Dhampir - By Barb Hendee & J. C. Hendee Page 0,140
bedroom window.
"This isn't my room," Rose said matter-of-factly. "It's Magiere's."
"Really?" Teesha answered. "How nice."
She had no idea how long it would take Rashed to wake and begin his attack. His only real weakness was an uneven dormant pattern. But now, the purpose of the moment began to play on her. Carrying Rose to the far side of the room, she set the child on the floor in direct line of sight with the open door. She then knelt down.
"Look at me," she said.
Oval brown eyes obediently moved to Teesha's face— which shifted instantly to a grimace of fangs and glimmering translucent eyes drawn wide with hunger.
"Scream," she ordered. Rose screamed.
* * *
Sword in hand, Magiere crouched behind the bar, peering out a small hole she'd gouged through its wall. Rashed would likely want to trap her upstairs again, where she had less room to swing her falchion and he could better use his size and strength. As it was, he'd probably search the entire upper floor before coming down, and from her current position, she could watch him descend. If he got close enough to her hiding place, she might be able to take his head off in a moment of surprise. Chap sat beside her, occasionally pushing his nose against her arm but otherwise obediently silent. She no longer doubted anything strange or uncanny he appeared to do. His calm state told her they still had time left to wait.
Then Chap jumped to his feet, growling softly, his attention focused upward.
"Shhhh, don't give us away," she whispered.
She knew he wouldn't, but felt a need to remind him. All the two of them had to do was wait for Rashed to finish his search and come down the stairs. The wooden boards beneath her knees were attached to her home, to her business, and she would defend them. She leaned closer to the hole and peered toward the stairs.
Noticing soft light reflecting off the wood near her face, she glanced down. Her topaz stone was glowing. Chap whined almost pitifully, and Magiere was about to tell him to be quiet again, when a scream rang out from upstairs— female, high pitched, and terrified. A child's voice.
Magiere knew the voice. It was Rose's.
Chap rounded the bar toward the stairs before she could respond, forcing her to follow.
"Wait!" she ordered in a loud whisper.
He stopped, growling low, body trembling.
Magiere had counted on meeting Rashed in an open fight. She had felt his thoughts in the cave below the warehouse. Monster or not, she'd felt his perverted warrior's sense that would bid him to attack alone. Would Rashed use a child as bait? Such an act seemed out of character. She joined Chap at the foot of the stairs.
Rose screamed again and didn't stop this time. Magiere grabbed the scruff of Chap's neck.
"Slowly," she said. "Keep a sharp watch."
She hated allowing herself to be lured into a trap, but there was no choice. Rose was in danger.
Staying alert, they crept up the stairs toward the sound of Rose's cries. Not running to help her became more difficult with each step. Nearer the top, she could tell the sound came from her own room. She peered quickly around the wall's edge with one eye, then pulled back. The door was wide open.
"Get Rose," Magiere whispered. "Do you understand? I'll fight. You just get Rose."
Chap stuck his head out around the top of the stairs toward the door, then back toward Magiere, and he growled.
Magiere stepped into the hallway to see Rose sitting on the floor of her room, crying loudly. She appeared unhurt, but tears streaked her face, and she was so frightened that Magiere struggled not to simply run in and grab her. Otherwise, the room, what she could see of it, appeared empty.
"Come here," she whispered, hoping Rose might be able to run out on her own. "Come out of there, now."
Rose only shook and cried harder.
Magiere stepped forward cautiously, Chap inching along close at her side. As she approached the doorway, she leaned her back near the right wall and, stepping sideways along it, watched the left side of the room come into view around the doorjamb. She held out her hand to Chap, motioning him to wait. When her shoulder brushed the doorjamb, the whole room was in view.
It was empty, wind blowing through the still-broken window where Rashed had crashed outward several nights before. She relaxed slightly, and reached out her hand to Rose.