"Owens, Robin D. - Summoning 02 - Sorceress Of Faith" - читать интересную книгу автора (Owens Robin D)
SORCERESS OF FAITH
Summoning Book 02
Robin D Owens
1
Boulder, Colorado
Late spring, early morning
She was running, running, running. Marian wished the
passages were narrower, twistier, because the thing that chased her
was huge and deadly. With each breath putrid air seared her lungs.
The caverns corridors oozed slime.
She stumbled, clutched the plastic ball holding her
hamster close. Looking down at her cross-trainer shoes in horror,
she saw the laces were untied. She always tied them in perfect
double bows.
A vibration hit her back. The monster's breath.
Stitch cramping her side, she used terror for a burst of speed and
reached narrow upward stairs. Fresher air, laden with blood instead
of poisonous acid, fouled her nostrils. She climbed, thinking the
thing behind her could flow up the stairs. It wanted her blood, her
guts, her brains.
Bumping from side to side, scraping skin raw, protecting her
pet, she jumped up the steps and burst out onto a wide ledge of
rock. With agility she didn't know she had, she pivoted,
avoiding the edge, hit the cliff face. Leaned into it. Gulping
night air, she felt the thing brush past her, and fall
screaming.
She couldn't stop herself from looking down. Saw
something worse than the huge shattered body of the monster that
had hunted her. Her younger brother Andrew was surrounded by
chanting black-robed druids who looked like death personified. Some
of the druids held scythes, some gongs, some chimes.
Prone Andrew was, more pale than he'd ever been in
life. Shrieking, "Nooooo!" she put the ball between her feet,
lifted her arms as if she could call thunder that would set his
heart to thumping again, push his blood; lightning that would nail
his soul into his body, fire the spark of life.
A wet chuckle came next to her, freezing her blood. Slowly
she turned her head to see a cowled figure with gleaming red eyes,
a face not quite human but which might have been a man's, once. He
opened his mouth wide, and it got larger and larger, ready to
swallow her whole. She raised her hands, fingertips arcing blue
fire-
Marian Harasta jolted from the dream, covered in clammy sweat.
Morning light streamed through the high windows of her garden
apartment and she gasped in relief.
Before she could exhale, the chimes sounded, rippling through
her nerves and echoing in her mind. Then the gong reverberated,
arching her body off the bed. Her vision blurred and distant
chanting rushed in her ears. She was bowed for one long moment
before she fell back onto the bed, panting.
First the nightmare. Now the sounds. For the past months, dreams
and auditory hallucinations had peppered her life- sleeping and
waking. She steadied herself with even breathing. She would figure
out what was happening to her. She'd had a full physical the week
before, and a psychological evaluation, too. And she was perfectly
fine.
The strangeness had started with sounds, then the dreams, then
an itchy feeling as if she were a butterfly escaping from a
constrictive cocoon, ready to stretch her wings. The notion was
more than a little scary because her academic career was on track
and her life tidy and under control. Except for Andrew, her half
brother with progressive-remitting Multiple Sclerosis.
Brrrrinnng. The telephone. She flung off her covers and
stumbled from bed, staggering to the phone charger on the kitchen
counter. She had to blink a couple of times to read the caller ID.
Her mother, Candace. Hell. The relationship with her mother, too,
was out of Marian's control. She let voice mail answer.
Marian wiped her face on the sleeve of her flannel nightgown,
pondering options to understand, then fix, her problems. She
couldn't discuss this with her academic professors of Comparative
Religion and Philosophy, or her advisor sheparding her through her
doctorate. Her university profs would not understand. She didn't
want any oddness attached to her spotless reputation as she planned
on a professional career.
Since the problem wasn't physical or psychological, she'd
considered psychic phenomena. Since she'd been fascinated by
alternative spiritualities for years, she thought she might find
help there.
She'd examined all the notes from all the classes she'd taken
outside the university-New Age classes that fed her thirst for
knowledge-searching for answers. Somewhere there was a solution for
what plagued her and she would find it.
As she padded to the bathroom, she checked on her hamster, Tuck,
curled in his cage in the alcove. A half-chewed piece of carrot was
within paw reach. All was well in his small world.
Marian only wished it were the same for her. She worked hard to
keep her life in order, and usually succeeded, but lately...
In the shower as water slicked away sweat, she decided to call
Golden Raven. The lady leaned more to Native American beliefs than
Marian did, but she was more open-minded than many and would listen
without judging. She might know of instances similar to Marian's
experiences. That would be a good step in controlling the weirdness
that had invaded her life.
"Yes," she muttered as she dressed for her work-study job. "I
need Golden Raven." She went to the telephone. Should she call
Golden Raven or Candace? Glancing at the clock, she thought it
might be too early for Golden Raven. If Marian didn't phone Candace
back, her mother's mood would turn nasty and her demands would
escalate. Inhaling deeply, Marian called the residence of Candace's
sixth husband, a mansion in an old, upscale area of Denver.
Candace's tone was sharp. "Well, Marian, it's good you called."
Papers rustled in the background. Since Candace didn't launch into
speech, Marian figured her mother was multitasking.
Excellent. Maybe they could get through a conversation without
damaging each other. "What do you want, Mother?" asked Marian.
"Hmm? Oh, yes, Marian. You must come down here to Denver for a
fund-raiser tomorrow night, Friday, 7:30 p.m. Cocktails and
dinner."
"Why, Mother?" Marian was deeply entrenched in academia now;
she'd never be a person who could enhance her mother's status in
any way. Thank God.
Candace heaved an exasperated sigh. "Trenton Philbert III
remarried a month ago. A woman who runs one of the largest occult
shops in Denver. Why he married such a creature, no one
knows. I just learned he and his new wife will be at the benefit.
Trenton dotes on the woman and his contribution is necessary for us
to meet our goal."
Ah, various cities competed to raise the most money and Candace
intended to prove she was the best. Candace continued, "So 1 need
to keep his wife happy to keep him happy."
Instead of zooming in on the woman like a barracuda.
"I can't imagine that anyone would have any idea what to say to
her." Creature was still in Candace's voice. "Then, I
thought of you, of course. With all your.. .experience in that
area."
Sounded like Marian attended seances and channeling every
night.
Hooking up again with the Denver New Age community might not be
a bad thing. In one way, Marian could even convince herself that
her company would be beneficial for the unknown woman. And there
were some good, kind people in Denver society that Marian would
like to see again. Too bad her mother didn't happen to be one.
Despite her methods, though, Candace was great at raising
money.
"I don't think so, Mother."
"I can make it worth your while," Candace continued.
Marian waited for the bribe. Bribes sometimes worked. Marian had
to know more about the situation to figure out whether the favor
was worth whatever Candace was offering.
"I know you're studying too hard. Having the rest of your
college fund would make life easier."
In Candace's mind, Marian was always studying too hard. Candace
didn't understand that learning was a pleasure. Though she
understood that knowledge was power, at least when it came to
playing the Denver social game, using secrets.
"Marian, did you hear me? I told you that I could release the
last of your college fund."
Good bribe, and if bribes didn't work, Candace used the threat:
Withholding her college fund now, Andrew's welfare when he'd been
younger. He was twenty-four, four years younger than Marian. She'd
tried to take care of him, since Candace was uninterested in her
son.
"I'll think about it," Marian said.
"I need a commitment," Candace snapped. "I'll call Andrew. It
may take some doing on his part, but he'll come."
"No, Mother, I don't want you bothering Andrew."
Candace ignored her. "Of course he'll come. The Colorado
Charities Fund disburses money to the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation
of Colorado. I always have an advantage when campaigning for the
Chairmanship of the Fund drive-with poor Andrew being afflicted
with MS, and at such an early age, too."
Fury veiled Marian's vision in a red haze. Good thing that the
phone was industrial strength; otherwise it would have crumbled
under her grip. How Candace could think of her own son that
way...
"Andrew is a person with a challenging disease. Don't define him
as a victim."
Candace sniffed. "Believe what you want. Now, about the
fund-raiser, tell me whether the weather will be clear."
Heat crept up Marian's neck. She'd always had weather-sense. She
shifted and felt the connection to Mother Earth, one reason she
loved the garden-level apartment. "Clear and cool," she said.
"Good. Your drive down from Boulder should be fine, then."
Rubbing her forehead, Marian said, "I'll be there."
"I thought so, and bring that delightful Professor Wilse with
you."
Marian shuddered at the thought of Jack Wilse. Mistake. She
admired his body but deplored his values. He'd manipulated and used
her, too, before her mind got her hormones under control. It was
inconceivable to her now that she'd had a brief affair with him.
"He won't be coming with me."
"Marian, you can't attend alone! How will it look? Speaking of
looks, you have used that exercise club membership I bought
for you so you'd lose those extra pounds, haven't you?"
"My weight is my own business." Candace would continue to
comment on it anyway. "I will be coming alone-or not at all. If you
want me there, deposit the rest of my college fund into my account
and e-mail me the details." Marian hung up.
Mistake. She'd allowed her mother to manipulate her.
Would she ever learn? But this time, she'd gotten the last of her
college fund. With chilled fingers she reached for her appointment
book, flipped to the end where she'd listed her five-year plan. She
inserted Friday's date as the day she'd receive the money that
would set her free from her mother, and launch her fully on her
career path. Ahead of schedule, but right on track. She wouldn't
allow anything or anyone-especially her mother- to control her
again. Her own mistakes might be bad, but they were hers.
Hers to learn from.
She felt as if she'd been stung, and poison was spreading
through her system. Like so many times before in her life. That's
what happened when you were raised by an unevolved Scorpio.
Grumbling, Marian stalked through her living room. A book from
the bookshelf-lined walls thumped to the floor. She stopped and
stared. There was a gaping hole on the second shelf where she kept
her Wiccan books neatly alphabetized by author.
She swallowed. Even before she picked up the book, she knew what
it would be: Craft Your Own Ritual, by a well-respected
Wiccan. It was the third time this week that volume had fallen from
the shelf.
As usual, the crisp pages fell open to a full-moon ritual.
Rising anxiety made her pulse race. She closed her eyes and colors
swirled behind her eyelids, followed by a flash of the image of
Andrew from her nightmare.
Her eyelids flicked open. Her chest tightened. All the recent
coincidental signs pointed to her conducting a full-moon ritual.
Marian glanced at the yearly moon phase chart she'd framed. Full
moon tomorrow night, Friday-the same night she'd agreed to attend
Candace's benefit.
A knock came at her door and a tingle ran up her spine. She
pushed aside the curtain draped over the apartment door's small
window, looked out. Golden Raven stood on the threshold. She smiled
until the lines deepened around her blue eyes and framed her mouth.
Beyond her was an old van packed full of boxes, ready for a long
trip.
With a sigh, Marian opened the door.
"I heard you call me," Golden Raven said.
Jaquar's Tower, Sorcerers' Mue Island, east of
Lladrana Late spring, that same morning
Jaquar stood naked in the alcove that held his magical supplies
and looked into the round ritual room of his tower. A faint
blue-green steam eddied and flowed along the lines of the pentacle
carved into the stone floor. His shoulders tensed at the thought of
plane-walking-leaving his body behind to float astrally through
different layers of existence. He was a Circlet-the highest rank of
Sorcerer-of Weather Control and plane-walking, but he'd been
focused on the second craft for the past three weeks.
Putting off the moment when he'd have to look in the Enhanced
Mirror, the last step before the ritual, he turned back to the work
counter and set his hand on the upper leaf in a huge book.
He'd made the book himself. Each sheet was a non-physical plane
he'd traveled. Sheets were arranged in the same layers as the
planes themselves. A being existed on many planes, but a good
plane-walker like himself could separate himself from his body and
explore one layer at a time.
The leaf he'd turned to was the plane he'd visit. One of
seething, low emotions-evil emotions only. A plane for monsters,
not humans. But he was tracking a monster. The monster that had
killed his adoptive parents three weeks ago.
A chime notified him that the ritual should be started within
the half hour. Jaquar inhaled deeply and went to the left end of
the narrow alcove. There he unfolded the three-paneled mirror. To
ensure he didn't get lost amongst the planes, he had to know
himself, and for that he used the mirror.
He scanned his physical appearance. He was taller than the
average Lladranan male, had filled out in maturity. His strong body
appeared nothing like that of the abandoned street boy Simone and
Torrence Dumont had found and raised. But the awful inner
loneliness of the boy before he'd known them filled him now. He'd
once thought he'd never feel that desolation again.
His body showed a few childhood scars. His eyes were still the
hated deep blue that made him an oddity in a brown-eyed culture.
Some ancestor had not been Lladranan.
He'd lost weight since the deaths of his adoptive parents, but
not so much that it would compromise his strength. His black hair
touched his shoulders and looked limp, not as shiny as it should.
The silver streaks denoting Power had visibly spread over the past
three weeks as he'd searched for the evil thing that had killed his
mother and father. Both had been powerful Circlets, yet the horror
had sucked them dry of magic and energy and life.
As Jaquar had searched the planes for the killer, he'd grown in
magical wisdom and Power, discovering new layers. These new planes
would be valuable in tracking the horrors that invaded
Lladrana.
The northern magical boundary of mainland Lladrana had been
failing, gaping open so that hideous evil creatures could slither
through to prey on the people. First the smaller horrors would
cross, such as armored snippers. Then the greater monsters would
attack in groups-renders and slayers and soul-suckers. And the
sangvile. At the same time, frink-worms had started falling with
the rain, affecting even the Tower community's islands.
The horrors had never reached the Sorcerers' town of
Coquille-on-the-Coast where his parents had lived until Jaquar had
led the sangvile there. He had answered the Marshalls' call for a
Sorcerer, given them information, then left. The sangvile had
attached itself to the flying horse he'd ridden from the Marshalls'
Castle to his parents' house. He'd left the deadly thing there,
unknowing. Just two weeks past, the key to restoring the magical
boundary had been found-too late for his parents.
He met his own hollow gaze in the mirror. "Mental," Jaquar said.
The reflection in the mirror changed and he saw the white sparkling
of his brain, the waves of strong mental energy. The rhythm of his
energy was good. His mind was clear.
"Magical," he ordered. The mirror showed his Power radiating out
in colorful bands from his body. Lladranans tended to judge magic
by the tones and tunes it made, but the mirror reflected it
visually. There were no breaks, no streaks of blackness. His Power
had never been stronger. Good.
Jaquar hesitated. "Emotional," he whispered, and saw his body
shrouded in grief. Fury and vengeance glowed red in his eyes and
heart. Not good. But he wasn't going to travel to any plane that
needed lighter, more uplifting emotions.
He'd be able to find that ugly lower plane easily, blend in,
cruise through it.
"Spiritual," he said. Again the darkness, nearly smothering the
gold aura tracing his body. Ragged spikes showed how his spiritual
health fluctuated. Perhaps when he'd destroyed the sangvile he
would make an appointment with the Singer for a personal Song
Quest. A Song Quest would tell him how best to manage his grief and
guilt. Later.
"Physical." There he was again, face strained, changed since his
adoptive parents had died. He recalled his last leave-taking with
his adoptive parents, no more than a month ago. Parents,
they would have corrected him, not "adoptive parents." They'd been
right in that as in so many other things. Though they hadn't
birthed him, had only taken him off the streets when he was eight,
they'd been his parents.
His last memory of them was as they laughed at some joke his
father had told just before Jaquar left their home. They were
framed in the golden light streaming from the doorway of their
house. His mother, round of face and body, leaning into his father,
the aura of love radiating from her....
Just the moment before, her sweet breath had caressed his cheek
as she'd kissed him farewell. Her scent had wound around him-the
flowery herb fragrance that had been his comfort from the moment
she'd claimed him as her own.
His father had hugged him hard, as always, and Jaquar had felt
the strength of Power and body that had always meant love and
safety.
No more. Ever. All because of him.
He had brought their evil killer to them. The odd boy they'd
saved from the streets had ultimately led their deaths to them, far
before their time.
"Off." His image faded and he was glad.
Unhurried, he walked to the pentacle, closed the circle with a
hummed note, and settled into a soft pallet in the center to begin
his quest to find and destroy his parents' slayer. He sang.
When the Songspell ended, his astral shape slipped from his body
with an easy pull and a tiny "pop." Hovering over his physical
form, he felt light and free.
He stayed in the same physical plane and rose above his Tower,
his island, to orient and anchor himself. As was customary, his was
the only Circlet Tower on the island, and the island itself was
small. Most circlets lived on their own island in the Brisay Sea,
east of Lladrana. He'd wanted one only a few miles from
Coquille-on-the-Coast where his parents lived so he would visit
them often.
On the physical plane, the sangvile had two forms: one, a black
spiderweb, and the other, a manlike dark energy. Its rudimentary,
nasty emotions were that of an evil predator. As strong as it was
now, if spread out in spiderweb form, it would cover a house. The
man form would be a giant.
The monster had gloated over the pain and fear it caused,
laughed in malicious glee at its feast of Circlets and their Power.
Those tainted emotions had leaked through several planes and led
Jaquar to it. He had found the horror too late to pin it down, set
it ablaze and watch it die.
Below, he saw his Tower, round and of red stone, with a flat
roof and a walkway around it; Mue Island, looking like the blunted
top of an archery arrow, slightly southwest of
Coquille-on-the-Coast. He drifted even higher, until he could see
most of Lladrana, the rocky hill where the Marshalls' Castle sat-in
the middle of Lladrana, far from the ocean, east and north of
Coquille-on-the-Coast. He tugged on the cord between his astral
self and his body. It held firm.
Then he plane-walked, searching for the sangvile.
He passed through several known planes to reach the one he
wanted, tuning himself to its unique vibrations. Only on this plane
could he pinpoint the hideous energy of the sangvile.
And there was the monster that had slain his parents. And Jaquar
lusted to destroy the sangvile with all the fierce desire within
him. Here, the sangvile was a gliding black smudge.
Jaquar was back on the hunt. Though this lower emotional plane
was a gray nothingness, Jaquar could dimly sense the geography of
the physical plane below, where the sangvile roamed. Here, the
image of the sangvile was a gliding black smudge, traveling
northwest from Lladrana. Jaquar followed.
No sights; worse, no sounds. The dreary atmosphere made his
emotions all the more powerful.
The sangvile moved. Geographic familiarity, physical reference
points, were gone. The sangvile was far outside the borders of
Lladrana, flying north with information and energy and magic to
give the Dark.
Jaquar's astral self followed. As a mind-shadow, Jaquar had no
eyes to weep or voice to scream his grief. The emotions that gave
him the strength and cunning to track the beast scoured him, made
him vengeance incarnate. He would kill the servant and destroy the
lord. No price was too high to pay.
The thing hesitated in flight, then lashed out with a
black-energy tentacle. Jaquar ducked, drew back. Was it aware of
him? Aware of something as predatory as itself, as ruthless?
Coalescing into a streak of dark lightning, the horror sped up.
The monster was near its.. .nest?
Ahead, the grayness of the ethereal plane changed. In the
distance was a black point. Jaquar sensed something huge and vile
and pulsing.
2
In front of Jaquar seethed a mound of evil so dark that it
swallowed all light, all energy. The sangvile rounded itself into a
ball and arced downward into a hole of red, with tentacles of gray
and acid green and black. The mound radiated a loathsome, diseased
feeling that seemed to coat Jaquar with slime.
The place was inimical to all humans. And it was hungry.
No price was too much to pay to avenge his parents.
Jaquar flung his astral-self into it.
And hit a magical shield. Rebounded, stunned and aching.
He spent his rage battering the magical barrier with all his
might, all of himself. He shifted to planes above and below and
struck the shield time and again, then returned to the first
plane.
Jaquar Dumont. A sneering voice resounded in Jaquar's
head along with a hideous clash of notes. He stopped his fruitless
assault. Hovered. Wondered whether to reply, if acknowledgment
would make him vulnerable.
The great Jaquar Dumont, bastard with tainted Exotique
blood, the voice continued, and Jaquar realized it was
human-and male.
A human Sorcerer consorting with the horrors and monsters that
invaded Lladrana? Had Jaquar been in his physical form he'd have
been sick with revulsion. Did Jaquar know the voice? He didn't
think so. He did sense the Power of the Sorcerer. The Sorcerer was
nearly a Circlet-but he wasn't the true and ultimate evil. The man
served another.
The Sorcerer laughed at Jaquar. So, you have found us, but
only on this low plane. You cannot break the Dark's shield, nor
harm this nest. No Sorcerer or Sorceress of Lladrana can.
Come out and fight! Jaquar threw the mental call to the
human.
The Sorcerer snorted. If and when I exit our nest it will be
with an army, or allies so strong that no one will be able to stop
us.
All of Lladrana will fight you! Jaquar shouted, trying to
pierce the shield with Mind and Power alone. Futile.
More sneering laughter. The Marshalls have discovered how to
raise the magical barrier against us. But in two weeks they
have not done much. The Marshalls are few and slow. The boundary
still has many gaps.
Wild shrieking came from the human. If he'd been sane at one
time, he wasn't now.
Gathering himself into a spear of Power, Jaquar arrowed to the
red maw-gate of the pulsing mound. And was flung away.
The sangvile is safe from you, as are all the servants I
control. You will never be able to pass the shield on any plane.
No Lladranan with Power can breech this forcefield. No Lladranan
can hurt this nest. The voice insinuated into Jaquar's mind as
he continued to batter at the gate. Since you loathe
the sangviles so much, I will set more upon Lladrana.
Soon. Aimed at Circlets.
Despairing, Jaquar continued the assault until his energy faded
and he had only enough strength to return home. He awoke hours
later, body stiff, psychically blind since he'd abused his Power.
With croaking voice, he dismissed the magical pentacle.
Jaquar staggered to his desk and fell into his chair, ready to
record all he knew of the sangvile, all he'd learned in his
pursuit. His face was colder than the rest of him. He lifted his
hand and touched his cheek. It was wet.
Boulder, Colorado The same morning
Marian froze. "I didn't call you."
Golden Raven raised little penciled-in eyebrows and pushed by
her to enter the apartment. "I heard you." She tapped her head,
glanced around and took a seat on the couch.
"I find that very strange." Just as odd as everything else that
was happening. Marian shut the door.
Golden Raven wore tight jeans and shirt that did nothing for her
heavy figure. But unlike Marian, Golden Raven accepted her body. "I
know you do, but just listen. My vision was of you and a young man
who looked a great deal like you- except he had black hair instead
of your red."
Andrew. Marian had never told Golden Raven about him.
Marian had met a lot of frauds while taking New Age classes, and
Golden Raven wasn't one of them. The woman was a brilliant
forecaster.
Tilting her multi-shaded blond head, Golden Raven surveyed
Marian's apartment. "Very much like you, Marian. Books, papers,
everything too neat and tidy. Still striving for perfection, I
see."
"Golden Raven, I'm running late for my job-"
"Our paths are not the same, but I had to tell you of the vision
before Wood Elk and I left for the West Coast." She looked at
Marian, eyes narrowed. "You have a great deal of intelligence, and
more-just plain magic in you, right beneath the surface. But
you dabble. You don't commit yourself to freeing your powers."
Marian wasn't accustomed to teachers berating her. She stood
stiffly beside Golden Raven.
"You dabble, not taking what you learn seriously. Yet I feel a
brilliant spark within you, humming just under your skin." She
tapped Marian's chest above her breasts. "Strong magic."
"Golden Raven, it would be interesting if that were true.
But-"
"You feel your psi powers trying to break free and even now
reject them. I heard you calling me this morning-can you
deny that?"
"No." But she wanted to. On the other hand, she'd always had an
internal push to find...something...ever eluding her. Could
it be magic? Could she have strong psychic powers? She'd only been
aware of her weather sense and her connection to Mother Earth.
Golden Raven grasped Marian's arm, then stilled, her eyes going
blank and unfocused. "The full moon. Tomorrow night." Golden Raven
sucked in a breath and stepped back from Marian, breaking the
physical connection. She shook her head, then met Marian's eyes. "I
don't know what it means. I can't tell you. Except that this
full-moon ritual is very important for you. It will be life
changing. For you and your brother."
Her words were as fearsome as Marian's nightmares, and seemed
just as real. Believe, or not? Golden Raven had mentioned Andrew
again, the bait Marian would always swallow.
She said steadily, "When I said your name this morning I wanted
to ask if you knew others who had had experiences like these I've
been enduring."
"Your psi potential demanding to be fulfilled. Do the ritual,
find one who will help you direct it. As for your brother, he is
linked to you and I believe he will be.. .greatly affected in a
good way by your psi development." She opened her mouth, then shut
it and shook her head again. "No, I should not tell you, even if I
could. I'm sorry, Marian. I must go now, and Blessings upon you."
With a little duck of her head she turned and left the apartment.
The door clicked shut behind her.
Marian barely saw her go as emotions churned inside her. She
needed another shower, although a hot bath would be better to
banish the sudden chill.
She might have shrugged off the continuing auditory illusions,
might have ignored Golden Raven's advice to find another teacher.
Might have continued to "dabble" in New Age spirituality on her way
to receiving her doctorate. But she would never ignore any threat
to her brother. Andrew was the person she most loved. She'd do the
ritual tomorrow night.
She'd anger Candace by not appearing on demand, couldn't in good
conscience take her mother's money when she wasn't going to follow
through on the favor of the fund-raiser. That meant putting her
career on hold, getting a job-leaving her college fund with her
mother. Marian squared her shoulders. So be it.
If a full-moon ritual was important to understand the
strangeness happening to her and if it could help Andrew, she'd do
it. And take it seriously, by God-or by All the Powers that
Were.
Lladrana The same day
Jaquar had just finished recording his journey in his lorebook
when a crackle of lightning had him jerking his head to the crystal
sphere on his desk. He flicked it with his fingernail, ping, and
accepted the sending of another Circlet.
Cloudiness filled the crystal, then dissolved to wisps. Two
people finished the Songspell that allowed them to communicate with
Jaquar and stared out at him. A shaft of pain speared through him.
Jaquar was accustomed to speaking only with his parents this way,
and they would never sing to him again.
Chalmon Pace and Venetria Fourney-on-again, off-again quarreling
lovers-gazed at him. They both bore the mark of great magical
Power, thick streaks of silver at both temples in their otherwise
black hair.
The last Jaquar had heard, Venetria had been backtracking the
sangvile. She'd lost an aunt in Coquille-on-the-Coast.
"Bad news," Chalmon said gruffly.
Jaquar grunted.
"Venetria's information, compiled with what I've gleaned from
the oldest lorebooks, tells us that the appetite of the sangvile is
exponential." He cleared his throat. "And it prefers those with
Power. The monster is directed at us, the Circlets of the Tower
Community."
With stiff lips Jaquar said, "We lost eight strong Sorcerers and
Sorceresses in Coquille-on-the-Coast. That can't be allowed to
happen again."
The other two nodded. "We agree," Chalmon said. "We must protect
ourselves from this horror. We're sure you are right-the sangvile
followed you from the Marshalls' Castle."
Jaquar laughed harshly. "I thought it was too weak to attach
itself to me. I thought it would hide and garner strength in the
Castle. Instead it knew I could lead it to a richer feast later."
He didn't think he'd ever forgive himself for that. "You said its
hunger is exponential?"
"Yes," sighed Venetria.
"It's back at its master's nest." The words pulled jerkily from
Jaquar, he didn't want to think of his journey to the red maw, his
vain assault, the gloating triumph he'd sensed. Nevertheless, he
told Chalmon and Venetria.
They were both pale when he finished.
"It's coming back, and not alone," Venetria whispered. "More
than one sangvile?"
"Yes," Jaquar said. He'd be ready for the horrors, and he wasn't
averse to attacking. "We need more to find the nest, to understand
what this 'master' is and how to battle it. I'll organize the
effort."
Chalmon frowned. "I don't know-"
Jaquar gestured, stopping Chalmon's protest. "I've lost the
most. Isn't that the Tower Community tradition? The one who is most
passionate gathers Powerful Circlets of the Fifth Degree and
directs them?"
The two looked at each other again.
"We're all concerned with the defense of Lladrana and now
finding the master who directs the monsters to invade," Chalmon
said.
Smiling coldly, Jaquar said, "If anyone wants to challenge me
for leadership, I'm available."
Venetria dipped her head. "So noted."
Chalmon shrugged, turned the subject. "No Sorcerer or Sorceress
could pass. No Lladranan with Power could breech the shield. That
means we use someone from the Exotique land. Someone for the Tower
community. Our Exotique."
"We could ask the Exotique Alyeka," Venetria said.
"She's one of the Marshalls. We can't be indebted to them. We'd
lose our independence," Chalmon snapped.
"Summoning our Exotique is already planned," Jaquar said.
"The master said, 'No Lladranan can harm the nest,' as if just
the presence of one who is not Lladranan can hurt the Dark."
"A natural weapon," Chalmon breathed.
"Think what she'll be like when she's trained!" Venetria
said.
Jaquar said, "The Summoning Song will bring to Lladrana a person
who will work well with us."
Venetria sucked in a breath. "Yes, but she must be strong if we
are going to send her to the nest."
Jaquar said, "Any Exotique the Marshalls can contact will
naturally be strong. As eldest and most powerful of the Tower, 1
believe Bossgond sent the Marshalls a list of the proper
qualities." Jaquar felt his mouth twist. "Bossgond didn't notify
me, but I received an acknowledgment from the Marshalls."
Frowning, Chalmon said, "Bossgond didn't tell me, either. It is
time he breaks this hermit existence."
"I'm sure he'd be glad to hear you tell him so," Venetria said
sweetly.
Chalmon continued. "The Exotique must be well-trained before we
send him or her to this master you discovered, Jaquar. He or she
must at least be trained enough to report what is found in the
nest."
"We may not have that luxury," Jaquar said. "Not if the maw
spews out more sangviles, as well as the other horrors-the slayers
and soul-suckers and renders."
"And dreeths." Venetria shivered. She'd barely survived a battle
with one of the winged lizards.
Chalmon scowled. "Yes, we must be prepared to sacrifice the
Exotique, for the good of Lladrana, for the planet Amee herself.
Knowledge is more important than one life. If worse comes to worst,
we could attach a reporting orb to her and send her with a
destruction spell-perhaps she'd be able to untie that weapon knot
you have."
"I would go myself, if I could," Jaquar said.
Venetria looked at him sharply. "You are the best plane-walker.
You already tried. Do you think the shield applies to all
planes?"
Again Jaquar's laughter was bitter. "It applied to as many as I
could reach within the limits of the spell-twenty or so. I'm not
sure exactly where or what the physical location is, but it's
big."
Making a note, Chalmon said, "Other things to research-the
shield, whether it is only magical or is physical also. Where the
nest could be. When the Exotique comes, I'll train him or her."
"No! If she's female, like the last one, she will want a woman
as teacher!" Venetria said.
"The new Exotique is mine," Jaquar insisted.
Now Chalmon barked laughter. "All of us will want to work with
someone so Powerful. This is exactly why we need the Marshalls to
Summon her. We don't work well together." He shot a glance at his
lady. "Sometimes not even those who are intimate with each
other."
Jaquar's heart tore. His father and mother had been an excellent
team, stronger together than apart. Perhaps that's what had drawn
the sangvile to them.
Chalmon and Venetria sniped at each other, then Chalmon faced
him.
"We'll call a Gathering for tomorrow at the Parteger Island
amphitheater to discuss all this," Chalmon said. "I'll move the
process along."
Venetria sent him a fulminating glance, then looked back to
Jaquar. "What is the Marshalls' price for the Summoning?"
Jaquar said, "I promised them objects, not favors. Some books,
most of which are duplicates in all our libraries. Whatever
magical weapons we have. Old battlespells."
"A price easy to meet," Chalmon said.
Venetria nodded. "Yes. I think I only have two weapons in my
Tower-what of you?"
"One," Jaquar said, but it was an incredible one, something that
perhaps only an Exotique could handle.
"I have four," Chalmon said.
"Of course you must pretend you're the best," Venetria said. And
then they were arguing again.
"I'll coordinate with the Marshalls as necessary in the days to
come," Jaquar said. He wouldn't lie to the Marshalls, but he
wouldn't welcome them unless he had a use for them.
With thumb and forefinger, Jaquar tapped the crystal and Chalmon
and Venetria disappeared. An hour later he had sent the contract
and books as first payment to the Marshalls for the Summoning.
Then he crossed to his armchair and sat again, letting the soft,
old leather settle around his body. He wondered if the other
Circlets had forgotten one very important thing, and if they had,
whether he could take advantage of it.
The Singer, the Oracle of Lladrana, had prophesied that the next
Exotique would be best suited for the community of the Tower. The
Singer had also told them of the time of the next Summoning-when
the Dimensional Gates between Lladrana and the Exotique land
aligned. The Marshalls knew this. It was tomorrow night.
In all the history of the Tower, the Sorcerers and Circlets had
never come to an agreement in a day. Chalmon was too optimistic. He
wouldn't be able to forge a plan amongst all the individual
personalities of the Tower.
Jaquar sank back into his chair to sleep. It would be a long
time before he could face his bedroom adorned with the quilt his
mother had made and the landscapes his father had painted.
He would not argue with the rest of the Sorcerers and
Sorceresses at Parteger Island, had no intention of compromising.
The Exotique was his. For knowledge. For vengeance.
Colorado
The next evening
Power hung in the air like a fine mist ready to condense into
dewdrops. It shimmered with every ripple of chimes, every strike of
the gong-the music only Marian could hear, had heard for the past
month. Now the sounds reverberated in a pattern that set her nerves
humming as she finished taping a ten-foot red pentagram on her
living room carpet.
She took a shaky breath as she connected the last line of the
star-shaped pattern and sank back on her heels to calm her
excitement. She wiped her damp palms on the sweats she'd put on
after her bath. Biting her lip, she examined everything again.
She'd had to scramble to craft the ritual, to get the herbs and
tools. There'd been no time to practice.
No negativity, not now. No doubts. So she shoved them
aside.
Soon the exact moment of the full moon would finally come and it
would be time to act. To perform a ritual that would bring great
change into Andrew's life and her own. To ask for what she wanted
most, a miracle-a healthy brother.
In order to clear enough space to tape the pentacle, she'd had
to stack books around the edges of the room, evidence that her
hunger for knowledge had burgeoned until it was nearly a craving.
She felt like the Chinese Dragon, ever pursuing the Pearl of
Wisdom. Someday she'd find just the right knowledge that would make
her whole, or set her free: the key to herself.
Marian stood and put away the tape. She checked the alcove where
her hamster Tuck sat blinking at her in a corner of his plastic
cage. He seemed to feel something unusual, too, since both his
cheek pouches were huge with food.
"Nothing to worry about, Tuck." She smiled at him, then rubbed
her arms. Crossing to the door of her garden-level apartment, she
pushed aside the small curtain over the door's window to look out.
Twilight was falling.
Hands on her hips, she scanned the rest of her preparations; her
altar was fine, the notes for her ritual were on her PDA in the
pentagram. A small spiral of smoke from the incense burner twisted,
sending lily-of-the-valley scent through the room. The smoke
sparkled silver.
Marian blinked, narrowed her eyes and stared. The glitter in the
powder shouldn't carry up into the smoke, and she thought she'd
seen a flash for an instant. Maybe. Maybe not. Tonight was a night
for stretching all she was, experiencing all she could.
With a sigh she looked at her gray sweats, still wavering
between doing the ritual in a gossamer crocheted cotton broomstick
gown or nude. She should be less self-conscious, able to accept her
plumpness as pleasing.
Just as she was about to shuck her sweats for the gauze dress,
the telephone rang. She glanced at the clock and bit her lip. It
was only an hour before the full moon and she'd wanted to be at the
climax of the ritual when that occurred. She debated answering the
call. Hesitated. Then she ran across the living room floor, hopping
over the star-points to reach the kitchen and pick up the
telephone.
"Hey, sis." Andrew's light voice floated across the line, and
she smiled.
"Hey back."
There was a heartbeat's pause. "Is everything okay there? 1 had
a feeling..." he said.
"Everything's fine." She eyed the red-taped pentagram on the
floor.
"Candace isn't giving you grief over anything, is she?" Their
mother had asked Andrew at the age of four not to call her any
variation of "Mommy."
"She wanted me to attend a benefit tonight, but I.. .wanted to
study." She was studying, learning.
Andrew groaned. "Yeah, the Colorado Charities. Sent her a check
for them, and one for the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation of
Colorado, too. She didn't say thank-you, but I believe she was
pleased. I don't have much contact with her anymore. Might be
better for your mental health if you backed away, too."
"I will, soon," Marian said.
Andrew's snort came through the phone line. "Wrong. You're
always trying to reconcile with her. It's a girl thing. Or maybe
it's just that you think a perfect life should have mother-daughter
happiness. Too bad your dad didn't leave you as well off as mine
did me-you wouldn't be at her beck and call over that college
fund."
He didn't offer her money from his trust fund, and Marian was
glad. "How are things going with you?" she asked.
"I get it, previous subject closed. I'm doing good, sis. Turned
in the new game project today and I'm going off on sabbatical." He
paused, then words rushed from the phone. "I'm in remission right
now, but-uh-I've had a few incidents-"
"Andrew!" Fear spurted through her.
"-and I want to try out that program we talked about last year,
the one set on Freesan Island in the San Juans. Sort of a retreat,
and they want us to minimize contact with outsiders. The
codependency thing, you know."
"Andrew!"
"So I won't be available or calling you for about six
weeks."
"Did you do another check on these people? The system?"
Andrew laughed. "You always have to be in control, sis. Not an
issue I've ever had."
No, Andrew had always been at the mercy of his condition, his
workaholic father and a series of stepmothers, most of whom found
him distressing.
He continued. "The camp's A-Okay. I know you're frowning-"
The warmth in his voice almost made her smile.
"But they aren't after my money and won't sell me to labs for
experimentation," he said. "Dr. Chan recommends the program and you
know how much we both trust her. I also had my financial advisor
and my private investigator check it out."
"They'll be careful with you?" Oops. "Tuck worries about you."
Now she knew he was rolling his eyes.
"Sis!" A slight pause. His voice deepened. "I'm a man. I know
how to work around my health issues. I plan to live life, not
merely exist."
"All right, all right. You have my blessing. Go and enjoy
yourself." She didn't know why those phrases rolled from her lips.
But they both knew the day-to-day risk he lived with.
"Hey, I was the one with the funny feeling, not you. Make sure
Tuck takes care of himself. Oh, and you take care of yourself, too.
Uh-by the way, will the weather be good?"
A familiar feeling whispered through Marian. "It should
be pleasant but cool to start off with, then showers. Take your
rain gear."
"Will do. Love ya. Bye." He smooched into the phone and hung
up.
When Andrew left Colorado for California, he'd made it clear
that he wanted to live as much as he could on his own. He wanted
her to pursue her studies in Boulder as she'd planned, so
she'd made herself let him go. He had been as desperate to live
independently as she had been. Currently he had a housekeeper, a
nurse who specialized in caring for people with MS. The matronly
woman had separate quarters in his home. Andrew had a car and
driver.
Their sibling relationship had actually improved. If he wanted
her with him, he knew all he had to do was call.
Tuck rattled in his cage and brought her back to the moment. She
studied the pentagram and found her pulse thumping fast. Andrew had
phoned just before the ritual. Surely that was a bit of magic in
itself. Further, he was trying another new program-could this
ritual influence that? She didn't want to think about what Andrew
would do when the disease became more debilitating.
Andrew's telephone call had thrown Marian's timing off. She'd
have to hurry through the first part of the ritual, use her notes
on her PDA. Not perfect. Perhaps she should delay the ritual until
next month? She wanted to, to ensure it would go more smoothly, but
she dared not.
She walked around the star to her bedroom, stripped out of the
soft cotton pants and shirt and folded them. Then she freed her
still-damp hair and fluffed it, enjoying the feel of the strands as
well as the slight tugging on her scalp as she ran her fingers to
the shoulder-length ends.
Returning to the living room, she lit the candles, drew the
outer circle, summoned guardian spirits. Palpable energy charged
around her. The chanting she'd heard in her dreams sounded as if it
came from her stereo, until she couldn't tell if it was real or
only echoed in her mind.
At the last minute, on impulse, she put the plastic ball with
her hamster into the center of the pentacle, too. After all, when
Andrew's and her own life changed, so would Tuck's, even if he only
dimly sensed the alteration. He was an essential part of her life,
so he should be included.
She stepped into the center of the pentagram and lifted her
voice in counterpoint to the music. Lightning flashed. Incredible.
Nothing like this had ever happened before. Energy raced through
Marian, making her feel powerful, like a goddess, and she laughed.
A bright carnelian-red ribbon of light unrolled, then curled around
Marian and Tuck. She stared at it in disbelief.
She grabbed Tuck's plastic sphere. With one small tug, they were
swept through a hole, like thread through the eye of a needle.
Power spiked and whirled and changed. She lost her connection
with Mother Earth. That deepest connection she'd felt all her life,
snipped.
They were somewhere else, in a wind-whipped corridor of dust
brown. A corridor to where?
Tuck's ball was torn from her grasp and she screamed. She
looked, listened, reached with all of her senses, flailed arms and
legs and couldn't find him. He'd been her companion for two years.
She cried and grieved.
Adrift and alone in pummeling, whistling winds, she felt terror
rip through her. Felt no links to anything. Not the earth, not the
trees, not the moon or stars. All that she'd recently realized had
spoken to her of her place and her life had vanished.
She reached mentally, emotionally for Andrew. Screamed and heard
silence again.
Nothing.
3
She found herself on a cold floor.
Marian didn't believe her senses. It felt as if she was on
stone, not the threadbare carpet in her apartment. The scent of the
room changed from lily of the valley to jasmine and sandalwood. As
she inhaled, the air felt more humid. The space around her seemed
larger, sounds echoing.
When she heard ragged breathing not her own, she squeezed her
eyes shut, sure she was dreaming. Maybe experiencing out-of-body
travel, though that had never happened before. She must be
safe in her apartment. She didn't want to think otherwise.
People started talking-not in English but in what sounded like
mangled French. As part of pleasing her mother, Marian had learned
French and spoke it like a native. This wasn't true French. She
thought her heart would jump from her chest it pounded so hard.
This couldn't be happening. If she kept her eyes closed, it would
all go away and she'd be home and safe and never dabble with magic
ever again.
With one singing ripple of chimes, her whole body arched
involuntarily. Despite her will, her eyelids flew open.
A circle of faces peered down at her, all slightly Asian in
appearance with dark eyes set in golden-toned skin. Marian gaped.
An older woman with golden streaks of hair at each temple and
compressed lips held up both hands palms outwards.
"Vel coom," she said.
With only a little deciphering, Marian translated the word into
"Welcome." She wasn't sure what to do. She still couldn't connect
to Mother Earth, let alone Andrew. Of course this whole thing could
be a hallucination, or worse, madness.
What should she do?
"Vel coom!" the woman shouted, gesturing for Marian to get
up.
Why didn't the woman help her? Marian squinted and saw flowing
lines of-energy? electricity? the Force? between her and the circle
of richly robed figures. There were at least sixteen people
surrounding her, evenly spaced along the large circle, pairs
dressed alike. Swords were sheathed at their hips. From what she
could see, the figure on the floor beneath her was a huge
pentacle-a star in a circle-larger than hers, about fifteen
feet.
She licked her lips and felt the dampness. The floor was cold
flagstones under her, not carpet. Her breath caught in her throat
as her mind spun with possibilities that she really didn't want to
consider, sorting and analyzing. Her brain told her she wasn't on
Earth, and she was in the midst of strong magic.
And she was lying in a big circular stone room, with wooden
rafters and high windows around the top.
She wanted to think of anything except that she was in a
different place. Naked.
Just the thought of her nudity made her flush-probably from her
toes to her hairline.
The people continued to stare.
Since it didn't look like they were going to approach, it was
time to put reality to the test and rise and-she gulped-pretend she
wasn't ashamed of her body.
Marian stood with shoulders back, hips tucked, stomach sucked
in, hoping her blush wasn't as red as it felt. Keeping within one
point of the star, she walked about five feet to where the others
stood, outside the circle of flowing red energy-lines. Visible
magic. If she weren't so scared, she'd be impressed. Everything
looked fascinating, would be fascinating, if she could
engage more of her mind than her emotions. But dreams ran on
emotions. This had to be a dream.
Her brain said it was, but her senses contradicted that notion.
Her emotions spiraled out of control until she controlled the panic
gritting her teeth. Act logically! Observe, at least.
The women were all as tall as she-at least five foot eight- the
men taller. They all had black hair, dark eyes and golden skin-and
silver or golden streaks of hair at one or both temples.
Marian pointed to a gray cloak a woman wore and made the motion
of swirling it around her. Unfortunately, in response to her
actions most of the men's gazes locked on her breasts. She wanted
to melt into the floor.
Marian cleared her throat. Was this real? Why were so many
people here if she'd only needed one teacher? "Where? Um- when? I
don't know- May I have the cloak, please?"
The woman who'd spoken earlier stared at her, frowning.
All she wanted to do was find a corner and hide. That thought
reminded her of Tuck and she forced back tears. He was gone. What
chance did a hamster in a plastic ball have in the winds of that
corridor?
This experience had already cost her more than she'd expected,
Tuck.
But she'd stood around long enough. She'd act as if this was
real, try and figure out what was going on, get her act together.
Be bolder, take action. Take control.
Ka-Boom! Thunder rattled the silver gong at the edge of
her vision. The gong responded with a low echoing tone. A flash of
light blinded her. Heat and vibration struck her, sent her flat to
the pavement again.
She blinked but could not see. She rolled to her side.
Arreth! The word rang strange in her head, but the image
of herself, still on the floor in the point of a carnelian-red
pentagram, teased her mind. Stay? Cloth brushed against her
ankle-someone was in the pentacle with her!
Swords rasped from scabbards.
A scream bubbled from her lips but emerged as a weak cry. So
much for being bold. She'd try again in a minute. Strong fingers
curved over her shoulder, squeezed in simple comfort, almost she
thought she heard a tune. She sat up, choked, coughed. The hand
moved from her shoulder to her nape, patted her upper back, then
left, taking the funny music in her ears with it.
Arreth. Stay, the masculine voice whispered in her mind.
Telepathy. She believed in magic, sort of, she'd just never
experienced so much of it.
Then his hands closed around her upper arms, and she was lifted
and pulled back into the center of the pentagram. Her ears rang.
Again the hands fell from her and the music stopped.
Her vision began to clear. Beyond the afterimages of floating
neon blobs, she saw the rich robes of those surrounding her. They
held swords pointed at the man standing beside her.
But their gazes slid over to her. She got the idea they were
fascinated by her pale skin that turned pink, red, then back to
white.
She blinked, then looked up at the man. He was about six foot
four. His face was broad at the forehead, with wide streaks of
silver at both temples, emphasized by the golden headband he wore.
His lips were full and mobile and dusky. He smiled down at her and
offered his hand. She met his eyes. They were deep, deep blue in a
tanned face.
A jolt of prophetic foreknowledge sizzled to her center. Uh oh.
Major, major MISTAKE!
This wasn't her teacher. This was her doom.
The wide eyes of the Exotique woman drew Jaquar. They were a
lighter shade than his own and for the first time in his life he
found blue eyes beautiful.
A flicker in her gaze and the Power pulsing around her were
signs she was experiencing a vision. His touch on her mind was too
superficial to share her natural melody, but it was sweet.
The Exotique's full mouth lured him as much as did her
soul-tune. He shook the sensual thought from his head, strove to
ignore her nudity. She looked delicious, but he had a use for her
and it wasn't as a lover. Still, he smiled his most charming smile,
hoping she'd trust him.
When he'd touched her, a lance of pure desire from their mingled
energies had shot straight to his groin. No. Despite what his body
wanted, he could not allow himself even affection for her. If he
had sex with the Exotique, there was a chance they'd bond. He
couldn't risk that. She was the weapon of vengeance he'd set loose
on the Dark like a blazing arrow. For his own peace of mind, he
dared not become attached to her.
"Jaquar Dumont," Swordmarshall Thealia Germaine said flatly from
the circle of Marshalls surrounding them, obviously unhappy that
he'd shown up uninvited.
He paid little attention to the Marshalls, watching as his
Exotique crossed to the pentacle, squatted and touched the flowing
magical red lines. Sparks flew, and she recoiled.
Standing, she slowly extended her arm through the barrier of
magic. It didn't hurt her. Jaquar let out a relieved breath. The
Summoning had worked, bringing an innately powerful mage from the
Exotique land to Lladrana. A woman whose power would be potent
here.
She tugged on the gray cloak of one of the female Marshalls.
With raised eyebrows and a smile, the Marshall gave it to the
Exotique. She donned the cape, then looked around, very serious,
examining the circular Temple, scrutinizing the altar with the
rainbow crystal lamps that also served as chimes, and the huge
silver gong beside it.
With narrowed eyes, she gazed at him and where he stood in the
center of the pentagram, the place of Power. She gestured for him
to move away. Demanded something in a language close to, but not
Lladranan. "Leave.. .go.. .home."
Jaquar smiled and shook his head. She scowled and marched back
to stand in the center of the pentacle with him, muttering what
seemed to be her own words of Power. But they would do no good. The
Marshalls had closed the hole between worlds.
She was still close to him and Jaquar had trouble ignoring her
softness, warmth and unusual fragrance. Her nudity under the cloak
was impossible to forget.
"Dumont!" Thealia snapped. "We did not expect anyone to use this
pentacle today except the Exotique. You of the Tower should leave
the entire Summoning to us."
He inclined his head and took the offensive. "Greetings,
Swordmarshall. We of the Tower Community thank you for this
Summoning. However, we thought Exotique Alyeka would be leading
this ritual." He was friends with the other Exotique-he might have
been able to persuade her to release the new lady into his
care.
"The Singer foretold that the second Exotique is to bond with
someone here and it should not be Alyeka. She should not be
present. Even she listens to the Singer, now."
"Ah," Jaquar said, smiling and gesturing to himself. "Well, I am
here and the lady can come with me." Time to get out of here,
before any other Circlets showed up to try to take the woman for
their own apprentice. He'd paid for the Exotique, now he should
take his prize and leave.
He strode to her and curved his right arm around her. The quiet
notes stringing between them deepened and took on a richness. The
Exotique took a step away, but stumbled, so he kept his hold. Her
blue eyes narrowed and her mouth thinned. Her innate, powerful
magic flared and set the gemstone lamps on the altar chiming. She
stared at them and shivered.
Bong! The gong thundered, announcing another presence
traveling into the closed sphere of the pentacle.
Venetria materialized inside the star, along with a pile of
books and two magical weapons. She glared at Jaquar. Though his
ears still rang with the sound of her arrival, he heard her
shouting.
"Jaquar Dumont! You will not claim this Exotique as your
apprentice. Doubtless she will relate better to a Sorceress."
Venetria tossed her head, gave the woman one quick, penetrating
look, then offered her hand to the Exotique.
Eyes wary, the woman touched Venetria's fingers. A clash of
tones echoed in the round Temple as the women's hands met. Venetria
dropped the Exotique's hand, flicking the incompatible energy from
her fingertips, then converted the gesture into a wave as she spoke
to the Marshalls.
"The books you requested-the ancient spellweapons at my
disposal, and instructions to use them."
Clang! This time the altar crystals rang and the sound
ran around the outstretched steel of the Marshalls' swords in a
bone-shivering scale.
Inside the pentacle, the two women stumbled against Jaquar.
Chalmon appeared in the north point of the pentagram.
Jaquar set his teeth, shouldered Venetria aside and steadied the
Exotique, enduring the sensual and powerful string of notes rapidly
deepening into a melody. They were already forming a
connection.
Chalmon glared at them. Beside him was a stack of books and four
weapons.
"This is ridiculous," Swordmarshall Thealia said, sheathing her
broadsword. The other Marshalls followed suit. She studied the
gifts in the pentacle and her smile was as sharp as her sword. Her
lip curled. "I see that those of the Tower are cooperating as
usual, which is to say, not at all."
Jaquar grasped the Exotique's arm. "As you can see, our energies
do not clash. 1 sent payment for the Summoning yesterday. On behalf
of the Tower, I again thank the Marshalls." He glanced at Venetria
and Chalmon, who stood in opposite points of the star. "I claim
this Exotique woman as my apprentice."
Chalmon scowled. "No."
No price was too much to pay to find and destroy the master and
avenge Jaquar's parents. "Then you challenge me. Tests of Power or
a duel of sorcery. The Marshalls can set up a procedure and
officiate."
Swordmarshall Thealia made a disgusted noise. Chalmon stiffened
in outrage.
The Power in the pentacle was incredible, radiating from four
strong mages. Jaquar sensed that the Exotique was merging all the
energies, changing them until they melded into a single Powersong
that he could use easily. She was inherently a strong Sorceress. He
couldn't wait to mold her raw power into focused magic.
Sunlight shafted through a high stained-glass window, framing
the voluptuous woman by his side in a pointed arch, painting the
pale skin of her face, hands and feet in jeweled colors,
illuminating her like a fine vellum manuscript. Her aura glowed
vibrant silver and turquoise, indicating strong and unusual Power.
The tune between them was distracting. She was beautiful beyond
compare in body and spirit.
A pity she might have to be sacrificed to stop the sangviles
from leaving the Dark's nest.
Time to leave. Jaquar looked around the large round stone room
of the Temple-at the Marshalls who seemed to be communing and
approaching a decision; at Chalmon and Venetria who stood in the
pentagram with him and the Exotique woman, but in opposite points;
at the Exotique herself who appeared less dazed.
Definitely time to go. He began gathering Power.
Bong, Bong, Bong! Suddenly the ringing of all the glass
in the room-from the windows, the storage crystals in the rafters
and chandeliers, the chime crystals on the altar-resonated through
his head.
A few seconds later his ears stopped buzzing and he saw the
oldest and strongest Sorcerer of them all, Bossgond, holding a
satchel. Chalmon went to Venetria, protectiveness radiating from
him.
Jaquar's stomach tightened and his lips pulled back from his
teeth in a silent snarl as he anticipated failure. There was no way
he could best Bossgond. Disappointment seared him. He wanted the
Exotique, he had plans for her.
What Bossgond's plans were, he couldn't imagine.
The greatest Sorcerer wore a stained, shabby robe that didn't
disguise the sticklike, knobby bones of his body. His full head of
hair was golden except for a small streak of black in the
middle-denoting his great Power.
He put his satchel down. Ignoring the rest of them, he bowed
slightly to the Exotique, then touched his fingers over his heart.
"Bossgond," he said in a deep, rich voice that sent a small hum
through the gong.
He took two steps and held out a swollen-jointed hand. She
placed hers in it. A white flash of their auras merging sent a
single, resonant note from the silver gong. The Exotique blinked,
then her lips curved. The Song between the old man and the young
woman must be comforting to her.
Jaquar ground his teeth. His prize was slipping from his
grasp.
With gentleness and grace the old man raised the Exotique
woman's hand to his lips, then loosed it. Jaquar wondered what sort
of music had spun between them-notes, or more. Then he remembered
the songs that had linked him and his parents, resonant from the
moment they'd found him. He'd been their apprentice, too. Grief
gripped him. To distract himself, he watched the Exotique.
Standing close to Bossgond, the Exotique was his height.
She wet her lips, then placed her hand above her breasts and
said, "Marian."
It was a good name-a name everyone could pronounce, unlike the
first Exotique's, Alexa. Jaquar wasn't the only one who
released a soft sigh.
Bossgond reached down and took a large crystal orb from his
satchel. He sang two notes and color whirled inside it, forming a
picture.
The scene in the sphere-crystal solidified into Alf Island,
Bossgond's home, and his tall, stately white Sorcerer's Tower. A
small image of Bossgond walked with Marian, obviously instructing
her. Marian was dressed in a beautiful velvet robe and carried a
staff of deep mahogany inlaid with twining silver and gold
leaves.
Then the image turned to night. The tower's outer wall
disappeared, showing the top ritual room as dark; the level beneath
was Bossgond's suite, lit with mellow crystal lights. He worked at
a desk. The next floor down was richly appointed for a woman.
Papers, books and jars of herbs cluttered a beautiful desk. Marian
sat at it, looking intense. Her staff leaned against the wall,
glowing the same deep red as her hair.
With a hum from Bossgond, the scene inside the globe faded. He
set it back into the satchel, then spoke one carefully pronounced
sentence. It wasn't in a language Jaquar knew.
Marian did. She smiled at him. A sincere smile. She looked
around the room, her expression turning wary. She nodded stiffly to
Chalmon and Venetria. Marian studied the Marshalls who stared back
at her but she didn't move from the center of the star or indicate
she wanted to be with them.
Jaquar thought she meant her glance to slide over him, but it
snagged and they gazed at each other. Her blue eyes held
intelligence, focus, determination. She would have been perfect for
him-no, for his purposes. No chance of wresting her from Bossgond,
even if she'd been willing.
The old Sorcerer looked at Marian and repeated his line.
"Yes," said Marian, and it was close enough to the Lladranan
ayes for Jaquar to know she agreed.
Bossgond turned to the rest of them. "The apprentice, Exotique
Marian, is coming with me. I anticipate that she will graduate from
apprentice to scholar in two weeks."
Venetria gasped. Bossgond sent her a chill look and she made a
strangled noise. Chalmon set an arm around her shoulders. Now they
looked like a couple again.
Bossgond met Jaquar's scrutiny. "Does anyone here in this Temple
challenge me?"
4
Silence filled the Temple at Bossgond's words. The old man
grinned. "I didn't think anyone would want to engage in a sorcerous
duel with me." He held the gaze of Swordmarshall Thealia. "Please
open the pentacle so the others can leave."
Swordmarshall Thealia drew her baton from her sheath, stepped to
the Power lines and sang an opening spell. The flow of Power bent
back on itself, allowing egress from the pentacle to the rest of
the Temple.
"Clear out of the star and circle," Bossgond ordered.
Chalmon strode out, head high, body tense. Venetria followed,
and from the sour look on her face as she glanced at the new
Exotique, Jaquar knew she recalled that Marian's energy didn't mesh
well with hers.
Neither Chalmon nor Venetria had suffered anything except a
little scraped pride from this debacle. Unlike himself-his plan was
a shambles.
Bossgond stared at Jaquar and raised an eyebrow. "Go," he
repeated.
Slowly, Jaquar complied.
"We would like the additional books and weapons," Thealia said.
"The Summoning was not as hard as that of our Exotique Marshall
Alyeka, but it was done at our risk and with our Power and in our
Castle Temple."
The old man inclined his head. "Agreed. If the Tower Community
was disorganized enough to pay you three times, then you should
take advantage of it."
Jaquar stood outside the circle and watched helplessly as the
old man handed Venetria's and Chalmon's offerings to the Marshalls.
He'd wanted to ensure the new Exotique was trained in
plane-walking, focus her studies on what he needed her to do, and
what she would have to learn to make the journey and, if possible,
return.
Thealia glanced dubiously at the six weapons. "All the
spellweapons of the Tower Community were promised."
"I have no weapons." Bossgond stared at Jaquar. "I trust you
will ensure the Marshalls receive the remaining payment from the
rest of the Towers." He examined the two swords, three knives and a
pair of gauntlets the Marshalls claimed from Venetria and Chalmon.
"I believe the last inventory of all the Towers stated we had
twenty weapons."
So the old Circlet had been studying the reports after all, just
not commenting.
Swordmarshall Thealia laid a hand on her baton of Power.
Jaquar nodded shortly at her. "As Bossgond says, I'll ensure the
delivery of all the weapons, except..." He glanced from Bossgond to
Thealia and swept a quick look around the rest of the Marshalls. "I
was gifted a knot-weapon when I raised my Tower, too powerful for
me to handle." He grinned with all his teeth. "Should you wish to
send someone for that weapon, I'll be pleased to relinquish
it."
"Not me," said Bossgond.
Thealia fingered the end of her baton but stepped back. "I'll
discuss it with Marshall Alyeka. We know nothing about
knot-weapons."
Bossgond reconnected the pentacle's Power lines with a small
wand of polished turquoise. He raised his head and sniffed, as if
testing the flavor of the Power. "Very good," he said, raising the
Exotique's hand to his lips.
After he'd finished the elegant gesture, Bossgond placed Marian
in the center of the pentacle and began the chant that would whisk
them from the Castle Temple to the pentagram in Bossgond's Tower on
Alf Island.
Marian listened to the old magician sing what she thought was a
spell. It was amazing. She drew the cloak around her. Her hands and
feet were cold. She'd agreed to go with the old man and it looked
like she was going by magic.
Still, she could feel the pressure of energy, magic, whatever,
gathering. Was there any chance that it might send her back home?
Was this a dream about how to find her teacher? She'd like to
believe it, but the bruises she had on her body ached with
all-too-real pain. In an hour or two the marks would show on her
skin.
With every moment that passed, Marian felt her hope fade that
this was a dream.
She looked at the oldest mage again. She should have been
watching her new teacher all along, paying attention to what he was
doing, but there was too much going on. And he'd made it clear he
would be her mentor, she'd learn. She hoped.
"I would be honored to teach you to use your Power," he'd said.
The cadence of his words had hummed through her, feeling
right. She felt inherently she could trust him, unlike
everyone else in this place. There was a smoothness of the energy
of his intentions toward her that didn't come from anyone else in
the room.
Every other person who had touched her had snags in their Power
flow toward her that she'd recognized as self-interest, specific
goals in their minds as to how to use her. Bossgond hadn't.
She understood now that the circle of people who'd brought her
to this place were called Marshalls. She'd picked that word up.
She'd always been a quick study and didn't think the language would
pose much of a problem, especially since it was close to
French.
The Marshalls still ringed the pentacle, grouped in pairs and
watching with interest. Since they'd been chanting when she'd come
here, they had to be the ones who'd burdened her life over the past
month. Their music was unique. The crystal lamps made of great
gemstones and arranged in the colors of the chakra were the chimes
she had heard. And she knew the sound of the silver gong.
Yet she didn't feel at ease with those pairs dressed in matching
colors, clinking with chain mail under their rich robes and
carrying weapons. She didn't care for this enormous, echoing
Temple. Something about the atmosphere raised all the fine hair on
her body.
Then there were the other magicians. The handsome Jaquar scowled
at her from outside the pentagram, almost vibrating with intensity.
Oddly enough, she could hear a stream of melodious notes coming
from him and it lured her. No. Absolutely not. That wasn't
right. She trusted her instinctive impression of him as someone who
could harm her deeply.
These people seemed to use music in their magic, but it was
still difficult to believe that the trickle of tunes she heard from
them was anything but her imagination.
She usually soaked in and analyzed everything around her, but
all the new experiences demanded that she shut down the overflow of
sensory information for self-preservation. She stepped closer to
Bossgond.
Marian clutched the cape. The lining was soft and warm. She
swayed to the chant. Bossgond had a fabulous voice. She'd enjoy
listening to it, learning from him.
Slam! The huge door to the Temple hit the stone wall and
a small woman shot into the room, followed by a big man who was
reaching for her.
"Alexa!" the man called.
Unlike everyone else, the woman was pale-skinned, with a white
scar on one cheek, short in stature, and though she had silver
hair, she appeared young.
The Marshalls started to surround her.
"Wait!" the woman called. In English.
Bossgond gripped Marian's upper arm hard and sped up his chant,
the rhythm now almost syncopated, making her dizzy with the energy
surrounding them.
The Marshalls' protests drowned out most of the woman Alexa's
words. Marian heard, "Wait! I came as soon as I could. You need to
know, you're in Lladrana-"
Magic coalesced around Marian and Bossgond, a huge pressure of
Power. She tried to take a step forward, but was held in place by
an invisible force.
"Can I go home?" Marian cried, straining to hear.
"Not yet," Alexa called.
"How soon?" Marian yelled.
Alexa shrugged. "Maybe a month!"
Marian bit her lip. What if Andrew returned earlier or had an
exacerbation during his retreat? She could lose him! She would
definitely lose her college fund.. .and her job.
What should she do? What could she do?
Her ritual had been in part to find help for Andrew. These
people might be able to cure him. She'd just have to find the
information and get back to him fast.
The man who'd followed Alexa plucked her from an irritated
circle of Marshalls. Holding her protectively, he ran with her to
the edge of the pentacle.
Alexa met Marian's gaze. "Make sure you ask about PairBonding.
And the Snap!"
Bossgond intoned, "Vont!"
The room disappeared. Vertigo hit Marian, and in the next
instant she fell onto a thick rug into which was woven a red
pentagram.
"Gagghhh," she croaked. Brilliant. Wonderful impression to make
on her teacher-and now the man whose power she was under.
Surely she could beat him physically if she had to, couldn't
she? Heaven knew she had heft.
But he sat next to her, watching with concerned eyes, then
stooped and brushed back her hair. Then he took her hand and helped
her up with unexpected strength, banished the flowing energy lines
around his pentagram with a whistle. Then he led her to a soft
chair that looked a lot like a fancy outdoor lounger. A series of
velvet pillows was attached to an adjustable wooden frame; the back
was set in a reclined position and the footrest was elevated.
Marian sat, leaned back and arranged the cloak in folds around
her. She'd kept a good grip on the front since receiving the cape
and it had only flapped open a little now and then, but had saved
her modesty.
In Lladrana.
Alexa had called it Lladrana. Who was she, and why wasn't
she the one helping Marian?
Bossgond, who'd gone to a sink on the far side of the Tower,
came back with a goblet of water. From the sprig of leaves that
floated on top she guessed it wasn't just water. She picked the
greenery out of the cup and sniffed. Minty. She dropped the leaves
back into the drink and, keeping her eyes on the old man, swallowed
a bit.
He smiled in reassurance, took the cup from her, drank some
himself and handed it back. Had she looked that suspicious?
Bossgond went to a large cabinet and opened it. Out floated a
sphere the size of an exercise ball. Large and blue-green-brown, it
rotated slowly. Marian's stomach tightened when she realized it was
a globe, but that the oceans and continents were unknown to her.
She looked away.
"Amee," Bossgond said.
First things first. Finding out how time passed on this new
world was of the utmost importance. All around her and through her,
magic surged like electricity. She should be able to master it and
use it to help Andrew, but how much time did she have?
She stood and moved closer to the globe, saw three large
continents and a countrylike portion outlined in black.
When the globe completed one full rotation, she said, "One day."
As it continued to move, she ticked off the days on her hand.
Feeling a little foolish, she continued with her mime. She drew
a pentagram, then sat on the floor. "Earth!" she said.
With skinny little brows raised, he said, "Exotique Terre."
"Terra." She nodded.
His eyebrows rose higher. "Exotique Terre."
Marian sighed and repeated, "Exotique Terre." With whooshing
sounds and wide gestures, and more noises to indicate the gong and
chimes and chants, she acted out her trip to Lladrana.
Then she went to the globe again and counted days as it rotated,
tilting her head in a question. Was any of this getting
through?
Bossgond frowned, then crossed his tower room to more shelves
and cupboards. He returned with a crude globe of Earth, about five
inches around. When she took the heavy ball of metal, she sensed
someone from her own world had made it. The echoes of the Song of
Mother Earth lingered. She could do better.
Narrowing her eyes, she concentrated, reaching deep inside her
for the Earth-song. While she was at it, she visualized the
continents and oceans as best she could. Not well enough. She
closed her eyes and thought of space shots of the earth, radar and
Doppler weather maps, especially of the United States, and
Colorado.
The metal in her hands warmed. When she opened her eyes, the
globe looked a lot better, the land masses and oceans well-defined.
She scowled at the eastern coastline of the United States.
Something was definitely off there; Australia and Asia weren't as
sharp as on a regular globe. Not perfect. Her shoulders
slumped.
Bossgond's bony fingers closed over her shoulder and squeezed.
Catching her gaze with his own chocolate-brown one, he gave a
little bow. "Thank you. You have increased my knowledge of Exotique
Terre tenfold."
He was trying to drive another point home. She was well aware of
a teacher's body language. Cradling the Earth globe in the crook of
his arm, he touched the much larger orb with his index finger.
"Amee." He glanced at her, eyes piercing. "Thay parfay."
Ah, the words were close enough to French. The image of planet
Amee wasn't perfect.
So he could sense her emotions, or perhaps he just read her
dissatisfaction with her construct in her face.
She sighed.
Bossgond released the Earth-globe and it hung next to the large
one of Amee. Earth rotated slower, in sync with Amee's days and
nights. Amazing that the days were the same-or perhaps this was an
alternative earth-but with different continents? Maybe all the
planets with similar rotations were reached by one dimensional
corridor....
Marian's head hurt. She had too little information for
hypothesis, and so much was happening.
All the tension in her body at the thought of being trapped here
and Andrew worrying himself into seizures released in a long
shudder. Weary, she swallowed hard, walked stiffly back to the
lounge chair and sank into the pillows, closing her eyes.
When she opened them, she gazed up at Bossgond, feeling lost. He
urged her to drink more of the herbal liquid, and she did. Her
stomach calmed.
Bossgond touched her shoulder. "Marian," he said. Tapping his
chest, he said, "Bossgond."
He was encouraging her, emphasizing how much she'd already
learned. That she was learning with every breath, with every
glance.
He took her hand and linked their fingers. She sensed great age.
Vitality, isolation.
Looking down at their hands, she saw a white aura, heard chords
forming into a song. He smiled, and she found herself smiling back.
Bossgond patted her hand and rose.
He went to the pentagram and fished out the large crystal ball
from his bag, then returned. With a little tune, mist swirled
inside the sphere, then solidified into the image of the handsome
magician who'd first entered the pentacle with her.
"Jaquar Dumont," Bossgond said.
Marian remembered the older woman who'd spoken for the Marshalls
calling him that, in flat tones. Jaquar.
"Chalmon Pace," Bossgond said, and the other mage's face
replaced Jaquar's.
He looked like a pompous associate professor, ever conscious of
his status and sure of his worth. Still, there was something in his
eyes that made Marian think he could be a good friend. His image
faded.
The female magician appeared in the sphere. "Venetria Fourney,"
said Bossgond.
The strikingly beautiful woman was easy to recall. They'd both
received shocks when the woman touched her. Marian rubbed her
fingers and grimaced at the memory. She'd liked the look of
Venetria, but since they'd shocked each other and Bossgond and she
meshed, if the conflicting energy was any indication, they wouldn't
work well together.
Marian caught her breath as she reran the thought. Wasn't she
being cool and analytical about all these strange and wondrous
things? Perhaps it was a dream. When she went to bed and woke up,
maybe everything would be fine. Tuck would wake her up in the
middle of the night by running on his wheel or rattling in his
cage, rearranging his hoard....
Right now, all she knew was here. She licked her lips. Marian
wondered about Alexa. She'd liked the look of her better than the
rest. Marian tapped the ball with a fingernail.
"Alexa?"
The woman's image formed. To her surprise, Marian saw the small
figure dressed in jeans and a down parka with knit hat, scarf and
mittens, trudging through snow in the mountains. She recognized the
parka as one she'd admired in a local boutique. Colorado? Was Alexa
from Colorado, too? Excitement flooded Marian and she nearly missed
seeing Alexa enter a silver arch.
Several seconds later, the woman appeared in the same pentacle
as Marian had, except that the energy lines of this one glowed
green.
Her parka was ripped, her hat gone, and her hair was brown. Not
silver, as Marian had seen. Something had turned Alexa's hair
silver since she arrived. Some experience here in Lladrana.
Jaquar wanted to leave the Temple, fast. Since the Marshalls
were dismissing the pentacle, none of the Circlets would be able to
leave that way.
His mind raced, considering plans to retrieve the new Exotique.
He ignored Chalmon's and Venetria's recriminations. Unlike them, he
had friends in the Castle.
He also ignored most of the Marshalls. Jaquar immediately went
to Bastien Vauxveau, who was talking to his wife, the Exotique
Alexa. Jaquar tapped Bastien on the shoulder. "Come along, I have
some propositions. One for you and one for Alyeka."
Bastien turned to Jaquar with gleaming eyes. "We'll be glad to
negotiate." He sent a glance to the other Marshalls. "They don't
need us."
Alexa sighed and spoke in heavily accented Lladranan. "I got
here too late."
"You weren't supposed to interfere at all," Bastien scolded.
"I don't mind flouting the Marshalls, but the Singer knows what
she's doing and she said not to take part in the Summoning."
"Huh," Alexa said, glancing around as if she was afraid the
Singer was watching. "We weren't part of the ritual, but I did want
to help her understand. It was miserable for me." She set her mouth
and swept out of the Temple.
For a small woman, she moved fast. Jaquar thought her locomotion
might be aided by her great Power. Alexa wanted to hurry, thus the
Song swept her along.
When Jaquar exited, he stopped under the Temple's portico to let
his eyes adjust to the moonlight. It was a beautiful spring night
and the Marshalls' Castle looked magnificent, as always. But Jaquar
sensed a distinct change in the atmosphere since he'd last been
here. At that time, under all their trappings of Power, the
Marshalls had been fearful. The magical boundaries of Lladrana were
falling and the Exotique they'd Summoned to reverse this had just
left. They'd discovered the sangvile in their walls.
Just that easily, remembering the sangvile dimmed the evening
for Jaquar. Alexa, who'd been waiting for Bastien and him, put a
hand on Jaquar's arm.
"I heard about your parents." She pronounced every word
carefully, clearly. "I'm sorry for your loss."
Jaquar grunted.
Bastien threw an arm around Jaquar's shoulder, squeezed and let
go. "You have propositions for us?"
If he wanted vengeance-justice, he'd need help from these
two. He twisted his mouth into the semblance of a smile. He must
not have done too well, because Alexa took a step back and her hand
fell to the Marshall's baton she wore on her left hip.
Jaquar switched his gaze to Bastien, who was shorter than he and
more solidly made. "You have the best stable of flying horses. I
want a volaran, preferably one you raised from a foal." It seemed
he'd be doing a lot of traveling and volaran-back would be the
easiest, least energy-consuming way.
Now Bastien clapped a hand on Jaquar's shoulder. "We'll
deal."
"And I want to talk to Alyeka about the new Exotique...." Jaquar
noted Alexa's scowl at the word and corrected himself. "Marian. I
want to consult Alyeka about Marian."
Alexa sent him an approving look. "Let's discuss this in our
suite," she said. With a whirl of blue-green robes she took off
down the cloister walk.
Renewed hope filled Jaquar. He wasn't finished yet. Somehow he'd
get the woman back.
5
Marian awoke to the sound of waves pounding against rock,
different from her white-noise machine. Opening sleepy eyes, she
stared at a rounded stone wall-not white plaster. She shot up in
bed and memory rushed back. She was not home in her apartment, not
in Boulder, not in Colorado, not in the United States of America.
She wasn't even on Earth-she reached for that basic connection..
.and felt nothing.
She'd had no nightmares, but shivered as she recalled the ones
she'd had in the past month. The druids could have been the
Marshalls. Other parts of those dreams could happen here on
Lladrana. Could they possibly have been more than dreams-like a
foretelling of the future? Fingers clutching her blankets, she
stared around her.
A beautiful, stained-glass partition showing flowers in a meadow
stood a few feet from the end of the bed. To her right and left,
the stone wall curved out of sight. She was in a tower room of the
Sorcerer Bossgond.
"Lladrana," she whispered, and the word seemed to sink down,
down, echoing through the floor, through the two stories beneath
her, into the ground-and sent a resonance back. The faint, broken
notes of a beautiful, sad melody rose to strum in her mind like a
sobbing violin. She shook her head, but the song remained, hovering
in the back of her brain.
Inhaling deeply, she tasted the faint tang of salt, and noted
the waves again. She was on an island. Beyond the glass partition
she saw bright sunlight from the windows on the far tower wall.
She'd traveled through a wind-whistling space, but not outer
space-another dimension?
Her stomach rumbled, and she focused on her hunger.. .and
finding a bathroom. Last night she'd merely stumbled into the room,
found the bed behind the glass partition. Letting the cloak drop
where she stood, she had crawled under the covers. She'd shivered,
then visualized heat surrounding her body and it had happened.
Magic? Maybe.
She hopped from the bed and her feet sank into a luxurious rug
of jewel-toned colors. The long gray cape she'd borrowed from one
of the Marshalls who'd summoned her lay like a dark cloud against
the carpet. She frowned as she picked it up. Though it had braided
frog-fastenings all the way down the front, she didn't consider it
viable clothing, but since it was all she had, she swirled it
around her, pushed her arms through the slits and looped the frogs.
Feeling a little better-and warmer-she noticed shelves on the far
side of the bed where a stack of clothes were folded. She'd
investigate later.
Though the glass partition didn't rise as far as the stone
ceiling, it ran along this portion of the tower ending at the wall
to her right. To her left, there was space enough for a doorway.
When she walked around the partition, she saw that the bedroom was
approximately a third of the whole room. The other two-thirds
looked like a study, except for a small, carved wooden closet
protruding halfway down the round wall in front of her. The closet
door faced her. She hurried to it, opened the door and sighed in
relief at the sight of an old-fashioned toilet with the tank near
the ceiling.
When she was done, she left the closet in search of a sink and
found multiple ones behind the closet. On the far side of the sinks
was a counter that held glassware, like an old alchemist's
setup.
Then came the door to the stairway and, after the door, a huge
desk. Shelves lined the room, except for the three large window
embrasures and a fireplace. A small grouping of two chairs and a
love seat sat in front of the fireplace close to the stained
glass.
It was charming, but not home. How long would she be here? She
only wanted help for Andrew, then she'd leave.
A horn blew and Marian jumped. Bossgond's voice came to her.
Breakfast and lessons in fifteen minutes. None of the words
were hard, so she grasped the meaning and hurried back to the
clothes shelves in the bedroom.
She touched the yoke of a royal-blue velvet garment, then lifted
it and found herself holding a long gown with embroidered yellow
birds. It seemed to be her size.
Additionally, she had a green dress, a maroon one and a black
gown-all with little yellow birds and narrow three-quarter-length
sleeves.
Though the blue robe had looked and felt heavy when she held it,
the minute she put it on it seemed like gossamer. It molded around
her breasts and lifted them, and Marian squeaked in surprise.
Built-in magical bra! This would take some getting used to. The
gown sent warmth to her skin-reflecting her own heat?
Marian looked dubiously at the one pair of footwear on the
floor, tucked under the lowest shelf. They appeared more like
pouches to put over her feet than actual shoes. Picking them up,
she found they had soft leather uppers and springy insoles. When
she turned them over she saw a material that looked like fine
scales. Snake? Dragon?
Anyway, they looked far too big for her, and the uppers stuck up
in folds. She couldn't see any laces.
Bracing a hand against the wall-it was warm to her touch- she
slipped on one of the shoes. It felt lined with fur and she hummed
with pleasure at the soft silkiness. Then the pouch tightened,
molding to foot and ankle. She tottered, stumbled, took a few steps
to regain her balance and fell onto the bed. She stared at her
foot. Not only had the slipper conformed to her body, but it had
turned the same color as her gown and now had little yellow birds
all over it. She wiggled her feet-one shod, one bare. The one with
the shoe felt better. Magical shoes.
Her heart jumped. What if she couldn't take it off? "Off!" she
ordered.
Nothing happened.
She hooked her thumbs inside the shoe and pushed down. The shoe
slid off her foot, tickling her sole, and plopped to the floor.
All right; one of them could come off. But if she put on both,
would she dance to her death? There were plenty of folklore stories
about shoes and mutilation, like Cinderella.
For a moment she just stared at the shoes, realizing that she
was in a place far, far different from home. That it seemed
somewhat like Earth accentuated her shock-she judged this place by
Earth experiences, concepts, standards, and theymight not apply.
Any move she made, thinking she knew the outcome, could be wrong
and lead her to her doom.
She fell back on the bed, hands over pounding heart, touching
the cloth that seemed like velvet but could be anything- fur, skin,
plastic wrap for all she knew. Even her senses could be
lying to her. Perhaps nothing here was real.
And if she continued to think that way, to challenge
everything-her senses, her mind, her experiences-she'd go mad. To
her horror, tears dribbled from her eyes.
This should be such an incredible, fascinating experience for a
true scholar! A whole new world to learn, a new aspect of her own
self-and magic!-to explore and master. She should be thrilled.
Instead, she wanted to curl up into a fetal position and pull
the covers over her head.
Bossgond was waiting for her. With breakfast. Even the thought
of food couldn't move her.
She was flipping out over a pair of shoes.
They were magic shoes.
Now her nose was clogged. She'd need to go to the toilet closet
and get some tissue-stuff she'd found there. It was in a roll and
had felt like regular toilet paper. She'd just used it, not
scrutinized it. Who knew what it was?
Was she going to let panic over the thought of a new world, a
magical world, paralyze her?
Wrong question.
The right question was, How long was she going to let
panic paralyze her?
Marian had always thought of herself as willing to learn new
things, explore new ideas-perhaps she'd even been snobbish about
that quality. In fact, she was a coward.
But her full-moon ritual had been about discovering why she'd
experienced odd sounds and nightmares. Now she knew. Golden Raven
had said she'd meet a teacher. She had. Now she had to figure out
how all this could help Andrew.
"Marian." The rich, deep voice of Bossgond seemed to echo around
the room. It certainly reverberated inside her mind. She turned her
head to see a tube running down the wall next to her bed, with a
flared opening like a trumpet.
"Marian, the oeuf is cooling."
She struggled to one elbow, then the second. "I'm coming," she
replied in French-the language she'd been speaking for hours
now-except for that tiny exchange with Alexa.
Alexa! While wallowing in her own fear she'd forgotten
Alexa-someone who'd already come from Colorado, had experiences she
could share with Marian. She was pitifully grateful that she didn't
have to take everything on faith, walking into a fog without a clue
as to the landscape around her. Alexa would help her. Marian was
not alone.
Just the thought of the other woman energized her.
"I'll be right there," she called out to Bossgond, a Sorcerer
who would teach her magic.
She stretched, feeling her muscles pull, feeling something
inside her that had been squashed and cramped, unfurl-a
butterfly-breaking-open-her-cocoon feeling.
She would practice wonder, learn all she could of magic,
in relation to herself and to Andrew. He'd expect her to live life
in the moment, wring everything she could out of each experience,
good or bad, not worry about being in control or making
mistakes.
So she put on the shoes and forced herself to admire the feel
and look of them. Then she marched to the toilet closet and took
some tissue and blew her nose, washed her face with water from a
tap.
Then she went out her door to find out if "oeuf' meant egg.
She ascended the stairs to Bossgond's quarters one floor above
her own. When she reached the door there was something like a harp
hanging on it. She pondered for a moment and decided it must be a
doorbell or a knocker. Running her thumbnail over the strings
released a ripple of sound that echoed through the tower and
plucked a couple of strings inside her, too-excitement and
anticipation.
Bossgond opened the door, wearing a short tunic that showed his
bony knees, a large yellow bird embroidered on the front. The
garment was cut so full that it hung on his slight frame. He stood
aside and Marian entered.
His space looked much like hers-windows letting in spring
sunlight, shelves all around the room, a desk, bathroom closet and
a partition hiding the bedroom. But it was as warm as a summer's
day-and the warmth felt more natural than the central heating she
was used to at home. Perhaps it was the humidity, or the scents the
air carried-fading spring blossoms and the start of summer.
The word oeuf meant omelette-a mild cheese omelette along
with croissants and hot chocolate with whipped cream. They ate at a
table near his fireplace. The fire flickered rainbow flames and
Bossgond let her watch them, examine the room and eat in peace.
When they finished, with a wave of his hand the dirty dishes
disappeared. If she were on Earth she could have marketed that for
a fortune-but where did the dishes go, and would they return? If
they returned, would they be the same dishes, but clean? How
clean would they be? Would bacteria still live-
Bossgond chuckled. "I see many questions in your eyes," he said,
enunciating each word.
Marian nodded and he nodded back. Apparently that was the same,
too, nodding as agreement.
He rose slowly and his joints popped. She frowned. He could make
the dishes disappear but had trouble rising? With motions and two
or three attempts at rephrasing the question, she made herself
clear.
"I have great Power," he said, rubbing his fingers together in a
gesture like the one that meant "money" back home. "And my will and
the Power make magical tasks easy, but my body is old and physical
tasks are not easy."
Marian wanted to know how old he was, but it was rude in her
culture to ask and she didn't know the rules of this society. She
just looked concerned and nodded again.
He pointed to the center of the room where three thick
oriental-looking rugs were layered. Huge pillows lay atop them
along with several small tables that held objects: odd bottles- and
were those wands?-and a couple of knives.
Marian hoped the knives were used ritually and practically, like
in Wicca, and not for bloodletting and sacrifice. From the corner
of her eye she studied Bossgond. She could take him in a physical
fight, but if he used magic she was sure she could be bound and
gutted in the blink of an eye. She shuddered.
The old man chuckled again and went to lower himself to the
rugs. He sat cross-legged, palms up on his knees and sent her a
quizzical glance.
She squared her shoulders. There was nothing she could do this
minute except scream and fight for her life if he meant her harm.
So she sank down across from him. To her amazement, her gown needed
no adjusting: it flowed out of her way when she sat.
"First we'll determine how strong your Power is and whether you
will be a good apprentice for me," he said, lifting his arms
shoulder height, hands angled up as if pressing against an
invisible wall. "Do as I do."
Marian mimicked him, putting her hands up. There was enough
space between them that they had a few inches between their hands
and didn't touch.
Bossgond hummed, and invisible pressure against her palms
snapped Marian's hands back to her shoulders. He smiled, but kept
the pressure steady.
Magical arm wrestling? Marian narrowed her eyes, sucked in a
deep breath. She felt her own will, and something else-
Power?-surge through her body, tingle through her hands, leave the
hollow of her palms to push against his, be stopped against a
barrier.
She concentrated, found a pool of energy within herself, drew it
up and sent it out in a ragged stream against his Power. His hands
trembled. Marian set her teeth, visualized a river of force inside
her, welling up from the deep pool, turning into a torrent pouring
from her hands to crash against Bossgond's wall. His hands snapped
back to his shoulders.
Looking surprised, he frowned, then pushed back at her. She kept
the Power steady against the strong force of his for what seemed an
eternity that drained her and started her panting-perhaps only a
minute. Then she slumped back against the pillow. Bossgond's Power
followed her, taking her breath, then vanished.
"Extraordinaire," he said.
She heard his voice around buzzing in her ears. Gentle,
inexorable fingers clamped around her wrists and brought her
upright again. Her lungs pumped and the dress seemed to soak up her
sweat and release a floral scent. Huh. Wriggling her legs and
bottom, shifting her shoulders, she stared at the man from under
lowered lashes.
He was inscrutable. Like a certain little green, pointy-eared
Master of the Force.
Her own personal taskmaster. Great. She knew now that she hadn't
given the green guy's students the sympathy they had deserved.
"Next test," Bossgond said, raising his hands, palms vertical
again.
Marian didn't think she could twitch a finger, but managed to
tilt her hands up from her wrists.
"To see how well we will do as Circlet and Apprentice," Bossgond
said.
Marian suppressed a grimace. She knew the word "apprentice." It
made her feel like she was ten again-maybe younger, just starting
elementary school-though, she was a beginner at magic.
She didn't even have the basic socialization of any child
brought up in this culture-what constituted rules of magic?
But Alexa seemed to have managed a position of high status, and
in a relatively short a time, if Marian's recollection of the coat
Alexa had worn in the vision was right. It was last winter's
jacket, so she would have purchased it no earlier than the
fall....
A sting against her palms brought her back to find her teacher
frowning at her from under silver eyebrows. Her cheeks flamed.
She'd let her attention wander! Oh yes, just like a kindergartner.
Heat flushed her neck, too. She'd disappointed a prof-not good. She
prided herself on being an exceptional student.
So she dipped her head in apology. "Excusez moi."
Bossgond nodded solemnly. "Attencion," he said.
She nodded again, kept her gaze fastened on his face, her mind
on what would come next. Her stomach tightened. She hated pop
quizzes. How could you get a perfect score without practice?
"Follow me," Bossgond said. He moved his hands far apart, cocked
his head.
Intent on him, she moved her hands apart, too. Then he began
gesturing, doing odd things with his hands, arms, face.
Marian mirrored him, watching. Finally, he returned to his
original position.
"Now you move and I will follow," he said.
This was the strangest activity Marian had ever done with a
teacher. Tentatively she set her hands together as if in prayer. He
did the same. A little bolder, she tilted her head, grinned. He did
the same. So they continued, Marian leading, until he said,
"Fini."
When her eyes met his, he said, "Now we move together, but
neither of us leads."
That sounded very strange. So she watched him and when he moved
his hands a little she followed, but leaned to one side, and he did
so, too. It was...balance. More than that, it was a connection,
knowing how they should move together, and in her mind she began to
hear a stream of musical notes weaving into a melody. A couple of
minutes later, they brought their hands together, palm to palm, and
a huge flare of energy burst from her, dazzling her with its
lightning brightness, its orchestral chord thundering in her ears,
her mind.
She spun free. Suddenly she was looking down on her body,
hand-to-hand with Bossgond, in a round tower room. Then she was in
the room above them, where she saw the star pentagram that had
brought her. She rose above the tower to see a large island, the
green coast of an unfamiliar land, then drifted even higher until
she saw how the world curved.
Free.
Terrified. There was nothing to hold her here-no bond with this
planet, this land. She still couldn't feel any link to Earth or
Andrew, and wherever that corridor was that she'd entered Lladrana
from, it didn't seem to be a physical place she could find.
Marian floated, unable to control her magic that had pushed her
from her body. The Power was so strong she was unable to move her
spirit-self even a smidgeon.
A slight breeze could blow her away.
6
Bossgond's strong hands squeezed hers. "Come back!" His resonant
voice trembled through her wavery self and she plummeted into her
body. She clung to his hands, stared at his homely face with her
physical eyes. Her body trembled.
"You have returned," Bossgond said. "Good." He separated his
fingers from hers one by one and stood up stiffly. "I will get you
hareco-a drink to help you settle."
Leaning back on the huge, firm pillow that braced her, Marian
hoped it wasn't some pitiful herbal tea. Good black tea would be
nice, or-
She smelled it. Coffee! And she murmured a prayer of thanks.
Bossgond handed her a mug and she inhaled the fragrance. Hot, dark
coffee. She drank greedily, while he sipped from a matching mug.
The pottery had a big yellow bird emblazoned on it, but she was too
shaken to ask about the icon.
"Your first lesson will be in grounding." He frowned, and the
small black streak in his golden hair seemed to darken, or perhaps
the rest glowed.
Marian pressed her lips together. She understood what he said
well enough, and she wasn't that much of a kindergartner that she
didn't know what "grounding" was-making sure you were solid in your
body before doing magic.
Keeping her voice even, she set aside her mug and said, "This
will be hard. I do not have a link-" she hooked her two index
fingers together "-to Amee. My link to Exotique Terre is broken."
Her chin wobbled at the thought. She grabbed her mug and sipped
again-something she could understand, coffee.
Bossgond patted her shoulder awkwardly and took his place again.
"From my observations, it seems as if Exotique Terre has little
magic," Bossgond said, as she drained the last, lovely gulp from
her mug.
Exotique Terre was what he'd called the globe of Earth the night
before. Marian didn't know what to say, so she shrugged.
"A Power like yours would not have been so stifled, so bound
until it struggled to get free, here on Amee." The old man's tone
was laced with disapproval of her previous world. "You are far
beyond the age of the standard Apprentice." He snorted. "But
perhaps it is good that you are an adult. I have little
patience."
He'd been fine with her so far, but she sensed she was a novelty
to him.
The meaning of his words sank in. "From your observations? You
can see into my world?"
"Indeed," he said, and waved to something that looked like an
enormous set of binoculars on a stand, aimed at a series of mirrors
that reflected infinitely. She couldn't figure out how the device
worked, didn't know if she dared to ask to see her old world.
She yearned to know that Andrew was all right.
Bossgond came and took the empty mug from her, offered his hand
to help her up. As she took it, the song between them uncurled
again. He nodded.
"We have a small bond, which will grow. It is good."
After she was on her feet, he released her. "Come, we must
remedy your lack of a link with Amee as soon as possible." He held
out his hand and a walking stick flew into it.
Marian gulped.
Nodding to the table holding the wooden wands, he said, "Choose
a walking stick."
His words made her uneasy, but she walked to the table and
picked up each in turn. The dark red one felt the best, as if it
were an extension of her arm. She repressed the urge to wave it and
say "abracadabra" or "kalamazam." Instead she handed it to
Bossgond.
He grinned in satisfaction and said, "Staff!"
The wand grew into a walking stick as high as her head- looking
like a rod or wand from a tarot deck.
Bossgond handed it to her, and when she grasped it this time, a
low note sounded and the thing vibrated. Small twigs appeared, then
sprouted greenery, then ivy twined up the staff, spreading silver
and gold leaves. She stared at it open-mouthed, and again her
memory was prodded-by the vision Bossgond had shown her in his
crystal ball when they'd first met. She'd had a staff just like
this. No wonder he smiled- either he'd foreseen this, or he had
deduced her Power correctly. What else wasn't he telling her?
Many things, she thought. The old sorcerer wasn't revealing
anything he didn't want her to know, and he probably thought she
knew more than she did. Her ignorance would impede them both.
He took her hand and led her to the stairs, and they wound their
way down the tower to arched, double wooden doors. Marian watched
intently as he slid the bar on the door to the side and into iron
brackets attached to the stone wall. She'd be getting more than
magic lessons, more than the sociology of a new culture-she'd learn
more about architecture, too. So much to learn! It excited her.
Bossgond shoved open the door and they walked out into a small
area paved with large gray flagstones, then into springy green
grass. The wind whisked their garments around them, tugged at
Marian's hair. He set a hand on her head and said, "Alam," and her
hair settled around her head. Neat trick, but she rather missed the
fingers of the breeze caressing her scalp.
The sunlight was yellow, clouds wispy white against a sky not
quite as blue as a Colorado spring sky. Marian shifted her
shoulders as she saw forested hills rolling to the horizon. She was
used to a view of the Flatirons and Rocky Mountains. She was
accustomed to a campus full of buildings, professors and students,
not a lonely island tower with one brilliant Sorcerer.
Bossgond pulled on her hand and they circled the great tower,
over bony rock, slippery moss and sweetly scented grass, until they
were almost halfway around. He stilled, closed his eyes, cocked his
head, then opened his lids and nodded once. "No one watches."
That was good to know-another trick Marian would like to learn.
A person couldn't depend on atavistic itching between the shoulder
blades. Bossgond squatted, gestured to her to do the same, then
indicated the top of a stone at the bottom of the tower wall that
looked well buried. He licked his finger and wiped off some dirt,
and Marian saw a tiny outline of a bird. Bossgond's heraldic
bird-she'd figured that much out. He whispered a word that was
taken from her ears by the wind and a cube of moss and earth around
the stone lifted as if cut. Another sighing two-note whistle and
the stone removed itself. Bossgond waved for her to look into the
darkness.
She had to wait a moment for her eyes to adjust before she could
see a rough pyramid point inside the hollow.
"The keystone of the tower," Bossgond said. "The proof that a
person has become a Circlet Sorcerer or Sorceress is when they
raise their own tower with their Power."
Marian swallowed.
He reached in and caressed the keystone, smiling as if he petted
a beloved animal.
Marian thought of her lost hamster Tuck and sniffled. What on
Earth-on Amee-did these people do for handkerchiefs? And where
would they put them? She hadn't noticed any pockets-but as she
thought of them, four flapped against her skin. Interesting.
"If this stone is found and destroyed, my tower will fall. I may
or may not be hurt, depending on whether I am in the tower and how
much of my Power I have invested in my tower at the time. At the
moment you are not Powerful enough to do me harm, and when we Bond
by Blood as Master and Apprentice, we will be incapable of harming
each other. Any secrets will never be able to pass our lips."
Blood-bond. Right. The idea should have deterred her, but it
didn't. Blood played a large part in various cultures' rituals to
symbolize a connection between people. She considered it a small
price to pay for knowledge.
"You understand?" asked Bossgond.
Marian nodded, tucking the information and ramifications away to
consider later. She reached in and touched the keystone. A little
current ran through her-not soothing like her connection to Mother
Earth had been-and she twitched. She couldn't imagine grounding
herself with this rock; there was too much energy.
Bossgond sighed, shrugged. "Not a good stone for you to link
to." With a wave of his hand the tower stone and the cube of sod
settled back into place, looking as if they'd been undisturbed for
centuries. "This is my Tower on Alf Island. But it is not the first
Tower. We will walk to old Mortig's Tower. Perhaps that will be
better for you."
They set off briskly and a minute later Marian bumped into a
sizzling invisible barrier. She yelped and jumped back.
On the other side of the...forcefield, Bossgond smirked at her.
Then he stepped up before her, touched his index finger to the
barrier and "cut" a door for her. She lifted her chin and swept
through past him.
"When we bond you will be able to enter or leave at will. I will
also show you the courtesy portal for well-intentioned
visitors."
After a quick walk away from the sun-west, then-of about a half
hour, they reached the remnants of tower walls about five feet
high. Bossgond showed her the hidden keystone to this, too. She
started to touch the thing and electricity zipped between her
fingers and the stone, shocking her. She fell back on her bottom
with an outraged cry.
Bossgond creaked a laugh, helped her up, dusted off her seat and
strode off in another direction. As they walked, Bossgond told her
about his island.
