He sprinted into the street, and I followed. The Cats of Catastrophe were close on my heels, though Bojangles kept getting distracted by the bright lights of the cars.

It was eerie, and scary. There were enough cars that we’d be pancakes if they started up again.

Lachlan bent and pulled off the heavy manhole cover. The Cats of Catastrophe dived in first, scraggly Muffin leading the way. Princess Snowflake III gave the hole a disdainful look, then leapt in with a shudder. Bojangles ran right in without hesitating or even looking. He was like the Road Runner going off a cliff.

I followed, climbing down the iron ladder into the gloom. Lachlan came behind me, and as soon as he pulled the manhole cover back over the hole, the roar of traffic started up again.

“Too close,” I muttered.

“Aye.”

I hopped onto a stone sidewalk built along the side of the sewer, and I raised my hand to illuminate my lightstone ring. It flared golden, revealing the space all around us.

I turned, taking in the wide stone tunnel that stretched in either direction. Water traveled sluggishly at the bottom of the tunnel, smelly, but not the worst. I had a distinct feeling there were grosser parts of the sewer. Other tunnels jutted off this one, giving the feeling of a massive catacomb.

“There’s a city under a city down here,” Lachlan said. “The most famous sewers in the world.”

“They should run tours.”

“They do. But not of this part.”

The Cats of Catastrophe were scouting out the ground ahead, sniffing all over as they inspected the walkway. The stone ledge that they walked on looked ancient, but at least it kept us out of the sewer water.

Something fizzled over my skin, a distinct feel of dark magic that prickled lightly. “You feel that?”

“Aye.” He pointed to the right, to where the cats had gone. “Coming from that way.”

“Let’s go.” I set off, following the sense of dark magic. Where the heck are you, magic thieves?

Something else pulled me along, too, though. A sense of my own magic, leading the way.

It spoke in my head, as if it knew the question I was asking and wanted to provide an answer.

What weird new power was this?

My Dragon God magic?

I shook away the thought. Now was not the time for distractions. We made our way through the tunnels, going deeper and deeper into the sewer. Water flowed sluggishly beneath, beginning to stink more strongly as we went.

The tunnel appeared to turn right as we neared, but I stopped, peering hard at the dead end in front of me.

Something in me tugged in that direction.

Did it really end here? It was an abrupt and strange way to divert a tunnel.

“Come on,” Lachlan said. “We need to go right.”

“Hang on.” I held out a hand, reaching toward the wall that seemed to be a dead end.

“What the heck is past here?” I murmured, more to myself than to him.

It was something. I could feel it.

Look and you will find what you seek.

Magic seemed to fizzle in my mind. It was a guide, in my head. It hadn’t worked before, but now it was?

It had a mind of its own.

The cats were sniffing at the base of the stone, clearly perplexed.

I stuck my hand out, ignoring the repellent sensation that the wall gave off. That was enough to convince me that there was magic here.

I pushed harder against the stone, and my hand disappeared through the wall.

“Bingo.” I stepped through the false barrier, into a long stretch of tunnel on the other side.

Lachlan followed. “How did you know? Even your feline sidekicks didn’t realize.”

“Instinct.” Lie. “Come on.”

We hurried down the tunnel, toward the strong sense of dark magic that was ahead of us.

When flame burst to life ahead of us, my heart leapt into my throat. The wall of fire seared my skin, making my eyes water. I flung out my shield. The protective barrier burst forth, forming a semi-transparent white wall between us and the flame. The air cooled a bit, no longer hot enough to maim.

Panting, I inspected what was ahead. Nothing but fire.

Then my magic faltered.

My shield dropped.

Shit!

I stumbled backward, away from the flame that roared forth. Lachlan waved a hand, his magic flaring. Sewer water rushed from below, crashing against the flame.

It sizzled and died, smelling of hot garbage.

“Oh, thank fates,” I muttered, leaning against the wall and gagging at the scent.

Panic followed quickly on relief’s heels.

My magic had faltered again.

Change was definitely coming, and I couldn’t let him know.

I caught his gaze, and it looked like he wanted to ask about my magic dying.

Fortunately, a massive splash sounded from behind him. My gaze darted to the water, where a huge serpent’s head was bursting forth.

I drew my sword from the ether and lunged for the scaly black creature, slicing cleanly through its neck. Blood sprayed, but I was fast, dodging low to avoid it. It splattered the wall behind me.

I stood, looking at Lachlan. “You’re welcome.”

He nodded his thanks, then his eyes widened on something behind me.

Oh, shit.

Before I could turn, he pulled the same trick I had, yanking his two short swords from the ether and lunging. I spun in time to see him slice another sea creature across the throat.

It crashed back into the water, sparkly black scales shining in the light of my ring. Red eyes blazed with a demonic light, and the scent of dark magic surrounded it. Its blood flowed into the water, making it boil.

“They’re magic,” he said. “Not real.”

“Guarding something.” I stepped up to the edge of the platform and peered down, my heart hammering. “We’d better get a move on.”

