But perhaps there was a way to implore her family. . . .
The female grabbed the lapels of his sturdy overcoat. "Leave me for the sun. Leave me to the death I wish for. I would take mine own hand to my throat if I could but I am not that strong of arm and shoulder."
Darius looked back at Tohrment, who was waiting by the carriage. Calling the boy forward with his hand, Darius said to the female, "Let me talk with your father. Let me pave the way."
"He shall never forgive me."
"It was not your fault."
"Fault is not the quandary, the outcome is," she said bleakly.
As Tohrment dematerialized over and took form before them, Darius rose to his feet. "Take her back to the carriage and render you both into that stand of trees. I shall go to her father now."
Tohrment bent down, awkwardly arranged the female in his arms and stood. In the boy's strong but gentle hold, Sampsone's daughter reverted to the listless condition she had passed the trip home in, her eyes open but vacant, her head lolling to the side.
"Take good care of her," Darius said, tucking the female's loose nightgown closer 'round her. "I shall return anon."
"Worry not," Tohrment replied as he began striding away through the grass.
Darius watched them go for a moment and then cast himself upon the wind, re-forming on the grounds of her family's estate. He went directly up to the front door and put the massive lion's head knocker to use.
As the butler opened the portal wide, it was obvious that something terrible was afoot within the manse. His pallor was that of fog and his hands were shaking.
"Sire! Oh, blessed be, do come in."
Darius frowned as he stepped through the door. "Whatever is--"
The master of the house came forth from the males' parlor . . . and right behind him followed the symphath whose son had triggered the series of tragedies.
"Whatever are you doing here?" Darius demanded of the sin-eater.
"Is my son dead. Did you kill him."
Darius unsheathed one of the black daggers that were strapped, handles down, to his chest. "Yes."
The symphath nodded once and appeared not to care. Damn reptiles. Had they no feeling for their young?
"And the girl," the sin-eater demanded. "What of her?"
Darius quickly pinned the vision of a blooming apple tree to the front of his mind. Symphaths could read more than emotions and he had knowledge that he did not want to share.
Without answering the thing, he looked at Sampsone, who seemed to have aged a hundred thousand years. "She's alive. Your blooded daughter is . . . well and alive."
The symphath drifted over to the door, its long robes trailing on the marble floor. "Then we are even. My son is dead and his progeny is ruined."
As Sampsone put his face in his hands, Darius went after the sin-eater, grabbing its arm and yanking the thing to a halt just outside of the house. "You did not have to reveal yourself. This family has well suffered."
"Oh, but I must." The symphath smiled. "Losses must be borne equally. Surely the beating heart of a warrior must respect this truth."
"You bastard."
The sin-eater leaned in. "Would you prefer that I have her kill herself? That was another path I could have trodden o'er."
"She did nothing to deserve this. Neither did the others of her bloodline."
"Oh, indeed? Perhaps my son only took what she offer--"
Darius put both his hands upon the symphath and spun him around, slamming him into one of the massive columns that held up the mansion's great weight. "I could kill you now."
The sin-eater smiled again. "Could you? I think not. Your honor will not allow you to take an innocent and I have done nothing wrong."
With that, the sin- eater dematerialized out of Darius's hold and re-formed on the side lawn. "I wish that female a lifetime of suffering. May she live long and bear her burden without grace. And now, I shall go anon and deal with my son's body."
The symphath disappeared, gone as if he had never existed . . . and yet the ramifications of his actions were borne out as Darius looked through the open door: The male of the great house was weeping upon the shoulder of his servant, the two taking comfort from each other.
Darius breached the arch of the grand entrance, and the sound of his boots brought up the head of the family's patriarch.
Sampsone broke away from his loyal doggen and he didn't bother to stop his tears or obscure his sorrow as he came forward.
Before Darius could speak, the male said, "I shall pay you."
Darius frowned. "For what?"
" To . . . take her away and see that she is provided with a roof o'er her head." The master turned to the servant. "Go unto the coffers and--"