He had demonstrated the strongest Power in several generations
when he was a youngster and had piqued the interest of the Powerful
Mortig. The choice of islands was always given to the most Powerful
first. Bossgond had held Alf Island for many years.
Alf was about a hundred miles across and had everything a person
would want-fresh streams full of fish, hills, forests, glades. His
tower was near enough to the coast and a small harbor to appreciate
the waves without being threatened by any flooding or crumbling
ground. A paradise to Bossgond.
It sounded pretty good to Marian, too, though she was sure she'd
miss mountains.
She thought back to when she'd hovered over the island. The
shape was a little like Australia.
After an hour-and-a-half walk they came to a depression in the
ground, too close to the rocky edge of the island to be altogether
stable. The circle of flat stones was barely visible, but Power
still radiated, drawing her.
Bossgond stood back and watched, but she strode to the hidden
keystone with confidence. This one didn't vibrate quite right,
either, but it felt better than either of the others.
Bossgond shook his head. "You are not of Amee, so no previous
keystone will tune to you easily. Perhaps you will find a better
place than this as you range the islands. For now, let us do the
grounding here."
To Marian's embarrassment, she found herself lying on her
stomach, arms angled down a few feet to the keystone. When she
curled her hands around the pyramid-shaped rock, Power shot through
her, erasing any exhaustion, starting a tingle racing in her
veins.
Bossgond sat cross-legged beside her and placed a hand on her
back, rubbed it. It felt nice, gentle, avuncular. She closed her
eyes and let her mind sink into a quiet pool, only feeling- the
warmth of the ground beneath her, the small breeze around her. And
with three hummed notes, Bossgond sent her into a deep trance.
Distantly she heard his voice instructing her. Under his spell,
she sang to the stone and it reverberated one note, two, three back
to her, and she felt a small tether to Amee.
With a soothing chant, Bossgond lifted her from her trance,
brought her into clear-headed wakefulness. Again she felt
energized. She laughed in delight at the connection with a
world-song again, though this particular planet-melody was
heart-wrenchingly sad.
She stood and stretched, limbering up after her time lying so
still on the ground.
Bossgond looked at her, then at the circle of grass and stones.
Then he gazed out to the sea, his face impassive. "If we do well
together and you do not want another island or a manor on the
mainland, I will grant you the right to raise another tower on the
island." The corners of his lips curved slightly upward. He
gestured. "You may choose where you please, as long as it is
outside my protective ring around my tower."
The forcefield they'd crossed. She nodded.
His expression turned grim and he raised a finger. "If we do
well together."
His tone was that of a man who'd been crotchety for decades.
When they returned to the Tower, Bossgond led her back upstairs
for lunch. She sat at the table and he set a plate and silverware
for them both. Then he put a few empty platters between them. He
went to a cupboard and came back with a box.
Taking a crumb of bread, he put it on one platter, then added a
bit of dried fruit, a few strings of jerky. As Marian stared,
Bossgond passed his hands over the dishes and sang a long
Songspell. The breadcrumb turned into a large loaf of bread dusted
with flour, the jerky became four thick slices of roast beef, the
fruit plumped into apples.
Under Marian's fixed gaze, Bossgond cut a piece of each and put
it back into the magical box, then returned the box to the
cupboard.
When he returned, he sang a little blessing, then made a
sandwich and dug into his reconstituted meal.
Hesitantly, Marian sliced a piece of bread-wishing there was
some Dijon mustard-and put a slice of roast beef on it. She took a
bite, chewed and swallowed.
The food was plentiful but tasteless. The victuals had to be
nutritious because Bossgond was still alive and he'd probably been
eating this way for years. No wonder he was so scrawny.
After finishing off an apple and half her sandwich, Marian said,
"Don't you cook?"
Sandwich at his open mouth, Bossgond's eyes widened. He put down
the bread and meat.
"Do you?" His voice was hoarse, his gaze gleamed with hope.
"Of course."
He stood up so fast that his chair rocked. "Come with me!"
Nearly running to keep up with him, Marian followed him out the
door, down the stairs past her own suite and to the level below her
room.
Bossgond threw open the door. A gleaming kitchen took up most of
the space, along with an empty pantry.
"Cooks were too much bother," he muttered. "I can fish,"
Bossgond said eagerly. "I can draw a deer to us and butcher
it."
lck. Marian was a civilized supermarket predator; she
couldn't imagine such a thing. It was enough to make a person a
vegetarian.
She crossed her arms. "1 don't intend to be here very long. My
priority, and what I want to spend my time doing, is learning from
you, not cooking."
He looked torn, then tried a pitiful look, but he was too
arrogant to do pitiful well.
"I would, however, supervise a cook." She liked her food,
too-all too much.
Bossgond's lower lip stuck out.
"How long has it been since you had a cook?"
"Fifty years," he muttered.
"You need a little pampering. You're too thin, you need good
food. You deserve it. I'm sure you could afford a cook."
"They are impossible to work with, men or women. They pry. They
talk too much. They don't like living on the island."
So he wanted an unambitious introvert who liked solitude. Marian
wondered how to advertise the position. "Let me think about this."
She wouldn't be able to eat Bossgond's rations for long.
He nodded, but his expression eased. He climbed the stairs back
to his chambers with a spring in his step.
Bossgond banished the food and dishes with a wave of his hand,
then they both returned to the center of the room.
Scowling, he said, "You plan on leaving soon? We paid the
Marshalls for your Summoning."
Marian lifted her chin. "My brother is ill, he needs me. My
ritual was to find answers to strange things happening in my life
and how to help him. I'm hoping that Amee will have information
about his disease and how to mitigate it. I intend to take that
knowledge back to him. I'll try to repay you."
Bossgond snorted, then studied her with narrowed eyes. "We will
speak of this later. First you must study."
Within a few minutes, Marian had mastered the art of grounding
herself, and the small, invisible thread spinning between her and
the ancient keystone had thickened to a braided strand.
He taught her to light the fire with her mind, to levitate a
book, to "call" her walking stick. Energy drained from her with
each task, and a slight film of sweat dampened her skin. Her dress
gave out the scent of herbs.
Then Bossgond rose and offered both his hands, beaming. "You
have mastered the first level of Apprenticeship." He bowed.
Already? She dropped a little curtsy and a bubble of triumph
expanded in her chest.
"To celebrate we will have another cup of hareco."
Oh boy, if coffee was so rare that she had to pass tests to get
it, life was going to be tough.
He poured them each another cup of coffee and settled into the
middle of the room with his mug. He gestured around them. "Survey
the room, touch what you like to discover your particular vocation
of study."
Marian blinked at him. "How?"
One corner of the man's mouth crinkled upward. "You will know.
It will hum in your mind."
Marian had always loved music as much as books, but this aural
culture made her feel alien. Still, she smiled, drained the last,
delicious sip of coffee and set her mug aside. She looked
around.
Bossgond leaned back against the pillows and sipped, staring out
the window. Without his penetrating gaze, Marian felt able to act
more naturally and to concentrate on exploring the room full of
fascinating objects. She looked at the huge binoculars, but didn't
cross over to them. When she moved away from the instrument,
Bossgond grunted in approval, and she decided to save the
binoculars for last if she didn't find anything else that struck a
chord.
She scanned the shelves. The books intimidated her a little
since she couldn't read the fancy cursive lettering. She leafed
through one and jolted when a couple of the pictures became
three-dimensional. Then she put it back with a sigh. She wouldn't
be in Lladrana long enough to learn how to read the language. A
pity.
For an hour she indulged herself with the treasures crammed on
the shelves-boxes and bottles, rugs, goblets and instruments, and
art objects of all kinds. She found an elegant, gold-etched bottle
that held all the scents of summer, a flying carpet for short trips
around the island, models of castles and people and animals.
Bossgond only stiffened twice during her explorations: once when
she picked up something like a wand, but longer, heavier, and
feeling like blood and death; again when she reached a big, open
book that looked like new pages had been added.
She moved on to another table with a series of glass jars that
looked a little like terrariums, increasing in size from a large
mug to a great globe of about two feet. She touched the top of one
in the middle and a sharp ping sounded in her mind. Static
electricity-from glass?-shot up her arm.
In an instant Bossgond was beside her. Grinning.
"Very good," he said, rubbing his hands.
Marian wet her lips, stared at the jars. Now that she'd touched
one, they all sang to her, like a series of glass
wind-chimes. "What does it mean?"
7
Bossgond smiled. "You are a Weather Mage."
Her pulse quickened. "Weather? Are you sure?" She'd always had
that odd sense....
He chuckled. "Very sure." Taking the largest globe with both
hands, he walked to the conversation pit and set it in the middle.
"You must start with this one. When you reach Scholar status, you
will be competent in modifying the weather in the midsize jar. Your
Circlet Test will be of fire, wind, wave and earth in the smallest
jar."
The one with plants and trees and tiny bugs. Marian gulped,
knowing instinctively that she could kill them all.
She sat cross-legged in front of the large sphere.
"Look into the glass," he said.
She did and caught her breath. There was a world down there!
With continents and oceans, mountains, streams, vegetation.
Bossgond sat behind her, his skinny chest to her back, his legs
framing hers. Marian tensed.
He clucked his tongue and placed his knobby hands on hers. His
chest expanded behind her as he inhaled deeply. "I was no better
than average at this task," he murmured. "But I can show you how to
direct your Power. Concentrate on the world below. Do you see the
clouds?"
Marian frowned and narrowed her vision, and a portion of one
continent seemed to enlarge. "I see...buildings! There aren't
really people down there, are there?" Her voice trembled in horror.
She couldn't do this, wouldn't do this if she might harm
anyone! Mistakes would be terrible.
"Look closer," Bossgond said.
Marian did. Concentrating, she focused her gaze until she saw a
city of stone and wood, with winding roads to manor houses and two
castles on a hill. They were all perfect little models, but they
were models-as were the trees and animals. There were no fake
people. Her breath rushed out.
"Now, back to where you see clouds," Bossgond said.
She "zoomed out," noted fat cumulus clouds and some wispy ones.
She hadn't taken any science courses in years, wished she recalled
more about weather. She smiled. Weather, with a capital W, was now
her focus of study. She was a potential Weather Magician. How
cool!
"We will try to move the clouds." Bossgond's hands tightened
over hers. "Feel the essence of the clouds, their density and
shape."
Was that like the exercise of "be a cloud" that profs in the
Drama Department taught? Bossgond's mind led her to a cloud that
showed gray at the bottom, yet puffed up white and pretty near the
top. It was humongous.
She shut her eyes and focused on sensation. She seemed to be
floating in the sky, but not as she had before, not herself,
Marian, but Cloud. She floated stomach-down, and the portion of her
body closest to the ground felt heavy and full of liquid. For the
first time in her life her ass felt airy. She couldn't prevent
herself from thinking of it as a huge billowing cloud, and
giggled.
Bossgond hissed. His irritation nudged her, and control of the
cloud slipped from her grasp. It rained. Thankfully nothing
happened to her real body.
"See if you can move the cloud," Bossgond said, disapproval
clear.
She pushed her cloud. Nothing happened, except that she got a
visual of her hands penetrating cool air. She tried something
different. She was now separate from the cloud and grappled to
encompass it. With her mind she formed a tiny membrane from
air molecule to air molecule of the cloud, then pushed. It
moved. She pushed again, and it slid rapidly through the air.
Having fun, she set her mind against it and shoved. It turned into
a streak of white.
"Whee!" Marian cried. She was flying, chasing a cloud.
Bossgond made a strangled sound and fell backward, away from
her.
She stopped, withdrew her consciousness from the weather globe
and shifted around to see what was wrong.
He was holding his head as if he had a migraine.
"Bossgond?" she asked.
The mage winced. "You are Powerful. I didn't expect you to be
able to move the cloud so easily, so fast and far. I never could,"
he grumbled.
"You have other talents." Marian scooted behind him and started
massaging his temples, wondering why she felt compelled to reassure
him. He grunted, then sighed with pleasure.
"Of course," he said, but he didn't sound as sarcastic as she'd
expected. He huffed out a breath. "You are a naturally gifted
student in Power. It happens sometimes, that there are
geniuses."
An inner glow of pleasure lit her. Of course, she'd been a
professional student all her life and knew she learned quickly..
.not that this was learning so much as revealing,
discovering something deep inside her, something she was meant to
be.
Bossgond said, "Naturally the Song would bring someone innately
Powerful to the Tower Community."
That evening after another mediocre meal, Marian joined Bossgond
in the ritual room. He began to Sing the blood-bond ceremony and
she joined in when she could. When he picked up a small, sharp
knife and strips of linen, she froze. What was she getting
into?
Bossgond smiled reassuringly. "We will be bound together for
four hours-the correct amount of time for a bond between Master and
Apprentice. There are both lesser and greater bonds, depending upon
the length of the binding. A Pairing-Marriage bond is a full night
and day."
She nodded and tried to relax as he took her arm and shoved up
her sleeve, concentrating on something else-like how glad she was
that neither of them had drunk a lot at dinner.
His voice deepened with mystery, with mastery as he cut her arm.
The pain was slight, but she yelped and stared as he inserted a
little tube in her arm. It looked as if he'd encased a whole vein.
Then he slit open his own arm and captured a vein.
Exactly how much blood would they be exchanging? This whole
thing involved a lot more than she'd realized.
After they were linked, they finished Singing the ceremony,
Marian in a low tone, experimenting with using her voice and Power.
Even before they snuffed the last candle, she could feel his blood
inside her, weighty with age, with Power, but also..murky.
With his blood came memories, strange and distorted and
flickering too fast before her mind's eye for her to catch and
analyze them.
As the minutes passed, through Bossgond, Marian's small tune
merged with the planet's. Wonder grew inside her.
She found herself panting, and regulated her breath-yoga
breaths. Slowly, they left the top ritual floor and descended to
Bossgond's study. He'd placed a small desk and chair next to his
larger one, along with the big glass sphere that contained Marian's
planet.
His mouth moved and a second or two later she heard his
distorted voice, not beautiful now, but beating at her ears.
"Study the continents, the contours of the land, and especially
the weather."
Marian stared at the sphere, but minutes passed before her eyes
focused. She swallowed. Everything was so overwhelming! She chose a
cloud-studied it as it floated over the continent, changed shapes,
absorbed other clouds and became a weather front. Her heart pounded
dully in her chest.
Bossgond fiddled with lenses on his desk. Glimmers of his
thoughts came with the flow of memories.
A few minutes after the second hour, Bossgond abruptly quit his
work and they went back to the ritual room, where they relaxed in
lounge chairs. This was easier, as she didn't have to struggle with
the input from his mind as he worked.
Slowly, slowly, without the distraction of her studies or his,
relaxing in the chair, Marian regained her equilibrium and could
snatch bits of Bossgond's knowledge, process it, understand it.
Comprehension of the language came first, and she smiled faintly.
Lladranan culture celebrated the Singer-a prophetess oracle-and the
Song, what they called the Divine. It made sense that she "heard"
the language in her blood, trickling to her brain, opening new
paths.
Too aware of her own memories flowing to Bossgond, Marian let
Bossgond's most personal ones zoom past her. She knew he'd had two
long-term lovers, that the relationships hadn't been totally
satisfying. He probably learned all about her mother-and Andrew.
Perhaps he could help with Andrew. At least Bossgond now knew how
much she loved her brother and why it was imperative for her to
return to Earth.
Then Marian "saw" the northern boundary of Lladrana, the fence
posts and magical forcefield boundary strung between them. The
fence posts blackened and fell, the border gaped. Monsters invaded.
Horrible, hideous, evil-looking things that brought nausea, so she
pushed the thoughts away.
She experienced worms in the rain. Most died when they hit the
ground, some tunneled into the earth. Frinks.
Some people opened mouths to the frinks, were consumed by them
inside until they turned into monsters within a human skin.
Mockers.
From a colorful whirl of views through the binoculars, Marian
picked out Alexa-at a graduation, at a funeral, hiking up a
mountain trail at night, walking through a silver arch.
Alexa choosing a baton. Alexa in battle-grisly images... Marian
shook her head sharply, no! She didn't want to see that. Not now,
not yet.
A new fence post-Alexa grinning, holding a helmet under her
arm.
Marian herself at her work-study job in the Engineering
Department. On a date with Jack Wilse. Talking to her mother.
Hugging Andrew.
She pulled her thoughts back to the here and now-to the shrouded
room around her, the cupboards that held the globes of Amee and
Earth she'd seen the night before. The clock showed three hours had
passed and seemed to tick with her heartbeat.
Bossgond made a strangled noise. She glanced at him-a gray tinge
had crept under his skin. His breath was ragged.
"I can't bear it," he mumbled. "Your world is too difficult to
contemplate. Too harsh."
Marian thought that being invaded by terrible monsters was worse
than Denver traffic, which she'd been thinking of. But she reached
for the linen strips that bound their arms together.
"No!" Bossgond cried, sitting straight up. "This needs a
delicate touch."
She understood him much better now, so she leaned back. As he
began to chant over the bindings, her blood slowed and dizziness
hit her. He carefully separated their arms. The tubes had
dissolved. A hollow sigh of relief escaped him.
After a few more chanting words, his hard fingertip ran up her
arm, sealing her wound and leaving cold fire in its wake. Bossgond
wrapped one strip along her arm and sang a simple healing tune that
made Marian smile. She was feeling sleepier and sleepier. Had
Bossgond siphoned her own energy into himself, thinking it was his
right as her master? She didn't like that thought or the dark
parade that followed. Maybe he'd been acting all day, and now she
was about to become a sacrifice. Bad. Very bad. How could she have
been so gullible?
Darkness swooped down on her.
Maps tucked under his arm, Jaquar followed Chalmon up his Tower
stairs to his study. The other Sorcerer radiated irritation,
probably still upset at Jaquar's behavior in claiming Exotique
Marian the day before. Or perhaps it was that Jaquar had gathered a
circle of Sorcerers and Sorceresses to watch the Dark's nest, and
they were reporting to him.
Before Jaquar's parents died, Chalmon had considered himself the
leader of their generation of the Tower Community. Jaquar, like
most, had gone his own way and done small tasks for Chalmon as
requested, and if they cost little.
That had changed. Jaquar had never wanted to be a leader, barely
had the patience to deal with the idiosyncrasies of a group of
individuals, but he hungered for vengeance.
When they reached Chalmon's tidy study, Venetria rose and came
forward. Jaquar sensed she'd been with Chalmon since the debacle at
the Marshalls' Castle the day before.
"Salutations, Venetria." He bowed and kissed her hand. "How did
you two get here?"
Chalmon waved a hand as if impatient with the question, any
small talk. "I bought a coach and Venetria bespelled it to fly. It
will be a welcome addition to my household."
Venetria frowned. "It's my coach."
"I bought it." Chalmon scowled at his lover.
"But my flight spell is much more costly than the coach
itself."
"Why didn't you settle this between the two of you before?"
asked Jaquar.
Chalmon reddened. Venetria smiled in satisfaction. "Chalmon was
in a hurry to get into the coach. All that Power compressed
in that pentacle yesterday was so invigorating."
Venetria heaved a sigh, which raised her chest. She did have
beautiful breasts. Almost as beautiful as the Exotique's, though
Jaquar had no business thinking such thoughts.
He strode to the center of the room where a study table and
several chairs sat, unrolled one of the large sheets of paper he'd
brought with him and placed it on the table. "This is a diagram and
map of Plane Eighteen. I've found it to be the best for observing
the nest. The master and monsters don't sense us because it is a
few levels more spiritual-more good-than what they can
achieve."
"They are too destructive for Eighteen?" Venetria asked. "I
don't do well in any Plane lower than Twenty-four." She slid
Chalmon a glance. "Unless I'm angry at Chalmon."
Jaquar's mouth twisted. "I've reached upward to Eighty-two, as
low as Eleven-which is the Plane the horrors use most often."
Chalmon grunted. "Is that other roll level Eleven?"
"Yes." Jaquar moved the first map to one side of the table and
set the second down.
As he unrolled it, Chalmon placed a paperweight on each of the
four corners and studied the musical notation at the bottom of the
chart. His nose wrinkled as if smelling a bad odor.
"Foul," Chalmon said. He tapped the music and a low, grating hum
and clashing notes reverberated through the room. Venetria jumped
and put her hands over her ears.
"You probably shouldn't have done that," Jaquar said mildly.
Greasy smoke hovered in the air. "You're right." Chalmon
scowled. "Now they could become aware of me, might have a direct
path here. I'll have to do a Ritual Cleansing." He glanced at
Jaquar. "How do you make such maps without alerting the monsters,
the Master, the Dark itself?"
"Very carefully." He had no intention of revealing his
secrets.
For an instant, Chalmon's face lightened with humor, then he
sobered again and nodded to chairs near the fireplace. They were
simple and covered in royal blue, Chalmon's color. He waited until
Jaquar and Venetria were seated, then said, "I am not comfortable
with your previous plan to train the new Exotique and use her to
infiltrate the nest."
Relief eased Jaquar's tight muscles. Despite his lust for
revenge, he'd had qualm, too, since he met Marian. Her personal
Song was so lovely.
Chalmon continued. "I studied the information you sent regarding
the recent observations of the Dark's nest. The Sorcerer who was
watching last night said there was a great stirring when Marian was
Summoned. The Dark obviously knows she's arrived. We may not have
time for her full training."
Venetria pursed her lips. "True. I hope Bossgond teaches her
rapidly and well."
Chalmon said, "The Sorceress watching the nest this morning
stated there has been increased activity, as if more monsters would
soon be released." He squared his shoulders. "I contacted the
others. We-the group of us-agree that we may have to move faster
than anticipated."
Anger stirred inside Jaquar. "Sounds as if you were busy during
my trip from my island this evening."
Eyes steely, Chalmon said, "From the Power I felt surrounding
the Exotique, she is strong enough and Exotique enough to
penetrate the magical shield keeping the rest of us at bay."
"I want her trained up to Circlet status first," Jaquar
insisted. "It would be foolish to throw away such a fearsome weapon
as Marian without learning all she is capable of." He stood and
paced. "Has it occurred to you that the Master is baiting a trap?
And he wants us to do just as we planned-send the new Exotique
Marian to her destruction instead of guarding her and using her?
She's Powerful and could be the worst danger to him if she develops
into a Circlet, unites us and fights with us and Exotique
Alyeka."
Chalmon shifted his shoulders. "That may well be true, but I'm
sure she could hurt the nest, and you saw what one sangvile
did. Its damage is exponential. If the Master releases
several-"
"We are watching. We will know when the horrors leave the
nest maw. We know how to defeat all the monsters we've encountered
so far, including the sangvile, including the dreeth. I do not want
to act in haste!"
Venetria and Chalmon exchanged glances.
"We should definitely spend more time with her and learn her
Powers before we solidify our plans," Venetria said. She grimaced.
"I suppose we should visit Bossgond."
"He'll probably be having many people dropping by-Circlets of
the Tower and Marshalls, too. Nothing will stop Exotique Alyeka
from greeting another from her old world." Jaquar smiled as he
recalled the small woman's excitement the previous day. "And since
Alyeka doesn't fly well, her husband, Bastien, will bring her. As a
black-and-white, Bastien has a wide streak of curiosity
himself."
Jaquar chuckled. "Yes, Bossgond's Tower may become a busy place.
Enough to make him cranky. I plan to go see him and Marian
myself."
Venetria and Chalmon watched Jaquar leave. As they stood at the
top of the tower, Chalmon's fingers tightened on hers, his profile
went stern. The Song between them was rough and uneven as their
thoughts and desires conflicted. As usual.
"I didn't ask to be jolted out of my complacency and into the
knowledge of great danger."
She jerked her hand from his and turned away from the window.
"I'm sorry I burdened you when my aunt died, made you face what the
sangvile could do to us," she said stiffly. "I must go." She'd
wanted to stay, had felt protected and warm here, even though his
furnishings were not to her taste. He'd never noticed that, of
course. She digressed from the topic he'd introduced, but she
didn't want to think about what plans he might propose.
He grasped her, both hands on her shoulders. "Jaquar is
deviating from his original tune in this."
"Easier to consider harm to an unknown person than someone we've
met."
"A very beautiful woman who has an intriguing Song. Who he held
in his arms, who spun notes with him even during a short interval."
Now Chalmon gazed beyond her. "But if Jaquar retreats from this
plan, I will not." His hawkish stare met hers again, pinned her.
"What of you?"
"I don't know."
Marian woke at the feel of a cool, damp, herbal-scented cloth
wiping her face. Bossgond stared down at her, concerned.
"It's only been a few minutes, and is still evening," he said in
a raspy voice. "Let us adjourn to my chambers."
Testing her arms and legs, Marian stretched. Her limbs worked
fine, though her insides felt a little hollow.
She took Bossgond's hand and rose, stood a moment, but no
dizziness occurred. Smiling at her master, a man whose bark was
worse than his bite from all she'd learned of him, she went with
him back down to his study.
It seemed even more comfortable since Marian had experienced the
Power it had taken to raise the Tower, the money- known here as
zhiv-to furnish it.
Attentive, Bossgond settled Marian in the nest of pillows in the
center of the room, then brought her coffee. She'd discovered
through their bonding that coffee wasn't rare-not as rare as
tea-but Bossgond considered it a treat.
He sat opposite her, his wrinkled cheeks faintly flushed. "We
are bonded, but not as deeply as usual between Master and
Apprentice. To compensate for my failure to complete the full
bonding I will show you something special tomorrow morning."
Marian stared at him, recognizing that his self-condemnation at
such a "failure," wasn't attractive. He'd done his best, hadn't he?
They did have a bond, a Song, and it felt strong to her.
He'd done neither of them harm. In fact, harm to him had been
averted, since the strangeness of Earth had threatened his sanity.
Yet he expected her to condemn him? She didn't know what to
say.
He waved a hand irritably. "You may go."
So she curtsied and left. Head crammed full of the day's
experiences, she wound down the stairs thinking that she should
keep a journal. She entered her room in full dark, but before the
door closed behind her, a soft light flickered on.
A lantern atop the large desk glowed-bright on the first blank
pages of an open book. Marian's mouth dropped open, but she was too
tired to make a sound, too weary to mess with the feather pen
sitting in the pretty gold-edged glass inkwell.
Instead she went behind the stained-glass partition to her
bedroom and removed her clothes and shoes, folding her dress up as
she'd found it. Not a wrinkle or a speck of dirt marred the cloth.
On one of the lower shelves she found a pile of pale gowns that
looked like nightwear, and drew one on, sighing with tired pleasure
as the soft material whispered over her skin. When she climbed into
bed and found the sheets warm, she chuckled. Magic could provide
incredible luxury.
Trying her own Power, she said, "Lights out," and smiled as
darkness enveloped her loft.
Just before she fell asleep, a thought occurred to her: all her
skill in being able to shape weather would not help Andrew.
In the morning Marian found a little golden tattoo of a bird on
the inside of her left wrist, but no other scar. When she tried to
converse with Bossgond at breakfast, he replied in grunts, and she
decided he was naturally a grumpy old man who'd tried to tone down
his manner for the past couple of days. She much preferred his
slight deception to her mother's hypocrisy. They ate another bland
cheese omelette and coffee.
She must remember to get them a cook.
After breakfast her heart pumped hard as he gestured to the
oversize binoculars-the ones he used to watch Earth. They had their
own stand of polished brass. The instrument itself was of
copper-inlaid brass and shone-obviously Bossgond's pride and joy.
The eyepieces were the right size; it was the other end that held
great lenses, each about three feet in diameter.
Bossgond went to the stand and adjusted gleaming gears. "I've
been observing your Exotique Terre for half a year now- as soon as
a Circlet reported that destiny tunes indicated more Exotiques
would be Summoned."
"Oh?" Marian encouraged.
"Then the Marshalls Summoned the first Exotique as expected, to
keep and train as one of their own, and indications appeared that
we, the Tower Community of Circlets, should accept the next
Exotique as one of us."
He was leaving a lot out, Marian was sure, but right now all her
attention was focused on the binoculars. She bit her lip, waiting
impatiently.
Bossgond tapped the fancy brass instrument. "This is still
focused on your former abode. See for yourself."
8
Careful not to joggle the binoculars, Marian bent to peer
through the eyepiece.
Her breath caught as she saw the gray carpet of her apartment,
the taped red star. The incense smoke had long since dissipated,
but the little power-light for her sound system was still on. Her
PDA was in the middle of the pentacle.
Drawing back, she nibbled her bottom lip, glanced at Bossgond.
"I know it's been only two days, but my brother is very sick. Could
I check on him?"
He stared at her in silence, and she wondered how much he'd
received and understood about Andrew. She kept her eyes on his. She
wouldn't back down. Bossgond's eyes narrowed.
"How far away is your brother?"
Marian spread her hands. "Across the country from me. My home is
in the middle of a great land mass-"
Bossgond nodded.
"-and my brother is on the West Coast." What was that island's
name? She'd researched the program when Andrew first considered it
a year ago. Freesan!
"You know the geography of your land and where to find him?"
Bossgond's eyes shifted, and she sensed excitement flowing from
him. He'd have someone to help him tour Exotique Terre.
"Yes," she said.
He pointed to a couple of great gears with knobs and calibrated
markings. "This will distance you from the scene, and this gear
will bring you closer."
One eye at the lens, Marian turned the biggest gear. Her living
room shrank and was replaced by her apartment building. As she kept
turning, she saw her street, the city, the state. It was brown-much
drier than Lladrana, even in the spring. With a gentle touch she
angled the viewing field until she saw northwest Washington State,
moved the binoculars again to focus on the many islands. Freesan
was small and undistinguished-long and narrow. She recalled that
the center sat on the north end of the island. Finally, she found
the main structure. She zoomed in, but couldn't see Andrew. A fine
tremor started within her.
"You are blood. Think of his Song," Bossgond murmured near her
ear.
That didn't help. She hadn't ever noticed a Song coming from
Andrew. She set her teeth, drew in a deep breath. Her magic was
strong here in Lladrana. If she couldn't hear him, perhaps she
could sense him or see his aura-or something. She mentally
reached for Andrew, visualizing him. For a moment she
touched him, then lost him. She muttered under her breath,
reached again-and there he was! Quickly, with fumbling
fingers, she narrowed the scope of the binoculars and saw him. Her
heart clutched. She hadn't seen him for a couple of months and his
recent exacerbations had taken a toll. He was very thin, as if his
will sustained him more than his body.
Bossgond nudged her aside, but kept a hand on her upper arm as
he looked through the binoculars. "Ah yes, I hear your family
melody."
He did?
He glanced up at her and clucked his tongue.
"Listen!"
So she did, with her heart and imagination, more than her mind,
and caught a brief series of notes. She did hear that while
her own portion of the twined melody was strong, Andrew's was
arrhythmic and missed beats.
"He does well," Bossgond said. "He is active."
The old man stepped aside, allowing Marian to peek again, and
she saw Andrew laughing in a group as they picked up packs and
walked from the building.
"That is enough," Bossgond said, drawing her away. "You used
much Power for this session, but the worlds of Exotique Terre and
Amee draw apart, and every day it will cost more energy to view.
You have much to learn, and need your strength to do so."
"I want to check on Andrew at least once a week."
Bossgond raised his brows. "We will discuss a price for
this."
"How about finding and supervising the cook, as we spoke
of?"
His eyes went calculating, as if pondering whether she could
survive in his culture, outside his Tower. She wondered, too, but
she'd think of something.
"Very well," he agreed.
Light-headed with relief, she took a couple of paces to the wall
and leaned on it.
Bossgond smirked. "You don't know how to restore your Power
yet." Then he bent and adjusted the gears. "They are focused on
your former rooms again. 'I am a Circlet, behold,'" he said.
He whistled-sharp and nearly at the edge of her hearing- and
made an intricate, swooping gesture. Then he held her PDA in his
hand.
Marian gasped.
He bowed, grinning, and offered it to her.
She snatched it from his hand, clutched it to her chest. "Thank
you."
"You are welcome," he said austerely. "Consider it payment for
my failure last night to complete the blood-bond to its proper
strength."
"You retrieved my...little machine book. Could you possibly find
my pet? He was lost in the corridor when we came here."
She thought of a pocket in the green gown she wore and one
appeared, perfect to hold the PDA. She put her possession- her only
possession from Earth-into the pocket.
Waving her hands, she tried to describe Tuck. "He's a...a
mousekin in a clear ball."
Bossgond shook his head. "The corridor between worlds is
inexplicable. The winds can be absent or like a hurricane.
Monsters..."
"No!"
"I saw you come through, but only glimpsed your pet at that
time. I have not seen him since. The binoculars are not designed to
explore the corridor. I'm sorry."
Marian bit her lip. "Thank you, anyway."
At that moment all the chimes in the open window sounded.
"Visitors come." Bossgond scowled.
"A boat?"
"No." He flicked his fingers to the window. "Go see." He looked
as if he suppressed a smile...at her expense? She crossed to the
window.
A flying horse carrying two people circled the Tower, then
descended to land in front of the main door. Marian found herself
leaning out of the window to stare at the Pegasus. It was the most
beautiful creature she'd ever seen, and she'd never been a girl
fond of horses. But this beast was different. It glowed with
magic.
"Hey!" someone called. "Hey, Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your
hair!"
Marian choked and tore her gaze away from the winged horse to
narrow her eyes at the small woman at the bottom of the Tower.
Alexa-the other Earth woman, the first Exotique in centuries.
"Will that grumpy old man let us in?" Alexa called, and Marian
was torn between laughter at Alexa's words and surprise that they'd
both called him the same thing.
"I'll ask," Marian shouted back in English, then turned to
Bossgond. "Will you allow Alexa to visit?"
"I let the volaran through my shield, didn't I?" he snapped, and
Marian sensed he'd learned enough English from her to know "grumpy
old man." She flushed but didn't apologize.
"I have not spoken with the Exotique Swordmarshall Alyeka yet."
With little grace, Bossgond tromped down the circular stairs,
grumbling under his breath.
Marian followed, excitement fizzing through her. When they
reached the bottom of the stairs, Bossgond ordered, "Light." The
lowest round chamber, which Marian hadn't seen before, lit with a
mellow glow.
The room was so beautiful that Marian gasped: the walls were
paneled in rich wood, carpets covered the stone floors, two large
fireplaces with sculpted marble surrounds held crackling fires.
Several tapestries hung on the walls. There were no windows. A
defensive measure?
Ripples of sound came from the entry doors-a scale rising and
falling, rising and-
"Will you stop that!" Bossgond yanked open one side of the
doors, letting late-spring sunlight flood into the room, and faced
a woman smaller than he. Alexa.
She wore thick tights and a tunic that came to mid-thigh. And
chain mail, with sheaths for sword and her wand-baton. Grinning at
Bossgond, she said, "Shalutashuns, Bossgond."
Marian realized several things all at once: Alexa was about
Marian's own age, small for an Earth woman-about five foot even-and
very small for a Lladranan. And she had a terrible accent.
"Shalutashuns, Marian," Alexa said, sounding drunk. She sighed
and switched to English. "It's the accent. I'm not good at
languages and Lladranan still tangles my tongue."
"Kind of you finally to visit me," Bossgond huffed. "I'm only
the most Powerful Circlet on Amee."
Alexa blinked at him. Her next words were carefully pronounced.
"I had no idea you wished to see me. You could have invited me, or
come to the Castle."
Bossgond drew himself up so he could tower over the smaller
woman. It didn't faze her. "I do not travel."
"Huh," said Alexa. "Sounds like you were just as interested in
me as everyone else in Lladrana and irritated because I didn't come
and satisfy your curiosity." She grinned widely. "As a matter of
fact, I'd never heard of you until a couple of days ago."
He narrowed his eyes and looked like an evil mage. "Th-those
arrogant Marshalls. Those impertinent younger Circlets..." he
sputtered.
"I'm sure you're right." Alexa nodded. "Sometimes prying
information out of them is like pulling teeth."
He looked horrified.
Alexa glanced at Marian. "You think they use that idiom?" she
said in English.
"It doesn't look like it. I think you've shocked him to his
core."
"Hmm. I haven't had any dental problems since I've been here."
She ran her tongue around her teeth. "I wonder what they do. I hope
it's better than on Earth. I hate dentists."
"How long have you been here?" Marian asked.
"Nearly three months. The weeks and days are about the same as
on Earth, you know."
"Yes."
Alexa heaved a sigh. "I suppose we'd better find out what you
know and what you don't."
"A good idea."
"You must have a million questions."
"Somewhere around that."
"Did the feycoocu come with you?" asked Bossgond.
"What?" Marian didn't catch the word.
"Fey-coo-cu," Alexa said slowly. She fingered the baton sheathed
at her side. "She's my sidekick." Alexa grinned. "A magical
shapeshifter."
Marian stared. "If you say so." But a little thrill went through
her.
Alexa laughed. "Yep, we have plenty to talk about." She turned
to a simmering Bossgond. "I am not proficient on volaranback. My
husband brought me. The feycoocu accompanied us in her hawk
form."
"Husband?" Marian asked. "Did two of you come from
Colorado?"
"Nope, I met him here." Alexa shifted, flushed slightly. "I know
it's been quick, but you know that old saying about extreme
circumstances and love. You don't get any more extreme
circumstances than these on Lladrana." All humor left her face, and
she rubbed at the scar on her cheek. "Let's walk and talk."
"I think we'd better," Marian said, swallowing apprehension. On
the whole, she'd been treating this lightly, but there was no
denying that if a bunch of people summoned you from another world,
they were probably desperate and wanted something from you.
Alexa made a half bow to Bossgond. "May I visit with your
Apprentice, Circlet Bossgond?"
He nodded regally. "Send the feycoocu to me if you see her. I
have never met one." His lip curled. "And if you don't see her, I
will talk to your Pairling. I've heard he is a black-and-white. We
need to study those unfortunates more."
"I'm sure he'll be glad to let you examine him," Alexa said
dryly.
"Pairling?" asked Marian.
"Husband, partner." Alexa frowned. "Isn't there a word
'shieldmate'?"
"Yes," Marian said.
Alexa nodded. "Then he's my shieldmate. We fight together."
A chill slithered down Marian's spine and she glanced at Alexa's
sword out of the corner of her eye. It appeared well used, with
plenty of nicks on the fingerguard. Marian couldn't imagine
fighting with a sword or shield. A hint of the dreams she'd had at
home drifted through her mind. She'd fought, though, with magic.
This was feeling more and more ominous. She ran her hands up and
down her arms.
"You may go, Apprentice," Bossgond said in a tone he hadn't used
before with her.
She stiffened and frowned at him. But that made her think, too.
Alexa apparently was a Marshall, which Marian had deduced was a
powerful elite. She was stuck as an Apprentice.
Alexa jerked her head to the door. "You should have seen the
horrible Tests the Marshalls put me through the minute I arrived,"
Alexa said under her breath.
She shuddered, and Marian knew the woman was utterly
sincere.
Marian followed her. "Bossgond showed me an image of you walking
in the mountains. Colorado?"
"Yes."
"You had brown hair."
Throwing open the door, Alexa stepped into the sunlight. It
gleamed on her silver hair. She looked back at Marian. "It was one
of those turn-white-overnight deals. The night I came."
"Really?" Marian's mouth had dried. As she went through the door
she welcomed the cheery warmth of the sun.
"Yeah, and my eyes deepened in color, too," Alexa said, her
curled fingers showing white knuckles as they clasped the top of
her baton.
The door slipped from Marian's grasp and slammed shut.
Alexa smiled at Marian and switched to English again. "You know
your way around here?"
"Not much."
Chuckling, Alexa said, "It's only been a couple of days since
you arrived-but I'm sure they've been jam-packed with
experiences."
"Oh yes," Marian said fervently. "I remember a nice forest path
and a peaceful meadow a few minutes away-will that suit?"
"For sure." She tilted her head. "I'm connected mentally to my
husband, Bastien. He's giving us privacy and hiding from Bossgond.
He says he'll talk to the old mage when he's ready."
Marian led the way from Bossgond's Tower. They paused at the
forcefield for Marian to open a "door" for Alexa. Outside
Bossgond's sphere of influence they stood in the sun and studied
each other.
"I like the looks of you," Alexa said.
Marian felt relief from an anxiety that she hadn't known she was
feeling. "I like the looks of you, too."
She held out her hand and they shook, then Alexa turned Marian's
arm over to see her wrist. Alexa's eyes sharpened.
"You've blood-bonded with Bossgond?"
"Yes, as Master and Apprentice." Marian pouted a little.
"Won't be long until you're a Circlet," Alexa said casually,
confidently. "The Song only Summons the best."
Marian liked her more and more.
Alexa held out her left arm and pushed her sleeve up, showing
her own tattoo: crossed wands. One was green with flames coming out
of the top, the other black with silver twined around it. "This is
my Pair-bond with Bastien-it's a blood-bond, sex bond, love bond.
We haven't had a formal ceremony-like a wedding-the full
binding-yet, though. We're both a little nervous about that."
Then she flipped open the short sheath and drew out the green
stick shown on the tattoo. It looked like jade.
"It's my baton-do you want to see it?" The offer was cheerfully
made, but her gaze watchful.
As soon as Marian touched the cool jade, a hard shock jolted up
her arm. She hung on as the energy-Alexa's energy-whirled through
her, then settled, itchy, under her skin. As she stared at the
baton, carved figures appeared, and the flames at the end
danced.
Alexa's eyes widened and she nodded incisively. "Good. I thought
you might be able to handle and use it. My husband, Bastien, can
hold it for a couple of minutes, use it once, but that's all. It's
good to know that you could wield it in an emergency."
"What emergency?" Marian said faintly, her stomach tightening,
watching mercury flow viscously in a glass tube under the
flames.
"On the battlefield, if I fall," Alexa said.
Marian dropped the baton. Alexa caught it-or rather, it flew
into her hand. Marian stared at the woman, fit and strong, with the
scar running down her cheek and somber eyes. Alexa heaved a
sigh.
"I was afraid that they'd leave this to me. That miserable old
man. But maybe you won't be fighting. Many Circlets don't." She
shrugged, but her voice was faintly condemning. "Let's walk and
talk."
"I'm not staying here. I have a life back home."
"Which is?"
"Boulder."
"Ah." Alexa's smile was quick and charming, but she covered the
ground rapidly. "Thought I pegged you for an academic."
"I'm working on my doctorate in Comparative Religion and
Philosophy," Marian said stiffly.
Alexa halted in the small meadow. A couple of large rocks graced
the center, looking like seats. She turned to Marian and tapped
herself on the chest. "Swordmarshall Alexa Fitzwalter, Esquire,
Attorney at Law."
"You're a lawyer?" It was the last thing Marian would
have guessed.
"Was." Alexa hitched herself up on one of the rocks and wiggled
to get comfortable. "Nice seat, warm from the sun." She smiled
serenely at Marian. "Now I do all my fighting on a battlefield, not
in a courtroom." A shadow lingered in her eyes.
Marian wasn't ready to hear her story. She had to make something
else very clear, first.
"I'm not staying. I can't. I have a life I must return to."
Alexa lifted her chin. "I have a life I crafted here."
"I have a brother with MS."
"Oh, I'm sorry." Alexa held out her hand, and Marian took
it-this time a sweet comfort flowed between them.
"It's progressive regressive MS, so it comes and goes. I'm
hoping to find a cure to take back. Maybe I can become Powerful
enough to cure him with magic?"
Alexa just shook her head. "I'm not sure how healing magic works
here. I've seen great wounds healed." She grimaced. "But it usually
takes more than one person and some serious spell-chants. For a
disease, I just don't know."
"My mother is back home, too," Marian said. She ran her hands
through her hair as she took the rock seat next to Alexa. It felt
as if many had sat there before-to talk, to eat, to watch the stars
at night.
They sat in silence for a moment before Alexa spoke. "I suppose
you'll return to Earth when the Snap comes, and stay. To be honest,
I don't know how much of our magic here will translate to magic
there." She waved a hand. "I never made it all the way back home
during the Snap-"
"The Snap?" Marian asked.
"I'll tell you about it later."
Marian sighed. "All right."
Alexa's hazel eyes appeared greener. "I didn't have any family
at home, nothing much to go back to, not compared to what I have
here." She shrugged and her smile quirked. "Though a vision I saw
indicated I'd become a federal judge if I went back."
Marian didn't doubt it. The woman was walking determination.
"I can't stay," Marian said. "I can't leave my brother."
"All right. But I'd better tell you what's going on,
anyway."
"That's a very good idea."
9
"Let me tell you why you were Summoned," Alexa said.
"As long as you don't expect me to stay," Marian cautioned.
"Too bad. Lladrana needs all the help it can get, and I can tell
by your aura that you'd be a lot of help." Alexa slipped
from her rock to sit on the sun-warmed ground.
Marian did the same and tried not to think about bugs.
Her expression completely serious, Alexa said, "The fact is,
Lladrana is in deep trouble. There are monsters invading from the
north." She shot Marian a glance. "I'm not talking about other
people with differing belief systems, but real, live, evil
monsters. The Lladranans usually call them 'horrors.'"
Bossgond's images of monsters came to Marian.
Alexa frowned. "Watch." With a sharp indrawn breath and narrowed
eyes, the air between them hazed. A huge, vicious-looking creature
hulked into view. It had long, sharp teeth that dripped saliva.
Curving, knifelike claws extended from its lifted forepaws.
"Render," Alexa said. She kept the image up and rotated it,
until Marian had to swallow hard.
The second monster was worse. Bigger even than the render, it
had putrid yellow fur, horns and spines along its arms, head and
back.
"Slayer. It can shoot the spines. They're poisonous, of
course."
"Of course," Marian said faintly, wondering if she was turning a
shade of green.
The slayer vanished and a third horror appeared. Worse. This one
had lizardlike gray skin, a round knobby head with burning red eyes
and a hole for a nose. Each shoulder sported an arm and two
tentacles with suction cups.
"Soul-sucker," Alexa said. "But it really just drains your
life-force." She waved a hand.
Just? Marian thought she squeaked, but Alexa showed no
evidence of hearing her.
The next horror that appeared metamorphosed between two shapes.
A black weblike substance and a dark manlike thing with rudimentary
head, arms and legs.
"It has a penis, too," Alexa said unsteadily. "Sangvile. One
tried to rape me as it sucked my Power from me."
The thing turned its head and its burning gaze struck Marian
like a blow.
This vision disappeared once quickly, as if Alexa didn't like
remembering it. Marian couldn't think how anyone could survive an
attempted rape by the hideous being.
"Dreeth," Alexa said on a sigh, and something Marian recognized
formed. At her exclamation, Alexa smiled.
"They look like pteradons, don't they?" Alexa said.
"More like a quetzalcoatluses with big bellies."
"Quetzalcoatlus. That sounds like the Aztec god."
"Yes, they were the largest of the flying dinosaurs." In her
studies, she'd found that many cultures had stories of dragons.
"Okay. They're dreeths here, as big as a house. A couple of them
nearly fell on me as they died. Bad," Alexa said so casually that
Marian stared at her in pure amazement.
She sorted out the implications. "You battle these things?"
"Pretty much every week." Alexa stroked the scar on her
face.
Marian couldn't imagine it. "You?"
Alexa met her gaze with fathomless eyes. "The Marshalls Summoned
me to be one of them, the best magical warriors in the business."
She shrugged. "Like Joan of Arc."
"Must have been a shock."
"Yeah. In Denver I'd taken one personal defense course from the
free university, several years ago. Big change in lifestyle." Now
she smiled. She waved a hand down her body and suddenly Marian saw
a rope of purple and silver. The link throbbed with life and
vibrated with a pretty melody. "But I'm well compensated. This is
my bond with my Shield, Bastien. As for financial reward, I have
wealth and an estate-you'll get your pick of land, too, if you
stay. And Bastien-" she grinned "-he's rather like a certain rogue
mercenary with a spaceship in the movies." She sighed. "I miss the
movies."
"You-they-the Marshalls, don't expect me to become one of them,
do they?"
"Nope. The Marshalls Summoned you for the Tower Community, the
Sorcerers and Sorceresses-the major ones are called Circlets."
Alexa grinned again. "No wonder they reached Boulder. Mostly
scholars, I think. Though Jaquar is one prime man."
Marian hadn't forgotten the hunk who'd appeared in the pentacle
with her.
"He's had it rough, lately, though. The sangvile ate his
parents."
"Ate his parents!"
Alexa waved her hand. "Okay, to be exact, the sangvile drained
his parents of their Power, turning them into husks that crumbled
into gray dust."
That didn't sound any better.
"He's really grieving. I'm sorry for that," Alexa said quietly.
"I know what he's feeling."
Not wanting to think about the man or his hurt, Marian said, "So
the Tower Summoned me."
"The Tower had the Marshalls of the Castle Community Summon
you," Alexa corrected. "The Circlets do not play well
together."
"What do they expect me to do?" Marian asked plaintively.
"I don't know. But there's plenty of work. The Marshalls are
just dealing with the monsters as they invade. That doesn't address
the underlying problem of where they're coming from or why, or how
to stop them."
Another image coalesced between them, this one of a
topographical map. "The country of Lladrana. Note the northern
border," said Alexa.
Marian studied it. Bright yellow glowed at points, and between
the lights wove a blue line.
"Magical fence posts and shield along the boundary," Alexa said,
explaining further Marian's vision from Bossgond. She always
preferred the maximum amount of facts, and appreciated Alexa's
visit. "The old fence posts were wearing out, the shield failing,
and the Marshalls didn't know how to make new fence posts or power
the boundary. That was my task."
"Sounds incredible."
"Yup, but I did it." Alexa beamed with pride. "Now we know how
to create fence posts and the boundary, but it isn't easy or quick.
You can see we still have big gaps in the border. Thus the
continued fighting-building up the army, which consists of Marshall
Pairs and Chevalier Pairs-Chevaliers are like knights, or
singletons. We're equal-opportunity employers. There are fifteen
Marshall Pairs now."
"So few!"
Alexa glanced at her. "There were six when I came a couple of
months ago. We're ramping up as fast as we can. But we lost three
Pairs before and during the first big battle."
There wasn't anything Marian could say. She stared at the tiny
glow of the fence posts and boundary line. So fragile to keep a
land safe. Magic and muscle, physical courage and a willingness to
fight were the only weapons being used to defend Lladrana now.
"It sounds to me," Marian said carefully, "as if the Lladranans
are missing a lot of knowledge."
Nodding approvingly, Alexa said, "That's right. They'd depended
on the boundary for centuries, killing the monsters as they
straggled over or through weak points. The Lladranans didn't find
their enemy, learn its flaws, formulate a plan to defeat it, or
destroy the threat once and for all."
Marian closed her eyes. "That's exactly what must be done."
"Yup," Alexa said with an exaggerated Western twang. She stood
and brushed off the seat of her pants, but since the leather looked
as if it would deflect an oil well, no dust or grass had stuck to
her. Old habits, Marian mused. No matter that she'd become
integrated into Lladranan society, much of Alexa would always be
pure Earthling.
She held out a hand to Marian. Marian put hers in it, her
fingers far larger than Alexa's. With a smooth pull, the smaller
woman drew Marian easily to her feet.
"Um, Marian." Alexa colored.
"Yes?"
"I think it would be good for both of us if we-uh-had a closer
connection so we could call each other mentally if need be, for
instance."
"A blood-bond? Like 1 have with Bossgond?"
"Yes."
"About that bond with Bossgond. Do you think it was the wrong
thing to do?"
Alexa shrugged. When she met Marian's eyes, hers were serious.
"I've relied heavily on my instincts here. I think it might serve
you well to do the same. After all, the Song sought you out, so you
have what is needed to mesh with the Tower, to stay here on
Amee."
She lifted her hand before Marian could speak. "I know, I know,
you need to get back to your brother, but I have the feeling that
the Song-that's fate, God, Goddess, whatever-doesn't make mistakes,
and it chose you." She hesitated. "Be careful of the Singer-the
oracle-though. She's a sneaky old witch."
Apparently having said all she was going to on the matter, Alexa
withdrew a wicked-looking dagger from her boot. She turned over her
left wrist and nicked the vein, then glanced at Marian. "You
ready?"
No. But she held out her arm anyway.
Alexa was quick and careful. The knife had little bite. Marian
watched blood well from her wrist. Alexa took Marian's arm and held
it against hers.
A wash of visions flowed from Alexa to Marian-recent ones of
battles on Lladrana that caused Marian to sway in horror, but
mercifully they flashed by.
There was Alexa hearing the same gong and chimes and chant as
had Marian. A lovely blond woman dancing in the sunlight down
Denver's 16th Street Mall. Graduation from law school. Classrooms.
Alexa growing younger in a series of foster homes. Each picture
brought a spurt of emotions-terror. . .grief.. .triumph..
.resignation.
Marian's sight dimmed. Her knees collapsed and she was on the
ground again. She flung out her left hand and it hit Alexa's rib
cage.
"Oomph!" Alexa protested.
"Sorry," Marian said weakly.
"No problemo." Alexa sounded as dazed as Marian herself. "Didn't
expect this to be so strong. I saw your brother, Andrew. You love
him very much."
"Yes."
"Your mother would never take care of him."
"No."
Alexa sighed. "Can you see yet?"
Marian blinked. Everything was cloud-thick gray. "No."
"Neither can I. Guess since we're not doing anything, I'll tell
you about the Snap."
"That would be good."
"The Snap is when Mother Earth calls you back-"
"I've lost my connection with Mother Earth." To her horror,
Marian's voice rose.
"Well, I never knew I had a connection until I got here," Alexa
said. "I thought I'd lost it, too, but it did pull me back.
I'm sure somewhere you still have a link to our home planet."
"Go on."
"It's hard to describe-a pull. More, it's a choice-stay or go.
Like I said earlier, I was given visions of what my life might be
if I went back, but I never actually left Lladrana. I could have,
if I wished-just wished to be back, I guess. But by that time I'd
made a life here. I had too much emotional commitment to Bastien
and the Marshalls and Lladrana to leave Amee."
Before Marian could ask questions, a man's honey-smooth voice
purred, "Well, well, well. Look what I've found, beauties basking
in the sun. I wonder what I'll do with them."
Terror froze Marian. She was blind, helpless.
"Bastien, that's not funny. You're scaring Marian," Alexa
said.
There was an instant of silence.
"My apologies, Marian," said the man. He was closer now- on the
other side of Alexa.
"Salutations, Pairling." His voice crooned now, full of
tenderness and love.
Marian still couldn't see the outer world, but a beautiful glow
came from her left side. Her tense muscles relaxed. Then she chided
herself. Knowing Alexa as she did now, if there'd been danger, the
woman-blind or not-would have been up and swinging.
"I'm having trouble seeing or moving, Bastien." Alexa sounded
very drunk-her bad Lladranan accent-and pissed.
"Always impatient."
Alexa snorted. "As if you aren't."
"Hey, another person is here who needs help," Marian said.
"Ladies, join hands and I'll aid you in clearing out your
systems of the aftereffects of an ill-prepared blood-bond.
Pairling-" his voice lowered dangerously "-I don't suppose you
researched the blood-bond before you did it with Marian?"
Another silence. Then Alexa said, "Uh, no. It came to me that it
would be good to have a blood sister. I like Marian. I
thought it would be best for everyone-for Lladrana, even-if we
blood-bonded." She spoke faster and faster, slurring her words, as
if trying to convince them all of the impeccable logic of her
impulsive act.
"Somehow I think Marian would have researched the blood-bond
before initiating it," Bastien said, humor in his voice.
Marian groped for Alexa's small hand, found it, squeezed.
"We're in this together," Alexa said with dignity, and Marian
wondered which "we" she meant.
Marian had no intention of staying in Lladrana, despite Alexa's
yearning for a sister-friend. Then she felt a pulse of clear,
bright silver-Bastien's energy to Alexa, thundering through the
smaller woman, then rolling into Marian. A flash enveloped her.
When it faded, she could see deep blue sky with fat white
clouds.
She turned her head to check on Alexa, but her gaze went
straight to the man. Alexa had called Jaquar a prime man, but this
one exuded charm and virility from every pore. His hair was striped
black and white and the murmuring sound coming from him was like
nothing Marian had heard in this world. Bossgond had said something
about his being a "black-and-white," and...
"Unfortunate?" she whispered, incredulous.
Alexa grinned. "Yeah. He really looks unfortunate, doesn't
he?"
"He looks like a bad boy to end all bad boys." He was a rogue to
the bone-with or without a spaceship.
He winked at her. "Actually," he said, grinning at her with too
much devilment, "I'm better with volarans."
Bastien had read her thoughts, and she picked up images of
winged horses from him. She'd been contemplating sitting up, but
remained still. All the new input was beyond her.
Alexa jumped up and into the man's arms. From there she looked
back at Marian. "Your initial questions answered?" she asked Marian
in Lladranan.
Marian's mind was unfortunately blank. She should have a
thousand more questions, but none surfaced. "I suppose."
"Anything else you need right now?"
Only one thing came to the forefront of her mind. "We need a
cook. Someone who'll get along with the grumpy old man, doesn't
like to socialize and would love to live on an island."
Alexa nodded. "That shouldn't be a problem. I'll find someone
for you. I have connections in Castleton."
Bastien squeezed her and whirled her around in a circle. She
shrieked.
"If you think you're going to Citymaster Masif alone, you're
wrong," Bastien said. His voice was steady despite his exertion.
The man was buff.
Marian managed to rise somewhat gracefully, curtsied to the both
of them, then left Alexa and Bastien to their pastoral idyll,
feeling a little melancholy. The woman had certainly landed on her
feet-though there was that comment about falling in battle. Perhaps
she wasn't much to be envied after all.
Angling off toward the ocean so as not to intrude, Marian
considered what she'd learned. At least she could still go back,
with the Snap. She hoped fervently that she could return to Earth
before Andrew got worried. She could check on him through the
binoculars, and if she had the Power that everyone thought, that
she felt, she'd discover the knowledge to help him
and force her return before he was finished with his
retreat.
She was listening to the ocean, absently watching spray as the
tide pummeled fierce rocks, when she stumbled into it. A tide of
full orchestral sound flowed over her, heavy on the strings. She
stopped. She stood in a large glade, green with grass. The sky
seemed bluer, the clouds whiter, the view of the ocean perfect. She
turned in place. The panorama was exquisite.
Her heart thudded with recognition. This was her
place.
She acknowledged the thought, then added a caveat. This
could be her place, the location where she'd build her
Tower, if she stayed in Lladrana. But she wouldn't.
Though the world tempted her. During her time with Alexa, Marian
had sensed that the Swordmarshall had a great need to be useful,
contribute meaningfully to society. The idea echoed in Marian.
And there was the fabulous magic. If she stayed, she could
become a Circlet at controlling the weather. Was that cool, or
what?
But not at the cost of losing Andrew. She could never live with
herself if she turned her back on him, chose this place instead of
him. An inner, awful trembling came at the thought.
So she determinedly left the glade and went on.
As she drew up to the front of Bossgond's Tower, she saw a large
frog sitting on a paving stone in front of the door. Maybe it was a
toad-she didn't recall enough biology to distinguish them. It was
green and about a foot long. Big, dark eyes watched her.
"Well, look at you." She smiled. She liked frogs.
"Ribbitt."
"You do know that you're blocking my way to the Tower?"
she said, feeling a little like she was in a fairy tale.
"Ribbitt."
Laughing, Marian said, "I hope you don't expect me to kiss you."
There was something intrinsically beautiful about the frog.
No, it said in her mind.
"Excuse me?" She didn't believe she'd heard it.
You do not have to kiss me. 1 wanted to see and speak
with the new Exotique. 1 am a feycoocu.
Marian stared, mind scrambling, though she recalled Bossgond and
Alexa talking about the magical being.
I am Alexa's companion.
That reassured Marian a little, so she let her shoulders relax,
closed her eyes and sighed. So many new things! Something to learn
every minute.
When she opened her eyelids, a fairy the size of the frog
perched on the door lintel. Marian stared. "You're not a frog."
No, and I am not really a fairy. I took that image from
Alexa's mind and yours. You have a different idea of fairies,
though. She glanced at her gossamer wings, the long black hair
that floated around her and her sparkling light-blue dress. She
smiled in satisfaction. Good, I am not all pink. Being pink was
a pain.
She sounded like Alexa. Marian grinned.
You are very Powerful.
The fairy's changing eyes mesmerized Marian. She fell into the
gaze and was caught in a cloud, between dimensions, then abruptly
landed with a jolt. She shook her head and blinked.
You will do. The feycoocu's voice appropriately sounded
like wind-chimes. She launched herself from the door and pirouetted
in the air. You will do very well. But it would be good if you
had a companion.
Marian swallowed. She wasn't sure that she could deal with a
magical sidekick. "You?"
No, I love Alexa and will stay with her. The fairy's
smile bloomed, dazzling Marian. But you have just taken
care of that matter yourself.
"What?"
Instead of answering, the feycoocu gestured and a small golden
sphere appeared to hover between them. Take this and feed it to
him.
The thing plunked into the hollow of Marian's palm so heavily
that it drove her arm down and she staggered under the weight. By
the time she'd braced her wrist with her other hand and lifted both
hands to waist level, the fairy had transformed into a hawk and was
flying away.
"Wait, what-"
Look for him in the place that called to you. Feed him the
walnut. She paused, turning her head back, and speared Marian
with a bright, glinting gaze. I am Sinafin. Guard my
name, but call on me if you have need. She zoomed out of
sight.
Marian opened her hand. The heavy thing did look like a golden
walnut.
A companion. Andrew? The place that called to her-the meadow
near the rocky beach with spraying surf. She ran, slowly and
awkwardly due to the great weight of the magical nut. When she
reached the meadow above the rocky beach, her breath came fast and
raggedly.
There, in the middle of the meadow, was Tuck in his ball.
1O
Marian sprinted to Tuck, who sat in his plastic hamster ball in
the middle of the green glade that had tempted her to stay in
Lladrana.
When she reached him, her legs simply collapsed. She thought she
whimpered at the sight of her pet. He'd pulled an orange wildflower
blossom through one of the plastic slots and sat, munching on it.
In the bottom of the ball was a small hoard of nuts and raisins,
and a bit of dried-up carrot that had been in his cheek
pouches.
He wasn't lost. He wasn't dead. He looked as fat and sassy as
ever. Gently moving the ball until the door was at the top, she
lifted off the lid, reached in and drew him out. Putting him
against her face, she sniffed the unmistakable odor of hamster and
cedar chips, felt the softness of his fur. It stuck to her cheek,
to the track of her tears.
She sat cross-legged and set Tuck in the folds of her skirt.
He looked up with bright eyes and continued to eat, apparently
happy to stay put. She could have sworn he smiled. Though he was a
nocturnal animal, she supposed the circumstances-the trip through
the corridor-how had he made it here?-the new world and the food
kept him interested enough to stay awake.
Marian heard herself croon his name. "Oh Tuck, oh Tuck."
He just ate on.
With a little shock, she realized she'd dropped the walnut.
Looking around, she didn't see it; it hadn't made a hole, and
didn't glow or anything. She bit her lip. The feycoocu had insisted
that she feed Tuck the magical nut, but what would happen if she
did? Would Tuck acclimatize better?
Could Sinafin be trusted?
Looking down at the small, new cut on her wrist where she and
Alexa had shared the strange sensation of mixing blood, Marian sent
her first telepathic message. Alexa, can you hear me?
Yes came the immediate response.
Marian received the vision that Alexa and Bastien were flying
back to their estate on the mainland.
Though she didn't need to speak aloud, Marian wet her lips.
Can Sinafin be trusted?
There was a pause. Sinafin can be trusted to do what is best
for Lladrana, Alexa replied.
That didn't help much. But Sinafin had approved of
Marian, and had wanted her to have a companion.
Alexa said, Sinafin says that the walnut will not hurt Tuck.
It will make him better.
I lost it. I dropped it when 1 saw Tuck, 1
think.
If you have a connection, you might be able to draw
it to you if you visualize it.
Marian stroked Tuck, but he still seemed happy to stay in her
lap. In fact, he'd curled into a ball to sleep. She closed her eyes
and formed an image of the walnut.
A spurt of surprise came from Alexa. So Sinafin took
it. I never thought of it after my first night here.
What?
It's an atomball.
Something in the tone of Alexa's thoughts sparked unease in
Marian. Is it dangerous? Sinafin said to feed it to
Tuck.
She heard Alexa's sigh in her mind, Just be careful. Call it
slowly. Think of it rolling to you.
Marian did, and felt a pull at her mind as if a thread were
attached to a ball she was rolling toward herself. A moment later,
something tapped the sole of her foot. It was the atomball.
Now it glowed. I have it. Thank you, Alexa.
Glad to be of help. Do you need me to stay in
contact?
Marian wanted to say yes, but decided it was cowardly and an
imposition. No.
Feel free to yell if you need help, Alexa said.
That's what Sinafin said. Thank you both.
Don't thank her until everything is all over, Alexa said
dryly. She has her own agenda.
Marian swallowed. Thank you, then.
Bye, said Alexa, and the telepathic connection went
still.
With both hands, Marian scooped up the golden walnut. It was the
size of a real walnut, but she didn't know how she was going to
convince Tuck to eat it. She shifted her legs so she could put the
walnut on her dress against the ground instead of in her lap, and
set it next to a sleep-snuffling Tuck.
He unrolled. His ears perked up. The hamster crawled over the
walnut several times, from several directions, then bit in and
gobbled greedily. The nut disappeared into Tuck at an amazing rate.
She thought she heard him burp, but hamsters didn't do that. Then
he looked up at her and blinked his black eyes, wiggled his nose
and curled back up to sleep.
Marian stayed in the meadow for a long time, petting Tuck with
one finger. Both the lovely wildflowers and the animal soothed her.
The quiet seemed almost luminescent as it sank into her bones.
When she lifted Tuck, he felt slightly heavier, but nothing like
the golden-walnut atomball. She'd have to fashion a cage-Bossgond
would help, she was sure. She put Tuck back in his plastic ball,
set the lid atop the ball but did not screw it closed, and
rose.
She could see Bossgond's Tower from here, and walked back to it,
musing that she now had three things from her old life. Tuck, her
PDA, and a clear, plastic hamster ball. Life was odd.
Bossgond awaited her, arms crossed, frowning-until he saw the
ball and Tuck. Then the gleam of a true scholar lit his eyes.
"What's that?"
"This is my hamster, Tuck, and his vehicle."
"Vehicle?" Bossgond reached for it.
Marian slipped Tuck from the ball and cradled him in her hands.
He didn't stir. She handed the ball to Bossgond.
"I met the feycoocu," she said casually, but kept a sharp gaze
on the old Sorcerer.
All his attention focused back on her. "Yes? What did it look
like?"
Marian started to correct him-to call "it" a "she"-then decided
against it. "First a large frog, then a fairy."
"Fascinating."
"She told me to feed Tuck-" Marian lifted the hamster for
emphasis "-an atomball."
Bossgond took a couple of steps back, glanced a little nervously
at Tuck. "An atomball? Where did the feycoocu get an atomball? What
did it look like? I've never heard such a thing."
"Tuck ate it," Marian said.
Eyes wide, Bossgond jerked his chin at the stairs. "Let's go up
to my suite. I want to study this."
The day had faded into evening, and the moment they walked
through the door, inside lights flared on. They were set in torch
holders, but obviously magic, glowing like the natural light of the
sun. Bossgond strode to his desk and placed the clear plastic
hamster ball on it.
"This is a very interesting substance," he muttered, tapping at
the ball. "Not glass."
"No." Marian studied Tuck, beginning to worry. He was so still,
but his small back still rose and fell with his breathing. "I need
a cage for Tuck."
Bossgond waved a hand and a low cabinet door opened in the wall.
Marian went over and bent down, then sighed. It appeared to be an
old aquarium. Tuck wouldn't like it. He preferred a nice plastic
cage with many toys and tubes.
Bossgond assigned Marian some "basic" lessons and spent the
evening studying the plastic ball and sleeping Tuck. He'd sworn not
to hurt either one.
After she'd demonstrated to Bossgond that she could ground
herself, call fire and cause a bean to sprout, he allowed her to
work with clouds in the weather globe. It thrilled Marian to play
with the clouds. She couldn't create them, or make them rain, but
she could push them around the globe and form images in them-they
wisped, then billowed into castles and dragons and a huge tree-the
world tree. Every culture had a symbol for the world-a globe, a
serpent, an egg, a circle, but Marian had always liked the world
tree the best. With a glance at Bossgond, she wickedly made a
caricature of the man, then his Tower.
Finally she got bored with her limitations and interrupted him
as he was tickling a sprawled Tuck's belly. Marian had the idea
that Bossgond was imagining the hamster's anatomy.
Alexa's description of the Snap earlier in the day bothered
Marian. She needed more details. "Alexa told me of the Snap
today."
"A very interesting phenomenon, the Snap," Bossgond said,
staring at her, fingers pyramided, tips tapping. He nodded once.
"It is an event. The Exotique land will bring you back to it."
Marian blinked. It was that easy? Just wait and she'd be
returned automatically? That didn't seem right. She shook her head.
"I felt the loss of my connection with Mother Earth." Her chin
wanted to tremble so she set her jaw. "It's gone." It
hurt.
His fingers continued to tap. "Very interesting information." He
looked at her, then reached out and picked up a sheet of paper and
a writing instrument. He made a note. "Perhaps, then, the Snap is
not a link to your planet. Perhaps this is an effect of the
Dimensional Gate."
Now he tapped his lips with the pen. "No Circlet is currently
studying the Dimensional Gateway, or Corridor. We will have to rely
on lorebooks about the topic." He made more notes. "The closest
thing the Tower Community has to experts on different dimensions
are me and...Jaquar Dumont, the plane-walker." He looked up from
his pad at her.
She knew the name, knew the man. The great-looking guy who'd
tried to claim her first. She suppressed a shiver at the memory of
her reaction to his touch-the searing certainty that somehow he was
her doom. Fate, and not a nice one.
Bossgond grunted as he studied her expression. "We won't speak
of him now."
Marian straightened. "You're my teacher."
"That I am."
"When does the Snap occur?" She yanked the conversation back to
the topic.
"It is individual to the person."
Marian narrowed her eyes. "Someone must have kept a record,
studied it."
"Someone did."
She released a pent-up breath. "May I have the record,
please?"
He turned to her with raised brows. "I don't think the records
we have on the Exotiques and the Snap will illuminate you, but I
will give you the Snap Lorebook." With a sly smile, he
snapped his fingers and a piece of paper appeared between them.
"That's it? The Lorebook?"
"Yes. An Exotique usually works with the Marshalls. The last one
before Alyeka was Summoned for the Singer and the Friends of the
Singer."
That was the prophetess, the spiritual basis of Lladrana.
"So?"
"So Exotiques have not been of a bent to record great details of
the Snap, or their passage to Lladrana. We Circlets must
extrapolate. Alyeka has provided the most detail of the experience.
I trust you will report your passage also."
"Of course." She went and took the sheet from him. It was hardly
more than a list.
It was the first "reading" she'd attempted since she'd bonded
with Bossgond. She had hoped it would be as easy as absorbing the
language. It wasn't. The alphabet was subtly strange, not quite the
Greco-Roman alphabet.
Bossgond indicated the writing at the top. Squinting a little,
Marian could make out the name "Thomas Lindley," a range of dates
and a phrase.
Bossgond's finger underlined the phrase. "Two weeks," he said.
The words appeared a neon white in her mind, then reshaped into
English, then returned to Lladranan.
Okay, reading would be more difficult and take time.. .but if
she was patient, the words and meanings might come to her.
"Thomas Lindley, two weeks," Marian repeated, moving her fingers
under the words. To the right of the time was a word in red. All
down the list the last word was in red or blue. It looked as if
three-quarters of the words were blue, one-quarter red. Marian
indicated the word. "This means?"
"Returned," he said gruffly. "Thomas chose to return to the
Exotique land."
Marian's pulse picked up. "There's a choice." Alexa had said so,
but Marian needed-emotionally more than mentally-to have it
confirmed.
Bossgond angled his head to stare into her eyes. His own were
dark pools of brown-black, expressionless. "The individual chooses
to stay or go. This list is currently arranged according to the
length of time between Summoning and the Snap." He pointed to the
last name on the page, about halfway down the sheet, "Jessica
Smith." His finger hovered over the time-period column. "Seven
years, three moons, twelve days," Bossgond read.
"Seven years! The Snap took that long for her? Why?"
"No one knows."
The last word for Jessica was "Stayed." Marian imagined so.
After seven years a person would have a whole new life.
"Time passes the same," she said.
He patted her shoulder with a knobby hand. "As far as we know,
yes. Our time units are nearly the same, also. Perhaps because our
lands are close to each other along the Dimensional Corridor."
He flicked a finger at the names and they rearranged themselves
on the sheet. "Now the names are arranged according to most
recently Summoned person."
Excellent.
At the top, Marian read, "Alexa Fitzwalter," scanned over to the
far column and saw the blue word "Stayed." She was the latest
Exotique. After her was Thomas.
Marian scanned the list. "The Snap usually occurs between a week
and six months." Six months was too long for her to wait. If she
wasn't back by the time Andrew checked with her-probably as soon as
he finished with the retreat-he'd move heaven and earth to find
her. She didn't want to contemplate how her loss might affect him,
emotionally and physically.
She took the sheet of paper. It felt slick and repulsive and she
gasped, letting it fall. Bossgond smiled humorlessly. "Parchment,
made from a slayer."
Marian recalled the yellow-furred creature with poisonous
spines.
Bossgond picked it up and placed it back on the desk. "I know
that Alexa told you of Lladrana's-and Amee's-peril."
For comfort, Marian retrieved Tuck from Bossgond's desk. He
snuffled a little. Cradling him in her hands, she met Bossgond's
eyes seriously. "You know of my brother Andrew and his
circumstances. I must be back home in a few weeks. I want
you to promise me that you will help me return, if my Snap doesn't
occur before that time."
Bossgond's lips tightened. "I don't know of anyone who has
returned to Exotique Terre under any circumstances other than the
Snap."
Marian nailed him with her gaze. "You are the oldest, most
Powerful Sorcerer of Lladrana. You can see my abode through your
binoculars. Both Alexa and I have passed through the Dimensional
Corridor, so we can visualize it. She understands my situation and
will help me return. Among the three of us-and anyone you think
might help-I should be able to go back."
He looked pained. "You won't change your mind?"
"No. My brother's health is at stake. He is my greatest
priority."
Bossgond rose and paced to the black-shrouded binoculars and
back. "I will do my best, but Lladrana needs you."
Marian heard more than that from the melody linking them. I
need you. Had he already become attached to her? That was so
sweet. She must admit that she'd already developed an affection for
him, as well as respecting him.
"Very well," he said. "I will request the Friends of the Singer
look through their Lorebooks and Oracle Archives for any
information regarding your brother's disease, as well as requesting
all data from the Tower Community. Occasionally we have had
Sorcerer or Sorceress Medicas. 1 will contact the Chief Medicas
attached to the Castle, the Cities and the Seamasters. If there are
instances of people who have or had your brother's disease, I will
learn of it, along with all treatments or cures."
Unexpected tears stung her eyes. "Thank you." But she was afraid
to hope.
"We are blood-bonded, as are you and Alexa. Though it has never
happened, perhaps you might be able to return to Amee."
She didn't think she'd ever abandon Andrew, even if he were in
perfect health, but Bossgond seemed to expect something from her.
"Perhaps. I was conducting my own Ritual at the time the Marshalls
Summoned me. I might have adequate Power even in Exotique Terre to
come back here."
He nodded briskly. "The Marshalls' Power and ritual coincided
with yours. Your Power is raw and untaught. But by the time I
finish instructing you, you could be our first Interdimensional
Traveler."
A gleam entered his eyes, and Marian got the sinking feeling
that he had a new career goal for her.
Oddly enough, obtaining her doctorate and starting on an
academic career-once her heart's desire-now seemed flat. What
teased her mind, plucked at her emotions, was the idea of becoming
a Circlet Weather Sorceress and raising her own Tower. She knew
exactly the place where she'd build it, too-in the green glen that
called to her. She suppressed a sigh and refrained from shaking her
head. She couldn't figure out how she could get everything she
wanted.
"It has been a long day for you," Bossgond said. "I think you
should retire and rest."
His gaze slid to the binoculars again, and Marian sensed he
wished to pursue his studies alone. Would he check on her
apartment? He now had Andrew's coordinates-would he watch Andrew?
Could Bossgond possibly learn how to help Andrew by observing her
brother?
"I am tired. Tuck and I will go to bed now." On impulse, she
kissed Bossgond's wrinkled cheek. "I could ask for no better
teacher." She thought she saw a tinge of red under his golden
skin.
"Perhaps you'd rather have Alexa as your mentor."
Marian laughed. "I think she is an excellent Swordmarshall." And
would have made a hot-shot attorney. "But I don't think she has the
patience to be a good teacher."
He smiled faintly as he took her arm and walked her to the
door.
"Besides-" Marian stopped "-she is very busy-fighting. She said
some Sorcerers and Sorceresses fight, too?"
"That was true of the last large battle, when Alexa requested
help from the Tower Community." He waved a hand. "Jaquar Dumont
organized our contribution. At that time the fence posts were still
falling and no one knew how to make new ones. The magical shield
along the north boundary of Lladrana was failing. A large number of
horrors had massed to invade."
Marian's imagination painted a vivid picture of the
conditions.
Bossgond finished, "So some of the younger Sorcerers and
Sorceresses used their Power in battle."
Marian's admiration for Alexa increased. She'd literally saved
the country-how had she felt as Joan of Arc? Marian wanted to know
the woman better.
Another wish that would not be fulfilled.... Time was too short
for everything Marian wanted to do, to learn, to explore.
"But during the battle, Exotique Alyeka discovered how to create
the fence posts." Bossgond looked grim. "Every Sorcerer and
Sorceress of the Tower made twenty copies of the information as to
how the fence posts are made, how the border shield is energized.
We sent Lorebooks to every contact we had in the other Communities.
The knowledge will never be lost again."
"A very good thing," Marian said quietly.
"Essential." Bossgond opened the door and ushered her out with a
small bow. He hesitated, then said, "Sleep well, and the hamster,
too."
Marian smiled. "We will. Sweet dreams."
Bossgond looked a little startled, and Marian went down the
stairs, smiling. It was good to surprise a teacher now and
then-keep him on his toes.
The next morning, Marian awoke to a small squeaky voice calling,
"Here's Food! Here's Food!" She blinked and struggled from sleep,
and the words went on and on. Cocking her head, she realized the
voice was close-coming from the table she'd brought into her
bedroom.
Coming from Tuck's aquarium.
A shiver feathered down her spine. Time to brace herself for
more magic.
Slowly she walked over to the glass cage. Tuck rose and placed
his little pink paws on the glass. He smiled.
He was not just a hamster anymore. She didn't know what he was,
but she knew he'd changed-become a companion to her.
"Hello, Tuck," she said.
"Hel-lo, Here's Food." He beamed. "Hun-gry."
11
Marian stared into the old aquarium. Tuck had just spoken to her
in squeaks she could understand! She blinked. "My name's
Marian."
"Here's Food," he said.
Glancing at the corner of the cage where he kept his food, she
saw his hoard wasn't as large as he preferred. She left the bedroom
for the "kitchen" area of her circular loft and pulled out a small
bowl of nuts and dried fruit that Bossgond had given her. Taking
the handful, she went back to the aquarium.
"Here's food," she said, and stopped to listen to her own words.
Tuck associated her with food, with those words. No wonder he
called her that.
She shrugged and put the handful of food in his cage.
He hurried over and began arranging it, eating an especially
tasty piece now and then. She stood and watched. A few moments
later he was done. Then he paced the cage. She'd lined it with
shredded paper. "No fun," he said.
The hamster had vocal cords. She wondered if she would ever be
able to study them. Then again, she didn't know what human vocal
cords looked like, and there were plenty of other topics that
demanded her attention.
He squeaked, "Out!"
"If I let you roam, will you stay, or run off so I will never
find you?"
He scrabbled against the glass. "I will stay in this place."
"This room," she said firmly. "No crawling down any pipes,
wiggling into any holes in the floor or walls and not returning."
She shook a finger at him, even as she wondered if he could
understand her. How he could understand her. Only one answer
occurred.
Magic.
Tuck wrinkled his nose. "Bad house. Want new one."
It might be interesting to make him a little house, without a
cage. She'd feel better if he were off the floor, but he climbed
well-a low table would be fine.
"Out! Out! Out!"
"All right!" She scooped him up and placed him on the floor.
She'd really have to learn to mind her step. He had only roamed her
apartment in his ball. "Do you want your ball?" Bossgond still had
it.
Tuck ran under the wardrobe. Gleaming black eyes peered out at
her. "No."
Marian sighed. "All right, but be aware that I might not see
you, so you have to be careful underfoot."
"Yes. More food. Soft food."
She smiled, figuring "soft food" meant a bit of cheese or egg or
fresh vegetables. "I don't have any here. I'll check with
Bossgond." She headed for the speaking tube.
"Old man teacher," Tuck said.
"Yes."
"He smells funny."
Marian stopped at the edge of the stained-glass partition and
looked back into the bedroom. As she watched, Tuck appeared,
crawling up the far side of her bedspread to explore her bed. He
sat, Buddhalike, in the middle of her bed, paws clasped.
"Smells funny how?"
Tuck sniffed. "Mostly big sweet smell, then man smell, then old
smell."
"Ah."
The hamster blinked at her and smiled. "You smell sweeter."
To her amazement, Marian found herself dipping a curtsy, smiling
herself. "Thank you, Tuck."
"More food."
She laughed. Cocking her head, she quieted her thoughts to sense
Bossgond. His thoughts sparked, indicating he was awake.
She went to the tube and spoke into it. "Tuck and I are
hungry."
Bossgond grunted. "The oeuf is ready. You can share it with
him."
Marian grimaced at the thought of the tasteless omelette. "We'll
be right up." She hurried to wash and dress, then picked Tuck up
from her bed.
"Shoulder," he said.
Looking at him askance, she said, "Are you sure? I don't want
you to fall."
"I will not fall."
Marian shrugged, then made a note not to do that when Tuck was
riding her shoulder. She set him on her right shoulder and winced
as his sharp little claws dug through the material.
As she ascended the stairs at a quick pace, Tuck kept steady,
and she knew they were both pleased at this new way of transporting
him.
When she entered Bossgond's chamber, the first thing she noticed
was his crystal ball flashing a rainbow of colors.
He followed her gaze, sniffed in disdain and snapped his
fingers. "Requests to visit. Or demands. I do not want to see
people, and I want you to concentrate on your training
before satisfying others' curiosity."
"Alexa came yesterday."
"That was different. I had not met her."
His curiosity had needed to be satisfied, and not only regarding
Alexa. Marian knew he'd wanted to meet Sinafin.
Bossgond studied Tuck on her shoulder. "Is that a safe way for
the hamster to travel?"
"Yes," Tuck squeaked.
The old mage froze, his eyes sharpening. "It speaks."
"Me! You talk to me. And I am a he."
Bossgond swallowed. "He knows grammar."
Marian gave a nervous laugh herself. "I think it must be the
atomball. He's sentient."
"What is sentient?" asked Tuck.
"You think," Marian said.
Tuck grumbled. "Of course I think."
She shared an amazed glance with Bossgond. He narrowed his eyes,
and Marian lifted her left hand to curve it protectively over Tuck.
"No dissecting!"
Bossgond looked affronted as if the idea hadn't crossed his
mind. "Of course not. The longer we have him to study- hmm-as your
companion, the more we can learn of him, of the atomball. It must
have been the atomball that made him intelligent-but how the
atomball..." Bossgond shook his head. "I had a few notes on this
atomball. The Marshalls made it as a Test of Exotique Alyeka's
Power. So twelve Marshall minds might have imprinted it-four of
those people are now deceased. I believe both Alyeka and the
feycoocu transformed the thing. Now it has been eaten by a hamster.
Very interesting." He looked distracted and headed for his desk,
instead of the table where two cheese omelettes sat.
"Food!" cried Tuck.
Before Marian could stop him, he scrabbled down her dress,
snagging his claws in the embroidery, which she watched reweave
itself. He hopped to the floor and ran to the dining table, up the
leg and onto the table to sit on a plate and shovel egg into his
mouth.
Ick. Despite the fact that she knew the food wasn't very
good, Marian hurried over and cut a quarter of the omelette for
Tuck, saving the rest for herself. She recalled where Bossgond kept
the extra plates and the coffee. She poured a mug for herself and
one for her teacher, giving him the coffee, omelette and a fork and
napkin as he sat at his desk.
While he ate absently, she sighed and returned to her place,
wondering how long it would take Alexa to find a cook for them.
After breakfast, Tuck explored Bossgond's room and the old mage
requested that she take the largest of her weather terrariums down
to the lowest floor and work with it there. Marian did as he
asked.
When she'd actually settled into the luxurious room, she found
herself smiling at having such rich surroundings. Better than the
best home office she'd ever seen. She allowed herself another cup
of coffee, then began her lessons.
Bossgond had printed instructions for her. Just reading was a
lesson in itself. Following his directions was even more fun. Today
she practiced stirring the wind and waves in preparation for making
clouds.
She'd mastered Wind-the scudding of the clouds around the
enclosed environment, little breezes that ruffled the tiny tree
forms and slapped up waves. She'd even managed a little hurricane
in the ocean and a tornado on land.
Now she studied Water. When Bossgond wasn't looking she'd tried
a little Tide and flooded most of her seacoast. Then, of course,
there was no way to hide her mistake.
He'd snorted with laughter, made her do her Wind exercises
again, and commented that she'd better not try Lightning without
him-she could take out the Tower. Abashed, Marian had agreed.
She was slightly distracted whenever Tuck skittered across her
line of sight. Joy and affection welled in her at the thought of
having him back-and as more than a pet. Whether he could be a real
companion she didn't know, but she enjoyed seeing him explore, and
listened with half an ear to his squeaky comments. "Good smell,
here!" "Nice hole." "Stone too cold on paws here. Stay away."
With incredible effort she visualized raising minute droplets of
water from a river and bay-she discovered she didn't have the
energy to handle a whole ocean, she had to limit herself
geographically. A good education, including basic science, had
saved her from lectures by Bossgond on how water became clouds.
He'd seemed impressed, but had grumped off to his own desk.
Marian was muttering to herself, lowering the temperature so the
droplets might coalesce, when she became aware of someone looking
over her shoulder. More than one someone.
She lost control of her condensation and the water fell back
into the sea. Turning, she scowled-and found herself looking at the
other two who'd appeared in the pentacle when she'd been Summoned.
Searching her memory as she nodded to them, she recalled their
names. The woman was Venetria and the man Chalmon.
The way they stood together, it seemed they were intimate- but
she knew each had wanted to claim her as an Apprentice.
Relationships must get as tangled here in Lladrana as they had
among scholars at the university.
"Salutations," she said, now knowing why she was using the
ground-floor parlor for her experiments. Bossgond had anticipated
the advent of other Circlets. He wouldn't have wanted to show them
into either her or his working space.
They'd come to check out the new kid on the block, she supposed.
Only natural, but it ate into her time. For an instant her gaze
went to the door that was open on the pretty spring day, but no
shadow of sexy Jaquar announced him. Just as well- she hadn't
forgotten that touch of warning.
"Salutations, Marian," said Chalmon. He held out his hand, and
Marian recalled that she hadn't touched him. Jaquar- a cascade of
notes; Venetria-a clash of chords; Bossgond- a streaming tune.
Carefully she put her hand in his. There was a tiny shock and a
little hum between them, as if he could become a friend-but only a
friend.
All three of them relaxed. Marian sensed Venetria had been
prepared to be jealous, and Chalmon had been unsure of what he
truly wanted from Marian, but now was willing to settle for what
had naturally occurred.
Marian released his hand, gestured to the open door. "Shall we
walk?"
Venetria cast a nervous glance at the stairs winding up the
Tower wall. She licked her lips. "Will Bossgond mind?"
"I'll tell him. We're blood-bonded," Marian said.
The other two exchanged glances, and irritation rose in Marian
that she wasn't conversant enough with the culture to understand
nuances.
"I would like to walk and talk," Chalmon said, with a half
bow.
Bossgond, Marian sent mentally, I am taking a
break. Venetria and Chalmon are here and we will stroll along the
meadow path. She wasn't going to lead them to the place that
resonated to her. Their inherent formality kept her at a
distance-of course, anyone seemed more formal than Alexa and
Bastien.
Bossgond replied telepathically. Good, get them out of my
Tower. 1 don't want to talk with them. And, he added with a
cackle, this will allow your coastline to dry
out.
Please watch Tuck, Marian said stiffly.
An absent grunt came from Bossgond.
Chalmon nodded to her practice sphere. "Your Power is for
weather?"
"Yes."
"Jaquar," Venetria muttered under her breath.
Marian looked at her quizzically and the other woman flashed an
insincere smile. "Jaquar Dumont also has that Power. No doubt
sometime in the future you must study with him."
Her expression went blank, and Marian sensed she hid something.
She sighed and led the way out of the Tower.
The day was beautiful, spring edging into summer. The scents
particularly pleased Marian-crisp sea breeze, flowers, grass. She'd
miss the freshness of unpolluted air when she returned to
Earth.
Breathing deeply, she smiled.
But the other two wore all-too-serious expressions.
"You know why you were Summoned to Lladrana?" asked Chalmon.
"Not specifically," Marian said. "Swordmarshall Alexa dropped by
yesterday and told me I would be working with you of the Tower
Community, but no one of this Community has stated why you
requested I be Summoned." Of course, it had been only three nights
and two-and-a-half days, and Marian had her own priorities.
Chalmon cleared his throat. "Much of the knowledge regarding the
Dark that invades Lladrana has been lost over the centuries." He
waved a hand. "Since the magical fence posts and borders protected
the mainland, we of the Tower Community focused on our own
studies."
Marian supposed that was the rationalization all the Circlets
were using to explain their inaction.
Venetria took up the story. "Then the fence posts fell. The
monsters invaded the mainland and Alyeka was Summoned. She
convinced Jaquar and some of us to fight. More terrible horrors
invaded-dreeths-" Venetria put a hand to her throat "-then the
sangvile." Her lips quivered. "The sangvile ravaged a town where
many Sorceresses and Sorcerers lived-Coquille-on-the-Coast. I lost
an aunt."
A cold chill raised the hair on Marian's neck as she recalled
Alexa's image and story. Venetria's aunt might have been about the
same age as Marian's mother.
Stepping closer to Venetria, Chalmon wrapped an arm around her
waist and looked directly at Marian-and she saw cool determination,
perhaps even the edge of fanaticism. "More sangviles may return. We
must stop these evil beings."
So now that the Tower Community was actually threatened-Marian
hadn't forgotten that the sangvile targeted Power users-Circlets
would actually bestir themselves to contemplate the problem.
Sounded a lot like the scholars of her own world. But Marian didn't
think Alexa had had much of a choice in ignoring the problem, and
now it appeared Marian would be integral to the Tower's effort.
"Alexa was Summoned to fight? Why did you Summon me? What do you
want of me?" she asked. When both pairs of eyes shifted away from
her, a cold feeling spread along her spine to her gut.
"We want you to learn. Then you will be able to help," Venetria
said gently, still not looking at Marian but at the path through
the serene forest.
"And what is my compensation?"
"Learning for learning's sake. Making a world safe-" Chalmon's
voice rose.
"It's not my world."
Venetria stopped, so Marian and Chalmon did, too. Venetria said,
"You can raise your own Tower and teach students, if you want.
Also, as a Summoned Exotique, you receive an estate and a certain
amount of zhiv." She waved her hand. "We have islands to spare, and
will collect jewels to ensure you live well."
"This is not my place. I will not stay. I have a sick brother I
must return to. If you can find me a cure for his disease, I
will do what you want." As soon as the words were out of her mouth,
she felt infinitely reckless. But it would take a miracle to cure
Andrew.
Chalmon frowned, absently took Venetria's hand and kissed the
back of it, placed her fingers on his arm and began walking again.
"A Circlet Medica is rare. One has not raised a Tower for over two
centuries."
"Pity," Marian murmured. "I will, of course, learn all that I
can, but when the Snap comes, I will return home. And you still
haven't given me any details of what is expected of me. Nor has
Bossgond. Hard to fulfill a goal if I don't know what it is."
Again Chalmon cleared his throat. "We are still formulating a
plan to fight the Dark."
"Who is 'we'?" asked Marian.
"Chalmon, myself, Jaquar, some others." Venetria made a moue.
"Planning will take some time-now all you must do is learn." She
looked at the pretty meadow ahead of them and sighed. "Truly Alf
Island is graced. Spring has barely touched my own island of
Zi."
"What are your specialties?" asked Marian. Perhaps she could
figure out what they might want of her from what they studied.
"I am studying cold," Venetria said. "Ice. I was able to freeze
the thin membranes of a dreeth's wings. In battle-" She choked.
Marian had a flash of the horror from the waves of fearful
memory coming from Venetria.
"I study the pulses of the world core and the intervals between
them," Chalmon said.
They walked for several seconds in silence while Marian thought,
shuffling his words around until they might make sense. There was a
faintly patronizing smile on Chalmon's face when she said coolly,
"So how have the pulses and intervals been? Weakening?
Slowing?"
He stopped, eyes widening. "How did you know?"
Marian shook her head. Another scholar blinded by the intricacy
of details and failing to see the whole picture-the forest for the
trees.
Staring at her, he muttered, "You are bright. All the more
reason...for you to progress quickly."
Venetria stepped up to Marian, linked arms-and neither of them
were shocked. Pondering it, Marian thought Venetria had dampened
her personal magnetic field.
"A very valuable insight," Venetria said, lifting her chin
arrogantly in Chalmon's direction. "Another reason to consider our
options when planning."
Chalmon's eyes narrowed. "How did you guess that Amee's Song has
diminished?"
Marian raised her brows. "Not a guess, a deduction. I've heard
two World Songs." And despite all the harm humans had done
to Earth, it was strong and intense and Powerful compared to
Amee's.
"Humph," Chalmon said. Then he turned on his heel and headed
back toward Bossgond's Tower. "I've discovered all I need to know
about you."
Marian didn't follow him and neither did Venetria. "How nice for
you," Marian said.
He shifted. "Do you have anything you wish to ask us?"
"A fair trade, do you mean?" Marian said.
Lips pressed together, he nodded.
"How kind of you to ask. Yes, Bossgond and I need a cook."
Both of them looked at her with surprise.
It was good to surprise colleagues, too-let them know that she'd
soon be a force to be reckoned with.
They walked back to the Tower in a not-quite-comfortable silence
that Marian refused to break. She'd wanted to meet more
Circlets-and still did. There must be more compatible people for
her, those who could grow into friends. Naturally, the image of
Jaquar popped into her head and she strove to keep from coloring.
She could share commonalities with him, but he struck her more as
"lover" than friend. If she ignored a vague warning and let herself
get involved with him...
When they reached the Tower, they saw Bossgond talking to a
little glass orb as he watched Tuck roll around the flagstones in
his hamster ball.
As soon as Tuck saw her through one of the slits he attempted to
roll to her-and the ball lifted slightly from the ground to
glide.
He squeaked angrily. "Out, out, out. Nasty ball."
Marian wrinkled her nose. It was cloudier than before, which
meant Tuck had peed in it.
As Bossgond disappeared into his Tower, she ran to meet
Tuck.
"The grumpy old man would not let me out! I am not a
dirty animal. I tried to go through a slit, but-" His words were
more like high-pitched squeals in her mind than real verbalization.
He stopped and stood, nose twitching, pounding the ball with tiny
clenched paws.
"I'll get you out. Just a minute," Marian soothed. She bent down
and unscrewed the cap. Ick, eau de hamster.
She tilted the ball and Tuck bulleted out to roll in the sweet
grass, then moved onto a clump of wildflowers.
"Throw it away, away, away!" demanded Tuck. "Out of that mean
old man's reach."
Chalmon and Venetria stared at him. Marian didn't like the look
in Chalmon's eyes, even more detached and examining than
Bossgond's.
With two fingers Marian sailed the lid away like a Frisbee. Then
she pulled back her foot, called on her Power and kicked the
plastic ball. It made a satisfactory crack and flew out of
sight. "It's gone."
Tuck ran back to her, smelling much better. He scrambled up her
dress and into her pocket, hiding in embarrassment.
Marian aimed a cool glance at the pair of Circlets and smiled
superficially. "Nice meeting you."
Chalmon half bowed, Venetria half curtseyed, amusing Marian.
Apparently her status wasn't high enough to rate full honors.
As soon as Marian entered Bossgond's Tower, Chalmon started off
in the direction of the strange orb that Exotique Marian's creature
had been in.
"What are you doing?" Venetria asked, hurrying to keep up with
him.
"An experiment, a trial run," he said. "We've hypothesized from
what the Master told Jaquar that even the essence of an entity from
Exotique Terre could harm the Dark's nest."
"Ah!" Venetria said, excited. "In that odd sphere is the essence
of an entity of Exotique Terre."
"I'm sure we can find a way to send it into the maw as a
weapon-observe whether it can truly penetrate the shield and, if
so, what result it might have on the nest."