We hurried from the spot, keeping our gazes on the water beneath us. I glanced at Lachlan as we walked, taking in the controlled nature of his being.

He was like a tiger, always waiting to pounce. Ready for anything.

It was a warrior’s stance. His stock and trade might be creating great magic to sell, but that wasn’t all he was good at. If I couldn’t have Bree or Rowan at my back in a fight, he was a good alternative.

As we walked, the air began to smell fouler. At first, I thought it might be the sewage. Were we coming to a particularly rank section?

But then my skin began to prickle.

“Dark magic,” I whispered.

Lachlan nodded. “Close.”

His magic swelled briefly on the air, the scent of pine cutting through the stink. I looked at him curiously.

“Blocking our sound, in case we’re close.”

“Ah.” I remembered how Bree had said she couldn’t hear us when she was eavesdropping. “You’d make a good thief.”

“In another life, maybe.”

Of course. This Lachlan was far too honorable for thievery. I was, too, now, though I hadn’t always been. There were parts of my childhood—the parts after my mother’s murder—where thievery had been the only way my sisters and I could eat.

I shook away the dark memories and focused on the sewer. We were entering an older part, where the brick looked more broken and the stone walkway more battered.

The dark magic was stronger here, and my heart began to pound.

We were close to something.

Up ahead, the passage branched off to the right.

Lachlan slowed as we neared, and I followed suit. The sound of voices filtered out from the passage on the right. There had to be a room there.

Up ahead, the sound of footsteps approached from another passage.

The Cats of Catastrophe, who’d been following along, hurtled off down the passage, hunting the owners of the footsteps. Lachlan and I pressed ourselves up against the wall, listening to the people in the room.

I crouched low, and he went high. We were crushed against the stone and against each other, but the sound of voices distracted me from the warmth of his body.

“When do we take it to her?”

“Soon. We have to wait for the signal. It’s not safe to bring it until the sorcerer is ready.”

“Not safe how? Sitting here with this thing is dangerous! People are after it!”

It? Were they talking about the spell that Lachlan had created? Were these our thieves?

Something in me screamed yes!

It might have been the new power that was trying to grow within me, or maybe it was common sense.

I looked up at Lachlan, whose big body loomed over me as he attempted to peer around the edge of the passage.

Well, if he was looking, I wanted to see, too.

I peeked around the edge of the stone passage, spotting a room within. About twenty feet away, a group of demons and mages sat around a rickety table. A paper-wrapped package sat on the table between them.

Bingo.

I caught sight of silver circles tattooed on the backs of the necks that I could see. What was that all about?

“When will she want it?” one of the mages asked. He was a skinny guy with dark hair and mean eyes. “It’s not safe here. For the spell, or for us.”

“We’re supposed to wait until she finds the sorcerer!”

I glanced up at Lachlan. How did he want to play this?

His gaze was glued on the group and the package, calculation in his eyes.

There were a lot of mages and demons in there—an even dozen—but we could take them if we had to.

“Oy! Who’s there?” one of the voices shouted.

Panic flared as I looked back down at the group, just in time to see a massive fireball hurtle toward us. It glowed orange and fierce, and was easily the size of a small car.

I lunged away from the wall as it plowed into the corner. It hit the stone with such force that chips of rock flew off. One sliced across my cheek, and pain flared briefly.

It was forgotten as I scrambled to my feet. Lachlan hopped up beside me.

“Go!” He led the way, racing into the chamber and blocking the way so he’d take the brunt of any oncoming hit.

My heart thundered as I followed. This was our only chance. We’d alerted them, and they’d run. We had to get that package before they escaped.

As he raced for the group, magic swirled around him. It flashed bright, then a lion stood in his place. His fur and mane were pitch-black, a strange combination that was both beautiful and terrifying.

The beast that was Lachlan charged the demons. A demon threw a fireball, and I dived low, skidding on the ground as the hot flame passed overhead.

As I lunged to my feet, I drew my daggers from the ether.

The demons and mages were scrambling within, trying to mount their defense as Lachlan charged. He hit two of them at once, taking them to the ground.

I threw my daggers at two more, taking out a gray smoke demon and the fire demon who’d tried to turn me into a roast turkey. My steel blades sank into their throats, blood spraying.

As I called two more daggers from the ether, Lachlan rampaged through the room, taking out demons as fast as they could hurl their magic at him. He plowed through smoke bombs and dodged massive icicles, tearing limb from limb.

A shining blue icicle hurtled toward me, forcing me to dodge left to avoid the blow. It sailed so close to my cheek that I could feel the cold.

I ignored it, frantically searching the room for the package.

It was tucked under the arm of a skinny guy with blond hair and a rat’s face. He was fumbling in his pocket, clearly searching for something.

A transportation charm!

It had to be. If he found it, he could disappear from here in seconds.

I threw my dagger at him. He seemed to sense it coming at the last minute and shifted. The blade sank into his shoulder.

He howled, panic flashing across his face.

I raised my other dagger, but pain tore through my shoulder, sending agony racing through my arm.

