A curse burst from Alistair's lips and he took off to the conflagrated structure. His brain had balked at the notion of actually entering the house, deeming it safer to attack from the safety of the street. But Cedany
had to be in his house, or else all would be for naught. This pain, this night, this burning revenge, would all be washed down the storm pipe like so many fallen leaves.
The door opened easily, probably kept unlocked now that there was nobody to keep inside. deGrey rushed into a room of finely woven nightmares. He could see them everywhere, the table, the counter tops, the living furniture and chairs. The room was hot, a small part of the room had collapsed onto a rafter, casting an infernal glow in the room. There was nobody here. Alistair ran past the table, seeing a hollow image of himself tied down on its hard wooden surface. Cedany's memory was bent over the apprentice with a blade, carving finely detailed glyphs into the boy. deGrey arched his back and struggled against his bonds, until his mentor forced a liquid down his throat and tightened his bonds.
The heat of the other room died away as Alistair entered the study, where his old mentor slept and worked. Only the dim fire light from the other room served as illumination, and deGrey's eyes struggled to see the dark corners. He searched manically, but found not a single trace of life. White anger, outraged at this turn of events, exploded from Alistair. He screamed curses at the top of his lungs, and hurled one of his vials at Cedany's desk. As if a miniature sun had been born, the room was suddenly brimming with light and heat. The fire clung greedily to the desk, crawling up it to lick at the wall.
A loud cracking sound pierced the room as a rafter fell in the living room. Alistair started, dashing out of the room. The heavy beam had fallen a few feet short of the door- it would be a tight squeeze out. Still hurling curses like the vials, he threw his last alchemist's fires at the wall. The entirety of the room was bathed in the vicious glow of the chemical flames as it ate away at the house. deGrey wasted not another second with this house, squeezing between the burning rafter and the door to escape. Flames licked at his clothes, but the contact was brief enough that they did not jump onto him.
Alistair ran out of the house, his clothes belching smoke like a furnace. He approached Shadow, soot and burns covering his face.
"We're done here, the house was empty." Disappointment clung heavily to the last curling tendrils of smoke from Alistair's shoulders. The cold night swallowed him as Alistair walked down the dark alley from whence he came.