Venetria frowned. "We don't know where the nest is
geographically, on the physical plane. We only know it isn't near.
So we must transport the sphere on an etheric plane and fire it
from there. That will take great, great Power."
Chalmon stopped and looked down. The ball lay at his feet. It
wasn't as odoriferous as it had been. He hooked a finger in the
opening and lifted it. Cracked but whole. "The orb is made of a
strange substance that is very light."
Feeling as if she was already several paces down a slippery path
leading to immorality, Venetria whispered, "How can we do
this?"
"It is time to replace observers loyal to Jaquar with those who
respect me more. With the aid of many, we should be able to
accomplish sending this sphere into the Dark's nest."
She stared into his brilliant, glittering eyes. "I meant how can
we consider sending a person into the Dark maw?"
His mouth tightened. "We need the knowledge. She can harm it,
stop it from spewing out more horrors, more sangviles."
Shaking her head, Venetria said, "You are becoming someone I'm
not sure I know."
His voice was tough. "I am refining down to the man I must be in
dangerous circumstances. We cannot do nothing. We must
act."
"At the expense of a woman's life?"
Chalmon started back to the landing area where they'd left their
volarans. He sent her a glance, one side of his mouth lifted in an
attempt at a smile. "She is very strong. She could destroy the nest
and survive."
Venetria snorted. "You say that to pacify me. I'd rather wait,
let the Exotique develop into her Power."
"Who knows how long that will take? And she does not wish to
stay here. We need to know what happens in that nest. The more
knowledge we have, the easier it will be to defeat the mind behind
all this-not only the horrors, but the Master and his master." He
stopped. "I am proceeding with this plan, Venetria, and nothing you
can say will stop me."
"But why?"
His eyes fastened on her. "For you."
For the rest of that day and the next, Marian waited for the
third Sorcerer she'd previously met to show up. She braced herself
to see Jaquar. Surely now that she'd gained her balance in this new
world-and had Tuck-she would find that her initial response to him
was exaggerated by circumstances. He'd be attractive, of course,
but no more so than any other man. In the back of her mind, she
fretted about that vision she'd seen when they'd touched. She
didn't recall the images that had flashed before her eyes-just the
feeling of overwhelming danger.
Exactly the way she wanted to feel for a hunk. But better that
than making a mistake and injuring her pride or her heart later.
This time, of course, she'd be cool, knowledgeable, graceful.
But he didn't come.
Since Bossgond loaded her with work, she let her expectation of
meeting Jaquar fade. She received the idea from Bossgond that she
moved rapidly from one level of spells to the next...and the next.
For herself, the lessons seemed to open someplace in her that
inherently knew what to do, what to say, how to form her spell
tunes, whistles and chants for the best results. Some of this was
her training, but most of it sprang from her irregular studies of
New Age beliefs.
By the middle of her second full week, Marian worked in all
three of her "terrariums." Oddly enough, she was most proficient
with Lightning and electrical storms. There had been no scary
"incidents."
Bossgond had allowed her a brief look at Andrew one morning, but
when she'd come up the next day for breakfast, he'd covered the
binoculars. He told her there would be no more viewing by them
both. He would watch and report, but the Power to coordinate so
they both could look through the binoculars was draining energy
they needed. Marian glared at him but said nothing.
One morning during her third week on Lladrana, the bells from
the harness of a volaran rang near her windows, and Marian rushed
to one, hoping Bastien had brought Alexa to visit.
Jaquar rode a black volaran with small white spots. The Circlet
was sexy. Every time she saw the man, he was more
attractive. Marian snorted. She couldn't afford to fall for
him.
"Marian!" Bossgond's irritated voice came from the trumpet tube
next to her desk.
"Yes?"
"That boy is here. He has good intent toward me so he just flew
through my shield-"
A knock echoed like thunder through the Tower.
"Ever since I took you as an Apprentice, there's been no peace.
You'd think if people saw that a door didn't have a harp, they'd
know they weren't welcome," Bossgond grumbled. He'd taken the door
harp off several days ago.
"I'm not answering it," Marian said, and got an immediate image
of the old man's ears perking up in interest.
"Why not?"
"Because I had a vision when we first met."
"Ah! That has happened in the past with those who were Summoned
for the Tower. Visions upon their arrival. What was it?"
Marian sighed. "I can't recall. Too many experiences since then
have piled on top of that memory to remember it clearly. I just
know he's Trouble."
"Hmm," said Bossgond, sounding more cheerful. "I've changed my
mind. I want to talk with the boy."
12
Marian wanted to argue with Bossgond about admitting Jaquar to
the Tower, but Bossgond appeared at the door to the stairs from her
suite, opening it.
"Coming?" he asked, eyes bright with curiosity.
"Yes." Marian shifted her shoulders. A tingle had run up her
spine to lodge itself at the back of her neck. For the first time,
she realized that there was no mirror in her outer room. There was
a small one that showed her face in the bedroom of her loft, but
nothing else. Bossgond had plenty in his chambers, but they were
for magical work.
She looked at him. He was neat and tidy in a midnight-blue tunic
that looked brand-new, but only his clothes seemed ageless. He was
ugly. Cute ugly, like a bulldog puppy, but it was no wonder he
didn't hang mirrors around.
With lagging steps, she followed him down to the bottom-floor
parlor.
Jaquar stood there. The sight of him-tall and well built and
handsome, with those wide streaks of silver over each temple and
the blue, blue eyes-sent hormones zinging through her veins.
She caught him staring at her, and a whispered tune fluttered
between them.
Marian had learned enough to know that this could mean real
trouble. Best she stay away from the man. So she moved from the
stairs and put a wingchair between them.
His eyebrows rose, but his attention turned to Bossgond, who
watched them both with a sly smile. The old mage held out both
hands, wrists straight and palms up.
Jaquar glanced at Bossgond's gesture and his lips tightened.
Marian realized she'd noticed his full mouth, and tried to gather a
little shield around her that might block out the string of notes
between them. It didn't work.
Carefully Jaquar placed his palms on Bossgond's, overlapping the
older Sorcerer's hands. Jaquar jerked, and Marian saw the flash of
energy between them, the blending of auras.
"I see I made a mistake years ago," Bossgond said. "Your parents
requested you spend some months under my tutelage, and 1 was too
immersed in my own studies and declined. But you would have been an
excellent student and would have helped me, and would have gained
your Circlet status earlier." Bossgond sighed gustily and dropped
his hands. "That's in the past."
"You have an Apprentice of your own." Jaquar inclined his head
to Marian. "Marian."
She nodded coolly. "Jaquar Dumont."
"She won't be an Apprentice for long," Bossgond boasted. "I'll
have her a Scholar by the morrow and a Circlet by the end of the
month."
Jaquar looked surprised. "Indeed."
Marian's stomach churned. Tests ahead. She wished she hadn't
known, and wondered if there was any mention of Testing for Scholar
in her books upstairs-if she could find the notes and prepare
somehow.
"Come upstairs to my suite," Bossgond said silkily, like a
spider to a fly.
Jaquar eyed him warily. "Why?"
Bossgond snorted. "Because I want to speak to you alone."
Marian gripped the back of the chair. "You could talk to him
here."
Waving her suggestion away with an impatient hand, Bossgond
threw them both an admonishing look and started up the stairs.
"Come, Jaquar."
The younger man made a half bow to Marian, then followed
Bossgond.
Bossgond's voice floated down. "Marian, I want you to rearrange
the western coastline of your continent in your planet ball,
generate a force-three storm, then bring the sphere upstairs to us.
Jaquar should see the results of your lessons with me and your
level of expertise."
Her pulse pounded in her ears. He'd just assigned her two huge
tasks and expected them to be carried out quickly! More, she would
have to gather the storm, then hold it as she walked from her rooms
to his. She calculated-it was a trip up twenty stairs. If she took
it slow and breathed properly she might be able to do it.
"Oh, and we will be talking in the ritual room at the top of the
Tower," Bossgond said.
Her hands fisted. She couldn't make another twenty stairs, a
full two stories, could she?
She heard Jaquar's grunt of surprise. Something in the sound
sent adrenaline coursing through her and she set her teeth. She
didn't have any time to waste. Everything she had must be focused
on her task.
She didn't want to fail the old Circlet. More, she didn't want
to fail in front of Jaquar. A woman had her pride. Even though
she'd been here only two and a half weeks, she refused to fail.
For a moment she just stood, jaw clenched, then she heard a
scrabbling noise and found Tuck sitting on his fat rump on her
desk. He stared at her with wide black eyes, his paws clasped
together. "I will help!"
She deliberately relaxed her mouth, rolled her shoulders and
eyed him. No doubt many people would dismiss the aid of a small
rodent, no matter how magical, but Marian just nodded gravely.
"Thank you." Who knew what an animal who ate an atomball could do?
Best to stretch his abilities as much as her own. Her pulse jumped
at the thought that he might not want to return to Earth with
her-something she didn't want to think about, couldn't think about,
right now.
Walking over to her desk chair, she settled into the fat cushion
that was beginning to take on her form. She looked at Tuck. "How do
you want to help?"
He chittered a few seconds-his thinking sound, she'd
learned-then said, "I will keep you calm."
"Keeping my hands from shaking as we take the terrarium up to
Bossgond will be a great help. Thank you."
His nose wiggled. "I need food," he squeaked slyly.
With a chuckle she scooped him up, rubbed him against her cheek,
then set him carefully down. "Come back to the desk when you're
done eating," she said absently, already focused on the planet
globe, parting the clouds to see the coastline. She took a moment
to loosen her muscles, inhaled deeply and placed her hands on each
side of the two-foot terrarium.
Frowning, she nibbled her lower lip as she considered how
extreme the alteration to the coast should be-or rather, how little
alteration she could do that would be acceptable to Bossgond. The
real test was gathering the storm and holding it so it didn't break
apart or go inland before she reached the two Sorcerers.
From what she'd experienced on Lladrana, equality of the sexes
was close, but some men would always innately believe that strength
made them superior to women.
Not Bossgond. He was an intellectual snob. As long as a person
had Power, they were respected.
Jaquar intimidated her because he was a Circlet, intelligent,
handsome.. .and very attractive.
There was that warning she'd received when they'd first touched.
Perhaps she could recall the brief vision if she touched him
again....
"Four minutes, Marian," Bossgond said through the speaking
tube.
Marian jolted-stared down at the west coast of the continent in
her terrarium. Concentrating, she delicately warmed the globe,
causing the polar ice cap to melt. It took time and mental effort,
but better that she be late arriving than not get her project
done.
Melting the ice cap raised the water level of the ocean and
changed all the coastlines of her continent, but she was
following the rules. As she watched the ice liquefy, she let out a
slow and steady breath, blowing at the terrarium. She used this to
symbolize a rising wind-energy she sent to stir the air and whip up
the seas until a force-three storm whirled in the ocean, sucking in
clouds and water.
She moved a little faster and harder than she'd thought, and the
storm whirled apart. Teeth clamped again, she struggled to keep the
energy steady, growing, spinning the storm off the coast.
A few seconds later she heard a squeak and automatically angled
her foot and leg so Tuck would have easy climbing. He hurried up
her gown to her shoulder, then placed a tiny, clawed paw on her
neck. The paw was cold.
But it calmed her. Since most of her mind was engaged in her
task, she didn't hold back when Tuck's energy touched hers-a burst
of light on her shoulder, stronger than she'd expected, a tiny rush
of tuneful notes.
"Sinafin is teaching me," he said.
Her attention almost wandered. She kept it steady, forced
extraneous thoughts from her mind.
"She says when you raise your Tower, I might become a
feycoocu."
No! Marian would not listen. "Are you trying to distract
me?"
He squeaked a chuckle. "Payback for all those times I rattled in
my cage and needed food and you were studying." He sniffed,
then licked a drop of sweat that had beaded around her
hairline.
"Time to go," she said.
Slowly, slowly she stood, lifted the planet globe.
It tipped.
She righted it, expelled a shaky breath. Dropping it would be
disastrous.
With tiny, cautious steps, mind on holding the storm, tension
settling between her shoulders, she moved from the desk to the
door. And stopped.
She'd have to separate some energy from the storm to open the
door latch, or shift the globe to lie along an arm, use her left
fingers to push the latch...
"I will open the door," said Tuck.
It flew open and slammed against the hall wall. His whole little
body felt warm-with embarrassment?
"Thanks," Marian croaked.
Male shouts came from above. Jaquar's "No, I won't!" startled
her, and the planet globe joggled. Marian gasped, struggled to keep
the storm steady. She pursed her lips in irritation that the men
couldn't leave her to do her work in peace.
Her head ached as she climbed the stairs; her arms tensed with
the strain. The forty steps seemed interminable, draining. Her
whole body trembled and she panted by the time she reached the
ritual room.
Again Tuck handled the door. The harp strings sang, the latch
slowly compressed, the door inched open.
When it was wide enough for her to walk through-a graceful glide
was beyond her-she carried the terrarium in, looking only at her
planet, ignoring the men except as shadowed bulks she had to
negotiate around to reach a waist-high table near the pentagram
rug.
"Let the storm go, Marian, but no destruction to the land or
trees."
That would mean keeping the Wind and Lightning in the sky or
moving the storm farther out to the sea. Marian clenched her
fingers around the glass. Sweat trickled from her temple and was
absorbed by her hair.
She couldn't do it. She was going to fail. The storm started
slipping from her grasp, moved quickly inland, and lightning struck
just outside the city in forks that would soon ignite trees-her
anxiety fueled the storm. If she wasn't careful, there'd be an
earthquake, tornado and tidal wave. Heat crawled up her
face.
Her neck strained as she angled her head to focus on the planet
ball. For an instant, she thought she'd grabbed control. Then the
outside of the city went up in flames, and a few seconds later the
tidal wave put out the fire.
"Very impressive," Jaquar said.
She bit her lip. She wanted to shut her eyes, or cry, or scream.
Maybe even all three.
Gasping in a breath, she relaxed her hard, frozen grip on the
glass, finger by finger, cleared her mind of outside distractions
and sent calm through herself and the ball. The damage had
been done. She'd averted an earthquake, but the city model was in
ruins.
As far as she was concerned it had been a pop quiz, and she
hated those. She'd had no time to prepare. If she'd known in
advance, she could have practiced. The wind peaked again and she
forced her thoughts away from self-recrimination to slowly heat the
land and dry it.
"Now restore the coastline to its previous form that you showed
me this morning," Bossgond ordered in a steely voice.
She almost lifted her eyes to stare at him. He must be
kidding-or she wished he was. But his energy beating at her was
stern, forceful.
She had no energy to do the task he required. Another failure
loomed. Her dress stuck to her, then released the scent of fresh
flowers, and she flushed again-they knew she sweated. She snatched
at the heat of her body for energy and re-formed a third of her
coastline.
Now she was cold, her knees trembling. She'd fall down soon.
"Sunlight," squeaked Tuck in her ear. His fur was warm by her
neck. He was the best male in the room, no question.
Good idea. She lifted the globe and paced to a patch of sunlight
slanting through a tower window. The warmth felt good on her back,
more, it gave her energy. She thought she could feel it
sifting through the ends of her hair.
Collecting threads of Power from the sun's warmth, the light
that surrounded her, she visualized the strands braiding into a
rope. A link from the sun through her, to her hands, to energy
forming inside the planet ball.
She hummed low, under her breath, then a little louder as Power
crackled between her hands, became a pressurized force that
reclaimed land from the ocean, solidified it, carved it into its
former configurations.
Again her dress released fragrance, but Marian barely noticed
it. She was concentrating on her world, the eastern coast of
her continent. She sculpted a cliff here in the north,
making it more sheer, a rocky outcropping appeared in the south.
She re-formed the caves and arches she'd enjoyed creating- why had
she done that? It was fierce, intricate work. Finally the last rock
jutted from the sea.
With the realization that she was through, her hands turned
slippery, weakness threatened. She couldn't drop the sphere! No!
Hastily she tottered back toward the table to put the terrarium on
it. The glass slid from her hands and landed with a clank.
But nothing worse happened.
She let her knees fold and she sank to the floor. Not caring
about appearances, she wiped her sleeve across her forehead. Only
then did she turn to look at the men.
They were inspecting her planet.
"What say you, Circlet Jaquar?" Bossgond's voice held a note of
challenge.
"It's a little too pretty. Obviously made by a woman," Jaquar
said.
Tuck ran down her gown to her lap, down her dress to the floor,
crossed to the table and swarmed up the carved leg. From there he
jumped for Jaquar's hand and hung on with all four teeth.
"Yow!" Jaquar shook his hand. Tuck bit deeper, then was thrown
off.
Marian instinctively reached out-a small ball of golden yellow
coalesced around Tuck and brought him to her. She held him in one
palm and stroked him with an index finger.
"How dare you hurt my friend!"
Jaquar smoldered at her. "Whatever it is, it attacked me." He
fashioned a bandage around his hand. "Bad bite."
"Rodent teeth are quite sharp. They grow continually, you
know."
Jaquar's eyes flashed with pain and anger as he turned to her.
He swore hot and long, but since Marian didn't know any of the
words except merde, she just smiled blandly.
"What is that thing?" asked Jaquar.
She lifted Tuck and stroked her cheek with his small body. "He
is my friend."
Jaquar snorted, narrowed his eyes. "I wouldn't have thought it
had the brain power to understand me-but it did, didn't it? It's
sentient, and has the beginnings of a personal Song."
"Tuck-that's his name-ate an atomball."
Jaquar's eyes rounded, his stare fixed on the hamster.
"Remarkable," he murmured.
"Let us return to the point, Circlet Jaquar. Do you agree that
Apprentice Marian has passed her Testing to become of Scholar
status?"
Shaking his head, Jaquar tapped the glass. "She didn't make
Circlet level. Her control was poor."
"But she did succeed in her Tests to name her a
Scholar."
Jaquar sent her and Tuck a hard gaze, cradled his hand. "It's
only been a little over two weeks since she arrived!"
"Time is not relevant. Power and mastery of her art is. She
passed the Scholar Tests."
"Yes," Jaquar agreed reluctantly. "She is no longer a mere
Apprentice."
Giddy delight filled her and Marian was glad she was sitting.
Her muscles were relaxing so much that she might flop to the
ground. That would not be very graceful, but she was so happy, she
didn't care.
Bossgond inclined his head to Jaquar. "We agree she is of
Scholar status, then." Her teacher looked down at her. He was a
short man, but seemed to loom over her. "Marian, you will go to the
hot spring baths in the lowest level of the Tower and cleanse
yourself while I prepare the Ritual from Apprentice to
Scholar."
She stared. Tuck ran from her hands up to her shoulder, then
said, "Let's go, let's go, let's go!" He patted her face with tiny
claw-tipped paws that snapped her from her amazement. She blinked,
nodded and rose stiffly to her feet. Tuck hung on to her gown.
Hesitating at the door, she looked back at the men. Bossgond was
placing a light wooden altar in the center of the star, intent upon
his work. Jaquar met her gaze from under lowered brows, his blue
eyes brilliant. From the tune linking them, she sensed frustration,
but pride in her, a touch of incredulity that she'd already become
a Scholar.
She dipped a half curtsy and left the ritual room, then hurried
to her own chambers where she took a towel, her favorite soap that
smelled of lavender, and a clean gown and underwear to put
on. When Alexa had offered to have someone make bras and panties
for Marian, she'd jumped at the offer and the garments had arrived
a few days later. Now Marian had enough underthings to last out her
stay. She kept the bras just in case her magical robes failed.
Though she yearned for a long soak in the hottest pool, to
reflect on her Tests and what she should have done better, Marian
bathed quickly but thoroughly in the coolest pool- she had no wish
to appear lobster-red before the men-and dried and dressed in
panties and robe. She was pleased that she wasn't out of breath by
the time she climbed the five stories.
The room was lit by indirect sunlight and candles when she
entered. Bossgond stood in the top point of the star, wearing a
golden robe that matched his hair. Jaquar stood to the south,
between the two lower star-points, and had changed into a maroon
robe. Both robes were tied with belts of string and had no
ornamentation. They both wore embossed golden circlets around their
foreheads.
Bossgond bowed to Marian, Jaquar did the same. With a dull,
silver-handled knife, Bossgond indicated to Marian that she should
stand at the left point of the star, the east.
The incense was strong, and mixed with her triumph and relief
and exhilaration. She was giddy. Giggles caught in her throat.
She'd done it! She'd passed her Apprentice tests and become a
Scholar, on her way to being a Circlet. She felt prouder than if
she'd aced her doctoral dissertation. She wondered if she'd get a
robe with a hood- Marian shook the fuzzy thoughts away. She swayed.
Narrowing her eyes, she stared at the scented smoke filling the
ritual room. Was that what made her feel dizzy? Blinking hard, she
turned her head to Bossgond. He stared at her with an avuncular
expression.
She glanced at Jaquar. His eyelids were lowered so that only a
deep-blue glint showed. A flush showed under his skin, and his
mouth curved. He looked as if he was admiring her.
Tuck squeaked loudly in her ear. His claws dug into her neck and
the sharp pain focused reality around her.
"She is here, she is here, she is here!" Tuck's high,
piping voice hurt Marian's ears.
A neon-purple bat swooped through the window.
Marian blinked.
It hadn't swooped through an open window.
The bat zoomed around the Tower room, dizzying Marian again. She
couldn't watch.
Very good, Sinafin broadcast mentally. Everyone turned to
her. The magical shapechanger stood by the planet globe in fairy
form. Leaning toward it, she stared inside and nodded. Very
good, indeed.
"You are here!" Tuck hopped up and down on Marian's
shoulder.
Vaguely she recalled that he'd said something about becoming a
feycoocu like Sinafin. Marian wanted to lift her hand to him, catch
him close to her heart and keep him, protect him from any major
change. Any further major change. But her limbs were too
heavy. Was it the incense?
She stared fixedly at Sinafin, seeing a huge golden aura
surround the fairy, mirrored in small glitters that floated in the
air of the chamber.
Sinafin flew from the table to perch on Marian's other shoulder.
She was lighter than Tuck. The hamster scrambled around her neck to
meet the fairy.
Turning her head, Marian watched as Tuck held up bloody paws to
Sinafin.
You have blooded the new Sorceress. Good, Sinafin said
approvingly. Dipping her head, the fairy lapped blood from Tuck's
paws. He did the same.
Blood. Her blood, Marian thought. Eeeew.
13
Sinafin sent mentally, Bossgond and Jaquar, let us
proceed with the ceremony raising Marian from Apprentice to
Scholar. I will witness for the Marshalls, since Marian will be
working closely with Exotique Alexa.
Marian stood at the altar, Sinafin on one side of the platform,
Tuck on the other, Jaquar watching from the eastern star-point.
Bossgond gave her a chilled golden goblet with thick yellow liquid
she was supposed to drink.
Marian eyed it warily, but whether it was the smoke from the
incense or the aftereffect of her Tests, her mouth was dry and her
thirst horrible. So she braced herself and glugged.
It was the best orange juice she'd ever had, and she coughed to
cover her nervous giggle.
So many strange events-like the ceremony-and so many familiar
things used in different ways-like the orange juice. She'd
congratulated herself on being flexible, on going with the flow,
but now wondered if that had all been a lie and she'd wake up
crazed one morning from the stress of it all.
Before she could grab on to the thought, Sinafin was brushing a
kiss against her cheek and it felt suddenly as if she were drinking
a mimosa.
It is done! Sinafin said, a big smile on her fairy
face. Marian sensed the feycoocu spoke only to her. An
Apprentice could not have handled any trouble, any fearsome magics
aimed at her or demanding responsibilities. But you are now a Third
Degree Scholar.
Oh yes, there were certainly things to be wary of, and one of
them fluttered just beyond her nose. Marian hadn't forgotten that
Alexa had said the shapeshifter had her own agenda.
"I don't know what you are talking about," Marian said stiffly
to the fairy.
There are five degrees of apprenticeship and
scholarship that you must master before you become a Circlet. You
are already a Third Degree Scholar. It is good.
Marian licked the last traces of the juice from her lips and
gave Sinafin a hard look. "What about the rest-the trouble,
fearsome magic and demanding responsibilities?" She didn't mind the
last, but the first two were definite causes for concern.
"Time for you to discard the old robe of apprenticeship and don
the new one denoting a Scholar," Bossgond said, a proud note in his
resonant voice.
That dragged Marian's attention away from Sinafin. Bossgond held
up a robe-this one with a new symbol on it, an open book with a
whirlwind coming from the pages. And the symbol was stitched around
the hem and the ends of the sleeves. Marian liked the symbols, but
would have preferred to have chosen her own icons.
Then his words sank in. She was supposed to strip? Here? Now?
In front of everyone?
Tuck, of course, had seen her naked both lately and when he was
a mere hamster. And of the beings in the room, he was the only one
she felt comfortable seeing her naked and vulnerable. How could she
bare herself to everyone's-to Jaquar's- stare?
Bossgond shook the robe impatiently. "Come, Marian, undress that
I might robe you."
"Couldn't you just give me the gown?" She reached for it,
but he whisked it away, narrowing his eyes.
Alexa, too, has a problem with nudity, Sinafin announced
to them all.
Heat crept up Marian's neck, her face.
Alexa, too, does this changing-color thing, Sinafin
transmitted.
Grim, Marian snatched off her gown and dropped it to the floor,
then grabbed at the new dress Bossgond held, missed. It was already
too late to be ladylike, unconcerned and dignified.
He stared at her panties. "You aren't naked under your robe!" he
said indignantly.
Alexa, too, wears such strange garments, Sinafin
chirped.
Marian wanted to strangle the little being.
"Nice," rumbled Jaquar from somewhere at Marian's left.
Of course she hadn't forgotten he was there. She leaped at
Bossgond, wrenched the new dress from his grasp and pulled it over
her head.
When it slipped down she felt respectable again. "Is the
ceremony now over?" she asked.
Bossgond huffed, then went to the altar and picked up a long,
sharp knife. He dipped it in a bowl of earth, then water, held it
over a flame, then incense. The Sorcerer chanted as he did so,
words stirring the air.
Marian stared in horror. Surely she wouldn't be cut or branded!
Why hadn't he told her he'd-
He took her left wrist-the one both he and Alexa had cut-and
laid the flat of the blade on her arm, beneath the tattoo that had
appeared on her arm after she and Alexa had blood-bonded-a crossed
wand and jade baton.
But the knife was warm, not hot, and when he lifted it there was
a small red triangle.
"When this fades, you will be a Circlet," he said. Then he
nodded to Jaquar. "She is your pupil, now, formally under your care
and protection."
Marian yelped as if the knife had burned her. "What?"
No one answered her, they all concentrated on finishing the
ceremony. A moment later Bossgond, Jaquar, Sinafin and even Tuck
clapped their hands once. The sound echoed like thunder through the
room.
"It is done," Bossgond said.
This time Marian believed it. The room dimmed, then
brightened.
Bossgond addressed Jaquar. "Teach her Weather but not
plane-walking. Her bond with Amee is not strong enough to keep her
here rather than lost in the planes. I will speak to both of you
each evening. Separately."
Jaquar's face turned impassive. He jerked a nod at Bossgond.
A sound like a foghorn came. That's the boat with the
cook, Sinafin said.
"Stay in the pentagram, Marian. Jaquar, join with her and I will
send you to Mue Island," Bossgond said conversationally.
"No, wait-" Marian objected.
"Will you help me, feycoocu?" asked Bossgond.
Yes.
"I'll send your volaran home, Jaquar," Bossgond said.
Marian didn't see him, but Jaquar moved behind her, wrapped his
arms around her waist. "We're ready," he said.
Tuck ran to her and crawled up her dress to a low pocket.
"No, I'm not ready," Marian said crossly. "What's going on
here?"
"I'm a Weather Sorcerer, Bossgond isn't. He can't teach you what
you must learn." Jaquar's breath ruffled her hair and Marian
shifted away. His arms tightened.
He was too close. Too...dangerous. And though she didn't
experience the same flash of foresight she had now as when they'd
first met, warning bells rang in her ears.
She wanted to change her major.
Marian and Jaquar arrived in his Tower with a soft pop of
displaced air. Marian stumbled, but Jaquar held her and she didn't
fall. She was all too aware of his fast heartbeat. From the trip?
Or from proximity to her? She'd like to think the latter, but
didn't flatter herself.
As soon as her balance was steady, she pulled away and his arms
dropped from her. She strode across the parquet floor.
"Don't cross the circle!" he ordered.
It didn't seem smart to breach magic. She'd already walked down
a star-point and was near the circle that surrounded the pentagram.
She crossed her arms, turned back and scowled at him.
"I didn't agree to be your student."
He raised his brows. "I didn't ask that you be my pupil. That
was arranged by Bossgond and the feycoocu. Two beings who should
not be crossed." His hand dipped to a pocket near his belt. He
withdrew his fingers, holding a stick slightly larger than his
hand. With a flick, the rod lengthened and thickened until it was a
seven-foot staff of smooth and gleaming white-gold. Atop the staff
was a real miniature cloud that wisped and flowed with the
currents of air in the room. Or maybe from Jaquar's emotions. It
was looking like a thundercloud.
Excellent trick. Marian tightened her jaw to keep her mouth from
falling open. She itched to examine the wand up close. How would it
feel to keep a cloud in your pocket? To what use could you put such
an item? The notion captivated.
He tipped the staff to the star-point to her left. A
crack and flash of lightning and the whole pentacle smoked
gray, then turned into a silver pattern inset in the floor.
"This is my ritual room. Let's descend to my study. I have my
Scholar planet spheres in storage there. You can use them. Today
I'll want to judge the scope of your Power. If you are as well
versed as Bossgond believes, we can start your practicum outside
tomorrow."
She could feel her eyes round, her heartbeat rushed loud in her
ears. Outside-that meant with real weather. Wind. Clouds. Ocean.
Thunder. She focused on the cloud hovering atop his staff.
He chuckled. "Bossgond said you were particularly adept with
Lightning. But we will start, as always, with Wind and clouds."
"Of course," she said, trying to be calm.
A rustling came from her gown and Tuck popped his head out of
the pocket. He fixed his eyes on Jaquar. "I am hungry."
Jaquar scowled, cradled his hurt left hand against his chest.
"What are you doing here, mouse?"
Tuck issued a miniature growl she'd never heard before. "I am
Marian's companion. I am a hamster," he squeaked. "I eat nuts, and
fruit and atomballs." It sounded like a challenge.
Jaquar blinked, then he flung back his head and laughed.
"So you do." He set his wand aside to stand by itself and
snapped his fingers at Tuck. "Come here so I can meet my guest and
provide for him well."
Tuck narrowed his eyes, cocked his head. Take me to him,
please.
Marian started at the tiny voice in her mind. Tuck's voice. She
froze. Another thing that was far out of her experience. Having a
magical shapeshifter from another world, or an old Sorcerer speak
to her mind-to-mind was far less shocking than hearing her hamster.
Blindly, she reached into her pocket, closing her fingers gently
around his soft fur and sturdy little body. She cupped her hands so
he could sit in them. As she walked to Jaquar, Tuck rode as if he
were a king. King of the hamsters?
Incredible.
She stopped within a couple of feet of Jaquar, eyeing him
warily. He scrutinized Tuck, who wore his hamster-Buddha aspect.
Tinkling music emanated from him. She almost expected Tuck to spout
wise instructions.
"May I pick you up? I'll be careful," Jaquar said to Tuck.
"Yes," Tuck said.
Jaquar slid his hands under Marian's. A ripple of hot notes
licked between them. Jaquar's deep-blue eyes met hers and they
stood, linked by music and warmth and gaze. The world, even Tuck,
seemed to fall away until only Jaquar mattered.
Tuck nipped at her right index finger and Marian gasped, jerked
and spilled the hamster into Jaquar's steady hands.
Even as she stepped back, Jaquar was lifting the hamster to eye
level, studying him.
"I'd like to see all of you," Jaquar said, and turned Tuck to
look at his belly, check his ears, even look at his back end under
his stubby tale. Then Jaquar peered at the hamster's ears and eyes.
"Not a mouse, not a rat," Jaquar murmured. "Could you open your
mouth?"
Marian said, "Bossgond has representations of Tuck, perhaps even
of his internal organs and skeleton. I'd prefer you ask Bossgond
for the Hamster Lorebook instead of prodding Tuck."
Jaquar didn't look at her but raised his eyebrows. "And what
would Master Tuck prefer?"
Tuck preened. "Food," he said.
Laughing again, Jaquar said, "We'll get some for you." He placed
Tuck on his left shoulder, took the staff and strode from the
pentacle to a door in the far wall.
Unlike Bossgond's Tower, Jaquar's was octagonal. Marian wasn't
sure what that said about him. From what she'd read, when a
Sorcerer or Sorceress raised a Tower, it came from the image of the
"perfect" Tower in their mind. So did the shape indicate that the
man had many angles?
"I don't have any food in this room. Let's go down to my study."
He opened the door, and instead of a hall and stairway winding
around the full building like Bossgond's, Marian saw a tiny
circular stair built into its own round Tower, straight up and
down. It would be steep.
"Wait," Marian said, staring at the empty center of the circle.
She frowned. "Once again I've been transported without any of my
belongings."
Jaquar tilted his head. "I have some bespelled cloth you could
make into gowns, if you know how."
"I don't." To her dismay she felt a sting at the back of her
eyes. She straightened her spine, waved at him to go on.
His face softened. "I'm sure Bossgond will send your things with
my volaran."
That hadn't occurred to Marian; she still fumbled with small
daily strategies of planning and doing. Irritated at herself, she
nodded at Jaquar and said, "Of course." She walked over to the door
and waited for him to descend.
"The door will close and lock behind you automatically," Jaquar
said, his voice carrying up from the shadowy stairway. "I'm sorry
to be discourteous, but I would prefer that I know you better
before I give you the Songspell to my ritual room."
"Naturally," Marian said. How could such a thing be
discourteous? She hated when people messed with her stuff; it was
one reason she lived alone. She reached out and found a pipelike
rail against the curved wall. Passing a window, she looked out.
Bossgond's Tower had been five stories high, and this one looked to
be the same. Was the mass of a Tower also the measure of the
Sorcerer's Power? Jaquar's ritual room hadn't been as large as
Bossgond's. But it had been more beautiful. Airier, with pairs of
long pointed windows around the walls.
Since her new gown lifted itself from her feet, keeping her from
tripping, Marian had no trouble with the stairs, except that they
were in such a small space. Claustrophobia had rarely bothered her
before, but perhaps that was another change. She seemed to
metamorphose daily, perhaps even moment to moment, as if she
unfurled and tried new butterfly wings.
The pleasant fancy kept her mind occupied until she reached the
lower floor of Jaquar's study.
She entered to find this room was much like the one above, with
pointed-arched floor-to-ceiling windows in every wall, but the
chamber was larger by about a third. The octagonal proportions were
lovely, though it had fewer shelves than Bossgond's study, due to
the magnificent windows. She could see the whole room; it wasn't a
partitioned loft with study, sleeping space and tiny kitchen as
Bossgond's had been. Again the floor was parquet strips in an
elegant pattern.
Jaquar stood at a pretty sideboard, wooden with a top of
colorful tiles. One of the tiles glowed red-hot under a
teakettle.
Marian's mouth watered. She could almost taste tea-wanted it
more than coffee. Tea was a comfort drink.
At a small table next to the sideboard, Tuck sat. "Food," he
demanded.
Slanting a glance at Marian, Jaquar said, "Food?"
"Nuts, fruit. A bit of soft cheese. Some grains and greens,
dried vegetables and seeds."
With a gesture, a large china bowl appeared on the table with
Tuck. It was filled with various nuts, many of which Marian didn't
recognize.
Tuck cheeped in delight, hoisted himself over the rim and
plunged into the bowl, scattering nuts. Jaquar shook his head and
chuckled. "He really did dive into his food."
"Yes." Marian found herself smiling back at him. "He really
did."
The kettle whistled and Jaquar poured water into a teapot.
Matching mugs sat on the sideboard. He handed a cup to Marian. "Let
us sit. The tea will come when it is ready."
She wasn't quite sure what to make of that, but followed Jaquar
to a couple of large, soft chairs made of pillows. They were set
before windows looking out on a view across the island and to the
western ocean, not toward Lladrana. Marian realized from the shine
of the floor that he'd moved the chairs to this pair of windows
from across the room-and recently. Sensing that it had something to
do with his lost parents, she said nothing.
Jaquar sat and stretched out his legs. "Tell me what you want to
learn, Marian."
He almost sounded like a departmental counselor. But his voice
was too much a tool-even more than a professor's voice was-to
belong to a counselor, and she thought he probed more sharply than
any counselor would. Less interested in her and her wants and needs
than how she might fit into his plans. Her stomach tightened. She
hadn't had a return of the strange feeling that he was a dangerous
threat, but she wouldn't forget it. Still, there shouldn't be
anything wrong with honesty. Perhaps it would prompt him to be open
in return.
"I want to find a cure for my brother's disease and take it back
to Exotique Terre."
He stared at her in surprise.
"Bossgond didn't tell you?" she asked.
"No." Jaquar's voice was a mere whisper. "You don't intend to
stay here in Amee, then?"
She narrowed her eyes. "No. More than that, if the Snap doesn't
happen within the next few weeks, I'll be asking for help to return
to my home. My brother has a degenerative disease."
"I'm sorry," Jaquar said, and she thought he meant it.
"And what do you want of me?" she asked.
14
Jaquar's eyes widened. He opened his mouth, then shut it, and
his lips shaped a grim line. When he met her gaze, his was darkly
serious. "What do I want from you? I wish you to progress rapidly
to Circlet status." A corner of his mouth kicked up. "Despite what
Bossgond says, and your spectacular demonstration of Power this
morning, I do not believe that you learn so quickly."
"Oh? And how long did it take for Alexa to become a
Marshall?"
His head jerked back in surprise. "I, uh-" He blinked, then
looked as if he were calculating.
"The Marshalls have Tests, too, don't they?"
"Yes, yes they do." Again he half smiled. "Many would say they
have the hardest Tests in all of Lladrana. Alyeka was Tested the
moment she arrived and had passed by the time she went to bed. Say,
three hours."
Marian stared at him, struggling to keep atop the discussion.
She recalled what Alexa had said had happened the first night she
was in Lladrana. "But it cost her-her hair turned white."
Jaquar inclined his head. "Very true, and though she became a
Marshall at that time, it took her weeks to develop her Power, to
become a Marshall in more than title only. I may be wrong, you may
be extremely quick." He shrugged. "You are more mature than
most Scholars who are so innately Powerful."
"I've been told that the.. .Song.. .and your Tower Community
chose me in some way. That I heard the Summoning and answered it
because I fit your requirements."
"Also correct," he said.
At that point, the teapot sailed between them. It went first to
Jaquar. He held out his mug and the teapot tipped, pouring a
golden-brown stream of liquid into his cup, stopping when it was
about a quarter-inch from the top. Then the pot slowly turned, and,
as if it were a heat-seeking missile, aimed for the cup Marian
held.
Though her hand wanted to tremble, she forced it still while the
tea decanted into her mug. "Wonderful." She couldn't help a sigh of
pleasure.
Jaquar smiled. "I keep black tea for Alyeka. She has a weakness
for it, and apparently it is not as easily available here in
Lladrana as it is in your own land."
"That's kind of you."
"Not really. I like her, and she is an excellent Marshall, which
means that she can provide us with very interesting items such as
dreeth acid sacs."
Marian willed herself not to pale. She nodded.
"And it riles Bastien when a man pays attention to Alyeka.
Before she tamed him, Bastien had a habit of irritating people. I
am no exception."
Marian wouldn't have called either Alexa or Bastien tame. The
teapot finished turning another circuit and settled itself on a
small, solid wooden table in front of them. Since the top was
heavily scarred as if the table had been used for many purposes,
Marian didn't move to protect the surface. Jaquar didn't even seem
to notice that the pot might have left another unsightly mark.
Sorcerer or not, he was a real guy.
She had let new magic distract her long enough-as it had far too
often lately-so she returned to her priority. "Do you know much
about diseases or healing? I can tell you my brother's
symptoms."
But he was shaking his head. "I am sorry. I have no skill in
that area. I cannot help you."
Marian nodded and sipped her tea. Disappointed again.
Jaquar finished his drink, picked up the teapot and crossed the
room. She could hear him, but didn't take her eyes off the view
from the windows. Green land, a winding stream, the ocean beyond. A
lovely view. And nothing like the Flatirons of Boulder or the
mountains of Denver. Home.
An odd clatter caught her attention, and she turned her head to
see Jaquar pushing a cart containing the spheres. "Why don't they
float like the teapot?" she asked.
"Because the teapot is imbued with generations of household
magic and is used often. I fashioned these planet spheres a while
back in my first year as a Circlet when I wanted to experiment with
weather in a controlled environment. When I was done, I removed the
energy from them to use elsewhere." He wedged the cart into the
space between her feet and the table, then waved a hand. It lowered
to angle over her chair like an adjustable desk.
Marian chuckled. No, Lladrana wasn't home, but it continued to
be endlessly fascinating. She could make a home here- even
raise a Tower-if she didn't need to return to Andrew.
"Revive the spheres," Jaquar said.
Though his tones were low and spoken like a request, Marian
didn't delude herself. The downtime they'd spent together was
finished and he now watched her with the keen gaze of a judging
prof.
It was easier than she had anticipated, and obviously far less
difficult for her than Jaquar had expected. But the glass and the
models-the land and cities and dried plant life-all resonated of
Jaquar, and Marian found the patterns simple to work with, as if
the man had familiar thought processes. In a few moments, all three
terrariums were vivid with "life"-and weather. The smallest jar
showed a pretty ocean lapping at newly plumped trees, opening and
stretching under bright sunlight and a sky with a few clouds..
.that spelled Marian in English. It was a signature that she
just couldn't resist. The middle terrarium was dark with rain and
storm. The largest planet sphere had new continents, oceans and
trade winds.
Jaquar studied her work from under lowered brows. He lifted his
head, shaking it. "Unbelievable."
Marian smiled sweetly.
"We will definitely begin your practicum outside, tomorrow
morning."
Tuck waddled up, squeaking something that Marian couldn't
understand because his mouth was full and both of his cheek pouches
were distended. He looked nearly two-thirds bigger than usual.
"By the Song!" Jaquar said. He squatted. "May I pick you up,
Tuck?"
There was mumbled hamster agreement.
Once again Jaquar scrutinized the hamster nose-to-tail, paying
particular attention to his cheeks. "What a remarkable animal."
Tuck smirked.
Jaquar looked to Marian, and for the first time she thought she
saw him without any mask. His eyes held a dark shadow, his faint
smile had no practiced charm, his whole body exuded interest and
attraction.
"A remarkable companion to a remarkable woman."
Warmth bloomed in Marian, both simple and complex. She felt
pleasure at the sincere compliment, and a low ache at the magnetism
humming between them, all too tempting to act upon.
Tuck wriggled in Jaquar's grasp. "Bed!"
It was too close to Marian's drifting thoughts. She
straightened. "Yes, what of the sleeping arrangements? I had my own
apartment in Bossgond's Tower."
"My Tower is just as well equipped as Bossgond's," he said. He
gestured upward. "As you know, my ritual room is the top of the
Tower, as is customary. This room is my study." He waved a hand.
"It has many windows and great light. I prefer dimness in my
personal rooms, so the lower three levels have only a few square
windows." He hesitated. "I was quite young when I raised my Tower
and gave little thought to having an Apprentice. I have never taken
one. But there's a suite of rooms-half the bottom floor-that should
serve."
He held Tuck up to gaze into the hamster's eyes. "Do you want to
stay with Marian, me, or have a little house here, Tuck?"
"A house!" Tuck squeaked.
Jaquar strode over to a shelf that held an elaborate model about
four feet square. The top was a church and attached buildings that
looked like a monastery or nunnery. But it was what was
below the building that fascinated-a series of tunnels and
"underground" chambers. Some were stone vaults and paved, others
rough caverns. Marian glanced down to the brass plate at the bottom
of the model. It read "Portions of the Singer's Abbey."
"Portions?" she asked.
He grimaced. "The Friends of the Singers are the most secretive
people in Lladrana. Much to the Tower Community's dismay, we don't
have accurate maps or models of the Singer's Abbey. This construct
is the best we have."
His gaze met hers and they shook their heads in unison. No
knowledge should be hidden. It wasn't right. She smiled, then his
lips curved, too.
Tuck squeaked and wiggled. "My house!"
"I think he likes it," Jaquar said. "One moment, Tuck, and I'll
take it off the shelf. The model has its own stand that rises from
the floor." Jaquar handed Tuck to Marian. The hamster quivered with
excitement. Jaquar ran his hand down the carved front support of
the bookcase, found a sculpted cloud and turned it. There was a
soft whirr and a pedestal rose from the floor and sat in one
of the octagonal corners of the room.
"That location matches the geographical placement of the
Singer's Abbey in relation to the sun," Jaquar said.
Tuck clapped his paws in delight, causing notes like glass
windchimes to tremble through the room.
Marian chuckled and walked over to the heavily carved stand that
consisted of a bottom, four pillared legs and an open top with
inset grooves for the model.
Jaquar overtook them and carefully placed the dollhouse on the
stand, then stooped, reached up and hooked his fingers into the
bottom of the construct. With a pull, a small ramp descended to the
floor. He grunted, then looked askance at Tuck.
"When old Sorceress Entanra gave this to me, neither of us knew
why she'd included the staircase." He stood and dusted his hands
off. "There are several Lladranan noble families that have a touch
of foresight, and she came from one of them."
"Put me down, down, down!" Tuck demanded. He obviously
yearned to try the staircase made just for him. Marian set him on
the floor. He ran to the little wooden ramp and climbed it until he
disappeared into the model.
"Entanra was of the Chiladees-Bastien's mother's family," Jaquar
said.
Marian shot him a startled glance. "Bastien has the gift of
foresight?"
Jaquar grunted as he tested the fit of the model in the stand.
It was solid. "No, but his brother Luthan Vauxveau does. You might
remember that if you happen to meet him." Jaquar tapped a finger on
the chapel. "He's a noble Chevalier with land and volarans of his
own, but he's also the representative of the Singer to the
Marshalls' Council. The Marshalls usually lead Lladrana-they are
the ones who like to do that sort of thing."
"Ah."
"Chevaliers of the Field are our main fighting force- knights
who ride horses or fly volarans."
At that point, Tuck popped out of one of the holes in the cavern
bottom and wound his way up to a large chamber, sniffing madly all
the way and making his usual comments to himself. "This is dusty,
no good. Smells like incense here, not nice for food. Where to
store the food?" He stopped and turned to them, clasping his
paws.
"Thank you, Jaquar. Thank you, Marian. This is a wonderful
house!" Then he hopped into a tunnel that vanished into the depths
of the model.
Marian frowned. "Is there somewhere we could see the whole thing
if we wanted?" A twinge of abandonment rushed through her.
Jaquar shrugged. "Each side provides a different angle, of
course, and if absolutely necessary, the model is constructed in
different, interlocking-spell layers and could be disassembled, but
I would prefer not to do that. Does having Tuck up here in my study
instead of your rooms bother you?"
Marian shifted. "A little." Jaquar's eyes had deepened into
sapphire. "I lost him during the Summoning. He was trapped in his
ball-his vehicle-and the wind took him away." She choked. "I
thought he was dead."
"How did you find him?"
"The feycoocu told me where to look. He was on Bossgond's
island."
Eyes widening, Jaquar said, "How did he get there?"
"I don't know." She shivered. "I don't know," she repeated in a
whisper. She glanced at the new hamster house. "I asked Tuck, but
he only vaguely recalls when he was just an animal."
"Hmm," Jaquar said. "He should be safe enough in the model, and
in this Tower. Outdoors is another matter."
Marian fisted her hands. "I don't know if I could lose him now.
He's a real companion." She couldn't imagine how hard it would be
to leave him here on Amee when she went back. More and more she
feared that Tuck wouldn't want to return to Earth.
"Sleep!" came Tuck's high voice, and as Marian turned to look at
the model of Singer's Abbey, the light in it dimmed. That gave her
a jolt, too. Hamsters were nocturnal, but since he'd awakened after
feasting on the atomball, Tuck had become more diurnal. And he had
enough Power to dim the light in his own house.
"You worry too much," Jaquar said. He reached out and took her
closed fingers in his large, elegantly long-fingered hands, lifting
one of her hands, then another to his lips.
With the brush of his mouth on her fingers, an intricate Song
bloomed between them, full-bodied, with a long melodic line.
Marian shivered. Her hands opened and her fingers twined with
his. As they joined palm to palm, a current of music twisted
between them.
The intensity of feeling, and the orchestral music, built until
her every nerve ending shivered.
"Dance with me," he said, voice low.
That was the last thing she'd expected.
Slowly, slowly, he raised her left hand to the top of his
shoulder. His smile was edged with challenge and irony-and she
sensed he dared both himself and her.
Jaquar's smile looked more ironic than amused. Then he stared
down at her. "You're surprised. Odd."
"I'm not used to.. .to melodies between people."
"But your people cherish music. I know this is so, because I
know Alyeka."
"Our.. .Power.. .doesn't manifest itself in music." It was all
Marian could say. She didn't really know how strong or how
pervasive true magic was on Earth. Surely it was secret knowledge,
practiced by only a very few.
"Do you dance?" he asked.
With the words came a rush of kindness, interest, attraction
from him. She grew light-headed.
"Yes," she said.
He set his left hand on her waist, in waltz formation. Did they
waltz here? Did Lladranans bring the waltz to Earth or vice versa?
Or did an Exotique learn it and take it home during a Snap?
The music between them surged, developed undertones, harmonies.
Jaquar swept her into a waltz, and the only music they heard was
that which they made between themselves.
He was graceful, supple, his steps wooing. More than the turns
made her dizzy. She'd never felt so womanly, so pretty. Nothing in
his gaze, his touch, his aura made her feel too tall, or too
plump.
Along with that came another realization-no one on Lladrana had
looked at her with critical eyes. Bossgond had studied her work and
snorted at her early efforts, but he'd never examined her person
with a judgmental gaze.
No one seemed to think she was overweight and out of shape. Her
body didn't seem to matter.
She felt beautiful.
And the man dancing with her was achingly alluring.
Her focus changed from herself to them, as a unit. The
dance.
Their steps matched. His body angled toward her, tempting, his
eyelids were heavy over gleaming eyes, his mouth relaxed to show
the natural softness of his lips...
With another turn, the scent of him, something male that spoke
of storms and windswept cliffs, flowed through her senses. The Song
between them mesmerized, was a primal mystery meant to be
explored.
Without thought, her body became supple, pressed against his.
Her blood heated until she felt flushed, ready, open.
The Song could go on forever and she'd enjoy every moment.
Rhythm and tempo changed, the music became slower, languorous.
He led and she followed, her senses filled with the pulse of desire
between them, soft air caressing her, embracing her as she danced
with him.
Daylight faded from the windows, let in whispering dark, and
still they danced, caught in the moment, never tiring, building a
strong connection between them.
It seemed like a dream.
Dream.
The word dropped coldly into her consciousness, opened her
memory. She'd had many lately. Dreams of the Songs and Summoning,
of Power, of doom and death. She stiffened, and with her thoughts,
the music spiked harshly.
The expectation in his eyes changed from misty to wary. He
slowed, brought them to a stop after a quick whirl, then bowed
before her, keeping his gaze on her face. "A lovely dance
indeed."
Though his voice was still quiet, Marian could almost hear his
defensive shields snapping up.
They stepped apart.
Marian cleared her throat. "It's a very strong Song between us.
Stronger than the one I have with Bossgond, even, and we're
blood-bonded. No doubt because you're my teacher and I've advanced
to Scholar?"
He smiled, and it was empty. "No doubt."
Irritation washed through Marian. He was keeping things from
her. She wondered if the same thing had happened to Alexa, and
would have bet her doctorate that it had. She'd have liked to ask
Alexa, though. Marian had discovered her telepathy didn't reach the
Castle from the islands. Where was a good telecommunications system
when you wanted it?
But Jaquar had masked his expression and moved to the doorway to
the circular stairs. "I think we should survey the small suite at
the bottom of the Tower. I haven't been there recently and don't
know how comfortable the rooms are."
"Of course." Marian smiled politely. She wanted to talk to
Alexa. Yearned for a telephone, or the crystal ball they used here.
Marian wondered who was the Circlet specializing in communications
and what they'd charge for making a link with Alexa.
She was walking briskly when she saw something on the floor near
the shelf where the model of the Singer's Abbey had been. She
didn't know why it snagged her attention, or how she saw it so
well, except that it, too, had a Song, and the minute she focused
on it, the dark tune came clearly in her mind. As she grew closer
she saw an intricately knotted length of six-stranded embroidery
floss in ox-blood red. She certainly would have missed noticing it
except for the low and slow drumbeats emanating from it.
As she picked it up, her fingers closed convulsively over the
floss and drumming poured through her, drowning all her other
senses.
Danger!
15
Only the thread in her hand had substance, and the drumming of
it eradicated all sight, sound, and even the pressure of the air on
her body, the floor under her feet. She hoped she was standing.
She wanted to scream but didn't even know if her mouth opened. A
symphony of drums would drown her out.
Don't panic. Panic could only make her situation worse.
Focus!
Feel!
And she did. She felt the tide of her own body moving in
counterpoint to the drums.
More!
She felt her Power. Pulling it, gathering the magic, started a
warmth in her feet that rose through her, accumulating speed and
heat. Her skin felt hot, tight, flushed with the magic she
contained. It spread up her neck, finally reached her face and
head.
Her ears popped and for a moment she was dizzy enough to think
the top of her skull was exploding with heat and light. The drums
subsided into a thrumming whisper just above the threshold of her
hearing.
Then she heard Jaquar's voice.
"What do you have there?" he asked sharply.
Light painted the insides of her eyelids red and she realized
she'd closed her eyes. She opened them and shook her head.
Jaquar stood a pace in front of her. "Can I see what you
have?"
Marian blinked up at him. Tension was back in his superb frame,
lining his face. "I-" It came out as a squeak lower than Tuck's at
his quietest. She tried harder. "I think this fell to the floor
when you took the model off the shelf." Relaxing every muscle of
her hand, her fingers curled open to show the thread.
Jaquar's mouth tightened. "The weapon-knot."
"Weapon?" Marian asked faintly.
He nodded. "Interesting that you can handle it. I never
could."
"What kind of weapon?"
"I don't know. We, the Circlets of the Tower, don't know."
"Please explain," Marian asked.
Shrugging, Jaquar said, "As usual, after a successful Tower
raising, I had an open house." He grinned. "You get gifts. Entanra
brought the model of the Singer's Abbey, and I put it on the shelf.
When I started cataloguing my gifts the next day, the knot was
here. I didn't know what it was, but I could feel the energy. My
parents had spent the night, and Mother realized it was a weapon,
but not what sort or how to use it. We sensed its danger. None of
us touched it. I never did. Now, there it is, in your hand." He
nodded to the thread.
Marian opened her hand flat. She seemed to have mastered the
latent energy of the thread. The drums were muffled. The dark-red
strands of the floss gleamed wetly, like living arteries. If they'd
pulsed, Marian would have dropped them and run screaming from the
room. She tried for a casual tone.
"I suppose you untie the knots to loose the weapon."
"Probably, but do you want to try it?"
"No!"
He laughed shortly. "Neither do I."
"Should I put it back?"
Jaquar turned and strode back to the door. He opened it and
started down the steps, his voice echoing hollowly back to her. "Do
what you please. As I said, I never could handle it. Consider it
yours."
Her fingers closed back over the floss. Carefully, she returned
it to the shelf.
Jaquar stood at the night-black windows of his Ritual room, the
northeastern windows facing the Dark's nest. Marian and the
mousekin had retired and now was time for thought- which should
have been full of regret, but wasn't.
He'd done it. Despite his original plans, despite all that was
wise, despite the vengeance that still raged inside him, he'd made
a Song with the new Exotique.
In the weeks since he'd found the nest, with around-the-clock
Scholars and Circlets watching it from other planes, they'd only
discovered that the place wasn't true north, but northeast. During
that time, the Exotique had gone from Apprentice to Scholar with
lightning speed. Then, just a few moments ago, she'd strolled to
the weapon-knot and picked it up, as easily as if she plucked lint
from her gown.
Obviously she was the one to send into the nest, to learn of the
monsters and the master and the Dark. To harm it, perhaps destroy
it.
A hive of activity seethed around the maw of the nest, as if it
would disgorge new sangviles soon. Sangviles that had hideously
destroyed his parents, killed exponentially, and threatened the
Tower Community.
Yet he had formed a bond with her. Vengeance warred with desire.
Not the desire of baseless lust, but of affection mixed with
caring.
He'd liked holding her.
He couldn't send her. Not without great preparation, spells of
protection, knowledge. Jaquar knew her now-Marian. Not the
Exotique, the tool for revenge, but Marian, the eager Scholar with
shadows in her eyes from pain for her brother. The woman who had a
ridiculous but powerful mousie as a companion.
He'd liked having her hands on him even more than he'd enjoyed
holding her. The dance had been wonderful. Inside the moment, his
despair had dropped from him until there was only the woman and the
emotions she made him feel.
The emotions, the Song that had resonated between them.
Affection, desire, even delight in the discovery of one who shared
talents and thought processes.
He could not send her to her destruction.
His hands fisted and a great pressure built inside his chest-
grief needing to break free. But he didn't know how to release it.
It filled him until he could hear it pounding in his ears, stinging
his eyes, drying his throat.
Beating at the shields of his emotions.
Fumbling, he opened the latch of one of the floor-length
windows, stepped out onto the roof of his study, raised his arms
and called the wind.
A gale whirled around him, sucked him up inside it, and he was
the strength and the power and the raging of it. The funnel spun
him away, shrieking out his rage. Then air whipped his eyes and he
laughed until tears ran down his face.
He rode the wind into a storm.
Another awakening in a new place.... The next morning, Marian
blinked sleep away, her eyes growing used to the gloom-and the
silence. The undertone of the music of the island, of Jaquar's
Tower, of inanimate objects still pulsed, but there was no clatter
of Tuck. Or of Bossgond.
Or Jaquar-though, as she thought of him she heard notes
cascading from above like those from musical strings.
Sighing, she stretched under the quilt. There was a feel to the
room as if the season was deep winter-the chamber was warm and dark
and cozy, with threatening cold outside. It seemed to have missed
rejuvenating spring. Frowning, she tested the whole Tower and found
that the "winter" was Jaquar's underlying grief and low-level
depression, the "threat" was the sangvile.
She didn't want to remember the image of the sangvile.
And the quiet was too much. So she hurried to the shower cabinet
and bathed and dressed. Then she left her rooms for the corridor
that bisected the floor, and went to the door to the staircase
tower and up.
She learned something immediately. Jaquar's Tower wasn't nearly
as soundproof as Bossgond's.
"No! I won't. That's final." His tone was sharp even through the
door.
He'd said no to Bossgond. Was the old mage pressuring him
again?
"I'll see you this evening, and I'll come alone."
Marian hesitated. Should she strum the doorharp or leave?
"Marian, Marian," squeaked Tuck. He scrabbled on the other side
of the door, tiny paws showing under the crack.
"Scholar Marian awaits me. Until later," Jaquar said
tersely.
So Marian ran her thumbnail over the doorharp and smiled at the
pleasing riff of notes. She wanted to do it again, and recalled how
Alexa had enjoyed sounding Bossgond's. Easily amused, we Earth
women, she thought with a smile, then looked up as Jaquar opened
the door.
He was scowling.
She curtsied. Tuck shot forward and patted her foot in greeting.
She scooped him up and put him on her shoulder. "Good morning,
Tuck."
The hamster cuddled close to her neck, thrummed against her
throat. With surprise, she realized a Song ran between her and her
companion now. They'd both progressed in their own way to make one.
And it resonated with memory-tones of Earth as well as new and
exciting experiences in Lladrana.
Jaquar took a pace back and held the door wide. "Come in. I have
reviewed your work in the planet spheres. They continue to progress
extremely well. It is definitely time to start your practicum. We
will work outside this morning."
Marian raised her brows. "Good morning to you, too." She entered
the room.
Color deepened under the golden tone of his cheekbones. He
inhaled deeply, closed the door quietly behind her. Then he
inclined his torso in an elegant half bow that emphasized his body
under the fine cream-colored linen shirt and brown suede trousers
he wore. "Forgive me, I was concentrating on work." He gestured her
in. "Breakfast is in the hotbox."
Something about him was different. She studied him closely from
under her eyelashes. He was pale, lines of weariness slightly
deeper at the corners of his eyes, but his muscles seemed...looser.
He no longer hummed with stress. With exquisite care, she sought
the tune echoing between them, analyzing it. The edge of his grief
was gone, mellowed into resignation. Perhaps the feeling of
melancholy would soon fade from his Tower, too. He wouldn't thank
her for commenting on either him or his Tower, though.
He led her to the chairs they'd sat in last night when she'd
revived his terrariums. When she sat, he placed a lovely black
lacquered tray over her knees. The dishes looked like fine china,
but the coffee mug was sturdy. On her plate was an omelette-since
two sorts of cheese oozed out the end and the top had a sprig of
what looked like dill, she could only hope that the meal was more
than fuel.
Cautiously she tried a bite, and moaned in pleasure at the
delicious mixture of tastes.
That pulled him from his brooding and he actually smiled. "I'd
heard that Bossgond's meals weren't too tasty."
"Mmm," Marian said. She didn't want to criticize Bossgond, but
couldn't disagree. "I would have liked to interview the cook who
arrived, though."
"You can trust Alyeka," Jaquar said.
Marian smiled. "Yes." In fact, Alexa was the only one
Marian trusted.
Meanwhile, she enjoyed the meal he placed before her and darted
looks around his den as he sat staring into his coffee.
Tuck had already eaten and was exploring Jaquar's study. From
the hamster's comments, she understood that he found it a
wonderfully fragrant and interesting place. She wanted to
investigate, too, but from Jaquar's closed expression, figured that
he'd hustle her out of his space and on to the less intimate
environs of the island as soon as she took her last sip of the
excellent coffee.
She'd already noticed that his octagonal room captured more
sunlight than Bossgond's round Tower.
He had more bell jars than Bossgond-for experimenting with
weather? And a lot of what most Earth people would call magical
tools-staffs of different woods and metals, wands,
ceremonial knives with no edge and wickedly sharp daggers. There
was also a collection of small boxes, as varied as the staffs, and
Marian longed to open them all and see what treasures they
held.
The chamber had an underlying elegance that was so much a part
of Jaquar. She took her gaze from the sweeping shelves of tidy
books to the man as he lounged, and a stray thought came that he'd
be devastating in a tuxedo. Not that she'd ever see him in one.
He wasn't what she'd expected. Of course she'd only met him
briefly, but she'd sensed he was trying to sweep her away with his
charm. Since they'd met again, he hadn't acted deliberately
charming at all, and she liked that.
In fact, she liked him, and the Song that twined between them.
They had much in common-love and concern for their family, a
passion for study, and weather Power. Absently, she drained her cup
and set it on the tray.
"Are you ready?"
"Yes."
He whistled a note and the dishes disappeared. Marian grinned.
For all the times she'd seen the spell, it was still one of her
favorites. She'd learned the task her second evening with
Bossgond.
Jaquar tilted his head, his gaze fixed on Tuck, who was sniffing
the lowest shelf of boxes. "Tuck, Marian and I will be spending the
morning outside. Will you be fine here?"
"Yes." Tuck didn't even look in their direction.
"Can you please stay in this room?"
Tuck hesitated, raised his head and looked at them. He bobbed.
"Yes."
"Thank you," Jaquar said, still polite.
His manner toward Tuck warmed Marian. That was another thing she
and Jaquar had in common-they liked and respected Tuck. Marian had
always sensed that Bossgond wanted to dissect Tuck, searching to
see if the atomball he ate was still lodged somewhere inside.
Still courteous, Jaquar led the way to the narrow curving stairs
and started down them. Marian carefully shut the door behind her,
testing it to make sure it was shut, then followed Jaquar.
He strode from the bottom of the stairway turret through the
hallway on the bottom floor of his Tower and threw open the heavy
front door. Bright sunshine painted the hallway floor yellow.
Interesting that both Bossgond and Jaquar had main entrances that
faced east-was that a male thing, an innate preference to look
toward Lladrana and not out to the sea, or did all main doors face
east?
He went out and stopped at the edge of a golden line-his
protective spell, no doubt-and carved a door in it with his
telescoping wand that currently was the size of Alexa's baton.
Marian stood at the threshold and inhaled the scent of Mue
Island-it was as different from Alf as Jaquar was from Bossgond.
There was more of the mainland scent, since the island was closer
to Lladrana; there was also more ocean because the island was
smaller. The fragrances of the island soil and flowers and trees
varied subtly, and were more pleasing to her than the astringent
air around Bossgond's tower. The atmosphere burgeoned with early
summer.
Her spirits lifted and she caught herself humming counterpoint
to the tune of the island, a tune that was one chord of the melody
comprising Jaquar's personal Song. Then Marian sighed. Would she be
here on Amee long enough to fully develop her own Song?
The wish to stay condensed into a hard kernel of yearning within
her-something she couldn't fulfill if she wanted to be near
Andrew.
Jaquar motioned for her to join him. When she did, he hesitated
a moment, then took her hand, closing his fingers over hers.
Warmth, and simple pleasure at the easy link flowed through Marian
and she smiled up at him.
He returned her smile, and it reached his eyes, banishing the
dark shadows of grief.
"As 1 said last night, we'll start with wind and clouds. The
best place for that is on the western coast of the island where the
wind blows in from the ocean." He shrugged. "There are only a
couple of tiny islands that no one of the Tower Community has
claimed between Mue and the Brisay Sea."
Excitement bubbled through her. She would have rubbed her hands,
but wanted to keep her fingers in his. "Great!"
He chuckled. "1 don't anticipate that you will have any problems
with the clouds-that's Second Degree Scholar work and you are at
the upper edge of Third Degree."
Her step hesitated.
"What?" he asked.
"Third Degree means something entirely different-a negative
connotation in my own language."
Interest sharpened his gaze. "What?"
Oh boy. How to define the phrase? "It is a very harsh
interrogation by the authorities." And then "the authorities"
needed explaining.
They had walked across a meadow of tall grass to a grove of
evergreen trees, and Marian looked back to see the Tower in its
entirety.
As she'd suspected, the lower two floors were of greater
diameter and the reddish stone looked small, more like cobblestones
or bricks. The other three stories were definitely octagonal, with
large pairs of pointed windows, airy and graceful from the outside
as well as the inside.
She frowned. Every few feet around the lower two stories were
jagged dark marks, like soot or gunpowder. She stopped and stared.
"What happened?"
Jaquar tensed beside her, then replied neutrally. "Even as a
Circlet, fire isn't my strong suit. As I raised the Tower and
called Lightning, it came-and singed the stone, and pointed
directly to my keystone. I couldn't clean it, so the only option
was to call it down several times to keep the stone's location
secret."
"There must be twenty marks around the base of your Tower."
Jaquar dropped her hand, turned and strode away. "I called a
lightning storm. That was the result. I was still quite young at
the time."
It was obviously a sore point, so she abandoned the subject and
hurried to catch up with him. "Is the meadow close?" She hadn't
walked so much since her trip to Paris as she had the past two and
a half weeks.
"Close enough. Your practice with clouds-" he glanced up as if
confirming there were plenty to work with "-should only take a
quarter-hour. Then you can progress to other 'air' lessons such as
Calling the Wind. The meadow is flat and also a perfect spot to
practice Wind Dancing."
Calling the Wind. Wind Dancing. Anticipation zipped through her.
"How lovely," she said, and swung into step with him.
He looked down at her and chuckled. "You're a Sorceress through
and through."
"A scholar," she said, nodding. "I always have been." Wistfully,
she thought back to her apartment, her old studies. They'd been
ongoing, but not nearly as enticing as learning magic-Power.
The moment they reached the meadow, he put her to work. They lay
side by side on the sunny grass and looked up at the clouds. After
all the time she'd spent with the terrariums, it was easy for her
to send her mind and will and Power into the sky to shape the
clouds and move them around. She was concentrating so on proving
her worth that the awareness of his big body beside hers, nearly
touching, almost didn't register. Almost.
She couldn't afford the distraction of thinking about the strong
aura of him, the well-formed muscles, the thickness and sheen of
his hair....
It had definitely been too damn long since she'd had sex. And
the moment that idea crossed her mind, the cloud she'd been
herding disintegrated into a dozen little ones. Luckily, Jaquar had
just said, "Done." Her timing had been perfect.
Still, she didn't roll over to look at him, but scrambled to her
feet, took a handkerchief from her gown pocket and wiped her
forehead. Then she grinned at him, pretending the heat in her had
been generated by her Power instead of thoughts of rolling around
with him. "What's next?" she asked.
His eyes narrowed, then took on a twinkle. The little Song
between them spiked in intensity and beat, but he replied with a
smile, "Now you Call the Wind."
16
Marian clasped her hands together to keep them from trembling
with excitement. Her first real use of Weather Magic came now!
Again Jaquar's instructions were succinct and the Songspell easy
to learn. The whistling words and rushing rhythm made innate sense
to Marian, as if she'd always known this Song. She only needed to
discover it within herself.
So she lifted her arms and spoke-sang the spell, and a gentle
breeze wafted tendrils of her hair that had escaped her braid, then
died when she laughed, forgetting to hold it. She looked to Jaquar,
aching to share her delight in this first real proof of her magic.
Bossgond was so old, she didn't think he remembered what it felt
like when magic was new and exhilarating and shooting through your
veins.
Jaquar was relaxed, leaning against a tree and smiling at her.
Since he also had the old-memory look in his eyes, she guessed that
he recalled very well how she felt. Their eyes met. Another moment
shared.
A bubble of happiness broke from her mouth in a giggle. She
lifted her hand to put it over her mouth at the silly sound, then
let her fingers drop. She didn't need to be anyone except her
essential self here and now, did not need to wear a mask, to
project an image. So she laughed and stretched her arms high and
shouted, "Yes!" Then, "What's next?" she asked eagerly.
He didn't move from the tree at the edge of the clearing,
staying out of her magical space, giving her room to work. His
brows rose. "Now you summon a stronger wind." His gaze turned
considering. He rested his hands on his hips, nodded decisively. "I
think you are ready to Call the Zephyr, the wind you will use most
often over land to modify weather, and Dance with it." He swept a
judging glance over her and she sensed he was examining the potency
and energy of her Power. "Ready?"
Marian shifted, settled into a stance that connected her with
the island. "Yes."
"This is the Zephyr Songspell." He sang it and the richness of
his tenor thrilled her so, that she had to ask him for the first
words again. She flushed when she didn't get it right the first
time. Patiently he repeated the words.
She mouthed the whole Song to herself, then looked at him with
drawn brows. "Can I alter a few words? They seem a little-" she
opened and closed her hands as if trying to grasp something
"-masculine. Or something."
He tilted his head. "Which words do you want to alter? Tell me
your Song."
Running through it again with the minor modifications, she
waited, not breathing, until he nodded. "That will do fine. You
are a quick study, and progressing, too, if you are shaping
the Songs to fit you."
She nodded in return, licked her lips and loosened her
shoulders. Then she raised her arms and sang.
The breeze spun around her, bringing all the scents of
spring-the wildflowers as well as the awakening soil, the hints of
dark pine and fading blossoms from the forested hills-and she
laughed in delight.
"Keep control," Jaquar instructed, "but provide more energy,
more Power, more stirring and push. See if you can have it
lift you from your feet. The air is already in motion, it shouldn't
be too difficult."
The thought of it, and her breeze, took her breath from her. She
followed directions. In her mind's eye, she visualized her large
yellow mixing bowl, the whisk she used to beat eggs, and applied
the memory of physically whipping the eggs to the use of her Power.
In an instant the wind increased, battered her, flipped her gown
high around her waist, lifted her several feet in the air, spinning
her. The little grooming spell on her long hair didn't survive.
Strands lashed her face. Her laugh turned into a shriek, part
excitement, mostly fear.
She didn't know what to do next. The wind was too strong for
her.
Hold. Jaquar's calm voice came in her mind and she didn't
know if he spoke to her or the wind. And still.
The rotation of the air-of her-slowed, and she lowered. She
misjudged the height and the moment when the breeze stopped, and
landed awkwardly off balance. She took a couple of stumbling steps,
windmilled, but fell.
Then she stared at the blue sky and the clouds.. .clouds she
could move and shape. She stretched out her arms-she felt as if she
were breaking from a constricting cocoon. Yes. More, more,
more!
Jaquar's shadow fell over her and the man himself looked down
with an odd expression on his face, as if he'd been surprised by
some new fact that killed a pet theory of his.
Marian laughed. Though handsome as the devil, he was like many
other scholars she'd known. Like her.
So she smiled up at him.
His face scrunched further, emotions warring behind his gaze.
Then a great breath escaped him. He smiled, sadly, shrugged and
offered her his hand.
She took it and welcomed the Song that rang between them. It was
all part of the beauty of the day.
With a tug, he drew her to her feet.
And into his arms.
She glanced up at him in surprise and he took advantage of her
parted lips to press his mouth on hers.. .and everything else
faded.
The kiss seared through her like a scorching wind, leaving her
knees so weak that she leaned against him and learned him in a
whole new way-his body in intimate comparison to hers. Taller,
broader, stronger.
Harder.
Except his lips-they were soft and intoxicating, nibbling at her
mouth just as the sensuality of their Song nibbled at her
reason.
For a while she just gloried in the rush of passion, of all the
sensations that told her she was strong and womanly and desired.
His arm was a solid bar across her back, holding but not forcing.
His other hand curved around her hip, then squeezed as he exhaled a
small groan. The tip of his tongue penetrated her mouth and she
tasted him, exotic and spicy and rich as the darkest bittersweet
chocolate. She wanted more of this, too.
The music was nearly overwhelming. If she let it, the melody
could sweep away reason and logic and sense. Something that had
happened before only at the peak of orgasm. She should be
frightened at the undercurrents and riptide of passion, but instead
it was tempting, for once in her life, to forget reason and only
feel.
His hand went to her bottom, brought her into his body and
against his hard erection. A moan of hunger escaped her-she wasn't
positioned quite.. .right. But his mouth had moved from hers to
below her ear, trailing down her jaw to her neck, and her skin
heated and her pulse pounded and she thought she was melting into
him. The beat of their music wound tight.
A moment later he lowered her to the ground, followed her down
to lay beside her, his hand going to her breasts.
The ground was sun-warmed beneath her, but it hummed an alien
tune. No familiar Song of Mother Earth, but something odd and
thready and broken that jolted her from the haze of passion.
She rolled away. His hand reached, but she kept moving until she
was beyond his grasp, beyond his close scent that called to her to
mate. Marian forced herself to one elbow, then the other. Panting,
she dared not look at him in case she lost all rationality again.
The man was definitely dangerous.
He stood and said nothing. She didn't think he'd offer his hand
again, but in case he did, she scrambled to her feet.
She'd known the sexual awareness was there, had half-fantasized
about the man, but didn't realize until now how utterly she could
succumb to him. It wasn't just fighting her own attraction to him,
but fighting his great magnetism. And the Song that spiraled
between them burst into full orchestral Power when they touched.
Too many things were in the "minus" column, but the way her body
felt, the way he made her feel beautiful were huge pluses.
Not looking at him, she shook out her dress-unnecessary since
there weren't any wrinkles-to give herself something to do. Then
her hands went to her hair and she tunelessly whispered the
grooming spell that tucked strands smoothly into a braid. He gazed
at her.
"I thought," he said in a husky voice, "you had a repetition of
that vision you received the moment we met so soon after you were
Summoned. But that isn't why you drew away, is it?"
Marian composed her expression and looked at him. His eyes were
deep blue, and she thought she could see sparks in them. His lips
were more red than she'd seen on any Lladranan. She ran a tongue
around her own and found them plump, and the taste of him jolted
her once more. She took a step back.
"No." She wasn't sure she could explain why the Song of the
world of Amee had affected her so.
"Since we are on the topic of our first meeting, what revelation
did you have about me?" His muscles tensed.
"I don't know," she said on a sigh, and met his now cool gaze.
"Just that you were my doom." It sounded stupid.
He stood and looked down at her, expression serious. "My
emotions were raw at that time."
She narrowed her eyes. He was still keeping something from
her-but what right did she have to demand he tell his secrets?
None. They had a lot in common, but they weren't close friends.
Acquaintances, colleagues-with him being the senior-perhaps even
bordering on lovers... That might be it! She worked it out in her
mind, slowly speaking the logic aloud.
"Are you talking about a bond between us-like I have with
Bossgond-that might have harmed me?"
"My emotions were raw," he said again, with just enough emphasis
for her to know that he hated admitting it.
"I've learned that bonding with people here can keep me on Amee
instead of returning me to Earth during the Snap." She turned her
arm so he could see the two magical tattoos-Bossgond's yellow bird
and Alexa's jade baton.
Jaquar's mouth twisted. "You already have two bonds, and you
still want to go back to your brother." He started walking, but not
toward his Tower. Another lesson? Perhaps. They were both dedicated
scholars.
"Bossgond has been solitary for a long time. He knows how much
my brother Andrew means to me and has said he'd help me
return-perhaps even come back to Amee if I'm successful in helping
my brother. So he won't hold on to me." Marian matched steps with
Jaquar. "As for Alexa-she's from Earth so her bond isn't completely
Lladranan. She, too, understands about my brother and wouldn't keep
me here against my will."
"Sounds logical, but what is logical in theory is not often true
in reality," Jaquar said softly.
Soon they reached a tiny cove surrounded by rock. Narrowing her
eyes, Marian thought she could see the coastline of Lladrana-so
this was the eastern side of Mue Island.
"You are excellent with Wind- Fourth Degree edging into fifth,"
Jaquar said. "Let's work with Water and Rain. There are several
pools in the cove where you can practice tides and surf and wave.
The cove itself is an excellent shape and size to develop rain. We
won't work with thunderstorms today-that is best conducted on the
far southwest of the island."
That was a blessing. Marian was beginning to feel tired.
Jaquar gestured to a nearby pool. "Why don't you start with
something simple, like evaporating the water and holding it in the
air."
Marian walked over to the pool, smiling, then stopped. "I
can't." She shook her head. "There are creatures in this pool. I
can't harm them." She glanced at Jaquar, to see an approving look
in his eyes.
He nodded shortly. "Good. You have a strong ethical basis
and a realization that the use of your Power to modify
Weather could greatly affect them."
"Thank you," she murmured.
"However, the residents of this particular pool won't be
affected by your evaporation unless you also draw all the moisture
out of their bodies-"
Ick.
"-and I'll be here to ensure that doesn't happen."
That's when the work began.
The water was slippery-as slippery to hold with her mind as it
was to cup in her hands. Time and again she slowly lifted the
water, to find it escaping her mental grasp before she could fold
it into the air. She started enthusiastically with about a
pitcherful, but after a couple of hours she was down to a cupful,
and of that, could only make a few drops evaporate.
Jaquar was so even-tempered that it grated on her nerves. She
sweated in the warm sunlight and he lounged on a rock, writing on a
scroll and watching her lack of accomplishment.
Exasperated, she rounded on him-and found his patience was
nothing but a pose, his mouth curved in an amused smile.
"What are you laughing at?"
He just raised his brows. "I was wondering if you would prove to
be the exception to the rule that Weather Sorcerers are better in
one element than others. It would have been trying if you were
perfect."
Marian stopped in midsnarl, relaxed. Then she rubbed her
temples. "The water is so damn slippery."
"It is at that," he said in suspicious agreement.
"I suppose you have no trouble with water."
"I had the same amount of trouble with it as you are having when
I was a first-degree Scholar."
She sighed. "A long time ago. So it will take me years to become
proficient with it."
"Probably, even though your Power is strong and you've advanced
rapidly, this could be your weak point."
She had others-her need for perfection was one. She grimaced. "I
suppose we should call it a day."
"Yes, I have my own studies this evening, but I will leave you
with my entire medical library to peruse."
That drove every other thought out of her mind. "Great!" Her
eyebrows dipped. "Something-I don't know-something today made me
think that there is help for him here." She couldn't understand it,
but once she spoke the words aloud, she knew it was true. She
instinctively believed Lladrana had the answers her brother
needed.
Jaquar stared at her thoughtfully. "Everyone has been speaking
about you-that would include Alyeka, and she knows your world and
ours. Today you called the Wind and the Zephyr. There might have
been notes of a tune, perhaps even a melody within the winds that
told you this."
She blinked at him, then wondered if she'd ever understand
enough about Lladranan Power.
When they reached Jaquar's tower, his huge black flying horse
was cropping grass near the building. The sight of packs loaded on
the volaran made Marian blink. Nothing in the world-in two
worlds-looked less like a beast of burden.
It raised its head, tossed its mane and whinnied. Marian heard a
faint Heyy in her head, obviously a greeting. It watched her
with huge dark eyes, seeming as interested in her as she was in
it.
Jaquar strode over to it and stroked its neck, his face
softening into a smile. Then he glanced up at Marian. "This is
Nightsky. He is honoring me with his companionship." Jaquar
whistled and the packs vanished in a riffling breeze. Marian made
an involuntary sound-she'd noticed the hem of one of her gowns and
it was hard to see it disappear again. She bit her lip and looked
up at the Tower.
"I sent them to my study," Jaquar said.
She nodded.
"Come meet Nightsky."
There was nothing she wanted more. She walked slowly to the
volaran, held out her hand, fingers down, for him to snuffle.
Heyy, he said again, aloud and in her mind. Slowly lifting
his muzzle, he sniffed at her hair. Good. It was more of a
feeling and an image-of a lump of sugar-than a word.
Marian laughed and Jaquar smiled. "Not many volarans deign to
speak to humans. We are honored." He bowed to the horse, who blew
air from his nostrils.
Going to the steed's other side, Marian stroked him herself. His
coat was finer, silkier than a horse's, feeling almost like tiny
feathers, over a strong muscular body. She frowned. "How do they
fly?"
She met Jaquar's eyes.
He raised his brows and smiled. He patted the volaran again. "We
have studied that and have come to the conclusion that they are
pure magic-Power."
The volaran felt awfully solid to her. She narrowed her eyes at
Jaquar. He shrugged.
"Very well. It's a combination of aerodynamics-" the word barely
translated in Marian's mind "-and Power."
"He's real, physical."
"Of course."
Marian shook her head, smiling. Pleasure emanated from the
winged horse, wrapping around both her and Jaquar. The smile faded
from Jaquar's gaze, turning into something more- affection,
tenderness. They held the stare and the late-afternoon air warmed,
almost sparkled, definitely hummed. Added was the resonant note of
the nearby Tower and wildness mixed with Power that was
Nightsky.
The soft mood spun between them-affection, respect, this shared
moment that contented them both.
A sharp trill of metallic chimes echoed from the open window of
Jaquar's Tower. His expression turned wry. "I'd say that Bossgond
sent you a crystal ball and he wants to speak with you."
Bossgond. Andrew! The old man had promised to keep track
of Andrew for her. She ran to the door of the Tower, flapped her
hands at Jaquar to hurry him up. It didn't work. He sauntered to
her.
She gritted her teeth, she wanted to hop up and down. "Bossgond
may have news of my brother, Andrew!"
Jaquar's brows winged up. "What?"
"Bossgond has binoculars focused on Earth-Exotique Terre-and my
brother."
"Those binocs of his are trans-dimensional?"
"Yes, yes!" She stepped aside and let him chant the opening
spell under his breath. He strode through the corridor and over to
the stairs. She hurried after him.
They ascended fast and flung open the door at the top. He
stopped and she tried to jostle by him, but the man filled the
small doorway. She poked him and he stepped aside, shaking his head
and staring.
She followed his gaze. Tuck had unwrapped all the packages and
had made a nice nest of her underwear. Marian trapped a groan in
her throat, felt her face warm with embarrassment. It wouldn't be
so bad except the garments were like her-Exotique.
The chime came again and she leaped for the small yellow glass
ball sitting atop the folds of her maroon dress. The orb was small
enough to fit in her hand. She curled her fingers over it and said,
"Hello? Hello?" When nothing happened, she shook it, like it was a
snow-globe, then stared at it futilely.
Jaquar plucked it from her hand, held it in his palm and tapped
his thumbnail against the glass. "Bossgond," he said.
Bossgond's face stared out at them, scowling.
"Andrew?" asked Marian.
The old man's frown deepened. "He looks as usual. Salutations,
Marian."
She let out a relieved breath. "Salutations, Bossgond." She
dipped her head a little in courtesy.
He studied her, face smoothing into his usual grumpy wrinkles.
"I need-wanted to ensure that you were well."
"Very well. Today I heard something in the wind that said I
might find help for Andrew."
Bossgond snorted, looked at Jaquar. "Report on the Scholar
Marian," Bossgond demanded.
Marian's face went perfectly blank. An oral evaluation with her
present?
"She is progressing well," Jaquar said easily. "Level five with
Wind, a solid level one in Water."
Grunting, Bossgond said, "Has a problem with Ocean, eh? Wasn't
noticeable in the ecospheres."
"No," Jaquar agreed.
"Told you she was best with Lightning, so is naturally weakest
with Ocean. Have you given her any practicums in Lightning?"
Jaquar's cheeks tinted red. "No. That will come the easiest, and
the best Lightning Study grounds are at the far end of the
island."
"Very well. I heard from Chalmon that the maw of the nest is
quite active."
Marian listened sharply. This wasn't a topic she knew of or
understood.
Jaquar shrugged. "It has been so the past few days. Hard to
extrapolate what is happening or may occur."
Bossgond grunted again, turned his stare back to Marian. He
smiled, and Marian nearly jumped at the unexpected charm of it.
"The cook is good, Marian." Bossgond licked his lips. "Thank
you."
She returned his smile. "You're welcome."
He seemed hesitant. "I miss you," he said gruffly.
Touched, Marian felt tears behind her eyes. "I miss you,
too."
"I'm working on a Sending to return you to Exotique Terre. We
can probably do it in the time period you require-three more
weeks."
Squinting into the small orb, Marian could see his desk piled
with papers and scrolls and books. She cleared her throat. "Thank
you."
He nodded, glanced at her, then Jaquar. "Proceed with her
training. When she is close to Circlet in all areas, bring her back
to me."
Jaquar raised his eyebrows, but all he said was, "Yes."
"Good studies," Bossgond said, and the crystal ball went
dark.
"Marian! Jaquar," Tuck said, sitting in his nest of Marian's
underwear.
She hurried over and picked him up. Holding him up to eye level,
she said, "Hello, Tuck."
"Hello, Marian. Hello, Jaquar," Tuck said. "Marian did well
today?"
"Very well," Jaquar assured the hamster seriously. "She has
great Power and will and is rapidly learning basic technique in
Wind. She just needs the skill of control."
Marian flushed at the memory of tipping and falling in the wind.
She hoped she did better with Lightning.
Tuck nodded. "I will tell Sinafin."
Jaquar continued. "She is not as skilled with Ocean."
Tuck waved a paw. "Water is not as important for Marian as
fire."
They stared at him, then at each other. Though they both had a
thirst for knowledge, Marian sensed Jaquar was as reluctant as she
was to question Tuck about Sinafin. This whole conversation seemed
to be straying into prophecy. From the tension in Jaquar's muscles,
Marian thought he no more wished to learn of the future or
Sinafin's agenda than she did.
"Nice garments," Jaquar said, and Marian realized he was staring
at her underwear. He grinned wickedly. "They look better on Marian,
though."
With a sniff, Marian set Tuck on her shoulder, scooped up her
clothing and held out her hand for the crystal ball.
Suddenly she wanted to be alone and as far away as she could
from all the strangeness-which meant holing up in her rooms. "With
your permission, Circlet Jaquar, I would like to retire to my rooms
and eat dinner there." Maybe she could conjure up food that was
close to American cuisine. "I think you have an appointment this
evening."
All expression vanished from his face, and Marian stilled in
wariness. Cool, unreadable blue eyes met hers.
"That I do. I will transfer my lorebooks on medicine to your
desk." He turned and walked away.
Tuck's claws dug into her shoulder. Danger, he said.
"How do you know?"
"Sinafin said-"
"Am I safe here in the Tower?"
He came up close and rubbed against her neck, his soft fur
comforting as well as tickling. "Yes."
She nodded decisively. "I'll be careful." Walking to the stairs,
she started down. There had been that warning premonition about
Jaquar. Thinking about the man-his sad and steady blue eyes, the
lovely dance they'd shared, the fun of playing with the
Wind-created a warmth inside her. The sexual attraction between
them was potent. She also liked him a great deal-and that was a
priority. Never again would she let simple physical attraction lure
her into intimacy with a man as she had with the late, unlamented
associate professor Jack Wilse.
But Jaquar Dumont was not Jack Wilse. The Sorcerer had a
presence, probably from his mastery of Power, that Marian
believed Wilse would never have.
Jaquar definitely made her insides tingle and her toes curl.
What harm could it do to have a good, hot fling here in
Lladrana?
She didn't know.
She had no idea what sort of ramifications emotionally, but more
importantly, socially, a sexual affair might entail. The worst was
the idea of a bond. They already had a potent Song between
them-stronger even than hers with Bossgond, and that had included
blood.
She'd have to beware of becoming emotionally involved with
Jaquar. She couldn't afford to have sex with him-not if it would
bind her to Lladrana.
17
Though Marian had gone to her rooms to feel less alien, the
rooms were, of course, as different from her own apartment in
Boulder as everything else on Lladrana was different from her other
life. She sat at the intricately carved desk, which repeated the
pattern of Jaquar's golden circlet, and brooded. By the time she'd
reached the apprentice suite a few minutes earlier, books and
scrolls had already materialized on her desk.
Tuck had clamored to explore, so she'd put him down and heard
scrambling and peeps in the background as he took stock of her
quarters.
She'd spent most of her time in practical lessons and hadn't
read much the past few days-a unique situation for her. Usually she
consumed books, both fiction and nonfiction. After eyeing the
books, she knew when she opened one that it would be in unfamiliar
script. She had bonded with Bossgond, who certainly knew how
to read, and Alexa who probably knew how to read in both English
and Lladranan, so Marian should be able to read, too.
She propped her head on her elbows and rubbed her temples. A
slight whoosh came to her ears, and the Tower's atmosphere
changed subtly. Jaquar was gone.
Tension drained from her, and only then did she realize that
she'd been waiting for him to leave. Now she was totally alone for
the first time since she'd arrived on Lladrana, and it felt...
good. Not at all scary.
As he flew on Nightsky to Chalmon's island, Jaquar considered
Marian. Since the dance the night before, she had seldom left his
thoughts.
Jaquar shouldn't want to bond with Marian. She wasn't staying in
Lladrana, and the heartache wasn't worth the passion. He lied to
himself. With Marian, he felt so alive, so complemented by another
person, that he knew the sex would be better than he'd ever
had.
But he wanted more. He wanted what his parents had had.
Bossgond had called to check up on him, and that fired Jaquar's
blood. As if Bossgond thought he'd hurt her.. .continue with his
original plan. It had been tempting, until he kissed her. Then
Sending her to the Dark's maw had become impossible.
Even now, unemotional logic said that her connection with the
weapon-knot made her perfect for the task of destroying the nest.
All she had to do was pull a thread.. .and kill herself.
Perhaps that was not true. No one knew how Powerful the knot
was, whether it would destroy the nest, whether it would kill if
she used it. But he wouldn't mention this to Chalmon and
Venetria.
No one knew whether the nest would be wounded, how much, if
Marian was Sent there. So logic bolstered his emotional decision.
He wanted vengeance, but not at the expense of an injured Marian.
His goals had changed. He would not use Marian as a weapon against
the Dark. He'd convince Chalmon and Venetria not to act on their
own. Now he must concentrate on teaching Marian, and her
best weapon would be Lightning.
Marian still hadn't opened a book when Tuck cheeped excitedly,
"What's this, what's this, what's this?" A scrabbling noise.
"Food!"
Marian tilted her head. She didn't recall having any food in her
rooms. There was a crash from the bedroom. It sounded... Earthlike.
Dread speared her, she shoved back the chair and ran into the
bedroom, yelling "Light!" Fire crackled to life in the fireplace.
Crystal globes flared brightly.
Tuck put his paws over his eyes, squeaking indignantly.
"Hurts!"
Humming, Marian lowered the light, then saw the destruction. Her
stomach cramped.
Tuck sat in the midst of the remains of her PDA. She stared at
it, horrified. Tiny electronic parts, as esoteric to her as any
magic she'd learned, were scattered in bits around the hamster.
Anger flashed through her. She'd considered the PDA her very own
tangible link with her homeland. It had been the symbol of the
control she had over her life, the knowledge she'd mastered-control
that was currently missing in the chaos of adapting to a whole new
world. She stared at the hamster, who sat back on his haunches and
groomed his whiskers with tiny claws. Obviously he had the digits
and Power to open the computer.
"What have you done?"
"It was dying."
She flinched. She hadn't wanted to admit that, even though she'd
only been turning it on for a few seconds at a time to see familiar
colors and menus and notes that represented her old life.
Tuck burped. "So I ate it."
"What?"
"I opened the nut up and ate the kernel. Now I know everything
it knows."
Marian was speechless.
Tuck squeezed his eyes shut and emitted a huff. When he opened
his eyes, they were all too sentient, all too understanding of her
emotions. What had she kept in her Personal Notes section?
"Just like I ate the golden nut Sinafin gave me, I ate the nut
inside that thing that beeped."
It had-every morning when it was time to leave for her bus to
work, when she had important meetings, lunches, parties.
Thanksgiving at her friends', for heaven's sake! Somehow she
couldn't see Tuck beeping.
"You know everything?" she asked weakly.
"Pick up the laundry every Tuesday evening at 6:00 p.m.," he
said, then continued, "Andrew's birthday March twenty-second."
"That's the appointment book," she confirmed. "May I pick you
up?"
"Yes. It was a tiring dinner."
"Oh." She took Tuck, went to the armchair she'd created in which
to talk to him and placed him in his tufted nest. He curled up and
watched her with bright black eyes.
Marian settled into the deep chair. It conformed to her body and
she sighed in pleasure. With a wave and just a little grief, she
dissolved the remnants of her PDA into molecules and sent them into
a storage lattice of Power that Bossgond had shown her how to use
and had sent with her things that were now spread out on the bed.
She wasn't sure how she'd use the complex molecules but was sure
she'd figure out something.
Tuck blew out a breath.
She shook her head. "I really can't see how I can play Solitaire
with you."
He hunched up and hummed quietly, just as her PDA had!
"Watch."
Midway between them, a small image of her last Solitaire game
appeared.
"Wow. I'm impressed." She was beginning to enjoy herself.
"Music?"
His eyes bulged even more than normal and he opened his mouth.
Strains of "Over the Sea to Skye" played on guitar poured
forth.
Marian listened, entranced, tears again coming to her eyes. This
time they rolled down her cheeks. That had been her favorite track
on the last album Andrew had given her. She summoned a tissue,
wiped her eyes and blew her nose.
"You played that one the most," Tuck said, sitting again on his
rump, paws in front of him.
"Yes."
"I didn't understand music before. Your music in the square nut
is different from the Songs I learned when I crunched the golden
walnut. I ate the shell of that nut, but not yours."
"I'm amazed that you could eat the meat of my 'nut' at all," she
said.
He opened his mouth in what she'd come to know was his smile.
"You liked the nut and didn't want it to die. I wanted more
mind-food. I thought how I could do it, and I did."
Like person, like animal companion. "Yes, you did!" Songs. That
meant prophecies in Lladrana. What sort of Songs had the golden
walnut carried and Tuck absorbed? "So what did the Songs in your
first nut say?"
His whiskers twitched, his paws clasped each other. "Sinafin
said I was not to tell."
Marian could probably coax it from him, but respected him enough
not to try. She respected a hamster. That sounded crazy. She
bit down on her lip. He was an intelligent being, and he was her
friend more than he was a pet or animal companion. And now he was
the only thing she had from Earth. Her eyes widened in horror. And
what would she do if she lost Tuck? The bits of plastic and glass
and metal around him that had been her mainstay in Colorado were
nothing compared to him.
She'd have to find some way to protect him.
He said, "You do not need to worry. I am very strong. I will
live long, now, and I have much Power."
She wondered how much hamster and how much magical being Tuck
was. It would be fascinating learning what he could do. Like Alexa,
Tuck was now a mixture of Earth and Lladrana.
A twinge of anxiety nibbled at her. She didn't know how she'd be
able to take him back to Earth. If he retained his Power on Earth,
she shuddered at the idea of his falling into scientists'
hands.
After chittering to get her attention, Tuck said, "I want to go
back to my house now. I have good drink and salty nuts there. I
want my better food."
Marian wanted to listen some more to Earth music. Instead she
gestured to the speaking tube by the bed-this one with a trumpet
painted like a blue morning glory and the tube a green stem with
embossed varicolored green leaves. "Jaquar's study is locked to me.
Can you climb up that?" Four floors.
He perked up. "Yes." Staring at her with his protuberant black
eyes, Tuck said, "I'd like to go outside tomorrow with you and
Jaquar. You can watch me."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes." He nodded emphatically.