I looked down. A tiny dagger stuck out of my flesh.

I looked up, catching sight of a skinny little demon with pale skin and red horns.

“A taste of your own medicine,” the demon hissed as he drew another blade from the satchel at his side.

I flung out my hand, creating a barrier between us and him.

The mage with the package was still fumbling in his many pockets, and Lachlan was working on the last six demons. He’d already mauled four of them.

The little white demon’s blade bounced off my shield.

Pain sliced me through the middle, and my shield flickered.

I looked down, gasping.

There was no dagger protruding from my middle, though it sure felt like it.

My shield faded. Lachlan roared, a sound of obvious pain. Magic flared around him, and he shifted back to human.

Right in the middle of five demons.

His face was white and drawn. He looked like agony was tearing him apart. Just how I felt. Tears welled in my eyes as I struggled to stay upright. But he managed to draw his sword and turn toward the demons.

What the hell was going on? Panic made my heart race.

The little white demon hurled another blade. I was too weak and slow to stop it, and it sank into my thigh.

I ignored the demon who was hurling blades at me and looked to the mage with the package. I had one job here, and I had to finish it.

Shaking, I dragged a blade from the ether and hurled it at him, but weakness made my aim wonky.

The mage dodged the steel, pulling a little stone from his pocket.

“Lachlan!” I screamed. “Transport charm!”

But Lachlan was fighting for his life. His skill was still incredible—I’d never seen someone fight so well. Not even me and Bree, and that was saying something. But his speed was like that of a normal man’s—not the crazy whirlwind I’d seen before. And he used no magic. Where the hell was his magic?

He was incredible with his blades, but he was far outnumbered by enormous demons. He needed his magic. They were overpowering him, delivering as many cuts as he gave to them.

My gaze darted to the mage with the package. He hurled a stone to the ground. Glittery black dust puffed up, and he stepped inside, disappearing.

I stumbled to my knees, pain taking me down.

The little white demon approached me, a grin on his face. The dagger gripped in his hand gleamed, but he didn’t throw it. Clearly he wanted to make the kill up close.

“Bastard.” I spit. Pain tore through my thigh and my shoulder where his other blades had hit.

I called a dagger from the ether, but came up short.

I was out.

Shit.

So I called on my sword.

On the other side of the room, the five demons abandoned their attack on Lachlan so they could race to the dissipating cloud of glittery black dust. They leapt through it, escaping the sewers before the transportation charm faded.

I staggered to my feet, facing the demon who approached.

I couldn’t kill him—I needed to be able to question him.

He took one look at my blade, then my face. Indecision flickered over his ugly mug, and he hurled his knife. I dodged, barely, and the steel sliced over my arm.

“Bitch,” he hissed, then ran.

He sprinted for the last of the black cloud. It was nearly gone. He might not make it. Too weak to chase, I threw my sword. It hurtled end over end and then plowed into his leg. He stumbled, giving it one last burst of speed, and made it through the glittery cloud, disappearing.

I stumbled to my knees.

Shit.

Triple shit.

“What happened?” I croaked.

Lachlan didn’t answer. He was laid out on the ground on the other side of the room, surrounded by the disappearing bodies of the demons he’d felled.

I crawled to him, my wounds aching. Blood dripped down my arms and thigh, leaving a gruesome trail.

Lachlan was rising to sit, his face twisted in pain. Gashes covered his torso, the claws of some demon that had gone to town once he’d shifted back to his human form.

“Are you all right?” His gaze trailed over my body, concern replacing the usual blankness.

“Sorta?” I wasn’t quite sure. The pain and blood loss were making me woozy. “You?”

“Same.” Pain echoed in his voice, and frustration.

We’d lost the lead.

He dug into his pocket and withdrew a little vial. He uncorked it and took a tiny sip, leaving the vast majority of the potion in the bottle. Then he handed it to me. “Drink.”

I didn’t ask questions, just swilled the liquid. Warmth and comfort flowed through me immediately, relaxing my muscles and clearing my mind.

“What’s in that stuff?” I asked.

“Healing potion. Enough for one.”

“Thanks for sharing.” My wounds weren’t fully healed, but they were a bit better. Enough that I had the strength to stand.

So did he, staggering to his feet.

I stumbled toward the body of a disappearing demon. Its arms and legs were almost invisible now as the body returned to the underworld. I fell to my knees and dug through the creature’s pockets. Demons didn’t normally carry ID, but maybe I’d get lucky.

On the other side of the room, Lachlan did the same.

After a minute, there wasn’t enough of the demon left to search.

“I’ve got nothing,” I said.

“Aye, same here.”

I staggered toward him. He wasn’t looking much better.

“What the hell happened to us?” I asked.

“I don’t know. Felt like my magic was being sucked out,” he said.

“Can you make a portal?”

“I can try.” He held out his hand. His magic barely flared.

Shit.

Slowly, a hazy portal appeared. Sweat dotted his brow, and his arm shook.

“Go!” he said.

I leapt through, letting the ether suck me in.