I froze. The tracker snapped around and raised her pynvium weapon. She glanced at the traps and pulled a knife from her boot as well.
Creak.
The tracker followed the sound, her head cocked, her weapons ready.
The sister gasped, soft as a splash. I held up my hands and mouthed, stay. She nodded.
The tracker was right on the other side of the traps from me. She took another cautious step in her shiny black boots and then stopped.
She narrowed her eyes. She cocked her head again and stepped closer to the wall of crab traps separating us.
Had she sensed me?
Jeatar had warned me about that before he’d left Geveg. “The Duke will hire the best trackers to go after you. The ones who can sense a Taker like a Taker senses pynvium. The good ones can sense a Taker just by walking by.”
If she’d sensed us from this distance, she was really good.
“Come out, come out, little girl,” she called louder.
I held my breath. Light drops of sweat dotted her brow and upper lip. Was she scared? If so, maybe I could catch her off guard, give the others time to move in and the sister time to move out.
“I know you’re here,” the tracker called. She held up one hand, inches away from the traps hiding me, as if she could feel me behind the wood. “Is that you, Shifter?”
I swallowed my gasp. She had to be guessing. She couldn’t possibly know it was me.
“I’ll leave the girl alone if you show yourself. You’re a much better prize for the Duke than she is.”
The dock creaked again. Aylin or Danello? “You can’t evade me for long, Shifter,” the tracker said in that irritating singsong voice.
Maybe not, but that didn’t mean I wouldn’t try.
“You can’t run,” she continued. “We have guards on every bridge off every isle. Soldiers at all the pole boat docks. If I don’t get you, one of my men will.”
Men? Since when did trackers hire others to help them?
I caught another glimpse of the tracker through the holes in the traps, then she was gone.
“Got you.”
Chapter Four
I gasped and spun. The tracker had a pynvium rod in her hand. She flicked her wrist and—
Whoomp.
Pain flashed from it, stinging my skin like blown sand. She gaped at me, shocked that I hadn’t collapsed to the ground screaming in pain. I guess they hadn’t figured out everything about me yet.
Something thumped against the traps around me. They clattered forward, spilling over the tracker like trash thrown from a window.
“Looks like I got you,” Aylin said, heaving an armful of nets at her.
“Vyand?” a man yelled.
“Her—” she began.
I dumped more nets over her and cawed three times. Two more caws answered right away. The tracker was quiet for only a moment, then started screaming and thrashing about.
“Tangle her up,” I said.
Aylin helped me truss her up in the nets like a chicken on All Saints’ Day. The tracker’s screams turned to angry squeals and curses.
The boy ran to his sister and dragged her out of the nook. Danello popped out from behind the traps. “More trackers are headed this way,” he said, pointing over his shoulder.
We left, staying low and moving as fast as we dared.
I slowed as we neared North-Dock Bridge, checking the crowded street for the guards the tracker claimed were on all the bridges. Dozens of haulers and day workers shuffled between the docks and the production district on the main isle, but none of them looked like guards.
We crossed the bridge slowly, moving with refugees and workers. On the other side of the bridge, I angled to the canal side of the street so we wouldn’t draw attention from some soldiers hassling a family of squatters.
“Danello, Aylin,” I said, “drop behind and check for anyone following.”
“Got it.”
Aylin vanished into the crowd, light on her feet as the wind, Danello less so, but he was getting better at it.
A refugee jostled me. I turned, glad for the excuse to look behind us. A block away, two men walked side by side. Their clothes said poor, but they didn’t glance at the soldiers or shy away when anyone walked close. Their dark hair was neatly trimmed and neither wore a beard. People that nondescript were usually the ones you had to watch out for. Danello and Aylin were about twenty feet behind them, walking on opposite sides of the street.
A burned smell drifted over the bridge as we crossed into what used to be a Baseeri-occupied neighbourhood. Most of it had been burned in the riots a few months ago, right after the old Luminary had claimed Geveg’s Healers were all dead. Well, that and me proving the Luminary had been lying and was really trying to steal the League’s pynvium. No one had been happy about that.
They’d gone mad, attacking the League, burning down Baseeri-owned shops and homes, giving the Governor-General an excuse to send in his soldiers and a legitimate reason to hurt us.
I looked at the Healers’ League, rising above the other buildings in the distance. The gaping hole where the Luminary’s office had been was a sharp reminder of why the trackers were after me.
What’s done is done and I can’t change it none.
“Nya?” Tali said, looking at me funny. “Why are we slowing down?”
“Sorry.” I picked up the pace again.
Three men rounded the corner in front of us, their gazes scanning the street. The tracker’s men? I turned around, heading back the way we’d come.
The tracker woman stepped out of an alley.
I froze. So did Aylin and Danello, now in front of me and on the other side of the tracker. Having her trapped between us didn’t make me feel any safer.
A plan, I need a plan.
The tracker smiled, but there was nothing friendly about her grin. She had a sword out this time and her knife in the other hand.