"Very well. Ready to go upstairs?"
"Yes."
Marian set him in the bottom of the tube. He grinned at her,
cheeped, and zoomed up the shaft. The opening strains of Mozart's
"The Magic Flute" echoed down and kept her company as she headed
back to her desk. Lladrana had changed Tuck, wondrously. Perhaps it
could change Andrew, too.
Impatient that he had to explain himself to other Circlets,
Jaquar strode into the parlor of Chalmon's Tower. Venetria and
Chalmon stood by the large table, arguing. They stopped as soon as
they saw him.
"Salutations," Jaquar said.
Chalmon placed a hand on Venetria's shoulder. "I think we all
agree that we must cooperate and that the Dark can no longer be
ignored. It was for that very reason that we had the Marshalls
Summon our own Exotique."
Jaquar said, "Since she comes from outside our community, and is
exceptionally Powerful, I think she will be an able leader, given
time."
Frowning, Chalmon said, "We definitely need a report on the
Exotique. That is why we asked you to come. We must learn when she
will be ready to infiltrate the Dark's nest. All the signs point to
the maw opening in the next couple of days. Will the Exotique be
ready to enter then?"
"I have another idea," Jaquar said. "Perhaps we can form a team
to seal the maw. Close their own shield. We may not be able to
infiltrate it and learn of the Dark, but we could delay, perhaps
even stop the master and the horrors he controls."
Chalmon tapped a crystal ball. "One of the younger Sorcerers
tried to lob a fireball in-nothing. We've tried everything, and
nothing works. All our Power slides away from the place. Nothing
penetrates and nothing sticks." He grimaced. "Ten people have
attempted spells."
Jaquar's gut tensed.
"Is it true the woman is already a Third Degree Scholar?"
Venetria asked.
"True."
Both Chalmon and Venetria exclaimed in astonishment.
"When do you anticipate her becoming a Fifth Degree Scholar or a
Circlet?" Chalmon asked.
Jaquar had already considered the question, estimated the time,
lengthened it to protect Marian. "I believe no longer than a
month."
"That's not soon enough." Chalmon's voice hardened. "I believe
the maw will open within the week. We must send Marian in to learn
of the Dark, to harm the nest and perhaps destroy this once-human
master who taunts us and directs the horrors."
"I think your plan disastrous," Jaquar said. "What can you hope
to learn through her?"
"I've made a little echoing spell-it will send back all she sees
and hears when she is within the nest," Chalmon said.
"No," said Jaquar.
"It was your plan in the first place!" Chalmon snapped.
The words were like a blow to the chest. He nearly staggered.
"Made in the heat of anger and vengeance."
Chalmon lifted and dropped a shoulder. "That may very well be
true, but what choice do we have? You saw what one sangvile
did. Its damage multiplies rapidly. Marian is very Powerful
already. She might be able to return by herself. Who knows what she
could do."
"I am her teacher and protector. I will not allow this," said
Jaquar.
"The Exotique Marian would not have been sent to us now
if we weren't to use her for this purpose," Chalmon said.
"That's convoluted thinking," Venetria argued. "That sounds as
if you believe in fate and not free will. Why do you think that now
when you never have before? Or is it only that you want to
sacrifice someone else?"
Red flushed beneath Chalmon's skin. "Don't call me a
coward."
"Why shouldn't I? You haven't plane-walked to that place. I
have." Venetria gestured grandly. "Jaquar has."
"Plane-walking is not one of my talents," Chalmon muttered.
"You'll sacrifice her. Is it so easy for you? I always thought
you were a man of character," Venetria said.
Chalmon's face contorted in anger. "I want to protect us. If
that means sacrificing some stranger, so be it."
Venetria said, "I'm not sure we should-"
"You always vacillate!" Chalmon accused. "I tell you, the worst
monsters are about to spew from that maw. Dreeths. Sangviles that
could easily target the Tower Community and eat us all!" He grabbed
Venetria's shoulders. "Woman, your island is the northernmost!
Close to the damn border where those monsters congregate. Your
defensive shields are pitiful. I won't lose you."
She stared at him, eyes wide. Her mouth trembled. "You would go
to such lengths to...to keep me from harm?"
Chalmon shuddered. "Everyone of the Tower Community has seen the
memory-vision of how the sangvile attacked Alyeka. I won't have
that happen to you. And that was only one sangvile."
Face set in hard lines, he stared at Jaquar. "Dreeths fly, and
have you forgotten that if the boundary is not fully Powered
between magical fence posts-and there are plenty of gaps- a horror
can manifest as far inside the country as one of its own
reached?"
"That hasn't happened in known history," said Jaquar.
"No? But all our Lorebooks say that it's true. And the sangvile
was in Castleton, in the Castle, in Coquille-on-the-Coast! Once the
nest opens and another of its kind spews out, it could manifest in
one of those places!" Chalmon said. "We have no choice: if Marian
can harm the nest, we must Send her."
Jaquar fought for the woman he'd come to admire. "We could go to
the Marshalls-specifically to the Exotique Alyeka, and ask her help
in penetrating the force that shields the maw. She's a trained
warrior-both physically and magically. She knows what we're facing.
She's fought a sangvile twice. She is one of us, now, a Lladranan.
We could use her as a spearhead into the maw, follow her in. That
could work."
Silence filled the chamber as all three of them considered the
plan.
"I always liked that idea." Venetria's face shone. "She can
penetrate the nest's shield and the rest of the Marshalls will
follow immediately. We could go, too."
Her Song was utterly sincere, and Jaquar relaxed.
Chalmon sat on a sofa and leaned back, pulling Venetria down and
close to him. He smiled patronizingly, his usual expression around
Jaquar, and nodded. "A good idea."
"And the Marshalls can move fast! They're used to mobilizing
quickly," Venetria said.
Eyebrows raised, Chalmon said dryly, "If Bastien and the other
Marshalls don't kill you for mentioning the idea to Alexa."
Jaquar decided to speak to Bastien alone, first. Relief flooded
him that he'd found a new plan. Chalmon and Venetria had been
convinced. "I'll contact Bastien and Alyeka in the near future,
before the maw opens again." His gaze swept the room.
"Alyeka is a very Powerful, strong, experienced fighter and
foresighted woman. I think she'll agree to spearhead our force." He
smiled sharply, "And she is linked to the Marshalls. We will
follow. And do you think any Marshall won't support her? They
always work as a team."
"The last time the Tower and the Castle tried a joint
effort-some two centuries ago-it didn't work," Chalmon said,
considering.
"Who will hold the focus of this combined Power?" Venetria
frowned.
Jaquar smiled. "Why, our Exotique, who is bound to Bossgond and
Alyeka. I will provide support, since I had a tentative link with
Alyeka, and thus the Marshalls, in that last battle." He met each
Circlet's eyes, impressed upon them his determination and
confidence that this was the right path to take.
When no one denied his logic, he bowed to them all, turned and
left.
Just before he shut the outer door behind him, he heard Chalmon
say thoughtfully, "Do you think Jaquar's bonded with our new
Exotique, too?"
"There is definitely a chord sounding between them," Venetria
said.
Jaquar closed the door, smiling a little. He had won the game,
and Marian would never know the depths he had sunk to, when ravaged
by grief.
For Marian, the books hadn't been too hard to read after all. At
first, the sight of the words seemed to sear into her head as if
they were written in neon. But when she put her finger on the
words, trying to learn the alphabet and sound them out, she heard
the sound-songs of them in her mind.
By the time she felt too exhausted to continue her search
through the Medical texts, she knew how to read. Some of the more
complex words still stymied her, and connotations and concepts
might be difficult, but overall, she was pleased with her work. She
didn't think she'd be able to read aloud anytime soon, though. And
as she dressed in her nightgown and climbed into her bed, she
wondered how soon the language of Lladranan-reading and
speaking-would vanish from her mind when she returned to Earth.
Would she go to France in the future and speak with a Lladranan
accent? Or would she have to relearn French?
She smiled to herself as sleep crept close. Her concentration
had been intense, and with the unaccustomed activities of the day,
she hadn't been able to read more than a couple of hours-not even
long enough to listen to the entire "Magic Flute." But she had
found small traces of information regarding something the
Lladranans called "cortifremi," which sounded like MS. As she
slipped into sleep, hope filled her that she'd be able to find a
magical-Powerful-cure she could apply to her brother.
She awoke to stifling dark and stark terror. The horrible sound
of swooping wings accompanied the brush of dusty feathers on her
face. She screamed and heard no sound.
This was not a nightmare. She was awake, cold sweat coating her
body. She couldn't move.
The thing perched on the bottom frame of her sleigh bed,
eyes gleaming.
18
Clutching the covers until her fingers hurt, Marian stared at
the bird. A black vulture with a bare red head.
It stared back. There was something about the tilt of its head,
the glow of its eyes, the...the...delicacy of its Song. It loomed
about a foot high. Weren't vultures bigger?
Sinafin? Marian sent the being a mental call. Sweet
relief poured through her.
The glittering black gaze pierced her. She could have sworn a
splinter of pain entered her chest.
Are you sure? whispered like dry dust in her mind.
Marian wasn't at all sure.
The bird lifted wings and sidestepped down the footboard with
the sound of sharp claws scritching against the wood, raising
gooseflesh on Marian's arms. Her heart thundered in her ears.
What do you want? Even if she could move, she didn't know if
she'd be able to speak.
Are you trying to talk to me? asked the creature. 1
can't hear you. Try harder.
The tone slapped her mentally-an order, nearly a compulsion.
Sinafin? Marian mind-whispered.
A flash of blue lightning blinded Marian, and when the spots
faded from her vision she saw the creature was now dead white, a
skeletal thing. Only the eyes were alive, and they were cold and
demanding.
But Marian knew what it was. It was the magical
shape-shifter, the feycoocu. Sinafin. What did the being want of
her? Marian could think only of Alexa's parting words. Sinafin
can be trusted to do what is best for Lladrana.
I can't hear you. Lightning flashed again and,
blinking, Marian saw the vulture was now covered in a long black
robe, a cowl draped over its head, showing only beak and glowing
red eyes that stared at her inimically.
It clicked its beak in threat. Marian moaned. No sound emerged.
She could make no sound!
1 can't hear you. You must call louder. The vulture
hopped down from the rail, robe flapping, and lit on her feet.
Claws curled over her toes. It felt heavy, pressing hard against
her feet. Marian shrieked silently in her head.
Marian watched in horror as it extended one clawed foot and set
it down on her ankle. It would walk up her body! She thought her
heart would burst from the terror.
Her mind gibbered, then put syllables together in a mental cry.
Sinafin!
I can barely hear you. Try harder. Another step and it
settled on her ankles, not heavy now, but moving with a dry
rustling that made Marian tremble.
Sinafin!
Better. Try again.
SINAFIN.
It stopped, foot raised, ready to step up on her shin. Its beak
opened in what appeared to be a grotesque smile.
SINAFIN! Marian screamed with her mind. Pushed aside fear
to grasp at the elusive wild Song of the small magical being.
SINAFIN!
Marian envisioned it as a she, a pretty fairy. SINAFIN,
FEYCOOCU! The bed seemed to vibrate with the force of her
mind-call.
The vulture flew-backward-to the footboard. Tilted its head.
Louder-use all your senses, all your will.
The feycoocu was a fairy, with black hair and blue wings, with a
wild, delicate, fascinating Song. She had smelled of... of.. .a
spicy floral scent. She was not heavy, she was light. An...
aura...a rainbow of Power surrounded her. Marian clutched the
knowledge to her, built the little being as a three-dimensional
entity. Marian used all her senses. Holding the image of the
feycoocu in her mind, Marian yelled, SINAFIN!
The Tower itself seemed to tremble with the reverberation of her
cry.
Sinafin perched on the curving wood of the footboard. That
might do. Her wings were hunched up around her head.
You have learned your lesson. The bird shot by Marian,
curved beak skimming her face, leaving a tingle. Tell no
one of this. It disappeared through the wall above Marian's
head.
"L-light," Marian gasped, and all the wall sconces, every candle
and both fireplaces flared to life.
It wasn't enough. She was chilled and could think of no spells
that would warm her.
She was so cold she couldn't think-from the terror? Had Sinafin
harmed her somehow?
As the trembling subsided, Marian began to scrape together some
logic and reason. If Sinafin acted in the best interests of
Lladrana, why had she terrorized Marian? How could that help the
land?
And she wasn't going to let a-a vulture intimidate her,
keep her quiet. No. Sinafin wouldn't hurt her. If Sinafin was once
a creature like Tuck-or if Tuck could metamorphose into a being
like Sinafin-a feycoocu was not an evil or cruel entity. The
reasoning cut through the last dregs of terror, let other thoughts
well up-how Marian had initially been amused and pleased with
Sinafin, had sensed that the fairy had been concerned for her,
later approved of her.
Sinafin had said she loved Alexa. A being like that wouldn't
torture without reason. Would she?
"Let's send the hamster ball to the Dark nest," Chalmon said
calmly as soon as they heard Jaquar's volaran take to the
skies.
Venetria jerked. "What? We decided to follow a different
plan."
"No," said Chalmon calmly. "Jaquar decided to remove himself
from his original plan and try another. It has merits, but he'll
fail. The Marshalls won't listen to him, and even if they do, they
will take time to think and act. Didn't they wait nearly a year
before informing the rest of Lladrana that the fence posts were
falling? Summoning an Exotique was their last, most desperate
solution to the problem."
"They are committed to fighting the Dark now," Venetria said.
"There are many more of them. They'll listen to Jaquar and move
quickly." She was speaking fast, but she liked the new plan, didn't
want the worry and guilt that had enveloped her when she'd
considered the old solution to the Dark.
Chalmon snorted. "Have you ever heard of a Marshall
plane-walking? They won't cooperate with us, and they won't want to
fight on an ephemeral plane."
"But we don't have the experience of the Marshalls in working
together to do a Sending or a Summoning. We might not be able to
send the Exotique into the nest."
He raised his eyebrows. "That's why we need to follow through
with the experiment." He glanced at the water clock. "Other
Scholars and Circlets who agree with me will be arriving
momentarily to help."
"Tonight?" Venetria said blankly.
Chalmon brushed a soft kiss over her mouth, the pure tenderness
in the stream of his Song softening her.
Then the doorharp trilled and Bossgond answered to the first of
fifteen people. Venetria watched, torn, as he calmly prepared for
plane-walking, a skill he wasn't proficient in. Finally, he was
ready, and gestured the others to ascend to his Ritual room on the
top floor.
That had been open and ready, too, and Chalmon hadn't told
her.
"I know you are conflicted on this matter. I want to make it as
easy as possible for you." He held out his hand. "I need our Song,
too."
"What plane do you visit?" she asked dully.
"The fifteenth."
"One Jaquar does not frequent."
Chalmon shrugged and his lips thinned. "You insist on remaining
at your vulnerable Tower. I will protect you with my last
breath."
She tossed her head. "You want information about the Dark-"
"We all do."
"You want to destroy the Dark's nest."
"A worthy ambition."
"Not if it means sacrificing an innocent woman!"
"We've had this discussion." He dropped his hand and turned to
the door. "Come or stay."
"What if I say I will live with you until the Dark is
destroyed?"
He turned away, glittering gaze meeting hers. "Will you?"
"Yes."
"Promise on your keystone?"
"Yes."
He inhaled deeply, then let out the breath. "Then I'll say we
should go forward with this experiment, just to see what
happens."
"Will you consider Jaquar's new plan?"
"We will wait and watch."
How long? She didn't want to push him, because then he would
turn intractable. A great weight bowed her down. She would be
making hard choices. Walking up to him, she put her hand in his.
"I'll come."
The Ritual passed quickly, as if each person had been practicing
it. Only Venetria and Chalmon and a third Circlet with an explosive
arrow would actually travel, the rest sang Songs that bonded them
temporarily to Chalmon, sending him strength. He, in turn, would
allow those left behind to experience what he did. He held the
strange orb of the Exotique's companion in his hand. It still
smelled.
Venetria struggled to stay on the fifteenth plane, and Chalmon
helped her. Finally they reached the observation point overlooking
the Dark's maw.
Watch for me, and tell me the next time the shield
darkens.
Her form wavering, Venetria watched. Now! she cried.
With a mental grunt of effort, Chalmon threw the clear hollow
ball at the nest. Another Circlet lobbed the small arrow of an
explosive spell.
The ball penetrated the shield.
The seething maw stilled.
The arrow broke as it hit the shield.
It worked! the other Circlet screamed. Exotique
essence harms the nest.
Venetria lost control, and Chalmon and the other had to hold her
within this plane.
But the arrow failed. The Exotique Terre artifact was
not strong enough. Chalmon's mental voice held the hollow
echoes of doom. Watch the nest, ordered Chalmon. Send me
word when it is active once more. He cut all the strands but
Venetria's that sent him energy with a sweep of his arm. His form
shuddered, wisped into nothing. She followed, fearing what would
come back to his tower, where she would stay with him.
Finally Marian called Alexa. Alexa! she shouted.
Through her bond with the other woman, Marian felt a pulse of
surprised fear. Shit, Marian, could you scream a little lower?
You woke me up.
Marian closed her eyes. It had worked! She'd added a little
wind-spell chant to her call and it had worked! She giggled. It
sounded high and nervous to her ears. No more crystal balls for
her.
Is Sinafin there? Marian asked, opening her eyes and
scanning her place for the dozenth time.
Mind grumbling, Alexa seemed to check, then said, 1 don't see
her. She is her own person. 1 don't keep tabs on her.
Marian puffed out a breath. Alexa, she was just here, in my
rooms at Jaquar's Tower. Terrorizing me.
What?
I swear she did the best she could to scare me out of
my skin. She was a vulture.
A vulture, huh. Another name for buzzard, right?
Yes.
Alexa's mind-tone almost sounded amused. Marian received the
impression that Sinafin had been everything from a cockroach to a
chinchilla. Then Alexa's mind turned to thinking. I hate to say
this-
Marian could almost see Alexa making a face. Yes? She
prompted.
But if Sinafin terrorized you, it was probably for
your own good.
The chill of fear crept back into Marian's bones. She wrapped
the comforter tighter around her, hummed the little fire-tune that
had gone out of her head earlier. Warmth enveloped her, but her
insides remained cold. That doesn't sound good. The deductions
one makes from that statement...
Yeah, Alexa agreed. If she's terrorizing you for your
own good, she probably thinks you're gonna face something even
scarier.
She did say I'd learned my lesson.
Huh, Alexa said. Then I'd be sure to practice what she
taught you. What lesson?
At that moment a siren shrieked-and it was Alexa hearing it. The
sound punched through their connection accompanied by Alexa's
sweeping emotions-feelings spurred by upcoming battle.
Gotta go. Invasion alarm. They aren't supposed to
attack at night. Something's up.
Marian received an impression of Alexa jumping from bed, racing
to her chain-mail, baton flashing into her hand and Bastien at her
heels.
Take care.
Yeah, Alexa sent absently. Like they say in e-mail,
"virtual hugs." But her mind had fallen into a strange
rhythm.
She was preparing for battle. To fight and kill monsters,
perhaps to die.
God bless! Marian sent strongly, then broke the
connection.
She slid from bed to pace the room a few times, then, when she
was warm, slipped off the comforter and spread it back over the bed
until it was perfectly aligned. Then she crawled under the covers
and hoped for sleep without dreams. And prayed for Alexa.
Jaquar's flight back to Mue was full of thoughts of Marian. The
sight of her as she'd called the Wind haunted him. Her dress had
lifted to show her body-the body he was trying hard to forget that
he'd seen naked twice-and the odd undergarment she wore only
accentuated her loveliness. Her hair had floated around her, deep
red with fiery highlights.
Most tempting of all were her blue eyes, wide with discovery and
excitement, and the joy on her face. How was he going to resist the
temptation of all that?
He gritted his teeth. He would have to. Marian intended to
return to her home and her sick brother. If his parents had needed
him, nothing would have stopped him from helping.
Jaquar had rediscovered his honor and thanked the Song he hadn't
committed an action that he would not have been able to live with.
He wasn't about to stain his precious honor by having sex with
Marian and binding her to Lladrana through him when she believed
she was needed elsewhere.
So perhaps he should help her hunt for medical aid for her
brother-the sooner she was gone, the sooner he could craft a new
life without his parents and continue on.
He might even consider taking an Apprentice.
When Nightsky and he landed near the Tower, Jaquar saw no light
from Marian's windows. She must be asleep.
He realized he'd wanted to see her, spend a little time in her
company, just enjoy the humming notes between them. Best she had
retired.
Jaquar sniffed the air. A storm was coming. It would bring rain
for Marian to practice manipulating-and lightning. Though it was
years now since he'd called the lightning storm and it had raged
beyond his control, he shuddered. Still, Bossgond was right: Marian
had an affinity for Fire.
Though Jaquar would never match her mastery in that element as a
Weather mage, he knew how to call the lightning, ride it even.
Better yet, he could teach her the basics, guide her practices and
watch her learn and become proficient with her Power, and that was
almost as good as using it himself. He didn't think she'd
ever-quite-match him in controlling Wind and Air.
He would teach her. He would protect her, and instruct her how
to protect herself.
So Jaquar tended to the volaran, then went to his rooms and,
listening to the rising wind, fell asleep.
A sound woke him. An odd noise he'd never heard in his Tower.
Foggy with sleep, he listened, heard clicks coming from the
speaking tube near his bed.
Before he could determine the source of the noise, a tiny, cold,
sharp-clawed paw patted his face. He jerked in reaction but stopped
the whistle that would have flung the hamster against the wall.
"You are thinking of Marian," the little being squeaked.
He'd been dreaming of her-lush and wanton and laughing in his
arms as they rolled on the bed and she opened her thighs and her
mind and- He grunted noncommittally in response to Tuck.
"You should go to her." Two small paws tapped his cheek.
"I don't think so."
"It would be best if you go to her and mate. I am Marian's
companion, but I want to stay here in Lladrana. Her place is here,
too. She is a Sorceress." Tuck hissed, "The feycoocu says she
should stay."
Ah, the instigator and the reason the mousekin was bothering
Jaquar. "You mean the feycoocu wants me to bond with Marian so that
when her Snap comes, she will be more likely to remain here. Marian
is concerned for her brother-that's who she wants to help. That's
who she's bound to the most, emotionally."
"That should change. Andrew is good, but he is not as important
as you."
The brother wasn't as important to the hamster or the feycoocu
as Jaquar, is what Tuck meant. Jaquar didn't want to listen any
more to the creature.
"I'm not going to have sex with Marian just to please you or the
feycoocu."
The hamster withdrew his paws, but a moment later, Jaquar felt
the tug on his hair and scalp as the rodent climbed onto his
head.
It sat on his forehead, warm and furry...and tickling. Rolling
his eyes back, Jaquar could see the gleam of Tuck's tiny black
eyes, serious with a knowledge that Jaquar didn't want to face.
"Your Songs match," Tuck said.
Jaquar didn't want to hear that.
"She belongs here. With you. With me. With Bossgond."
"That may be what you want, may truly be best for her, but
Marian must decide for herself."
Tuck grumbled, huffed, climbed down to walk back and forth
across Jaquar's chest. "You won't go to her tonight?"
"No. If we.. .mate, our pleasure will be a mutual experience,
one she wants as much as I. I will not seduce her. Furthermore, I
will endeavor not to bind her to me with a strong sexual
tie."
More mutterings from the hamster. Finally Tuck sniffed and said,
"It would be better if you love tonight, in the Tower. Best if you
twine your Songs into one. But we must trust the Song."
The philosophy was far beyond what Jaquar thought Tuck could
achieve. The hamster had been talking better, too. Jaquar wondered
how Tuck had made the intellectual leap. The feycoocu? Practice?
Jaquar didn't know, but uncomfortable personal conversation or not,
the whole episode was going word for word in his personal
Lorebook.
"Good night," Tuck said. His claws skittered as he stepped into
the speaking tube.
To Jaquar's amazement, the hamster flew up.
A moment later, Jaquar found himself smiling. There were now
three beings in this Tower who were masters of Air.
When she met Jaquar at the door to his study the next morning,
Marian noticed a constraint between them in their stilted
conversation. Perhaps he thought that she was going to ask awkward
questions about where he'd disappeared the night before. Marian
didn't consider it any of her business, but didn't know what
formalities or rules there might be between student and teacher.
She was certain that she didn't want to talk to him about Sinafin's
visit, and he'd no doubt ask if she commented on his night.
So breakfast talk was desultory. One glance at Tuck's house
showed Marian that he was curled up in a ball in the plush room
he'd taken as his sleeping space. The sitting room that adjoined
Tuck's "bedroom" was piled high with his hoard.
Marian shook her head at the sight. "I think Tuck has finally
adapted to Lladrana and gone back to his old nocturnal habits."
An odd expression crossed Jaquar's face, but all he said was "It
seems so." He hesitated, gestured to the trees thrashing in the
wind outside the Tower windows. "A storm's coming in. The height of
the front will strike the northwest part of Mue Island
midafternoon. This is excellent weather for you to practice Water
Power. The hike across the island is an hour, so we should leave
after lunch."
Forcing a smile at the thought of a long hike in bad weather
just to fail at lessons, Marian agreed to the plan. He was the
prof, after all.
He must have guessed her thoughts, or perhaps the notes
stringing between them went a trifle flat, because he smiled
genuinely. Pushing his clean plate aside, he leaned forward on the
table and whispered, eyes glinting, "We can also see how you do
with Lightning Magic."
Immediately Marian cheered up. She felt her eyes widen. "For
real? I'm very good with Lightning in the ecospheres. It's my best
subject. But you'll let me try it in a real-life situation?" She
found herself whispering, too, in excitement.
Jaquar chuckled. "Yes. A practicum."
Marian nearly shuddered with delight. "This is going to be the
absolute best class in my entire career."
He set his hand out on the table, palm up. His gaze was
gentle.
She put her hand in his, squeezed his fingers, then noted the
rolling melody streaming from him to her and back, redoubling in
strength. Lifting her glance to his, they connected that way, too.
His eyes had deepened to dark blue, blue she hadn't seen on
Earth-Lladranan blue, or perhaps it was the silver glints in
them-magic, Power. Power blue.
"Your eyes are so beautiful," she said.
His expression closed and he pulled his hand away, stood and
banished the dishes. "Be prepared to leave for the shore after
lunch. Practice Water and Lightning in the spheres this morning for
at least three hours."
Well, that was certainly a dismissal. Consultation with the prof
over.
Marian stood and curtsied formally, which made Jaquar narrow his
eyes as if he wondered whether she was being sarcastic. She looked
once more at the sleeping Tuck, then went down to pursue her
studies.
When she started working with the ecospheres, she understood
she'd always used the wind or the sun to work with the water, not
handled that particular element itself. She flushed again at the
thought of how easily she'd failed in the task the day before of
holding water in the air, and how well she'd thought she'd been
progressing before that. Sighing, she knew she'd had a touch of
hubris and had been squelched.
She studied hard, experimenting with water for a solid hour,
starting with the smallest terrarium through to the largest. Her
efforts at mastering water in the terrariums were mediocre. To
truly master Water magic, she'd need step-by-step instruction from
Jaquar.
After struggling with Water, she spent some time with Lightning,
then looked over the lesson plan and found she'd completed every
task. She spent another half-hour being creative with Lightning,
then went back to Water before she finished manipulating the
elements.
Marian was deep in her medical reading when Jaquar announced
lunch. She had it sent down in a dumbwaiter type device, and ate at
her desk, reading. When her waterfall clock pinged that she had a
few minutes before Jaquar came down, she freshened up and donned
her sturdiest gown to hike across the island. Still, she waited for
him for about five minutes, not daring to immerse herself again in
the scrolls. She wished Tuck or her PDA had been around to set the
alarm- the waterfall clock was too imprecise for her taste. She
eyed the thing. Surely there were better timepieces. Some
Circlet had to be studying time.
Jaquar arrived and knocked on her door. He was dressed in a cape
the color and texture of duct tape and wore the stupidest hat
Marian had ever seen, low crowned and broad brimmed but not nearly
the elegant proportions of a gaucho's. Furthermore, it was made of
some horrible gray material that reminded Marian suspiciously of
the texture of "soul-sucker" that she'd seen in Alexa's and
Bossgond's images.
She drew back a little.
"I was right. It's raining and there are lightning storms at the
shore. This storm will provide you with good practice with water
and fire," Jaquar said. "Rain or running water is easier to
work with than pools or even the tide." His smile was warm. "Do you
have a rain cape?"
"Actually, I do." It was still marked with yellow birds as
befitted Bossgond's Apprentice, but she didn't care about that. She
went into the bedroom and pulled it on. As she crossed back into
the living room/study she noticed that Jaquar had not stepped over
the threshold, and her heart began to pound. She hadn't invited him
in, and he respected her enough that he hadn't entered without her
asking. So different from some of the men she knew. Like Jack
Wilse.
His head tilted to the side and she saw his nostrils flare. He
smiled again. "The place holds your fragrance. From what I can see,
you've made it your own. Good."
"Where's Tuck? I thought he wanted to go outside today-and
with at least one of us watching him, he will be protected."
Jaquar pulled a face. "In the rain? He was disgusted when he saw
it on the windows. I think he's rearranging his hoard."
"Always a hamster's favorite thing-besides eating. They are
originally desert animals."
"Ah." Jaquar touched her shoulder and the cape rippled. When the
fabric finished moving, it was plain gray, no pattern of little
yellow birds.
Marian chuckled. "Thanks." She pulled the hood of her cape over
her head.
"You are welcome. You'll need a hat to keep the frink-" He
stopped, a considering look coming to his eyes. "Perhaps not.
Frinks don't seem to fall around Exotiques." He offered his hand,
and she took it.
Once again, she sensed that he'd experienced an emotional sea
change in the time they'd been apart.
He opened the door and they stepped out. The odd pinging on the
small flagstone patio stopped. Blinking rain from her lashes,
Marian noticed the rain looked less dense than before.
"Lovely, no more raining frinks," Jaquar said in satisfaction.
His grin flashed. "There are definitely more benefits to having you
around than just looking at your lovely person, Marian." He
squeezed her hand.
On the way to the beach, Jaquar quizzed her about her studies in
a casual manner that made her feel as if he wasn't judging her or
holding to strict expectations-not nearly as harsh as she judged
herself, and his standards for her seemed lower than her own. Was
she being too hard on herself again? Too concerned with perfection?
Probably. No one could say that Jaquar wasn't an excellent teacher
or a very Powerful Circlet.
Now and then they paused while Jaquar patiently instructed her
in Rain Power-once when it was pouring, once in a drizzle, once in
a light shower. He was right-rain in motion was a lot easier to
manipulate than still water.
Finally they reached the beach and it wasn't more than a minute
before lightning struck a few yards away. Marian itched to get her
hands on it, wrap her mind around Lightning Power.
Instead, Jaquar made her practice with storm-tossed waves and
tide pools rippling with rain for what seemed like hours.
Then a roar came from overhead and lightning struck close, and
Marian lost her concentration and the bit of rainstorm she'd been
managing.
The lightning sang to her-to her mind, but even more, to her
blood. She knew it, each crackle, each beyond-hearing hiss and
zing. Even before Jaquar showed her, mind-to-mind and by
demonstration, how to weave it into patterns, how to Send it,
Marian knew the Song. Linking hands with Jaquar's, he called it and
controlled it, forking it down beyond their feet, sending streaks
across the sky.
She'd never felt anything like it-nothing so Powerful, so
satisfying as playing with lightning, creating designs. It was as
if she'd taken the electricity inside to sizzle in her blood. As if
she was lightning.
He'd start a Song to teach her, and she'd pick up the tones, the
rhythm, the melody and sing herself. Marian's Song of Lightning,
the words more facile on her tongue than his.
So, eyes narrowed as if he gauged her every note, he set her
tasks, and though she knew they were tests, she just laughed.
Nothing came easier to her in her life than taming lightning.
She danced it across the sky, sent it from cloud to cloud, from
cloud to ground, to rock, splitting a boulder. She made tiny
sparks, long forks, curtains of the stuff.
Spectacular.
She played, she designed, she drew and dismissed. And finally as
the rain pounded down and she'd done all he'd said, she whirled
around in the wind and faced him, grinning.
He smiled back.
But as she took stock, she realized something in the Song of
Lightning was missing. Something she hadn't grasped. It was not
complete.
Marian lifted her face to him, questioning.
"You need practice inside a storm." He gestured to a
cliff. "From there we could step into the wind and let it take us
through the storm front." His eyes had deepened to dark blue and
the expression was pure challenge.
But Marian had always loved storms. "Ayes," she agreed in
Lladranan.
Jaquar grinned and held out his hand. She put her hand in his,
liked the connection when his long, elegant fingers folded over
hers.
"Let's go!"
They ran up the hill. She wasn't in the best of shape, but
Jaquar matched his steps to hers, not dragging her, not pushing
her. She liked that, too.
He led her to a huge rock jutting out in space. Though she
wasn't usually bothered by heights, the wind was strong and another
large curtain of rain was marching closer.
Jaquar stepped forward and closed her cape, smoothed it over her
body, sealing it. The Lightning Song was inside her and transformed
into sexual sparks. She trembled beneath his touch. A smile hovered
on his lips. He kissed her nose but didn't speak above the rain,
the thunder.
Instead he moved behind her and wrapped his arms around her
middle.
What next? she asked, because there had to be a
next.
Sing with me. He took up a spiraling chant.
She followed.
When the melodic line was established, he dropped his voice to
harmonize. At the next break in the chant, he said, "Ready?" There
was a tone in his voice that told her he'd step back if she
wanted.
"Ayes," she said.
"We'll do this together." He started a low, intricate chant.
After a few measures, she felt the cadence of it, figured out
the twisting chords.
"Now!" he cried. A gust of wind blew them into the air.
For an instant, she was only conscious of his arms around
her-the strength of him, physically and in his psi Power. His body
was pressed to hers and many Songs wrapped them both. His Song and
hers and theirs, and the Song of Mue Island, the Song of the Air
and the Storm and the Ocean. All rang in her mind like an
orchestra.
Then the sheer magnificence of the storm, of their wild ride
inside the clouds, whirling with the wind made her shriek with
excited laughter. Oh, she could experience this forever. The
glory of it was beyond human comprehension. She felt the vibration
of Jaquar's chest behind her and didn't know whether he laughed
with her or Sang, and it didn't matter.
They followed the storm winds for a while, then a black fist of
a cloud loomed, could not be avoided. Something about it chilled
her. It didn't feel right. When they were in it a fog dulled
her senses. She clamped her hands on Jaquar's wrists and told
herself she could feel his muscle, sinew, bone under her fingers
when she doubted, when her fingers grew too cold to tell. The cloud
battered her with a mean sleet she writhed to avoid, ducking her
head. The Songs faded to a horrible hum like a high-pitched cry of
a straining car engine, a series of pings that were nearly beyond
her hearing.
She felt pummeled for an endless time, then they dropped-
straight into a rain cloud where sweet water drenched her, slicked
her hair, stuck her magical gown tight to her body. She could hear
the Songs again, and Jaquar shouting in her ear.
"Look ahead," he cried. "Lightning. Do you want to try and ride
it?"
All the joy in the storm, the reckless energy around her
throbbed through her on a rising tide of music. "Yes," she
screamed. "Yes, yes, yes!"
Now we call the lightning and ride
it!
19
A flash of fire rolled over them, encased them. Took them.
Whisked them up with the speed of light.
Snatched her breath so she couldn't sing.
They dipped, fell, and Jaquar's voice came rich and deep.
They spun in a sea of electrical sparks. In heavy, dewy
clouds.
Curving his hand around hers, he lifted them, spread their
fingers, palm out. Marian followed his movement.
Call the lightning now!
She did, so again they were swept away, shot from cloud into
night, plummeting downward.
Jaquar held a note, Marian joined him.
And time slowed.
They were on the bolt itself, shooting from the cloud, across
the sea to other clouds.
The speed was awesome, something she shouldn't have been able to
experience. Couldn't rationally explain.
Jaquar stopped singing. And Marian lifted her voice and sang and
they rode the lightning.
Finally a huge arcing stream, thicker than both of their bodies,
caught them, sent them rushing down to land, darkness punctuated by
city lights.
As they zoomed down the lightning, Jaquar guided them so they
lit in a field and avoided the town. The rich soil had been turned,
ready for planting, and it, with the scent of ozone and the feel of
the lightning still fizzing in her bloodstreams, made her crave
sex. With Jaquar and only Jaquar. She didn't want to think, didn't
want to weigh the pros and cons, didn't want to speculate what
consequences might occur from their coupling. She wanted to tear
his clothes off.
So she did. She shoved off his cloak, grabbed his tunic and
ripped, and he stood staring at her. She yanked at his pants and
then he was clothed only in a loincloth. Her breath caught in her
chest at the sight of him. It was raining, slicking his muscles,
droplets defining them. He was beautiful.
She'd never seen a better proportioned man-broad shoulders, lean
hips, muscular thighs... The pounding of the rain around her
thundered in her ears. He stood tall and sexy and, in this instant,
hers. She knew it.
Her hands curved over his shoulders, then his nostrils flared,
his expression went wild and he yanked her to him. His body was hot
and hard...and ready. Then his mouth was on hers, wet and
demanding. She opened to him.
They slipped and fell to the ground, landing softly. She didn't
know if that had been his Power or hers, or Amee's, but she heard
overwhelming orchestral chords that combined into a pulsing,
rhythmic drumbeat. A sexual beat. She cried out as her own clothes
disappeared and warm rain slipped down her body in a sensual
caress.
His hands were on her body, sliding, stroking, probing, the
sensations so intense she could only cling to him, yearn for
him.
And his tongue was in her mouth and she was tasting him as he
took her. Their bodies met and melded, arched and twisted. Their
minds touched and linked and shattered with pleasure.
Marian lay under his weight, panting, enjoying the lovely Song,
the sluicing rain, the heat of him. She'd never felt so abandoned,
so free. Her mind had totally blanked, not a rational thought to be
found.
She laughed.
A tremor went through him. His head was next to hers and he
whispered, "Marian." The richness of his tone, the lilt of it made
her quiver.
Long moments passed as they lay together. Finally he shifted
beneath her and she let the reason she'd banished in experiencing
the physicality of the now, rush back to fill her head.
The rain had stopped. She used a hook of Wind to lift and hold
her, dry a bit of ground and set her on her feet. With a three-note
spell, her dress-warm and dry-slid over her head and draped her. It
was a little harder to find her new underwear, and when she did,
she drew on the panties, but used a pocket in her gown to hold the
bra. The dress bodice was doing just fine as a foundation garment
for her breasts.
By the time she'd dressed, the sheathing clouds had dissipated
to show a large, white moon. The night sky held swaths of stars.
She tilted her head back to experience the night, found a bubble of
happiness shimmering through her. She felt lighter, freer than she
had for a long time. Too much work and not enough play. And what
spectacular play sex with Jaquar had been!
She rolled her shoulders, aware of the new range of movement now
that the tension built up over the past few weeks had eased.
Smiling, she looked to Jaquar.
He stood gazing down at her. Inscrutable.
"Do you think we made a mistake?" she asked.
He pushed his stupid hat onto his head. "I don't think we need
to talk about it."
Men were the same even across worlds.
"All right," she said coolly.
He took her hand. Music crashed through her-the intensity of
emotion from him made her stumble and he slid an arm around her
waist. His tender actions seemed at a variance from his cool
manner, so she set his earlier words aside. She didn't want to
analyze anything-his words in relation to his actions and emotions,
or her own.
"I have you," he said, his voice softening.
"I have you," he repeated, lilting, and she didn't know if he
meant that he wouldn't let her fall or that he was keeping her as a
lover-reluctantly. She shivered from the strange fury of emotions
she'd experienced in the past couple of hours and he stopped to
drape his cape around them both, pulling her close to his side.
Still befuddled, she nevertheless realized that they kept pace with
each other-she lengthening her stride a little, he shortening his
own. Their steps matched. Something else she didn't want to
consider right now. She shook her head to clear it, looked once
more at the brilliant sky glittering with at least two veils of
stars-was there more than one arm of a galaxy visible? As she
inhaled deeply, fresh air helped clear her mind, while the ruts of
the soil centered her.
She cleared her throat before she spoke. "Where are we?"
With his free arm, he gestured to a smooth area in front of
them. "The road between the Marshalls' Castle and the town of
Castleton."
Marian stopped, looked up at him. "That's on mainland Lladrana,"
she croaked.
He raised his eyebrows. "The wind took us to the mainland. The
lightning storm was wide. I thought it best to ride the lightning
down here, near one of the most populated places in Lladrana."
Again, Marian stared at the sky. No trace of clouds. She found
herself shaking her head in disbelief. "One hell of a way to
travel!" When she said it, another bit of knowledge jolted
her-she'd picked the word for "hell"-anfer-from his mind! Her
Lladranan accent was now near perfect, and her comprehension of the
nuances of the language a great deal better than they had been.
His hand squeezed her hip, his eyes darkened. "I can't ride the
lightning by myself. I don't have the skill or Power."
She swallowed hard. "You showed me how, you controlled our
descent." If she'd been by herself more than likely she'd have
plummeted to the ground and made a large dent. End of Marian.
Now his teeth gleamed in a smile. "I'd traveled that way with
the last Weather Mage, Sorceress Entanra, when I was an
Apprentice." He shrugged. "And I knew the theory, of course."
"Of course," Marian said faintly, trembling.
He wrapped his arms around her. "Shh," he said into her
hair.
She felt his warm breath, but couldn't seem to stop
shivering.
"You have the knowledge to Ride the Lightning, to Dance with the
Wind. If you don't think about failure, it won't happen."
"Are you sure?"
Chuckling, he said, "No."
Oh yeah, that made her feel a whole lot better. Her nerves were
shot. The intimacy between them was growing and that scared her,
too. She liked him far too much, didn't dare become deeply
attached to the man if she planned to return to Earth. No future in
it, and she didn't know if she had the finesse to handle an affair.
The emotional connection between them was already stronger than it
would be for any casual fling.
She needed balance. So she stepped away from the comfort of his
arms, but was still glad when he slipped his arm around her
waist.
She looked at the road, glanced up the hill and saw the dark
hulking shadow of the Marshalls' Castle. Alexa. She sighed in
relief. Alexa would be the perfect person to help Marian sort out
her feelings. So she gazed toward the Castle and sent out a mental
call. Alexa?
A fleeting surprise throbbed to Marian from her link with
Alexa.
Marian? You sound close.
I am close, on the road between the Castle and
Castleton.
Confusion. Why did you fly in?
1 didn't, Marian sent dryly. I rode the lightning as
part of my training and we ended up here. Jaquar is with
me.
Pure stupefaction throbbed from the other end of the bond with
Alexa, then curiosity, excitement. Rode the lightning! That is
so cool!
Jaquar's mouth tilted up, and Marian knew he was hearing a small
echo between Alexa and her. He urged her onto the road and they
turned to the Castle.
We'll be at the Castle shortly, Marian sent.
Wait! I'm at the Nom de Nom, a Castleton inn that the
Chevaliers frequent. The noise around their mental bond
increased.
Oh.
1 think Jaquar knows of it. See you in a bit,
Alexa said.
Marian glanced up at Jaquar. "Did you hear? Do you mind going to
the Nom de Nom?"
"I heard. Are you sure you want to visit the inn? The Chevaliers
can be...rowdy." Again his arm tightened around her waist, and she
thought she felt a tendril of jealousy. Chevaliers were the knights
of Lladrana, those who fought the horrors. They probably were real
testosterone guys, adrenaline junkies.
A chuckle rumbled in her throat before she could stop it.
"You're an exceptionally sexy man, Jaquar."
He stiffened, then picked up the pace. "You think so?"
"Very, and so does Alexa."
"She does?" He sounded pleased. "By all means, let's go to the
Nom de Nom. Is Bastien there?"
"For you to tease by flirting with Alexa?" She pinched his arm.
"You're with me, and I don't approve of that sort of behavior."
Jaquar laughed.
They neared the town gate. The archway through the walls was
well lit by huge white balls of magical illumination. Two guards
garbed in green and blue stepped into the arch.
Jaquar didn't hesitate in his stride. "Sorcerer Circlet Jaquar
Dumont and Exotique Scholar Marian."
The men's mouths dropped open and they separated to each side of
the arch.
"The Tower's Exotique!" one whispered in excited tones. "No
one's seen her except the Marshalls and the Tower. This will be
something to tell!"
"She's a nice size," the other said. "Not like that strange
little Marshall."
There was the sound of a blow, a grunt from the guard. "Marshall
Alyeka has always been kind to me. Keep your mouth shut, dolt," one
said to the other.
Marian could feel their gazes on her as she walked away.
Irritation at the men surged. Obviously news of her visit would be
spread far and wide, probably by morning.
Jaquar guided her along wide sidewalks through the equally wide
streets and elegant squares of a town. The city looked more like
late Renaissance or early Industrial Age than Medieval. Each
building had a caged magical light.
Yes, Alexa was right. There were a lot of interesting aspects of
Lladrana.
She heard the inn before she saw it-and felt it vibrate to her
bones from the huge and Powerful Songs. She slowed a little,
tilting her head, trying to sort through the Songs. "So many Songs,
so rich," she murmured.
Jaquar looked startled. "The Nom de Nom is three blocks
away."
Marian just shook her head, tried to piece together what she was
experiencing. "Songs of one person, two..."
"Those would be paired fighters, a Shield and Sword for
defensive and offensive work."
Frowning, she said, "Some crisscrossing and almost woven
nets of Songs."
"Chevaliers working together as teams when necessary."
"Some Songs have one primary tone and branch off, adding other
little tunes."
"Ah." Jaquar led her around a turn. "Probably a Noble with
Chevaliers sworn to him or her." Jaquar waved to a three-story
building that seemed so old it leaned a little. "The Nom de
Nom."
Just before they reached the threshold, Jaquar stepped away from
her with a little sigh. He ran a hand through his hair, smoothed
his clothes, then looked at her. He touched the shoulders of her
gown and adjusted them a little. After one comprehensive, sweeping
glance at her, he nodded, his mouth quirking in a grin. "Any
dishevelment you have could be attributed to a wild lightning
ride."
For an instant, his hand curved softly around her cheek. "You
are quite, quite fabulously Exotiquely beautiful."
She stared at him, stunned.
Then the door opened before them and some Chevaliers emerged,
bringing the scent of smoke and beer. Marian blinked when she saw
four women and a man, all equally tall, all dressed in well-worn
leather. They hesitated a moment at the sight of her and Jaquar.
The men goggled at Marian. Then the women muttered greetings and
went off, hauling the man with them. A spicy musk lingered from
their passing.
"What's that scent?" asked Marian.
"Volaran."
Flying horse. She hadn't noticed that Nightsky's fragrance had
been so strong.
"This will be your first exposure to many Lladranans," Jaquar
said. "And a group not of the Tower Community. Ready?"
Marian nodded.
He grinned again. "It's been a long time since I've been in
here." He tilted his hat. "Not since my early youth." Sweeping open
the door, he held it for her to enter first.
Noise and color rushed over her. To her right was a long bar
with many Chevaliers-men and women in equal number- lounging
against it, talking. She had the feeling women had been part of the
fighting force for as long as men had. She saw people ranging from
an older man who looked as tough as beef jerky to a fresh-faced
teenaged girl who walked toward them. Her eyes widened as she
passed them, and she dipped her head in greeting.
Others stepped back, giving Jaquar and Marian a clear path. She
blinked and finally saw Alexa at the last booth on the left. The
Marshall stood and waved, grinning.
Each booth held four or more people, except the one just before
Alexa's, which held an intense couple clutching hands and sharing a
strained conversation and potent Song underlaid with deep sexual
tones. Alexa's booth held only her.
When they reached the booth, Jaquar indicated Marian should
slide along the leather seat closest to the wall and face Alexa. He
followed, placing his body between Marian and the Chevaliers.
"Salutations, Marian," Alexa said, and Marian heard the more
casual Hey, Marian in her mind.
"Salutations, Alexa," Marian said.
"Salutations, Alyeka," Jaquar said.
Alexa inclined her head to Jaquar. "Salutations, Jaquar."
"I don't see Bastien," Jaquar said as Alexa sat. He slid his hat
to the far corner of the table near Marian.
"No, he's at the Castle volaran stables. A wild, pregnant
volaran flew in and asked for his help. Apparently she thought the
birth would be complicated. My personal assistant, Marwey, just
updated me-you saw her on the way out."
"You have a personal assistant?" The words escaped Marian
before she could stop them.
Alexa laughed and sat. "I have a personal assistant, and
ten Chevaliers." She rolled her eyes. "Some of the
Chevaliers should be in Bastien's employ, but he doesn't like being
a boss. Do you want beer, Marian?"
A serving woman had sidled to the table. She stood near Alexa as
if believing even a slightly known Exotique was better than a
strange Exotique and a Sorcerer.
"Do they have wine?"
"1 wouldn't recommend the wine here," Jaquar said. "The mead
might be acceptable."
"I'm drinking tea." Alexa lifted her mug. "They keep it for
me."
"Mead is honey wine, right?" Marian asked, searching her
memory.
"Ayes," the waitress confirmed.
Marian smiled at her. She took a step back.
Marian said, "Mead is fine."
"I'll have lager," Jaquar said.
Though the barmaid looked like the type of woman who enjoyed
flirtation and male attention, she smiled superficially at Jaquar
and hurried away.
Jaquar lifted Marian's hand to his lips and kissed it, then
linked fingers with her. Alexa tilted her head and her eyes
unfocused. Marian sensed the Marshall was studying their auras and
listening to the Song surrounding them-a Song that clearly rang of
recent sex.
Her eyebrows dipping, Alexa sent Marian a questioning glance.
Do you realize you've formed a sex bond with Jaquar? She
said mentally to Marian.
Hard not to realize, that, Marian said. 1 know
what I'm doing.
Alexa appeared doubtful but didn't contradict Marian.
At that moment the server bustled up with a wineglass she deftly
slid to Marian, and an ale mug for Jaquar. A silver coin appeared
on the table near Jaquar's mug and the woman squealed and scooped
it up.
Marian smiled as she hurried away, then took a gulp of mead that
tasted of spicy herbs, wine and honey. She tilted her head back and
saw them.
Heads. Mounted on the wall.
Monsters.
Her hand holding the glass went limp and crashed to the table.
She forced herself to swallow instead of spew the drink.
She couldn't tear her gaze away from the awful creatures. These
were the real thing of the holographic images Alexa had shown her.
Render-black, bristly fur, wide mouth opened in a snarl with awful,
sharp teeth. Two paws were mounted, too, each with six curved
razor-sharp claws. Slayer-yellow head covered with spines, wicked
tiny eyes. Soul-sucker-reptilian gray skin, round sockets for eyes
and nose, a torso sporting two arms with two tentacles framing each
arm. Her gaze went to Jaquar's hat, which he'd put on the table.
Definitely made of soul-sucker.
Gulping again and again to keep her mead down, Marian tried not
to think of them attacking the humans here. Attacking and
killing.
Her stomach rolled. She put a hand on her throat to force the
sickness down, but still tasted the "tassy water"-as a young Andrew
had named bile-preceding nausea.
Alexa gripped Marian's hands hard, and a soothing balm sifted
through Marian from her.
Jaquar scowled and said, "What is it?" He set an arm around her
shoulders.
"Just keep your eyes from the upper third of the room," Alexa
said in English. Marian got the idea that she was upset on Marian's
behalf, and slipped into the language for that reason. Lladranan
would never be Alexa's first language-but if Marian had the chance
to stay, her English would dim.
Marian took a couple of deep breaths, redolent of beer and fire
smoke-oddly, the latter comforted her, too. The smoke carried the
tang of fire and Marian drew it within her. "It's the heads,"
Marian said.
"Whose heads?" asked Jaquar.
Another thing that Alexa from Earth understood and Jaquar
didn't.
Alexa grimaced. "Sorry, 1 was appalled when I first saw them,
too." She shrugged. "But now 1 face the real things often enough
that they don't faze me."
The fire smoke that had warmed her blood turned cold. Alexa
battled these things. Marian wanted to hug the woman, wrap her
close, take her home. But Alexa had found a new home and a new
destiny and it seemed to suit her-she was truly a warrior woman at
heart.
Their eyes met and Marian saw wry wisdom in Alexa's. "I'm happy
here," she said softly.
Marian forced a smile and a nod. "I can see that," she replied
in Lladranan.
Alexa wrinkled her nose. "Okay," she said in English, then
switched to Lladranan. "I could use a better skill for the
language, and an easier time of riding lessons, both horse and
volaran. Do you ride?"
"Ayes," Marian replied in Lladranan.
Looking at Marian with narrowed eyes over her mug of tea, Alexa
sipped, then put her cup down. "You have it easy."
"I was an Apprentice and am now a Scholar, still studying to
become a Circlet. You became a Marshall that first
night."
Alexa cheered. "You're right. It was awful passing those Tests,
but I did get them all over with." She sighed. "But it took me a
while to Pair, and until then no one considered me a full
Marshall." She shrugged again. "That's over with." Leaning forward
with a renewed light in her eyes, Alexa asked, "Can you really ride
lightning?"
"Ayes."
Wriggling in delight, Alexa said, "That's so cool. Could you
teach me?"
2O
Jaquar squeezed Marian's shoulder and his attention was pulled
back to Alexa and Marian. From the corner of her eye, Marian had
watched him play male eye-and-attitude games, warning other men
away from the table.
He said, "No, Alexa, Marian can't teach you how to ride
lightning. She hasn't mastered the technique herself, and you may
not have Power that's linked to Fire to learn."
Alexa pouted, then cunning crossed her face. Without a word, her
jade baton appeared in the center of the table standing on end and
the bronze flames burst into fire, both real and magical.
An instant of silence, then came sounds of scraping chairs and
rustling garments. Marian glanced around to see the Chevaliers-both
male and female-who had been casually leaning at the bar now
studiously faced it. The sharp whispers fromthe booth behind Marian
stopped. No one looked at Alexa's table.
Only Marian felt Jaquar tense, otherwise he kept an impassive
expression.
"Point taken," Jaquar said.
"Very impressive," Marian said.
With a wave of Alexa's hand, the baton disappeared, probably
back under the table and into its sheath. Since Alexa didn't peep,
Marian deduced no fire had burned her, nor was the baton hot.
Definitely impressive.
Relief seemed to ripple through the room, voices wove back into
normal conversation. Alexa gazed around thoughtfully. "They still
think I'm an unknown quantity, ready to go off like a rocket."
"They aren't the only ones," Jaquar murmured. Marian agreed.
"Two Exotiques and a Circlet Sorcerer, all strange folks, and
the place is still full of Chevaliers." Alexa nodded in
satisfaction. "Goes to show how tough they are."
Marian thought anyone that could hang around in a rough place
like this with a bunch of monster heads decorating the walls had to
be tough.
Jaquar said, "I think about a quarter of the room emptied when
we joined you."
Shrugging, Alexa scanned the men and women again. "The creme de
la creme of the Chevaliers remained," she said.
Marian decided Alexa personally knew everyone who was left. "I
know I can't have a baton like yours without becoming a Marshall,"
she said, "but do you think I can have a magic wand or
something?"
Alexa's eyes opened wide. "You'll get a magic telescoping staff.
All the Circlets of the Fifth Degree have them. Didn't they tell
you?"
"No."
"They never realize the holes in our knowledge." Alexa shook her
head.
"I've figured that out," Marian said.
At that moment the outside door opened. Alexa heard it, looked
up and narrowed her eyes. The door shut, and a new, strong Song
approached them. It was the most intricate, Powerful and potent
Song Marian had heard since coming to Lladrana. The sheer richness
of the music overpowered her for a moment. She realized it was the
Song of a married couple- soul mates.
A few seconds later the young woman Marian and Jaquar had passed
on the way in stopped at their table. On her shoulder was a
warhawk. The girl was followed by a young man who wore bright
purple Chevalier leathers. These were the two with the wonderful
Song.
Eyeing the hawk-Sinafin-warily, Marian addressed her.
"Salutations, feycoocu," she said.
Sinafin preened, then nodded. Salutations, Scholar.
"Salutations, feycoocu," said Jaquar.
To Marian's surprise, the bird stepped from the girl's shoulder
to Jaquar's. He blinked as if also amazed.
The girl gestured to Alexa to scoot over. With a frown, Alexa
moved to the corner, muttering about people taking advantage of a
small person. The girl sat next to Alexa and the young man seated
himself next to the girl.
"This is my personal assistant, Marwey, and my Chevalier
Pascal," Alexa said.
Marian noticed a bright purple badge on Marwey's cloak, and once
again looked at Pascal's tabard of purple. She couldn't help
staring at Alexa. "You like purple."
Alexa growled. "It's the traditional color for Exotiques. Be
glad you aren't dressed in it and that everything around you isn't
purple."
"You're kidding, right?" Marian blurted in English.
Alexa buried her nose in her large mug. "Tho." The Lladranan
"no" echoed hollowly.
Staring at the young couple sporting the hideous color, Marian
shook her head.
Pascal's eyes fired. "It's a perfectly good color!"
Marwey pinkened and nodded.
"Maybe they don't see the exact shade we do," Marian said
weakly.
Alexa's eyebrows rose. "They are an aural society."
Interrupting Jaquar's stare-down with the bartender, Marian
addressed him. "What do you think of Alexa's...livery?" She thought
"livery" was the word for what a noble person dressed the
subordinates in their household in.
Jaquar glanced at Pascal's purple leathers. "Bright.
Interesting."
Marian and Alexa shared a glance.
"I have purple clothes, purple bed hangings," Alexa said
gloomily. She glared at Sinafin, the feycoocu. "A purple
muff!"
"Really?" Marian couldn't believe the being who'd frightened her
so badly the night before could be anything as innocent as a
muff.
A crash of breaking glass diverted everyone's attention to the
bar. Then a streak of purple caught Marian's eye as Sinafin- a
muff-rolled off Jaquar's shoulder and across the table to land in
front of Marian.
My visit last night was necessary, said Sinafin. Her
mental voice was soft as a whisper, meant only for Marian's ears.
I am sorry, but it was necessary.
Marian figured that was the best apology she'd get from the
creature. The thickly furred muff rippled, exuding comfort.
Hesitantly Marian petted the muff and it warmed under her fingers,
sent her a few bars of "Over the Sea to Skye."
With a sigh, Marian gave up her anger and continued stroking
Sinafin. Lovely animal, ugly muff.
Marwey glanced at Pascal. He studied Jaquar and Marian,
shrugged.
"Alyeka?" Pascal said.
"Yes?" said Alexa.
"I have something of importance to ask and think it must be
spoken of now," Pascal said. He squared his shoulders, discreetly
nodding toward the booth behind Marian and Jaquar.
Jaquar straightened and gazed at the younger man. The muff
rolled away from Marian and off the table to the bench beside her,
then onto the floor.
"What is it?" Alexa had set her mug down and had tilted her head
as if trying to hear any Songs coming from the booth.
Marian herself heard erratic, harsh rhythms. Two Songs
inextricably melded together, both hopeless.
Alexa frowned. "I don't understand what you want."
Marwey's lips tightened. "Koz and Perlee Desolly. They're
friends of ours. They're-"
"Desperate," Pascal finished. "They Paired against the wishes of
the noble they flew under and both were dismissed from his service.
They're independent now and penniless."
"Reynardus," Marwey said flatly.
Glancing at Marian, Alexa explained, "Bastien's father. The
former Lord Knight of the Marshalls."
In urgent tones, Pascal said, "The Desollys need support. A
helping Song. Knowledge that they're good Chevaliers, good
people."
Hands wrapped around her mug, Alexa nodded. "I understand. Most
of Reynardus's fliers are now with Luthan or Bastien and me."
"The thing is-" Marwey wet her lips, swallowed "-we're not sure
how Luthan and Bastien feel about Koz. He's antagonized them both
in the past. And-uh-Bastien and Perlee- well, they played together
for a while."
Alexa scowled.
Marwey continued. "But only for a month or two, and they both
moved on. It was a long time ago."
Alexa was shaking her head.
"Please, Alyeka," said Marwey. "Take them on. We will-"
Holding up a hand, Alexa stopped the girl's tumble of words. "I
can't believe you hesitated to ask. Of course they can fly under my
banner," she said. Then her tone sharpened. "They're good, and will
fit in with my team?"
"We'll make sure they do," Pascal assured her.
"All right, then." Alexa screwed up her face. "I think I still
have plenty of zhiv to pay two more Chevaliers."
A yip came from under the table and a small dog scrambled up to
Alexa's lap, then hopped onto the table, where it panted, swiped
Alexa's cheek with a long, pink tongue and curled into a ball. It
was the shapeshifter Sinafin, the feycoocu
frog-fairy-vulture-hawk-muff.
Marian stared at it. "A miniature greyhound?" she murmured.
"Yes," Alexa said, petting the dog. "They don't exist in
Lladrana."
"Of course not," Marian said politely. "That would be too
easy."
She shared a smile with Alexa. Then the other woman stood on
tiptoe to peer over Marian's head into the booth behind her.
Alexa looked at Pascal. "What rank do you want to give the
Desolly Pair?"
Pascal jutted his chin. "Koz deserves Fourth."
"Fourth rank. He must be good, then," Alexa said.
Pascal slipped from the bench and strode to the other booth. The
voices behind Marian stilled, took on the lightness of casual
conversation. Then Pascal began speaking in quiet, reassuring
tones.
Moments later the emotion throbbing from the booth behind Marian
was a relief so pure it held giddiness.
Jaquar tapped a finger on the table. The small gesture had the
three women looking at him. "Alyeka, do you have any dreeth teeth
left, or, better yet, a spur? There are several Circlets who want
those and will pay dearly for them."
Alexa rubbed her hands, grinned. "Oh yes." She looked at Marian
and wrinkled her nose. "Gruesome trophies."
The couple from the other booth approached Alexa's table with
Pascal. Koz was a big, raw-boned man of bluntly handsome features.
Under his arm he sheltered a startlingly beautiful woman with amber
eyes and dark brown hair that grew from a widow's peak. Marian
hypothesized that she, like Jaquar, had some old Exotique
blood-interesting, since progeny from Earth-Lladranan unions were
rare. She wondered if a Circlet had kept track of the bloodlines,
the genetic code...
"Swordmarshall Alyeka Vauxveau, I present to you Koz and Perlee
Desolly, who I think would make an excellent Chevalier Pair of the
Fourth Rank for your household."
"Thank you," the woman whispered.
Koz's jaw worked. "I promise you, Swordmarshall Alyeka, you will
never regret this."
"Welcome to my household, Chevaliers." Alexa held out her
hand.
Desolly touched her fingers briefly with his own, then half
bowed. "Thank you."
The woman and Alexa shook hands.
"I will pay for your lodgings in Horseshoe Hall or the Keep,"
Alexa said.
"Thank you, Lady," Perlee said. She smiled up at Koz. "We'll
have our own rooms. How wonderful!" She bit her lip, glanced back
at the booth they'd left. "We can move in immediately... we have
our dufflecases."
Alexa smiled and waved a hand. "Fine. I'm sure Marwey and Pascal
have it all planned out. Go ahead." Her eyes twinkled at Marwey,
who slipped from the bench and started out of the inn.
The Desollys and Pascal followed.
Alexa tilted her cup. It was empty.
"Do you want more tea?" asked Jaquar.
"Not here. I have a better cache up at the Castle. Let's go
there." Alexa looked at Marian and a small trill of notes ran in
the Song between them. "You can stay in the suite under mine. In my
Keep Tower," she said proudly. "It's really great except it's
always been assigned to an Exotique, so there's the purple
factor."
She turned to Jaquar. "You can stay in the..." She frowned.
"Where do Sorcerers and Sorceresses stay when they're at the
Castle?"
"We have never stayed in the past, but perhaps it is time to be
more active," Jaquar said.
"Didn't stay in the past?" Alexa jumped on the admission. Her
eyes narrowed. "Since this war with the Dark has escalated, all the
Marshalls are living in the Castle rather than on our own estates.
It's time the Tower Community establishes a presence in the Castle,
too."
Jaquar's teeth gleamed in a smile that wasn't quite nice. "I
agree, but you bait me. Well, let's see. We could raise a Tower in
the middle of one of the Castle courtyards."
Staring at him, Alexa said with heavy irony, "Oh yeah, that will
work."
His brow furrowed as if he pondered her phrasing. Marian
chuckled.
"The Castle is called The Marshalls' Castle," Jaquar pointed
out. "We of the Tower would be on your grounds-you would have the
strategic advantage."
"Heaven forbid that any of the communities of Lladrana would
work together to save us all from the Dark," Alexa snapped. "Turf
wars. Shee-oot."
Jaw flexing, Jaquar said evenly, "I said I want to end that, but
I will also remind you that the Marshalls kept the knowledge that
the fence posts were falling and the horrors were invading from the
rest of the country until far too late. No wonder the Marshalls
have alienated other segments of our society."
"Did we hide that knowledge, indeed?" Alexa stood, planted her
hands on the table and leaned forward, every small inch of her
exuding menace.
"Not you-those before you." Jaquar raised a hand in peace.
"Can you tell me that none of the Tower Community knew what was
going on?" she said in a dangerously low voice. "That no one
tracked the Dark? Tell me that you all didn't remain quiet, too,
watching the Marshalls struggling to staunch the flow of horrors.
That you didn't hesitate to inform the other members of Lladranan
society. That you stood back and let Chevaliers die fighting until
I asked for your help. That you didn't really join this action
until you all knew a sangvile was loose and it was feasting on your
own."
The inn had fallen silent, everyone focused on their table.
Anger and suspicion swirled in the atmosphere. Did Alexa know she
was stirring up a mob? The wait staff had vanished.
Jaquar paled beneath his golden skin. He stood, looming over
Alexa. It had no effect on her. "I will say that we made mistakes,
individually and as a community." He swept a glance around the
room. Many of the Chevaliers turned back to their own business. One
tough, rangy man met Jaquar's eyes. "Mistakes we have paid for."
Grief laced his voice.
Alexa sighed and raised her hands, palms out. "Peace between us.
As we say in Exotique Terre, 'That was then, this is now.'" A
considering look came to her eyes. Her smile matched the one Jaquar
had given her earlier. "I suppose we Marshalls could claim one of
those islands off the west coast that you Circlets like. Establish
a presence among you, instead of making rooms available here in the
Castle." She straightened.
Choking, Jaquar flung up a hand in what Marian recognized as the
gesture of a fencer when hit. "That isn't necessary."
"Then the Tower needs a presence here in the Castle. Permanent
rooms. To work with the Marshalls and the Castleton City
Guildfolk." Alexa's glance speared Marian. "Try to integrate the
Tower Community with the Marshalls."
Marian opened her mouth, closed it, then stood.
Jaquar reached out and took her hand, raised it to his lips.
"For tonight I'll stay with Marian." He paused.
When she didn't contradict him, she felt some tension leave his
stiff body.
"Tomorrow we can tour the Castle and choose rooms for the Tower
Community, should any wish to come and stay."
"I'll expect you at the Marshalls' Council Meeting tomorrow
morning," Alexa said.
"Of course. I'll be there."
The outside door opened, and as fresh, cool night air poured in,
Marian felt some of the negative emotions in the room flow
out-given a little push by Alexa and some of the Chevaliers. Marian
was impressed at the teamwork, the willingness to help. Her vision
shifted slightly and she heard Power-a ready tune of support from
the flying knights encased Alexa, and washed to Marian, too, out of
respect for Alexa and her obvious acceptance of Marian. No tune
reached Jaquar.
Sinafin yipped. That was very well done. It is a good
start. She approved.
Marian saw some Chevaliers nod and realized the feycoocu had
broadcast the comment.
A middle-aged, sturdy woman of obvious authority strode to
them.
Alexa inclined her head to the woman, gestured to Alexa. "Lady
Hallard, Representative of the Chevaliers to the Communities of
Lladrana, let me introduce you to Exotique Scholar Marian
Harasta."
The woman's dark brown eyes studied Marian. She nodded once,
briskly, and shot out her hand. Marian untwined her fingers from
Jaquar's and took the woman's hand, found it hard with calluses.
Obviously this woman didn't send her Chevaliers into battle without
her-she led her Chevaliers in battle.
"Salutations, Marian, pleased to meet you." She dipped her head
at Jaquar. "Sorcerer Circlet Dumont, good to see you. We need all
the help we can get." She hesitated, then tramped away to the bar
and the tough, rangy Chevalier that wore her colors-gray and
yellow.
"Let's go now," Alexa muttered. "Before everyone in Castleton
shows up to meet you and ask you questions. At least you speak the
language well," she said enviously. "Better than I do."
She swept out in front of them. Jaquar plucked up his hat and
set it on his head, left the booth and stepped aside for Marian,
then brought up the rear. Marian was amused that she was sandwiched
protectively between the two.
No one stopped them.
The night air was brisk, the sky magnificently star-studded. The
air smelled pure and with her inhalations, Marian tasted Song-the
tang of the City, the mainland of Lladrana.
Once they left the vicinity of the Nom de Nom, the streets and
squares were quiet, though not dark. Plenty of windows were lit,
showing that the culture wasn't simply dawn-to-dusk.
Marian and Alexa walked together and Jaquar trailed behind,
talking with Sinafin who had changed into warhawk form when none of
them were looking and rode on his shoulder.
Soon they reached the road to the Castle. It was uphill. Marian
straightened her spine and tried not to think of her aching feet.
At least the magical slippers had wonderful arch support.
Alexa took off at a rapid pace. Valiantly, Marian kept up.
"Alexa," Marian said in English, trying to keep a whine from her
voice. "Can you slow down a little? I walked two hours to a beach,
practiced Power lessons for another three or four, then rode
lightning here." She glanced back at Jaquar, who was talking to
Sinafin. "Not to mention.. .other activities. My body feels
like..." Her muscles felt whipped, but her inner core felt glowing
at riding lightning and the sex afterward.
"Oh? Sorry. Those 'other activities' can really wear a person
out." Alexa grinned up at Marian.
"Yes. How far is it?"
"To the Castle? About two miles."
Marian suppressed a groan, but Alexa sensed it anyway. "Not used
to walking, eh?"
"No. Bus."
"Car." Alexa sighed. "I'm a bad horsewoman. Of course, since I
used to be a terrible horsewoman, that means I'm improving.
I haven't ridden alone on volaranback lately, not since I broke my
arm again." She shook her head. "I fall off. Everyone, including
the volarans, is appalled. Maybe I have an inner ear problem. No,
can't be that because the jerir got in my ears all three times and
that would have healed."
She continued talking, but Marian paid no mind as she struggled
to grasp the wisps of memories that had come from Alexa during
their blood-bond. "Wait!" Alexa stopped, Marian gestured to
continue walking and they did, but she said, "The jerir pool-a
healing pool. It healed awful wounds."
"Yes, it did," said Alexa. "And little cuts and scrapes, and
bruises. Everything. We used all the benefits up and had to send
the remaining sludge away. I think to some island where a Circlet
could study it." She put her hand on Marian's arm. "But I don't
know how jerir is for diseases. You might want to speak to the
Castle Medica or Swordmarshall Thealia. I know they're working with
a black-and-white baby who swallowed some jerir. Black-and-whites
usually have bad Power flow, but whether that translates into bad
brain synapses or what, I don't know."
"Maybe, just maybe..." Marian whispered.
"Marian, if jerir was a cure-all for black-and-white problems or
anything else, I assure you, rare as it is, it would still be used
a lot."
Marian sniffed back hopeful tears that had lodged in her throat.
"You're right, of course. But it's an avenue to explore."
"Of course." Alex stared at Marian. "You really do look
exhausted."
"Thanks a lot." Marian shrugged. "I ache."
"The Castle baths are spring fed. Hot springs," Alexa said. She
skipped a little up the road.
Marian nearly closed her eyes at the energy radiating from the
woman.
"Hot springs," Marian repeated reverently.
"Yup. The best are the Chevaliers' baths in the bottom of
Horseshoe Hall. Efficacious minerals, good Powerful soothing
spells, a series of different temperature pools." Alexa waved.
"Whatever you need."
"Sounds wonderful."
"They're also the busiest. Probably full right now. Co-ed
bathing." Alexa slid a glance Marian's way.
Marian was shaking her head.
"Yeah, I know, I don't care for it, either. The Marshalls have a
fancy public bath in the bottom of the Keep-pretty mosaic tiles,
greenery." She cocked her head. "No one's there right now. It's
co-ed, too, so Jaquar can keep you company. Between the two of you,
you could ward the door and make it private." Alexa wiggled her
brows, then sobered. "Marian, you do know that every bond
you make-with Bossgond, the blood-bond I forced you into-"
"Don't you say that! I agreed."
"You didn't-don't-know all the ramifications-"
"Maybe not, but I'm an adult. Don't take my choices away from
me. I don't want you feeling guilty over this."
"Oh, all right. But to continue my warning from my vast
experience of three months-every bond you make with someone here,
with Amee itself, will tie you here, and I know that's not what you
want. You have one helluva a Song going with Jaquar already."
"I know."
"Just saying-"
"Thank you, but I'll be fine." I have to be.
21
Whether Jaquar had noticed that their pace had sped up, Marian's
agitated voice or a ruffling of the Song he shared with her, he
caught up and walked with them.
Actually, he strutted. "The feycoocu has graced me with the gift
of her name."
Marian and Alexa shared a glance. "Sinafin?" they asked in
unison, looking at the bird.
Jaquar's mouth twisted. "I should have known both of you knew
it."
Of course, said Sinafin. They are Exotiques. All the
Exotiques will know my name.
His eyes narrowed with calculation.
"That reminds me," Marian said, switching back to Lladranan.
"The woman we met at the Nom de Nom, Perlee Desolly, looks as if
she has some Exotique blood. I was under the impression that
children from Exotique-Lladranan unions are rare."
"True," Alexa said. "But they do occur. My estate-the one gifted
me as an Exotique-and you'll get one and a salary, too, Marian-was
established by an Exotique who had children." Alexa stared straight
ahead. "I doubt Bastien and I will have children. It's not good to
bring children into the world when both parents are fighters." She
shrugged. "And if Lladrana ever wins this war, I still don't think
we'd be blessed. During the two visions I had of my life on Earth
or my life here, children were not in my future. We practice birth
control, anyway."
"How?" asked Marian.
Now Alexa turned her head and smiled. "Really a curious person,
aren't you, Marian."
Marian was glad the dark would not show her flush. "Yes."
"Only to be expected, you being an academic and all. But I would
have thought that Jaquar would say something about it-or Bossgond,
even."
Marian stared at Jaquar's profile. "They didn't."
Jaquar shrugged. "It didn't come up. I know Marian can't stay. I
did what was necessary." Sinafin asked him something and he turned
his head to talk with her.
"Powerful people-such as Marshalls or Circlets-can control
bodily functions. During sex we usually turn up the body heat and
kill the little swimmers."
"Sperm?" Marian asked.
"That's it," Alexa replied cheerfully. "Fry 'em to hell." She
waved her hand. "Poof. They're gone."
"Interesting," Marian said. She was almost distracted from the
topic she wanted to pursue. "Has anyone ever kept track of all the
mixed bloodlines through genealogy?"
"Like an Exotique descendants' Lorebook?" Alexa asked.
"Yes."
"I don't know."
Marian caught Jaquar's attention and repeated the question.
"I haven't heard of any," he said, and picked up the pace so
that Alexa nearly had to run.
"Didn't your parents ever discuss your heritage with you?" asked
Alexa. She wasn't even panting.
"No. I was abandoned as a child. In Krache." He gave a humorless
smile. "A seaport with few decent people. My adoptive parents found
me living in the streets there."
"Oh," Alexa said. "Sorry."
Sinafin rubbed her feathered head against his cheek,
crooning.
Alexa stared at Jaquar, then shook her head. "Well, at least I
don't have to look at that hat anymore. Bastien made it for
himself, you know. Really ugly hat."
Marian followed the new conversational lead. "Very ugly hat.
Uglier than your purple muff."
Sinafin clicked her beak in amusement.
They arrived at the main gate of the Castle. The Marshalls'
Castle. Marian had visited a couple of castles in France, but this
one looked more like Windsor than a French chateau.
There was a drawbridge, and the edge of the iron portcullis
showed near the top of the entryway. The hallway beyond the gate
must have been at least fifteen feet long, leading into a
courtyard.
Since Jaquar and Alexa walked quickly and the buildings
overshadowed the grassy courtyard, details were lost.
Alexa headed toward the far door of the yard. "This is the lower
ward," she said. Pulling her jade baton from its sheath, she
pointed it at a large, square wooden door with iron strap-work and
hummed two notes. The door banged open. Marian caught horrified
looks on the faces of two uniformed soldiers as they flattened
themselves against the inner wall.
"Sorry," Alexa said. "I didn't know anyone was minding the
door." She slipped her baton back in its sheath and stepped over
the foot-high threshold of the door.
Jaquar chuckled and did the same.
As Marian followed she met the eyes of the soldiers-both
middle-aged, one man and one woman-and found them staring at
Jaquar, then her, mouths open.
More gossip would circulate, for certain.
Alexa waved to the massive Keep. "Thealia's Tower is the
closest, mine is behind hers, overlooking the cliff." She angled
toward it.
This yard wasn't grass like the previous one, but stone. A huge
round building about three stories high dominated the far end.
Jaquar held out his hand and Marian took it. He gazed down at
her, smiling. Did she look as lost as she felt at this turn of
events?
Sinafin emitted a piercing cry and Marian wondered if Alexa had
kept track of all of Sinafin's forms; it seemed the creature had an
infinite variety. The hawk flew across the yard.
"She's going to Bastien and his laboring volaran," Alexa
said.
"This is Temple Ward," Jaquar said. He gestured to the round
building. "That's the Temple where the Marshalls Summoned you."
Memory images clicked into place of the gigantic round room, a
pentacle, an altar. "If I want to return to Earth, should I leave
from there?"
Alexa halted, glanced back at them. "Probably best. The
Marshalls are the strongest team in the country. I don't think a
band of Circlets would have the experience in blending their Power
to accomplish such a difficult and delicate task. Or you can wait
for the Snap."
"I'll figure out how to recompense you for sending me home
before I leave. The timing of the Snap is too uncertain," Marian
said.
They entered a cloister walk of open stonework arches that ran
along most of the Keep, then went to the far Tower, where there was
a door. Alexa ushered them through and into a large hallway. She
indicated the left wall. "That's the Marshalls' Council Room." When
they came to an intersecting corridor-another wide hall-Alexa
turned left. "The hall at the end of the building opening to the
right leads to my tower. I'll show you to your suite, then I think
I'll check on Bastien in the volaran stables."
So they traversed the corridors and mounted the stairs in
Alexa's tower. As in Jaquar's Tower, the steps were a tight spiral
of stone.
Alexa crossed the circular inner entryway to a door and flung it
open, then turned left down a dim, narrow passage and threw open
another door. "Your rooms. Be glad the Marshalls only used an
incredible amount of purple in my suite." She grinned at Jaquar.
"You should know lighting and housekeeping spells-you might want to
dust." Then she hurried away.
Whistling several notes, Jaquar entered as light flickered in
crystal orbs on the walls.
"It's beautiful," Marian said. She stared into a richly colored
bedroom-rugs of complementary patterns, a wide expanse of windows
that followed the curve of the tower. To her right was a huge
canopy bed, complete with curtains.
Marian stared at the bed. The heat of her blood seemed to rise
until it pulsed just under her skin, sensitizing every nerve.
She was intensely aware of Jaquar standing beside her, though
she didn't turn to look at him. She could hear his every breath,
sense the waves of his aura, and the melody between them rolled
like thunder in her ears, in her heart. She barely breathed
herself, afraid that moving might shatter her mind, the sensory
input was so great. She didn't know how she stood the feeling
throbbing between them.
"I can't," she whispered in English.
But he must have known it was denial.
His footsteps were mere brushes of shoe upon thick rug, yet she
heard them... retreating. At the door, he murmured, "I'll be in the
Keep baths at the lowest level. Follow our Song if you wish to join
me."
A slight disturbance of air indicated the opening and shutting
of the door.
Marian trembled violently, took one step, two, toward the bed.
Fell across it. She panted and tears leaked from under her eyelids.
She lay there for a moment, doing nothing but existing, as if her
mind spun in starry space, scattered into electrical impulses that
were stars, no thought, only being.
She was afraid her heart had developed a small crack that could
wrench it in two. One part of her longed to stay in Lladrana,
become a Sorceress, fulfill her natural potential...learn more of
Jaquar.
The other part would always need Andrew-for brotherly love, to
protect and be protected. Her family.
How could she merge the two?
She could return to Earth and stay.
She could return to Earth, explain everything to Andrew and
return to Lladrana.
She could stay in Lladrana-but, no, that was not truly an
option.
The most exciting, the most frightening possibility of all was
to convince Andrew to return to Lladrana with her. But could she?
What if he would live longer and better on Earth? What if there
really was no hope for him on Lladrana? What if she couldn't come
back, let alone bring Andrew with her? What price would they pay to
return?
And why was she thinking of all these abstruse matters when
there was a sexy hunk of man waiting to pleasure her in the wet,
steamy, exotic baths...? Because she was afraid her feelings for
Jaquar played a big part in her decision.
But, of course, there was such a thing as thinking too much,
overanalyzing. That was exactly what she was doing now.
Marian stretched, and grit pricked her skin-dust from the road?
Caked mud from lovemaking in the field? Electricity of her body
attracting particles during the lightning ride? Probably all
three.
She hopped from the bed and did a quick exploration of the tower
suite. She was becoming well informed about tower living
arrangements. This one had a bathroom with a shower, but no
bathtub, as usual.
Definitely time for a wash.
Humming-and realizing she was lilting a portion of the tune that
linked her to Jaquar-Marian let the notes seep into her, lead her
feet instinctively. An interesting alternative to thinking-simply
following instinct. She seemed to be much more tied to the world
and people and Songs here than on Earth.
She reached the lowest level of the Keep. Instead of dark and
dank, twisty passages, she found well-lit corridors that were
wide.
For a moment she hesitated outside the door. Their previous sex
could be rationalized away as excitement from playing in the storm.
If she went in now, they'd join together again-knowingly and
deliberately on both their parts.
Letting her emotions, her sexuality, surface and overwhelm the
sharp thoughts, Marian pushed the door open.
He stood waiting for her, shining droplets scattered over his
body. The lush setting of colorful mosaic tiles complemented his
golden skin, dark hair, blue eyes. A man in the prime of his life,
he moved toward her with muscular power and grace. He could be a
sultan, a water god. He was a Circlet, a great Sorcerer. A
magnificent man.
An aroused man.
Her insides began to tremble as her body readied for him. No
need to suppress logical thought patterns now-they were gone.
Memories whirled through her of his hands, his lips, the sound of
his low groan as he climaxed. She wanted it all again. More and
longer.
She wanted to glide her hands over his firm muscles, feel the
teasing prickle of his body hair. She wanted him over her and in
her.
So she held out her hand, but he stepped past her. Half turning,
she saw him place his palm against the door A maroon light flared
around his fingers as he crooned, "Private and special, softly keep
this place for us alone."
That Song was a tune that repeated again and again in her mind
as he came to her, smiling.
Eyes locked on hers, he took her hands, lifted one to his lips,
turned it over and pressed a tingling kiss into her palm, then did
the same with the other. He loosed her hands and her fingers curled
inward, to hold his tender kisses.
His palms curled around her shoulders as he leaned forward and
kissed her forehead, then her eyes closed as he touched his lips to
each eyelid. He was undoing her, utterly. Nothing in the universe
mattered save him, his soft mouth, his gentle wooing of her. She
didn't even care that he comprised her world. No warning alarms
rang in her head. Only the deep languid feelings stirring inside
her were important. Only the yearning that would coil tightly,
demanding to be assuaged.
Her eyes opened again as he kissed the tip of her nose, brushed
her lips with his. All so reverent, as if he was cherishing her.
Her breath left on a moan.
She raised her own hands, placed them on his face, felt the
elegant bones beneath his skin, saw the shadows under his eyes that
grief had painted. Yet nothing in his touch, in his bearing, in his
Song reverberated with grief and she was glad she gave him surcease
from that emotion. She stroked his lean jaw, slid her thumbs over
his full lips. Lips she had to taste. She tilted her head and drew
his mouth to hers.
The meeting of their lips was the most exquisite thing she'd
ever felt. Promising. Infinitely promising. She could believe
anything with his mouth against hers. Feel everything. She opened
her lips, feathered her tongue across his lips, savored his taste
of wild forest herbs, of wind, of man, bringing it into her to
keep.
His tongue followed suit, traced his taste over her lips,
relished her, then plunged into her mouth, penetrating, exploring,
as if all her essence could be learned from this kiss.
He broke the embrace and stepped back, his eyes dark, his face
taut with passion, his chest rising and falling with ragged
breaths. When he raised his hands they trembled, and he met her
eyes and laughed. "What you do to me, Lady. Beauty-of heart, of
mind, of body, of Song. I have never heard such a compelling
Song." Fisting his hands as if checking they still obeyed him, he
crushed the fabric of her dress at her shoulders, then lifted the
gown from her, tossing it aside to lie like an emerald shadow.
A raspy noise caught in his throat as he studied her. He shook
his head. "Exotique. Who knew such splendor existed-pale skin, red,
red hair, nipples the color of-" Again the groan and head shake.
"Beyond any Lladranan delights."
Frowning, he said, "What happened to that-that garment which
molds your breasts?"
She felt herself blush, and since it started above her breasts
he watched with interest. "My bra?" She nodded to the gown. "It's
in a pocket of my gown."
"Yet you wear the lower piece that emphasizes your
femininity."
It was nothing more than a pair of high-cut panties.
Jaquar shuddered. "You'd best hurry and bathe. I have already
done so. I can't stand the wait for you much longer."
She shucked her panties, scanned the tile for puddles and
avoided his tracks as she hurried to the pool. She decided it was
long and deep enough for a flat dive. The Marshalls did themselves
proud.
The water-warm and gliding silkily against her skin-full of
herbs, she guessed. Her fingers touched the bench jutting from the
pool wall and she surfaced. She shook her head to fling her hair
from her eyes and glanced around.
Jaquar slowly walked to the pool. She thought she could see the
heat of desire emanating from him in the steam.
Marian ducked under, then bobbed back up. She wanted to soak her
bruised body-later. She spied a dish of soaps, grabbed the first
one and began a scrub. She'd just done her hair when Jaquar put his
hands under her arms and drew her from the water.
She gasped, but before she could protest, he was washing her
thoroughly. She moaned and hung on to him as his slick hands
caressed her, massaging her breasts until all she could hear was
her own panting. He was relentless, sliding his hands over the
curve of her hips and belly, up and down her legs. His fingers
delved between her thighs, exquisitely, knowledgeably. Her balance
wavered.
Her vision dimmed, but her sense of smell heightened. The
fragrance of the soap rose to her nostrils-aloe and something
sharper that reminded her of deserts more than green Lladrana. It
mixed with a luxurious scent that she realized with a touch of
self-consciousness was her own arousal. Then there was Jaquar's
natural scent, and his own musky arousal. She whimpered as the
combination blew through her like a scouring wind, hollowing so she
could be filled with something else, something new.
And filled with man.
She swayed toward him.
His hands were strong around her waist. "Take a breath. I'll
rinse you, then... then..."
She closed her eyes and inhaled deeply.
"By the Song, your breasts..." he murmured. She was
raised, then lowered gently into the water that lapped against the
soles of her feet, causing her toes to curl. The water flowed up
her calves to her knees, to her thighs. Then it warmed her sex, and
she shuddered, she was so aroused. He slipped her farther into the
pool until her breasts floated, nipples tight, and she began to
moan.
"Breathe!" he warned.
She shut her mouth. The water caressed her neck, rose over her
face, tingled her scalp as her hair spread out.
He smoothed his hands up her body under the water and she could
do nothing but twist under his touch. His fingers untangled her
hair, then he caught her under her arms and pulled her out of the
water.
Releasing her breath in a puff, she finally opened her eyes to
see his face taut, and a flush on his skin that affected her even
more. She needed him.
The cool air evaporating the water on her contrasted with her
heated blood, coiling her arousal tighter. She'd never been so
aware of her entire body, and the throbbing of her sex.
Then he settled her on a soft, fluffy bathsheet, big enough to
hold them both. One of his hands curved around the back of her
neck, bringing her lips close for his kiss. He plunged his cool
tongue into her mouth as he angled his body over hers, slipping his
knees between her thighs. The roughened brush of his body hair
against her sensitized skin had her arching to meet him, welcome
him.
He thrust into her, long, deep, powerfully.
She sucked on his tongue, stared into his eyes. He withdrew
slightly, lunged again, and she shattered into bliss.
He groaned and followed.
Their Songs merged, took from each other, gave to each
other.
Changed them both.
Marian felt enveloped by him. His warmth surrounded her, and the
exotic fragrance of bath and sex whirled around her. Time
slowed.
Finally, he lifted his head and his gaze was as piercing as
ever.
She outlined his cheekbone with the pad of her thumb, chuckled.
"You are back to thinking, Jaquar?"
He opened his mouth, hesitated, cleared his throat. "You
can talk." He set his brow against hers. "I'm going to roll us over
into the pool for a quick cleansing."
"I don't think-"
The water slid over them. They didn't hit the bench as she'd
feared. Nor did they separate. Jaquar kicked, found his feet, and
his hands slid to cup her bottom, entering her.
He flexed his muscles, all of his muscles, and Marian
began the spiraling climb to the center of the storm once more.
"What's going on in there? Open up now!" a woman shouted from
outside the door, banging on it.
Jaquar jerked, withdrew. He grasped her hand and pulled her to
the corner stairs leading out of the pool.
"Don't make us use our batons to get in," threatened the woman.
She sounded like an angry parent scolding unruly children.
Marian couldn't help herself, she laughed.
There was silence, then a more subdued shout. "I don't recognize
you."
"It's Exotique Marian and Circlet Jaquar," Jaquar said coolly,
taking a large terry-clothlike robe in midnight blue from a hook on
one of the pillars. He wrapped himself in it, then brought another
to Marian. It was purple.
Surely this was Alexa's robe.
It was too long for Alexa. It was Marian's robe. She was
so bemused by the startling color and its very presence that she
allowed Jaquar to help her on with it. He stood behind her,
overlapped the front and tied the belt in a loose knot, then
brought her back against him.
He felt hard and solid and wonderful. His breath was sweet and
warm next to her ear. Tenderness flowed from him.
"Ahem," rumbled a male outside the door. "These are the
Marshalls' baths. And we are the Marshalls, yet the door is
warded for privacy against us. Do you think you could finish up
quickly in there? Training took place in mud fields today."
"Quickly?" whispered Jaquar. "I think not-not this next
time."
Heat washed over Marian. "We're coming out. Jaquar, can you
dismiss the ward?"
He heaved a sigh. "If I must." With a wicked grin, he continued,
"Our loving will be better in bed, anyway."
Heavens. An-ti-ci-pa-tion. Marian swallowed, fiddled with
adjusting her robe. She hoped they didn't look as if they had had
hot and sweaty sex, since they hadn't. It had been more like hot,
wet, slippery sex. On the other hand, it was probably too
late to impress the Marshalls. The damage of this little scene was
already done.
On his way to the door, Jaquar picked up her panties and put
them in his pocket.
"I want those!" Marian demanded.
He shrugged, rolled their clothes together and tucked them under
his arm. He touched the door with one finger. "Open."
"Thank you," the man outside muttered.
Jaquar stood aside and people swept in. The first was a huge
man, already shirtless and showing a massive chest covered with
scars. Another was a stately woman with narrowed eyes.
Marian dipped in a little curtsy. "Salutations."
"Salutations," the woman said. "And to you, Jaquar."
He inclined his head to the group, "Swordmarshall Thealia."
Some moved to opposite sides of the room and behind openings
Marian hadn't noticed. Dressing rooms?
Jaquar caught Marian's hand in his own. He smiled charmingly at
Thealia. "Sorry to delay you. We rode the lightning tonight and got
quite dirty."
Those who were still in the main bathroom froze.
Thealia opened her mouth, hesitated, then shook her head and
waved toward the door. "We have business to discuss. Depart."
"Of course," Jaquar said. Tugging slightly on Marian, he led her
away.
After he shut the door, he waited for a moment, and Marian heard
the rise of excited voices.
Jaquar smiled in satisfaction. "That will give them something to
talk about."
Tucking her hand in the crook of his arm, he led her to their
suite under Alexa's rooms. This door, too, he warded for privacy,
and Marian watched him and knew she'd learned enough to do the
little whistle spell herself.
He came back to her and put his hands on her shoulders, rested
his brow on hers. "In the baths, I was too aroused to think. But I
want our coming together to be sharing and mutual pleasure, Marian.
An act of conscious decision. Sleep with me," he said unsteadily.
"More, take me into you and merge with me and hold me and rock me
to infinite Song." He removed her robe in a quick sweeping
movement. "As I will do for you in return."
She'd never believed a person could talk too much, but Jaquar
certainly was doing so. What was that old movie line? "Shut up, you
fool, and take me to bed." Worked for her.
He grinned, and laughter rolled from him. He swung her up into
his arms.
22
Jaquar didn't sleep well. All he wanted to do was forget himself
in Marian's tight body. But he had to speak to Bastien. Once the
Marshalls agreed to the new plan to assault the Dark, Marian would
be completely safe. As it was, he was certain he had a couple of
days before Chalmon and Venetria would act. Chalmon might have
derided the Marshalls when it came to making speedy decisions, but
most Circlets were even slower. And Chalmon and Venetria alone
could not Send Marian; they would have to convince others to help.
That, too, took time, and Jaquar had heard no rumblings.
So he dozed and finally heard Alexa return-alone. He dressed
quickly in just a robe and walked to the volaran stables. The night
was quiet, the sky blazing with stars. Except for a patrolling
guard, he was the only one abroad. Even when he passed from Temple
Ward to Lower Ward, he saw few people. If Chevaliers were partying,
it was in the Nom de Nom or the tiny inn in the outer Castle
wall.
He met Bastien as the man exited from the stable passage into
the ward. Bastien stood and stretched, breathing deeply. He smelled
of sweat-volaran and his own-and other odors that Jaquar didn't
want to identify.
Bastien grinned and joined him. "Beautiful night!"
"The volaran mare?"
"Very fine! With a fine filly."
"Excellent."
"That it is." Bastien made to throw an arm around Jaquar's
shoulders and chuckled as he stepped aside. "So, Circlet, what do
you want of me? Permission to raise a Tower in the middle of
Horseshoe Close, here?"
"As if you could grant such."
Bastien laughed, touched the baton at his hip. "I have more
influence now."
"I've come to speak of the Dark." Feeling a little wary of the
shadows, Jaquar walked to the middle of the ward and slowly began
to return to Alexa's tower. Bastien accompanied him. "Is this about
plane-walking and finding a maw of evil?"
"You've heard?"
Bastien shrugged. "Rumors."
Jaquar told him of his first trip to the nest and the master's
words, then laid out his new plan.
"No," Bastien said flatly, muscles tense. He was all warrior
now. He swept his fingers through his black-and-silver hair. "I
can't plane-walk. I don't have the control due to the remnants of
my wild Power. I am Alexa's Shield, her protector, her Pairling. I
will not allow her to fly into this battle without me."
They'd neared the gate to Temple Ward, and didn't speak until
they'd passed through and were beyond the guards' hearing.
Bastien frowned. "Besides, Alexa is an Exotique. She is tied to
Amee by me, and the rest of the Marshalls, but her bond with the
world is not as strong as that of someone who was born here. She
could get lost among the planes." He glanced at Jaquar. "If it were
on this physical plane, we'd fight, but not otherwise."
"It is Marian's task, then, to fight the Dark in its nest." Bile
rose in Jaquar's throat. He'd make sure she didn't go in alone, and
that she was Circlet of the Fifth Degree before they attempted
it.
"No," Bastien said, and it took a moment for Jaquar to realize
what he'd heard.
He stopped outside the Assayer's Office and stared at Bastien.
"No?"
Bastien shook his head. "I can't think her task is to destroy
the nest all by herself. Powerful as she is, I don't think she
could do it. She might harm it, but if she didn't destroy the Dark,
too, the nest would regenerate."
"True."
Walking to the entryway of the Keep, Bastien said, "All
indications show that every community of Lladrana must be
integrated and cooperating to destroy the Dark."
"Also true." They'd reached the landing below Marian's
suite.
"Don't say anything about this to the Marshalls' Council
tomorrow morning. 1 want to tell Alexa myself, and 1 need awhile to
figure out how to do that."
"Very well," Jaquar said, and watched Bastien take the stairs
up.
His plan was ruined, but only he and Bastien knew. Jaquar had a
couple of days to come up with a new one, but he wouldn't do it
alone; he must consult with Bossgond.
He entered the suite and watched Marian sleep. Her skin was so
pale in the moonlight, her body so beautiful, her expression so
pleased, it made him ache.
Jaquar went and showered, then returned to her. As he slowly
woke her, caressed her into moaning passion and took her on another
wild ride, he wondered how long he would have her.
He loved seeing the passion and affection in her eyes, the hint
of hero-worship. That would die when he warned her, told her what
he himself had set in motion.
He'd dealt with too many deaths lately.
It was dawn when Chalmon dismissed the Circlets and Scholars who
had been practicing the Sending ritual and looked at Venetria.
"Your contribution to the Sending Song was weak. I can't do it
without you."
"Even though I don't agree with you?"
His lips quirked. "If you were violently against this, you'd be
throwing things at my head. Preferably my glassware." His face
hardened. "But it must be done. The nest will open again
soon, I know it!" He shrugged and moved around the room restlessly
in an atypical manner.
Venetria narrowed her eyes. He was sensing something she
wasn't-she could tell through the fluctuations in their Song. His
Power picked up minute variations in the Amee's Song. Venetria
shivered.
"It will be bad, very bad if the maw spews out horrors at this
time."
She hesitated. "Perhaps we should consult the Singer."
He barked laughter. "You think I didn't consider that? I visited
her the night before last and was granted an audience. Not a Song,
for she knew our affairs as usual, but a meeting. Apparently she's
received many Songs recently. No wonder." He strode to the model of
the nest he'd made. She didn't follow. The thing disturbed her with
its slow, inimical pulsing.
Venetria asked, "What did the Singer say?"
Another short laugh that was no laugh at all. "One sentence. 'Do
what you must do.'"
She just stared at him. "That's all?"
Pacing, he nodded sharply. "I had the feeling that the Singer
had received many conflicting Songs of future events." He stopped
and pivoted to face her, his Song all determination. "We must
continue with our plan."
The cry escaped her. "Send an untrained woman into the maw!"
"Partially trained and very, very Powerful. If anyone has the
chance to destroy the nest and live, it is Exotique Marian. We'll
watch. There is a good chance that once she opens the nest it will
be vulnerable to us!" He frowned. "As for being untrained-who knows
but that raw Power might be more effective against the nest than
trained? The more she is instructed, becomes a Circlet, the more
she is learning Amee's ways and dimming her Exotique Terre
essence."
"That's merely rationalization."
He swung on her in fury. "You think so? I don't. If you cannot
help me in this..." He didn't end the sentence.
She knew what he meant and her heart seemed to shatter into a
thousand fragments, only held together by sheer will. Or perhaps
her terror of losing him. She couldn't breathe. Her studies had
lost much of their allure and now he was the mostimportant thing in
her life. She didn't think he felt the same, and didn't dare tell
him. She said, "I will Sing with you."
He straightened, his expression calmer-had he, too, feared their
Song would break?
Marian awoke to the doorharp, followed by a knock: "Shave and
a haircut. Two bits." She smiled sleepily. Despite the fact
that Alexa would stay in Lladrana, some of her thought processes
would be pure Earthling for as long as she lived.
But Marian didn't want to think of Alexa's life span. Like
Andrew's, it could be far too short.
Untangling herself from Jaquar, who grunted and reached out an
arm to keep her close, Marian rose from the bed, grabbed the purple
robe and opened the door.
Alexa grinned up at her, noted the purple robe and rolled her
eyes. "I see the Marshalls were ready for you. There's probably a
robe like that in every building's baths."
"Huh," Marian said brilliantly.
"Do you want to joint the Marshalls' Council Meeting this
morning?"
Marian just stared at her in horror.
Alexa laughed. "Guess not. Well, there's plenty to explore
around the Castle." She waved. "Feel free."
"I thought I might visit the baths again."
Chuckling, Alexa said, "A woman after my own heart. The most
private is the Ritual Bathing Pool in the Temple, but it's also the
coolest."
Marian would like to get a good look at the Temple and discover
if there was any possibility that she could Send herself back to
Boulder on her own.
Alexa whistled sharply. Marian jumped, then goggled as Jaquar
appeared beside her, fully clothed in his maroon Sorcerer's robe
and wearing his Circlet of figured gold. Dressed for success. Wow.
She'd have to learn that trick.
Looking approving, Alexa smiled. "Come along, Jaquar. I'll
excuse Marian from the meeting, but not you. I'm sure the Marshalls
have lots of questions about what's been going on in the Tower
Community."
Jaquar darted a glance at Alexa. Then he brushed back Marian's
hair and kissed her lips softly. "Good morning."
She couldn't help smiling up at him with all the far-too-gooey
feelings she felt for him. "Good morning, Jaquar."
"Well, it looks like another example of a Lladranan man being a
fabulous lover," Alexa said with a chuckle.
Jaquar just raised an eyebrow. He turned to Marian, caught her
around the waist with a hard arm and ravished her mouth. He left
her mind reeling, heat welling inside her. She stepped away from
him, gave him a little push to send him on his way to a dreary
meeting.
"Go away, you two."
"See you later," Alexa said. "You might want to visit the
brithenwood garden. I'd like to know what you think of it."
Marian found her gown and underwear in the bathroom. They hung
suspended in air in the shower stall, and she just stared for a
moment, mouth open. Nibbling her lip, she deduced that Jaquar had
"washed" them with some sort of spell, particularly since his
shirt, trousers and loincloth also floated midair. That thought, of
course, made her wonder if he was wearing anything under his
elegant robe. She banished the distracting idea and dressed.
The Keep was cool, as was the cloister walk outside it, but the
day was sunny and bright. Only a few soldiers and a couple of
Chevaliers were around as she strode up the walk and stopped under
the Temple portico. The door to the Temple was huge and wooden, but
all she did was lift the iron ring of the latch and it swung
inward, opening, the scent of incense wafting out.
She let the ring slip from her grasp and took a step into the
dim building, closing the door behind her. For a moment she just
stood as her eyes adjusted to the light. The room was fully as big
as she remembered, sectioned off here and there by intricately
carved screens that didn't reach the high ceiling.
Following the curve of the wall, she explored. Most of the wall
on each side of the door held a built-in stone bench with velvet
cushions, and piles of lush pillows here and there. She ducked
around all the screens and found a dining room, a toilet closet
with sink and octagonal, tiled tub, even a place to sleep that held
several mattresses covered in silk. There were fireplaces, and
light came from the high windows.
The ceiling showed huge beams studded with Power-storage
crystals and wheel-chandeliers. Very interesting.
Finally she moved to the area of the room that held the altar
and a large pool. When Summoned, she'd thought the pentacle that
the Marshalls had used was incised in the stone. Since Bossgond and
Jaquar both had permanent pentagrams, she'd continued to think so,
but her memory had played her false. Hands on hips, eyes narrowed,
she scanned the room, tested her Power against it and received
incredible echoes of great spells, bell-tones from the crystals
above and the chakra lamp-chimes.
There was no permanent star and circle. Which meant that the
Marshalls created the symbols when necessary, probably drawing and
angling them in the direction that would vibrate the best with
their goals.
Scrutinizing the stones, she found a bit of a vermilion outline
of the pentacle that she'd fallen into. She also discovered an
almost flaming blue-green line that might have been the color of
the pentacle used to Summon Alexa, if her memory of the images
Bossgond showed her were true.
Hands clasped behind her to prevent her curious fingers from
betraying her by touching the altar, she noted the tools, gleaming
with a polish from use and care. The lamp-chimes drew her.
Different-colored candleholders looked cut from gemstones. A small
mallet lay near them, and Marian could recall the Power of the
sounds wrung from them. Her fingers itched to take the mallet and
run it across the seven chimes. Would they sound different unlit?
What of the size of the candle, or the candle's wick-would that
affect the sound? Marian didn't know.
She studied the gong. It looked to be about nine feet in
diameter and of hammered, polished silver, with not a smidgeon of
tarnish. Again she wanted to unclasp her hands and test- flick a
finger and thumbnail against the gong, see what happened.
Better not. Stepping back, she didn't release her entwined
fingers until she was far beyond temptation. She looked at the
pool. She knew it had once contained the famed healing-liquid,
jerir, but now it definitely held herbal water. She glanced at the
door to the Temple. No way was she going to bathe in full view of
anyone who walked in.
So she returned to the little octagonal pool to wash and
shampoo. The moment she stepped from the bath, the bottom opened
and the water disappeared. Wow. New water, with flecks of plant
matter she hadn't noticed, flooded into the pool from eight sides
and it was full again in minutes.
Marian rolled her shoulders, shook out her arms and legs,
testing her limbs. No doubt about it, she felt good from the
bath. Efficacious herbs and minerals, as Alexa had said.
As she walked back to the door, she paused by the large pool and
considered it. She hadn't done any lessons today and maybe working
with water inside, here, might be easier.
Go ahead, Sinafin said. She was a frog again, sitting by
the pool. The Temple is for all human endeavors. Bathing,
eating. The frog grinned. Practicing Water lessons.
"Will the Temple and the pool help me? I don't want to
succeed in lessons here if I can't duplicate them elsewhere."
The frog let out a reverberating crooaaakkk that raised
the hair on the back of her neck. Now any advantage is
neutralized. I will watch but will neither guide nor add my
Power.
"Thanks." She guessed. She stepped into a wide shaft of
sunlight, settled into her stance, called her Power. It was easier
now, as if she could sweep all the latent sparks of static
electricity from the atmosphere, as if she could process sunlight
flowing through the windows into sheer fiery energy. With complete
concentration, she followed Jaquar's instructions step by step, not
daring to modify any of his Songs of Water Power.
She stared at the pool, tried to evaporate some water. As with
her first lesson, she used too much. Sighing, she let the cupful
fall back into the pool and began with a droplet.
It worked. She held it, dispersed it into the air, could find it
and reform it if she wanted! Yay!
The sun glinted in her eyes, so she closed them. She felt the
rays enveloping her, the warmth of the light, the very yellowness.
There were other colors in the spectrum, other stars adding their
signatures to the light, and she gathered them all, used them on
the pool.
She opened her eyes. She'd done it!
Congratulations! croaked Sinafin, glowing green.
With a whoop she danced over to the feycoocu and patted her cool
frog head. "I did it!"
You will not forget this lesson, either.
Marian didn't want to think of her previous one with Sinafin.
She much preferred Jaquar as a professor.
"One more time," she said, rolled her shoulders and stepped into
the shade, keeping her eyes open. This time she tweaked the Songs
Jaquar had given her. She held her breath as she collected the
slippery water, kept it suspended in the air with her mind,
evaporated it-dispersed it into the air-then lifted it to the
ceiling, forming a rain cloud. With exquisite precision, she let
the misty rain pour down, missing both Sinafin and herself.
The feycoocu hopped over to the rain and wallowed. The little
shower ended quickly and Marian punched her arms in the air and
shrieked, "Yes!" Then she whirled around, stopped. If she
had let the rain fall on her, she could have dried herself
easily with a warm breeze, intensified sunlight on her clothes and
not her skin. Oh yeah!
Now dry the stones, Sinafin said.
Grinning, Marian did.
I will see you later. With complete dignity
the frog leaped to the door and through it.
Exclamations came from outside the Temple. Marian chuckled. She
skirted the altar and gong. Despite her recent success with water,
she didn't trust herself to keep her hands from poking into
Powerful instruments that were best left undisturbed by a foolish
student-strains of "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" ran through her
mind. She surely didn't want to explain any dancing brooms or gong
rolling off its stand or gemstone lamp-chimes cracking, or a
strange Song emanating from the Temple.
Her imagination ran riot at all the havoc she could cause. She
supposed it was an honor-the amount of trust everyone placed in her
that she wasn't being watched.
She left the Temple humming, and walked through the courtyard
and gate and down to the Lower Ward. There she lingered a moment,
observing people train in a circular area with swords and shields
and staffs. They were good, and as exciting as any historical
movie. Better choreographed, too.
A scent came to her nose that she recognized as volaran and she
found her way to the Landing Field. There she observed a couple of
Chevaliers depart, one Sword and Shield Pair of male lovers
land.
She gave them privacy and turned away to the maze that linked
the Landing Field and the Keep and Alexa's brithenwood garden.
Wandering through the maze, Marian knew that she liked this
place. Oh, the Castle could never be home to her as it might be to
Alexa-though Alexa had her own estate, too. But Lladrana, the world
of Amee, resonated inside her. Just walking on the soil was an
experience; she seemed to draw a bit of energy into herself at each
step. Even water now answered to her Power, left her a bit of fluid
strength. Dancing with the wind energized her, too, not to mention
riding lightning!
She couldn't imagine herself doing any of those things at home.
Not in Boulder. Maybe, if she was very, very careful, she could
find some deserted mountain meadow in which to practice. If she
even had enough Power on Earth to summon a wind. Her stomach
tightened. Somehow she didn't think everything she learned here
would work there. How much more effort would she have to use to do
magic on Earth?
One more thing she didn't know.
But she did know that she was greedy. She wanted to be the
Powerful woman she was becoming, the woman who could play in
storms, dance with the wind, ride lightning. The woman who could
cook and clean and create with magic. Yet Earth held Andrew,
and her mother. Perhaps, with the perspective she'd learned here,
the new experiences, somehow she might be able to bond with her
mother, love and be loved as family should. She could hope.
Marian laughed when she reached the door to the brithenwood
garden. It was small. She'd have to duck, but Alexa could open it
and walk straight through. No wonder Alexa liked it. Marian opened
the door and hunched her back as she entered the garden. It was one
of the most beautiful places she'd ever seen.
The tree that gave the garden its name, the brithenwood, stood
tall and willowy with white bark and deep green, narrow spearlike
leaves. The scent was floral, but unique as if the perfume
comprised several "notes" instead of just one-perhaps the leaves
and the bark exuded fragrance as well as the blossoms. Looking up,
Marian could see that the top of the tree still held a few white
blossoms.
Around the brithenwood was a bench, and two tracks of stepping
stones wove through the tangle of garden that was lush with
textures and colorful flowers.
Something-the tree, the walled garden itself-dispersed serenity
like a scent. The Temple had been serene, too, with an underlying
muscle of Power-a place that had seen sanctified Rituals for ages.
This garden brought the peace of nature. The tall gray stone walls
emphasized the blue of the sky, the low wooden door seemed to hold
the world at bay.
As she crossed to the bench, Marian spied a twig about five
inches long and half the width of her finger that had fallen from
the brithenwood. It was a pretty thing, so she picked it up and
slid it into her pocket. Then she sat beneath the tree.
Since the morning was so peaceful, Marian decided to meditate.
She drew her legs up and crossed them, rested her hands on her
knees and emptied her mind. When a thought or observation occurred,
she let it drift by, fade.
The Songs around her helped. Not only the individual Song of the
tree, but the sprightly notes of the flowers, the buzzing of bees,
the rustling of grasses and leaves in a small breeze, all combined
into a lulling melody.
Until a horrible screech jolted her. Her eyelids flew open and
she saw a peacock strutting around the garden, tail fully unfolded.
Marian choked.
"Sinafin," she said. "Peacocks are male. Peahens are not nearly
so colorful."
A beady eye turned in Marian's direction. Sinafin sniffed and
continued her progress around the garden.
Marian closed her eyes again, but this time couldn't settle.
Which was just as well, since a minute later the door banged open
and Alexa tromped in.
Meeting Marian's eyes, Alexa winced and flushed. "Meditating,
huh? Sorry." She slammed the door shut.
"I take it the meeting did not go well?" Marian said.
"A couple of the Marshalls put Jaquar's back up and he danced
around what the Tower Community was doing about the Dark. I brought
up establishing a Tower presence here and you'd've thought I
proposed razing the Castle!"
Marian frowned. "Well, I was Summoned for some task, I know
that. It's probably rallying the Tower Community, making
them a community instead of individuals. Then having them integrate
with the Marshalls. But that doesn't mean the effort will be
welcomed by the Marshalls."
"I'll work on them," Alexa said grimly, fingering her baton in
its sheath as she sat next to Marian. Then she saw Sinafin parading
around, opening and closing her feathers. "A peacock again." Alexa
snorted.
"I told her that peacocks have the pretty plumage and peahens
are subdued, but she ignored me," Marian said.
Alexa said, "By the way, word has spread that you're here, and a
Scholar of the Fourth Degree-"
"Fourth!"
Alexa raised her brows, and her smile widened. "That's what
Jaquar told us."
"Wow. Just one more degree-"
"And Finals, probably worse than your doctoral exams. Mine sure
were worse than the Bar exam."
Marian subsided. "You're probably right."
"Anyway, people will be coming to meet you." No sooner had Alexa
said that than a loud knocking sounded at the garden door.
"Who's there?" shouted Alexa.
"Luthan and Faucon," called a man's voice.
"Bringing gifts for the new Exotique," said another voice, rich
and cultured.
"A moment," Alexa called, but she turned to Marian with a smile.
"One really amazing thing about being an Exotique is people give
you stuff to make you remember them, like them. And-" she raised a
forefinger "-since Exotiques are inscrutable in their thoughts and
actions, those gift-bearers don't necessarily expect a return on
their investment. The trick is not to be greedy." She pulled a dark
red stone out of her pocket and showed it to Marian.
Marian stared, open-mouthed. "That looks like the ruby in one of
England's royal crowns."
"The Black Prince's ruby. It's really a spine." Alexa flushed a
little. "I like jewels."
"Who doesn't?" They shared a smile.
"I earned this. I'm sure you will soon have skills to
trade."
"We are still out here," the first voice called.
"Just a minute," Alexa shouted. "I need to tell Marian about you
two."
"That's a few words for Luthan, but 1 would take much longer,"
said the second voice, which Marian decided was Faucon.
Alexa bit her lip, shot a glance at Marian. "I don't know if
you've run across this before-"
"Across what?"
Shrugging, Alexa said, "Some of the Lladranans instinctively
like or dislike us. I think it's a visceral thing."
Marian blinked. "No, I haven't experienced that."
Alexa nodded. "You're about to meet two handsome, sexy and
honorable Chevaliers. Luthan is Bastien's brother and the
Representative of the Singer to the Marshalls. Faucon is a
high-ranking noble."
"I take it one of them has this instinctive like-dislike
reflex?"
"They both do. Try not to think badly of the one who has the
revulsion. He's embarrassed by it."
"Revulsion? It's that bad?"
Alexa wiggled her eyebrows. "And the opposite is the
attraction."
"Oh boy," Marian said under her breath.
"Come on in!" Alexa called, before Marian had time to really
think on all the ramifications of Alexa's words.
The small door opened and two men ducked under the lintel and
entered. They carried scrolls.
"Now there's a pair," Alexa whispered. She leaned closer to
Marian.
The first man was dressed in immaculate white Chevalier fighting
leathers that bore no stain or scar. Remembering the garb she'd
seen in the inn the night before, Marian could only think that the
clothes must have a spell on them, or he'ddressed up-to meet her?
His hair was black with a wide streak of silver at his left temple
and a smaller brush of silver at his right. His eyes were brown
like most of the Lladranan men, but he was taller than average, and
they were a tall race. His build was lean and muscular, his face
was narrow, and something about him reminded Marian of Bastien-so
this must be Luthan. His expression was somber.
The second man was only an inch shorter and his body type less
lean and more athletically muscular-mesomorphic. He had
medium-sized streaks of silver, denoting Power, at each temple
framing a face as elegant as his voice had been, and strikingly
handsome. He winked at them. Marian sat up straighter.
Luthan halted a few feet from them, took a breath. He looked
braced for something, then a shudder moved through his entire body,
but he remained expressionless. Alexa caught Marian's hand and
squeezed in silent support. Try not to hold it against him,
she said with quiet sadness. Alexa had dealt with a brother-in-law
who'd found her revolting.
Marian nodded.
The man came up and bowed formally, looked to Alexa.
Alexa sighed. "Luthan, Lord Vauxveau, Chevalier Fifth Rank,
Representative of the Singer to the other Communities of Lladrana,
please meet Marian Harasta, M.A., Exotique Scholar of the Fourth
Degree."
"I was instructed to introduce myself to you and assure you of
the Singer's support in all things." He held out his hand.
Just then, Marian recalled that this was the man who had
prophetic visions, like her friend Golden Raven back home. Marian
wondered if his was strongest when touch-activated, like Golden
Raven's. Now it was her turn to brace herself. She put her fingers
in his and he bowed gracefully over them.
The peacock screeched.
Luthan dropped Marian's hand.
Both men turned.
Faucon bowed. "Salutations, feycoocu."
Luthan inclined his head. "Salutations, feycoocu."
Marian wondered if one or both of them knew Sinafin's name.
A smile lifted one side of Luthan's mouth as he set two books
and three scrolls next to Marian. "Here are some Lorebooks from the
Singer's Abbey that she sent you. She also told me to inform you
that Alexa, here, was the one who mended Bastien's bad Power
flow."
Marian stared at Alexa, who pinkened and shifted.
"It was an accident. I did it-um-instinctively."
Faucon jostled Luthan aside, bowed deeply and sent Marian a
charming smile. "I see that Exotique Terre has supplied us with
another gorgeous woman." He took Marian's hand and lifted it to his
lips. "Your wish is my command."
Had he really said that? Marian went over the line in her head,
translated it into English, French, back into Lladranan. It scanned
the same in all languages.
His fingers stroked her palm and a flicker of heat entered his
gaze. Obviously this was the man who was immediately and innately
attracted to Exotiques. Marian told herself not to be so pleased,
it was nothing personal-but it felt very personal. "One of
my ancestresses was an extraordinary Medica and Sorceress. I bring
you copies of her studies."
Withdrawing her hand, Marian smiled. "Thank you."
His fingers dipped into a pocket of his breeches. When he
withdrew it, he held a small, square bottle of dark-green stoppered
with a tiny cork. "I have a small pool of jerir on one of my
estates, and had this liquid harvested for you. My ancestress said
this was the greatest amount of jerir a person should imbibe."
"Huh." Alexa eyed it. "Guess I didn't swallow any more than that
in my three dips or I wouldn't be here."
"A devastating thought," Faucon assured her. He handed the
bottle to Marian. "With my compliments. Would you like to join me
for-"
Luthan dropped a hand on Faucon's shoulder. "No, Faucon."
Faucon stepped away from Luthan, scowling. "I will not listen to
any specious lies from you this time, Luthan."
Shrugging, Luthan said, "It was only a word of warning. I've
been told there's a very strong Song linking Scholar Marian and
Circlet Jaquar Dumont. Of course, if you want to irritate
the Circlet-"
Faucon's jaw set. He glared at Luthan, turned his glance to
Marian, shook his head and sighed. "My timing is off once more." He
bowed to Marian again. "Truly, Scholar Marian, should you need
anything I can provide, send word."
"Thank you," Marian said, slipping the bottle into her
pocket.
Sinafin shrieked and made to herd the men from the garden.
For the first time, Luthan smiled fully. "And farewell to you,
also, feycoocu." He bowed to Alexa and Marian and left. Faucon gave
a small salute to Alexa, another melting smile to Marian, and
followed Luthan from the garden.
There was a short silence after the door closed behind the men,
then Marian said, "Lladrana certainly grows handsome men."
Alexa chuckled. "Yes, indeed, and my Bastien is the best of the
lot."
Marian shrugged. "Tell me about curing Bastien."
Shifting again, Alexa said, "Well, uh, it happened during
sex."
"Oh." Marian was eager to know, but couldn't find the right
words to pursue the topic gracefully.
"To be precise," Alexa said, looking away, "I noticed that
Bastien's crystal star had a flaw during sex, and afterward, I
removed it."
"What crystal star?"
Alexa looked surprised. "When we make love, we both project
multi-pointed stars that touch and meld together."
"Oh."
"That doesn't happen with you and Jaquar?"
"No, I, uh, don't get visuals. Mostly I just get swept away by
this spectacular wave of music."
They met each other's gazes, began to laugh.
"Oh," Alexa said.
They laughed some more.
Alexa tapped her fingers on her baton sheath. "That's
interesting. You might be better suited to Lladrana and Amee than
I, since you seem to have a more aural than visual sense. I'm gonna
have an accent for the rest of my life."
Marian touched her fingers to the books beside her, sending her
mind and intuition questing, hoping to receive an indication that
help for Andrew lay within one of the tomes. Nothing.
"Perhaps when you get back to Earth, you'll still have Power, at
least enough to cure your brother," Alexa said reassuringly.
"I hope so," Marian murmured.
"It will be interesting to know whether and how much Power works
on Earth."
They shared another smile. "Yes," Marian said.
A cautious tapping came on the door. It creaked open and a young
man poked his head inside.
"Oh, you're here," he said.
Alexa shrugged. "Come on in, Urvey."
Steps dragging, the youngster did. Marian thought he was about
the same age as Marwey-late teens. He was dressed in fighting
leathers and a midnight-blue tunic that after a few instants,
Marian placed as Bastien's livery. Bastien's servant, then. He
darted a glance around the garden as if it were a strange and
threatening landscape.
"This place sounds funny," he said.
"It's mostly our Exotique Songs," Alexa said. She tilted her
head as if listening, touched Marian on the forearm. "Though since
Marian is still connected with Earth-Exotique Terre- I can hear
echoes of my mother planet, too."
Alexa looked a little wistful, but nothing in Alexa resonated
with a wish to return to Colorado. She was certain of her course.
Marian envied that.
Urvey appeared unconvinced. He fingered the piece of paper he
held.
"You have a message?" asked Alexa, putting out her hand.
Shifting his feet, he stared at Marian. "It's for her. And the
Circlet," he whispered.
"Oh," Alexa said. "Marian, this is my husband Bastien's squire,
Urvey Novins. Urvey, this is Exotique Scholar Marian Harasta."
He was not like any squire Marian had envisioned.
Urvey bowed. "My pleasure," he said.
"Salutations." Marian nodded, then held out her hand.
Urvey dropped the note in it. The paper was slightly damp.
Marian unrolled the paper and read the letters easily-a benefit of
her bond with Jaquar.
Guildsman and Townmaster Sevair Masif requests the presence of
Exotique Scholar Marian and Circlet Jaquar Dumont to discuss the
matter of Weather Magic and frinks. Please come as soon as
possible.
Though the note was courteous enough, Marian felt searing
anger.
23
Blinking several times Marian handed the message to Alexa.
"Frinks are worms that fall with the rain? I've never seen them,"
Marian said to Alexa.
"I have, but only once." Alexa looked up with a frown. "I think
I'll go with you. I don't know what Jaquar's relations are with
Sevair, but the underlying tone of this note concerns me, and I
won't let him push you around. He's a nice guy, really, so I don't
know what's wrong."
She was throbbing with curiosity.
"The Guildmaster's journeyman is waiting in the cloister walk
outside the Keep," said Urvey.
"Can you call Jaquar mentally, please?" Alexa asked Marian.
"You don't think we should refuse?"
Drumming her fingers along her baton sheath, Alexa shook her
head. "I don't think it's a good idea. The various communities of
this society are distant enough. I'm sure one of our jobs is
bringing them together to fight the Dark. Let's not alienate a good
man."
"All right," Marian said, and stood.
Alexa rose, too. With obvious relief, Urvey ran to the door and
held it open for them.
Jaquar! Marian called, holding an image of him in her
mind.
Alexa took Marian's forearm, smiling. "Just tell him that you
got an invitation to visit Sevair Masif. From what I know of men,
he'll insist on accompanying you. Then we can hand him the note on
the way down."
"All right," Marian said. I am going to Castleton to meet
with- She had used visual symbols for herself and the city,
but had no symbol for Sevair. Taking the note back from Alexa, she
scanned it for any sort of icon, noticed a stone block and a
hammer.
Marian? Jaquar asked. His voice was filled with
affection, making her smile. He sounded as if he were in the Keep
somewhere.
I am going to Castleton to meet with Sevair Masif. She
sent the mental image of the stone block and hammer.
What?
For a third time, Marian began forming the pictures she needed
to communicate mentally with him. I am going to-
You're going to the cloister walk outside the Keep, he
said, obviously more accustomed than she was to sorting images from
their mingled Songs and occasionally touching minds.
I'll meet you there, he finished.
"It worked." Alexa grinned.
"I guess so," Marian said.
Since they had to go through the maze, Jaquar was already in the
walkway, leaning against a post with his arms crossed, when they
met him. Another youngster about Urvey's age, dressed in dark gray
livery, stood in simmering silence.
Addressing the young man, Alexa said, "Marian, may I introduce
you to Jumme, Townmaster Masif's journeyman."
Marian hesitated, then dipped a curtsey.
The youth responded by whipping off his hat and making a
flourishing bow such as Marian had never seen outside of the
movies.
"My pleasure." His voice vibrated with sincerity, and a little
more.
"Do you know-" Alexa started, gesturing to Jaquar.
"He introduced himself," Jaquar said coolly, pushing away from
the pillar to take Marian's hand and tuck it under his arm. He
scanned her face. "You look a little different."
She smiled. She wasn't ready to tell him she'd mastered Water.
She wanted to be able to practice outside in the ocean and be
perfect when he next tested her.
"Do you want to ride?" Jaquar asked. "It's only a couple of
miles, but riding-"
"No, thank you. Let's walk. It's a beautiful day."
So they walked, two and two-Alexa and Jumme, and Marian and
Jaquar-back down to Castleton.
Sevair Masif's gray stone house sat across from a pretty green
square. Both the outside and the warmly paneled interior were
distinctive and obviously quality work. The earth-tone furnishings
of the den Marian, Jaquar and Alexa were issued into were of
excellent material and well-tended.
Jaquar led Marian to a small beige couch that would hold two,
and Alexa took a chair of deep gray.
Sevair stood stiffly behind the desk. In a work shirt, his arms
and shoulders appeared well-honed by his occupation. He was as tall
as Faucon had been, and like Luthan, he had a streak of silver hair
on the left side of his forehead.
His jaw was clenched, his eyes narrowed. He leaned forward on
long, scarred hands, piercing Jaquar with his stare.
"Weather Sorcerer Circlet Dumont, were you ever going to answer
our requests for help?" he asked icily.
Jaquar stood and straightened to his full height-a couple of
inches taller than Masif, but not as heavily muscled. He still
managed to look down his nose. "I received no request for
help."
Masif's gaze snapped with angry fire. His jaw flexed, then he
said, even more coldly, "Every few months for the past two years,
we sent a message to you asking for help."
Jaquar's manner changed subtly, from challenging to listening.
He shook his head. "Townmaster Masif, I received no message. How
did you send it?"
"Through the Marshalls, to be forwarded to you-" He stopped,
glanced at Alexa who was no longer lounging in her chair but
sitting up straight.
Making a disgusted sound, Masif moved to a chair-not the one
behind his desk, which would give him a better placement for
authority, but one near the fireplace. "The Marshalls. They didn't
forward our messages. They never responded to our questions
themselves, and now I learn that they actively worked against my
Townspeople." His fingers fisted, released. "The Marshalls let my
people worry, turn into mockers, and betrayed us."
"One moment!" Alexa raised a hand, her brow knit, and Marian
could hear the faint echoes of Alexa's conversation with the other
Marshalls. After a minute, Alexa said to Masif, "The Marshalls made
the decision not to tell you that they didn't know how to combat
the frinks. However, neither Thealia nor any of the older Marshalls
received any messages from any Townmaster to pass along to the
Tower Community or Circlet Jaquar, the Weather Sorcerer."
"Reynardus." Masif's mouth thinned.
"Not necessarily," Alexa said. "When was your last message?"
"A few weeks ago..."
"After I'd joined the Marshalls?"
"Yes."
There was silence. Finally, Masif stood and bowed to Jaquar. "My
apologies. It looks as if the problem regarding a traitor is mine.
And forgive me my inhospitality. Would you like tea?" he asked
Marian.
"No, thank you."
Jaquar offered his hand to Masif. "I am sorry."
Masif clasped Jaquar's hand and the men's energy merged, flared,
their Songs ringing in the harmony of like minds. Both looked a bit
stunned. Masif dropped his hand and took a step back. Jaquar came
and sat beside Marian, setting his arm along the back of the sofa
behind her.
"I am also sorry to tell you that I can do nothing about the
frinks," Jaquar said. He huffed out a frustrated breath. "I've
tried, the Song knows how often I've tried, but I can't
sense the frinks in the clouds. Not all rain clouds carry
them, and there is no pattern as to which do and which don't."
"Before Alyeka came, every rain brought frinks."
Jaquar rubbed his left temple. "Then perhaps they develop at a
lower altitude than I can operate inside a cloud-they might even
form as they leave a cloud. I can only tell you that I don't know
much about the matter, despite intensive study." He shrugged. "They
are elusive to me."
It was obvious he didn't like admitting that. Marian shifted
closer to him in comfort and Masif's gaze went to her.
"Last night there were heavy rains on farmer Ciboul's fields.
Since Alyeka came, the outer fields that border the road to
Castleton have received fewer and fewer frinks in the rain. But the
inner fields, frinks were still a problem-until this morning.
Ciboul reported to the Citymasters' Council that there was no sign
of frinks in several fields."
Marian felt herself blushing. Suddenly she recalled the deep
ties everyone seemed to have with the land. Would the farmer have
realized she and Jaquar had had sex in his fields? How
mortifying.
Jaquar said, "I was instructing Scholar Marian in weather
yesterday, particularly storms and lightning. We rode the lightning
onto a field near the road between the Castle and Castleton, then
walked out to the road."
"Excuse me," Marian said. "But what do frinks look like?"
Masif smiled. "I anticipated that question. It appears as if I
am the tutor for the Exotiques in frinks. You learned of frinks
with me, didn't you, Alyeka?"
Alexa shuddered. "Yes."
The Townmaster walked back to his desk and took out a round
pottery bowl. He shook it a little and the sound made Marian's skin
crawl. It was reminiscent of rattlesnake tails, with an added tinny
note.
"Ewww," said Alexa.
Masif stopped beside her and showed her what was in the bowl.
"Ewww," she said again, took the bowl and wrinkled her nose, then
handed it to Marian.
Marian decided to be more classic in her exclamation. "Ick." The
bowl was full of little metallic shells that looked like
articulated, armored cocoons. Each was about three inches long and
as wide as her thumb. She grimaced. "Double ick."
Jaquar took the bowl and poked his finger into it, stirring the
contents. The repulsive, tinny scritching sound came again. Marian
and Alexa shuddered.
"Most frinks that fall, die. Only some survive and burrow into
the soil," Jaquar said absently. He picked one up. Holding it by
one end, he wiggled it.
Marian leaned away from him. "It sounds like a rattlesnake tail,
only worse," she said.
Jaquar and Masif looked at her quizzically.
"Yes!" Alexa said. "That's what they remind me of. One of my
foster parents had a rattlesnake tail. Ick."
"Ewww," said Marian at the same time.
Turning it over in his fingers, Jaquar frowned. "Even this shell
has weight. If I felt these in the clouds, I'd know it."
"Oh!" Marian stared at Jaquar, wide-eyed, understanding now what
they'd flown through in that black cloud the afternoon before.
They all looked at her.
Jaquar's scowl vanished and he sent a little tune to her, which
echoed back with her puzzlement.
"What?" he prompted.
With an inward shrug, Marian tried an explanation. "That black
cloud, with the-the sleet." It hadn't been sleet. It had been
frinks. The thought of those obscene things pummeling her creeped
her out. "The noise instead of the Songs."
"Marian," Jaquar said quietly. "I saw no black cloud. I would
not have taken you into a cloud with sleet. I'm a Weather Sorcerer.
I know which clouds hold ice pellets. We went into rain, yes, but
not sleet. I heard no strange noise." He kept his cool, blue gaze
on hers.
Marian lifted and spread her hands in a helpless gesture. "I
don't understand."
"She's an Exotique. Perhaps she can perceive the frinks that
escape your notice, Circlet," Masif said, equally coolly.
Never looking away from her, Jaquar nodded. "Perhaps so. Tell
us."
Grimacing, Marian looked at Masif. "Could I have that tea now,
please?"
"Certainly." He picked up a horn that wasn't connected to
anything and ordered tea.
Momentarily distracted, Marian asked, "How do you do that? Is
the horn magic, or-"
Masif smiled. "The horn has a small spell on it, but, I, too,
have Power."
"Oh." She narrowed her eyes and stared at him, trying to see his
aura. Nothing.
Jaquar put the frink back in the bowl and set it aside. Then he
wiped his hands on a handkerchief and grasped her hands. Until his
fingers touched hers, Marian hadn't realized how cold hers were. He
rubbed them between his own.
"Tell us about the cloud."
With a frown, Marian searched her mind for details. "I don't
know when or where we blew into it." She lifted and dropped a
shoulder. "Playing in the storm was so exciting, I couldn't measure
time-you know how it is."
"I can guess that you got caught up in your work." Masif smiled
at her.
At a tap on the door, he opened it and took a small tray, which
he placed on the low table in front of her.
Marian made herself strong, sweet tea, and curved her hands
around the china cup for the comfort of a known thing-a china cup
of tea. The men were unknown, the furniture slightly different.
Songs of the people in the house flowed around her in music unknown
on Earth. A hot cup of tea was familiar.
When Alexa followed her lead and smiled at her, Marian was even
more comforted.
"Marian?" Jaquar prompted, more teacher to student than lover to
lover.
She sipped the tea. It was good as tea went. She drank a bit
more. "As I said before, I can't judge when or where the cloud was,
but it was huge-a big, black cloud shaped like a fist." Jaquar
tensed beside her, but she continued. Frowning, she looked into his
eyes. "I nearly lost contact with you. I couldn't feel you.
So I grabbed onto you, hard."
Nodding shortly, Jaquar said, "I remember you doing that, but
not when or where, either." He glanced at Masif. "But it was her
first Storm Ride. It's not unusual to have a student panic."
Masif poured himself a cup of tea. "Rather like taking an
Apprentice up the scaffolding of a spire, I'd imagine. You're not
sure what they'll do when the excitement wears off."
"Sounds right," Jaquar said.
Marian continued with her story. "Anyway, my head went foggy.
The Songs disappeared. There was this awful noise like pinging,
then an-" She looked at Alexa and said in English, "It sounded like
an engine revving too high, ready to blow."
Alexa nodded.
Marian turned back to the men. She didn't know the Lladranan
word for engine, hadn't seen any such thing. "A very
high-pitched noise, long and rising. Then I felt things hitting me.
I thought it was sleet." She glanced at the pile of frink husks and
quickly away, then gulped her tea.
Reaching out, Alexa patted her arm. "Hideous."
Marian tried a weak smile. "Yes."
The men stared at her for a long moment.
"I would say that the Townmaster is right. You felt the frinks,
even their evil cloud, while I didn't. Something the Dark can mask
from us but not you, perhaps. Extrapolating from the experiences of
both you and Alyeka, the frinks cannot make contact with you, or if
they do, they die."
"This is a great discovery," Masif said. "With your aid,
Scholar, we might forestall any more frinks from falling live and
burrowing into the ground." He looked at Jaquar again. "Does the
Tower Community know what evil the frinks will do to the land?"
Jaquar shook his head. "No. We are watching them, just as you
Cityfolk and farmers are. We do not know what disaster they might
be germinating. We have no records of frinks, no Lorebook in which
they are mentioned."
"Nor do the Marshalls," said Alexa.
"Not good," said Masif.
Marian took one last cup of tea and prepared to disappoint the
man. "I'm sorry, but I will not be able to help much." She met
Masif's intent gaze. "I have a sick younger brother at home. I am
studying as much as I am able, with the hope that something here
might help him, perhaps even cure him and others who have his
disease. But I can't stay here in Lladrana." She braced for
anger.
Instead Masif's face went impassive. He turned his head and the
light touched the wide band of silver at his left temple. "I lost a
young sister," he said, almost too low for her to hear. He jerked a
head at Jaquar. "The Circlet lost his parents. I do not doubt that
if we had had the chance to save them by visiting Exotique Terre
and returning, we would have done so."
"Thank you," Marian said.
"We Guildspeople of the cities and towns and fields thank
you," Masif said gravely.
They took their leave, and a few minutes later, Jaquar and
Marian strolled through the streets of Castleton. A Chevalier
joined them and he and Alexa dropped back to speak of Castle
politics.
"It's a pretty city," Marian said. "Very clean."
"Very. Not like the one I grew up it, but Krache is a seaport in
the south, a lawless city in both Lladrana and the country to the
south, Shud."
Marian squeezed his hand. During their lovemaking, when they
were connected mind to mind, emotions to emotions, she'd received
flashes of memories from him. She supposed he had experienced the
same. At least it wasn't as detailed as the memories that had
flooded her during the blood-bond with Bossgond.
"I'm sorry," she said.
His smile was crooked. "I know that your childhood wasn't
pleasant, either."
Marian shrugged. "How many people do you know who had a great
childhood? Alexa didn't."
"Of the Circlets? Most, I would say. Extraordinary Power tends
to show itself early. If their own parents weren't of the Tower
Community, they'd be fostered, then apprenticed to a Circlet while
still young. For instance, both Chalmon and Venetria had an easy
childhood and student life."
As he said it, Jaquar felt another tingle at the back of his
neck, as if they were being watched. He'd experienced it a couple
of times since they'd entered Castleton-once when they'd entered
the city gates on the way to speak with Masif and again when they'd
left the stonemason's home.
They were in a busier portion of the town, with small shops and
narrower streets. Mentally, he stretched his Power, and caught a
flicker of pulsing Circlet Power and a glimpse of a tall, lanky
youth and the bright green cape he wore. Chalmon's recent student
who'd raised his Tower and advanced to Circlet had chosen that
color green as his own.
Jaquar set his arm around Marian's waist. They were lovers now.
He knew a little more of her mind, and how completely unaware she
was of some aspects of Lladranan culture, like the competition
between the Towers. He'd protect her.
The Marshalls' Council Meeting this morning had not gone well.
He'd told them of the plane-walking and the dark maw and the
master-but not all of the master's words-and they'd demanded
information about where this evil place was, despite the fact that
he'd told them the Tower wasn't sure of the location.
He'd spoken of the Circlet observers and the Marshalls had
insisted that they receive all previous and future reports of the
watchers. The Marshalls wanted the Tower Lorebook. As usual,
the Marshalls did not listen but commanded. Jaquar had hoped this
would be different now that Alexa was part of the Marshalls, but
tradition and ingrained distrust of the Tower were too strong to
overcome, at least in one meeting.
Marian sighed and leaned into him, and Jaquar realized that
they'd just passed through the city gate and onto the road up to
the Castle. He'd been lost in thought.
She hadn't demanded to know what he was thinking, hadn't
chattered or tried to converse while he was in deep thought. A
jewel of a woman. Truly a Scholar and a lady.
As she kept step with him, the Song they'd made between them
resonated low and potent. Her body brushed against his, hip and
thigh. Under his arm her waist was soft and supple. Her fiery hair,
different in texture than any he'd known, caressed his cheek. The
fragrance of her rose to his nostrils and he inhaled, believing
that he could never get enough of that scent.
But she was bent on returning to Exotique Terre. Now that he'd
bonded sexually with her, he knew firsthand of her love for her
brother, how much Andrew meant to her. Jaquar could not keep her
from the young man. If Jaquar's parents had been alive, or if he
had stronger bonds with other Circlets and they had the time and
incentive, he'd have proposed that they Summon Andrew. But even
then, the young man's health was too fragile for that. Not that the
Circlets of the Tower worked together well. They simply didn't join
together often enough to practice merging their energies. They
hadn't had a strong enough outside reason to cooperate.
Until now.
The sangvile and the threat of many sangviles all feasting on
the rich Power of Circlets in a few days scared Jaquar down to the
bone. And he was sure he wasn't the only one. Even Bossgond had
expressed a fear of the monsters. Time to consult the old mage.
He'd help with a plan.
Marian hummed a little tune and Jaquar's focus returned to her.
The tune, like so much else about her, was unfamiliar. He liked
it.
He liked her. More-she fulfilled him. Sex with her wiped
his mind clean of concerns. Her conversation stimulated him. Her
joy in learning her Power reminded him of his own past, helped him
recall lovely moments between himself and his parents, instead of
remembering them as gray husks echoing of emotional torture.
She stumbled and he steadied her, held her close, noting with
wry amusement that his heart rate sped up at the contact.
Marian smiled up at him and his thoughts scattered.
He wished she could stay. He'd court her if she stayed.
The idea terrified as well as delighted him. He'd been spoiled
by his parents' Pairing. They were a rare Circlet Pair-equal,
trusting partners. Much more likely was a string of lovers, or a
live-in lover who wasn't a Circlet, or the bickering and mistrust
shown by Chalmon and Venetria. Before Marian, he'd never thought
he'd be so lucky as to find a Circlet who'd complement him. His
rough early childhood had made him cynical enough that he hadn't
aspired to a Pair-bond with a woman.
Now there was Marian.
Her hand slid into his and the touch of her fingers along his
palm fired every nerve in his body. He was completely, achingly
aware of her and aroused.
He glanced to the side of the road. No wonder, this was the
place they'd appeared last night.
Blood had rushed under Marian's skin, too, and since her
coloring was so much paler than a Lladranan's it was easier to see.
Enticing.
How fast could they get back to their bedroom?
24
As they walked up to the gate, a deafening alarm shrieked.
Alexa passed them, screaming, "Let me by!" People got out of her
way, fast. The Chevalier she'd been talking to ran with her. The
Castle guards stiffened, became more alert.
Bastien appeared at the far end of the thickly-walled entrance
tunnel, grabbed Alexa and dropped a chain-mail tunic over her. Two
other people came to dress her in armor. An instant later the sound
of volaran wings beating the air reached Marian. People tilted back
their heads and looked up. At least twenty volarans took to the sky
in the first wave. Marian recognized several Marshall Pairs, as
well as noble and independent Chevaliers, flying singly and in
twos.
"Let's go!" Bastien said, and whistled. A huge dappled volaran
strode into view.
Marian's heart clutched. Her friend was going into battle. She
didn't know what to say, what to do, could only stand and stare.
Though Bastien's face was creased in a wide, fighting grin, Alexa
looked pale under her helmet as she squared her shoulders.
"Good luck!" Marian shouted.
"Merci!" Alexa called back, in Lladranan.
Bastien dipped his head to Marian, picked his Pairling up by her
waist and tossed her onto the volaran. He leaped to the flying
horse's back behind Alexa. "Fly!" he cried.
The volaran's muscles bunched, wings extended. He took to the
air, disappeared behind the Castle walls, then soared above them.
Other volarans flew in formation behind Bastien and Alexa. Marian
saw Pascal and Alexa's new Chevaliers, Koz and Perlee, all riding
beautiful volarans. Under her helmet, Perlee's hair showed red in
the sun and she stroked her volaran's neck and laughed with
excitement. Koz glanced over at her and smiled. They looked years
younger than the desperate couple Marian had first noticed at the
Nom de Nom the night before.
Alexa and Bastien were the only ones who rode double- because
she didn't ride well, didn't fly well, Marian remembered.
The klaxon stopped and the great silence pressed on Marian's
ears, not mitigating the dread in her stomach. People moved around
them, going in or out of the gate, on their daily business. Marian
clutched one of Jaquar's hands in both of hers.
More shouting came from beyond the gate, and another wave of
volarans rose. This time their leader was Luthan Vauxveau in his
pristine white fighting gear. His hair was wet as if he'd been
bathing when the alarm sounded. No woman rode with him and his
expression was severe.
Marian gulped. "Alexa's gone," she said, her voice raspy.
Jaquar slipped his arm around her waist. "Yes."
"I thought since she found the answer to the fence posts, there
would be fewer battles!" The connection between Alexa and her grew
every day, as did their affection.
Marian and Jaquar were now alone on the road.
He urged her forward. "The Marshalls can now raise more fence
posts and energize the magical boundary that keeps the horrors out,
but there are still old gaps, and the ancient posts continue to
wear out and fail."
They came to the gate and the Castle soldiers looked at Marian,
intrigued. Then one stared at Jaquar and her eyes hardened.
"The Marshalls fly to defend Lladrana from the Dark. What does
the Tower Community do to defeat the evil?" The soldier
sneered.
"I reported to the Marshalls of the Tower's efforts this
morning," Jaquar said. "The Marshalls are responsible for sharing
the information."
Marian raised her chin. "We destroyed a mass of frinks in the
clouds yesterday," she said.
The soldier's expression softened. She gave a little bow to
Marian. "Our thanks. Exotiques are such a boon in these dangerous
times. Thank you for coming to help us."
Marian nodded, flushing. She was a fraud. She'd been learning
her Power and playing, and the only help she'd given was
inadvertently. She hurried with Jaquar through the Castle gate and
into the Lower Ward.
There she saw great activity. More Chevaliers, even a Sword and
Shield Marshall Pair, ran to the stables and Landing Field,
continuing to respond to the silenced alarm.
"What am I going to do?" Marian murmured under her breath.
Lladrana needed her. Alexa needed her. Surely Marian should fill
the position of Tower Exotique as Alexa had that of Castle
Exotique.
The longer Marian stayed, the more she was torn.
Andrew needed her. How could she abandon her old life? Andrew?
Her mother?
How could she turn her back on this new opportunity that
fulfilled her more than her life on Earth had done?
"Come," Jaquar said, as if he felt her agitation through their
sex bond. He led her through Horseshoe Close, to the stables and
inside to a small training ring.
There stood a lovely roan volaran watching a tiny cream-colored
foal. The beauty of the sight caused new tears to sting behind her
eyes. The little flying horse was practicing running, stretching
its wings, and now and then hopping into the air and gliding a few
feet. The mare looked on indulgently.
Jaquar leaned against the rail. "Bastien asked the mare if the
foal, which is a filly, can stay with him and Alexa and train to be
Alexa's mount." Jaquar chuckled. "By the time the foal is adult,
Alexa should be ready to fly on her own."
Marian watched the small horse, exploring as all babies explore,
learning new things every minute. She knew Jaquar had brought her
here to give her pleasure, and the visit had, for a moment, but now
all the uncertainties of Lladrana's future seemed emphasized.
"She's going to be a battle mare, then." Marian choked, her gaze
following mother and child as they circled the ring.
Jaquar drew her into his arms. "Yes. We live in a difficult
time. An era that wouldn't have been so hard if our ancestors had
concentrated on discovering the nature of the Dark and defeating
it." He snorted. "They studied its creatures, deduced how to
contain the invasion of the horrors and, when thatworked in
general, went on with their lives. A terrible mistake." A hint of
bitterness emanated from him.
Marian circled him with her arms, leaned against him and closed
her eyes. The solidity of his tall, strong body comforted her-the
woodsy scent of him, but most of all she was reassured by his
determination to find out the nature of the evil that threatened
Lladrana and work with others to destroy it.
"I can't stay." Marian opened her eyes and stepped back,
repeating the words that had become her mantra. "I must return to
Andrew."
Jaquar smiled sadly, brushed a thumb over her cheekbone. "I
know. So we have a short time together. But I will help you,
Marian. Bossgond and I will make sure that you return home." His
voice lowered. "Perhaps you could consider coming back.. .and
bringing Andrew if possible. As you saw, Exotiques are prized."
He leaned forward, brushed his lips against hers, back and
forth, sensitizing them. "Before you leave, we will generate a plan
for you to come back. Please consider, Marian."
She swallowed. "You think we could do it?"
His eyes fired. "We can try."
Slowly, she shook her head. "I don't know if Andrew is strong
enough."
Jaquar dropped his arms. "Bossgond watches other dimensions. He
knows a great deal about the Dimensional Corridor and will try to
make all the Exotiques' trips safe and easy in the future. He is
studying Summoning Power and Ritual to the exclusion of all else. I
am a master of plane-walking. Between us, and with Alexa, we should
be able to bring you back, and Andrew, too. The gate soldier was
right, Marian-Lladrana needs you." Jaquar grasped her hands, lifted
one and kissed its back, then did the same with the other. "And I
think you need Lladrana, as well." He shook his head. "I don't know
much of your life on Exotique Terre, but the Song wouldn't have
chosen you for the Tower Exotique if you couldn't enjoy a life on
Lladrana."
Marian withdrew her hands. "I'll think about returning. But only
if I can bring Andrew and if this place would be good for him,
too." She met his eyes. "I'll want to see all your plans and
Rituals for Summoning us before I decide."
He chuckled and swept her a bow. "I'll ensure that you do,
Scholar Marian."
That reminded her. "You told the Marshalls I was a Fourth Degree
Scholar."
"I lied."
"What!"
Setting his brow against her forehead, he snagged her gaze with
his. Such beautiful blue eyes he had, and now they were open and
earnest. "When we left Mue Island you were a Fourth Degree Scholar.
You have Circlet status now, I think perhaps as much as second
degree already. You learned to control the lightning ride-that
should have made you Circlet status... There was something more,
too-when you found and faced and defeated the frinks in the
clouds."
Her breath came heavy, but she couldn't look away from him.
"Second Degree Circlet?" What would her mastery of Water lift her
to?
He straightened, nodded. "Yes. But it is Bossgond's place to
Test you, and you won't come into your full Circlet Power until you
raise your Tower."
Marian shivered. "So quickly."
Jaquar took her right hand again. "Lladrana needs you, so the
Song found the most Powerful Exotique in your land." He chuckled.
"And you have good study habits."
She nodded. "A thirst for knowledge. I always have."
"Circlets of the Tower are like that." He turned to go, tugged
on her hand.
Glancing back, Marian saw the little filly nursing. So young, so
tender, such a huge fate in store for her. The mare's gaze, wise
beyond that of a mere horse, met Marian's. "She might die in battle
with Alexa," Marian said of the foal to Jaquar, envisioning a
hideously bloody volaran and rider, dead and pale.
Tho. The negative grated in Marian's mind. With a jolt,
she realized it was from the mare.
Jaquar halted. His head lifted and turned, looking at the mare
as if he, too, had heard.
He and Marian stared at the mare.
The volaran observed them with steady eyes. Alexa and Fleche
will not die in battle together.
Releasing her held breath, Marian said, "Is that her name,
Fleche?" It meant Arrow.
The mare snorted. Alexa named my filly Cloud, but her True
Name is Fleche Obscur, "Arrow for the Dark." The volaran's
words Sang of Power, of fate. I was sent to foal here by
the head wild stallion. Fleche is his filly, too.
Jaquar bowed to the mare. "Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
We take our leave, now."
The mare dipped her head to nuzzle her filly, but kept one
shining eye on them. I would not tell you more. It is not for
you to know. You are not Our Exotique.
Marian's stomach turned over.
Jaquar nodded. "The Chevalier's Exotique, the Exotique of the
Field."
The mare lifted her head and neighed a laugh. The Volaran
Exotique. Then she turned away from them and focused on her
baby.
Marian was glad to hurry away from the stables, matching
Jaquar's long strides. "Chevalier Exotique," she found herself
muttering.
"Swordmarshall Alexa is the Marshalls' Exotique, the Exotique of
the Castle Community. You-" Jaquar squeezed her fingers "-are
Circlet Marian, the Sorcerers' and Sorceresses' Exotique, the
Exotique of the Tower Community."
"And one will come who is the Chevalier Exotique."
"Or the Volaran Exotique-depends on your point of view, I
suppose. Do you have people well versed in volarans in Exotique
Terre?"
Marian thought of all the ranches in Colorado, of the rodeos and
horse shows, the breeders and associations, even of the polo club.
Her mother stabled two horses. "We don't have volarans. But my
land, Colorado, has many horses." She drew in a deep breath. The
scent of volaran clung to her gown, the Song of the mare and her
filly still played in her mind. "Alexa comes from the largest city
in our area. I come from a smaller city close to Alexa's that is a
seat of learning. But we have horse breeders and horse farms. We
are well known for our ranches." What sort of person would be
Summoned as the Exotique for the volarans? Would it be another
woman or a man this time?
If it was a woman, would she accept her destiny on Lladrana or
seek to return like Marian? Since she'd be a Chevalier, too, would
she form a stronger bond with Alexa? Alexa would have another close
friend, then, a woman who had belonged to both worlds, too. Envy
swirled through Marian. She had no close friend like Alexa at
home.
Marian wished Andrew were a horseman.
"How many?" she asked blankly. She should know, but was a little
too shaken by the pressure of fate, of options spinning in her head
to recall right now. Maybe if she waited, Andrew would be
Summoned.
Jaquar ushered her from the Lower Ward into Temple Ward and they
made for the Keep. "How many Exotiques can be Summoned in the next
two years? Why, the same amount as there are communities of
Lladrana. Six. Obviously the Song has a master plan, but what it
is, the Singer hasn't told us."
She glanced at him and saw that though his voice was light and
ironic, his eyes were narrowed and his lips had an irritated curl
to them. "Six." Marian sighed.
He pressed her fingers in reassurance. "And obviously you two
ladies are here to provide a link between the communities, so we
will be able to combine and function as one. Perhaps we can destroy
the Dark."
"Two years," Marian breathed. Everything might be resolved in
two years. An incredibly short time.
Jaquar walked fast, whether out of suppressed anger or some
other passion, Marian didn't know. "Probably more. Each Exotique
must learn of Lladrana, complete her own task, whatever that is."
He definitely sounded angry.
But Marian didn't know why he was furious, and since it didn't
seem aimed at her, she ignored it, still caught in the idea of
other Exotiques, the grand plan that might be unfolding. What would
she be doing on Earth in a little over two years? Even working to
fund her last years, she should be finished with her doctorate and
cozily settled into an academic career path.
How flat that sounded.
Andrew might be fairly healthy and active. Or he might be
dead.
She shuddered. She'd been thinking that leaving through Ritual
and being Summoned back might be a possibility. Jaquar had spoken
as if such magic could be done. But she was deluding herself into
thinking it could be quick and easy. Or cheap.
The Tower had paid the Marshalls to Summon her. Those very
Marshalls were out fighting today and would continue to battle.
Some could die, and the strength of the Marshalls' Power
diminished.
They reached the cloister walk outside the Keep and Jaquar said,
"Sit with me, Marian," in a tone that made her blood turn cold.
Marian looked at him, eyes wide, and stilled. Her Song
fluttering, she sat.
Jaquar joined her and took her hands. "I wanted you to
concentrate on your studies, but there are things you must know.
Just before you came, I followed the sangvile who killed my parents
back to its nest-the home of the Dark." He told her everything, and
as he watched, her skin went pale, even her lips took on a tinge of
white. It was fascinating-and wrenching-to watch.
Her breasts rose and fell with quick breaths, her hands went
cold in his. He folded his fingers around hers, sent warmth to
them.
She finally said, "My task is to plane-walk to the maw and
destroy the nest?"
"No!" He believed that with every note in his body.
She tilted her head, frowned. "It must be."
He thought back to what Bossgond and Bastien had said, both men
less emotionally involved with the nest and Marian than he. "It
can't be now. Your bond with Amee is not strong enough to
plane-walk."
"But the horrors-"
"The horrors have invaded Lladrana for centuries. We are
watching and waiting, and planning. Every Apprentice, Scholar and
Circlet in the Tower Community knows how to kill sangviles with
fire. Some wear amulets. You-" he leaned forward and kissed her
brow "-my lovely Circlet, Summon fire with a thought."
"It must be my task," she repeated.
"But not now," he said firmly. "No one could expect you to rise
to Circlet so soon." He rubbed her hands. "I'm working with Bastien
and Bossgond." He wanted to hear, soon, if Bastien had any ideas.
They must speak as soon as possible.
"Bastien?" Marian looked startled. "This is a Tower
problem."
"No, dear one. This is a Lladranan problem-you taught me
that. I think your task must be to organize us to be a viable force
against the Dark."
"I see," she said. She leaned against him for a moment, then
stood.
He was grateful when she dropped only one of his hands and they
linked fingers with the other.
"I want to go up to the suite, now." Her smile was lopsided.
"I'd like thick walls around me."
He kissed the top of her head. "You are so brave."
She wasn't brave at all, but once again buried under a huge
amount of information-and expectations.
Jaquar wrapped an arm around her waist, but she still felt cold.
She wanted to be in a quiet place where she could shove aside her
emotions and begin to think logically.
As soon as they reached their suite in Alexa's tower, Jaquar
flung open the door.
Loud chimes rang a few notes of Bossgond's public Song, then his
peevish voice boomed. "Where are you two? Do you know how difficult
it was to find you? It took me time away from my studies. I need to
consult with Jaquar. Contact me at once."
Bossgond would not speak with her. When she'd called him via the
crystal ball in their suite as Jaquar was changing into more
everyday clothes than his formal Circlet robe, Bossgond had painted
a strained smile on his face and his eyes had shifted away from
her. He'd wanted an in-person meeting with Jaquar as soon as
possible but had not invited her.
Marian continued to mull over different scenarios as she rode
double with Jaquar back to Mue Island on a huge volaran that
Bastien's squire had loaned them. Apparently the Pegasus had never
flown over the Brisay Sea and wanted the adventure.
Bossgond must have known all along about the Dark and the maw
and the imminence of it opening and spewing out monsters and how
she might be able to harm the nest. But he hadn't said anything.
That comforted her. Wait! He had said something. He'd told
Jaquar that Marian couldn't plane-walk. Furthermore, she
knew Bossgond had treated her like a regular Apprentice.
Every time she had asked any Circlet what they wanted of her
before, they'd said "learn." She had, but she wouldn't be around to
pay them off, not quickly. When she came back... She lifted her
chin. When she came back, she'd fight-in her own way.
The trip didn't take long enough to sort everything out. Jaquar
explained that Powerful volarans, and Bastien's were all very
Powerful, had "distance magic" that shortened the flight, as if
each beat of wings carried them many miles instead of yards. Soon
they were circling down near Jaquar's Tower.
Wait, wait, I am here, cried Tuck's voice in her
mind.
Jaquar cocked his head and the volaran's ears flicked as if
they'd heard her hamster, too.
Oh, how she wanted her hamster! She pinpointed Tuck: to her
horror, he was outside. Not only that, but he was beyond
Jaquar's security forcefield. She wanted to scream and carry on,
but since he was obviously safe, she suppressed the urge, though
both Jaquar and Tuck must feel her distress through their bond with
her.
Sure enough, Jaquar tightened his arms around her and soothed.
"He's fine." Jaquar chuckled. "He isn't stupid. He has Nightsky
with him."
"Oh." Marian let out a relieved breath.
See, strange beastie? The volaran they rode turned his
head back, blinking with curiosity.
"Yes," said Jaquar. "Look for your fellow volaran,
Nightsky."
Their volaran angled toward the far side of the island. It was
easier to see Nightsky, of course, than Tuck. Nightsky galloped
down the beach, stopped and lifted his wings in greeting to the one
they rode.
As they descended, Marian finally saw Tuck jumping up and down
on a rock jutting into the ocean, waving his paws and squeaking
madly. I am here!
Since he appeared so delighted with himself, she could only
smile. Their volaran gently spiraled down. He nodded at Nightsky,
then delicately stepped over to Tuck. Lowering his head slowly, he
eyed the hamster, then snuffled at him.
Tuck squeaked with laughter, patted the volaran's big nose with
a tiny paw. Pretty vo.
"Vo?" asked Marian.
"Volaran," Jaquar said, dismounting and helping Marian down. She
stood a moment, leaning on him until she got her legs back from the
ride.
"Of course," Marian said.
Their communion done, the volaran lifted his head from Tuck,
then turned and greeted Nightsky, nickering. Marian sensed the
other, telepathic communication between the two volarans, but could
not understand it.
Jaquar hunkered down so he was close to eye level with Tuck.
"Well, Master Tuck, did you have a good time outside? You certainly
scared Marian and me with your adventuring."
Tuck looked away. "Not speaking to you."
Raising his eyebrows, Jaquar stood. "Is that so?" Without
waiting for a response, he went to the volaran they had ridden in
on and stroked him from nose to tail, singing. Marian observed how
the coat seemed to gleam, how the volaran moved more easily. Jaquar
had groomed him and given the flying horse more Power, to make the
return flight.
When Tuck screeched for attention, Marian walked over to him. He
sniffed. She bent down and stroked him with her forefinger. He
huffed.
"I thought we'd agreed that you wouldn't go outside," she said.
She couldn't lose him.
"For one day and night only." Since his black eyes bulged, they
couldn't slide slyly in her direction, but he tried.
"I see." She bit her lip. "I was very, very scared when I knew
you were outside."
"Nightsky was with me."
"Yes, thank you for bringing him with you."
"We talk. He's a good vo." Tuck sat back on his haunches. "I
wanted to see the ocean. I heard the ocean." He opened his mouth
and sound of surf-Earth's waves-rolled out in counterpoint to the
island's. "I never saw the ocean."
"Oceans are hard to come by in Colorado."
"I only saw the front yard. It was little."
"Yes, it was-is." It was about a three-by-six-foot piece of
grass at garden level. Suddenly, with all her heart, she wanted to
be back there, back before everything started.
But Tuck twitched his whiskers and rubbed his paws as if
dismissing the subject.
Bide well, Exotique, Bastien's volaran dipped his head at
her. Bastien returns.
Trepidation for herself was swallowed by fear for Alexa. "The
battle's over? Is Alexa all right?"
Most live.
Marian winced.
All you know well, live, said the pegasus.
Well, that was good news, though she felt sad for the strangers.
She curtsied to the flying horse. "Thank you for that information,
and for the excellent ri-flight here." She thought she was doing
well, acting naturally when her head buzzed with options-go and
never return, go and heal Andrew and come back, go and bring Andrew
back, stay and fight the nest. Surely the cowled figure in her
dreams was this evil "master."
The pegasus looked out to the ocean, then studied his
surroundings in all direction. He bowed to her, whinnied and sent
mental messages to Nightsky and Jaquar, then took off again, flying
inland.
Jaquar glanced at Marian, his hand on Nightsky's neck. "Nightsky
is ready to go. We should leave shortly so I can consult with
Bossgond and return before the evening meal." He scowled. "You're
fretting. Do you want me to stay?"
"No. I want you to talk to Bossgond. But even more than that, I
want you to bring him back here so I can talk to him." By the time
they returned, she'd have her thoughts in order.
He looked at her soberly. "I'll do that. Return to the Tower. Go
to my study and Sing 'Open, water, access.' The floor in one
corner of the room will open to a large square pool. Practice
Water." Prof to student. The words reassured her enough to make a
small joke.
"Still not willing to eat with Bossgond, even with the new
cook?"
"I would rather eat with you," Jaquar said simply.
Tuck grumbled.
"Oh, and Tuck," Jaquar added.
"Bossgond called," Tuck muttered. "Other Circlets called. Much
noise. Worse than telephone and answering machine." He made a high
beeping noise like one of the sounds Marian's PDA had programmed
into it, and opened his mouth. "Call me at once on my new
cell number 720-MRS-RICH," issued from Tuck in Marian's mother's
perfectly elocuted tones. Marian recalled she'd recorded the
message with her PDA just in case she couldn't remember the new
phone number. As if she could forget MRS RICH.
Jaquar laid a hand on her shoulder, his face shadowed. "Your
mother?" He shook his head. "I couldn't understand the words, of
course, but our link told me it was she. She doesn't treat you as
you should be treated, with respect." And Marian felt his response
to her mother's message through the bond. He was grateful he'd had
loving parents. Marian had reminded him of that.
"I must go," he said. Gently, he pulled her into his arms. He
tipped her chin up with one hand. "You are so lovely, inside and
out." Brushing a thumb over her lips, he said, "So very worthy of
respect and love."
25
Marian's heart thudded hard as she stared into the deep blue of
Jaquar's eyes. The waves along the shore crashed, the odor of the
briny ocean nearly overpowering the scent of man, of Jaquar, that
she craved. All her senses were extraordinarily keen. She thought
she could feel the weight of his gaze as it traveled over her face.
Knew she could feel their auras, their Power, mingling. Their bond
opened, emotions flowing between them. Tenderness. Respect. The
faint edge of love.
He bent his head and his lips touched hers softly, yet a
yearning stormed through her. His lips pressed hers, withdrew.
He stepped back. "I must go. If I stay an instant longer, we
will mate on the sea."
She nodded.
Jaquar took another step back. "Go to the Tower. Beware of other
Circlets." He ran for Nightsky and jumped onto the volaran's back.
The flying horse leaped into the sky, lifting with wings and Power.
They flew in the direction of Alf Island and Bossgond. Jaquar
lifted a hand to wave.
I'll be back before dinner! he sent, mind to mind.
Fear spiking again, Marian didn't wave back.
Tuck gave a tiny growl to attract her attention. He looked up at
her, his face furrowed in a hamster scowl. "You left me alone a
long time," Tuck accused shrilly. Marian picked him up, but
he wouldn't settle in her hands and he nipped the fleshy part of
her thumb in irritation.
"Ouch!"
"Serves you right," Tuck said. "I was lonely. I was afraid for
you. Many speak through the glass ball but not you and not
Jaquar."
"I'm sorry."
He sat back on her hand, his little chest puffed out. "I am your
companion now. Sinafin says so."
"And of course Sinafin is always right," Marian murmured.
Tuck nodded. "Yes."
Marian sniffed.
Tuck had a hard time narrowing his bulbous eyes, but he
tried.
Marian chuckled.
"You remember that she is teaching me, and when you raise your
Tower I can become a feycoocu."
All humor faded before renewed anxiety. What did Sinafin know?
What would the feycoocu tell Marian if she asked? She stared at
Tuck. What did he know and what would he tell her?
"Let's go back to the Tower and have a little talk."
"And food," Tuck said.
She'd bribe him with anything. "And coffee."
Tuck scrabbled up to her shoulder, set his pointy claws through
the material of her gown, tugged at her hair.
"Ouch!" Marian said. "Let me make a pocket for you." So she did,
right above her breasts.
Tuck settled himself inside. "Nice. Warm. Heart sounds good.
I'll take a nap." He wriggled a couple of minutes more.
Marian eyed the cove, almost wanting to see if her mastery of
Water worked here, too.
Almost. She decided that Jaquar's pool would be another good
test.
She found the path from the beach to the interior of the island.
Nibbling her lip, she visualized a map and thought this beach must
be on the southwest portion of the island.
The sun's warmth soaked into her, reaching every cell. She was a
Circlet and specialized in Fire! Lightning, as a matter of fact.
Now she only had to prove she had mastered Water.
How much would she be able to do in Jaquar's study? She thought
one of the reasons that she hadn't been able to manage Water was
the pressure of having Jaquar watch her-and judge her work. Always
disliking error, she became paranoid about making mistakes while in
his company. She'd never had an intimate relationship with a prof
before-not that he was much like any teacher she'd known.
The attraction between them was so strong-not only physically,
but of like minds and values. She had the idea that if she was
given a choice between furthering her studies in Power or having
Jaquar as a lover, she'd choose the man. That notion scraped her
nerves-it sounded too much like her mother, who needed an admiring
man around at all times.
So Marian stretched her legs on the walk back to the Tower. Her
body was toning up, as much due to daily exercise as the calories
she and Jaquar burned off in bed. He was such a fabulous lover.
But no doubt he'd want to see how she progressed with her
lessons in Water. She grinned. She was hoping to show him she'd
mastered it!
To bolster her confidence she crafted and refined a tune, and
hummed what she whimsically called "Marian's Rain." It was both a
mnemonic song to prod her memory for the right steps, the right
feelings, she should have when practicing the cycle of
seawater to rain, and a Powerful Songspell.
She was nearing the protective circle around the Tower when she
stopped and stared at a carriage, without horses or volarans or
even wheels, sitting in the meadow. It was an elegant
equipage of bright green and gold with small pink-and-white striped
flags on each corner.
Before she could figure out what it was, the Circlets Chalmon
and Venetria walked from the direction of the Tower, calling,
"Marian!"
Beware of other Circlets. Fear gripped her. They were
between her and the Tower! But she could run, find a place to stop
and open the protective circle. Escape.
She turned and raced. A hot splinter of pain speared into the
back of her right shoulder.
Dizziness. The ground rose up. She managed to land on her side,
sparing Tuck. Tuck...stay...still.
She fought unconsciousness, but wished she hadn't when she heard
Chalmon say, "This was all Jaquar's plan. I wish he'd stayed to
carry it through."
His voice rang with sincerity, and Marian knew he'd spoken the
truth.
Marian woke suddenly and completely. She stood in the center of
the smallest of several pentacles increasing in size that were
incised into the flagstones of a huge courtyard between stone
theater seats open to the evening sky.
To her right, beyond the courtyard, was an opening to the
theater where the carriage sat. To her left was a dilapidated
Tower. She recognized this place. Parteger Island, the Tower
Community gathering place.
It would soon be full dark, yet it was still light enough for
Marian to see about thirty people watching her.
Trapped.
26
Tuck stared up at her with wide eyes from her bodice pocket.
About twenty people stepped up to an outer circle about six feet
from her. They placed their palms out, spread-fingered as if
holding her in place.
Marian's breath stopped. She threw herself bodily against the
barrier.
It didn't give. They had her caught inside the pentacle.
"Line up around the pentacle, immediately," Chalmon commanded
those who hung back. He stood on the inner circle closest to her,
along with Venetria and three other Circlets- just beyond arm's
length, though she reached and reached with fingers curved like
claws.
Fear dried her mouth, buzzed in her head as she strove to reason
at what was happening. She'd wanted to be Sent home to Boulder. It
looked like she was going somewhere else, and she trembled to
imagine where.
A young man looked uneasy. "I don't know about this-"
"If you won't stand with us, stay out of the way or leave."
Chalmon's voice was hard. "The best estimate is that the Dark maw
will open and release monsters, including sangviles targeted at us,
before morning. We must prevent this!"
"I don't like this," a woman said. "I'm only a Scholar, and
wasn't told of this. I won't do it. An Exotique is a precious
resource, and this is gross betrayal."
Damn right. Marian struggled to break free of the bonds again,
this time buffeting the forcefield with her mind. Her Power
fluttered like a butterfly inside a killing jar, though she saw
sweat running from the Circlet's headbands down their faces.
One against far too many. She could hardly breathe. She didn't
know what was going on, but sensed it was very, very bad.
"Where are her teachers-Bossgond, Jaquar?"
Good questions. Venetria raised her voice and began an
intricately toned spellchant that drowned out others, and the Power
wove thick around her. Marian's palms dampened. Where was
Jaquar?
"This was Jaquar's plan in the first place," Chalmon said. "He's
been informed of the danger of the nest opening shortly, and is on
his way."
Oh God. Doomed.
Just like that first premonition she had when she arrived in
Lladrana. She wanted to shriek. She fisted her hands and flung
mental bolts of Power toward the shield, fueled by sheer hurt and
anger and fear. The invisible trap held.
"We must link and conduct the Ritual now. Join us or
not." Chalmon stepped into place, slapping his right hand into
Venetria's left. All around the circle people linked hands.
The Song swelled, added harmonies. Marian was caged with pulsing
beams of red light sounding like the rush of a mighty river. She
swayed, glassy-eyed, as if not only her body was captured and
controlled, but her mind, too.
When she saw Jaquar running toward her, she sent him loathing,
her mouth open with a silent shriek of horror and betrayal.
He stumbled. His gaze bored into hers. His face was all angles,
tight expression. She couldn't read him.
She couldn't face him, either. Underlying her fear, her rage,
her desperation was the burning acid of his lying and
treachery.
She'd turned her back on him! Jaquar's fury at the others dimmed
beside his anger at himself. He should have told her what he'd
originally planned, but he hadn't wanted to see her respect for him
destroyed.
Fool.
He had to reach her, prevent the others from Sending her, or go
with her into the maw.
No price was too much to pay.
Her head tilted away from him. The Song between them ceased with
a sudden, sharp shock. She'd cut the link.
Agony whipped through him-pain at the severing of the sex bond
and all the emotions that had attached to it and spun delicately
between them.
She shuddered time and again, hunched her shoulders, but did not
face him.
He reached the outer circle of Circlets and Scholars and they
blocked him-moving, dancing, arms linked. With gritted teeth he
grabbed the clasped hands of a man and a woman passing by, inserted
himself into the energy stream and winced when a crash of cymbals
ripped through him.
But they hauled him up, kept him on his feet, moving forward in
the circle. His mind wheeling to find balance, to think.
The loud chant diminished as it transformed to a voiceless
Songspell that traveled mind to mind and was below hearing. He
reached for the meaning of the words, struggled to comprehend, to
counter.
But he could not stop it. The melody being forged was too great,
created by Powerful, determined people, for once in concert. They
were Sending Marian to explore and harm the nest-atop the shoulder
of her gown was a tiny crystal ball that would relay the sights and
sounds of the Dark's headquarters to waiting observers.
He broke from the outer circle, ignoring the cries of the
participants as he wrecked their energy flow, and staggered toward
the inner circle. One glance at the five people and he had another
thing to be thankful for.
Bossgond wasn't there. They had spent some time discussing the
rumors he'd heard of Jaquar's original plan, then how to watch the
nest. They'd come to no conclusions about how to attack or destroy
it quickly. Then the old mage had drawn Jaquar into a long
discussion about the Dimensional Corridor and Sending Marian back
to Exotique Terre. Jaquar had returned to his Tower later than he'd
planned, to hear Chalmon's curt call. Doubt had crept into Jaquar's
mind as to whether Bossgond had delayed him on purpose. But no, he
hadn't betrayed Marian. Her mentor hadn't betrayed her.
No, Jaquar, her lover, had.
Narrowing his eyes, Jaquar gauged his timing to push into the
inner circle, past the swirling figures to the pentacle and Marian.
The Sorcerers and Sorceresses of this round danced with hands
clasped but arms outstretched between them. And with each step, the
music rose, nearing a crescendo.
There! Jaquar flung himself between two tall men, under their
arms, into a stinging, ear-pounding thump of a drum. Bang!
He pushed, penetrated the field, fell to his hands and knees, felt
warm blood run from his nose.
He lurched to his feet, hurtled forward to the red-sphere cage
surrounding Marian. He reached it, tried to penetrate the
forcefield. Cacophony pounded through him-hissing, screaming,
noise. He pressed onward. He had just touched Marian's fingers when
Venetria ordered, "Go!"
Chalmon's deep voice followed. "Go!"
Jaquar grabbed for Marian's hand. Missed.
"Go!" chanted a third Sorcerer.
The spell cloth encasing the weapon-knot Jaquar had snatched
from his Tower fell from his fingers into Marian's palm. It was the
strongest weapon he could give her.
Her hand jerked closed over the thread.
Once again she turned terror-filled eyes upon him, and he knew
in that instant that she thought his actions, too, had been part of
the spell, of the plan.
"No!" he screamed, but he didn't know whether she heard him
before she vanished.
Utter silence descended-except for the echoing of his last
no, around the stone theater of Parteger Island.
At the last minute, when terror overcame the haze in her mind,
Marian understood that the Power flow was uneven, flawed. Unlike
the Marshalls, this group wasn't accustomed to working together.
Further, none of them entirely trusted one another or the process
of connection.
Deep inside, Marian screamed. It was bad enough that she was the
puppet and the tool of this group. To know that they might be
incompetent in their spell was terrifying.
What would happen to her?
Off balance, the Circlets' minds and will yet managed to merge
for one clear moment, and they flung Marian to the Dark maw. She
shivered and shuddered and spun through planes of existence she
hadn't known about but recognized through the touches of minds
against hers.
Wind didn't take her-she could have mastered it. Lightning
didn't sweep her through the night-she could have bent that to her
will. She traveled on the push of minds, on the waves of
sound of a mighty Songspell.
Mordantly Marian realized their aim was off. They had not shared
a common vision of their target.
She rubbed the cloth Jaquar had given her and the outer covering
fell away. The weapon-knot twined around her right middle
finger.
Betrayed. Emotional pain stabbed her, tears backed behind
her eyes. They were sending her to the heart of evil, and Jaquar
had given her the weapon to destroy it-though she didn't know how
to use it. It probably would kill everything, including her.
She flew through gray landscapes, through black space studded
with a glistening swath of stars. Then she plummeted down, down,
down to a seething black place with an open maw that looked like
unhealthy red flames, like a scabby, open mouth with razor-sharp
teeth.
She hit a Powerful shield that slimed her as she plunged
through, screaming until fear took her very voice.
Tuck squirmed in her chest pocket. Just the feel of him calmed
her. She wasn't alone. She had someone to protect. As she fell
through rocky darkness and saw a stone floor rising, she twisted
and landed hard on her side. Again.
"Oomph!" Her breath thumped from her body and she lay stunned,
gasping.
The smell-of putrefaction, burning, dead things rotting.
She didn't want to inhale, but her lungs struggled to suck air. All
this time on Lladrana she'd become more and more aware of sounds,
but now odor overwhelmed her. She flopped an arm over her nose to
try to limit the stench. Already she felt it seeping into her
clothes, her hair.
Her mind cleared enough to take stock of her surroundings. Dark
brown cavern walls, oozing damp. A pitted, rocky path upward,
blackness shrouding the cavern and any passageways beyond her feet.
The air was hot, sulfuric, laden with the horrible odor.
All too familiar from her nightmares.
Chittering frantically, Tuck popped from her pocket and
scrabbled to her neck, where he patted her face. "You are okay.
Okay. Okay!"
Just the sound of the English term steadied her. Her next breath
succeeded; she drew air into her lungs.
It tasted vile.
She choked and coughed and doubled over. Tuck clung to her hair,
patting, whispering, "We are fine."
She didn't think so, but couldn't spare the breath to tell
him.
A horrible thud came from the dark corridor beyond her
feet, followed by scratchy, ragged breathing.
Not her own.
Her heart beat hard enough for her to feel it. Just like in the
dream, something huge lumbered at her. Ready to eat her. Or
worse.
She'd been in Lladrana long enough to know there was worse.
Marian scrambled to her knees and found that her magical dress
had ripped and showed no signs of mending itself. She couldn't
spare the Power to fix it. She'd need all her wits, all her energy,
all her Power to escape this.
The maw of the Dark. The center of the evil that was
invading Lladrana. They'd sent Tuck, innocent Tuck, with her.
Bile coated her tongue and the back of her throat.
She would survive, and they would pay.
Jaquar would pay the most.
An awful croaking echoed in the cavern. Slow, slithery movements
sounded, closing in. Marian hopped to her feet, swept up Tuck,
thrust him in her pocket. But he wriggled and escaped.
"No, 1 want to be out. I want to see."
Marian didn't.
She had to move!
Grabbing her gown, she straightened it with a flip of the
fabric, saw that the tear was mending threads one at a time as if
the spell labored against the noxious atmosphere.
A small crash of rock behind her made her jump.
Which nightmare would this be-the vicious, huge monster she
couldn't see, or the evil once-human Sorcerer? The master that
Jaquar had told her of.
Not one of them-not Bossgond, not Jaquar, not any of the
others-had given her any real information about this place. She had
no knowledge of her enemy, of his weaknesses, nothing she could use
to craft even a half-assed spell, let alone a perfect spell, or at
least a competent spell.
Tuck set his claws in the shoulder of her gown. Run! he
cried mentally.
Marian ran. She had no breath to spare for prayers. Her
feet thudded up the cavern. There was enough reddish glow-light for
her to see as she ran.
Which nightmare? Would she break out onto a cliff edge and see
Andrew lying dead? How could she? What were those fearsome
dreams-predestined truth, or fiction?
They seemed all too real right now.
She bumped off the wall, and an odoriferous slime-smear
decorated her sleeve, her arm hurting where she'd hit the rock.
Like in her dream. Pumping lungs, pumping legs. Her shoes seemed
loose, not tight around her ankles or cushioning her soles.
Flop. Flop. The more she thought about her shoes, the more
she felt them slip.
Chhrrrhh. The hot breath of the creature touched her
back. Adrenaline flooded her and she ran faster than she'd ever
thought she could.
The passage twisted, and she careened from one wall to the
other, no pain now. Too frightened. Ran into something that gave
before her-cloth over a doorway? And she was through. Was this the
cliff edge? She pivoted, slammed against the wall.
Beside her, the tapestry went up in flames.
She stood on a huge ledge, but it wasn't outside. She was near
the top of a cavernous room on a great balcony. To her right was a
wooden rail that looked all too flimsy. Roars and rumbles came from
below.
"Well, well, well," creaked a sly voice. "What do we have here?
A little intruder."
It was the man in the cowled robe, but he wasn't a man, he was a
giant-nearly a third taller than she, with misshapen hands furred
with hair on the backs, the only flesh she could see. He might once
have had the coloring of a Lladranan, but his skin now showed a
distinct shade of green.
He rose from a thronelike chair and walked slowly to her. She
couldn't see into the hood that covered his face but got the
unsettling impression of movement, like a mass of wriggling worms,
or tentacles. Marian set her back against the wall.
At that instant, the monster chasing her lumbered through the
doorway.
Lurching from side to side, it reached the balcony, stretched
its wings and tottered to the rail.
A dreeth. A small dreeth, but still terrifying.
The flying dinosaur's leathery wing-tip brushed against an
invisible forcefield over the railing and sparked. The beast
hissed. Flames shot from its mouth.
Marian gulped. "I didn't know dreeths were fire-breathing." The
comment came from her, all right, though she didn't know what
possessed her to speak.
The once-man chuckled wetly. "I am working on it. But if they
have fire, they must be small. I picked the image from the Exotique
Alexa's brain." Another snicker that made Marian's skin crawl. "You
Exotiques do have a rich imagination for monsters."
Marian tried to keep images of movies, of graphic novels, of
fantasy gaming cards showing evil beasts, from flooding her mind,
ready to be culled and used by this creature.
The dreeth turned toward them.
"Go!" The cowled figure waved a three-fingered hand studded with
pus-filled lumps at the dreeth and the rail. A shimmer and hum and
the forcefield vanished. The dreeth screamed as it flew away.
Marian was sure that whatever awaited in the room below was
worse than what she faced here. At least it sounded as if there
were massed monsters down there, but still... She crept toward the
rail, looked over it.
Sure enough, there were at least a hundred. She recognized
slayers, renders, sangviles-three more dreeths, these gigantic.
There were other horrors, lesser and greater, that she had no names
for. Most of them were eating live, writhing animals. Would she be
dinner, too?
The inhuman creature rasped laughter. "There is no escape for
you that way. There is no escape for you at all." He advanced on
her. "An Exotique Scholar, what a prize. What shall I do with you?
What pretty hair."
His hand reached for her, stopped. His head tilted. "What do we
have here?"
She froze in terror. Tuck hid in her hair. Please, no, not
Tuck.
The man-beast roared with laughter, his fetid breath washing
over her, a drop of spittle hitting where her neck curved into her
shoulder. It burned. Marian set her teeth against a scream.
She shrank against the wall. She had to do something.
She'd survived in her dreams! Blue fire had sizzled from her
fingertips. She had no clue what blue fire was, how to find it
within her Power, how to use it.
Think!
"You have a little spy. Something the Circlets set upon you. How
cute."
He couldn't have said "cute." No, he hadn't-she'd just heard it,
filled in the blank. She wondered how much she was feeling, sensing
from him, and what she actually heard. What was real.
"But I am the Master and though I enjoy toying with you, it is
time to send your poisonous presence where you cannot affect the
nest. Yes, I am the Master." White, curved fangs gleamed in the
darkness of his hood. His fingers, elongated and multi-jointed,
plucked a little glass orb the size of a marble from her shoulder.
She hadn't even known it was there.
With thumb and forefinger, he flicked it over the rail. There
was a tiny flash, a roar from the monsters.
"Oooh, and you have a mousekin, too. An Exotique animal with
Power, also a threat to our home," the un-man said. "I think I have
sensed his essence before." He reached again.
"No!" Her fingers closed on something in her skirt pocket- the
brithenwood stick.
"Yesss." Now his voice was sibilant, snakelike. His fingers
curled and claws sprang from the tips, swiped at her neck,
severed a swath of her hair. Missed Tuck.
"No!" She flung the brithenwood, wrapped in anger and Power. It
struck his eye and pierced it!
He shrieked in agony, plucked the stick from his eye and dropped
it, snatching his fingers back. A droplet of blood fell on her
hand, burned as much as his spit, trickled to her wrist tattoos and
flashed white, searing her.
The Power of his pain and rage lifted her from her feet, flung
her over the rail to fall to the horrors below.
Death. And her last sight would be the deformed mage, eye
exploded, black blood coating the empty socket, trickling down his
cheek. Long tentacles around his mouth wriggling in pain.
But he slowly closed his fingers into a fist and her fall
halted. She hung suspended in air.
Not such an easy end for you! His malevolent voice hit
her like cudgels, bruising. You are Powerful. I will suck that
Power from you, drain it drop by drop, and your agony at its slow
loss will make it all the tastier, all the stronger for my own use.
And when my little horrors need some special energy, I'll carve off
a piece of you for them. 1 wonder what will go first? A finger?
Perhaps a whole hand or foot...
The monsters screeched and the noise drowned out even the
master's mental words in her head.
After a long moment when he communed with his underlings, he
turned back to her, flicked his fingers. The blow was a strong
backhanded slap that snapped her head back. With a screeching yell
he sent her into the dark place. Go, now, to the larder where
your obscene alien vibrations do not disrupt us. Go!
Larder. Larder. Larder. The word reverberated in Marian's
mind, increasing in loudness with every repetition until it struck
her unconscious.
27
Marian awoke to nothingness. To silence and darkness and no
physical sensation. She could hear, see, sense nothing. Knew
nothing.
Was nothing.
She had not a bit of control in her life, in her fate. Panic
shredded her.
She couldn't hear her breath or her heartbeat.
She couldn't smell any fragrance from her dress or even her own
perspiration.
Nothingness.
She screamed.
There was no sound.
No intake of air, no taste on her tongue.
She couldn't feel the gown against her body.
Worse, she couldn't feel herself. She tried to close her
hands into fists, felt no flex of muscle, no pull of tendon, no
touch of finger on finger, fingers curled into palms.
Biting terror filled her, shrouded her mind.
What was left of her?
No body.
Only mind.
For untold aeons she screamed inside until her fear subsided
from sheer weariness.
Slowly, slowly one thought connected to another. She became
aware again.
Was she dead?
Was this limbo? Absence of sensation. Best definition of limbo
she'd ever come across and she was living it. Maybe she was living
it.
If she was dead, why was her brain still working? Why did she
still have an idea of self?
Marian.
She was Marian Dale Harasta.
Relief fluttered through her. If she could think, perhaps she
could somehow get out of this mess.
With her mind.
She'd had Power once.
Before she'd failed.
She'd made mistakes. She'd not listened to her instincts, she'd
trusted the wrong man, she'd failed.
Humiliation flooded her, self-accusation. She'd failed.
And now she was here, in limbo, unable to control anything.
Maybe.
Inside her head she sang a spell to move the air.
Nothing.
She tried licking her lips.
No tongue, no wetness, no plump lips.
Thought vanished under quivering fear.
But this time the descent into panic was shorter. She
believed.
She reasoned. She knew her identity, she felt hot and cold- or
perhaps it was just the recalled wash of hot and cold through her
body as it reacted to emotion-icy fear, flushing embarrassment,
guilt.
Marian Dale Harasta.
Yes, the edge of panic receded. She still hung in the limbo of
the lost. It wasn't as dark as she had thought. Perhaps that had
been black terror pressing upon her brain, binding her spirit. She
thought her eyes were open but saw nothing but grayness, like fog.
It tricked her mind into making shapes where she knew there were
none.
Was Tuck still with her? Hanging on to her shoulder? She hoped
so but he could be biting her ear and she wouldn't feel it. Perhaps
he hadn't lost reason like her. Maybe she hadn't thrashed around in
panic and bucked him off. She could only hope he was with her and
coping better than she.
Was the knot still twined around her finger like a ring? She
didn't know. She couldn't feel it, so she certainly couldn't fumble
to untie it.
Once more she moved her feet, but could not feel the stretch of
tendon. Dark humor welling up, she sent instructions to her feet to
close together, to tap heels together three times, her mouth formed
the words There's no place like home.
It didn't work. She hadn't expected that it would. She couldn't
feel her feet or any vibration in her throat.
She was truly helpless. Her worst fear come true. And nothing
she'd done all her life to be perfect had saved her from this. None
of the knowledge she'd slaved to learn, to remember, could help
her. None of the innate Power she'd felt and honed in Lladrana
could save her. All those lessons-useless.
Lessons. The word sat in her mind like a silver splinter.
Pointed, hurting a little, prodding her, like there was something
she should remember. What?
At least she had her brain. She could think. She didn't know if
time passed in this limbo, or how it passed. Whether nanoseconds or
years passed in the worlds outside. Whether she herself aged.
Another tiny bit of calm trickled through her-at least her mind
still worked. Perhaps her studies provided her with help after all.
She might be able to amuse herself for quite a while, and that
could keep her from going mad.. .again.
She wasn't pleased that she'd lost control so totally, given
herself to fear and panic and self-condemnation at a stupid
mistake.
Well, she should cut herself a break-no one she knew had ever
experienced what she had, found themselves suspended in
nothingness. So who knew what they would have done? How
could she measure herself against the unknown courage of someone
else? Except she did it all the time.
She'd gauged her prettiness, her sexual attractiveness, her
social skills against that of her mother, or other girls and women
in Denver society. Had always found herself lacking there.
She thought of Andrew. She wondered if tears welled up in her
eyes, if her throat closed, because the tightness she felt in her
spiritual heart should have brought such physical reactions. Her
love for Andrew was, and had always been, powerful and
unconditional.
Thinking of Andrew steadied her. She wondered how he was doing
in his new retreat, whether she'd found any way to help him, or
could have found some in the future.
Marian considered whether-when-Alexa and Bossgond would miss
her. Fury overwhelmed her at Jaquar's betrayal, at his last gesture
of shoving the weapon-knot in her hand so she could destroy the
nest, while destroying herself, as well. He had been her
doom and she hadn't listened. Instead, she'd listened to the
stupid, false Song between them and his words. She'd been so
pleased that he'd found her beautiful, so blinded by their
lovemaking.
Another lesson wasted.
Lesson.
Maybe the thrill of riding the lightning, of feeling immense
Power crackle through her, of the acceptance by Alexa and Bastien
and the Marshalls in the Castle had made it easy for him to deceive
her. Especially after that ghastly experience with Sinafin.
Knowledge blinded her: she could have sworn it flashed white-hot
and atomic in her mind.
You have learned your lesson, Sinafin had said. And
before that-in the endless moments of that traumatic
experience, the feycoocu had repeated again and again, I
can't hear you.
As if Sinafin knew that Marian would have to call for help one
day....
Hope nearly sent her spiraling into mindlessness again. To hope
and attempt and fail was worse than not hoping at all.
Easy, easy. She tried to take deep, even breaths. Inhale, hold
for a count of eight, exhale. She didn't know if her body did as
her mind directed, but either way, it couldn't hurt to pretend.
Harking back to Earth lessons, Marian visualized a stream of white
light entering her body, through her head, flowing down her as she
imagined relaxing tight muscles one by one. She'd been meditating
for a couple of years and easily sank into a different state-a
state of clarity and altered brain waves.
Reaching deep, gathering the greatest amount of self, and Power,
and sheer will, she yelled at the top of her lungs, SINAFIN!
FEYCOOCU!
Very, very faintly she heard a whisper. Too quiet to understand.
Perhaps even imaginary. Marian collected herself again. Screamed
again, putting an extra punch of Power-she hoped-behind her
call.
SINAFIN!
Another tiny.. .echo?
Marian built an image of Sinafin in her head as the feycoocu had
taught her-but unlike that time at Jaquar's Tower, she didn't see
Sinafin as a fairy. No, this time, the shapeshifter was the
warhawk, sitting on Jaquar's shoulder in the Nom de Nom.
Marian "closed" her eyes and brought back every sensation,
physical and emotional, of that scene. The smokiness of the bar,
the red leather of the booths beneath her, Jaquar's warm and tender
arm across her shoulders- The image faded. Damn it!
Again she built-this time from the emotions out. Now she
realized Jaquar had an aura of a man well satisfied with sex and
the anticipation of more. Alexa sat across from Marian-quivering
with curiosity and yearning to ride the lightning, deep green eyes
alight with interest. The Song between them flowed with Alexa's
pleasure that Marian was there as well as friendliness, affection.
Alexa was solid in the vision. For a moment their Song filled
Marian's mind, and she held it close, worked to remember it.
Jaquar-do the breathing exercise even if you can't feel
it-Jaquar had been a man throbbing with sexuality, a Circlet
radiating Power. A lover, a man who'd weathered and come to terms
with his grief. An underlying, innate note in his being had matched
hers-an Earth tune, from the last essence of Earth blood he
carried. The Song they had made together-passionate, wary,
inescapable, tempting. Marian remembered that tune too well. Before
it could hurt her, she gently, gently drew away, but kept it in her
mind.
She recalled other portions of the scene-the twisting and
twining notes of the individual Chevaliers standing at the bar. The
lower, duller strains of the bartender and barmaids.
The intense emotions of the couple in the booth behind her that
Marian hadn't noticed at the time, came back- love, desperation,
shock at Alexa's offer, thrilling hope and acceptance. Incredible
relief. The Song between the two Chevaliers.
The Song of Marwey and her lover Pascal. Deep, abiding love with
knowledge of their past, commitment to each other and a shared
future.
The Song of Marian herself. Bright with Power, intricate and
weaving chords from Earth into a Song of Lladrana-or vice versa.
She knew that Song now-Song of her bones and blood-though she
couldn't feel them. Song of her heart and mind. Song of her
soul.
All these twisted like strands of harmony into a thick rope that
Marian used to gather her Power and send it forth in a great shout
that rolled from her, taking everything she had. SINAFIN.
SINAFIN. SINAFIN.
Marian? The voice was muted but clear. Relief rushed
between them.
Help! Marian thought she should be weeping buckets with
the word.
Hold on. 1 have your Song-rope, Alexa said
grimly.
An instant later Marian felt a surge of Power come to her. She
imagined a warm embrace from the smaller woman- ephemeral, but
true.
And her wrist burned. She could feel it, feel the pattern
of the heat-Alexa's jade baton.
Where are you?
In the nest. In limbo. In the larder. Marian suppressed a
wild surge of black laughter. The evil Sorcerer called the
Master who serves the Dark cast me here. Whatever happened,
Alexa needed to know what was going on.
Wait to tell me. Call again. You are not alone. Send
ropes to your friends.
Help! The word shot from her. Was caught.
1 have you, said Jaquar.
Again she felt desperation-this time from him. Rage. Her whole
body heated with warmth. She felt the curling of her toes, the very
lifting of hair on her scalp. She didn't want the warmth. But she
wanted to go back.
I have you, he repeated.
She didn't reply, but used her turmoil of emotions to send
another call. BOSSGOND!
Here! His voice was deep and old and solid.
Alexa said, I am joined with Jaquar and Bossgond,
hand-to-hand. Bastien is arriving momentarily. The Marshalls are
here in the Castle Temple. We will bring you back.
Marian shuddered, felt the tremor through her body.
Marian! It was Tuck, warm fur rubbing against her neck.
I have been talking and talking and you didn't say
anything. He sounded fearful.
"Sorry, Tuck," she said, and her tongue felt thick, her throat
clogged with tears-of panic and hope and relief. She cleared her
throat and said, weakly, "Could I hear a little Beethoven? The
Ninth, please?"
Tuck vibrated against her and the orchestral piece rumbled from
him. She breathed deeply, enjoying the sensation of her lungs
filling, expanding, emptying, shrinking. Blessed sensation.
She still saw nothing but fog.
Time to Call for Sinafin again, Tuck said. He chuckled in
her mind. You Call and I will broadcast Sinafin. Soon we will be
Summoned to the Castle Temple. Then we can go home.
Home. She didn't know where that was-her first thought was of
Bossgond's Tower, then her apartment. She didn't ask Tuck where he
meant.
Power roared to her from Alexa, strong and wild.
Alexa? Marian asked.
Bastien is here. So is Sinafin. Call her again.
Sinafin! Marian shouted.
I am here. You did very, very well, Marian.
Marian gulped at the praise, lifted her arm and saw the deep
emerald velvet. She wiped her eyes on the sleeve.
Alexa broke into laughter. Beethoven's Ninth! We can all hear
it! You should see the Marshalls' faces. Stopped them in their
tracks.
I have Called Circlets 1 trust as well as those who hurt
you, Bossgond added. My friends will link with me. And
Jaquar. With the Marshalls' help it will be but a puff of breath to
bring you back. You are bringing us together, the Castle and the
Tower, this day. Well done, Marian. It will be only a few
moments....
I'll hang in here, Marian sent to Alexa, and her friend
laughed again.
One by one new Songs were sung to Marian, drowning out
Beethoven, so Tuck stopped the Earth music.
Songs of people were so much more fascinating. As each Pair of
Marshalls was added-Swordmarshall and Shieldmarshall-three Songs
enriched the links between them, each individual and the Pair
Song.
In her mind, Marian saw the Circle gather and expand as others
joined. After Alexa, Jaquar's Song was the strongest- cruelly
familiar, though she'd cut the bond between them.
She knew she had, she'd felt the whiplash of it, then the empty
place inside her where it had sung.
Jaquar hadn't spoken to her after those first words, and she
hadn't talked to him. It was hurtful enough to realize that he was
the second person who'd heard her. If they'd had more time
together, he probably would have been the first one her Song would
have flown to.
Would he have ignored it? Would he, could he have brought in the
strong force that Alexa had to save her? Marian didn't know, but
she dreaded facing him and the other Circlets, trying to be
civil.
When all the Marshalls had joined the Circle, the rainbow
brightness, the incredible Power Marian sensed amazed her. It was
far greater than the Power the Circlets and Scholars had used to
Send Marian to the Dark nest. Even Bossgond's and Jaquar's Powers
looked puny.
The Marshalls' individual Power might not have the depth and
breadth of a Circlet's, but they were used to working as a team. No
wonder the Tower Community had given the task of Summoning Marian
from Earth to the Marshalls.
Marian's shoulders sagged in relief. She knew she'd be saved.
The change in her body caused her to spin slightly in the
nothingness. She lifted her hands as if she could paddle as she
might in water, and caught sight of the weapon-knot wrapped around
her finger like a fancy ring. Bloodred and pulsing, as if it, too,
soaked in Power from the Song-web that wove around her. Though,
that image wasn't quite right for sound instead of sight. She was
more like a solo performer surrounded by a huge and mighty
orchestra. She smiled at the notion.
Now her immediate fears were banished, Marian had time to truly
think. She laughed shortly. Atavistic fear had banished thought,
the physical triumphing over the mental as usual in a human
being.
She was deep in the Dark's nest. Dare she try to destroy it with
the knot? She sensed the knot had several spells woven into it and
each, when loosed, could do damage.
No, said Bossgond. 1 will demand all Lorebooks of
weapons or knots to be sent to me. We will study them
together.
Another wisp of relief. Marian swallowed hard. She'd be going
home with Bossgond, not staying at Jaquar's.
Tuck sniffed in her ear. I love my house.
Two jolts swept her as familiar energy, tainted with guilt and
shame, came into the Circle. Venetria and Chalmon.
They begged to add their Power to Summon you back, Alexa
said acidly. And Sinafin agreed. Hardly anyone goes against
Sinafin. Know this, Tower Community. Alexa's voice reverberated
and Marian knew that she spoke in a loud voice to the whole Tower,
as well as sending her speech mentally. When a community Summons
an Exotique, they must provide her or him with an estate and
life-stipend. That is true of this Tower and Exotique Marian. You
will gift her with an island and zhiv-or you will pay zhiv
to the Marshalls in return for an estate on mainland Lladrana,
should she choose to stay with us. As for those who sent
Marian to the Dark nest, you all owe her a life.
That stunned Marian. She was owed a life-by about twenty-five
people.
Emotions roiled through her.
Anger. They had sent her to her death.
Vengeance. She would make them pay, each and every one.
Then glee! Did she have a bank of favors to be sent home and
bring herself and Andrew-God willing-back, or what?
She'd let Bossgond and Alexa and Sinafin collect for her. Marian
giggled. She figured no one was going to set themselves against
Alexa or Bossgond, either. Good.
And she had repaid the Tower for all the teaching Bossgond and
Jaquar had given her. She could go back to Boulder with a clear
conscience in that area, free of any emotional debt.
Ready, Marian? asked Jaquar.
Ready, Marian ? said Alexa an instant later.
Yes!
You know where the nest is. Situate yourself in the
coordinates. Then visualize the Castle Temple and come to
us! Jaquar said.
Marian shut her eyes, glad she'd spent some time exploring the
Castle Temple-that morning? She pictured the huge open space, the
wooden screens, the rafters with Power crystals glowing. The altar
with the chakra lamp-chimes of precious stones filled her mind, as
did the great silver gong. She'd never forget the details of the
pool where she'd mastered Water.
Her memory harkened back to her previous Summoning there, the
Marshalls in colored robes wearing batons at their sides. Bossgond
and Jaquar, Venetria and Chalmon in their formal robes, with
circlets gleaming on their brows. She brought Tuck from her left
shoulder and cradled the hamster in her hands, curving her fingers
around him. She held him tight to her breasts. He huddled down
inside the protection of her fingers.
The music rumbled, surrounding them, encasing them in a sparking
sphere of lightning! Marian lifted her foot to touch the arcing
energy, and she and Tuck rode the lightning that rippled with
chimes.
Crack! Bong!
Her feet thudded against soft carpet and her knees bent,
absorbing the shock.
28
Choking, Marian opened her eyes to see a circle of sixty people
still enveloped in an aurora borealis undulating with Power. All
had hands linked and raised over their heads.
Gaze locked on hers, Bossgond lowered his arms, softened his
voice, drew the chant to the end. The circle broke hands.
Tuck wriggled and Marian opened her fingers. The hamster flew to
Alexa's shoulder, where Sinafin sat. He started chittering as if
telling all their adventures.
Propelled by the need to feel another person, Marian flung
herself into Bastien's arms, and he and Alexa cradled her
close.
Marian felt enveloped in life, in...in...honor. All the
slimy horror of the Dark nest and the master faded. The underlying
evil intelligence that lurked there had seeped through her pores
and down to her core like malevolent oil. This, too, diminished
when surrounded by Alexa and Bastien. Good people, dedicated
people.
"Marian," Jaquar whispered.
She didn't take her face from Bastien's shoulder.
"Don't touch her!" snapped Bastien in a cool and deadly tone
that Marian hadn't heard from him before. "You may return to your
island." He spoke over Marian's head. "Venetria and Chalmon, you
leave a list of those who perpetrated this wickedness upon Marian,
then return to your islands, also. You are not welcome here.
Consider how much your life is worth. That is how much each of you
must pay to Marian for this grievous wrong. Every Circlet and
Scholar who took part in the Sending will forward to the Marshalls
a statement of what they owe Marian-the value of their own life.
They will pay- forever, if necessary. We Marshalls will keep the
accounts."
"My life is worth anything I have, everything 1 have," Venetria
whispered.
"I, too, will pay anything she requests from me," Chalmon said.
"But I will point out that the plan succeeded. The maw did not
disgorge monsters. It was harmed by her presence. It does not
appear as if the nest will send out horrors for an unknown amount
of time in the future. All is quiet-"
"Watch!" Tuck shrieked. He opened his mouth and held up his
little pink paws tipped with white claws.
Marian stared as a hologram appeared, recalling that her PDA had
video- and sound-recording capabilities. Tuck could report
everything to the Marshalls. What an incredible show-and-tell!
"No!" Marian whispered. Her face was pale and set,
hair wild and looking as if it glowed red. Her eyes were wide. She
trembled.
"Yesss." The mutant Sorcerer's voice was sibilant,
snakelike. His fingers curled, claws sprang from the tips, swiped
at Marian's neck, severed a swath of her hair, missed Tuck. The
image bobbled.
"No!" Marian cried. A green-brown stick sparking with
Power shot from her fingers. It struck the master's eye and pierced
it!
A shudder rippled through everyone in the room.
Alexa cleared her throat. "Nice shot. Excellent weapon. What did
you use?"
With one last squeeze for Bastien, Marian stepped away from him
and Alexa.
Marian flicked her robe, trying to remove dirt. "A brithenwood
twig I found in the garden here."
"Interesting," one of the female Marshalls said. "I would say it
had special qualities. We must investigate this."
"Yes," Chalmon said, a little too loudly. "The information
Marian sent back about the Dark's nest will be invaluable in our
fight against it."
Jaquar's right fist slammed into Chalmon's jaw, knocked him to
the ground. Venetria hurried to his side.
Jaquar looked straight into Marian's eyes. "I swear, Marian, by
my most solemn word of honor, by my parents' lost lives, by the
keystone of my Tower, I did not participate in this
action."
Anger fired inside her. "You set me up." Her voice was
shrill-and accented with French.
Apparently he understood, because he lifted both hands, palms
out. "I swear, Marian, I did not betray you."
Sinafin clicked her beak.
She steadied her nerves and spoke slowly and clearly. Marian met
Jaquar's dark sapphire eyes and said, "You knew. They said
it was your plan." She shot a glance at Chalmon and Venetria, who
had withdrawn to one of the screens that partitioned the
Temple.
Marshalls flowed between her and the Circlets, as if protecting
her.
He reached for her, stopped. "Long ago."
"You gave me this." She held up her hand, fingers spread to show
the dark bloodred weapon-knot encircling her finger, wide enough to
reach her first knuckle.
"For defense. I arrived too late." His mouth twisted.
Too many feelings whirled inside her, like storm clouds shaking
with thunder and lightning.
Bossgond stepped forward, gently embraced her, kissed her on the
forehead-and all that gesture did was remind her of Jaquar's tender
habit of talking to her with his brow against hers.
When Marian didn't hug Bossgond back, he dropped his arms and
took a step back. She glanced at him. He looked older than when
she'd last seen him.
"I knew, too," Bossgond said. "I heard rumors but did not act.
Did not tell you about them."
She had sensed he was avoiding her, hiding secrets from her. His
dark brown eyes filled with grief; his shoulders slumped.
Marian drew in a deep breath. "Maybe tomorrow I can forgive
you." She didn't look at Jaquar when she spoke to him. "I
don't know if I can ever forgive you."
From the corner of her eye, she saw him flinch, incline his head
in acceptance. He walked into the shadows near the circular walls
of the Temple, out of her range of vision. Since she didn't hear
him open the large door, she knew he stayed.
Bastien draped an arm around her shoulders. "Come have a late
dinner."
Another surging fear swamped her, made her lean against Bastien.
"How...how much time passed?"
Alexa took one of Marian's limp hands, squeezed it. "You were
gone for about six hours."
Marian nodded, moved away from Bastien and withdrew her hand
from Alexa's. Much as she'd like others to fight her battles, they
were her problems and she had to deal with them.
She scanned everyone in the room. Many she didn't know-
Chevaliers and the Circlets whom Bossgond had called. But she
recognized all of Alexa's and Bastien's household that she'd been
introduced to. She saw the Chevalier's Representative, Lady
Hallard, and her staff; the Singer's Representative, Luthan
Vauxveau. The sexy noble Chevalier Faucon.
So many people had helped her!
They'd come when she Called, given her support when she needed
it, even if they didn't know her.
They were fighting a war against monsters and were finally
coming to work together.
She stared at every Circlet who'd come to retrieve her from the
Dark. A greater number than those who had Sent her, and of all
ages, from a teenager who fiddled with his circlet as she nodded to
him, to a woman who had to be as old as Bossgond but wore her white
hair high and held her matronly body proudly.
She was blessed.
Then she swept her glance to Chalmon and Venetria. Venetria
didn't meet her gaze. Chalmon watched her from under hooded
eyes.
Marian curled her lip. "You attached that-marble-to me and saw
and heard everything before the master found it and destroyed it."
She lowered her voice. "But you don't know what happened after
that." She gestured to Tuck. "Tuck can show others, the Marshalls,
the good Circlets, what happened. I can tell them what
happened." She paused significantly. "I can tell them of what I
know and my deductions from my experiences."
Venetria bit her lip. Chalmon reddened. They hummed with
suppressed desire to hear. Served them right-perfectly right- that
she would tell the Marshalls and not them.
"I know something of the master and what he serves." She waited
a beat. "And the reason the Dark invades."
Jaquar soaked in the solitary splendor of the baths beneath the
Noble Apartments, a building across the courtyard from the Keep. No
one joined him. He wasn't sure whether or not the other Circlets
considered him an outcast, but the Chevaliers and Marshalls viewed
him with distaste.
Alexa and Bastien had whisked Marian off somewhere. Reflexively
he mentally reached for her through their sex-and-affection bond.
Nothing.
He groaned and rubbed his chest over his heart. It hurt, the
cutting of the bond, the instinctive searching for her and finding
nothing, the knowledge that he'd ravaged her emotionally and lost
whatever affection and respect she'd had for him. The bond had been
more than sex. How much more, he didn't know, but dangerously close
to love on his part, a more-than-sex-and-affection bond.
Marian had no affection for him now, and there sure wouldn't be
any sex with her in his future.
He wanted to close his eyes and let the bath water lap away his
tension. But he dared not.
He'd tried sinking into himself, listening to the sound of the
gently moving water and letting it soothe his mind as the hot water
eased his body, but when he shut his eyes he saw Marian.
Marian dazed and terrified within a red cage of Power... Marian
white and trembling, with a wide streak of newly silver hair at her
left temple, clinging to Bastien, hiding her face from Jaquar...
Marian too hurt to look at him directly...
None of those images were ones he wanted to see again, or
remember.
He didn't want to recall Bossgond's flinty and accusing gaze,
either. The older mage had not spoken, not looked at him except for
one scorching stare that made Jaquar feel four years old with a
mess in his pants.
Bossgond and the other Circlets had socialized briefly with the
Marshalls, and accepted lodgings in the Keep. No doubt they were
surveying the suite Jaquar himself had chosen that morning for a
representative of the Tower to occupy.
Enough! Time to regroup and plan. He must offer Marian all his
support, mend the rift with her. Then he would work with Bossgond
and Bastien and the Marshalls to neutralize the nest. He was the
best plane-walker.
Soft footsteps whispered over the stones. Jaquar sat up; the
movement caused water to slosh up to his chin. Luthan Vauxveau
disrobed and slid into the six-person tub with him.
"Salutations, Circlet Dumont," Luthan said quietly.
"And to you, Chevalier Vauxveau," Jaquar said.
Luthan slid down the bench so that his shoulders were
underwater. He rested his head on the padded neck roll surrounding
the tub and closed his eyes.
Jaquar was at a loss. He didn't know Luthan well, and everyone
else in the Castle was avoiding him-why wasn't Luthan? Deciding he
didn't want to know, Jaquar settled back into the welcoming hot
water. But a hum of tension lived in his muscles.
After a moment, Luthan said, "The next couple of days are going
to be very important. I wanted you to know."
As if the past few had been commonplace! Jaquar recalled that
Luthan Vauxveau had a small gift of foresight. He was also the
Representative of the Singer, the prophetic oracle of Lladrana.
Which had brought him to Jaquar?
"You wanted me to know so I could do what?" asked Jaquar. Luthan
didn't open his eyes. "Be alert." When the silence became too heavy
for Jaquar to endure, he left.
Marian choked down some herbal tea that was supposed to be
calming, and managed to eat half of her small dinner in the
Marshalls' dining room. Tuck was sleeping in her breast pocket,
limp with exhaustion.
She felt discombobulated-sometimes mind and body working
together, sometimes distanced from her body, uninvolved with her
emotions. Time moved in jerky increments. Slow moments of
tolerating dinner conversation. Fast flashbacks to the Dark evil's
nest, when her mind worked to remember every tiny nuance of the
experience, consider it, correlate it with every other small fact.
She needed to be sure of her conclusions.
"Marian?" Alexa said.
Looking up at her concerned friend, Marian understood that Alexa
had spoken her name more than once. "Do you want to bathe or go to
bed?" Alexa asked.
A bubble of hysterical laughter caught in Marian's throat. Use
the elegant, colorful baths of the Keep where she and Jaquar had
made love? Slip into the sheets of the same bed they'd slept in,
then later torn up during sex?
She didn't think so. "No. And I don't want to sleep in that
suite under yours, either."
"I understand," Alexa said. She looked to Bastien.
He smiled at Marian. "We've put you in the suite under
Swordmarshall Thealia and her husband."
"Oh. I'm sure that's fine. It has a shower stall?"
"Yes," said Alexa.
Bastien leaned forward, covered one of Marian's hands with his.
"So you're buzzed on the battle aftermath, mind humming, muscles
twitching, too restless to sleep-"
Marian's eyes widened. "I didn't go into battle."
"You certainly did," Alexa said. "Against the master, and
won."
Shaking her head, Marian said, "I didn't win, either."
"You're alive and safe. He's crippled and his plans are shot to
hell. That means you won," Bastien informed her cheerfully. "So
what do you want to do to wind down? Walk to Castleton and back?
It's a nice night-um, early morning."
A little shudder passed through Marian. She didn't think she
could face the expanse of dark sky, even sparkling with the stars
of two sweeping galaxies. The panic that had coated her had been
too black. "I want to visit the brithenwood garden." She only knew
that when she said the words.
"Sounds great." Alexa smiled at her and stood.
Marian coughed at the pun. "The garden does have a great
Song."
"Fine with me," Bastien said, rising.
"You're going, too?" Marian got up from her chair.
He smiled genially, tucking her right hand in his left arm,
angling his right elbow out for Alexa to take. "From now on,
Circlet Marian, you will be escorted at all times. You are
too valuable a gift to be unprotected."
Marian didn't know whether she liked the idea or not.
Alexa winked at her. "I've lined up Faucon Creusse to be your
companion."
Then Marian realized what Bastien had called her. She looked up
at him as he led her from the Keep to outside the Castle and to the
shortcut through the maze. "You know I'm a Circlet?"
Bastien shrugged. "The strength of your Power was evident as
soon as you landed inside the pentagram. Fifth Degree Circlet."
Marian gasped.
Alexa hurried forward to open the garden door and went through.
Marian and Bastien ducked under the lintel, then Bastien closed the
door behind them.
The scent was marvelous, comprising of early summer flowers, the
brithenwood tree itself, sweet grasses and the faint tang of the
deep forest to the west. That reminded her of Jaquar's scent. She
automatically tested their bond. It was gone. She'd cut it
deliberately. Marian swallowed.
Alexa was helping her to the seat around the tree. Then the
small woman shifted from foot to foot before Marian.
Alexa cleared her throat. "Urn, Marian. Uh, I don't want this to
be a shock to you like it was to me." Alexa touched Marian's
hair.
Marian jolted. "I've gone white?" No! She was far too young.
"No," Alexa said.
Marian relaxed.
"Not totally," Alexa said. She took a wide lock of Marian's hair
at her right temple and tugged gently. "Just this much."
"Feels big," Marian muttered.
"It's very attractive," Alexa soothed.
Bastien kissed Marian's fingertips. "Very attractive. The color
of your hair is exquisite. The streak only emphasizes it."
"Oh," Marian said hollowly. She was torn between wanting a
mirror immediately, and hiding forever from the fact that she wore
a silver Lladranan Power streak.
Alexa plopped down beside Marian. The Swordmarshall fluffed her
hair. "The question is, will my silver stuff grow golden with age?
That's what happens here-the older the mages get, the more golden
it becomes."
Marian chuckled. "You aren't a native. I don't think so."
"I don't, either." Alexa sighed.
The short exchange had lightened Marian's mood.
There was a rustle in the branches above her. She looked up and
saw a blue squirrel. She blinked, but it remained blue.
The Song chose wisely when it Summoned you, Circlet
Marian, Sinafin said. You are close to fulfilling your
specific task.
"Not yet," Marian said quietly. "Not until I tell everyone
tomorrow at the Marshalls' Council Meeting my deductions." She
frowned, fretting. "And there's one bit I don't quite
remember...."
Alexa hugged her. "You will."
Bastien smiled with wicked charm. "You're an Exotique
Circlet-nothing will escape you."
Sinafin dropped a brithenwood branchlet in Marian's lap.
29
Tuck woke Marian up by tugging at her hair. "Pretty, pretty," he
said. "Now you look like a Circlet."
Marian grunted and rolled over, feeling as stiff and sore as if
she'd been beaten. Groaning, she stretched cautiously, inch by
inch. The bruises from when she'd pinballed through the caverns
painted her skin in blues and purples. Ick.
But she could feel her muscles, and that was way over on the
plus side.
She hadn't had any nightmares. That was good, too. She buried
her head in the pillow, wanting more sleep.
Tuck nattered on. "We are going to report to the Marshalls. I
will use my amazing abilities and astound them all."
Marian cracked an eye open, saw the suite that had been
furnished for a teenage girl. Full of ruffles. It really didn't
matter. The shower had hot water and the bed was soft.
"I am going to be a star," Tuck said.
"Is that so?"
"But to be at my best, I need food." He smiled, showing
his little teeth.
She subsided back into the pillow. "Ask Jaquar-" Just that
easily, she reached for their bond, and all the hurt of a
love-affair gone bad crashed over her. She put her hands over her
heart to keep it from cracking with the grief.
Their bond was no more. She'd cut it in anger and fear and the
horror of betrayal. Nothing had changed that. She should want a
connection with him again.
Jaquar had said he hadn't betrayed her, had tried to save her,
then given her the weapon-knot. Her eyes went to where it rested on
the bedside table.
She noticed tear tracks on the pillow, and her chin wobbled.
She'd cried in her sleep for him.
But her judgment for men had been wrong again. She'd trusted a
man who could send a person to a hideous death. The original plan
had been his. He'd put the idea of sending her off into the maw of
the Dark into Chalmon's and Venetria's heads.
Tuck said, "Yes, Jaquar would feed me well, but I don't know
where he is. He must be in the Castle, but his heart does not beat
in the Keep. I need food now. Much food. Excellent quality food.
Now!"
Marian was distracted by Tuck's observation, and it was so much
easier to consider an intellectual problem than to wrestle with the
emotions ripping her apart. At this moment thinking was good,
feeling just plain hurt. Switch to reasoning mode.
"You can tell who is in the building by their heartbeats? You
can recognize that?"
Tuck pulled her hair.
"Ouch!"
He grinned at the two strands he held in his paws. "You must
listen to me, and get me food."
They weren't in Jaquar's or Bossgond's Towers, where Tuck had
stashes. Marian certainly was his caretaker again, and she didn't
want him running around the big Keep by himself. "All right, all
right." As she sat up, another groan tore from her. Despite the
couple of weeks she'd spent here, being physically active,
yesterday had tested her body to its limits.
Grumbling, she moved to the wardrobe. It held two gowns. One
she'd worn for the past two days. She checked it, but there was no
sign of the tear she'd seen in the Dark's cavern. It looked and
smelled fresh, but she didn't know if she could wear it again. Too
many memories-donning it in the morning after great sex with
Jaquar... No. She should not think about that.
She should focus on Tuck and her presentation-report,
debriefing?-with the Marshalls and Circlets. Probably some
high-ranking Chevaliers and other community representatives to the
Castle. There'd be a full house. It would be as bad as her
doctorate oral exams.
Somehow it didn't scare her. She wondered if that was just the
nonchalance that came after a truly terrifying,
life-threatening-and-worse experience, or if she'd grown beyond her
compulsion to be perfect. She hoped she'd grown.
"Come on!" Tuck hopped up and down on her bare foot, his claws
scratching.
Marian took the other dress out. It was purple.
Still, she put it on and scooped up Tuck. He'd like the elegant
Marshalls' dining room. She wondered what the reaction would be to
a hamster sitting on a linen tablecloth, eating fruits and nuts
from a bowl. The thought amused her.
When she opened the door of the suite, a rangy man in well-worn
Chevalier flying leathers pushed away from the wall of the
entryway.
His bow to her was minimal and had little grace. "Marrec
Guardpont. Chevalier attached to Lady Hallard's household.
She's-"
"The Representative of the Chevaliers to the Marshalls. I take
it you are my escort?"
"That's right."
She studied him. Tall and strong like most Chevaliers. He looked
tough, with lines beside his steady brown eyes. He had small
streaks of silver at each temple, denoting modest Power. Marrec
radiated solid responsibility.
"1 saw you in the Nom de Nom a couple of nights ago, and you
were with Lady Hallard last night when everyone Summoned me from
the Dark's nest."
"I added my bit," he said, then gestured for her to go before
him down the stairs.
He was a man of few words, but the knife on his right thigh and
the sword on his left made her think he was most definitely a man
of action.
Running bootfalls of more than one person sounded. Marrec
slipped in front of Marian, drew his sword, tensed.
Surely there wasn't any threat in the Castle? In the very
Keep?
"Let's be cautious," Marrec said, and Marian stiffened. Was he
telepathic? Empathic?
At the next crossing corridor, guards ran past. They didn't even
look at Marian and Marrec. The rest of the walk to the dining room
was without incident.
Bossgond found them as Marian was finishing the last bite of the
croissant that came with her eggs Benedict. Tuck was still
munching. Marian had had to remind him time and again that a
hamster with cheek pouches stuffed to twice his size was not
elegant or star material.
As soon as Marrec saw Bossgond, he pushed his chair back, stood,
bowed to her and inclined his head to the older mage, then left the
dining room.
"The Marshalls and other Circlets await," Bossgond said as he
stopped by their table. He eyed Tuck. "The hamster will show us
what occurred during your tribulation in the Dark's nest?"
Tuck withdrew his nose from his bowl and sat up straight, paws
curled inward. "Yes," he said, then opened and curved his mouth
roundly in the way Marian knew meant he was about to broadcast.
She picked him up and stroked him, head to tail. He wiggled in
pleasure. "Not yet, Tuck. Let's save it for the Marshalls." She set
him on her shoulder and he began grooming, paying particular
attention to his whiskers.
"I'm ready," she said, but now her stomach jittered.
Bossgond took her elbow. "Jaquar will be present, and
afterwards..."
Marian frowned down at him. "Yes?"
Sighing, Bossgond led her from the room and down the wide
corridor. Finally, as they made the last turn, he said, "Jaquar and
I collaborated on a Ritual to Send you back to Exotique Terre and
return you-and perhaps your brother- from there. The timing is
difficult, but we think it might be done within a week."
At that moment, Luthan Vauxveau, Bastien's brother, opened a
door, saw them and gestured them to him. On the door was a fancy
harp. Underneath was written in elegant gold lettering "Marshalls'
Council Chamber."
The Marshalls and Bossgond's Circlets sat in a long rectangular
room with a scarred and dented wooden table and elaborately carved
chairs.
Alexa took a chair with a stack of pillows atop it. The chair
back showed a sword. Bastien sat to her left, in a chair carved
with a shield. Other Marshalls followed, in color-coded pairs,
sitting in appropriately carved chairs.
Luthan Vauxveau took the chair that showed a woman lifting her
arms, head thrown back to the stars, her mouth open. He was the
Representative of the Singer, the Lladranan oracle, Marian
remembered.
With a big smile, Bossgond slipped into the chair with a carved
back of a tower. He tugged Marian's hand and she sat next to him in
a chair with a shield. The other Circlets followed. Jaquar was at
the far end of the table. After one glance at his strained
expression caused her stomach to pitch, Marian looked away,
observing others.
Lady Hallard greeted Marian with a short nod, then took the
chair showing an almost three-dimensional volaran on its back.
Everything neat and tidy. Everyone in their place. Marian
approved.
As soon as they all settled, Lady Knight Swordmarshall Thealia
Germaine called the Council to order, then introduced Marian-as a
Circlet of the Fifth Degree.
Marian stood, not knowing exactly where to start. Then Tuck ran
down her arm from her shoulder to her hand, which lay on the table.
He strutted to the middle of the table, sat back on his haunches,
wiggled his butt as if to get comfortable and opened a rounded
mouth.
A projection like a hologram appeared in front of him, in a
three-foot sphere.
Marian stood dazed and vacant-eyed in the middle of a
series of pentacles. She woke suddenly and completely, then
threw herself against a barrier.
It didn't give.
"Line up against the second pentacle immediately,"
Chalmon commanded.
Tuck showed everything in gruesome, colorful, amplified
detail-from his own perspective. Marian couldn't watch, wanted to
put her hands over her eyes, to slink from the room. Instead she
sank back into her chair, closed her eyes and suffered through the
betrayal again.
She heard a chair slide against the wooden floor, and someone
came to stand behind her. Jaquar didn't touch her, didn't try to
renew the bond between them, but his aura wrapped around her in
warm support. She didn't know how he did that, but she was
grudgingly grateful for his presence. Everyone else around her was
completely enthralled by the show.
Now and then people gasped with horror, swore or muttered
phrases she didn't understand. The comments around her were often
drowned out by her whimpering, moaning, occasional screams in the
movie.
Her hands fisted in her lap. Bad enough to relive this, without
understanding that she hadn't shown much courage.
When she heard Tuck squeaking wildly, "Marian, Marian, Marian!"
she opened her eyes to see herself, face expressionless and body
completely motionless, surrounded by a backdrop of black, seething
smoke.
Marian froze in her seat. The larder. Obviously Tuck hadn't been
affected.
In the hologram her eyes darted from side to side, but appeared
unseeing. She opened her mouth and screamed so loudly that the
small diamond-shaped windowpanes rattled and jolted several of the
people at the table. Jaquar tensed behind her. She realized he was
swearing under his breath, words she couldn't guess at.
Now Marian couldn't look away from herself hanging there. In the
hologram, her hands fisted and lifted before her face. "Maybe we
should fast-forward, Tuck?"
Alexa choked. She looked pale and turned tear-filled eyes to
Marian. "What was happening to you?" Her whisper was hoarse.
Shrugging, Marian said, "Nothing. I felt nothing. No physical
sensations at all." She grimaced. "That's why you see all the
contortions-"
"Quiet!" snapped Thealia, cocking her head to listen.
On screen, Marian was tapping her heels together and chanting,
"There's no place like home."
She squirmed in her chair.
Alexa choked on a sob, sniffled. Her lips curved upward.
"Might've worked, who knows?"
"It didn't." Then she realized that in Tuck's movie, a low chant
hummed around her. She strained to catch the words. Everyone at the
table did.
Thealia hissed and leaned back in her chair. "I can't quite
understand the words. They're mangled."
A murmur of agreement ran around the room.
Marian looked at Alexa. "Alexa?"
Alexa shrugged. "No, of course not."
"They're French," Marian said.
Everyone stared at her.
Flushing, Alexa said, "I'm bad with languages."
Marian tilted her head. "And maybe some bastardized Latin.
Anyway it started out with the witches' scene from
Macbeth."
Alexa's mouth dropped open. "You read Shakespeare in
French?" Then her brows drew together. "Like 'eye of newt,
toe of frog'?" she asked in English.
"Yes." Marian translated for the Lladranans. "We're listening to
archaic French and Latin demonic spells. Maybe that's why I came to
the conclusion I did."
At that moment, Marian-in-the-movie twitched and began
screaming, "Sinafin!"
"I think we should definitely stop this production," Marian
said.
"No, let's watch it to the end," Thealia said.
Sitting back, Marian noticed that Jaquar had taken his seat at
the end of the table. His hands were tight fists atop the table and
he appeared to be staring into space.
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony filled the room, and both Marian and
Alexa broke into relieved laughter.
Luthan leaned forward and asked Marian, "What is the name of
this Song again, Circlet Marian?"
"It's the Ninth Symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven."
His lips moved as if memorizing the information. Then he nodded
and resumed his impassive expression.
Tuck soon finished with the show and Beethoven's music cut off
abruptly. Tuck exhaled a huge sigh and rocked onto his back, paws
curled. If Marian hadn't felt the strong thrum of his Song through
their bond, she'd have thought him dead. Not even a digit
twitched.
"Tuck!" Alexa cried.
"He's weary, but not debilitated," Marian said. She scooped him
up and cradled him in her hands. "You were a star," Marian
whispered to him. He opened one gleaming eye, closed it. Then she
set him on her lap.
"Get some food and water for the hamster," Thealia ordered.
A woman Marian hadn't noticed before stared at Tuck, then
hurried to the door. "What kind of food?"
"Nuts, Umilla, bits of fresh fruit," Alexa said patiently, and
Marian realized the serving woman was a black-and-white, like
Bastien.
Marian felt erratic bursts of Power pulsing from her.
The woman bobbed her acknowledgment and scurried from the
room.
"So." Thealia tapped her finger on the table, gazing at Marian.
"What are your conclusions?"
Inhaling deeply, Marian prepared herself. "The master is a
Circlet gone bad."
"Over to the Dark Side." Alexa's mouth twitched.
Marian blinked. "Yes. When I was with him, I sensed he'd
apprenticed with a Circlet on one of the islands, but the man
failed when he tried to raise his Tower."
One of the female Circlets shivered. "When that happens, a mind
can be fractured, the energy can warp one physically, too."
"A Circlet of the First or Second Degree," Bossgond said,
shrugging with dismissal.
Irritation spurted through Marian. The people in this room were
the most Powerful in the land, perhaps in the world of Amee, but
most displayed the arrogance that came with such power.
She met Alexa's steady green gaze. The woman dipped her head and
Marian felt another tie of kinship. Marian had all too often been
sneered at when she appeared in the "society" circles her mother
preferred. And Marian knew there were several "misfits" at the
table. Bastien, the black-and-white; herself; Alexa, the Exotique
and former foster child; even Jaquar. He was a man who'd been
abandoned as a boy because of his Exotique coloring. Yet all of
them had found their way into the circles of Power.
The door opened and the serving woman brought in a large bowl of
nuts, a grainy composite that looked like granola, and bits of
apple and pear. Tuck perked up in Marian's lap.
He reached the bowl as it was placed on the table and dove in,
chirping with delight.
"This 'Master.'" Bossgond fingered his lower lip. "He was very
large. I can think of only four male Circlets who failed to raise
their Tower." He named them. "And none of them was above average
height or weight. Raising a Tower can warp you, but not add
mass."
"Perhaps the one he serves gave him...more, or his diet." Marian
shut her mouth. She didn't want to think about the tentacles on his
face and what his diet might be.
Bossgond scanned the room. "All the Circlets here have raised
their Towers. We cover several generations. Can you think of anyone
I didn't?"
Silence held the room for several heartbeats.
"Bonhlyar," Jaquar said. "He was normal, too." An undertone
in his voice made Marian think that Bonhlyar hadn't considered
Jaquar normal.
"Bonhlyar," Marian muttered. It rang a bell. "Not-oh! He calls
himself Mahlyar, now." She'd received a lot of information from his
blood and spittle that had seared her.
"Ah," said Bossgond. "I was never convinced that his Circlet
Testing was properly witnessed."
"What else did you learn of the master?" Thealia asked.
"He serves the Dark. He is the one who breeds and organizes the
horrors, both in the maw and in a breeding ground to the north of
Lladrana," Marian said.
"We knew that," said a Circlet.
"I didn't. No one told me," Marian shot back.
There was an embarrassed silence.
"We were informed rather late ourselves," Thealia said steadily.
"Obviously the Singer has been right all along that the efforts of
the various communities need to be integrated."
"The master forms them into battle groups, and orders them where
the Dark wants them sent. The Dark has Power to transport them from
the maw to other places, but not in large groups."
Marian licked her lips. "There's more." She felt the weight of
their stares. "I think the Dark is not native to Lladrana."
"That has been extrapolated before," Thealia agreed.
"I think it came through the Dimensional Corridor." Marian
frowned. "Though when I was in the nest, I got this feeling of..
.immensity.. .immense age and immense size."
"And immense evil," Alexa said. "Fire-breathing dreeths." She
covered her eyes. "The master got that idea from me. I'm so sorry."
She shook her head. "You were wise to shield your mind."
Marian blinked. "How did you know?"
Alexa dropped her hands. "Weren't you watching-no, of course you
shouldn't have. But the Power aura around your head was quite
clear."
They saw much more than she would have believed they could. It
had been a mistake not to watch, not to see what everyone else had.
She stiffened her spine. She'd have to live the events a third
time, have Tuck repeat it for her again, so she could observe every
nuance. She hated making mistakes. More often than not, they
hurt.
Thealia leaned forward and pierced Marian with her gaze. "You
were Sent there and Summoned back. When you were there, you formed
an image of the location of the nest in your mind. Tell me you know
where the nest is physically."
Her voice held the command of a spell, but only her emotional
need affected Marian.
30
Marian looked around, managed a reassuring smile. "Do you have a
globe?"
Someone whistled and a big globe appeared before her. Marian
located Lladrana, followed the curve of the continent northwest
beyond the two seas-one landlocked, one not- and pointed to an
island of one high volcanic mountain. "Here," she said.
"Of course," whispered Bossgond.
"Damn!" Thealia slapped the table. She shook her head. "Too far
to launch an immediate attack. We might ask for volunteers to
survey the place."
"Not yet," Jaquar said. "Let the Tower observers gain as much
information about it from all the planes, first."
Thealia pursed her lips, nodded. "Fine." She looked at Marian
again. "Other conclusions? You said you knew why it was
invading."
"I think the Dark originally came through the Dimensional
Corridor here." She struggled to put into words the deductions
she'd formed from clues she'd picked up unconsciously. She'd been
too terrified at the time to put the puzzle together, but had since
examined every detail. Shrugging, she pulled Tuck from where he was
wallowing in his food bowl and put him back on the table. "Replay
that time-" She gulped. "After the master struck me."
Tuck started the replay with Marian throwing the brithenwood
stick into the master's eye. Oddly enough, the bloody scene
comforted her. She'd defended herself, and hadn't done too
badly.
Then there was a roaring, a chanting not quite in sync. "This is
what I heard. At the time, I was understandably not listening." She
managed a strangled laugh at the memory of being suspended over the
room full of monsters. "But I remembered later."
Again the others frowned in concentration. Shook their
heads.
"Tuck, can you choose the loudest group of chanters and refine
the sound to project only their voices?" She had no idea of his
capabilities.
Tuck stopped, waddled over to his water dish and lapped. Then he
centered himself in the table, sat with paws curled inward and
opened his mouth.
"Get it. Get it. Get it. We will get it, Master. Master.
Master." The last word emphasized the sibilant.
"Sangviles." Jaquar choked.
A chill pall enveloped the room. Sangviles feasted on Power.
Every person here would be a tasty treat. Marian shivered.
"I think the Dark entered Amee by the Dimensional Corridor and
arrived in Lladrana first. When it moved on, it left something
behind, and wants it back," Marian whispered, but the chamber was
so quiet it was as if she shouted.
There was a full minute's silence.
"That's all?" someone sputtered. "Just give it back."
"You're not thinking," Alexa snapped. "Whatever it needs would
only make it stronger, I'm sure. What we don't want is an
even more formidable enemy. It is an immense Dark evil as it is,
affecting the entire world of Amee. Amee cries," she ended
softly.
Marian lifted her chin and swept the table with her gaze,
meeting each person's eyes except Jaquar's. "Both Alexa and I know
that Exotique Terre's Song is much stronger than Amee's, yet
Exotique Terre probably doesn't have the same abundance and potency
of Power. So how much greater was the Power on Amee before the Dark
drained Amee's and broke its Song? Every minute the Dark feasts on
Amee."
Bossgond grunted. "A very good question." A smile flickered on
his lips. "Both the Exotiques are excellent students, good thinkers
and natural Power Users. The Song would not send us anything less
in this time of need." He stood and bowed to Alexa, then turned and
bowed to Marian. "Good work. We now know more about the master and
the Dark and the reason the Dark is invading Lladrana. There is
much we still need to learn, and ultimately we must destroy the
Dark before it demolishes Lladrana, but you have increased our
knowledge base significantly. I salute you." He bowed again.
Marian sat up straighter. "Thank you."
"I think the Marshalls will want to discuss all the information
they learned privately," Bossgond said to the Circlets. "You all,
go disperse everything you heard to the rest of the Towers. Jaquar,
come with me, we must speak of the Dimensional Corridor," he ended
coolly.
"One moment," Swordmarshall Thealia said. "The Marshalls
understood last night that Exotique Marian did us a great service,
so we wish to thank her with a presentation of our own."
Bossgond settled down into his chair, eyes bright with
interest.
Thealia lifted the speaker-horn. "Come in, now, please,
Medica."
The door opened and a woman wearing a dark red tabard with a big
white cross entered, holding on her hip a baby girl about a year
old. The woman was a Medica-a doctor-healer. The child was a
black-and-white, a person of potentially great Power that was
fragmented and erratic.
Marian tensed. This was the child that had nearly drowned in
jerir. She'd swallowed the magical brew-inhaled it, too.
The Medica sat in a chair with a shield carved on it. She put
the little girl, clad in a diaper, on the table. The baby grinned
and started crawling as fast as she could down the table.
Marian looked around. The Circlets observed the baby detachedly,
the Marshalls wore goofy smiles and tried to attract her attention.
She scuttled directly to Thealia's husband, patted his round
face.
"Her name is Nyja," the Medica said. "Like many
black-and-whites, before her dip in the jerir, her Power flow and
mental processes were splintered." She inhaled. "I have copies of
my notes of her condition before and after her plunge."
Marian felt Alexa simmer with anger through their bond, and sent
comfort to her.
Like most black-and-whites, the child was subject to
frissons, convulsions," the Medica continued.
Bastien, now master of his wild black-and-white Power,
stiffened. Alexa twined her fingers with his.
The Medica pushed a book that looked like a journal onto the
table. "I understand that your brother has that symptom?"
"He has muscle spasms," Marian said. The little girl was basking
in the attention, going from person to person to play with each.
Her Song was clear and steady and strong.
"Ahem." The healer cleared her throat and shifted a little
farther from Alexa. "The night the babe was immersed in the jerir,
she inhaled the liquid into her lungs, swallowed some, and-" the
Medica sucked in a breath "-had a tiny hole in her skull. The jerir
reached her brain."
"What!" Alexa jumped to her feet, furious.
The baby began to whimper. Alexa tromped to where the child sat
and scooped her up, cuddling her. The little one settled against
Alexa's breasts, obviously comfortable with her.
The healer had paled and did not meet Alexa's eyes. "We Medicas
are very well versed in head trauma, treatment and surgery. The
hole was drilled a few moments before the jerir experi-uh, therapy,
and closed as soon as I revived her."
Alexa rocked and patted the baby, narrowing her eyes at the
Medica. "I don't remember that."
"I beg your pardon, Swordmarshall, but you were not in a very
observant state at the time." The healer still didn't meet Alexa's
eyes.
"Feycoocu, is this true?" asked Alexa.
Yes, projected Sinafin mentally, strolling out from under
Alexa's chair as a long-haired white Persian cat.
Alexa snorted. "I can see I won't get any answers from you-
you're a cat." Her mouth snapped shut, then she sent a fulminating
glance around the room. "I won't stand for such experiments,
do you hear?"
Thealia rose and took the little girl from Alexa, looking down
at the Exotique Marshall. "We wanted to save our
granddaughter."
Bastien curved an arm around Alexa and brought her against his
body. "They tried something different to cure Nyja and it worked,
evened out her Power flow."
Alexa fingered her baton.
"You think her brain was affected beneficially by the jerir?"
asked Marian.
"Yes."
Marian trembled with excitement, with hope. "My brother's
disease is one of the nerves, particularly in the brain and the
spinal cord." But did a black-and-white's fragmented Power flow
have any resemblance to multiple sclerosis? Could the jerir liquid
help Andrew? And would he have to have brain surgery in Lladrana to
cure him?
The Medica rose, then placed her hand on the journal. "These are
copies of our notes regarding Nyja. She is an exceptional child,
now." She gave a half bow to the room and left, back straight.
Marian stood and took the book, held it close. "Thank you," she
said to Thealia.
Bossgond rose and snapped his fingers. All attention focused on
him. He stood like a king, like the most Powerful magician in the
world. "Exotique Marian was my Apprentice. I believe she has proven
her worth to all of you. She would be an invaluable addition to the
Tower and to all Lladrana in our fight against the Dark.
"I think you all know of her circumstances. She has an ill
brother on Exotique Terre-Jaquar Dumont and other Circlets are
prepared to return her to her home with the hope that we may Summon
her back once again, and perhaps her brother, too. Who will stand
with us in this endeavor?"
Thealia laid her hand on her husband's shoulder. "I speak for
myself and my Pairling in offering our aid." She glanced around the
room. "I would prefer if all the Marshalls agreed to be part of
this Summoning, as we are the most trained in the technique."
"There are others to be Summoned in the future, too?" a Circlet
said.
Luthan rose. "The Song predicts that the battle against the Dark
will be most effectively pursued and won if four other
Exotiques are Summoned. The other segments of our society are
interested in people who will work with them. The best times for
the Summonings over the next two years are known."
Bossgond said, "The calculations regarding Exotique Circlet
Marian's travels through the Dimensional Corridor are specific to
her and will not interfere with any other Summonings."
A burly-looking Swordmarshall rolled his shoulders. "More
Summoning spells lie ahead of us. My Shield and I will participate
in Summoning Circlet Marian. Good practice."
All of the other Marshalls murmured agreement. A huge burden of
stress dropped from Marian's shoulders. She exhaled a prayer of
relief.
Nodding at the Circlets, Bossgond said, "If you wish to take
part in this exercise, both Sending and Summoning, please let me
know." He turned to Jaquar. "Come with me and we will refine our
plans. Marian, we will be ready to speak with you in about an
hour."
Everything was moving so quickly. And so well! Marian just stood
and watched the others file out until only Alexa and Bastien were
left.
"We'll be behind you all the way," Alexa said. "If it can be
done, it will be done."
"Thank you," Marian said.
Marian sat at the desk in her Castle apartment and studied the
vial of jerir Chevalier Faucon had given her. It was a viscous dark
liquid the consistency of thick maple syrup. When she held it up to
the window, it was opaque to the light, but deep within the glass
she thought she saw a sparkle or two. She didn't know what that
was, and nothing in the research notes mentioned sparkles.
She'd already read the notes on baby Nyja, how much better the
child had progressed after the submersion in the jerir than before.
Drawings showed where the hole had been made in her skull. Marian
had leafed through a fat volume on head injuries and surgery.
Apparently the Castle Medicas had made that a specialty for
generations.
Her thoughts kept straying from her studies, particularly since
she thought she'd absorbed everything she could about the jerir and
healing. She continued to consider the people of Lladrana.
The Marshalls and Circlets had ill-hidden their excitement at
the information she'd given them. She suspected that they didn't
think the price she paid was too high and that the ends justified
the means.
Only Alexa, Bastien and Bossgond, the three closest to her, knew
her trials and what it had cost her in terror and pain.
As for Jaquar, he'd looked as if he had suffered every step of
the way with her. She still could not banish him from her thoughts.
She shifted in her seat as she thought of their lost bond.
She tried to think about him in a logical fashion. Since she'd
sensed facts about the Dark's maw, had reviewed them, and then had
come to conclusions about the inhabitants in a way that had helped
all of Lladrana, hadn't she also come to conclusions with Jaquar
and Bossgond?
Yes. She leaned back against the soft pillow back of the chair
and closed her eyes, remembering the atmosphere of Jaquar's
Tower-the grief and rage and despair. She could believe him when he
said his original plan was made in the craze of vengeance.
Objectively, she could envision how the whole scheme unfolded. .
.and how Jaquar might have backed off when his sorrow lessened and
when he came to know her, as he'd said.
After all, she'd only had that brief, deadly premonition about
him once, the first time they'd met.
But reason did nothing to ease the very real hurt.
The little waterfall clock tinkled that it was time to join
Bossgond and Jaquar in the chambers now allocated to the Tower, a
suite of several rooms on the top floor of the west wall of the
Keep. Prime space, she knew. She wished Tuck had been her PDA alarm
clock and accompanied her, but after the meeting, Sinafin had
carried him to the brithenwood garden.
Marian hesitated to see Jaquar again, didn't know what emotions
would batter her. She set her shoulders, donning her most
professional manner.
Picking up the vial of jerir, she stared at it again, seeking
the glimmers. They seemed to symbolize hope, and she took comfort
from the small bottle. She put it in her pocket as an odd talisman
and touched it as she walked to the Tower's suite. She recalled how
Alexa fingered her baton, and thought that if all went well, Marian
herself would have a telescoping wand to hold and keep her fingers
busy in the future.
Though she ran her thumb only softly over the doorharp, they
heard her, and Bossgond impatiently shouted, "Enter." After a
seconds' hesitation, Marian set her fingers in the door latch and
pulled it. The door opened outward and she slipped into the room,
then closed the door behind her.
Bossgond and Jaquar stood by a large library table under a bank
of windows. The desk was covered with papers held down by various
objects.
The men were a study in contrasts-Jaquar big and handsome and
young, Bossgond small and bony and wrinkled.
But the sharpness in their eyes showed their minds, and
Bossgond's Song had an echoing depth and brilliance that Jaquar had
not yet achieved.
They were master Sorcerers.
Now she was, too.
Jaquar met her gaze with dark blue eyes shadowed with pain he
made no effort to mask. She had to look away, especially since her
loss of their bond throbbed with the same hurt.
"Come here, come here," said Bossgond. "Look at this sketch of
the Dimensional Corridor that Jaquar and I have done."
She walked over to the table. The white papers only emphasized
the green of the fields and forests seen from the windows.
The paper on top looked old. It showed an octagonal tube with
round doors or portals on each side. She touched her forefinger to
the drawing and inhaled sharply as the residual Song of the person
who'd drawn this conjured up the brief vision she'd had of the
corridor between worlds.
"Yes," she said. "It was like this, except I didn't notice all
the doors, or that there were other angles with portals."
Bossgond said, "We believe this corridor links eight worlds, all
generally alike, and the easiest passage is between opposite doors.
The drawing shows the axis of Exotique Terre and Amee as the angles
that are ninety degrees to us, or straight up. We think the angles
slowly rotate so that eventually Amee is closer to some other world
than Exotique Terre, but it is only from Exotique Terre that we
have Summoned others."
"So I should ignore the other angular walls with doors if I am
able to control my trip through the corridor." She sure didn't want
to get stuck somewhere else, where dimensional travelers weren't
understood or welcomed. Dreadful scenarios flashed through her
mind. She banished them, concentrated on the drawing.
"That would be safest," Jaquar said in a raspier tone than
usual.
"Indeed," Bossgond said absently, riffling through a stack of
papers.
"The Dark knows of the corridor and can open it," she
whispered.
Jaquar nodded abruptly. "Yes. Because it sent a render after
Alexa. But we will protect you." His words hummed with a solemn
vow.
Bossgond crowed when he found the page he wanted. "With the help
of some of the other Circlets, we've calculated the days when you
should be Sent and when we will Summon you back."
He shoved a paper at her. "This copy is for you, to take when we
return you. These are the recent and upcoming dates that the
Dimensional Corridor resonates best between Exotique Terre and
Amee. As you can see, the best time to Send you would be the day
after tomorrow, but that is far too soon to prepare us all for a
Sending Ritual. If it were a Summoning, it would be different-we
know how to connect and perform that spell, since we did so last
night, but a Sending.. .no."
Marian took the paper and glanced down at it. She saw a bold red
line-graph that peaked a couple of days from now, smaller apexes
along the line. Lladranan dates were written horizontally beneath
peaks and valleys. The largest peak, at the far left side of the
paper, was the day the Marshalls had Summoned her. Another high
mark was last night, when many of the Marshalls, Circlets and
Chevaliers had pulled her from the nest.
Bossgond tapped the page Marian held. "Also included is the
specific hour that is best for our Summoning Rituals." He looked at
her from under lowered brows. "Since you were first Summoned when
you were performing your own Ritual, I think it makes the
connection between us and the chance for success all that stronger
if you do so again. I have written the chant that we will be using
to Summon you back, and the chant you should do at the same
time."
Marian licked her lips. "I see." She smiled weakly. "You've been
busy."
"I've had help," he said gruffly, nodding toward Jaquar but
looking past him. "Circlet Dumont drafted the chant." Bossgond's
voice turned stiff. "He knows you better in some ways than I do.
Exotique Alyeka reviewed the words this morning."
"Quite an effort. My thanks," Marian said. She, too, dipped her
head to Jaquar but didn't meet his eyes.
Bossgond said, "Your task now is to place the dates of Exotique
Terre beneath the Lladranan dates, so the time corresponds to the
moons and days that are the most familiar to you." He gestured to
another small desk. "Do that now, and when you are finished, you
can go." He looked pointedly at Jaquar. "The tension in this room
is too high."
"Yes, Bossgond," Marian said. "When do you think you will Send
me?"
He pointed to a yellow star on a date six days ahead. "Here,
within the week, and the Summoning a few days after that."
Marian stared at the paper in dismay. Those times were a lot
less favorable than all the previous times, and she wanted it
better-perfect-for Andrew. "It's diminishing. Couldn't we wait
until it builds again? Surely it does."
"Yes," Jaquar said flatly. "But the Chevaliers have already
approached the Marshalls to do a joint Summoning for an Exotique of
their own. I, and some other Circlets-but not Bossgond-have agreed
to participate."
Marian forced herself not to tremble. "I see." She attempted
another smile. "My wanting to return to Exotique Terre and then
come back here has placed a lot of stress on you all."
Jaquar strode forward, held out his hand as if to touch her,
then dropped it. "We need you." He cleared his throat. "Right,
Bossgond?"
"Yes. Go do your work, Marian." Bossgond bent back over the
table.
She took the paper to the small desk, picked up a feather pen
and tapped her cheek with it. The first, highest peak showed the
date of her Summoning underneath. It had been the night of the full
moon on Earth. She'd never forget the May night-the full moon, the
day before Andrew left for his retreat, the date of the big charity
ball that her mother had expected Marian to attend. She knew the
date well, and though she had come to think in terms of the days of
the Lladranan moons-moon months-she'd kept track of the time that
had passed. It only took her a moment to finish.
But before she could show it to Bossgond for his approval, the
Castle's klaxon sounded.
31
Bossgond and Jaquar looked toward the south and the volaran
Landing Field. Marian jumped from her seat, stuffed the piece of
paper in her pocket, the note wrapping around the vial of
jerir.
Hurrying to the windows, she reached them just in time to see
the first flight of volarans take off-all the Marshalls. She caught
her breath at the awe-inspiring flight. Sword and Shield Pairs in
colorful battle armor flew, helms glistening.
The Circlets watched in silence as Chevaliers followed the
Marshalls, lifting into the sky.
Marian bit her lip. "They fly to battle often, don't they?" Her
hand went to the paper in her pocket. "What if they are gone- or an
alarm sounds during my Ritual?" She hated being so selfish, but
didn't want to contemplate failure.
Again Jaquar lifted a hand as if to cup her shoulder. Again he
didn't touch her. Bossgond threw an arm around her and
squeezed.
"You are a Circlet, an Exotique. Lladrana needs you. The Tower
needs you. I am sure the Marshalls will do as they did before-"
"Summon us at night? Both Alexa and I were Summoned at night,
and it is rare for the horrors to invade at night." She was
crushing the paper. "But all the rest of the good times to Summon
are during the day." She'd noticed that.
"The Marshalls will commit to Summoning you and perhaps some of
the more Powerful Chevaliers, too. If the alarm rings, others will
go-lesser ranked Chevaliers."
Blood drained from her head. She leaned on Bossgond. "In that
case, in sending Chevaliers without the most Powerful, I may be the
cause of deaths."
"There are always priorities, some people who are more
expendable than others. I assure you that the Marshalls protect
Exotique Alexa more than any other person in their group, and they
would do the same for you," Bossgond said.
Marian didn't like that thought, wanted for an instant to be
held by Jaquar instead of Bossgond, since his face had gone
expressionless. She sensed he didn't like that option, either.
Straightening her spine, she stepped back. "I'm finished with my
exercise." She showed the crumpled paper to Bossgond. He glanced at
it and grunted approval.
"I saw the feycoocu flying with Alexa and Bastien, so Tuck
should be back in my rooms," Marian said. The strain of being with
Jaquar, wanting him and their link, and disliking herself for that
wanting, was becoming too much.
"Tuck will probably not wish to be Sent back to Exotique Terre
with you," Jaquar said quietly. "May I have your permission to ask
him to stay in his house in my Tower?"
Once more Marian had visions of Tuck being dissected by Earth
scientists. "I don't think he should return with me. You may ask
him, and if I am not able to return to Lladrana after I am sent, I
would like you to offer to be his companion." She didn't trust
Bossgond entirely with Tuck, either.
Jaquar bowed deeply. "I thank you for your faith in me in this
matter."
Marian had no answer for that. She stared at Jaquar, wishing
he'd been the incredible man she'd considered him, a man in her
eyes that had fantasy aspects. Too good to be true. But he was all
too human, and her disillusionment would take a while to fade. He
had plotted her death.
Her judgment of men sucked.
Emotions churned inside her.
She turned to Bossgond with one last question. "What's
next?"
He scanned the room around him with approval. "It has been a
long time since I stayed at the Castle, and I've never been given
the freedom of their library." He shrugged. "I don't think they
know what treasures they have. The closer I bond with them, the
easier it will be for us to link during Rituals. Also-" he grinned
"-they are an excellent source of monster parts for spell
ingredients."
That was another thing she didn't want to think of that might
roil her feelings-Alexa and Bastien at war, fighting monsters, and
claiming trophies of those that tried to kill them and were
destroyed instead.
"So you want to stay here?" Marian asked.
"Yes. Some Circlets will visit me each day and we will tune to
each other, facilitating a link when it becomes necessary."
"You want me to remain here for the six days until I'll be Sent
back to Exotique Terre?" Marian sank into a nearby chair, trying to
ignore the hum of Jaquar's Song that insisted on feathering along
her nerves.
"Yes. The Marshalls should become better acquainted with you,
your Power, your skills."
Marian sighed and rubbed her arms. "Where are my things?"
"At my Tower," Jaquar said.
"I have them," said Bossgond at the same time.
"Spread all over the countryside as usual," Marian muttered.
Bossgond glared at Jaquar. "You rent a volaran and gather
all Marian's possessions in your Tower. I," he continued
grandly, "will tell my cook to pack your things. Jaquar can fly to
Alf Island, pick up the rest and deliver them here."
Jaquar narrowed his eyes but said nothing.
"Don't you want to check on your dimensional telescope?" Marian
asked.
Bossgond's face went blank. The hair on the back of Marian's
neck rose. He was definitely keeping something from her. She popped
from her chair and gripped the front of his tunic. "Andrew is all
right, isn't he?"
The old mage patted her hands. "He is alive and as well as can
be expected." He craned to scowl at Jaquar. "What are you waiting
for?"
Lifting an eyebrow, Jaquar said, "I have another task I must
complete before I leave. I will, of course, follow your
orders."
Marian got the distinct feeling that both Bossgond and Jaquar
himself were punishing him for his actions. It made her
uncomfortable.
Jaquar glanced at her, and she saw that despite his casual
manner and cool words, his eyes were stormy. Was he watching her to
see if she approved of him flagellating himself?
"You are welcome to stay in my Tower, ever and always,
Marian."
"Circlet of the Fifth Degree Marian," Bossgond said pointedly.
"When she returns she will be raising her own Tower, and I know
she's chosen a place on Alf Island, with me!"
"The stress in this room is certainly beyond what my frail
nerves can stand," Marian said. She spared a sober look for each of
them. "I do want to return, but it will depend upon my brother
Andrew's needs. It isn't certain that I-or Andrew and I-will come
back to Lladrana, or that a second Summoning will be a
success."
Marian couldn't settle down. She paced the tower suite. It had
been decorated for Marwey, who now lived with her Pairling, Pascal,
and reflected the innocence of a gently bred young girl. Marian
didn't think she'd ever been that young or naive, so the room
evoked a vague discomfort in her.
Tuck had found a fluffy white pillow rimmed with lace on the bed
and claimed it as his own. He snored peacefully in the center of
the pillow, as if he were a living jewel or a gift ready to be
presented to a dignitary. She smiled briefly, then drummed her
fingers on the windowsill and stared into the maze below, tracing
the path from the Keep entrance to the Landing Field, then the
brithenwood garden. Her mind felt trapped.
No. Not just her mind. She felt constrained. People here had
moved her around at their will. Events had been happening to her
and she'd reacted. She wasn't in control of her life, wasn't even
in control of her pet hamster, who had turned into an amazing
entity.
Was she such a passive person?
She'd been learning.
She'd been developing her Power.
She'd been changing-she hoped.
Her will had been strong-at all times she'd acted with the
foremost thought of helping Andrew.
There were times when she'd taken an active role. She had
chosen Bossgond over the other Circlets when she first came. She
had taken a lover. She had fought the master.
At no time had she acted impulsively. Was that a virtue or a
failing? Perhaps she should have acted impulsively.
It was her wish to be Sent back to Boulder. It was her wish to
return to Lladrana if at all possible, and with Andrew, too. Surely
that wasn't passive?
Perhaps she couldn't sit still because she'd studied so hard
that now she felt she needed to act. She prowled each room
of the suite, looking out the windows at the day, scanning the
clouds to check the weather. Maybe she could find a good frink
storm to annihilate. She puffed out a breath and shivered when she
recalled the feel of the creatures against her skin-but it would be
something to do.
Again her gaze fell on the maze and the Landing Field beyond. It
might be interesting to have a flying lesson.
At that moment she heard the strum of her doorharp and
everything in her stilled. It was Jaquar. She knew without
stretching her senses to hear and feel his Song.
She'd instinctively been waiting for him. Somehow she'd
unconsciously understood, through their shared glances and
body language, that he would come to her.
That she was his last task before he set out on the errands
Bossgond had given him.
She cleared her throat. "Come in."
Jaquar entered, closed the door behind him and just stood and
stared at her, yearning and torment in his eyes. "I need to talk to
you." His jaw set and he held his body tight as if awaiting
dismissal or rejection.
Marian shrugged with more casualness than she felt. Her
heartbeat had picked up when he was outside her door. Her nerves
now quivered at the sight of him.
He took a pace or two into the room. "I know it is too soon for
you to forgive me." He shuddered. "I can't imagine what being in
the maw was like. I deserve your disdain.
"I will say," he added in a low tone, "that when the sangvile
led me to the nest, I was mad to get in there, to destroy it." His
mouth curved down. "I tried. I'd have given my life to do what you
did." He inhaled. "I was ashamed that I'd started the whole matter,
and once I knew you, I didn't want you to find out and lose respect
for me. So I planned on stopping it and you'd never know of my
dishonor."
"You've explained yourself. Are you done?" she asked
quietly.
Flinching, he said, "No. I wish to apologize deeply for my part
in the ordeal you faced, to ask your forgiveness."
Marian nodded slowly. "I accept your apology."
He dipped a hand in his pocket. "This is not a bribe for your
forgiveness. It is a gift. And since I know you are more concerned
for your brother than yourself, it is for him." He withdrew a small
golden stone like a tiger's eye that shone with Power. He cupped it
in his palm.
"What is it?"
"Energy, to help your brother cross with you." He shrugged a
shoulder. "I drew it down from the Castle Temple's storage
crystals. Just imagine, energy from the strongest Rituals of the
most Powerful team on Lladrana is captured here." He offered it to
her. "They won't miss it."
She took it without touching his fingers. His face
tightened.
The stone was warm from his hand and the bit of his aura
clinging to the tiger's eye sank tingling into her skin. He said,
"The Medica told me they gave one to the baby after her dunk in the
pool, and it might help with jerir."
"Thank you." She rolled it in her hand. The crystalline
structure was full of Power in every lattice. "Though, I don't
think I can convince a healer on Exotique Terre to drill a hole
into my brother's skull and pour jerir onto his brain."
"Whatever you want of me, I'll provide. Before you go to
Exotique Terre and after you return." He hesitated. "You do plan to
return?"
She met his gaze. "Yes, if my brother agrees. I believe I have
friends enough here who have the Power to Summon us back."
"You have more than a friend in me." His voice remained quiet
and husky. He took another step forward, closer to her, just beyond
arm's reach.
Marian stepped back.
Jaquar stilled. "What do you think the odds are that you will be
able to convince your brother to come with you?" he asked
carefully.
Slipping the stone in her other pocket, Marian stared out the
window. "It depends upon his disease. If he is doing well, and
there is a better prognosis for him, then we may stay."
"I cannot wish him ill, but my life will have lost something
precious when you leave, Marian."
She really didn't want to hear that. Was he trying to win her
over because of his shame, because he didn't like people thinking
poorly of his character? That would be the basest motive.
"Thank you for the stone," she repeated.
"There was another reason I wanted to speak with you," Jaquar
said.
"Yes?"
Jaquar shifted. "I haven't had many women in my life. But you
are the most amazing, and I deeply regret what has happened between
us. The Song between us was extraordinary. It developed so quickly,
was so strong and complex." He braced himself. "I want.. .I want a
bond between us again. Even if it is only acquaintances, only
friends, I need that link." Once again his cheeks took on a darker
color. "Please?" Then he stepped forward, stretched out his hand,
palm up.
Marian swallowed. No one had ever said such things to her. She
wanted to believe him.
"Please?" he whispered.
She lifted her hand.
He reached out and touched her fingers-and the Song between them
mended instantaneously. Not a tiny link of affection, but a
full-blown symphonic poem of respect, deep friendship, like minds,
hearts that beat in tune. It echoed like fate along her nerves.
Then it happened.
Fog enshrouded her.
He started fading.
She saw him start to grab for her, then curl his fingers into
fists and step back.
The Snap.
She let it take her.
Suddenly she was in the Dimensional Corridor with fierce winds
whistling around her. She had no idea of the reason for the winds
or what would happen if she calmed them, so she formed a forcefield
around herself, using the Power that swept her around.
For a moment she let herself spin. Her life had just altered
again. Her mind scrambled to keep up. She needed time to think!
On one of her spins, she saw a flash of bare flesh. She stopped
her turn just in time to peer down the corridor and see her past
self pulled by a red ribbon through the door the Marshalls had
opened with their Summoning.
Shock hit her.
She was seeing the past! Those doors behind her opened on the
past!
Marian wondered if she could go farther back than her own
original experience in the corridor. Could she travel to where
Alexa was being Summoned? Would there be some way for Marian to
help Alexa defeat the monster who had attacked her? And if she did,
would she change history for Alexa and even herself? Scary
idea.
She moved away from the shining portal to current-day Earth,
opposite the one she'd exited. She turned into the dimness of the
past.
Marian hurried to the old door that had opened for her previous
self, but it had closed. Marian-of-before was gone-now landing on
the stone floor and meeting Jaquar and the Marshalls.
Her heart remembered the fear and pain and confusion. The door
to her right-to Earth-closed into a small black crack, then
vanished. A few feet into the future there was still a door.
A tiny rattle attracted her. Tuck in his hamster ball! She had
to concentrate, focus if she was going to achieve her goals.
She scooped up Tuck, looked at him through the clear ball.
Bright unintelligent animal eyes gazed back at her. If she kept
him now, would he develop as she had? She didn't dare change the
past.
The wind whisked her gown around her ankles.
She had no time!
Always, always she was distracted and missed the optimal moment
to act. She turned to the "Lladranan" side of the corridor and
stared at the next door.
A passage she hadn't understood in the notes of the
interdimensional traveler finally made sense, echoing in her mind.
"One can never go through a previous door. An opening is available
for only a single use."
Beat. Beat. Beat. She heard the rushing in her head and
didn't know if it was her blood, the winds of the corridor or the
pulsing of many world-Songs.
Perhaps it was time itself.
She pressed against the door and it opened on a bright rainbow.
Why the rainbow? Because it was the past? Was it an omen for her?
Would the rainbow appear just to her, or for certain Powered
people? Or for everyone?
Focus!
She stood on the threshold, drew in a deep breath and felt as if
fizzing champagne entered her body-what would it do to her?
Focus!
Her hands gripped the plastic ball, relaxed.
Blowing on it as if it were a bubble, she set it gently wafting
on a small breeze, watched as the ball-and Tuck-settled into the
flowered meadow where she'd found him. A kaleidoscopic twist of her
sight and she saw her former self speaking with Sinafin.
The door snapped closed.
Marian pivoted, fought against a huge wall of pressure that
constricted her lungs, forcing air from them. Five steps into the
past. Her eyes stung. Squinting, she saw that the door to her
apartment had closed. The next dark door began to shrink.
She jumped at it, was struck with hard blows. She kept the image
of her Earthly home strong in her mind. She slipped. Fell.
Into her apartment.
32
Gasping for air, Marian lay still, pulse thundering in her ears.
Her senses dimmed and panic overwhelmed her for an instant as she
viscerally recalled the grayness of the Dark's lair where she'd
also lost all sensation.
"Uh, uh, uh," she moaned. Her limbs convulsed and she curled
into a fetal ball.
Smell returned first-the scent of lily-of-the-valley
incense.
Distantly she heard her clock chime, her phone ring.
She blinked. Haze parted before her eyes. All the colors were
brighter, more vivid, yet sounds, Songs, came faintly, were
muffled. All except dear Mother Earth's Song.
Marian rocked to her hands and knees. Shook her head to clear
it. The phone rang on and on. She stood and staggered until she
reached it. The receiver felt odd in her hand-plastic, alien.
Bracing herself, she answered it. '"Lo."
"Marian, what are you doing still home!" her mother, Candace,
shrilled. "You should be on your way. Must you irritate me at every
turn!"
The sweep of innate love she'd had at the sound of her mother's
voice vanished as Candace's words sank in. Marian leaned against
the kitchen wall and stared at the calendar, the clock, the moon
chart. It was only a couple of hours-no later-from the time she'd
left.
"Marian, do you hear me?" Candace persisted.
"Ayes," Marian said. "Mais oui."
"That's not funny," Candace said. "I don't appreciate you being
snide."
Marian rubbed at her temple. She was undergoing serious culture
shock-something she hadn't anticipated.
"Get yourself down here at once, or I won't deposit the second
half of your college fund. I did teach you to honor your word."
By the Song! "Sorry, Mother, I've been, uh, in an intense French
seminar the past, uh, couple of days-"
"Just get down here as quickly as you can." Candace sounded
furious. She hung up.
Setting the phone carefully back in its cradle, Marian pressed
both hands to her head. Her mouth was dry-her whole body seemed
thirsty. With measured steps she opened the refrigerator. The cold
air blasted her and she flinched, she was so unused to it. Her hand
curled around the filtered water pitcher, her fingers chilling at
the touch. She kept her hand steady as she poured a tumbler full of
water. Then she drank it down. And another.
She needed more-a full immersion, a bath. She might have time
for a shower. Automatically, she undressed.
Candace was right. It was rare for Marian to break her word. She
didn't recall ever doing so with her mother. Yet she'd done it when
she'd left. Because of Andrew.
So much had changed, but her priorities remained the same. She
wanted Andrew cured and only hoped that he could be convinced to
come to Lladrana with her.
She also wanted a loving mother.
That wouldn't happen.
She'd once had hopes that she and her mother could build a
mutually satisfying relationship. Now Marian had limited time to
find words to reconcile with Candace. Marian's gut told her it
couldn't be done. She'd have to leave one of the major threads of
her life dangling, untidy, unfinished, never to be perfect.
It hurt.
Candace was already furious with her. It would be difficult for
Marian to work her out of her stubborn anger.
The shower water cooled as it cascaded over her and Marian
reluctantly turned the faucets off. She used minimal makeup and
shimmied into her black evening dress. It fit better than ever.
She'd toned up a bit in her weeks away-all that stair climbing.
She wound her hair into an elegant twist, grimacing at the new
wide streak of silver over her left temple. Then she checked the
small black beaded evening bag that she kept prepared for her
mother's events.
And hesitated.
Her mind boggled at the thought of driving a stick-shift in the
dark from Boulder to Denver. The traffic! She didn't know if she
could do it.
But when she entered her living room again, the pentacle glowed.
She saw it with new eyes. It held Power.
Marian closed her eyes. She held Power, too. She could
feel it surge through her. It wasn't as strong as when she was on
Amee, but she'd be able to do wondrous, magical deeds.
Slowly she moved into the middle of the pentacle. She knew the
building where the fund-raiser was taking place very well. It was
Candace's preferred place for charities, an old, elegant hall. That
had once been a Scottish Rite Masonic Temple. Marian's lips curved.
Plenty of star symbols there.
Even as she thought of that, a neon-blue star appeared in her
mind-it was in a mosaic on the wall of a large balcony.
Perfect.
With a small chant, Marian raised her arms, Called the Wind and
chanted that she wanted to be in the hall. The zephyr picked her up
and whirled her. There was an emptiness, then her feet hit solid
ground and her left hand touched small tiles. When she opened her
eyes, it was to see her fingers in the center of the star.
Her breath rushed from her and she leaned against the wall. It
hummed with the aftermath of Power. The remaining energy soaked
into her and she accepted it gratefully. It was one thing to be a
Circlet of Lladrana and practice magic there. It was completely
different to do something magical on Earth, where she'd always
considered herself a rational person and where magic didn't seem to
exist.
The babble of cultured voices rose with the scent of costly
perfume from the floor below. Marian let dislike of the event
tremble through her, then set her shoulders and pushed away from
the wall to walk with staggering steps. She barely made it a few
paces down the hall to the ladies' room. It was blessedly
empty.
She checked herself in the mirror. Her mouth fell open and she
snapped it shut.
She looked better than all right. In the dim light she
seemed to glow. Her hair was sexily tousled; her makeup appeared to
have interacted with her skin to emphasize her eyes, cheeks, mouth.
She stared, and felt a slight tingle as if she wore a shimmering
coat of conditioner. An old word occurred to her, magic.
Glamour.
Realizing she was wasting time-time her mother was counting in
seconds-she left.
With the knowledge that she'd never looked better, and slightly
hysterical, bubbling amusement at the effect of Power on her skin,
Marian hurried down the old wooden staircase at the back of the
building and into the ballroom.
She stopped at the bottom of the staircase to look around. The
people and the party furnishings looked so strange after her
sojourn in Lladrana. Nerving herself, she spotted her mother and
crossed to her. She hadn't seen Candace in nine months, and she
looked thin, pale and expensively elegant. She was speaking to two
men with false affection. Her husband, John, smiled vacuously as he
sipped champagne.
Candace's eyes widened, and for one instant Marian heard the
faulty tune between her and her mother.
"Marian, how good of you to finally come," Candace said coolly.
Her expression had hardened.
Marian felt as awkward and gawky as when she was twelve and had
a growth spurt that sent her towering inches over Candace.
"Good evening, Candace," she said.
The men were introduced and bowed over her hand. Their auras had
altered slightly-they were attracted to her, Marian realized. John
stared at her.
Candace watched with sharpened gaze. The mother-daughter Song
brayed with brass. With it came a word from Candace's mind.
Competition.
Marian nearly gaped at her mother, but murmured something
appropriate to the men and offered them a weak smile.
"Please excuse me, gentlemen, I must speak with my daughter
alone." Candace smiled, too, then gripped Marian's arm in a
clawed-handed squeeze and moved her away from the men.
Still stunned by the rapid shifts in her life, Marian didn't
hear Candace's first few words.
"-at my wit's end to keep Trenton's new wife amused. Her name is
Juliet. Go over there and keep her happy so 1 can work on Trenton
for a plump donation." With a tilt of her head, Can-dace indicated
a woman dressed in black knit tunic and trousers with a long,
silver, fringed and beaded evening shawl draped around her. She
moved a little and Marian saw the Chinese pattern for longevity
woven in metallic thread on the back of the robe.
And she heard the woman's tune. Earthy, amused, strong. Clashing
with Candace's own life Song. She listened to her mother's Song,
which fluctuated between strident and whispered sharp
notes...fading.
Shock rippled through Marian as she realized her mother was
seriously ill, perhaps dying. She opened her mouth.
Candace discreetly poked Marian in her back. "Go do your
duty."
Only a rusty, "Yes, Mother" escaped Marian. Operating solely on
instinct, she walked up to Trenton's bride.
The woman took a glass of wine from a server who arrived at the
same time as Marian. Needing something to settle her, Marian took a
glass, too. It tipped, liquid sloshing dangerously close to the
rim.
Juliet reached out to steady Marian's wrist. "Easy," she said,
then, "Thank you," to the server who moved off with his tray.
A tinkle of connection sounded between them. Juliet gasped,
dropped her hand. Her eyes widened, and Marian gained the
impression that she hadn't heard the sparkling notes but had
seen a shift in their mingled auras.
Then she smiled, quite genuinely. "How kind of Candace to
provide someone interesting for me to speak with."
Marian choked on her drink. She spilled a few droplets on her
bosom, watched them soak into her dress and disappear. It didn't
look as if the material would stain. Good.
She racked her brain to recall the meager information her mother
had given her about this woman weeks ago. "You, um, own The Queen
of Cups store?"
"Yes."
"It's the best New Age establishment in Denver," Marian said,
glad it was the truth. She wasn't acclimatizing as quickly as she
had thought she would to being back home on Earth.
"Thank you." Juliet smiled. "What do you like the best?"
"Your books. Excellent selection."
Juliet looked askance. Did Marian have an accent? Did Juliet
think Marian was as superficial as Candace? "And, um, your herbs. I
bought a nice marble mortar and pestle the last time I was in."
Juliet relaxed. "We have a good stock of tools. We recently
received a new shipment of pendulums."
Frowning, Marian said, "Pendulums can be quite attractive, but
I've never used one." She didn't think she'd seen any in Lladrana,
either. Did they use them?
With a tilt of her head, Juliet said, "Is something disturbing
you? You seem.. .distracted."
Disconnected was a better word. Linked to Mother Earth,
but that Song was subdued here in the city. It had faded to a hum
that spoke more to her blood than her mind. Otherwise Marian was
disconnected to everything around her, everything she'd been linked
to a few hours ago.
Except Candace, and the Song between them was so pitiful it was
depressing. Marian shook her head, hoping to jar a little sense
back into it.
"Sorry, I'm just back from an.. .intense retreat. French." She
smiled. "I'm a little tired and coping with language echoes."
Juliet narrowed her eyes. "Maybe you should have some food."
Then, with a sweep of her arm, she called to a waiter who was
circulating with small steak kebabs.
"Thank you," Marian said as she took three. She munched one
quickly and then she and Juliet drifted over to a waste basket and
dropped two of the bamboo skewers into it.
Juliet slipped the wineglass from Marian's hand and set it on a
nearby table. "And I think you should have less to drink."
"Very wise," Marian said, then finished off the second kabob.
She was ravenous, could eat ten of the appetizers. Was this a
reaction to her using magic here, or to the Dimensional Corridor,
or to landing on Earth again, or what?
"Marian," Juliet said softly, as Marian discarded the third
empty stick.
Heat flooded her. "I'm sorry, as you said, I'm distracted, and
here I came just to meet you. Please, forgive."
Juliet looked intrigued. "Just to meet me?"
Marian nodded. "Yes, my best teacher, Golden Raven, just left
for the coast. I thought I'd talk to you about the Denver community
and see if you could recommend someone comparable."
"Ah. Yes, I'd heard Wood Elk and Golden Raven were heading
west." Juliet's brow furrowed. "You want another teacher?"
Actually, that was the last thing she wanted. Thinking on it,
she had a surfeit of teachers lately, but Marian nodded anyway.
"Hmm." Juliet tapped her finger against her lips. "Do you get
our newsletter?"
"The print one, but I think I'd pay attention to an online one
more." That made Marian think about her PDA. She'd been careful not
to touch it when she returned to her apartment. The intricacies of
time-travel paradox had stumped smarter people than she. Marian
caught herself rubbing her temples. "Sorry."
"Let's sit down." Juliet led her to a small sitting area against
the wall. She took Marian's hands.
Their Songs flowed together in counterpoint. Juliet's eyes
widened again.
"Your energy is fluctuating too extremely," she said.
Marian tried to withdraw her hands, but Juliet held tight.
"Breathe with me."
Of course! Why hadn't Marian thought of that? Too fuzzy brained.
She let her eyelids drift closed. For several moments the women
breathed together. At first Marian was aware of all the people and
muted Songs around her, then she focused in on Candace's Song and
felt her mother's disgust at her and Juliet. Marian sent love down
the bond to Candace, but it seemed to dissipate against the shield
of Candace's heart. In turn, Marian searched for emotions from
Candace-pride in her daughter, respect, affection, love,
anything-and only sensed a distant acknowledgment of blood,
nothing more.
Finally she blocked her aching heart and emptied her mind, and
found serenity, solidity. She withdrew her hands and opened her
eyes to Juliet's considering gaze.
"I've been doing too much," Marian said.
"Of course." Juliet pursed her lips, tapped them with a finger
again. "They are getting ready for the silent auction. I'd like to
slip out a moment. I have something for you."
Probably a grounding crystal or an herbal drink. Marian raised
her eyebrows. She should be wary. "Yes?"
Juliet nodded decisively. "Can you come with me out to my car a
moment? I have it there. I knew it belonged to someone, but not who
or when I'd meet the person-so I've been carrying it around."
A low hum seemed to rattle her bones-another feeling of
premonition. Marian took another few discreet, deep breaths.
"Yes."
"Great. Follow me." Whirling so her silver fringe caught the
light and gleamed, Juliet headed quickly through the room to the
exit.
They were intercepted by her husband, Trenton Philbert III, who
was Marian's height and towered over Juliet. He set himself firmly
in their path and raised a brow. "Going somewhere, Juliet? I
believe we discussed this earlier."
Juliet rolled her eyes. "I've found the person the book is
for."
Trenton shifted his gaze to Marian. His eyes cooled. "Ms.
Harasta."
Juliet tsked and patted Trenton's arm, bringing his attention
back to her. He smiled, harsh features softening. "Trey, you are
making judgments again."
"An occupational hazard," the man said.
A lightning bolt of recollection hit Marian. "You're a judge,
aren't you?"
"Yes." His tone was clipped.
Marian frowned. "Do you know Alexa Fitzwalter?"
His stare pinned her. "She disappeared about three months ago.
What do you know of that?" His voice was harsh.
Too many conflicting emotions and ideas clashed in Marian's
head. This return to Earth was as bad as her first hours in
Lladrana. She put fingertips to her temples, trying to find
words.
"Let me remember. Friends told me that Alexa was unexpectedly
called away to handle a.. .delicate situation." That was true
enough. Marian shrugged casually. "I didn't speak to her before she
left and haven't since." Not on Earth. She kept that thought
foremost in her mind when she met Trenton's eyes. "I was wondering
if you've heard whether she's returned?" Maybe she could find a way
to tidy up Alexa's affairs-take care of back rent, close her law
practice.
"Her car was found abandoned near Berthoud Pass."
Shit.
Frowning, Marian said, "I don't know how to reach her. I never
had her cell number." Again truth.
The man continued to weigh Marian's words. A portion of his Song
pulsed from him-powerful, honorable, concerned and with a touch of
personal Power-truth-sensing.
"Her office and apartment have been closed," he said
abruptly.
Marian shook her head. "Then 1 guess I can't help."
"Where did you meet Alexa?" asked Trenton.
"We're gathering attention, and the silent auction is about to
begin," Juliet interjected. She pushed at her husband's shoulder.
"Go buy something outrageously expensive for me to support the
charities and show everyone how much you love me."
He threw back his head and laughed. Even more gazes swung in
their direction.
Juliet lifted her snub nose. "I have business with Marian. She
needs the book."
Book? Trembling started within Marian. A book held infinite
possibilities.
In an unexpectedly elegant gesture, Trenton took his wife's
hands, kissed each of them. Then he looked at Marian again. "I'll
get back to you later-"
"No, you won't," Juliet said firmly. "You will leave her
alone.
I know you don't like unanswered questions, but I believe that's
the best in this case."
Trenton looked pained, shot them a glance from under lowered
brows, then strode back to the plush seats that had been arranged
in rows.
As the auctioneer called the group to attention, Marian and
Juliet slipped from the hall into the cool spring night. Tears
stung the back of Marian's throat. She was home on Earth, in
Denver, where she'd been raised.
Even the city air tasted good on her tongue. The lights were too
bright to see many stars, but she stopped to look up and find
Orion. The scent of blossoming trees wafted to her, even more
familiar and comforting than the brithenwood. How could she give
all this up? Her old, steady life. Her simple dreams. Her home.
A car door clunked closed and Marian realized that Juliet had
left her to collect the book.
Marian looked around-the bright lights from Colfax Avenue, a
couple of streets down, the huge trees leafing out, the interesting
architecture of the hall.... She'd find none of this on
Lladrana.
Could she return?
33
Juliet's silver shawl flapped in the breeze as she hurried to
Marian and thrust a blue book into her hands. It was small but
heavy, and bound in leather.
"Thank you," Marian said. "What do I owe you for it?" "Free, on
the house." Juliet started back toward the hall and
Marian kept pace. "Will you be disappearing, too?" Juliet turned
her head and smiled.
"Maybe." All this indecision wasn't like her. But the choice was
huge and final. "I will definitely be leaving Boulder for
Californiafor a little while. Then I may disappear, and my brother,
too."
"Then why did you ask me about a teacher?"
"In case I stay. I'm not sure what I'm doing and doubts creep
in. And there's my mother-"
Juliet patted her shoulder. "You'll make the right decision."
They stepped into the hall and, instead of going to the ballroom
where bidding was active, Marian crossed the lobby to a red leather
couch and sat back against the squabs. Juliet sat beside her.
Looking down at the book, Marian received another shock. It was
written in archaic Lladranan. She shivered and her fingers clutched
the little blue leather book. She knew enough of the old language
to read "Use.. .Knot.. .Unbinding."
Fate.
The intricate red-silk weapon-knot rested on her bedside table.
In Swordmarshall Thealia Germaine's Tower in the Keep of the
Marshalls' Castle. In Lladrana. On the world of Amee.
Her hands shook and dropped the book onto her lap.
"I knew you were the right person for the book," Juliet
said. "You can read the language, can't you?"
"Yes," Marian whispered.
The door to the lobby swung open and Trenton stalked through.
"I've done my part for the charities, now let's go home." He
scowled at Juliet. "You're my bride. You were supposed to stay with
me. You weren't supposed to abandon me, especially not for
obviously better company than the folks in that room and more
interesting conversation."
Juliet rose and crossed to him, smiling serenely. She patted his
cheek, stood on tiptoe and brushed a kiss on his lips. "I'll do
better next time you drag me to one of these, darling. Did you buy
me something wonderful?"
"Yes. It will be delivered tomorrow." His gaze fastened on
Marian. "I think I want to speak with Marian Harasta. I've been
trying to figure out where her path might have crossed with Alexa
Fitzwalter's."
Juliet linked her fingers with Trenton's, tugged. He didn't
move.
Marian smiled slightly. "Colorado Shakespeare Festival in
Boulder?" After all, Alexa had quoted Macbeth correctly, she
must like the Bard.
Trenton's eyes narrowed.
Pulling at his hand, Juliet said, "I think you want to go home
for some fun."
He jerked his stare from Marian to settle it on Juliet, and
grinned. "You believe you can distract me with fabulous and
inventive sex?"
"Oh yes." She raised their joined hands and kissed his knuckles
and walked away.
He followed, chuckling. "You are so right."
Marian was left aching for Jaquar and the tender affection
they'd known far too briefly. And wondering what she could, what
she would do...
She waited until everyone had left the fund-raiser, until her
mother had overseen the departure of the catering staff and the
efforts of the cleaning crew. Nothing but perfection for
Candace.
When Candace sent her husband for the car, Marian joined her in
the middle of the elegant, empty ballroom.
Candace sent her a brilliant smile, all teeth. "It was good of
you to finally show up, Marian."
Ignoring the emotional slap, Marian pressed on. "Mother, have
you seen a doctor?"
"Why do you say that?" Her eyes sharpened.
"You look a little.. .tired."
Candace waved the comment away. "The ball was quite challenging
this year, but I outdid myself." Her expression turned smug. "I
doubled donations this year."
Marian cleared her throat, tried again. "Now that the event is a
success, you might want to slow down a little."
Straightening her bony shoulders, Candace said, "Nonsense, you
know nothing about my life."
"I suppose not, but I think you should see a doctor."
Candace's lip curled. "Quacks, the lot of them. They haven't got
a clue."
Marian's heart thudded. "You've been to see some! What did they
say?"
"A lot of balderdash." She took off on a final inspection of the
room. "I'm not listening to them."
She hardly ever listened to anyone. Marian caught up with her
and grabbed her arm. It was nothing but skin and bone under her
fingers. Her fear spiraled higher. "Mother!"
"How many times must I tell you to call me Candace! You
don't listen. You don't remember."
"Mo- Candace, do you realize you're ill?" Marian couldn't give
up.
"Oh, is that some of your New Age wisdom? I suppose you'll
prescribe some nice herbal tea for me."
Marian didn't want her mother sick. Didn't want Andrew sick.
Didn't want anyone she loved to die. "Let me review the doctor's
reports and we can..."
Candace made a disgusted noise. "No. I'll live my life as I see
fit."
"You're ill."
"I'm not."
"Let me help!" Marian cried, twisted inside.
Whirling, Candace glared at her. "You've never been a help to
me. You barely arrived tonight on time, and did so only because of
the money."
"No. Not entirely-" Marian's breath hitched.
With a nod of satisfaction at the room, Candace went to the
light bank and flipped all but one switch off, then strode to the
double doors to the lobby. She and Marian went through at the same
time.
"Candace, I need to talk to you."
"I don't want to talk with you. Not now, and not later."
"A luncheon appointment." Marian caught her hand, fragile as a
bird's.
Candace wrenched her fingers away. "No." She didn't meet
Marian's gaze.
Candace's jaw firmed and Marian could barely see the scars of
her last face-lift. Blue eyes the same color as her own scanned the
lobby, then finally locked with Marian's.
"We simply don't have anything to say to each other, Marian. We
are too different." Candace unlocked a closet, slipped on her fur
coat and stroked it. Her hand trembled. Then she straightened her
spine and headed to the front door. "Go away, Marian. I'll let you
know when you might be of use to me. Go back to your pitiful,
lonely little life. You may know book learning, but you don't
understand anything about the real world or men."
"I- What about John? What does he think of the doctors'
reports?"
Candace lifted her chin. "John supports me in all I do. As for
you, I'll transfer the last of your college fund Monday. Then we'll
be done with each other."
The words were like a blow. Harder than she'd ever heard from
her mother. Impossible to bear without a cry of pain. "Why are you
being so hateful?"
Candace swept out of the lobby into the night; Marian keeping
pace. "I'm not being hateful, I'm being honest. You want to drag me
around to doctors, as if you know best and they can fix my life. My
life is excellent. Your life is the one that needs fixing.
By the way, that streak in your hair ages you." She turned and
locked the doors behind them.
"Mother, I'm moving away."
Candace waved for her car parked a block down the street to pick
her up. "Is that so? Out to California with Andrew, I suppose.
Well, from what I understand the Californians are even more fitness
conscious than Coloradans. You'll have a hard time finding a man
there."
More words she had to ignore. One last try. "I don't know when
I'll be back. If ever."
"Don't be so dramatic," she said. As if already forgetting her
cruel words, she air-kissed Marian's cheek as the chauffeur came
around to open your door. "Bye-bye, Marian." She slid into the back
seat of the car.
Just before the door closed, Marian saw the mask drop from
Candace's face. It sagged with fatigue and sickness. Candace didn't
know this might be the last time she'd see Marian. Candace really
didn't care.
Hurt washed over Marian as the taillights of the car blurred in
her vision. She stumbled to a bench flanking the doors to the hall.
For a moment she just sat, absorbing the verbal slaps her mother
had dealt her. Her shoulders slumped. There would be no
rationalizing the words away, pretending they didn't happen,
pretending Candace didn't mean them. With the closing of her car
door, Candace had snapped the mother-daughter bond.
It was so fragile it had disintegrated into dust, and any
remnants would be blown away by the time Marian reached
Boulder.
The next day Marian awoke with a screaming headache and burning
muscles. Daylight stabbed pain into her eyes. She stumbled from bed
a couple of times to take aspirin, splash her face with cooling
water, then return to sleep. Once, as she passed Tuck's cage, she
tested the theory that everything had been a fever dream and opened
the plastic lid to find him.
He was gone.
A glance at the taped pentacle in the living room showed that
her PDA was gone, too.
She retreated to bed and slept the day and the night away.
Sunday morning she awoke ravenous. Once again she checked what
she could to see again if her time in Lladrana had been a
dream.
No Tuck.
No PDA.
And a beautiful purple velvet gown hung in her closet, with a
container of jerir, a yellow stone and a crumpled piece of paper in
the pocket.
As she ate breakfast, she studied the parchment. It was
parchment, made from some finely scraped animal skin. The ink had
dried bright and vivid, unlike most standard Earth inks, more like
the ink of illuminated manuscripts that were specially made-of
ground semiprecious stones, weren't they?
The second thing she did was log onto the Internet and searched
for "Lladrana," "jerir," "Circlet," and any other unique words that
might indicate other travelers.
Nothing.
No scientific data on Dimensional Corridors.
She walked to campus and around it, enjoying the late-spring
day, the comfortably familiar sounds and sights of other students.
She stopped and stared at her department building and thought of
her future there.
After she made sure she was unobserved, she Sang a tiny wind
into being. It swirled over a few grass blades, then died. The
effort to call the wind was about triple what she would need to do
the same on Amee. It left her hungry and with tendrils of a
headache throbbing in the back of her skull.
She'd been avoiding weighty concepts, disturbed emotions, trying
to be steady and stable all day long. But she'd have to decide what
to do soon. Tomorrow was Monday. She couldn't see herself going in
to work at the Engineering Department.
She had time, a little voice inside her whispered as she walked
back to her apartment. She had nearly three weeks.
During lunch, she studied the timeline again and saw a day
circled in brilliant blue, with a notation in Bossgond's hand.
"Summon Marian and Andrew back to Lladrana."
Invisible ink, of course. She didn't know why she was surprised.
Everything fell into place. Bossgond had seen her through his
dimensional binoculars on Earth when she'd been in Lladrana.
Naturally he'd correctly deduced what had happened, but had said
nothing to her in case he might change what was or what might
be.
Still, it made her shudder.
That afternoon, she went over her finances. They were in good
shape and if she received the last of her college fund tomorrow
she'd have plenty to live on before she was Summoned to
Lladrana.
If she went. The day had been delightful. She'd steeped
herself in the rich and sustaining essence of Earth, of her life as
it had been.
The choice before her was just too gigantic for her to act
hastily. She decided to quit her work-study job. Spring semester
had just ended, and though she'd planned on registering for summer
classes if she received her college fund, she could delay a
while.
So she tidied her apartment and late in the evening began a
tentative list of what she'd like to take to Lladrana, if she
decided to return. When it was finished, she figured it would take
a moving van to transport. Probably the most she could carry was a
backpack, and Andrew, too.
Her sleep that night was peaceful and she awoke refreshed. Her
first order of business was quitting her work-study job. She'd
finished a big project and summer school would be light. Though the
Dean was naturally grumpy about replacing her, he didn't seem too
concerned.
Again she walked around the campus, strolled along downtown
Boulder, enjoyed herself and considered her two lives. Everything
seemed so clear in Lladrana.
She could have magic here. But could she integrate it into the
life she'd planned? Not easily. Marian suspected that her trials in
the Dark's maw was only the overture for a long opera. If she was
to play her proper role in Lladrana, she'd be integrally involved
in defeating the Dark. She already felt like she might have a
bull's-eye painted on her.
And there was Jaquar. She didn't want to much think about him,
either, but great quests would entail many other
"greats"-sacrifices, betrayals, triumphs. She'd never had a man
like him before and didn't think there was one walking the streets
of Boulder who could compare.
She sat at her kitchen table and made a list-pros and cons for
returning to Lladrana or staying on Earth.
Lladrana won.
With trembling fingers, she opened the Lorebook of
Knot-Weapons. The volume was well organized, with simple knots
first. It showed a picture of the knot, the description of its use
including effects and damage, then gave visual instructions on how
to tie the knot step by step. When Marian touched those pictures, a
faint haze appeared as if a holographic picture should be
projected. Not enough Power on Earth-though if Marian sent her own
Power through her fingertips, she could see the "movie"-hands
slowly tying the knots.
Dread tightening her muscles, Marian continued to turn the
pages. Her knot was the third from the end, "City Destroyer." Her
mouth dried and she edged away from the book, setting her fisted
hands on her lap. There was a long "Warning" section, describing
how to encase the user of the weapon in a Powerful shield before
its use. The shield chant looked complex and demanded perfect
pitch. Which Marian didn't have.
Mouth dry, Marian scraped her chair back and went to the kitchen
for a glass of filtered water, trying not to imagine what would
have happened if she'd untied the knot.
It would have destroyed the maw-at the cost of her life.
The whole matter smacked of fate.
She'd have to use the book in the future, hopefully when she was
very, very Powerful and had found someone to shield her. With
friends, maybe-though she didn't think Alexa had perfect pitch,
either.
Of course Andrew was her priority. She was sure she could
convince him to return with her, but she'd have to ensure he
believed her first. Could she connect with him in the Lladranan
way? Let him feel her experiences?
She was happy and excited, until she called and spoke with
Andrew's doctor.
"I'm glad you phoned," Dr. Chan said. "Since Andrew authorized
me to tell you everything, I'll be blunt. His health is poor. He's
underweight and vulnerable to infection. He has fallen several
times the past few months and has been lucky not to break a bone.
The intervals of time between attacks are shortening and the
flare-ups are more intense and longer."
Marian clutched the phone. She hadn't known. It didn't sound
good. If Andrew believed his mind was failing... She shuddered.
34
Marian forced herself to wait before going to California. Time
had to elapse so she wouldn't see herself in Bossgond's binoculars.
She kept herself busy changing her life.
She readied herself, poring over the Ritual chant Bossgond had
written, retrieved the hard-copy notes of the Ritual she'd written
for herself and refined it to dovetail with the Lladranans', and
prepared the pentagram.
And she practiced. By the time the Marshalls and Sorcerers and
others would Summon her and Andrew, she would be letter-perfect in
her own Ritual.
Echoes of Lladrana reverberated in her days. One morning she
found herself tense and nervous, then felt giddy with relief. When
she looked at the timeline, she saw she'd Tested for Scholar that
morning on Lladrana. So she bought a huge calendar and filled in
the blocks with what she recalled of each day there, so she could
"listen" for the echoes, feel the resonance of the emotions
affecting her in Lladrana.
Finally, she took a flight to Andrew's ranch home in San Mateo,
California.
As she went into his office, she noted the additional equipment
for his deteriorating health. Canes and walkers stood in every
room, his computer had a voice-recognition system for when his
fingers lost mobility and an ergonomic keyboard for when his voice
slurred. The sight of these made her eyes sting. No one should have
to live this way, fall before an encroaching disease.
Marian called the retreat. When a counselor answered, Marian
left a message that she had an emergency and needed Andrew, then
gave his phone number as a contact.
He called a couple of hours later, sounding worried. "What's up,
sis?"
"I need you, Andrew."
He swore. "I knew there was something going on that you weren't
telling me about."
"I'm not the only one who's been hiding things," she said. "I
spoke with Dr. Chan."
There was silence.
"I love you, Andrew, and I need to talk to you-about some life
changes I am considering."
"You!"
"Yes. I've quit my work-study job and dropped out of school.
I've been out of the country and have another...vocational offer,
but whether I pursue that or just transfer to a California
university is up to you. I want to get your opinion."
"Huh," Andrew said. "This can't wait until after my
retreat?"
"I'm afraid not. The timing is difficult." She took a
breath.
"And I spoke to people where I was about you and received a
herbal medicine that might help."
"You're kidding, right?"
"No."
Again there was a long silence. It scraped Marian's nerves until
she burst out, "Andrew, so much has happened. Such incredible
events. I can't.. .I can't discuss this on the phone." To her
horror tears clogged her throat.
"Shh, sis. I'll come home. You're at-my house, right?"
"Yes." She sniffled.
"You want to make the arrangements for a plane and car, or do
you want me to?"
"I've got all the details ready."
"Of course, give 'em to me. I have a pencil and paper."
So she did.
"Looks good," Andrew said, then paused. "Thanks, Marian."
"What do you mean?"
"Thanks for saying you need me, for calling me with your news
and making me feel.. .strong."
"You are strong, Andrew."
He snorted. "Not many people treat me like that, though. I love
you-see you later."
"I love you, too."
As soon as she hung up, a tide of exhaustion overwhelmed her and
she slipped into the guest bed and slept. And dreamed of Jaquar
playing with her in a storm...
Marian woke to a commotion at the front door as Andrew paid off
his driver and disengaged the alarm system. She dressed in her
purple robe and hurried into the living room.
Andrew closed the door behind him and locked it, then took the
walker standing by the door and leaned heavily on it as he stared
at Marian. "My God, you look different."
She ran to him, trying not to show her shock at his thinness and
infirmity. "I'm so glad to see you!" She hugged him gingerly, then
returned to his comment. "Different how?"
Slowly he shook his head. "There's the hair, of course. That
silver streak is very striking. Natural?"
"Yes."
"Too bad. Guess you really did have weird stuff going on."
Marian raised her eyebrows. "You thought I lied about it?"
"Fibbed." He smiled slightly. "Thought you were worried about me
and spinning a tale to come live with me or something." He shook
his head again. "You look...trimmer. In shape." He flushed.
"That's okay. Any more comments about my appearance?"
He narrowed his eyes. "You look more yourself. But
more... You glow. You aren't pregnant or anything, are you? If you
are and the guy dumped you, I'll kill him!" His expression grew
fierce.
Marian took a step back in surprise. "No. Not pregnant."
"But there was a guy, I can tell."
Andrew took a couple of clumping steps toward her, and she
realized he was very tired.
She wanted to rush to him and help, but instead indicated his
recliner and took the one on the other side of the table.
He stumped to the recliner and lowered himself into it, still
keeping his eyes on her face. "Did the jerk dump you?"
Clearing her throat, she shook her head. She had cut the bond
between herself and Jaquar. "No, I dumped him."
"Wanna talk about it?" Andrew relaxed back into the recliner and
shut his eyes.
"Not particularly."
"All right."
"Do you want me to-" But he was asleep.
For a time she watched him sleep. So beloved, this brother of
hers. He'd been the only loving and stable person in her life. But
she was deeply afraid for his health.
He was so much worse than she'd known. Or perhaps she was just
looking at him with new eyes. Her mouth firmed. There wasn't much
here that could help him, but maybe on Lladrana... She'd try
anything to cure him. Dipping in, or perhaps even drinking
the magical jerir. Paying the Marshalls any price to do a group
Healing. The same with the Circlets. And the Friends of the Singer.
Perhaps the Singer herself had Powers, could channel the Power of
the Song to help Andrew.
Her options and methods might have changed, but her priority
remained the same.
Since he was sleeping and she needed to do something, she went
into the kitchen and took out a frozen casserole. It could warm
until he awoke.
She picked up his duffel and unpacked it, set his medications on
the table by his elbow with a glass of water and put the dirty
laundry in the washer. She was transferring his clothes to the
dryer when he called her name. She finished her task and walked to
the living room.
"So, I didn't dream you," he said.
Leaning against the arch that separated the living room from the
kitchen, Marian smiled at him. "No."
He rubbed his face, moved the recliner upright and drank some of
the water. Serious gaze fixed on her, he said, "Sit down. Tell me
what changed you and what you want to do about it. What you want
me to do about it." A corner of his mouth lifted as if in
pride that she'd asked for his help.
She didn't want to hurt him with the bond, would try to keep it
light and easy at first and watch Andrew for any discomfort.
Walking over to him, she stretched and then curled her fingers,
limbering them.
"What are you doing?"
Warmth crept up her cheeks. "I, uh-when I was away, I learned
this technique for.. .connecting with people on an... emotional
level."
He just stared at her, then he laughed, and it was so good to
hear and see him this way that she drank in the sight and smiled
herself.
After his last chuckle, he said, "All those New Age classes of
yours-and where did you go, Tibet?"
"Not exactly."
He stretched out his hands. "Okay, lay it on me."
Instead of clasping hands, she bent and hugged him. A Song rose
between them. Since Andrew stiffened, she sensed he heard it,
too-the Song of the children of Candace. Closing her eyes, she felt
tears well behind her lids. She was so glad to hold him.
Without thought or will, her experiences on Lladrana flickered
through their bond-fast and sketchy, but undeniably real.
His arms tightened around her. Then he shivered and withdrew.
His face had paled, but his eyes blazed with wonder and excitement.
"I can't believe it." Then he lifted a hand. "No, I do
believe it, but it's fantastic all the same. Magic works and you
have an affinity for fire."
He glanced over to the fireplace. "Care to light it?"
She sent him a withering glance. "It's gas."
"So?"
"So you have to turn the gas on. That's moving a lever,
not lighting logs."
"Huh. Could you use some air to press down the switch?"
"Maybe I should draw down lightning on your thick skull."
He snorted. "Don't think you could do it." A wistful expression
crossed his face. "I thought I got something about a hole in the
skull and that special liquid-jerir?"
Marian licked her lips. "Yes."
"Didja bring the stuff with you and can I see it?"
"Yes." Marian went to the guest bedroom and returned with the
bottle of jerir, which she handed to Andrew.
He took the solid proof of her trip to Lladrana in his hands,
tilted the container back and forth, studied it under the light.
The sparkles were harder to see under a lightbulb, but Marian
spotted a couple.
"Real magic." He set the bottle on the table with his medicines.
"You want to return, don't you?"
She met his eyes, let her fear show in her own. "I'm torn. It's
a dangerous situation and it doesn't look like it's going to get
any better soon." Taking a deep breath, she let it out slowly. "I'd
have great Power and with great Power comes great
responsibility."
"I'm glad that you feel that way."
A smile played on her lips, then faded. "I have to feel that
way-otherwise I might succumb to pure greed or hubris or
something."
But Andrew was shaking his head. "I don't think so. You've seen
too much of what can happen, with great riches and status in Denver
society."
"Many of those people are caring, service-oriented
individuals."
"But not Candace. What of Candace? You came back for me, and I
thank you for that and am considering my new options. But I can't
see you telling Candace about Lladrana, or convincing her to go
there. Not her kind of place at all. You've always wanted a good
relationship with Mother."
Marian braced herself. "I saw Candace Friday night. She's..
.dying." She swallowed hard. "I think she knows it. Cancer,
probably. She won't do anything about it. Doesn't accept the
prognosis. I got this through our bond-before she cut it."
Andrew swore, looked away. A moment later, he said, "It's hard,
isn't it, knowing there's not a thing we can say that will make her
take care of herself? I tried, now and then." His eyes turned sad.
"I would have said that I didn't care. I do, of course. She is our
mother."
"I don't think she has long-less than a year, perhaps."
Closing his eyes, Andrew sighed. "This is difficult for you." He
shifted in his seat. "Maybe it's best that we do leave now. She
wouldn't want us to be there at the end."
"You're sure of that? We couldn't give her comfort?"
"When did we ever give her comfort?"
"What if she changes her mind, her ways, wants us at the
end?"
He opened his eyes, stared back at Marian. "Do you really
believe you should forgo life on Lladrana because of a remote
possibility that our mother will change her ways on her deathbed?
If so, then I think you really don't want to return to Lladrana and
the challenges there, but just prefer your steady, tidy life
here."
Shock rippled through her at his harsh words. She staggered back
to sit in the opposite recliner and frown at him.
His smile was humorless. "You wanted me here, needed me
here to help you think about this radical change in lifestyle.
Well, that's what I'm doing."
Marian rubbed her temples. "Not pulling any punches, are
you."
"Since you'll be walking into circumstances that might get you
killed, you'd better really be committed to that course."
She nodded, looked away, put his words in the back of her mind
to simmer. She'd consider them later. Taking an unsteady breath,
she put a hand on her churning stomach. "You're talking like you'll
come with me."
Nodding, Andrew said, "I'll give it good consideration. I know
there's some time constraints. When would we leave?"
Marian dipped her hand in her pocket and withdrew the paper
Bossgond had given her. Andrew examined it, turning it over and
looking at both sides. He rubbed his thumb over it, scratched with
his nail, even lifted it up and sniffed. Again he half smiled.
"Doesn't smell like Earth, but it does smell a little like
you."
She hadn't quite accepted that she had a scent others noticed.
"Huh."
Andrew chuckled, then glanced at the paper and read the English
words at the bottom of the timeline. "I guess this big blue circle
is when the return Summoning will be done?"
"Yes."
He nodded. "All right, about ten days." Carefully setting the
paper aside on the table, he said, "That's enough heavy talk for
now. Let's eat, watch some tube and get to sleep."
That evening, Marian lay in bed and waited-tonight had been the
night in Lladrana when she and Jaquar had danced, when the first
level of their connection had developed. She let the soft
reflection of what was now occurring on Lladrana filter through
her. Afterward, she felt a small but definite bond between her and
Jaquar again-Jaquar-of-the-past and herself. She sat straight up in
bed. Did Past-Jaquar now feel the bond with Earth-Marian as well as
Lladrana-Marian? She thought he must, so the "Marian effect" upon
him would be more than his effect on Lladrana-Marian or
Earth-Marian. Not quite a double whammy, but still, it was
something to consider when she thought of him-which was often.
Being on Earth gave her time and distance to reflect on her
affair with Jaquar. She missed him, missed the companionship above
all, and, of course, the sex. And she welcomed the renewed
connection; this seemed to reverberate from the future, too, for
just prior to the Snap, she'd linked with him again. A link through
time. The thought made her shiver.
What would happen to that bond if Andrew decided against
Lladrana?
She woke late, and by the time she dressed, Andrew was moving
around the kitchen with only one cane and looking rested.
"Want me to make omelettes?" she asked.
He grinned and settled into a chair at the table. "Sure."
She got the ingredients together and began preparing.
A few minutes passed in silence. "I've decided," he said
quietly.
Marian tensed as she folded the egg mixture over in the frying
pan, then glanced at him.
"Yes?" Her voice was equally soft.
"I want to go with you."
She slid his omelette onto a plate and placed it before him,
then went to work on hers, she was focused more on Andrew.
"Why?"
He shrugged. "I think it's evident that my time and future here
is limited." Then he gave a lopsided smile that tore her heart.
"I'll take my chances on Lladrana."
She could barely breathe. "Really?" It came out in a
high-pitched squeak that would have done Tuck proud.
Andrew picked up his fork and took a tiny bite. "I don't have
much appetite." He continued to eat mechanically.
But when she finished making her own omelette and sat across
from him, his gaze was as intense as a laser.
"Some people are born to do certain things. You are born to
be the Exotique Circlet Sorceress of Lladrana." His face
hardened. "I don't ever want you walking away from that destiny.
Promise me."
It wasn't often he demanded things of her.
She put down her fork, couldn't eat.
"Promise me, now. Nothing will stop you from returning."
She choked. He meant his sickness, his death.
"I want this for you, Marian. All your life you've been looking
for something, searching for that one skill that was completely
natural for the genius inside you. You had it and knew it
subconsciously." He waved a hand. "Most sensitive people could tell
that. Now you've found it. I will not let you squander your
talent. Promise me now."
"I promise." The words were barely a breath, but he heard them
and nodded.
"Good." He closed his eyes again, a smile hovered on his mouth.
"Always searching, all those classes..." He sighed.
Marian stared down at her omelette, too excited to eat. What had
she done? She'd promised to go back to Lladrana and battle the
Dark.
She might have been born to this work, but unlike her first week
on Lladrana, the months to come wouldn't be fun and games and
learning. Her future-their future, hopefully- could be brutal and
short.
"Eat," Andrew said, "and I'll tell you how this will work."
Marian smiled, was able to pick up her fork again and eat. The
omelette should have been tasty, but it was much like the ones
she'd eaten with Bossgond. Still, like Andrew, she ate
automatically, for fuel.
Andrew said, "I'll get ready to travel. I think we should leave
from your apartment again." He looked around. "This house should
sell pretty quickly, especially if I keep the price reasonable.
I'll pull out money from my account and convert it to-what do the
Lladranans use as currency?" He grinned. "No use going there a
pauper if I can help it."
"You're sure you want to do this?"
"Of course." He chuckled. "I'm the risk-taker, remember? You're
the cautious one, trying to get things perfect before you make a
move."
"I'm doing better at that," she mumbled.
He tilted his head. "I think you are. Those Lladranans taught
you more than magic, didn't they?"
She managed a smile. "I had a lot of challenging
experiences."
"You'll have to tell me the whole story, from beginning to
end-or at least the middle. We haven't reached the end yet."
"You'll really return with me." She searched his face and found
his eyes steady.
"You're the one with the destiny. I'm the one with no future. .
.here. We're family. Where you go, I go."
Tears rolled down her face. She reached for the paper towel she
had used for a napkin and wiped her eyes, blew her nose.
He began eating again. "And you'll have to tell me about the
man, too."
Her chest tightened. "The man."
"I felt him. But that can wait, it's all about me first. I'm not
going over poor, and there is definitely other stuff I want to take
with me. What do they use as currency, gold?" He winked.
"Uh, I don't know. I dealt mostly in trade." She frowned, trying
to remember Alexa's experiences. "Jewels, Alexa had a ruby-no, a
red spine."
"Even better." Andrew rose and took his plate to the sink,
washed it and his fork, frowning. "I didn't get that stuff about
Alexa. Who is she?"
Marian finished the last bit of omelette, then walked up and
gently jostled Andrew away from the sink so she could wash and put
away her own dishes. She looked up at him with a twinkle in her
eye. "Alexa was the first Exotique."
His goggle-eyed look was satisfying.
35
The following days Marian spent with Andrew were some of the
most satisfying in her life. His symptoms eased and he became the
vital, intelligent man he was when in remission. He delighted in
Marian's small displays of magic, forged ahead in settling his
affairs, closing his business and selling the house. In that, they
worked well together. Andrew liquidated his holdings and bought
gold and gems while Marian dealt with the paperwork of their
disappearance.
They flew back to Denver by private jet a couple of days before
they were to be Summoned.
On the night Marian's other self was thrown into the Dark's
nest, Andrew took her to an expensive restaurant and kept her mind
occupied by making her tell him stories of Lladrana. But her
underlying fears remained and her body betrayed her by twitching
until Andrew grabbed her and held her close.
The morning of the Summoning, Marian moved the two cots she and
Andrew had slept on to the building's storage unit and left them.
She returned to a clean apartment, bare except for the items they
would need for the Summoning. Andrew had placed his night gear in
his pack, put on the music. He stood outside the scarlet-taped star
and circle looking thoughtful. Their packs lay in the middle of the
star.
"You know, this is going to look awfully strange to the property
manager when he walks in."
"This is Boulder," Marian said tensely, reviewing her notes.
Anxiety that her mind would go blank bit deep. "Besides, I'm going
to leave the door unlocked. Maybe they'll think someone else laid
the tape. I'm sure the brass incense burner and the mini music
system will be stolen by the time someone in authority gets
here."
Andrew patted her shoulder and shook his head. "I think they'll
know you did it. Everyone knows you've always been weird, Marian,"
he teased.
Marian chuckled weakly, scanned his face, rubbed her throat.
"Ready? You're sure you want to go?" They'd taped the pentacle
together. Andrew had practiced the chant, too.
"Like the other ten billion times you've asked me-yes, I want to
go. This is a real adventure." He adjusted his hat to a rakish
angle. He wore a full leather suit of pants, vest, heavy jacket and
an Indiana Jones-style hat. The hat reminded Marian of the hideous
hat that Jaquar wore and she felt her heart pump faster at the
knowledge she'd soon see him. For him, it would be a mere two days
since she left, but for her it had been weeks.
He'd know that and factor it in when he pressed for a renewal of
their relationship.
Marian wore her underwear and her purple robe. She'd packed a
silk pantsuit and several pairs of jeans. She had some in Alexa's
size, too, and was bringing a package of Tuck's favorite hamster
treats. She had new electronic "nuts" for him-encyclopedias, books
and music.
She set her shoulders. "Let's do it." She glanced down at her
notes, shoved them into the center to consult.
"Easy," Andrew said as he caught her left hand in his right
one.
His fingers didn't have tension running through them, his body
was relaxed, Marian noted with envy. His right hand held the
tiger's eye full of energy that Jaquar had given her.
She looked at her watch. "We're running a little ahead of
schedule."
"All to the good. Let's start."
"I don't know..."
"You must believe we can do it," Andrew said.
"What if it's not right?"
He just chuckled. "I can't think that magic spells are so
precise that there is no room for mistakes, can you?"
She didn't know, but it couldn't hurt to be as perfect as
possible.
So they began the Ritual tailored to Earth Song and magic that
Marian had crafted. They lit the incense together, closed the
Circle, began the chant. Andrew's voice was low, deeper than Marian
had ever heard, fervent-sounding.
He wanted to do this. The knowledge should have relaxed her, but
it didn't. She was strung tight as a piano wire.
Mother Earth's Song rose from the ground through her feet,
surged through Marian like a benediction. Andrew's fingers clamped
over hers.
They chanted the final note.
A sizzling firebolt hit between their feet.
Andrew jerked. Marian gasped.
They shot into the Dimensional Corridor even as Marian was
thinking that the property manager wasn't going to like the singed
carpet and it was good she'd reconciled herself to not getting her
deposit back.
"Marian?" Andrew shouted over the winds roaring around him.
His eyes stared as if he didn't see what she did-a shining,
nearly translucent portal across the hall from them. Through it she
could see a huge Circle of Marshalls, Circlets, Scholars,
Chevaliers.... But it wasn't the Temple at the Marshalls'
Castle!
The incised pentacle was the one at Parteger Island-a place she
never cared to see again.
"Marian!" Andrew shivered as if the winds buffeted him.
No breeze stirred the bottom of Marian's robe. She was in
control here.
With a slight tug on Andrew's hand, she led him to the portal,
and through it.
They dropped about four feet to the gray stone. Marian steadied
Andrew as the breath jarred from him on landing.
Amee's Song flooded her, held her transfixed. Earth's Song
diminished, left with a farewell of distant thunder, the image of a
gray sky over the Boulder Flatirons, and the scent of ozone after a
storm. Marian blinked back tears to see Andrew gawking around them,
swaying.
Power sizzled through her-from the midmorning sunlight, the hot
stone beneath her feet, the triumphant cry of Amee at the arrival
of another warrior. Wind whirled around her like a thousand
blessings, stroking her with love, from Amee-and from Jaquar?
His dark sapphire gaze fixed on hers, he stood linked between
Alexa and another Marshall. Determination and promises flowed to
her from him, through the emotional link that widened as their
gazes locked. He nodded, then turned his head to look at Andrew.
His eyes softened, a smile close to pity curved his lips.
Marian scowled. How dare he pity her brother!
"First question," Alexa called in English as soon as the last
word of the Summoning chant ended. "Did you bring potatoes? You
know they don't have fries here."
Marian laughed and Andrew grinned.
Lady Knight Swordmarshall Thealia Germaine cut the Ritual Circle
by withdrawing her hands from those on each side of her and humming
an atonal note.
Alexa strolled toward them, smiling at Andrew. "Hi, you must be
Andrew. I'm Alexa."
Andrew took a step, wavered. Marian reached to brace him, but he
shrugged her hand away and paced forward steadily, holding out his
hand. "Andrew Reston."
Marian and Andrew had just stepped from the center pentagram to
between the star-points when a screaming whoosh sounded
behind them.
The shriek came from a thin, weedy young Circlet who yelled,
"The maw opened. Danger. Danger! I saw it. An immense pulse of
Darkness straight here-carrying horrors." He crumpled.
Wing beats and cries came from above. Volarans had risen to
scream challenge to a dreeth, diving at it, clamping teeth on the
fragile wings.
Marian whirled to see monsters pouring into the confined circle
of the stands, trapping the Lladranans and her and Andrew-hulking
renders, slayers ruffling their spines, the soul-suckers with
twisting tentacles. Five black splotches of manlike sangviles
glided toward them. She stood petrified.
But Lladranans fought in three dimensions.
Alexa whirled and ran to Bastien. He shrilled a whistle and a
mighty volaran dipped near to the ground. Bastien threw Alexa onto
the steed, then jumped on behind her. An egg-shaped force field
snapped around them. They whipped out their batons and Bastien
yelled a war cry as they flew straight for the dreeths distended
belly.
Their Chevaliers, Pascal and Urvey, Koz and Perlee and others
called their volarans and followed.
The Marshalls coalesced into Pairs, then into a team, stripped
their robes from their armor and waded into the fight, faces grim.
A Powerful Song of destruction vibrated from them in low tones.
Most of the Circlets and Scholars stood as frozen as Marian.
Bossgond wielded a staff that sent invisible energy, frying a
slayer.
Sinafin in hawk-form flew over Marian and dropped a brithenwood
branchlet on her head, screaming, Fight.' That jolted Marian from
immobility. She caught the branch before it fell to the ground,
held on hard. To her surprise, the twigs melded into the main stem,
the forks came together, and she had a strong, beautiful wand that
Sang of life.
Others were dying. Marian saw a male Chevalier Pair fall beneath
five renders, ripping them apart.
Fight. It was a whisper inside her that had to grow fast,
that had to stir her body into action. It didn't matter that she
didn't know how. She had to try.
Jaquar ran to them, his telescoping staff the size of a wand.
His lips were pulled back in a grin. He'd torched a sangvile and
yelled in triumph.
Behind him followed a soul-sucker, and another speeding
sangvile. "Watch out-" She'd meant to warn him, but he caught
Andrew in a football tackle and draped him over his shoulder,
running for the dubious safety of the deserted Tower.
Cold fingers encircled her ankle. Power stilled in her, began to
drain. She looked down in horror to see a sangvile move its head to
her calf, lips protruding.
Fight.' Fire! Fire killed these things. She was the Mistress of
Lightning. Fight before she died!
The Massster sssends his greetingsss, the evil thing
hissed in her mind-violation enough to enrage Marian.
She pointed her new wand at it and shouted, "Fire!" Summoning
Power from the anger of Amee in the ground beneath her. She allowed
it to sear through her to free her wits, roll down her arm and
charged from the wand to strike the sangvile and shrivel it to
ash.
Her first kill.
She felt no remorse, only dedication to the cause of freeing
this planet from the Dark that sought to claim it. She wouldn't
stand aside. She'd learn to fight. This was her home now, these
people her family as much as Andrew. She would defend them to her
death.
Shuddering, she took a few seconds to scan the battleground.
Most of the Scholars had fled after Jaquar, who was organizing
them. Several Circlets stood ready before him.
To her surprise, Chalmon and Venetria had joined Bossgond. A
ragged Song rose from the three as they struggled to work as a
unit, fighting a dreeth. Venetria used her staff to coat the
creature's wings with ice, and it crashed. Bossgond and Chalmon
shot a thick sizzling stream into it, firing it.
Chevaliers fought on foot or volaran-back. Some had fallen, but
their bravery and skill in facing the monsters and dispatching them
impressed Marian.
The Marshalls were awesome to see-targeting a dreeth or a
specific group of horrors, swooping down, and dispatching them. Not
one Marshall-Sword or Shield-appeared to have a scratch.
Marian limped to the Tower where Jaquar was forming the Scholars
and Circlets into a defensive semicircle. She couldn't see Andrew
but sensed he was behind the line.
As she walked, she swung her wand like a weapon, shooting fire
at the horrors-cutting two soul-suckers in half, setting a render
afire. She learned not to shut her eyes as the fire hit, not to
flinch as death claimed a beast. Her left foot that the sangvile
had leeched onto was numb and dragging behind her, slowing her.
A scream of pain split the air above her. Marian looked up to
see a small dreeth flame a rider and volaran. The rider fell and
hit the ground two feet from Marian with a sickening thud.
Marian pivoted, struggled to keep her balance.
It was Perlee.
"Nooo!" an anguished man shouted in her ear. Koz jumped from his
own volaran, flung himself at Perlee, lifted her.
She was dead.
"No," he whispered, rocking her. "It can't be. This can't be
right. This isn't fair."
Even Marian knew that life was rarely fair, and war never was,
and this was her first battle. She swallowed hard, averted her gaze
from the burned and broken Perlee. Setting a hand on Koz's large,
trembling shoulder, she cried, "Come."
So many monsters. How could they all have appeared? A black
death ray straight from the maw to here.
She shivered, pulled on Koz's arm. "Come! We aren't safe
here."
He lifted a pale face, blind eyes staring. "She's my Pairling,
we're bonded. She can't die. Not without me. She can't go away
without me. She can't abandon me." It was a chant of his own. A
chant rejecting death. A futile Song.
Thudding footfalls approached. Pascal, the head of Alexa's
Chevaliers, stopped near them. "Perlee's gone, Koz. We have a fight
to finish." His words were harsher than his tone. "Come along."
Koz did nothing.
Pascal stooped and pulled Perlee's sword from her loose fingers.
To Marian's horror, he yanked Perlee from Koz's grasp, lifted her
sword and plunged it into her body, through it, into the ground.
Marian choked.
Perlee's body sank into the ground until all that showed was a
depression of darker green grass, and her sword stood upright like
a gravestone.
Koz roared in despair and swung at Pascal, who ducked, grabbed
the man's arm and snapped, "Let's go. Horrors are advancing.
Protect the Exotique!"
Looking down at her with dull eyes, Koz moved between her and a
group of monsters rampaging toward them.
Adrenaline shooting through her, Marian ran haltingly toward the
Tower, the men at her back. She plunged through the defensive line
a moment before the horrors caught up with them.
The men joined the ranks and turned and fought. Jaquar stepped
up with them as the beasts hit the line.
The battle had come to the Tower.
Jaquar, Pascal and Koz cut down the first wave of six-three
renders, a soul-sucker and two slayers.
As a slayer died, it flung its spines into the defenders. A
female scholar fell.
So did Andrew.
Marian screamed, her cry resounding off the black stones of the
Tower. She rushed to his side, found the yellow spine sticking out
of his shoulder. Without thought she grabbed it-acid seared her
palm. Pain scoured her. She kept her gaze locked on Andrew.
His face was pale, beaded with sweat. He tried to smile.
"Guess.. .I've.. .had.. .it. Not much of an.. .adventure."
"Nooo!" she moaned.
Jaquar was there. "The jerir, do you have it?"
Marian stared at him.
"The jerir!" he repeated.
She fumbled in her pocket where she'd put the bottle, dug it
out. He ripped it from her hand, unstoppered it and poured it into
Andrew's wound, then found the energy stone in Andrew's pocket and
set it atop the injury.
Andrew jerked in her arms. She thought she saw his soul rise
from his body. "No!" she cried. "Stay, stay with me."
With her own strong Song, Powered by physical and emotional
pain, she encased him, drew him close. Held him. His soul hovered,
then slipped halfway back into him.
Jaquar grabbed her hurt hand, took a vial from his pocket and
upended fiery liquid over her palm and fingers. Her vision
darkened. She fought it back.
Battle cries and roars came from the line. She turned her head
to the protective rank of Circlets fighting. She saw
Marshalls-Alexa and Bastien-zooming down on the monsters from
behind.
Two Circlets fell. Then a render's powerful swipe hit Koz, swept
him off balance, and his head hit the stone wall.
As Marian watched, the battle moved to the Tower, with all the
monsters attacking, then the Marshalls and Chevaliers cut the
horrors to shreds.
A shout of triumph rose. Soon all the survivors entered the
Tower, which had become a hospital zone.
Marian stayed with Andrew, who struggled for life, laboring to
breathe. She didn't let go of his Song, kept re-weaving the bond
between them.
The two Castle Medicas who had helped Summon Andrew and Marian
arranged the wounded around them, used their Power to heal. The
Marshalls had consulted with the Medicas regarding Andrew, and
Marian hated that he'd heard their whispered conclusion. He was an
Exotique, too unknown and frail to be healed by a Marshalls'
Circle. They could not help.
Would not help.
The Marshalls Healing Circle dealt only with the worst Chevalier
casualties, slowly and steadily. They fought death and won.
Nor would the Marshalls help Koz. The Medicas frowned over the
Chevalier. "He has a concussion. We have healed it, yet he does not
respond." They shook their heads over him, then went on to other
wounded.
The Scholars and Circlets had set up a Healing Circle, too,
under Chalmon's direction, with Bossgond a part of it. Marian could
sense from where she sat that the Circle wasn't as strong or as
steady as the Marshalls'. Not as well practiced.
Something she'd definitely remedy in the future...
She didn't want to think of a future without Andrew. Had never
wanted to imagine a life without her brother. She wasn't ready for
his death so soon after the triumph of arriving in Lladrana.
Jaquar stayed with her, sitting beside her but not touching,
keeping a low Song of comfort running between them. Now and then he
would leave to join the Healing Circle. She missed him, then. He
was only across the floor from her, but she missed him.
She prayed. The day crept by with agonizing slowness.
Finally Andrew's breath rattled in his chest. His eyes opened
and his gaze fixed on hers.
Marian, he whispered in her mind.
She jerked, her fingers tightening on his hand.
Andrew. She infused her mental voice with all the love
she felt for him. I'm sorry-
No! I'm not. He managed a smile. An adventure. Live,
Marian. Live large.
Andrew-
No, listen to me. A hoarse sound that might have been the
beginning of a chuckle escaped his lips. Look, I have learned
something new today. To mind-speak. Listen to me.
He rolled his eyes toward Koz, who moaned. Medicas gathered
around him. I want his body.
36
She flinched in shock. No!
Andrew projected mentally, I learned something else
today, too. I can see souls. His is leaving. He doesn't want his
body. He is abandoning it, following his lady into death.
No!
Yes. He is not fighting to survive, to live like we
have. Like I am.
Andrew was right. She and Andrew had always struggled- against
their mother-to live as individuals. Andrew had fought to live with
his condition, sometimes from moment to moment, as he fought to
live now.
Koz surrendered to death. His mind did not want to overcome the
shock of his head injury because he was devastated by the loss of
his Pairling. Even now, as life drained from his eyes, his etheric
self, his soul, began to rise and separate from his body.
It is a big, strong, virile body, and 1 want it.
"No." But she whispered.
Yes. Come on, sis. You and 1 have read enough science
fiction and fantasy, enough philosophy, watched enough flicks to
know it can be done!
A bubble of sheer incredulity caught in her throat. I
can't-
You can! You have great Power here. You have friends
and allies and people bonded and indebted to you who will help.
This is no time to lack faith in yourself!
But deep inside something gibbered insidiously, I
can't.
You must! Look, his spirit is leaving, and you have
me. You'll get all of me. Put me inside his body!
She had no time to prepare, no knowledge of how to do this
thing. If it could be done. She wanted to deny that she
could help. But Koz and Andrew were both in the arms of death. With
luck she could save one. Andrew.
Linking Andrew's limp hand with Koz's, she put her hands around
the men's joined fingers, felt the last pulsing energy of them
both. She sensed how Koz was bound to the tiny echo of Perlee's
Song and yearned to follow. Sensed how Andrew craved to live. As
she balanced the rhythmic Songs of them, sweat slid down her face,
her back, and her own true melody wavered.
Someone's hands curved over her shoulders. Jaquar. She should
not be able to bear it, but he sent her strength and she used it. A
gray form lifted from Koz, sped to where another
shade-Perlee?-hovered. They merged and vanished. Pain speared
Marian's head, her vision narrowed to Andrew's face. She gulped
breaths but found no air.
Jaquar's grip dug into her shoulders. He was a rock she leaned
on.
The Medicas drew back from Koz's body.
"No! Stay!" Marian commanded. She forced her hand to drop
Andrew's limp fingers. "I have my brother and he wants to live. He
will take this body. Keep it alive!"
They stared at her. One rubbed his forehead. "I have never seen
a soul transfer. I don't know how it's done."
Marian didn't, either. She lifted her chin, kept Andrew close,
wrapped tight in her love. With a thick tongue, she said, "I am a
Sorceress, a Circlet of the Fifth Degree, I will do this."
Enthralled, the three Medicas stared at her. The leader nodded
decisively. "We will keep the body alive."
She glanced at Andrew. The minute thread of life connecting his
soul broke. There was a snap, an inner snap of Andrew
separating from his body. The full weight of him, his will, his
soul, his character, his personality fell on her and they spun into
blackness, unconsciousness threatened. She gritted her teeth, but
barely felt the action. Shoulders hunched, she fell forward.
Send me in, Marian, please, please, please, begged
Andrew, like the child he'd been once.
She couldn't deny him then, and couldn't deny him now.
Wearily, lifting Andrew's being like a weight too heavy to be
borne, she fumbled for Koz's hand, sensed the emptiness of his
shell, knew the shape of all the crannies and caverns of him.
Someone moaned-was it her? Straining, she poured Andrew's
essence into the body, tucked him in as if into a bed. The body
jerked, ripping Andrew and Koz's hand from her slippery grasp. She
grabbed, but missed him.
Bossgond was there, his hand linked to her right. Jaquar was on
her other side, his fingers encompassing her left hand. And they
were connected to all the Circlets on the field. Chalmon and
Venetria poured energy into her. Everyone gave her support.
Power trickled into her from unrecognized sources.
She reached with all her heart and mind and soul and recaptured
Andrew, his whole being, and held him close, matched his whimpers
with her own, turned them into hums of comfort.
Here is the body before you, Bossgond said. The
heart, the mind, the soul cavity. Do! We will help.
Marian was afraid. What if-
You cannot doubt yourself! Bossgond snapped. You must
have faith that you can do this.
Marian strengthened her will, let Andrew flow from her keeping,
guided him into the body, holding him safe-for another stretch of
seconds before her doubts ambushed her again. She fought them with
the love she felt for Andrew, with the affection she felt from
Bossgond, with the Powerful support she felt from Jaquar, but the
transfer slowed.
Inside her head, Bossgond insinuated thoughts opposing the voice
of her self-doubt. Why do you think that you must achieve
perfection or you will fail?
Because 1 have always failed and it must be because I am not
perfect. But with the admission, her heart felt lighter and
more of Andrew sparkled into the body. Bossgond was distracting
that part of her mind that doubted and letting her magic and Power
do what needed to be done!
What have you failed at? Bossgond asked mildly.
Having my mother love me. Keeping Andrew safe. The
failures rose huge in her mind.
Bossgond seemed to consider that. Perfection cannot be
achieved. You can only do your best with the resources that you
have. You did not fail with your mother. Your mother was the one
who could not give you what you needed. It was a lack in
her.
I wanted too much.
Take the love 1 feel for you as a father, Bossgond said,
and it poured into her. Love from the man, his pride in her, in her
accomplishments filled her. She saw with awe that he thought she
was beautiful, mind and body.
You did not fail Andrew. Jaquar's deep voice echoed in
her mind. He is here. He was not originally Summoned, but he
came. You gave him new life. How can you think you failed
him?
Put that way, she couldn't. She let droplets of Andrew slide
from her holding, sparkle into the mind-space, throb into the
heart-space-that great heart of his-swirl into the soul-space. She
released him with joy.
An arm clasped her around the waist and Power inundated her from
Alexa. All the Marshalls linked with her. Marian went blind at the
shock, the realization that through her the Power of all the
Marshalls, all the Circlets, merged and cycled. Powerful people
all, they provided Marian with all the magic she could need.
Through her, they learned of one another, accepted each
other. Distrust diminished with the intimate connection; trust and
faith grew.
Take my love as a sister-friend, Alexa said, and that
love filled Marian, banishing darkness and uncertainty. Alexa saw
her as beautiful, too-as a strong woman of fascinating Power, full
of love for Andrew, full of curiosity about life. In Alexa's image,
Marian was laughing.
Marian smiled, relaxed.
Take my love as a mate, Jaquar said. The breath-stealing
hugeness of his love roared through her like a river. She was a
gorgeous woman. A woman who matched him in mind and heart. A woman
who gave him joy as she learned, explored things. A woman who made
him think and laugh and yearn.
How could she doubt herself? She couldn't. Her uncertainties
vanished, defeated for now, as she gave her beloved brother new
life.
She shrugged, settling the last of him into her Power stream,
ready to transfer him with care. From Bossgond and the Medicas, she
saw how to weave his mind into the brain, how to help him connect
and spark the electrical impulses that werethought and memory and
knowledge. From Jaquar and Alexa she expanded the heart-space where
Andrew's emotions would live, sent them flowing there. And through
Luthan the Chevalier Representative of the Singer, she received
delicate touches from that elder woman, which mended Andrew's
spirit, settled his soul.
Finally it was done.
Every little iridescent iota of Andrew gone from her keeping and
into his new physical shell. What lingered and connected them both
was the love they had for each other.
She slumped, black exhaustion descending, then fell into
Jaquar's strong arms.
You are a Great Sorceress of Faith, he said, and his
words comforted as darkness overwhelmed her.
Marian didn't think she'd been unconscious for more than a
moment or two, because when she awoke, she was kneeling on the
Tower floor next to Koz-Andrew. Afternoon light filtered through
the windows, and circles of people surrounded her in a spiral,
their hands beginning to unlink.
"Surely this was the greatest Power Circle ever created," a
melodious male voice said near her.
She glanced that way and found a Shieldmarshall smiling at her,
pleasure and Power in his gaze.
A Medica stroked Andrew-Koz's hair back from his head. "We will
wake him in about two hours," the Medica said, smiling grimly. She
swept a hand, indicating the room. "Combined wisdom says that the
new mind must have time to settle in, but cannot be unconscious for
too long or the inherent brain patterns of the past occupant will
begin to overcome the new entity."
"The new person, my brother Andrew."
Dipping her head, the Medica agreed. "Andrew."
The shell of the Andrew whom Marian had loved all her life lay
pitiful and deserted, green eyes wide and staring, face lax. Marian
trembled and looked away. She couldn't stay here.
"I need air," she said.
Jaquar helped her to her feet. The rest of the Marshalls and
Circlets were now participating in a single Healing Circle.
Marian gestured to the others. "Go help."
"I'd rather stay with you."
"I won't be a good companion." She needed to ponder events.
"You only have to be yourself. I'll just accompany you."
She linked her hands together, afraid the trembling in them
would move to her whole body. "So much has happened," she
whispered.
When she looked at Koz she saw only a large, virile Lladranan
man. She flinched.
Jaquar hugged her. "He's there."
Pulling away, Marian turned her back on the scene. "I can't see
him. I can only have faith that we accomplished the soul
transfer."
Jaquar drew beside her, lifted her fingertips and kissed them.
"You are the most amazing woman I know, and the most daring in your
faith."
She stared at him. "I'm not-"
"You trusted people in a different land. You learned from them.
Then you even returned to a world in great danger, a world that
will demand much from you. You trusted us with your Summoning and
with your brother. If Alexa can be called the Guardian of Honor,
you can be known as the Sorceress of Faith."
Marian didn't know what to say. It felt as if a ton of
responsibility was about to land on her shoulders. She didn't have
the energy for that.
Andrew's former shell was gone. She gulped. She'd known that
body as Andrew all her life. Would it sink into the ground like
Perlee's? Would she miss it, mourn it, when she might have the real
Andrew with her?
She shook the weird notions off.
Chants rose around them. Healing Power generated its own sweet
smell that mixed with the sweat of those working, and the lingering
stench of the monsters' bodily fluids.
"I want fresh air," she said.
He glanced at the open door of the Tower and the area beyond.
"It should be safe. The Song knows, the Marshalls don't leave a
scrap of the horrors around."
"I'm too tired to go far," she said.
"I'll be with you." He took her arm.
This time she didn't argue. She walked as steadily as she could
outside, and her left foot still dragged a bit-in all the commotion
she had forgotten to tell anyone about it.
"Why are you limping?" asked Jaquar.
"A sangvile-um-bite."
Jaquar swore and scooped her up. He whisked her back inside and
to the Marshalls' Healing Circle. Marian didn't like being the
center of attention again, but was pleased when she felt the
sparkling connection with the Marshalls. She'd have to ensure the
Tower Community bonded together better. Her wound was quickly
healed, though a Medica scolded her and told her that her ankle
would be weak for several days.
The atmosphere in the Tower was even more oppressive. Too many
Lladranans. There were only two Earth people, herself and
Alexa-even Andrew had a Lladranan body, and how much would that
change him? She had faith that he'd only become a better
person.
"My ankle is better enough to walk," she muttered to Jaquar, and
linked fingers with him.
He looked at her, smiling. "Thank you."
"For forgiving you?" she asked.
"You have?"
She kept silent until they left the Tower and emerged into the
strong late-afternoon sunlight. There she stopped to close her eyes
and soak it up. The light refreshed her, reminded her she was
alive. And so was Andrew.
When she opened her eyes, the first thing she saw was Perlee's
sword in the ground. Next to it was Koz's. As her gaze swept the
area, she saw about twenty other upright swords, some on the
flagstones between the stands. None in the series of pentacles.
"All my fault," she whispered.
"I don't think so," said a voice behind her.
It was Chalmon. He and Venetria stood, looking bedraggled and
exhausted, just outside the Tower door.
Jaquar stepped in front of her. "What do you want?"
"To apologize to Exotique Circlet of the Fifth Degree Marian
Harasta," said Chalmon.
"You can't apologize for something that you don't regret,"
Marian said, stepping up to join Jaquar. When she thought of what
this man and his cohorts had done, her anger spiked.
Chalmon eyed her warily. "That's true." He swallowed visibly.
"And I still think that the knowledge we received was incalculable
and the injury you did the nest saved many lives." He inhaled
deeply. "But we were wrong to use you so, without your knowledge,
and I apologize for that. 1 will always carry the burden of guilt
that I was a moral coward and took the easy way out to forestall
the consequences I feared."
From what she'd garnered through the link she had with Chalmon
and Venetria, Marian didn't think anything about Sending her to the
maw was easy for anyone. And Chalmon had been afraid the master and
the monsters would invade Venetria's island and destroy his lover.
Fear for a loved one made a person do strange things. Like die as
Koz did. Like transfer a beloved brother's soul and spirit and
heart into a different body.
Marian might understand why Chalmon had acted as he did, but she
wouldn't forgive him anytime soon. She'd never trust him.
Turning to Jaquar, Chalmon bowed deeply. "And I apologize to
you, Jaquar. I used your name to deceive Marian. I caused her to
believe you betrayed her. I damaged your relationship with
her."
Jaquar grunted. "Tell us why you don't think the attack was
specifically because of Marian."
"I'm sure the Dark wants the Exotiques...neutralized. But the
next was releasing sangviles," Chalmon said simply. "Those are
particularly dangerous to the Tower Community. It's reasonable
that the master had targeted this island as a stronghold for the
horrors all along. In the past it has been rarely used, but is
central to the current Towers." He shrugged. "I'd hate to think
that the Dark is resourceful enough to target this island in two
days. The timing may be due to Marian, but I believe everything had
been planned."
He glanced around, his gaze lingering on the upright swords.
"Parteger Island will never be the same. Nor should it be. I
believe Circlet Marian will lead us now."
"Lead!" Marian exclaimed.
Chalmon's lips curved in a smile-grimace. "Organize us, then. We
have been lax in cooperating, like spoiled children."
Marian was shaking her head, but Jaquar squeezed her fingers.
She was torn by the idea-pleased and proud. But the weight of that
responsibility pinned her heart.
"Excellent reasoning regarding today's attack, Chalmon," Jaquar
said. His smile was forced, all teeth. "Now go."
"I don't know if his logic is sound," Marian said. Her damn
self-doubt about her abilities was back.
"Then, know this," Chalmon said quietly. "Since you arrived, and
your brother, too, Amee's Song is stronger. For that I will always
thank you. And know also that I do not forget my debt to you. What
I cannot pay in zhiv, I will promise in favors. My life is yours
should you ever need it." He bowed and turned back to the Tower
door, hesitating as if bracing for more work with others who
disliked him. Then he squared his shoulders and went inside.
After Venetria watched him go, she gave Marian a strained smile.
"I apologize, too. I knew what we did was wrong. I have no excuses.
I don't think I'll ever forgive myself for my own actions." She
squeezed her eyes shut, then opened them. "My life is yours, too,
Marian. Just direct me in any way." She curtsied deeply and
followed Chalmon.
Jaquar heaved a sigh. "Well, that interrupted my romantic walk
with you."
Marian smiled, pressed his hand. "We were supposed to be on a
romantic walk?"
Bringing her closer, Jaquar pulled her hand through his arm and
began strolling again. "Yes, calming, uplifting, romantic."
"All that?"
His eyes were serious. "Everything I can give you, Marian."
He smiled. "Parteger Island is really very pretty. Quite
pastoral beyond the theater and Tower." He waved a hand. "Meadows
of flowers, orchards of fruit, groves of trees..."
"Your eloquence amazes me."
He chuckled with her. "So I'm trite." His tone turned serious.
"You often leave me without words, Marian."
They had reached the outermost large pentacle. Jaquar grasped
her other hand so that they stood facing each other. The heat from
the sun wrapped around them, warmed the air.
His face was more lined than when she first met him. His eyes
seemed bluer, his gaze definitely wiser. He'd suffered and
survived.
As she had.
As Andrew had.
They all lived.
Even the streaks in his hair looked slightly wider than they had
when he first stared down at her in the Marshalls' Temple.
"Our Song has revived, Marian," he whispered. "Listen to
it."
She dropped her gaze and let the music surge around her, through
her, cycle between them. It grew with every heartbeat, with every
breath, with every moment her hands touched his. A Song more
beautiful than she'd ever heard.
"Dance with me, beautiful Marian," he said, and led her into a
waltz.
She closed her eyes and listened to their Song, and as she did,
all the things he'd said and felt about her swirled through her
bringing balm. He'd sent all his love, all his strength to her in
her moment of need. He'd named her as mate-and Sorceress of
Faith.
The tenderness now, of his arms, his steps, his body leaning
into hers seemed like an unending caress.
The waltz ended too soon.
Marian met his eyes, saw his yearning.
"I love you," he said.
She closed her eyes. "I know. I care for you." She swallowed.
"Deeply."
He brushed a kiss across her mouth, and Marian's lips tingled,
heat bloomed within her.
Jaquar smiled. "We match, Fifth Degree Circlet Marian." We
should Pair-bond.
A corner of her mouth lifted. "After seeing what happened to Koz
and Perlee, I am doubtful."
He shook his head. "They were truly unlucky." He waved a hand at
a Chevalier pacing the opening of the theater, on guard. "But look
at Pascal. He is Paired with Marwey and neither would give that up.
And all the Marshalls-"
Marian put her fingers over his lips to stop his words. "I must
grow accustomed to my new life here first-"
"An excellent idea," Bossgond said. He tapped Jaquar on the
shoulder. "Our wounded and Medicas must stay for a while, and the
Marshalls would like you to restore the water lines."
They all walked back to the Tower, but when she reached the
looming building, Marian tugged at her hands and Jaquar
stopped.
She said, "The day is lovely. Peaceful. Let me consider my new
life. Please give me a few moments alone."
He frowned and reluctantly let her go.
Thinking to see some of the aspects of the island that Jaquar
had described, Marian circled the Tower. She breathed in the
fragrant air of Amee but soon wanted to be near Jaquar again.
She'd just decided to go back when she stumbled straight into
the arms of the cowled master.
37
She screamed, but it was too late.
The master raised a hand. The blow would kill her.
"I cry a sorcerous duel, now!" Bossgond shouted as he and Jaquar
ran around the Tower corner.
Jaquar ran toward her. Bossgond tackled and sat on him.
The master, Mahlyar, stilled. His fetid breath whistled in her
face. The tentacles on his face squirmed.
People sprinted out of the Tower, stopped.
"Dark Power or no, you are bound to a duel, Mahlyar, especially
here on Parteger Island, the common gathering place of all the
Tower Community, which you once were part of. I cry duel!" Bossgond
yelled between panting breaths as he restrained Jaquar.
Not death at the master's hands, Marian thought.
Or at least, not right now. Apparently she had a chance, pitiful
though it might be.
Check your pockets, Jaquar advised. He'd stopped
struggling. You are the Sorceress of Faith. You can destroy
it.
Fight. Kill. Destroy. All the things she'd never wanted to do,
never practiced, shrank from. She had to do it now.
"Your pocket!" Jaquar reminded.
She remembered. She had the brithenwood wand. The wand! She
released a sigh of relief as she whipped it out.
The master laughed, clapped his hands. "Duel force field,
nothing in and nothing out."
Jaquar said, Remember your Power, your mastery over Weather
elements. Storm and-
A clear dome of rippling energy snapped over them and cut
Jaquar's instructions off. Her world narrowed to herself and
Mahlyar and the fight that would take place in a circle of fifteen
feet.
She stood panting, eyeing him like a rabbit eyes a mountain
lion, nearly petrified with fear. Fatalistically, she decided to do
her best, at least cripple him enough that when the forcefield was
raised, Alexa and the others could get him.
Even as she thought this, he waved a crooked, pus-laden finger
in the air and made a door. It cracked open and dark slanted into
the circle in beams. The dark death ray again...
She met its mad gaze. It was not human nor animal. It was not a
"he."
"I can escape home," it said, so softly she thought only she
could hear. "Or even better, I can bring others through after I've
sucked your Power and eaten your brain."
A shudder seized her. She had to stand. She had to fight.
She had to win.
"You are such a failure, Marian," Mahlyar said, and his voice
was all Candace-and others.
The words were thrown at her again and again, and with them
images of people throughout her life who'd found her wanting by
standards other than Marian's own. A teacher, a society debutante,
another grad student, Jack Wilse...
"Enough!" she screamed. Screaming felt good.
She advanced with her wand.
The whispers of failure circled her again, and this time the
visuals had solidified into three-dimensional people, all tall
enough to make her feel childlike, and flinging failure after
failure at her.
But this tactic wouldn't work. She had fought this battle
earlier. Hadn't Bossgond bolstered her confidence? Hadn't Jaquar
just named her the Sorceress of Faith? And besides that outside
validation, she had her own true self-esteem.
She was a success! She had succeeded in goals that she'd
set for herself. She had mastered her Power and become a Circlet.
She had found a man to love and share her life with. Most of all,
she had saved her brother.
And why was Mahlyar using these hateful puppets? To distract. He
didn't seem to be doing anything else, like firing up a
thunderbolt, he was just watching her. To test her? Perhaps. To
psych her out. Yes!
And because he was afraid of her.
The knowledge dazzled her.
She aimed her wand at him, sent fire spearing toward him.
Palm out, he deflected it.
"You are the failure!" She could play his game.
"You failed to raise your Tower." It didn't sound too awful
to her, but his features contorted. He shot a stream of
darkness.
She jerked her wand, countered the stream, sent it into the
ground at his feet. He snarled.
They circled. Anxious faces outside the dome-Pascal,
Swordmarshall Thealia, Alexa-watched. She couldn't let their fear
become her own.
He flung back his hood and howled, shocking her.
She jumped back. His face was patchy with color, bloodred,
Lladranan gold, dead gray. A large brow ridge overhung his deep-set
sockets. One eye showed small and red, the other hollow bone.
Four-inch tentacles sprouted from around his mouth, three at each
temple, thicker ones at the angle of his jaw.
Marian thought she'd go mad if one of those tentacles touched
her.
His bolt of dark light caught her in the chest with hideous
cold. Her heart slowed, her torso numbed. Her brain went foggy.
Then her left ankle gave. No! She hopped. Stomped her left foot,
both feet. Her soles tingled as energy from the ground whispered
through her. A tremor shivered through her. Not enough energy, not
enough Power. Still, she flicked her wand and fire spurted. He
waved it away, advanced with lips curled back showing sharp pointy
teeth.
Marian set her feet, settled into her balance, raised her wand
and summoned all the Power she had to shoot a flame.
With a finger-snap, Mahlyar built a shield to deflect her
fire.
She stared as he kept coming.
He yanked the wand from her hands, shrieked with pain and let it
fly. It hit the forcefield, then the ground.
So much for a wand as a weapon. Fear pooling inside her, she
stooped and picked up a rock, threw it at him.
It hit his shoulder and he grunted.
This wasn't good.
Sneering, he flexed his fingers. Claws flicked from the tips,
gleaming and murderous.
She ran for the wand. It was better than the rock, maybe still
had some Power. She'd thrown a brithenwood stick once to good
effect.
Scooping it up, she blessed adrenaline for her new strength.
This time she whistled a short spell-"Kill, kill, kill"-and dredged
up the last shred of anger and hate and destructive emotion from
her body. She whirled and flung the wand, mind directed.
It skewered his left hand, torched it.
He screamed, blew on his hand and encased it in ice.
With evil determination, he flicked a writhing thread of dark
energy at her. It caught her left ankle, twisted, twined.
Trapped.
With one jerk he had her feet out from under her, was dragging
her to him. He grinned, his black tongue licking over thick lips,
his facial tentacles pulsing bloodred in triumph.
Terror immobilized her. She flopped around. Caught.
Think!
A pointed rock bit into her bottom.
Use the pain!
Use your Power!
From the sun. She reached and it flowed into her,
energizing.
From the ground. Her nails clawed the ground and rich energy
poured into her.
Energy. Power. Use it!
How?
She was a Weather mage. Lightning!
Yes.
She couldn't Call it from outside the forcefield.
But she could call it from inside herself. She formed the bolt,
her whole body arcing as she sought to contain the energy. It ran
through her head to toes to head, a closed circuit, escalating in
Power, infusing every cell, sparking down every nerve. Suddenly her
Power was there.
She stared up at Mahlyar, and he bent slowly down, grinning,
tentacles curling, reaching, grasping.
She jammed her arms out, fingers stiff and spread.
Lightning!
Blue fire zapped him, flung him back to hit the forcefield. He
fell to the ground.
She stumbled to her feet and limped toward him. Her left ankle
hurt-she sent a streak of lightning energy to encircle it, halted
at the pain as her own Power burned away all traces of the
Dark.
Mahlyar staggered to his feet and swept his right arm out, claws
extended, gleaming and sharp. Sent a dark ray shooting.
With a thought, electrical Power rippled around her, shielding
her. Nothing could get through from outside.
The next blue bolt of fire from her fingertips tore open his
chest. She reached in and ripped out his blackened heart. It
shriveled as she closed her fist around it, nails digging in. He
screamed and the world shook.
The forcefield around them popped like a bubble and all the
energy that they had confined and not used swept into her. Powerful
energy, clean, sparkling, snapping energy, like a thunderstorm
rolling through her and leaving lightning. She staggered and fell
to her knees, dropped her head.
1 will take that, Sinafin said in a tuneful voice. A beak
pressed at her right fist, thrust through her fingers, snapped up
the small stone heart in her hand.
"My God," someone said in English. Female. Alexa. "Shit, Marian,
when you learn to fight you don't mess around." Her voice wobbled.
"Ripped out the heart. Shit. I think I need to sit down."
A presence joined Marian on the ground. She felt it to her
left.
She was full to bursting with Power, her skin stretched tight,
the inner flesh of her lips turned out. All her senses were...off.
She hoped they weren't fried, but suspected they were, along with
her brain synapses. All fried. Poor Marian. Too bad. Such
potential.
But she'd always known she'd come to this.
She heard whispering, then Bossgond said loudly, "She will never
have such Power again. It is the best time for her to raise her
Tower, I say!" He walked up to Marian and she saw him as a wavy
ripple of shades of yellow in the air. The gold tone was
particularly striking and she stared at it.
"Ahem." Bossgond cleared his throat. "Marian, it is time to
raise your Tower."
Raise her Tower! The stunning idea nearly jolted her from
the Power daze. She'd heard, read, thought a lot about that, but
she wasn't ready. Oh no. Hadn't she overcome enough challenges
today?
Someone took her elbows and lifted her to her feet. She didn't
want to be upright or to think. She'd just look at the pretty
gold-
"Marian," said Alexa. "You're staring at Bossgond's crotch."
Oops.
"Marian." Another male voice, reverberating across all the
chords of her being. Soft, tender, caressing her name. Jaquar, who
drew close.
She'd have thought Jaquar would be shades of red, like his
maroon robe, but he was blue. From the palest gray-blue, icy-white
blue to deep indigo. And the most beautiful blue was his eyes.
"Beautiful blue eyes," she said.
"Yes, yes," Bossgond snapped. "Let's get you to Alf Island. I
know the place there that called to you."
"Heart to heart, soul to soul. Cleave. Transfer. Go. Come..."
She wanted Jaquar's heart and soul to cleave to her own.
Cleave was a word used in the Christian marriage ceremony,
wasn't it?
"Take her other arm, Jaquar, and let's move before her
brain explodes with an overload of Power!"
Just escaped brain being eaten to face brain exploding... Some
days you couldn't win. Marian giggled.
Bossgond continued shouting orders. "Transfer to Alf Island
through the innermost pentacle. It has remnants of Power, too. We
need to get her there and started on her Tower raising fast,
so she can use this energy before it burns her out."
She stared at the yellow banner that was Bossgond. He flapped in
the breeze, agitated. She'd never seen him so disturbed, never
heard him emphasize his words in normal speech. Then came a time
that bent and twisted.
"This is something I don't want to miss," shouted Alexa. "We'll
follow on our volarans."
Wind and fire and water. The scent of wildflowers so perfect
that she wept and felt tears sizzle dry on her skin.
Her feet connected with the land and the rootedness shocked her
clear to her heart. This was her land. Her place,
forever.
The yellow waves of air approached, holding a large
peacock-colored pearl. Bossgond placed the lovely pearl on her
shoulder.
Hello, Marian, Tuck said, nuzzling her neck.
Tuck! She was back. She was home.
"Raise your Tower, Fifth Degree Circlet Marian Dale Harasta!"
Bossgond thundered the command, brooking no denial.
Marian responded instinctively.
And it started. The first of her Power siphoned from her,
coalescing into a three-dimensional image of the perfect Towers for
her, and her mind cleared. She smiled. Who could have guessed?
They were square. She'd wanted square after all the round towers
she'd inhabited. They weren't simple, but a Victorian fancy of what
castle towers should look like. How fun. How amusing to plant this
here on Amee.
Power encased her. She could do anything. She could raise these
towers!
So she settled into her balance, digging her toes into the rich
dirt that was nothing like the soil of Colorado. Tuck dug in, too,
his claws into her shoulder.
She sorted the Power inside her. The stronger tune of Amee
herself wound through Marian's blood, and she felt the energy of
the land settle in her belly.
She swayed a little to catch the spray of the incoming surf on
her face, distilled the Power of Water: surging, ever flexible,
ever changing, yet strong enough to carve beaches and canyons. The
hidden, secret, infinitely unknowable depths of the oceans flooded
her with energy. She hunkered down to hold the Power. But it had
blinded her, so she raised her arms, tilted her face to the sun to
feel the warmth of it, of fire.
A solar flare licked her body, burned through her to mix with,
then separate from the water energy. From swollen, cracked lips she
said, "Wind! Air!" It whirled around her, buffeting her, and she
laughed, for she could feel only the touch of the air and what she
contained within herself, could not see, or hear or taste the spray
of the tide on her lips. For an instant the wind brought all the
dark, rich scents of Amee. Then that sense, too, vanished as a
whirlwind as it spun inside her.
She thought she shrieked with joy, with the incredible Power. It
tugged at her in four directions-a pleasure-pain tempting her to
succumb to the elements, be torn apart in ecstasy. She danced with
it, the streams of Power whirling around her in rainbow of colors,
surging through her in great chords of melody so beautiful she
thought she might splinter into iridescent shards.
A great tug of something else, some other Song, shuddered
through her. A quiet, strong melody of love and lust and yearning.
Jaquar. It was easier to remember his name than hers. Marian? Yes,
she was Marian. Once of Earth and now of Amee.
And by the Power she would raise her Tower.
She screamed with laughter at the simple rhyme, but it focused
her, made her concentrate, harnessing the Power-so hard, so
difficult when it raged wild-shaping it, harder still- did she
pant, sweat, turn bloodless with the effort? And fling it into the
shape of two connected towers-like Tower Bridge of London.
Too great an endeavor for both towers and the bridge and the
walkway. So the bridge shrank and Marian fell and felt the hard
ground of Amee cut into her knees. And still she strove to
build, to manifest in reality what she knew in her mind. No
bridge, but instead of arches for traffic to pass through, the
bottom stories were solid! She grunted with effort.
"Done!" someone shouted. "Let the Power go!"
What Power? It was all used up. Marian fell to her side, and the
tiny bit remaining of the four elemental Powers trickled from her
grasp into.. .Tuck? He'd hopped onto the ground and now bathed in
the last shining remnants of her Power.
Feeling came first. Jaquar cradled her in his arms, but the Song
of Amee linked her to the planet and the grass was cool against her
calves. She had Towers and a world and a man.
Then she noticed the exquisite mixed fragrance of sweet grass
and flowers and sea spray.
"Well now," Alexa said, and Marian could feel her hearing
sharpen. "That's a sight I never thought to see again." Alexa
chuckled.
As if Alexa's words were a spell-and they could be, couldn't
they? Alexa was as strong in Power as she, though trained in a
different discipline-Marian's blindness faded and overbright colors
and shapes replaced it. She blinked and blinked again, and found
herself staring at Alexa, who stood holding Marian's brithenwood
staff and her own Jade Baton. Alexa gazed at the two Towers of
Tower Bridge. They were connected with a little Victorian fancy of
a walkway on the fourth level.
Marian looked at them, delighted. She never would have thought
that her "perfect" image of a tower would be these fussy buildings.
What a fabulous house. And Ritual room. And study. What wondrous
things she could do in a place like that.
"Two," Jaquar said, and his chest rumbled against her. "Two. For
you and Bossgond? Or for you and Andrew?"
Marian tried to speak, but coughed. Her throat was dry. Had she
been screaming as she'd thought?
Bossgond squatted down near them, held a wineskin to her lips.
She drank gratefully, uncaring that some of the thick mead trickled
down her chin.
"I thought." She met Jaquar's eyes and saw anger there- and deep
hurt. That wasn't acceptable. She wanted his smile. Clearing her
throat again, she said, "I thought for me and Tuck."
Jaquar's hurt flashed out of existence. He laughed. "That
hamster is prancing.'"
Tuck scrabbled up the side of her leg, danced up her thigh to
her stomach. Her mouth dropped open. He was a rainbow-furred
hamster. He sat back on his haunches, something large in his right
cheek pouch. She had the suspicion that it was a shriveled stone
heart and didn't want to contemplate that.
Tuck said, "I am pleased. But I do not need a whole Tower."
He nuzzled her neck, then hopped off her to the ground and grew.
Marian goggled, then stared some more when he was joined by a
matching foot-long rainbow-colored hamster.
Sinafin.
"We will make a little turret and take turns living here and
with Alexa." Tuck came up and his tongue darted out to lick her
chin. "Thank you. I shall live long and have Powerful
offspring."
"Huh," she said, and tried to sit. It was beyond her strength,
but Jaquar moved so she was propped in a sitting position against
him. He held the wineskin now. Bossgond had risen and moved away to
join everyone else in surveying the Towers.
"Perhaps," Marian whispered, "you'd like to live with me in one
Tower and we could use the other for our studies?"
Jaquar shook his head.
Her stomach tightened and the mead turned sour in her mouth.
"They're square," he pointed out, "and silly looking. My
masculinity might be called into question."
Bastien, Alexa's Pairling, had wandered back and now snorted. "I
think they're fine Towers. If you don't want them, I bet I could
convince Alexa-"
Jaquar hugged Marian tight. His heart was thumping hard, but his
voice was cool. "1 want them, and Marian." He glanced up at
Bastien. "I'll use your worthless self as witness. I hereby
formally ask Marian to Pair-bond with me in a coeurdechain."
Bastien snorted again. "You Sorcerers, always so formal. Why
don't you just kiss her?"
So Jaquar did, and she felt the Song that rose between them
twine them together. His total self opened to her and she
responded. She tasted the true intensity and richness of life that
could be found in giving and sharing love with a partner.
She broke the kiss and touched his cheek, smiling. "I look
forward to exploring every aspect of our lives and our world with
you."
Then she studied the people around her. To her amazement
Andrew-Koz was there, swaying in the hold of a massive
Swordmarshall, eyelids heavy.
She jumped up and ran to hug him. His arms came around her, but
he didn't hug her back as he always had. Her heart flipped into her
throat. "Andrew?"
He blinked. When he answered, his words slurred. "I think you
should call me Koz." He was speaking Lladranan! Of course he knew
French, and Marian had tried to teach him rudiments of the language
on Earth. Did the brain have language patterns-? Her mouth
dried.
"Koz?" She stepped back, and his arms fell to his side.
"Yep," he said in English, and that reassured her a little. He
switched back to Lladranan. "And I think I'll live in Horseshoe
Hall at the Marshalls' Castle. I'm a Chevalier now." He puffed out
his chest, but it was a larger chest than he'd had and he
overbalanced.
The Swordmarshall steadied him. "Easy, lad."
Koz-Andrew glanced at the Towers, then to her. "Go, Marian," he
said, and the lilt when he said her name was the same, though the
voice was deeper. He smiled, and somehow that was the same,
too.
She grabbed his hands, which were not at all the same. "I'm your
sister and I love you. I want you to be happy." She didn't want him
fighting. But it was not her decision.
Marian swung her gaze to Alexa's. Koz had been a part of Alexa's
household. The other Exotique winked and nodded, and Marian
released a relieved breath. Alexa would watch out for him.
Koz was taller than Marian, so she stood on the balls of her
feet and brushed a kiss against his cheek. "I love you."
"I love you, too," Koz said. His eyes narrowed as he looked past
her to Jaquar, who came up to them and placed an arm around
Marian's shoulder. "Looks like you've got a man. Don't take any
crap from him."
She smiled. "I won't."
Bossgond announced, "I think I will establish a school centered
around my Tower." He stood, hands on hips.
"Wonderful!" Marian said. The old Circlet needed to be more
sociable. She looked at Bossgond, a grumpy old man who'd become the
father she'd never had. Alexa and Bastien gazed at her, smiling,
too. Sinafin and Tuck paraded around as peacocks and Marian caught
Tuck's chirp.
"I am the boy. I have the pretty feathers. You are the girl and
are a peahen."
Sinafin ignored him.
Everything Marian had ever wanted was here, even though she'd
never known it, could never have imagined this life. She'd been
right to return. Her heart and future lay here.
On Amee she'd learned to open herself to more people than
Andrew-to trust and love. Her adventure had forced her to become an
integral part of a vibrant community engaged in an awesome task,
instead of a distant, academic observer of life. Relationships with
people, particularly these people, would be fascinating and
ever-changing, expanding the knowledge of her heart and leading her
to wisdom instead of mere understanding.
"You're my friends," she said.
They cheered. She curtsied.
A breeze feathered against her skin. The last, blessed lesson of
the day floated over her, into her-the knowledge that she was
perfect in her own unique way.
She laughed. "I won against the Master Mahlyar. We won against
the Dark." Marian looked at her twin Towers and flung out her arms
and whirled in complete freedom. They were hers. Her new home and
school. But who knew what condition they might be in? Whether there
would be furnishings or food? She didn't care.
She said something she'd never said impulsively before, because
before it had needed to be planned, it had needed to be perfect and
right and tidy. But this moment was perfect in itself, as were all
moments. As she was. "Let's party at my place!"
Jaquar scooped her up and spun her around and they lifted off
the ground in a rush of air.
Another perfect moment. She'd live a lifetime of perfect
moments.
Shaking her head, she chuckled. That sounded very Zen. But she
was an Exotique Circlet, ready to add another melodic line to the
symphony that was Lladranan culture.
Marian slipped from Jaquar's arms and took his hand. She Sang
her Song as she ran to her Towers, and her lover and friends and
brother followed.
SORCERESS OF FAITH
Summoning Book 02
Robin D Owens
1
Boulder, Colorado
Late spring, early morning
She was running, running, running. Marian wished the
passages were narrower, twistier, because the thing that chased her
was huge and deadly. With each breath putrid air seared her lungs.
The caverns corridors oozed slime.
She stumbled, clutched the plastic ball holding her
hamster close. Looking down at her cross-trainer shoes in horror,
she saw the laces were untied. She always tied them in perfect
double bows.
A vibration hit her back. The monster's breath.
Stitch cramping her side, she used terror for a burst of speed and
reached narrow upward stairs. Fresher air, laden with blood instead
of poisonous acid, fouled her nostrils. She climbed, thinking the
thing behind her could flow up the stairs. It wanted her blood, her
guts, her brains.
Bumping from side to side, scraping skin raw, protecting her
pet, she jumped up the steps and burst out onto a wide ledge of
rock. With agility she didn't know she had, she pivoted,
avoiding the edge, hit the cliff face. Leaned into it. Gulping
night air, she felt the thing brush past her, and fall
screaming.
She couldn't stop herself from looking down. Saw
something worse than the huge shattered body of the monster that
had hunted her. Her younger brother Andrew was surrounded by
chanting black-robed druids who looked like death personified. Some
of the druids held scythes, some gongs, some chimes.
Prone Andrew was, more pale than he'd ever been in
life. Shrieking, "Nooooo!" she put the ball between her feet,
lifted her arms as if she could call thunder that would set his
heart to thumping again, push his blood; lightning that would nail
his soul into his body, fire the spark of life.
A wet chuckle came next to her, freezing her blood. Slowly
she turned her head to see a cowled figure with gleaming red eyes,
a face not quite human but which might have been a man's, once. He
opened his mouth wide, and it got larger and larger, ready to
swallow her whole. She raised her hands, fingertips arcing blue
fire-
Marian Harasta jolted from the dream, covered in clammy sweat.
Morning light streamed through the high windows of her garden
apartment and she gasped in relief.
Before she could exhale, the chimes sounded, rippling through
her nerves and echoing in her mind. Then the gong reverberated,
arching her body off the bed. Her vision blurred and distant
chanting rushed in her ears. She was bowed for one long moment
before she fell back onto the bed, panting.
First the nightmare. Now the sounds. For the past months, dreams
and auditory hallucinations had peppered her life- sleeping and
waking. She steadied herself with even breathing. She would figure
out what was happening to her. She'd had a full physical the week
before, and a psychological evaluation, too. And she was perfectly
fine.
The strangeness had started with sounds, then the dreams, then
an itchy feeling as if she were a butterfly escaping from a
constrictive cocoon, ready to stretch her wings. The notion was
more than a little scary because her academic career was on track
and her life tidy and under control. Except for Andrew, her half
brother with progressive-remitting Multiple Sclerosis.
Brrrrinnng. The telephone. She flung off her covers and
stumbled from bed, staggering to the phone charger on the kitchen
counter. She had to blink a couple of times to read the caller ID.
Her mother, Candace. Hell. The relationship with her mother, too,
was out of Marian's control. She let voice mail answer.
Marian wiped her face on the sleeve of her flannel nightgown,
pondering options to understand, then fix, her problems. She
couldn't discuss this with her academic professors of Comparative
Religion and Philosophy, or her advisor sheparding her through her
doctorate. Her university profs would not understand. She didn't
want any oddness attached to her spotless reputation as she planned
on a professional career.
Since the problem wasn't physical or psychological, she'd
considered psychic phenomena. Since she'd been fascinated by
alternative spiritualities for years, she thought she might find
help there.
She'd examined all the notes from all the classes she'd taken
outside the university-New Age classes that fed her thirst for
knowledge-searching for answers. Somewhere there was a solution for
what plagued her and she would find it.
As she padded to the bathroom, she checked on her hamster, Tuck,
curled in his cage in the alcove. A half-chewed piece of carrot was
within paw reach. All was well in his small world.
Marian only wished it were the same for her. She worked hard to
keep her life in order, and usually succeeded, but lately...
In the shower as water slicked away sweat, she decided to call
Golden Raven. The lady leaned more to Native American beliefs than
Marian did, but she was more open-minded than many and would listen
without judging. She might know of instances similar to Marian's
experiences. That would be a good step in controlling the weirdness
that had invaded her life.
"Yes," she muttered as she dressed for her work-study job. "I
need Golden Raven." She went to the telephone. Should she call
Golden Raven or Candace? Glancing at the clock, she thought it
might be too early for Golden Raven. If Marian didn't phone Candace
back, her mother's mood would turn nasty and her demands would
escalate. Inhaling deeply, Marian called the residence of Candace's
sixth husband, a mansion in an old, upscale area of Denver.
Candace's tone was sharp. "Well, Marian, it's good you called."
Papers rustled in the background. Since Candace didn't launch into
speech, Marian figured her mother was multitasking.
Excellent. Maybe they could get through a conversation without
damaging each other. "What do you want, Mother?" asked Marian.
"Hmm? Oh, yes, Marian. You must come down here to Denver for a
fund-raiser tomorrow night, Friday, 7:30 p.m. Cocktails and
dinner."
"Why, Mother?" Marian was deeply entrenched in academia now;
she'd never be a person who could enhance her mother's status in
any way. Thank God.
Candace heaved an exasperated sigh. "Trenton Philbert III
remarried a month ago. A woman who runs one of the largest occult
shops in Denver. Why he married such a creature, no one
knows. I just learned he and his new wife will be at the benefit.
Trenton dotes on the woman and his contribution is necessary for us
to meet our goal."
Ah, various cities competed to raise the most money and Candace
intended to prove she was the best. Candace continued, "So 1 need
to keep his wife happy to keep him happy."
Instead of zooming in on the woman like a barracuda.
"I can't imagine that anyone would have any idea what to say to
her." Creature was still in Candace's voice. "Then, I
thought of you, of course. With all your.. .experience in that
area."
Sounded like Marian attended seances and channeling every
night.
Hooking up again with the Denver New Age community might not be
a bad thing. In one way, Marian could even convince herself that
her company would be beneficial for the unknown woman. And there
were some good, kind people in Denver society that Marian would
like to see again. Too bad her mother didn't happen to be one.
Despite her methods, though, Candace was great at raising
money.
"I don't think so, Mother."
"I can make it worth your while," Candace continued.
Marian waited for the bribe. Bribes sometimes worked. Marian had
to know more about the situation to figure out whether the favor
was worth whatever Candace was offering.
"I know you're studying too hard. Having the rest of your
college fund would make life easier."
In Candace's mind, Marian was always studying too hard. Candace
didn't understand that learning was a pleasure. Though she
understood that knowledge was power, at least when it came to
playing the Denver social game, using secrets.
"Marian, did you hear me? I told you that I could release the
last of your college fund."
Good bribe, and if bribes didn't work, Candace used the threat:
Withholding her college fund now, Andrew's welfare when he'd been
younger. He was twenty-four, four years younger than Marian. She'd
tried to take care of him, since Candace was uninterested in her
son.
"I'll think about it," Marian said.
"I need a commitment," Candace snapped. "I'll call Andrew. It
may take some doing on his part, but he'll come."
"No, Mother, I don't want you bothering Andrew."
Candace ignored her. "Of course he'll come. The Colorado
Charities Fund disburses money to the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation
of Colorado. I always have an advantage when campaigning for the
Chairmanship of the Fund drive-with poor Andrew being afflicted
with MS, and at such an early age, too."
Fury veiled Marian's vision in a red haze. Good thing that the
phone was industrial strength; otherwise it would have crumbled
under her grip. How Candace could think of her own son that
way...
"Andrew is a person with a challenging disease. Don't define him
as a victim."
Candace sniffed. "Believe what you want. Now, about the
fund-raiser, tell me whether the weather will be clear."
Heat crept up Marian's neck. She'd always had weather-sense. She
shifted and felt the connection to Mother Earth, one reason she
loved the garden-level apartment. "Clear and cool," she said.
"Good. Your drive down from Boulder should be fine, then."
Rubbing her forehead, Marian said, "I'll be there."
"I thought so, and bring that delightful Professor Wilse with
you."
Marian shuddered at the thought of Jack Wilse. Mistake. She
admired his body but deplored his values. He'd manipulated and used
her, too, before her mind got her hormones under control. It was
inconceivable to her now that she'd had a brief affair with him.
"He won't be coming with me."
"Marian, you can't attend alone! How will it look? Speaking of
looks, you have used that exercise club membership I bought
for you so you'd lose those extra pounds, haven't you?"
"My weight is my own business." Candace would continue to
comment on it anyway. "I will be coming alone-or not at all. If you
want me there, deposit the rest of my college fund into my account
and e-mail me the details." Marian hung up.
Mistake. She'd allowed her mother to manipulate her.
Would she ever learn? But this time, she'd gotten the last of her
college fund. With chilled fingers she reached for her appointment
book, flipped to the end where she'd listed her five-year plan. She
inserted Friday's date as the day she'd receive the money that
would set her free from her mother, and launch her fully on her
career path. Ahead of schedule, but right on track. She wouldn't
allow anything or anyone-especially her mother- to control her
again. Her own mistakes might be bad, but they were hers.
Hers to learn from.
She felt as if she'd been stung, and poison was spreading
through her system. Like so many times before in her life. That's
what happened when you were raised by an unevolved Scorpio.
Grumbling, Marian stalked through her living room. A book from
the bookshelf-lined walls thumped to the floor. She stopped and
stared. There was a gaping hole on the second shelf where she kept
her Wiccan books neatly alphabetized by author.
She swallowed. Even before she picked up the book, she knew what
it would be: Craft Your Own Ritual, by a well-respected
Wiccan. It was the third time this week that volume had fallen from
the shelf.
As usual, the crisp pages fell open to a full-moon ritual.
Rising anxiety made her pulse race. She closed her eyes and colors
swirled behind her eyelids, followed by a flash of the image of
Andrew from her nightmare.
Her eyelids flicked open. Her chest tightened. All the recent
coincidental signs pointed to her conducting a full-moon ritual.
Marian glanced at the yearly moon phase chart she'd framed. Full
moon tomorrow night, Friday-the same night she'd agreed to attend
Candace's benefit.
A knock came at her door and a tingle ran up her spine. She
pushed aside the curtain draped over the apartment door's small
window, looked out. Golden Raven stood on the threshold. She smiled
until the lines deepened around her blue eyes and framed her mouth.
Beyond her was an old van packed full of boxes, ready for a long
trip.
With a sigh, Marian opened the door.
"I heard you call me," Golden Raven said.
Jaquar's Tower, Sorcerers' Mue Island, east of
Lladrana Late spring, that same morning
Jaquar stood naked in the alcove that held his magical supplies
and looked into the round ritual room of his tower. A faint
blue-green steam eddied and flowed along the lines of the pentacle
carved into the stone floor. His shoulders tensed at the thought of
plane-walking-leaving his body behind to float astrally through
different layers of existence. He was a Circlet-the highest rank of
Sorcerer-of Weather Control and plane-walking, but he'd been
focused on the second craft for the past three weeks.
Putting off the moment when he'd have to look in the Enhanced
Mirror, the last step before the ritual, he turned back to the work
counter and set his hand on the upper leaf in a huge book.
He'd made the book himself. Each sheet was a non-physical plane
he'd traveled. Sheets were arranged in the same layers as the
planes themselves. A being existed on many planes, but a good
plane-walker like himself could separate himself from his body and
explore one layer at a time.
The leaf he'd turned to was the plane he'd visit. One of
seething, low emotions-evil emotions only. A plane for monsters,
not humans. But he was tracking a monster. The monster that had
killed his adoptive parents three weeks ago.
A chime notified him that the ritual should be started within
the half hour. Jaquar inhaled deeply and went to the left end of
the narrow alcove. There he unfolded the three-paneled mirror. To
ensure he didn't get lost amongst the planes, he had to know
himself, and for that he used the mirror.
He scanned his physical appearance. He was taller than the
average Lladranan male, had filled out in maturity. His strong body
appeared nothing like that of the abandoned street boy Simone and
Torrence Dumont had found and raised. But the awful inner
loneliness of the boy before he'd known them filled him now. He'd
once thought he'd never feel that desolation again.
His body showed a few childhood scars. His eyes were still the
hated deep blue that made him an oddity in a brown-eyed culture.
Some ancestor had not been Lladranan.
He'd lost weight since the deaths of his adoptive parents, but
not so much that it would compromise his strength. His black hair
touched his shoulders and looked limp, not as shiny as it should.
The silver streaks denoting Power had visibly spread over the past
three weeks as he'd searched for the evil thing that had killed his
mother and father. Both had been powerful Circlets, yet the horror
had sucked them dry of magic and energy and life.
As Jaquar had searched the planes for the killer, he'd grown in
magical wisdom and Power, discovering new layers. These new planes
would be valuable in tracking the horrors that invaded
Lladrana.
The northern magical boundary of mainland Lladrana had been
failing, gaping open so that hideous evil creatures could slither
through to prey on the people. First the smaller horrors would
cross, such as armored snippers. Then the greater monsters would
attack in groups-renders and slayers and soul-suckers. And the
sangvile. At the same time, frink-worms had started falling with
the rain, affecting even the Tower community's islands.
The horrors had never reached the Sorcerers' town of
Coquille-on-the-Coast where his parents had lived until Jaquar had
led the sangvile there. He had answered the Marshalls' call for a
Sorcerer, given them information, then left. The sangvile had
attached itself to the flying horse he'd ridden from the Marshalls'
Castle to his parents' house. He'd left the deadly thing there,
unknowing. Just two weeks past, the key to restoring the magical
boundary had been found-too late for his parents.
He met his own hollow gaze in the mirror. "Mental," Jaquar said.
The reflection in the mirror changed and he saw the white sparkling
of his brain, the waves of strong mental energy. The rhythm of his
energy was good. His mind was clear.
"Magical," he ordered. The mirror showed his Power radiating out
in colorful bands from his body. Lladranans tended to judge magic
by the tones and tunes it made, but the mirror reflected it
visually. There were no breaks, no streaks of blackness. His Power
had never been stronger. Good.
Jaquar hesitated. "Emotional," he whispered, and saw his body
shrouded in grief. Fury and vengeance glowed red in his eyes and
heart. Not good. But he wasn't going to travel to any plane that
needed lighter, more uplifting emotions.
He'd be able to find that ugly lower plane easily, blend in,
cruise through it.
"Spiritual," he said. Again the darkness, nearly smothering the
gold aura tracing his body. Ragged spikes showed how his spiritual
health fluctuated. Perhaps when he'd destroyed the sangvile he
would make an appointment with the Singer for a personal Song
Quest. A Song Quest would tell him how best to manage his grief and
guilt. Later.
"Physical." There he was again, face strained, changed since his
adoptive parents had died. He recalled his last leave-taking with
his adoptive parents, no more than a month ago. Parents,
they would have corrected him, not "adoptive parents." They'd been
right in that as in so many other things. Though they hadn't
birthed him, had only taken him off the streets when he was eight,
they'd been his parents.
His last memory of them was as they laughed at some joke his
father had told just before Jaquar left their home. They were
framed in the golden light streaming from the doorway of their
house. His mother, round of face and body, leaning into his father,
the aura of love radiating from her....
Just the moment before, her sweet breath had caressed his cheek
as she'd kissed him farewell. Her scent had wound around him-the
flowery herb fragrance that had been his comfort from the moment
she'd claimed him as her own.
His father had hugged him hard, as always, and Jaquar had felt
the strength of Power and body that had always meant love and
safety.
No more. Ever. All because of him.
He had brought their evil killer to them. The odd boy they'd
saved from the streets had ultimately led their deaths to them, far
before their time.
"Off." His image faded and he was glad.
Unhurried, he walked to the pentacle, closed the circle with a
hummed note, and settled into a soft pallet in the center to begin
his quest to find and destroy his parents' slayer. He sang.
When the Songspell ended, his astral shape slipped from his body
with an easy pull and a tiny "pop." Hovering over his physical
form, he felt light and free.
He stayed in the same physical plane and rose above his Tower,
his island, to orient and anchor himself. As was customary, his was
the only Circlet Tower on the island, and the island itself was
small. Most circlets lived on their own island in the Brisay Sea,
east of Lladrana. He'd wanted one only a few miles from
Coquille-on-the-Coast where his parents lived so he would visit
them often.
On the physical plane, the sangvile had two forms: one, a black
spiderweb, and the other, a manlike dark energy. Its rudimentary,
nasty emotions were that of an evil predator. As strong as it was
now, if spread out in spiderweb form, it would cover a house. The
man form would be a giant.
The monster had gloated over the pain and fear it caused,
laughed in malicious glee at its feast of Circlets and their Power.
Those tainted emotions had leaked through several planes and led
Jaquar to it. He had found the horror too late to pin it down, set
it ablaze and watch it die.
Below, he saw his Tower, round and of red stone, with a flat
roof and a walkway around it; Mue Island, looking like the blunted
top of an archery arrow, slightly southwest of
Coquille-on-the-Coast. He drifted even higher, until he could see
most of Lladrana, the rocky hill where the Marshalls' Castle sat-in
the middle of Lladrana, far from the ocean, east and north of
Coquille-on-the-Coast. He tugged on the cord between his astral
self and his body. It held firm.
Then he plane-walked, searching for the sangvile.
He passed through several known planes to reach the one he
wanted, tuning himself to its unique vibrations. Only on this plane
could he pinpoint the hideous energy of the sangvile.
And there was the monster that had slain his parents. And Jaquar
lusted to destroy the sangvile with all the fierce desire within
him. Here, the sangvile was a gliding black smudge.
Jaquar was back on the hunt. Though this lower emotional plane
was a gray nothingness, Jaquar could dimly sense the geography of
the physical plane below, where the sangvile roamed. Here, the
image of the sangvile was a gliding black smudge, traveling
northwest from Lladrana. Jaquar followed.
No sights; worse, no sounds. The dreary atmosphere made his
emotions all the more powerful.
The sangvile moved. Geographic familiarity, physical reference
points, were gone. The sangvile was far outside the borders of
Lladrana, flying north with information and energy and magic to
give the Dark.
Jaquar's astral self followed. As a mind-shadow, Jaquar had no
eyes to weep or voice to scream his grief. The emotions that gave
him the strength and cunning to track the beast scoured him, made
him vengeance incarnate. He would kill the servant and destroy the
lord. No price was too high to pay.
The thing hesitated in flight, then lashed out with a
black-energy tentacle. Jaquar ducked, drew back. Was it aware of
him? Aware of something as predatory as itself, as ruthless?
Coalescing into a streak of dark lightning, the horror sped up.
The monster was near its.. .nest?
Ahead, the grayness of the ethereal plane changed. In the
distance was a black point. Jaquar sensed something huge and vile
and pulsing.
2
In front of Jaquar seethed a mound of evil so dark that it
swallowed all light, all energy. The sangvile rounded itself into a
ball and arced downward into a hole of red, with tentacles of gray
and acid green and black. The mound radiated a loathsome, diseased
feeling that seemed to coat Jaquar with slime.
The place was inimical to all humans. And it was hungry.
No price was too much to pay to avenge his parents.
Jaquar flung his astral-self into it.
And hit a magical shield. Rebounded, stunned and aching.
He spent his rage battering the magical barrier with all his
might, all of himself. He shifted to planes above and below and
struck the shield time and again, then returned to the first
plane.
Jaquar Dumont. A sneering voice resounded in Jaquar's
head along with a hideous clash of notes. He stopped his fruitless
assault. Hovered. Wondered whether to reply, if acknowledgment
would make him vulnerable.
The great Jaquar Dumont, bastard with tainted Exotique
blood, the voice continued, and Jaquar realized it was
human-and male.
A human Sorcerer consorting with the horrors and monsters that
invaded Lladrana? Had Jaquar been in his physical form he'd have
been sick with revulsion. Did Jaquar know the voice? He didn't
think so. He did sense the Power of the Sorcerer. The Sorcerer was
nearly a Circlet-but he wasn't the true and ultimate evil. The man
served another.
The Sorcerer laughed at Jaquar. So, you have found us, but
only on this low plane. You cannot break the Dark's shield, nor
harm this nest. No Sorcerer or Sorceress of Lladrana can.
Come out and fight! Jaquar threw the mental call to the
human.
The Sorcerer snorted. If and when I exit our nest it will be
with an army, or allies so strong that no one will be able to stop
us.
All of Lladrana will fight you! Jaquar shouted, trying to
pierce the shield with Mind and Power alone. Futile.
More sneering laughter. The Marshalls have discovered how to
raise the magical barrier against us. But in two weeks they
have not done much. The Marshalls are few and slow. The boundary
still has many gaps.
Wild shrieking came from the human. If he'd been sane at one
time, he wasn't now.
Gathering himself into a spear of Power, Jaquar arrowed to the
red maw-gate of the pulsing mound. And was flung away.
The sangvile is safe from you, as are all the servants I
control. You will never be able to pass the shield on any plane.
No Lladranan with Power can breech this forcefield. No Lladranan
can hurt this nest. The voice insinuated into Jaquar's mind as
he continued to batter at the gate. Since you loathe
the sangviles so much, I will set more upon Lladrana.
Soon. Aimed at Circlets.
Despairing, Jaquar continued the assault until his energy faded
and he had only enough strength to return home. He awoke hours
later, body stiff, psychically blind since he'd abused his Power.
With croaking voice, he dismissed the magical pentacle.
Jaquar staggered to his desk and fell into his chair, ready to
record all he knew of the sangvile, all he'd learned in his
pursuit. His face was colder than the rest of him. He lifted his
hand and touched his cheek. It was wet.
Boulder, Colorado The same morning
Marian froze. "I didn't call you."
Golden Raven raised little penciled-in eyebrows and pushed by
her to enter the apartment. "I heard you." She tapped her head,
glanced around and took a seat on the couch.
"I find that very strange." Just as odd as everything else that
was happening. Marian shut the door.
Golden Raven wore tight jeans and shirt that did nothing for her
heavy figure. But unlike Marian, Golden Raven accepted her body. "I
know you do, but just listen. My vision was of you and a young man
who looked a great deal like you- except he had black hair instead
of your red."
Andrew. Marian had never told Golden Raven about him.
Marian had met a lot of frauds while taking New Age classes, and
Golden Raven wasn't one of them. The woman was a brilliant
forecaster.
Tilting her multi-shaded blond head, Golden Raven surveyed
Marian's apartment. "Very much like you, Marian. Books, papers,
everything too neat and tidy. Still striving for perfection, I
see."
"Golden Raven, I'm running late for my job-"
"Our paths are not the same, but I had to tell you of the vision
before Wood Elk and I left for the West Coast." She looked at
Marian, eyes narrowed. "You have a great deal of intelligence, and
more-just plain magic in you, right beneath the surface. But
you dabble. You don't commit yourself to freeing your powers."
Marian wasn't accustomed to teachers berating her. She stood
stiffly beside Golden Raven.
"You dabble, not taking what you learn seriously. Yet I feel a
brilliant spark within you, humming just under your skin." She
tapped Marian's chest above her breasts. "Strong magic."
"Golden Raven, it would be interesting if that were true.
But-"
"You feel your psi powers trying to break free and even now
reject them. I heard you calling me this morning-can you
deny that?"
"No." But she wanted to. On the other hand, she'd always had an
internal push to find...something...ever eluding her. Could
it be magic? Could she have strong psychic powers? She'd only been
aware of her weather sense and her connection to Mother Earth.
Golden Raven grasped Marian's arm, then stilled, her eyes going
blank and unfocused. "The full moon. Tomorrow night." Golden Raven
sucked in a breath and stepped back from Marian, breaking the
physical connection. She shook her head, then met Marian's eyes. "I
don't know what it means. I can't tell you. Except that this
full-moon ritual is very important for you. It will be life
changing. For you and your brother."
Her words were as fearsome as Marian's nightmares, and seemed
just as real. Believe, or not? Golden Raven had mentioned Andrew
again, the bait Marian would always swallow.
She said steadily, "When I said your name this morning I wanted
to ask if you knew others who had had experiences like these I've
been enduring."
"Your psi potential demanding to be fulfilled. Do the ritual,
find one who will help you direct it. As for your brother, he is
linked to you and I believe he will be.. .greatly affected in a
good way by your psi development." She opened her mouth, then shut
it and shook her head again. "No, I should not tell you, even if I
could. I'm sorry, Marian. I must go now, and Blessings upon you."
With a little duck of her head she turned and left the apartment.
The door clicked shut behind her.
Marian barely saw her go as emotions churned inside her. She
needed another shower, although a hot bath would be better to
banish the sudden chill.
She might have shrugged off the continuing auditory illusions,
might have ignored Golden Raven's advice to find another teacher.
Might have continued to "dabble" in New Age spirituality on her way
to receiving her doctorate. But she would never ignore any threat
to her brother. Andrew was the person she most loved. She'd do the
ritual tomorrow night.
She'd anger Candace by not appearing on demand, couldn't in good
conscience take her mother's money when she wasn't going to follow
through on the favor of the fund-raiser. That meant putting her
career on hold, getting a job-leaving her college fund with her
mother. Marian squared her shoulders. So be it.
If a full-moon ritual was important to understand the
strangeness happening to her and if it could help Andrew, she'd do
it. And take it seriously, by God-or by All the Powers that
Were.
Lladrana The same day
Jaquar had just finished recording his journey in his lorebook
when a crackle of lightning had him jerking his head to the crystal
sphere on his desk. He flicked it with his fingernail, ping, and
accepted the sending of another Circlet.
Cloudiness filled the crystal, then dissolved to wisps. Two
people finished the Songspell that allowed them to communicate with
Jaquar and stared out at him. A shaft of pain speared through him.
Jaquar was accustomed to speaking only with his parents this way,
and they would never sing to him again.
Chalmon Pace and Venetria Fourney-on-again, off-again quarreling
lovers-gazed at him. They both bore the mark of great magical
Power, thick streaks of silver at both temples in their otherwise
black hair.
The last Jaquar had heard, Venetria had been backtracking the
sangvile. She'd lost an aunt in Coquille-on-the-Coast.
"Bad news," Chalmon said gruffly.
Jaquar grunted.
"Venetria's information, compiled with what I've gleaned from
the oldest lorebooks, tells us that the appetite of the sangvile is
exponential." He cleared his throat. "And it prefers those with
Power. The monster is directed at us, the Circlets of the Tower
Community."
With stiff lips Jaquar said, "We lost eight strong Sorcerers and
Sorceresses in Coquille-on-the-Coast. That can't be allowed to
happen again."
The other two nodded. "We agree," Chalmon said. "We must protect
ourselves from this horror. We're sure you are right-the sangvile
followed you from the Marshalls' Castle."
Jaquar laughed harshly. "I thought it was too weak to attach
itself to me. I thought it would hide and garner strength in the
Castle. Instead it knew I could lead it to a richer feast later."
He didn't think he'd ever forgive himself for that. "You said its
hunger is exponential?"
"Yes," sighed Venetria.
"It's back at its master's nest." The words pulled jerkily from
Jaquar, he didn't want to think of his journey to the red maw, his
vain assault, the gloating triumph he'd sensed. Nevertheless, he
told Chalmon and Venetria.
They were both pale when he finished.
"It's coming back, and not alone," Venetria whispered. "More
than one sangvile?"
"Yes," Jaquar said. He'd be ready for the horrors, and he wasn't
averse to attacking. "We need more to find the nest, to understand
what this 'master' is and how to battle it. I'll organize the
effort."
Chalmon frowned. "I don't know-"
Jaquar gestured, stopping Chalmon's protest. "I've lost the
most. Isn't that the Tower Community tradition? The one who is most
passionate gathers Powerful Circlets of the Fifth Degree and
directs them?"
The two looked at each other again.
"We're all concerned with the defense of Lladrana and now
finding the master who directs the monsters to invade," Chalmon
said.
Smiling coldly, Jaquar said, "If anyone wants to challenge me
for leadership, I'm available."
Venetria dipped her head. "So noted."
Chalmon shrugged, turned the subject. "No Sorcerer or Sorceress
could pass. No Lladranan with Power could breech the shield. That
means we use someone from the Exotique land. Someone for the Tower
community. Our Exotique."
"We could ask the Exotique Alyeka," Venetria said.
"She's one of the Marshalls. We can't be indebted to them. We'd
lose our independence," Chalmon snapped.
"Summoning our Exotique is already planned," Jaquar said.
"The master said, 'No Lladranan can harm the nest,' as if just
the presence of one who is not Lladranan can hurt the Dark."
"A natural weapon," Chalmon breathed.
"Think what she'll be like when she's trained!" Venetria
said.
Jaquar said, "The Summoning Song will bring to Lladrana a person
who will work well with us."
Venetria sucked in a breath. "Yes, but she must be strong if we
are going to send her to the nest."
Jaquar said, "Any Exotique the Marshalls can contact will
naturally be strong. As eldest and most powerful of the Tower, 1
believe Bossgond sent the Marshalls a list of the proper
qualities." Jaquar felt his mouth twist. "Bossgond didn't notify
me, but I received an acknowledgment from the Marshalls."
Frowning, Chalmon said, "Bossgond didn't tell me, either. It is
time he breaks this hermit existence."
"I'm sure he'd be glad to hear you tell him so," Venetria said
sweetly.
Chalmon continued. "The Exotique must be well-trained before we
send him or her to this master you discovered, Jaquar. He or she
must at least be trained enough to report what is found in the
nest."
"We may not have that luxury," Jaquar said. "Not if the maw
spews out more sangviles, as well as the other horrors-the slayers
and soul-suckers and renders."
"And dreeths." Venetria shivered. She'd barely survived a battle
with one of the winged lizards.
Chalmon scowled. "Yes, we must be prepared to sacrifice the
Exotique, for the good of Lladrana, for the planet Amee herself.
Knowledge is more important than one life. If worse comes to worst,
we could attach a reporting orb to her and send her with a
destruction spell-perhaps she'd be able to untie that weapon knot
you have."
"I would go myself, if I could," Jaquar said.
Venetria looked at him sharply. "You are the best plane-walker.
You already tried. Do you think the shield applies to all
planes?"
Again Jaquar's laughter was bitter. "It applied to as many as I
could reach within the limits of the spell-twenty or so. I'm not
sure exactly where or what the physical location is, but it's
big."
Making a note, Chalmon said, "Other things to research-the
shield, whether it is only magical or is physical also. Where the
nest could be. When the Exotique comes, I'll train him or her."
"No! If she's female, like the last one, she will want a woman
as teacher!" Venetria said.
"The new Exotique is mine," Jaquar insisted.
Now Chalmon barked laughter. "All of us will want to work with
someone so Powerful. This is exactly why we need the Marshalls to
Summon her. We don't work well together." He shot a glance at his
lady. "Sometimes not even those who are intimate with each
other."
Jaquar's heart tore. His father and mother had been an excellent
team, stronger together than apart. Perhaps that's what had drawn
the sangvile to them.
Chalmon and Venetria sniped at each other, then Chalmon faced
him.
"We'll call a Gathering for tomorrow at the Parteger Island
amphitheater to discuss all this," Chalmon said. "I'll move the
process along."
Venetria sent him a fulminating glance, then looked back to
Jaquar. "What is the Marshalls' price for the Summoning?"
Jaquar said, "I promised them objects, not favors. Some books,
most of which are duplicates in all our libraries. Whatever
magical weapons we have. Old battlespells."
"A price easy to meet," Chalmon said.
Venetria nodded. "Yes. I think I only have two weapons in my
Tower-what of you?"
"One," Jaquar said, but it was an incredible one, something that
perhaps only an Exotique could handle.
"I have four," Chalmon said.
"Of course you must pretend you're the best," Venetria said. And
then they were arguing again.
"I'll coordinate with the Marshalls as necessary in the days to
come," Jaquar said. He wouldn't lie to the Marshalls, but he
wouldn't welcome them unless he had a use for them.
With thumb and forefinger, Jaquar tapped the crystal and Chalmon
and Venetria disappeared. An hour later he had sent the contract
and books as first payment to the Marshalls for the Summoning.
Then he crossed to his armchair and sat again, letting the soft,
old leather settle around his body. He wondered if the other
Circlets had forgotten one very important thing, and if they had,
whether he could take advantage of it.
The Singer, the Oracle of Lladrana, had prophesied that the next
Exotique would be best suited for the community of the Tower. The
Singer had also told them of the time of the next Summoning-when
the Dimensional Gates between Lladrana and the Exotique land
aligned. The Marshalls knew this. It was tomorrow night.
In all the history of the Tower, the Sorcerers and Circlets had
never come to an agreement in a day. Chalmon was too optimistic. He
wouldn't be able to forge a plan amongst all the individual
personalities of the Tower.
Jaquar sank back into his chair to sleep. It would be a long
time before he could face his bedroom adorned with the quilt his
mother had made and the landscapes his father had painted.
He would not argue with the rest of the Sorcerers and
Sorceresses at Parteger Island, had no intention of compromising.
The Exotique was his. For knowledge. For vengeance.
Colorado
The next evening
Power hung in the air like a fine mist ready to condense into
dewdrops. It shimmered with every ripple of chimes, every strike of
the gong-the music only Marian could hear, had heard for the past
month. Now the sounds reverberated in a pattern that set her nerves
humming as she finished taping a ten-foot red pentagram on her
living room carpet.
She took a shaky breath as she connected the last line of the
star-shaped pattern and sank back on her heels to calm her
excitement. She wiped her damp palms on the sweats she'd put on
after her bath. Biting her lip, she examined everything again.
She'd had to scramble to craft the ritual, to get the herbs and
tools. There'd been no time to practice.
No negativity, not now. No doubts. So she shoved them
aside.
Soon the exact moment of the full moon would finally come and it
would be time to act. To perform a ritual that would bring great
change into Andrew's life and her own. To ask for what she wanted
most, a miracle-a healthy brother.
In order to clear enough space to tape the pentacle, she'd had
to stack books around the edges of the room, evidence that her
hunger for knowledge had burgeoned until it was nearly a craving.
She felt like the Chinese Dragon, ever pursuing the Pearl of
Wisdom. Someday she'd find just the right knowledge that would make
her whole, or set her free: the key to herself.
Marian stood and put away the tape. She checked the alcove where
her hamster Tuck sat blinking at her in a corner of his plastic
cage. He seemed to feel something unusual, too, since both his
cheek pouches were huge with food.
"Nothing to worry about, Tuck." She smiled at him, then rubbed
her arms. Crossing to the door of her garden-level apartment, she
pushed aside the small curtain over the door's window to look out.
Twilight was falling.
Hands on her hips, she scanned the rest of her preparations; her
altar was fine, the notes for her ritual were on her PDA in the
pentagram. A small spiral of smoke from the incense burner twisted,
sending lily-of-the-valley scent through the room. The smoke
sparkled silver.
Marian blinked, narrowed her eyes and stared. The glitter in the
powder shouldn't carry up into the smoke, and she thought she'd
seen a flash for an instant. Maybe. Maybe not. Tonight was a night
for stretching all she was, experiencing all she could.
With a sigh she looked at her gray sweats, still wavering
between doing the ritual in a gossamer crocheted cotton broomstick
gown or nude. She should be less self-conscious, able to accept her
plumpness as pleasing.
Just as she was about to shuck her sweats for the gauze dress,
the telephone rang. She glanced at the clock and bit her lip. It
was only an hour before the full moon and she'd wanted to be at the
climax of the ritual when that occurred. She debated answering the
call. Hesitated. Then she ran across the living room floor, hopping
over the star-points to reach the kitchen and pick up the
telephone.
"Hey, sis." Andrew's light voice floated across the line, and
she smiled.
"Hey back."
There was a heartbeat's pause. "Is everything okay there? 1 had
a feeling..." he said.
"Everything's fine." She eyed the red-taped pentagram on the
floor.
"Candace isn't giving you grief over anything, is she?" Their
mother had asked Andrew at the age of four not to call her any
variation of "Mommy."
"She wanted me to attend a benefit tonight, but I.. .wanted to
study." She was studying, learning.
Andrew groaned. "Yeah, the Colorado Charities. Sent her a check
for them, and one for the Multiple Sclerosis Foundation of
Colorado, too. She didn't say thank-you, but I believe she was
pleased. I don't have much contact with her anymore. Might be
better for your mental health if you backed away, too."
"I will, soon," Marian said.
Andrew's snort came through the phone line. "Wrong. You're
always trying to reconcile with her. It's a girl thing. Or maybe
it's just that you think a perfect life should have mother-daughter
happiness. Too bad your dad didn't leave you as well off as mine
did me-you wouldn't be at her beck and call over that college
fund."
He didn't offer her money from his trust fund, and Marian was
glad. "How are things going with you?" she asked.
"I get it, previous subject closed. I'm doing good, sis. Turned
in the new game project today and I'm going off on sabbatical." He
paused, then words rushed from the phone. "I'm in remission right
now, but-uh-I've had a few incidents-"
"Andrew!" Fear spurted through her.
"-and I want to try out that program we talked about last year,
the one set on Freesan Island in the San Juans. Sort of a retreat,
and they want us to minimize contact with outsiders. The
codependency thing, you know."
"Andrew!"
"So I won't be available or calling you for about six
weeks."
"Did you do another check on these people? The system?"
Andrew laughed. "You always have to be in control, sis. Not an
issue I've ever had."
No, Andrew had always been at the mercy of his condition, his
workaholic father and a series of stepmothers, most of whom found
him distressing.
He continued. "The camp's A-Okay. I know you're frowning-"
The warmth in his voice almost made her smile.
"But they aren't after my money and won't sell me to labs for
experimentation," he said. "Dr. Chan recommends the program and you
know how much we both trust her. I also had my financial advisor
and my private investigator check it out."
"They'll be careful with you?" Oops. "Tuck worries about you."
Now she knew he was rolling his eyes.
"Sis!" A slight pause. His voice deepened. "I'm a man. I know
how to work around my health issues. I plan to live life, not
merely exist."
"All right, all right. You have my blessing. Go and enjoy
yourself." She didn't know why those phrases rolled from her lips.
But they both knew the day-to-day risk he lived with.
"Hey, I was the one with the funny feeling, not you. Make sure
Tuck takes care of himself. Oh, and you take care of yourself, too.
Uh-by the way, will the weather be good?"
A familiar feeling whispered through Marian. "It should
be pleasant but cool to start off with, then showers. Take your
rain gear."
"Will do. Love ya. Bye." He smooched into the phone and hung
up.
When Andrew left Colorado for California, he'd made it clear
that he wanted to live as much as he could on his own. He wanted
her to pursue her studies in Boulder as she'd planned, so
she'd made herself let him go. He had been as desperate to live
independently as she had been. Currently he had a housekeeper, a
nurse who specialized in caring for people with MS. The matronly
woman had separate quarters in his home. Andrew had a car and
driver.
Their sibling relationship had actually improved. If he wanted
her with him, he knew all he had to do was call.
Tuck rattled in his cage and brought her back to the moment. She
studied the pentagram and found her pulse thumping fast. Andrew had
phoned just before the ritual. Surely that was a bit of magic in
itself. Further, he was trying another new program-could this
ritual influence that? She didn't want to think about what Andrew
would do when the disease became more debilitating.
Andrew's telephone call had thrown Marian's timing off. She'd
have to hurry through the first part of the ritual, use her notes
on her PDA. Not perfect. Perhaps she should delay the ritual until
next month? She wanted to, to ensure it would go more smoothly, but
she dared not.
She walked around the star to her bedroom, stripped out of the
soft cotton pants and shirt and folded them. Then she freed her
still-damp hair and fluffed it, enjoying the feel of the strands as
well as the slight tugging on her scalp as she ran her fingers to
the shoulder-length ends.
Returning to the living room, she lit the candles, drew the
outer circle, summoned guardian spirits. Palpable energy charged
around her. The chanting she'd heard in her dreams sounded as if it
came from her stereo, until she couldn't tell if it was real or
only echoed in her mind.
At the last minute, on impulse, she put the plastic ball with
her hamster into the center of the pentacle, too. After all, when
Andrew's and her own life changed, so would Tuck's, even if he only
dimly sensed the alteration. He was an essential part of her life,
so he should be included.
She stepped into the center of the pentagram and lifted her
voice in counterpoint to the music. Lightning flashed. Incredible.
Nothing like this had ever happened before. Energy raced through
Marian, making her feel powerful, like a goddess, and she laughed.
A bright carnelian-red ribbon of light unrolled, then curled around
Marian and Tuck. She stared at it in disbelief.
She grabbed Tuck's plastic sphere. With one small tug, they were
swept through a hole, like thread through the eye of a needle.
Power spiked and whirled and changed. She lost her connection
with Mother Earth. That deepest connection she'd felt all her life,
snipped.
They were somewhere else, in a wind-whipped corridor of dust
brown. A corridor to where?
Tuck's ball was torn from her grasp and she screamed. She
looked, listened, reached with all of her senses, flailed arms and
legs and couldn't find him. He'd been her companion for two years.
She cried and grieved.
Adrift and alone in pummeling, whistling winds, she felt terror
rip through her. Felt no links to anything. Not the earth, not the
trees, not the moon or stars. All that she'd recently realized had
spoken to her of her place and her life had vanished.
She reached mentally, emotionally for Andrew. Screamed and heard
silence again.
Nothing.
3
She found herself on a cold floor.
Marian didn't believe her senses. It felt as if she was on
stone, not the threadbare carpet in her apartment. The scent of the
room changed from lily of the valley to jasmine and sandalwood. As
she inhaled, the air felt more humid. The space around her seemed
larger, sounds echoing.
When she heard ragged breathing not her own, she squeezed her
eyes shut, sure she was dreaming. Maybe experiencing out-of-body
travel, though that had never happened before. She must be
safe in her apartment. She didn't want to think otherwise.
People started talking-not in English but in what sounded like
mangled French. As part of pleasing her mother, Marian had learned
French and spoke it like a native. This wasn't true French. She
thought her heart would jump from her chest it pounded so hard.
This couldn't be happening. If she kept her eyes closed, it would
all go away and she'd be home and safe and never dabble with magic
ever again.
With one singing ripple of chimes, her whole body arched
involuntarily. Despite her will, her eyelids flew open.
A circle of faces peered down at her, all slightly Asian in
appearance with dark eyes set in golden-toned skin. Marian gaped.
An older woman with golden streaks of hair at each temple and
compressed lips held up both hands palms outwards.
"Vel coom," she said.
With only a little deciphering, Marian translated the word into
"Welcome." She wasn't sure what to do. She still couldn't connect
to Mother Earth, let alone Andrew. Of course this whole thing could
be a hallucination, or worse, madness.
What should she do?
"Vel coom!" the woman shouted, gesturing for Marian to get
up.
Why didn't the woman help her? Marian squinted and saw flowing
lines of-energy? electricity? the Force? between her and the circle
of richly robed figures. There were at least sixteen people
surrounding her, evenly spaced along the large circle, pairs
dressed alike. Swords were sheathed at their hips. From what she
could see, the figure on the floor beneath her was a huge
pentacle-a star in a circle-larger than hers, about fifteen
feet.
She licked her lips and felt the dampness. The floor was cold
flagstones under her, not carpet. Her breath caught in her throat
as her mind spun with possibilities that she really didn't want to
consider, sorting and analyzing. Her brain told her she wasn't on
Earth, and she was in the midst of strong magic.
And she was lying in a big circular stone room, with wooden
rafters and high windows around the top.
She wanted to think of anything except that she was in a
different place. Naked.
Just the thought of her nudity made her flush-probably from her
toes to her hairline.
The people continued to stare.
Since it didn't look like they were going to approach, it was
time to put reality to the test and rise and-she gulped-pretend she
wasn't ashamed of her body.
Marian stood with shoulders back, hips tucked, stomach sucked
in, hoping her blush wasn't as red as it felt. Keeping within one
point of the star, she walked about five feet to where the others
stood, outside the circle of flowing red energy-lines. Visible
magic. If she weren't so scared, she'd be impressed. Everything
looked fascinating, would be fascinating, if she could
engage more of her mind than her emotions. But dreams ran on
emotions. This had to be a dream.
Her brain said it was, but her senses contradicted that notion.
Her emotions spiraled out of control until she controlled the panic
gritting her teeth. Act logically! Observe, at least.
The women were all as tall as she-at least five foot eight- the
men taller. They all had black hair, dark eyes and golden skin-and
silver or golden streaks of hair at one or both temples.
Marian pointed to a gray cloak a woman wore and made the motion
of swirling it around her. Unfortunately, in response to her
actions most of the men's gazes locked on her breasts. She wanted
to melt into the floor.
Marian cleared her throat. Was this real? Why were so many
people here if she'd only needed one teacher? "Where? Um- when? I
don't know- May I have the cloak, please?"
The woman who'd spoken earlier stared at her, frowning.
All she wanted to do was find a corner and hide. That thought
reminded her of Tuck and she forced back tears. He was gone. What
chance did a hamster in a plastic ball have in the winds of that
corridor?
This experience had already cost her more than she'd expected,
Tuck.
But she'd stood around long enough. She'd act as if this was
real, try and figure out what was going on, get her act together.
Be bolder, take action. Take control.
Ka-Boom! Thunder rattled the silver gong at the edge of
her vision. The gong responded with a low echoing tone. A flash of
light blinded her. Heat and vibration struck her, sent her flat to
the pavement again.
She blinked but could not see. She rolled to her side.
Arreth! The word rang strange in her head, but the image
of herself, still on the floor in the point of a carnelian-red
pentagram, teased her mind. Stay? Cloth brushed against her
ankle-someone was in the pentacle with her!
Swords rasped from scabbards.
A scream bubbled from her lips but emerged as a weak cry. So
much for being bold. She'd try again in a minute. Strong fingers
curved over her shoulder, squeezed in simple comfort, almost she
thought she heard a tune. She sat up, choked, coughed. The hand
moved from her shoulder to her nape, patted her upper back, then
left, taking the funny music in her ears with it.
Arreth. Stay, the masculine voice whispered in her mind.
Telepathy. She believed in magic, sort of, she'd just never
experienced so much of it.
Then his hands closed around her upper arms, and she was lifted
and pulled back into the center of the pentagram. Her ears rang.
Again the hands fell from her and the music stopped.
Her vision began to clear. Beyond the afterimages of floating
neon blobs, she saw the rich robes of those surrounding her. They
held swords pointed at the man standing beside her.
But their gazes slid over to her. She got the idea they were
fascinated by her pale skin that turned pink, red, then back to
white.
She blinked, then looked up at the man. He was about six foot
four. His face was broad at the forehead, with wide streaks of
silver at both temples, emphasized by the golden headband he wore.
His lips were full and mobile and dusky. He smiled down at her and
offered his hand. She met his eyes. They were deep, deep blue in a
tanned face.
A jolt of prophetic foreknowledge sizzled to her center. Uh oh.
Major, major MISTAKE!
This wasn't her teacher. This was her doom.
The wide eyes of the Exotique woman drew Jaquar. They were a
lighter shade than his own and for the first time in his life he
found blue eyes beautiful.
A flicker in her gaze and the Power pulsing around her were
signs she was experiencing a vision. His touch on her mind was too
superficial to share her natural melody, but it was sweet.
The Exotique's full mouth lured him as much as did her
soul-tune. He shook the sensual thought from his head, strove to
ignore her nudity. She looked delicious, but he had a use for her
and it wasn't as a lover. Still, he smiled his most charming smile,
hoping she'd trust him.
When he'd touched her, a lance of pure desire from their mingled
energies had shot straight to his groin. No. Despite what his body
wanted, he could not allow himself even affection for her. If he
had sex with the Exotique, there was a chance they'd bond. He
couldn't risk that. She was the weapon of vengeance he'd set loose
on the Dark like a blazing arrow. For his own peace of mind, he
dared not become attached to her.
"Jaquar Dumont," Swordmarshall Thealia Germaine said flatly from
the circle of Marshalls surrounding them, obviously unhappy that
he'd shown up uninvited.
He paid little attention to the Marshalls, watching as his
Exotique crossed to the pentacle, squatted and touched the flowing
magical red lines. Sparks flew, and she recoiled.
Standing, she slowly extended her arm through the barrier of
magic. It didn't hurt her. Jaquar let out a relieved breath. The
Summoning had worked, bringing an innately powerful mage from the
Exotique land to Lladrana. A woman whose power would be potent
here.
She tugged on the gray cloak of one of the female Marshalls.
With raised eyebrows and a smile, the Marshall gave it to the
Exotique. She donned the cape, then looked around, very serious,
examining the circular Temple, scrutinizing the altar with the
rainbow crystal lamps that also served as chimes, and the huge
silver gong beside it.
With narrowed eyes, she gazed at him and where he stood in the
center of the pentagram, the place of Power. She gestured for him
to move away. Demanded something in a language close to, but not
Lladranan. "Leave.. .go.. .home."
Jaquar smiled and shook his head. She scowled and marched back
to stand in the center of the pentacle with him, muttering what
seemed to be her own words of Power. But they would do no good. The
Marshalls had closed the hole between worlds.
She was still close to him and Jaquar had trouble ignoring her
softness, warmth and unusual fragrance. Her nudity under the cloak
was impossible to forget.
"Dumont!" Thealia snapped. "We did not expect anyone to use this
pentacle today except the Exotique. You of the Tower should leave
the entire Summoning to us."
He inclined his head and took the offensive. "Greetings,
Swordmarshall. We of the Tower Community thank you for this
Summoning. However, we thought Exotique Alyeka would be leading
this ritual." He was friends with the other Exotique-he might have
been able to persuade her to release the new lady into his
care.
"The Singer foretold that the second Exotique is to bond with
someone here and it should not be Alyeka. She should not be
present. Even she listens to the Singer, now."
"Ah," Jaquar said, smiling and gesturing to himself. "Well, I am
here and the lady can come with me." Time to get out of here,
before any other Circlets showed up to try to take the woman for
their own apprentice. He'd paid for the Exotique, now he should
take his prize and leave.
He strode to her and curved his right arm around her. The quiet
notes stringing between them deepened and took on a richness. The
Exotique took a step away, but stumbled, so he kept his hold. Her
blue eyes narrowed and her mouth thinned. Her innate, powerful
magic flared and set the gemstone lamps on the altar chiming. She
stared at them and shivered.
Bong! The gong thundered, announcing another presence
traveling into the closed sphere of the pentacle.
Venetria materialized inside the star, along with a pile of
books and two magical weapons. She glared at Jaquar. Though his
ears still rang with the sound of her arrival, he heard her
shouting.
"Jaquar Dumont! You will not claim this Exotique as your
apprentice. Doubtless she will relate better to a Sorceress."
Venetria tossed her head, gave the woman one quick, penetrating
look, then offered her hand to the Exotique.
Eyes wary, the woman touched Venetria's fingers. A clash of
tones echoed in the round Temple as the women's hands met. Venetria
dropped the Exotique's hand, flicking the incompatible energy from
her fingertips, then converted the gesture into a wave as she spoke
to the Marshalls.
"The books you requested-the ancient spellweapons at my
disposal, and instructions to use them."
Clang! This time the altar crystals rang and the sound
ran around the outstretched steel of the Marshalls' swords in a
bone-shivering scale.
Inside the pentacle, the two women stumbled against Jaquar.
Chalmon appeared in the north point of the pentagram.
Jaquar set his teeth, shouldered Venetria aside and steadied the
Exotique, enduring the sensual and powerful string of notes rapidly
deepening into a melody. They were already forming a
connection.
Chalmon glared at them. Beside him was a stack of books and four
weapons.
"This is ridiculous," Swordmarshall Thealia said, sheathing her
broadsword. The other Marshalls followed suit. She studied the
gifts in the pentacle and her smile was as sharp as her sword. Her
lip curled. "I see that those of the Tower are cooperating as
usual, which is to say, not at all."
Jaquar grasped the Exotique's arm. "As you can see, our energies
do not clash. 1 sent payment for the Summoning yesterday. On behalf
of the Tower, I again thank the Marshalls." He glanced at Venetria
and Chalmon, who stood in opposite points of the star. "I claim
this Exotique woman as my apprentice."
Chalmon scowled. "No."
No price was too much to pay to find and destroy the master and
avenge Jaquar's parents. "Then you challenge me. Tests of Power or
a duel of sorcery. The Marshalls can set up a procedure and
officiate."
Swordmarshall Thealia made a disgusted noise. Chalmon stiffened
in outrage.
The Power in the pentacle was incredible, radiating from four
strong mages. Jaquar sensed that the Exotique was merging all the
energies, changing them until they melded into a single Powersong
that he could use easily. She was inherently a strong Sorceress. He
couldn't wait to mold her raw power into focused magic.
Sunlight shafted through a high stained-glass window, framing
the voluptuous woman by his side in a pointed arch, painting the
pale skin of her face, hands and feet in jeweled colors,
illuminating her like a fine vellum manuscript. Her aura glowed
vibrant silver and turquoise, indicating strong and unusual Power.
The tune between them was distracting. She was beautiful beyond
compare in body and spirit.
A pity she might have to be sacrificed to stop the sangviles
from leaving the Dark's nest.
Time to leave. Jaquar looked around the large round stone room
of the Temple-at the Marshalls who seemed to be communing and
approaching a decision; at Chalmon and Venetria who stood in the
pentagram with him and the Exotique woman, but in opposite points;
at the Exotique herself who appeared less dazed.
Definitely time to go. He began gathering Power.
Bong, Bong, Bong! Suddenly the ringing of all the glass
in the room-from the windows, the storage crystals in the rafters
and chandeliers, the chime crystals on the altar-resonated through
his head.
A few seconds later his ears stopped buzzing and he saw the
oldest and strongest Sorcerer of them all, Bossgond, holding a
satchel. Chalmon went to Venetria, protectiveness radiating from
him.
Jaquar's stomach tightened and his lips pulled back from his
teeth in a silent snarl as he anticipated failure. There was no way
he could best Bossgond. Disappointment seared him. He wanted the
Exotique, he had plans for her.
What Bossgond's plans were, he couldn't imagine.
The greatest Sorcerer wore a stained, shabby robe that didn't
disguise the sticklike, knobby bones of his body. His full head of
hair was golden except for a small streak of black in the
middle-denoting his great Power.
He put his satchel down. Ignoring the rest of them, he bowed
slightly to the Exotique, then touched his fingers over his heart.
"Bossgond," he said in a deep, rich voice that sent a small hum
through the gong.
He took two steps and held out a swollen-jointed hand. She
placed hers in it. A white flash of their auras merging sent a
single, resonant note from the silver gong. The Exotique blinked,
then her lips curved. The Song between the old man and the young
woman must be comforting to her.
Jaquar ground his teeth. His prize was slipping from his
grasp.
With gentleness and grace the old man raised the Exotique
woman's hand to his lips, then loosed it. Jaquar wondered what sort
of music had spun between them-notes, or more. Then he remembered
the songs that had linked him and his parents, resonant from the
moment they'd found him. He'd been their apprentice, too. Grief
gripped him. To distract himself, he watched the Exotique.
Standing close to Bossgond, the Exotique was his height.
She wet her lips, then placed her hand above her breasts and
said, "Marian."
It was a good name-a name everyone could pronounce, unlike the
first Exotique's, Alexa. Jaquar wasn't the only one who
released a soft sigh.
Bossgond reached down and took a large crystal orb from his
satchel. He sang two notes and color whirled inside it, forming a
picture.
The scene in the sphere-crystal solidified into Alf Island,
Bossgond's home, and his tall, stately white Sorcerer's Tower. A
small image of Bossgond walked with Marian, obviously instructing
her. Marian was dressed in a beautiful velvet robe and carried a
staff of deep mahogany inlaid with twining silver and gold
leaves.
Then the image turned to night. The tower's outer wall
disappeared, showing the top ritual room as dark; the level beneath
was Bossgond's suite, lit with mellow crystal lights. He worked at
a desk. The next floor down was richly appointed for a woman.
Papers, books and jars of herbs cluttered a beautiful desk. Marian
sat at it, looking intense. Her staff leaned against the wall,
glowing the same deep red as her hair.
With a hum from Bossgond, the scene inside the globe faded. He
set it back into the satchel, then spoke one carefully pronounced
sentence. It wasn't in a language Jaquar knew.
Marian did. She smiled at him. A sincere smile. She looked
around the room, her expression turning wary. She nodded stiffly to
Chalmon and Venetria. Marian studied the Marshalls who stared back
at her but she didn't move from the center of the star or indicate
she wanted to be with them.
Jaquar thought she meant her glance to slide over him, but it
snagged and they gazed at each other. Her blue eyes held
intelligence, focus, determination. She would have been perfect for
him-no, for his purposes. No chance of wresting her from Bossgond,
even if she'd been willing.
The old Sorcerer looked at Marian and repeated his line.
"Yes," said Marian, and it was close enough to the Lladranan
ayes for Jaquar to know she agreed.
Bossgond turned to the rest of them. "The apprentice, Exotique
Marian, is coming with me. I anticipate that she will graduate from
apprentice to scholar in two weeks."
Venetria gasped. Bossgond sent her a chill look and she made a
strangled noise. Chalmon set an arm around her shoulders. Now they
looked like a couple again.
Bossgond met Jaquar's scrutiny. "Does anyone here in this Temple
challenge me?"
4
Silence filled the Temple at Bossgond's words. The old man
grinned. "I didn't think anyone would want to engage in a sorcerous
duel with me." He held the gaze of Swordmarshall Thealia. "Please
open the pentacle so the others can leave."
Swordmarshall Thealia drew her baton from her sheath, stepped to
the Power lines and sang an opening spell. The flow of Power bent
back on itself, allowing egress from the pentacle to the rest of
the Temple.
"Clear out of the star and circle," Bossgond ordered.
Chalmon strode out, head high, body tense. Venetria followed,
and from the sour look on her face as she glanced at the new
Exotique, Jaquar knew she recalled that Marian's energy didn't mesh
well with hers.
Neither Chalmon nor Venetria had suffered anything except a
little scraped pride from this debacle. Unlike himself-his plan was
a shambles.
Bossgond stared at Jaquar and raised an eyebrow. "Go," he
repeated.
Slowly, Jaquar complied.
"We would like the additional books and weapons," Thealia said.
"The Summoning was not as hard as that of our Exotique Marshall
Alyeka, but it was done at our risk and with our Power and in our
Castle Temple."
The old man inclined his head. "Agreed. If the Tower Community
was disorganized enough to pay you three times, then you should
take advantage of it."
Jaquar stood outside the circle and watched helplessly as the
old man handed Venetria's and Chalmon's offerings to the Marshalls.
He'd wanted to ensure the new Exotique was trained in
plane-walking, focus her studies on what he needed her to do, and
what she would have to learn to make the journey and, if possible,
return.
Thealia glanced dubiously at the six weapons. "All the
spellweapons of the Tower Community were promised."
"I have no weapons." Bossgond stared at Jaquar. "I trust you
will ensure the Marshalls receive the remaining payment from the
rest of the Towers." He examined the two swords, three knives and a
pair of gauntlets the Marshalls claimed from Venetria and Chalmon.
"I believe the last inventory of all the Towers stated we had
twenty weapons."
So the old Circlet had been studying the reports after all, just
not commenting.
Swordmarshall Thealia laid a hand on her baton of Power.
Jaquar nodded shortly at her. "As Bossgond says, I'll ensure the
delivery of all the weapons, except..." He glanced from Bossgond to
Thealia and swept a quick look around the rest of the Marshalls. "I
was gifted a knot-weapon when I raised my Tower, too powerful for
me to handle." He grinned with all his teeth. "Should you wish to
send someone for that weapon, I'll be pleased to relinquish
it."
"Not me," said Bossgond.
Thealia fingered the end of her baton but stepped back. "I'll
discuss it with Marshall Alyeka. We know nothing about
knot-weapons."
Bossgond reconnected the pentacle's Power lines with a small
wand of polished turquoise. He raised his head and sniffed, as if
testing the flavor of the Power. "Very good," he said, raising the
Exotique's hand to his lips.
After he'd finished the elegant gesture, Bossgond placed Marian
in the center of the pentacle and began the chant that would whisk
them from the Castle Temple to the pentagram in Bossgond's Tower on
Alf Island.
Marian listened to the old magician sing what she thought was a
spell. It was amazing. She drew the cloak around her. Her hands and
feet were cold. She'd agreed to go with the old man and it looked
like she was going by magic.
Still, she could feel the pressure of energy, magic, whatever,
gathering. Was there any chance that it might send her back home?
Was this a dream about how to find her teacher? She'd like to
believe it, but the bruises she had on her body ached with
all-too-real pain. In an hour or two the marks would show on her
skin.
With every moment that passed, Marian felt her hope fade that
this was a dream.
She looked at the oldest mage again. She should have been
watching her new teacher all along, paying attention to what he was
doing, but there was too much going on. And he'd made it clear he
would be her mentor, she'd learn. She hoped.
"I would be honored to teach you to use your Power," he'd said.
The cadence of his words had hummed through her, feeling
right. She felt inherently she could trust him, unlike
everyone else in this place. There was a smoothness of the energy
of his intentions toward her that didn't come from anyone else in
the room.
Every other person who had touched her had snags in their Power
flow toward her that she'd recognized as self-interest, specific
goals in their minds as to how to use her. Bossgond hadn't.
She understood now that the circle of people who'd brought her
to this place were called Marshalls. She'd picked that word up.
She'd always been a quick study and didn't think the language would
pose much of a problem, especially since it was close to
French.
The Marshalls still ringed the pentacle, grouped in pairs and
watching with interest. Since they'd been chanting when she'd come
here, they had to be the ones who'd burdened her life over the past
month. Their music was unique. The crystal lamps made of great
gemstones and arranged in the colors of the chakra were the chimes
she had heard. And she knew the sound of the silver gong.
Yet she didn't feel at ease with those pairs dressed in matching
colors, clinking with chain mail under their rich robes and
carrying weapons. She didn't care for this enormous, echoing
Temple. Something about the atmosphere raised all the fine hair on
her body.
Then there were the other magicians. The handsome Jaquar scowled
at her from outside the pentagram, almost vibrating with intensity.
Oddly enough, she could hear a stream of melodious notes coming
from him and it lured her. No. Absolutely not. That wasn't
right. She trusted her instinctive impression of him as someone who
could harm her deeply.
These people seemed to use music in their magic, but it was
still difficult to believe that the trickle of tunes she heard from
them was anything but her imagination.
She usually soaked in and analyzed everything around her, but
all the new experiences demanded that she shut down the overflow of
sensory information for self-preservation. She stepped closer to
Bossgond.
Marian clutched the cape. The lining was soft and warm. She
swayed to the chant. Bossgond had a fabulous voice. She'd enjoy
listening to it, learning from him.
Slam! The huge door to the Temple hit the stone wall and
a small woman shot into the room, followed by a big man who was
reaching for her.
"Alexa!" the man called.
Unlike everyone else, the woman was pale-skinned, with a white
scar on one cheek, short in stature, and though she had silver
hair, she appeared young.
The Marshalls started to surround her.
"Wait!" the woman called. In English.
Bossgond gripped Marian's upper arm hard and sped up his chant,
the rhythm now almost syncopated, making her dizzy with the energy
surrounding them.
The Marshalls' protests drowned out most of the woman Alexa's
words. Marian heard, "Wait! I came as soon as I could. You need to
know, you're in Lladrana-"
Magic coalesced around Marian and Bossgond, a huge pressure of
Power. She tried to take a step forward, but was held in place by
an invisible force.
"Can I go home?" Marian cried, straining to hear.
"Not yet," Alexa called.
"How soon?" Marian yelled.
Alexa shrugged. "Maybe a month!"
Marian bit her lip. What if Andrew returned earlier or had an
exacerbation during his retreat? She could lose him! She would
definitely lose her college fund.. .and her job.
What should she do? What could she do?
Her ritual had been in part to find help for Andrew. These
people might be able to cure him. She'd just have to find the
information and get back to him fast.
The man who'd followed Alexa plucked her from an irritated
circle of Marshalls. Holding her protectively, he ran with her to
the edge of the pentacle.
Alexa met Marian's gaze. "Make sure you ask about PairBonding.
And the Snap!"
Bossgond intoned, "Vont!"
The room disappeared. Vertigo hit Marian, and in the next
instant she fell onto a thick rug into which was woven a red
pentagram.
"Gagghhh," she croaked. Brilliant. Wonderful impression to make
on her teacher-and now the man whose power she was under.
Surely she could beat him physically if she had to, couldn't
she? Heaven knew she had heft.
But he sat next to her, watching with concerned eyes, then
stooped and brushed back her hair. Then he took her hand and helped
her up with unexpected strength, banished the flowing energy lines
around his pentagram with a whistle. Then he led her to a soft
chair that looked a lot like a fancy outdoor lounger. A series of
velvet pillows was attached to an adjustable wooden frame; the back
was set in a reclined position and the footrest was elevated.
Marian sat, leaned back and arranged the cloak in folds around
her. She'd kept a good grip on the front since receiving the cape
and it had only flapped open a little now and then, but had saved
her modesty.
In Lladrana.
Alexa had called it Lladrana. Who was she, and why wasn't
she the one helping Marian?
Bossgond, who'd gone to a sink on the far side of the Tower,
came back with a goblet of water. From the sprig of leaves that
floated on top she guessed it wasn't just water. She picked the
greenery out of the cup and sniffed. Minty. She dropped the leaves
back into the drink and, keeping her eyes on the old man, swallowed
a bit.
He smiled in reassurance, took the cup from her, drank some
himself and handed it back. Had she looked that suspicious?
Bossgond went to a large cabinet and opened it. Out floated a
sphere the size of an exercise ball. Large and blue-green-brown, it
rotated slowly. Marian's stomach tightened when she realized it was
a globe, but that the oceans and continents were unknown to her.
She looked away.
"Amee," Bossgond said.
First things first. Finding out how time passed on this new
world was of the utmost importance. All around her and through her,
magic surged like electricity. She should be able to master it and
use it to help Andrew, but how much time did she have?
She stood and moved closer to the globe, saw three large
continents and a countrylike portion outlined in black.
When the globe completed one full rotation, she said, "One day."
As it continued to move, she ticked off the days on her hand.
Feeling a little foolish, she continued with her mime. She drew
a pentagram, then sat on the floor. "Earth!" she said.
With skinny little brows raised, he said, "Exotique Terre."
"Terra." She nodded.
His eyebrows rose higher. "Exotique Terre."
Marian sighed and repeated, "Exotique Terre." With whooshing
sounds and wide gestures, and more noises to indicate the gong and
chimes and chants, she acted out her trip to Lladrana.
Then she went to the globe again and counted days as it rotated,
tilting her head in a question. Was any of this getting
through?
Bossgond frowned, then crossed his tower room to more shelves
and cupboards. He returned with a crude globe of Earth, about five
inches around. When she took the heavy ball of metal, she sensed
someone from her own world had made it. The echoes of the Song of
Mother Earth lingered. She could do better.
Narrowing her eyes, she concentrated, reaching deep inside her
for the Earth-song. While she was at it, she visualized the
continents and oceans as best she could. Not well enough. She
closed her eyes and thought of space shots of the earth, radar and
Doppler weather maps, especially of the United States, and
Colorado.
The metal in her hands warmed. When she opened her eyes, the
globe looked a lot better, the land masses and oceans well-defined.
She scowled at the eastern coastline of the United States.
Something was definitely off there; Australia and Asia weren't as
sharp as on a regular globe. Not perfect. Her shoulders
slumped.
Bossgond's bony fingers closed over her shoulder and squeezed.
Catching her gaze with his own chocolate-brown one, he gave a
little bow. "Thank you. You have increased my knowledge of Exotique
Terre tenfold."
He was trying to drive another point home. She was well aware of
a teacher's body language. Cradling the Earth globe in the crook of
his arm, he touched the much larger orb with his index finger.
"Amee." He glanced at her, eyes piercing. "Thay parfay."
Ah, the words were close enough to French. The image of planet
Amee wasn't perfect.
So he could sense her emotions, or perhaps he just read her
dissatisfaction with her construct in her face.
She sighed.
Bossgond released the Earth-globe and it hung next to the large
one of Amee. Earth rotated slower, in sync with Amee's days and
nights. Amazing that the days were the same-or perhaps this was an
alternative earth-but with different continents? Maybe all the
planets with similar rotations were reached by one dimensional
corridor....
Marian's head hurt. She had too little information for
hypothesis, and so much was happening.
All the tension in her body at the thought of being trapped here
and Andrew worrying himself into seizures released in a long
shudder. Weary, she swallowed hard, walked stiffly back to the
lounge chair and sank into the pillows, closing her eyes.
When she opened them, she gazed up at Bossgond, feeling lost. He
urged her to drink more of the herbal liquid, and she did. Her
stomach calmed.
Bossgond touched her shoulder. "Marian," he said. Tapping his
chest, he said, "Bossgond."
He was encouraging her, emphasizing how much she'd already
learned. That she was learning with every breath, with every
glance.
He took her hand and linked their fingers. She sensed great age.
Vitality, isolation.
Looking down at their hands, she saw a white aura, heard chords
forming into a song. He smiled, and she found herself smiling back.
Bossgond patted her hand and rose.
He went to the pentagram and fished out the large crystal ball
from his bag, then returned. With a little tune, mist swirled
inside the sphere, then solidified into the image of the handsome
magician who'd first entered the pentacle with her.
"Jaquar Dumont," Bossgond said.
Marian remembered the older woman who'd spoken for the Marshalls
calling him that, in flat tones. Jaquar.
"Chalmon Pace," Bossgond said, and the other mage's face
replaced Jaquar's.
He looked like a pompous associate professor, ever conscious of
his status and sure of his worth. Still, there was something in his
eyes that made Marian think he could be a good friend. His image
faded.
The female magician appeared in the sphere. "Venetria Fourney,"
said Bossgond.
The strikingly beautiful woman was easy to recall. They'd both
received shocks when the woman touched her. Marian rubbed her
fingers and grimaced at the memory. She'd liked the look of
Venetria, but since they'd shocked each other and Bossgond and she
meshed, if the conflicting energy was any indication, they wouldn't
work well together.
Marian caught her breath as she reran the thought. Wasn't she
being cool and analytical about all these strange and wondrous
things? Perhaps it was a dream. When she went to bed and woke up,
maybe everything would be fine. Tuck would wake her up in the
middle of the night by running on his wheel or rattling in his
cage, rearranging his hoard....
Right now, all she knew was here. She licked her lips. Marian
wondered about Alexa. She'd liked the look of her better than the
rest. Marian tapped the ball with a fingernail.
"Alexa?"
The woman's image formed. To her surprise, Marian saw the small
figure dressed in jeans and a down parka with knit hat, scarf and
mittens, trudging through snow in the mountains. She recognized the
parka as one she'd admired in a local boutique. Colorado? Was Alexa
from Colorado, too? Excitement flooded Marian and she nearly missed
seeing Alexa enter a silver arch.
Several seconds later, the woman appeared in the same pentacle
as Marian had, except that the energy lines of this one glowed
green.
Her parka was ripped, her hat gone, and her hair was brown. Not
silver, as Marian had seen. Something had turned Alexa's hair
silver since she arrived. Some experience here in Lladrana.
Jaquar wanted to leave the Temple, fast. Since the Marshalls
were dismissing the pentacle, none of the Circlets would be able to
leave that way.
His mind raced, considering plans to retrieve the new Exotique.
He ignored Chalmon's and Venetria's recriminations. Unlike them, he
had friends in the Castle.
He also ignored most of the Marshalls. Jaquar immediately went
to Bastien Vauxveau, who was talking to his wife, the Exotique
Alexa. Jaquar tapped Bastien on the shoulder. "Come along, I have
some propositions. One for you and one for Alyeka."
Bastien turned to Jaquar with gleaming eyes. "We'll be glad to
negotiate." He sent a glance to the other Marshalls. "They don't
need us."
Alexa sighed and spoke in heavily accented Lladranan. "I got
here too late."
"You weren't supposed to interfere at all," Bastien scolded.
"I don't mind flouting the Marshalls, but the Singer knows what
she's doing and she said not to take part in the Summoning."
"Huh," Alexa said, glancing around as if she was afraid the
Singer was watching. "We weren't part of the ritual, but I did want
to help her understand. It was miserable for me." She set her mouth
and swept out of the Temple.
For a small woman, she moved fast. Jaquar thought her locomotion
might be aided by her great Power. Alexa wanted to hurry, thus the
Song swept her along.
When Jaquar exited, he stopped under the Temple's portico to let
his eyes adjust to the moonlight. It was a beautiful spring night
and the Marshalls' Castle looked magnificent, as always. But Jaquar
sensed a distinct change in the atmosphere since he'd last been
here. At that time, under all their trappings of Power, the
Marshalls had been fearful. The magical boundaries of Lladrana were
falling and the Exotique they'd Summoned to reverse this had just
left. They'd discovered the sangvile in their walls.
Just that easily, remembering the sangvile dimmed the evening
for Jaquar. Alexa, who'd been waiting for Bastien and him, put a
hand on Jaquar's arm.
"I heard about your parents." She pronounced every word
carefully, clearly. "I'm sorry for your loss."
Jaquar grunted.
Bastien threw an arm around Jaquar's shoulder, squeezed and let
go. "You have propositions for us?"
If he wanted vengeance-justice, he'd need help from these
two. He twisted his mouth into the semblance of a smile. He must
not have done too well, because Alexa took a step back and her hand
fell to the Marshall's baton she wore on her left hip.
Jaquar switched his gaze to Bastien, who was shorter than he and
more solidly made. "You have the best stable of flying horses. I
want a volaran, preferably one you raised from a foal." It seemed
he'd be doing a lot of traveling and volaran-back would be the
easiest, least energy-consuming way.
Now Bastien clapped a hand on Jaquar's shoulder. "We'll
deal."
"And I want to talk to Alyeka about the new Exotique...." Jaquar
noted Alexa's scowl at the word and corrected himself. "Marian. I
want to consult Alyeka about Marian."
Alexa sent him an approving look. "Let's discuss this in our
suite," she said. With a whirl of blue-green robes she took off
down the cloister walk.
Renewed hope filled Jaquar. He wasn't finished yet. Somehow he'd
get the woman back.
5
Marian awoke to the sound of waves pounding against rock,
different from her white-noise machine. Opening sleepy eyes, she
stared at a rounded stone wall-not white plaster. She shot up in
bed and memory rushed back. She was not home in her apartment, not
in Boulder, not in Colorado, not in the United States of America.
She wasn't even on Earth-she reached for that basic connection..
.and felt nothing.
She'd had no nightmares, but shivered as she recalled the ones
she'd had in the past month. The druids could have been the
Marshalls. Other parts of those dreams could happen here on
Lladrana. Could they possibly have been more than dreams-like a
foretelling of the future? Fingers clutching her blankets, she
stared around her.
A beautiful, stained-glass partition showing flowers in a meadow
stood a few feet from the end of the bed. To her right and left,
the stone wall curved out of sight. She was in a tower room of the
Sorcerer Bossgond.
"Lladrana," she whispered, and the word seemed to sink down,
down, echoing through the floor, through the two stories beneath
her, into the ground-and sent a resonance back. The faint, broken
notes of a beautiful, sad melody rose to strum in her mind like a
sobbing violin. She shook her head, but the song remained, hovering
in the back of her brain.
Inhaling deeply, she tasted the faint tang of salt, and noted
the waves again. She was on an island. Beyond the glass partition
she saw bright sunlight from the windows on the far tower wall.
She'd traveled through a wind-whistling space, but not outer
space-another dimension?
Her stomach rumbled, and she focused on her hunger.. .and
finding a bathroom. Last night she'd merely stumbled into the room,
found the bed behind the glass partition. Letting the cloak drop
where she stood, she had crawled under the covers. She'd shivered,
then visualized heat surrounding her body and it had happened.
Magic? Maybe.
She hopped from the bed and her feet sank into a luxurious rug
of jewel-toned colors. The long gray cape she'd borrowed from one
of the Marshalls who'd summoned her lay like a dark cloud against
the carpet. She frowned as she picked it up. Though it had braided
frog-fastenings all the way down the front, she didn't consider it
viable clothing, but since it was all she had, she swirled it
around her, pushed her arms through the slits and looped the frogs.
Feeling a little better-and warmer-she noticed shelves on the far
side of the bed where a stack of clothes were folded. She'd
investigate later.
Though the glass partition didn't rise as far as the stone
ceiling, it ran along this portion of the tower ending at the wall
to her right. To her left, there was space enough for a doorway.
When she walked around the partition, she saw that the bedroom was
approximately a third of the whole room. The other two-thirds
looked like a study, except for a small, carved wooden closet
protruding halfway down the round wall in front of her. The closet
door faced her. She hurried to it, opened the door and sighed in
relief at the sight of an old-fashioned toilet with the tank near
the ceiling.
When she was done, she left the closet in search of a sink and
found multiple ones behind the closet. On the far side of the sinks
was a counter that held glassware, like an old alchemist's
setup.
Then came the door to the stairway and, after the door, a huge
desk. Shelves lined the room, except for the three large window
embrasures and a fireplace. A small grouping of two chairs and a
love seat sat in front of the fireplace close to the stained
glass.
It was charming, but not home. How long would she be here? She
only wanted help for Andrew, then she'd leave.
A horn blew and Marian jumped. Bossgond's voice came to her.
Breakfast and lessons in fifteen minutes. None of the words
were hard, so she grasped the meaning and hurried back to the
clothes shelves in the bedroom.
She touched the yoke of a royal-blue velvet garment, then lifted
it and found herself holding a long gown with embroidered yellow
birds. It seemed to be her size.
Additionally, she had a green dress, a maroon one and a black
gown-all with little yellow birds and narrow three-quarter-length
sleeves.
Though the blue robe had looked and felt heavy when she held it,
the minute she put it on it seemed like gossamer. It molded around
her breasts and lifted them, and Marian squeaked in surprise.
Built-in magical bra! This would take some getting used to. The
gown sent warmth to her skin-reflecting her own heat?
Marian looked dubiously at the one pair of footwear on the
floor, tucked under the lowest shelf. They appeared more like
pouches to put over her feet than actual shoes. Picking them up,
she found they had soft leather uppers and springy insoles. When
she turned them over she saw a material that looked like fine
scales. Snake? Dragon?
Anyway, they looked far too big for her, and the uppers stuck up
in folds. She couldn't see any laces.
Bracing a hand against the wall-it was warm to her touch- she
slipped on one of the shoes. It felt lined with fur and she hummed
with pleasure at the soft silkiness. Then the pouch tightened,
molding to foot and ankle. She tottered, stumbled, took a few steps
to regain her balance and fell onto the bed. She stared at her
foot. Not only had the slipper conformed to her body, but it had
turned the same color as her gown and now had little yellow birds
all over it. She wiggled her feet-one shod, one bare. The one with
the shoe felt better. Magical shoes.
Her heart jumped. What if she couldn't take it off? "Off!" she
ordered.
Nothing happened.
She hooked her thumbs inside the shoe and pushed down. The shoe
slid off her foot, tickling her sole, and plopped to the floor.
All right; one of them could come off. But if she put on both,
would she dance to her death? There were plenty of folklore stories
about shoes and mutilation, like Cinderella.
For a moment she just stared at the shoes, realizing that she
was in a place far, far different from home. That it seemed
somewhat like Earth accentuated her shock-she judged this place by
Earth experiences, concepts, standards, and theymight not apply.
Any move she made, thinking she knew the outcome, could be wrong
and lead her to her doom.
She fell back on the bed, hands over pounding heart, touching
the cloth that seemed like velvet but could be anything- fur, skin,
plastic wrap for all she knew. Even her senses could be
lying to her. Perhaps nothing here was real.
And if she continued to think that way, to challenge
everything-her senses, her mind, her experiences-she'd go mad. To
her horror, tears dribbled from her eyes.
This should be such an incredible, fascinating experience for a
true scholar! A whole new world to learn, a new aspect of her own
self-and magic!-to explore and master. She should be thrilled.
Instead, she wanted to curl up into a fetal position and pull
the covers over her head.
Bossgond was waiting for her. With breakfast. Even the thought
of food couldn't move her.
She was flipping out over a pair of shoes.
They were magic shoes.
Now her nose was clogged. She'd need to go to the toilet closet
and get some tissue-stuff she'd found there. It was in a roll and
had felt like regular toilet paper. She'd just used it, not
scrutinized it. Who knew what it was?
Was she going to let panic over the thought of a new world, a
magical world, paralyze her?
Wrong question.
The right question was, How long was she going to let
panic paralyze her?
Marian had always thought of herself as willing to learn new
things, explore new ideas-perhaps she'd even been snobbish about
that quality. In fact, she was a coward.
But her full-moon ritual had been about discovering why she'd
experienced odd sounds and nightmares. Now she knew. Golden Raven
had said she'd meet a teacher. She had. Now she had to figure out
how all this could help Andrew.
"Marian." The rich, deep voice of Bossgond seemed to echo around
the room. It certainly reverberated inside her mind. She turned her
head to see a tube running down the wall next to her bed, with a
flared opening like a trumpet.
"Marian, the oeuf is cooling."
She struggled to one elbow, then the second. "I'm coming," she
replied in French-the language she'd been speaking for hours
now-except for that tiny exchange with Alexa.
Alexa! While wallowing in her own fear she'd forgotten
Alexa-someone who'd already come from Colorado, had experiences she
could share with Marian. She was pitifully grateful that she didn't
have to take everything on faith, walking into a fog without a clue
as to the landscape around her. Alexa would help her. Marian was
not alone.
Just the thought of the other woman energized her.
"I'll be right there," she called out to Bossgond, a Sorcerer
who would teach her magic.
She stretched, feeling her muscles pull, feeling something
inside her that had been squashed and cramped, unfurl-a
butterfly-breaking-open-her-cocoon feeling.
She would practice wonder, learn all she could of magic,
in relation to herself and to Andrew. He'd expect her to live life
in the moment, wring everything she could out of each experience,
good or bad, not worry about being in control or making
mistakes.
So she put on the shoes and forced herself to admire the feel
and look of them. Then she marched to the toilet closet and took
some tissue and blew her nose, washed her face with water from a
tap.
Then she went out her door to find out if "oeuf' meant egg.
She ascended the stairs to Bossgond's quarters one floor above
her own. When she reached the door there was something like a harp
hanging on it. She pondered for a moment and decided it must be a
doorbell or a knocker. Running her thumbnail over the strings
released a ripple of sound that echoed through the tower and
plucked a couple of strings inside her, too-excitement and
anticipation.
Bossgond opened the door, wearing a short tunic that showed his
bony knees, a large yellow bird embroidered on the front. The
garment was cut so full that it hung on his slight frame. He stood
aside and Marian entered.
His space looked much like hers-windows letting in spring
sunlight, shelves all around the room, a desk, bathroom closet and
a partition hiding the bedroom. But it was as warm as a summer's
day-and the warmth felt more natural than the central heating she
was used to at home. Perhaps it was the humidity, or the scents the
air carried-fading spring blossoms and the start of summer.
The word oeuf meant omelette-a mild cheese omelette along
with croissants and hot chocolate with whipped cream. They ate at a
table near his fireplace. The fire flickered rainbow flames and
Bossgond let her watch them, examine the room and eat in peace.
When they finished, with a wave of his hand the dirty dishes
disappeared. If she were on Earth she could have marketed that for
a fortune-but where did the dishes go, and would they return? If
they returned, would they be the same dishes, but clean? How
clean would they be? Would bacteria still live-
Bossgond chuckled. "I see many questions in your eyes," he said,
enunciating each word.
Marian nodded and he nodded back. Apparently that was the same,
too, nodding as agreement.
He rose slowly and his joints popped. She frowned. He could make
the dishes disappear but had trouble rising? With motions and two
or three attempts at rephrasing the question, she made herself
clear.
"I have great Power," he said, rubbing his fingers together in a
gesture like the one that meant "money" back home. "And my will and
the Power make magical tasks easy, but my body is old and physical
tasks are not easy."
Marian wanted to know how old he was, but it was rude in her
culture to ask and she didn't know the rules of this society. She
just looked concerned and nodded again.
He pointed to the center of the room where three thick
oriental-looking rugs were layered. Huge pillows lay atop them
along with several small tables that held objects: odd bottles- and
were those wands?-and a couple of knives.
Marian hoped the knives were used ritually and practically, like
in Wicca, and not for bloodletting and sacrifice. From the corner
of her eye she studied Bossgond. She could take him in a physical
fight, but if he used magic she was sure she could be bound and
gutted in the blink of an eye. She shuddered.
The old man chuckled again and went to lower himself to the
rugs. He sat cross-legged, palms up on his knees and sent her a
quizzical glance.
She squared her shoulders. There was nothing she could do this
minute except scream and fight for her life if he meant her harm.
So she sank down across from him. To her amazement, her gown needed
no adjusting: it flowed out of her way when she sat.
"First we'll determine how strong your Power is and whether you
will be a good apprentice for me," he said, lifting his arms
shoulder height, hands angled up as if pressing against an
invisible wall. "Do as I do."
Marian mimicked him, putting her hands up. There was enough
space between them that they had a few inches between their hands
and didn't touch.
Bossgond hummed, and invisible pressure against her palms
snapped Marian's hands back to her shoulders. He smiled, but kept
the pressure steady.
Magical arm wrestling? Marian narrowed her eyes, sucked in a
deep breath. She felt her own will, and something else-
Power?-surge through her body, tingle through her hands, leave the
hollow of her palms to push against his, be stopped against a
barrier.
She concentrated, found a pool of energy within herself, drew it
up and sent it out in a ragged stream against his Power. His hands
trembled. Marian set her teeth, visualized a river of force inside
her, welling up from the deep pool, turning into a torrent pouring
from her hands to crash against Bossgond's wall. His hands snapped
back to his shoulders.
Looking surprised, he frowned, then pushed back at her. She kept
the Power steady against the strong force of his for what seemed an
eternity that drained her and started her panting-perhaps only a
minute. Then she slumped back against the pillow. Bossgond's Power
followed her, taking her breath, then vanished.
"Extraordinaire," he said.
She heard his voice around buzzing in her ears. Gentle,
inexorable fingers clamped around her wrists and brought her
upright again. Her lungs pumped and the dress seemed to soak up her
sweat and release a floral scent. Huh. Wriggling her legs and
bottom, shifting her shoulders, she stared at the man from under
lowered lashes.
He was inscrutable. Like a certain little green, pointy-eared
Master of the Force.
Her own personal taskmaster. Great. She knew now that she hadn't
given the green guy's students the sympathy they had deserved.
"Next test," Bossgond said, raising his hands, palms vertical
again.
Marian didn't think she could twitch a finger, but managed to
tilt her hands up from her wrists.
"To see how well we will do as Circlet and Apprentice," Bossgond
said.
Marian suppressed a grimace. She knew the word "apprentice." It
made her feel like she was ten again-maybe younger, just starting
elementary school-though, she was a beginner at magic.
She didn't even have the basic socialization of any child
brought up in this culture-what constituted rules of magic?
But Alexa seemed to have managed a position of high status, and
in a relatively short a time, if Marian's recollection of the coat
Alexa had worn in the vision was right. It was last winter's
jacket, so she would have purchased it no earlier than the
fall....
A sting against her palms brought her back to find her teacher
frowning at her from under silver eyebrows. Her cheeks flamed.
She'd let her attention wander! Oh yes, just like a kindergartner.
Heat flushed her neck, too. She'd disappointed a prof-not good. She
prided herself on being an exceptional student.
So she dipped her head in apology. "Excusez moi."
Bossgond nodded solemnly. "Attencion," he said.
She nodded again, kept her gaze fastened on his face, her mind
on what would come next. Her stomach tightened. She hated pop
quizzes. How could you get a perfect score without practice?
"Follow me," Bossgond said. He moved his hands far apart, cocked
his head.
Intent on him, she moved her hands apart, too. Then he began
gesturing, doing odd things with his hands, arms, face.
Marian mirrored him, watching. Finally, he returned to his
original position.
"Now you move and I will follow," he said.
This was the strangest activity Marian had ever done with a
teacher. Tentatively she set her hands together as if in prayer. He
did the same. A little bolder, she tilted her head, grinned. He did
the same. So they continued, Marian leading, until he said,
"Fini."
When her eyes met his, he said, "Now we move together, but
neither of us leads."
That sounded very strange. So she watched him and when he moved
his hands a little she followed, but leaned to one side, and he did
so, too. It was...balance. More than that, it was a connection,
knowing how they should move together, and in her mind she began to
hear a stream of musical notes weaving into a melody. A couple of
minutes later, they brought their hands together, palm to palm, and
a huge flare of energy burst from her, dazzling her with its
lightning brightness, its orchestral chord thundering in her ears,
her mind.
She spun free. Suddenly she was looking down on her body,
hand-to-hand with Bossgond, in a round tower room. Then she was in
the room above them, where she saw the star pentagram that had
brought her. She rose above the tower to see a large island, the
green coast of an unfamiliar land, then drifted even higher until
she saw how the world curved.
Free.
Terrified. There was nothing to hold her here-no bond with this
planet, this land. She still couldn't feel any link to Earth or
Andrew, and wherever that corridor was that she'd entered Lladrana
from, it didn't seem to be a physical place she could find.
Marian floated, unable to control her magic that had pushed her
from her body. The Power was so strong she was unable to move her
spirit-self even a smidgeon.
A slight breeze could blow her away.
6
Bossgond's strong hands squeezed hers. "Come back!" His resonant
voice trembled through her wavery self and she plummeted into her
body. She clung to his hands, stared at his homely face with her
physical eyes. Her body trembled.
"You have returned," Bossgond said. "Good." He separated his
fingers from hers one by one and stood up stiffly. "I will get you
hareco-a drink to help you settle."
Leaning back on the huge, firm pillow that braced her, Marian
hoped it wasn't some pitiful herbal tea. Good black tea would be
nice, or-
She smelled it. Coffee! And she murmured a prayer of thanks.
Bossgond handed her a mug and she inhaled the fragrance. Hot, dark
coffee. She drank greedily, while he sipped from a matching mug.
The pottery had a big yellow bird emblazoned on it, but she was too
shaken to ask about the icon.
"Your first lesson will be in grounding." He frowned, and the
small black streak in his golden hair seemed to darken, or perhaps
the rest glowed.
Marian pressed her lips together. She understood what he said
well enough, and she wasn't that much of a kindergartner that she
didn't know what "grounding" was-making sure you were solid in your
body before doing magic.
Keeping her voice even, she set aside her mug and said, "This
will be hard. I do not have a link-" she hooked her two index
fingers together "-to Amee. My link to Exotique Terre is broken."
Her chin wobbled at the thought. She grabbed her mug and sipped
again-something she could understand, coffee.
Bossgond patted her shoulder awkwardly and took his place again.
"From my observations, it seems as if Exotique Terre has little
magic," Bossgond said, as she drained the last, lovely gulp from
her mug.
Exotique Terre was what he'd called the globe of Earth the night
before. Marian didn't know what to say, so she shrugged.
"A Power like yours would not have been so stifled, so bound
until it struggled to get free, here on Amee." The old man's tone
was laced with disapproval of her previous world. "You are far
beyond the age of the standard Apprentice." He snorted. "But
perhaps it is good that you are an adult. I have little
patience."
He'd been fine with her so far, but she sensed she was a novelty
to him.
The meaning of his words sank in. "From your observations? You
can see into my world?"
"Indeed," he said, and waved to something that looked like an
enormous set of binoculars on a stand, aimed at a series of mirrors
that reflected infinitely. She couldn't figure out how the device
worked, didn't know if she dared to ask to see her old world.
She yearned to know that Andrew was all right.
Bossgond came and took the empty mug from her, offered his hand
to help her up. As she took it, the song between them uncurled
again. He nodded.
"We have a small bond, which will grow. It is good."
After she was on her feet, he released her. "Come, we must
remedy your lack of a link with Amee as soon as possible." He held
out his hand and a walking stick flew into it.
Marian gulped.
Nodding to the table holding the wooden wands, he said, "Choose
a walking stick."
His words made her uneasy, but she walked to the table and
picked up each in turn. The dark red one felt the best, as if it
were an extension of her arm. She repressed the urge to wave it and
say "abracadabra" or "kalamazam." Instead she handed it to
Bossgond.
He grinned in satisfaction and said, "Staff!"
The wand grew into a walking stick as high as her head- looking
like a rod or wand from a tarot deck.
Bossgond handed it to her, and when she grasped it this time, a
low note sounded and the thing vibrated. Small twigs appeared, then
sprouted greenery, then ivy twined up the staff, spreading silver
and gold leaves. She stared at it open-mouthed, and again her
memory was prodded-by the vision Bossgond had shown her in his
crystal ball when they'd first met. She'd had a staff just like
this. No wonder he smiled- either he'd foreseen this, or he had
deduced her Power correctly. What else wasn't he telling her?
Many things, she thought. The old sorcerer wasn't revealing
anything he didn't want her to know, and he probably thought she
knew more than she did. Her ignorance would impede them both.
He took her hand and led her to the stairs, and they wound their
way down the tower to arched, double wooden doors. Marian watched
intently as he slid the bar on the door to the side and into iron
brackets attached to the stone wall. She'd be getting more than
magic lessons, more than the sociology of a new culture-she'd learn
more about architecture, too. So much to learn! It excited her.
Bossgond shoved open the door and they walked out into a small
area paved with large gray flagstones, then into springy green
grass. The wind whisked their garments around them, tugged at
Marian's hair. He set a hand on her head and said, "Alam," and her
hair settled around her head. Neat trick, but she rather missed the
fingers of the breeze caressing her scalp.
The sunlight was yellow, clouds wispy white against a sky not
quite as blue as a Colorado spring sky. Marian shifted her
shoulders as she saw forested hills rolling to the horizon. She was
used to a view of the Flatirons and Rocky Mountains. She was
accustomed to a campus full of buildings, professors and students,
not a lonely island tower with one brilliant Sorcerer.
Bossgond pulled on her hand and they circled the great tower,
over bony rock, slippery moss and sweetly scented grass, until they
were almost halfway around. He stilled, closed his eyes, cocked his
head, then opened his lids and nodded once. "No one watches."
That was good to know-another trick Marian would like to learn.
A person couldn't depend on atavistic itching between the shoulder
blades. Bossgond squatted, gestured to her to do the same, then
indicated the top of a stone at the bottom of the tower wall that
looked well buried. He licked his finger and wiped off some dirt,
and Marian saw a tiny outline of a bird. Bossgond's heraldic
bird-she'd figured that much out. He whispered a word that was
taken from her ears by the wind and a cube of moss and earth around
the stone lifted as if cut. Another sighing two-note whistle and
the stone removed itself. Bossgond waved for her to look into the
darkness.
She had to wait a moment for her eyes to adjust before she could
see a rough pyramid point inside the hollow.
"The keystone of the tower," Bossgond said. "The proof that a
person has become a Circlet Sorcerer or Sorceress is when they
raise their own tower with their Power."
Marian swallowed.
He reached in and caressed the keystone, smiling as if he petted
a beloved animal.
Marian thought of her lost hamster Tuck and sniffled. What on
Earth-on Amee-did these people do for handkerchiefs? And where
would they put them? She hadn't noticed any pockets-but as she
thought of them, four flapped against her skin. Interesting.
"If this stone is found and destroyed, my tower will fall. I may
or may not be hurt, depending on whether I am in the tower and how
much of my Power I have invested in my tower at the time. At the
moment you are not Powerful enough to do me harm, and when we Bond
by Blood as Master and Apprentice, we will be incapable of harming
each other. Any secrets will never be able to pass our lips."
Blood-bond. Right. The idea should have deterred her, but it
didn't. Blood played a large part in various cultures' rituals to
symbolize a connection between people. She considered it a small
price to pay for knowledge.
"You understand?" asked Bossgond.
Marian nodded, tucking the information and ramifications away to
consider later. She reached in and touched the keystone. A little
current ran through her-not soothing like her connection to Mother
Earth had been-and she twitched. She couldn't imagine grounding
herself with this rock; there was too much energy.
Bossgond sighed, shrugged. "Not a good stone for you to link
to." With a wave of his hand the tower stone and the cube of sod
settled back into place, looking as if they'd been undisturbed for
centuries. "This is my Tower on Alf Island. But it is not the first
Tower. We will walk to old Mortig's Tower. Perhaps that will be
better for you."
They set off briskly and a minute later Marian bumped into a
sizzling invisible barrier. She yelped and jumped back.
On the other side of the...forcefield, Bossgond smirked at her.
Then he stepped up before her, touched his index finger to the
barrier and "cut" a door for her. She lifted her chin and swept
through past him.
"When we bond you will be able to enter or leave at will. I will
also show you the courtesy portal for well-intentioned
visitors."
After a quick walk away from the sun-west, then-of about a half
hour, they reached the remnants of tower walls about five feet
high. Bossgond showed her the hidden keystone to this, too. She
started to touch the thing and electricity zipped between her
fingers and the stone, shocking her. She fell back on her bottom
with an outraged cry.
Bossgond creaked a laugh, helped her up, dusted off her seat and
strode off in another direction. As they walked, Bossgond told her
about his island.
He had demonstrated the strongest Power in several generations
when he was a youngster and had piqued the interest of the Powerful
Mortig. The choice of islands was always given to the most Powerful
first. Bossgond had held Alf Island for many years.
Alf was about a hundred miles across and had everything a person
would want-fresh streams full of fish, hills, forests, glades. His
tower was near enough to the coast and a small harbor to appreciate
the waves without being threatened by any flooding or crumbling
ground. A paradise to Bossgond.
It sounded pretty good to Marian, too, though she was sure she'd
miss mountains.
She thought back to when she'd hovered over the island. The
shape was a little like Australia.
After an hour-and-a-half walk they came to a depression in the
ground, too close to the rocky edge of the island to be altogether
stable. The circle of flat stones was barely visible, but Power
still radiated, drawing her.
Bossgond stood back and watched, but she strode to the hidden
keystone with confidence. This one didn't vibrate quite right,
either, but it felt better than either of the others.
Bossgond shook his head. "You are not of Amee, so no previous
keystone will tune to you easily. Perhaps you will find a better
place than this as you range the islands. For now, let us do the
grounding here."
To Marian's embarrassment, she found herself lying on her
stomach, arms angled down a few feet to the keystone. When she
curled her hands around the pyramid-shaped rock, Power shot through
her, erasing any exhaustion, starting a tingle racing in her
veins.
Bossgond sat cross-legged beside her and placed a hand on her
back, rubbed it. It felt nice, gentle, avuncular. She closed her
eyes and let her mind sink into a quiet pool, only feeling- the
warmth of the ground beneath her, the small breeze around her. And
with three hummed notes, Bossgond sent her into a deep trance.
Distantly she heard his voice instructing her. Under his spell,
she sang to the stone and it reverberated one note, two, three back
to her, and she felt a small tether to Amee.
With a soothing chant, Bossgond lifted her from her trance,
brought her into clear-headed wakefulness. Again she felt
energized. She laughed in delight at the connection with a
world-song again, though this particular planet-melody was
heart-wrenchingly sad.
She stood and stretched, limbering up after her time lying so
still on the ground.
Bossgond looked at her, then at the circle of grass and stones.
Then he gazed out to the sea, his face impassive. "If we do well
together and you do not want another island or a manor on the
mainland, I will grant you the right to raise another tower on the
island." The corners of his lips curved slightly upward. He
gestured. "You may choose where you please, as long as it is
outside my protective ring around my tower."
The forcefield they'd crossed. She nodded.
His expression turned grim and he raised a finger. "If we do
well together."
His tone was that of a man who'd been crotchety for decades.
When they returned to the Tower, Bossgond led her back upstairs
for lunch. She sat at the table and he set a plate and silverware
for them both. Then he put a few empty platters between them. He
went to a cupboard and came back with a box.
Taking a crumb of bread, he put it on one platter, then added a
bit of dried fruit, a few strings of jerky. As Marian stared,
Bossgond passed his hands over the dishes and sang a long
Songspell. The breadcrumb turned into a large loaf of bread dusted
with flour, the jerky became four thick slices of roast beef, the
fruit plumped into apples.
Under Marian's fixed gaze, Bossgond cut a piece of each and put
it back into the magical box, then returned the box to the
cupboard.
When he returned, he sang a little blessing, then made a
sandwich and dug into his reconstituted meal.
Hesitantly, Marian sliced a piece of bread-wishing there was
some Dijon mustard-and put a slice of roast beef on it. She took a
bite, chewed and swallowed.
The food was plentiful but tasteless. The victuals had to be
nutritious because Bossgond was still alive and he'd probably been
eating this way for years. No wonder he was so scrawny.
After finishing off an apple and half her sandwich, Marian said,
"Don't you cook?"
Sandwich at his open mouth, Bossgond's eyes widened. He put down
the bread and meat.
"Do you?" His voice was hoarse, his gaze gleamed with hope.
"Of course."
He stood up so fast that his chair rocked. "Come with me!"
Nearly running to keep up with him, Marian followed him out the
door, down the stairs past her own suite and to the level below her
room.
Bossgond threw open the door. A gleaming kitchen took up most of
the space, along with an empty pantry.
"Cooks were too much bother," he muttered. "I can fish,"
Bossgond said eagerly. "I can draw a deer to us and butcher
it."
lck. Marian was a civilized supermarket predator; she
couldn't imagine such a thing. It was enough to make a person a
vegetarian.
She crossed her arms. "1 don't intend to be here very long. My
priority, and what I want to spend my time doing, is learning from
you, not cooking."
He looked torn, then tried a pitiful look, but he was too
arrogant to do pitiful well.
"I would, however, supervise a cook." She liked her food,
too-all too much.
Bossgond's lower lip stuck out.
"How long has it been since you had a cook?"
"Fifty years," he muttered.
"You need a little pampering. You're too thin, you need good
food. You deserve it. I'm sure you could afford a cook."
"They are impossible to work with, men or women. They pry. They
talk too much. They don't like living on the island."
So he wanted an unambitious introvert who liked solitude. Marian
wondered how to advertise the position. "Let me think about this."
She wouldn't be able to eat Bossgond's rations for long.
He nodded, but his expression eased. He climbed the stairs back
to his chambers with a spring in his step.
Bossgond banished the food and dishes with a wave of his hand,
then they both returned to the center of the room.
Scowling, he said, "You plan on leaving soon? We paid the
Marshalls for your Summoning."
Marian lifted her chin. "My brother is ill, he needs me. My
ritual was to find answers to strange things happening in my life
and how to help him. I'm hoping that Amee will have information
about his disease and how to mitigate it. I intend to take that
knowledge back to him. I'll try to repay you."
Bossgond snorted, then studied her with narrowed eyes. "We will
speak of this later. First you must study."
Within a few minutes, Marian had mastered the art of grounding
herself, and the small, invisible thread spinning between her and
the ancient keystone had thickened to a braided strand.
He taught her to light the fire with her mind, to levitate a
book, to "call" her walking stick. Energy drained from her with
each task, and a slight film of sweat dampened her skin. Her dress
gave out the scent of herbs.
Then Bossgond rose and offered both his hands, beaming. "You
have mastered the first level of Apprenticeship." He bowed.
Already? She dropped a little curtsy and a bubble of triumph
expanded in her chest.
"To celebrate we will have another cup of hareco."
Oh boy, if coffee was so rare that she had to pass tests to get
it, life was going to be tough.
He poured them each another cup of coffee and settled into the
middle of the room with his mug. He gestured around them. "Survey
the room, touch what you like to discover your particular vocation
of study."
Marian blinked at him. "How?"
One corner of the man's mouth crinkled upward. "You will know.
It will hum in your mind."
Marian had always loved music as much as books, but this aural
culture made her feel alien. Still, she smiled, drained the last,
delicious sip of coffee and set her mug aside. She looked
around.
Bossgond leaned back against the pillows and sipped, staring out
the window. Without his penetrating gaze, Marian felt able to act
more naturally and to concentrate on exploring the room full of
fascinating objects. She looked at the huge binoculars, but didn't
cross over to them. When she moved away from the instrument,
Bossgond grunted in approval, and she decided to save the
binoculars for last if she didn't find anything else that struck a
chord.
She scanned the shelves. The books intimidated her a little
since she couldn't read the fancy cursive lettering. She leafed
through one and jolted when a couple of the pictures became
three-dimensional. Then she put it back with a sigh. She wouldn't
be in Lladrana long enough to learn how to read the language. A
pity.
For an hour she indulged herself with the treasures crammed on
the shelves-boxes and bottles, rugs, goblets and instruments, and
art objects of all kinds. She found an elegant, gold-etched bottle
that held all the scents of summer, a flying carpet for short trips
around the island, models of castles and people and animals.
Bossgond only stiffened twice during her explorations: once when
she picked up something like a wand, but longer, heavier, and
feeling like blood and death; again when she reached a big, open
book that looked like new pages had been added.
She moved on to another table with a series of glass jars that
looked a little like terrariums, increasing in size from a large
mug to a great globe of about two feet. She touched the top of one
in the middle and a sharp ping sounded in her mind. Static
electricity-from glass?-shot up her arm.
In an instant Bossgond was beside her. Grinning.
"Very good," he said, rubbing his hands.
Marian wet her lips, stared at the jars. Now that she'd touched
one, they all sang to her, like a series of glass
wind-chimes. "What does it mean?"
7
Bossgond smiled. "You are a Weather Mage."
Her pulse quickened. "Weather? Are you sure?" She'd always had
that odd sense....
He chuckled. "Very sure." Taking the largest globe with both
hands, he walked to the conversation pit and set it in the middle.
"You must start with this one. When you reach Scholar status, you
will be competent in modifying the weather in the midsize jar. Your
Circlet Test will be of fire, wind, wave and earth in the smallest
jar."
The one with plants and trees and tiny bugs. Marian gulped,
knowing instinctively that she could kill them all.
She sat cross-legged in front of the large sphere.
"Look into the glass," he said.
She did and caught her breath. There was a world down there!
With continents and oceans, mountains, streams, vegetation.
Bossgond sat behind her, his skinny chest to her back, his legs
framing hers. Marian tensed.
He clucked his tongue and placed his knobby hands on hers. His
chest expanded behind her as he inhaled deeply. "I was no better
than average at this task," he murmured. "But I can show you how to
direct your Power. Concentrate on the world below. Do you see the
clouds?"
Marian frowned and narrowed her vision, and a portion of one
continent seemed to enlarge. "I see...buildings! There aren't
really people down there, are there?" Her voice trembled in horror.
She couldn't do this, wouldn't do this if she might harm
anyone! Mistakes would be terrible.
"Look closer," Bossgond said.
Marian did. Concentrating, she focused her gaze until she saw a
city of stone and wood, with winding roads to manor houses and two
castles on a hill. They were all perfect little models, but they
were models-as were the trees and animals. There were no fake
people. Her breath rushed out.
"Now, back to where you see clouds," Bossgond said.
She "zoomed out," noted fat cumulus clouds and some wispy ones.
She hadn't taken any science courses in years, wished she recalled
more about weather. She smiled. Weather, with a capital W, was now
her focus of study. She was a potential Weather Magician. How
cool!
"We will try to move the clouds." Bossgond's hands tightened
over hers. "Feel the essence of the clouds, their density and
shape."
Was that like the exercise of "be a cloud" that profs in the
Drama Department taught? Bossgond's mind led her to a cloud that
showed gray at the bottom, yet puffed up white and pretty near the
top. It was humongous.
She shut her eyes and focused on sensation. She seemed to be
floating in the sky, but not as she had before, not herself,
Marian, but Cloud. She floated stomach-down, and the portion of her
body closest to the ground felt heavy and full of liquid. For the
first time in her life her ass felt airy. She couldn't prevent
herself from thinking of it as a huge billowing cloud, and
giggled.
Bossgond hissed. His irritation nudged her, and control of the
cloud slipped from her grasp. It rained. Thankfully nothing
happened to her real body.
"See if you can move the cloud," Bossgond said, disapproval
clear.
She pushed her cloud. Nothing happened, except that she got a
visual of her hands penetrating cool air. She tried something
different. She was now separate from the cloud and grappled to
encompass it. With her mind she formed a tiny membrane from
air molecule to air molecule of the cloud, then pushed. It
moved. She pushed again, and it slid rapidly through the air.
Having fun, she set her mind against it and shoved. It turned into
a streak of white.
"Whee!" Marian cried. She was flying, chasing a cloud.
Bossgond made a strangled sound and fell backward, away from
her.
She stopped, withdrew her consciousness from the weather globe
and shifted around to see what was wrong.
He was holding his head as if he had a migraine.
"Bossgond?" she asked.
The mage winced. "You are Powerful. I didn't expect you to be
able to move the cloud so easily, so fast and far. I never could,"
he grumbled.
"You have other talents." Marian scooted behind him and started
massaging his temples, wondering why she felt compelled to reassure
him. He grunted, then sighed with pleasure.
"Of course," he said, but he didn't sound as sarcastic as she'd
expected. He huffed out a breath. "You are a naturally gifted
student in Power. It happens sometimes, that there are
geniuses."
An inner glow of pleasure lit her. Of course, she'd been a
professional student all her life and knew she learned quickly..
.not that this was learning so much as revealing,
discovering something deep inside her, something she was meant to
be.
Bossgond said, "Naturally the Song would bring someone innately
Powerful to the Tower Community."
That evening after another mediocre meal, Marian joined Bossgond
in the ritual room. He began to Sing the blood-bond ceremony and
she joined in when she could. When he picked up a small, sharp
knife and strips of linen, she froze. What was she getting
into?
Bossgond smiled reassuringly. "We will be bound together for
four hours-the correct amount of time for a bond between Master and
Apprentice. There are both lesser and greater bonds, depending upon
the length of the binding. A Pairing-Marriage bond is a full night
and day."
She nodded and tried to relax as he took her arm and shoved up
her sleeve, concentrating on something else-like how glad she was
that neither of them had drunk a lot at dinner.
His voice deepened with mystery, with mastery as he cut her arm.
The pain was slight, but she yelped and stared as he inserted a
little tube in her arm. It looked as if he'd encased a whole vein.
Then he slit open his own arm and captured a vein.
Exactly how much blood would they be exchanging? This whole
thing involved a lot more than she'd realized.
After they were linked, they finished Singing the ceremony,
Marian in a low tone, experimenting with using her voice and Power.
Even before they snuffed the last candle, she could feel his blood
inside her, weighty with age, with Power, but also..murky.
With his blood came memories, strange and distorted and
flickering too fast before her mind's eye for her to catch and
analyze them.
As the minutes passed, through Bossgond, Marian's small tune
merged with the planet's. Wonder grew inside her.
She found herself panting, and regulated her breath-yoga
breaths. Slowly, they left the top ritual floor and descended to
Bossgond's study. He'd placed a small desk and chair next to his
larger one, along with the big glass sphere that contained Marian's
planet.
His mouth moved and a second or two later she heard his
distorted voice, not beautiful now, but beating at her ears.
"Study the continents, the contours of the land, and especially
the weather."
Marian stared at the sphere, but minutes passed before her eyes
focused. She swallowed. Everything was so overwhelming! She chose a
cloud-studied it as it floated over the continent, changed shapes,
absorbed other clouds and became a weather front. Her heart pounded
dully in her chest.
Bossgond fiddled with lenses on his desk. Glimmers of his
thoughts came with the flow of memories.
A few minutes after the second hour, Bossgond abruptly quit his
work and they went back to the ritual room, where they relaxed in
lounge chairs. This was easier, as she didn't have to struggle with
the input from his mind as he worked.
Slowly, slowly, without the distraction of her studies or his,
relaxing in the chair, Marian regained her equilibrium and could
snatch bits of Bossgond's knowledge, process it, understand it.
Comprehension of the language came first, and she smiled faintly.
Lladranan culture celebrated the Singer-a prophetess oracle-and the
Song, what they called the Divine. It made sense that she "heard"
the language in her blood, trickling to her brain, opening new
paths.
Too aware of her own memories flowing to Bossgond, Marian let
Bossgond's most personal ones zoom past her. She knew he'd had two
long-term lovers, that the relationships hadn't been totally
satisfying. He probably learned all about her mother-and Andrew.
Perhaps he could help with Andrew. At least Bossgond now knew how
much she loved her brother and why it was imperative for her to
return to Earth.
Then Marian "saw" the northern boundary of Lladrana, the fence
posts and magical forcefield boundary strung between them. The
fence posts blackened and fell, the border gaped. Monsters invaded.
Horrible, hideous, evil-looking things that brought nausea, so she
pushed the thoughts away.
She experienced worms in the rain. Most died when they hit the
ground, some tunneled into the earth. Frinks.
Some people opened mouths to the frinks, were consumed by them
inside until they turned into monsters within a human skin.
Mockers.
From a colorful whirl of views through the binoculars, Marian
picked out Alexa-at a graduation, at a funeral, hiking up a
mountain trail at night, walking through a silver arch.
Alexa choosing a baton. Alexa in battle-grisly images... Marian
shook her head sharply, no! She didn't want to see that. Not now,
not yet.
A new fence post-Alexa grinning, holding a helmet under her
arm.
Marian herself at her work-study job in the Engineering
Department. On a date with Jack Wilse. Talking to her mother.
Hugging Andrew.
She pulled her thoughts back to the here and now-to the shrouded
room around her, the cupboards that held the globes of Amee and
Earth she'd seen the night before. The clock showed three hours had
passed and seemed to tick with her heartbeat.
Bossgond made a strangled noise. She glanced at him-a gray tinge
had crept under his skin. His breath was ragged.
"I can't bear it," he mumbled. "Your world is too difficult to
contemplate. Too harsh."
Marian thought that being invaded by terrible monsters was worse
than Denver traffic, which she'd been thinking of. But she reached
for the linen strips that bound their arms together.
"No!" Bossgond cried, sitting straight up. "This needs a
delicate touch."
She understood him much better now, so she leaned back. As he
began to chant over the bindings, her blood slowed and dizziness
hit her. He carefully separated their arms. The tubes had
dissolved. A hollow sigh of relief escaped him.
After a few more chanting words, his hard fingertip ran up her
arm, sealing her wound and leaving cold fire in its wake. Bossgond
wrapped one strip along her arm and sang a simple healing tune that
made Marian smile. She was feeling sleepier and sleepier. Had
Bossgond siphoned her own energy into himself, thinking it was his
right as her master? She didn't like that thought or the dark
parade that followed. Maybe he'd been acting all day, and now she
was about to become a sacrifice. Bad. Very bad. How could she have
been so gullible?
Darkness swooped down on her.
Maps tucked under his arm, Jaquar followed Chalmon up his Tower
stairs to his study. The other Sorcerer radiated irritation,
probably still upset at Jaquar's behavior in claiming Exotique
Marian the day before. Or perhaps it was that Jaquar had gathered a
circle of Sorcerers and Sorceresses to watch the Dark's nest, and
they were reporting to him.
Before Jaquar's parents died, Chalmon had considered himself the
leader of their generation of the Tower Community. Jaquar, like
most, had gone his own way and done small tasks for Chalmon as
requested, and if they cost little.
That had changed. Jaquar had never wanted to be a leader, barely
had the patience to deal with the idiosyncrasies of a group of
individuals, but he hungered for vengeance.
When they reached Chalmon's tidy study, Venetria rose and came
forward. Jaquar sensed she'd been with Chalmon since the debacle at
the Marshalls' Castle the day before.
"Salutations, Venetria." He bowed and kissed her hand. "How did
you two get here?"
Chalmon waved a hand as if impatient with the question, any
small talk. "I bought a coach and Venetria bespelled it to fly. It
will be a welcome addition to my household."
Venetria frowned. "It's my coach."
"I bought it." Chalmon scowled at his lover.
"But my flight spell is much more costly than the coach
itself."
"Why didn't you settle this between the two of you before?"
asked Jaquar.
Chalmon reddened. Venetria smiled in satisfaction. "Chalmon was
in a hurry to get into the coach. All that Power compressed
in that pentacle yesterday was so invigorating."
Venetria heaved a sigh, which raised her chest. She did have
beautiful breasts. Almost as beautiful as the Exotique's, though
Jaquar had no business thinking such thoughts.
He strode to the center of the room where a study table and
several chairs sat, unrolled one of the large sheets of paper he'd
brought with him and placed it on the table. "This is a diagram and
map of Plane Eighteen. I've found it to be the best for observing
the nest. The master and monsters don't sense us because it is a
few levels more spiritual-more good-than what they can
achieve."
"They are too destructive for Eighteen?" Venetria asked. "I
don't do well in any Plane lower than Twenty-four." She slid
Chalmon a glance. "Unless I'm angry at Chalmon."
Jaquar's mouth twisted. "I've reached upward to Eighty-two, as
low as Eleven-which is the Plane the horrors use most often."
Chalmon grunted. "Is that other roll level Eleven?"
"Yes." Jaquar moved the first map to one side of the table and
set the second down.
As he unrolled it, Chalmon placed a paperweight on each of the
four corners and studied the musical notation at the bottom of the
chart. His nose wrinkled as if smelling a bad odor.
"Foul," Chalmon said. He tapped the music and a low, grating hum
and clashing notes reverberated through the room. Venetria jumped
and put her hands over her ears.
"You probably shouldn't have done that," Jaquar said mildly.
Greasy smoke hovered in the air. "You're right." Chalmon
scowled. "Now they could become aware of me, might have a direct
path here. I'll have to do a Ritual Cleansing." He glanced at
Jaquar. "How do you make such maps without alerting the monsters,
the Master, the Dark itself?"
"Very carefully." He had no intention of revealing his
secrets.
For an instant, Chalmon's face lightened with humor, then he
sobered again and nodded to chairs near the fireplace. They were
simple and covered in royal blue, Chalmon's color. He waited until
Jaquar and Venetria were seated, then said, "I am not comfortable
with your previous plan to train the new Exotique and use her to
infiltrate the nest."
Relief eased Jaquar's tight muscles. Despite his lust for
revenge, he'd had qualm, too, since he met Marian. Her personal
Song was so lovely.
Chalmon continued. "I studied the information you sent regarding
the recent observations of the Dark's nest. The Sorcerer who was
watching last night said there was a great stirring when Marian was
Summoned. The Dark obviously knows she's arrived. We may not have
time for her full training."
Venetria pursed her lips. "True. I hope Bossgond teaches her
rapidly and well."
Chalmon said, "The Sorceress watching the nest this morning
stated there has been increased activity, as if more monsters would
soon be released." He squared his shoulders. "I contacted the
others. We-the group of us-agree that we may have to move faster
than anticipated."
Anger stirred inside Jaquar. "Sounds as if you were busy during
my trip from my island this evening."
Eyes steely, Chalmon said, "From the Power I felt surrounding
the Exotique, she is strong enough and Exotique enough to
penetrate the magical shield keeping the rest of us at bay."
"I want her trained up to Circlet status first," Jaquar
insisted. "It would be foolish to throw away such a fearsome weapon
as Marian without learning all she is capable of." He stood and
paced. "Has it occurred to you that the Master is baiting a trap?
And he wants us to do just as we planned-send the new Exotique
Marian to her destruction instead of guarding her and using her?
She's Powerful and could be the worst danger to him if she develops
into a Circlet, unites us and fights with us and Exotique
Alyeka."
Chalmon shifted his shoulders. "That may well be true, but I'm
sure she could hurt the nest, and you saw what one sangvile
did. Its damage is exponential. If the Master releases
several-"
"We are watching. We will know when the horrors leave the
nest maw. We know how to defeat all the monsters we've encountered
so far, including the sangvile, including the dreeth. I do not want
to act in haste!"
Venetria and Chalmon exchanged glances.
"We should definitely spend more time with her and learn her
Powers before we solidify our plans," Venetria said. She grimaced.
"I suppose we should visit Bossgond."
"He'll probably be having many people dropping by-Circlets of
the Tower and Marshalls, too. Nothing will stop Exotique Alyeka
from greeting another from her old world." Jaquar smiled as he
recalled the small woman's excitement the previous day. "And since
Alyeka doesn't fly well, her husband, Bastien, will bring her. As a
black-and-white, Bastien has a wide streak of curiosity
himself."
Jaquar chuckled. "Yes, Bossgond's Tower may become a busy place.
Enough to make him cranky. I plan to go see him and Marian
myself."
Venetria and Chalmon watched Jaquar leave. As they stood at the
top of the tower, Chalmon's fingers tightened on hers, his profile
went stern. The Song between them was rough and uneven as their
thoughts and desires conflicted. As usual.
"I didn't ask to be jolted out of my complacency and into the
knowledge of great danger."
She jerked her hand from his and turned away from the window.
"I'm sorry I burdened you when my aunt died, made you face what the
sangvile could do to us," she said stiffly. "I must go." She'd
wanted to stay, had felt protected and warm here, even though his
furnishings were not to her taste. He'd never noticed that, of
course. She digressed from the topic he'd introduced, but she
didn't want to think about what plans he might propose.
He grasped her, both hands on her shoulders. "Jaquar is
deviating from his original tune in this."
"Easier to consider harm to an unknown person than someone we've
met."
"A very beautiful woman who has an intriguing Song. Who he held
in his arms, who spun notes with him even during a short interval."
Now Chalmon gazed beyond her. "But if Jaquar retreats from this
plan, I will not." His hawkish stare met hers again, pinned her.
"What of you?"
"I don't know."
Marian woke at the feel of a cool, damp, herbal-scented cloth
wiping her face. Bossgond stared down at her, concerned.
"It's only been a few minutes, and is still evening," he said in
a raspy voice. "Let us adjourn to my chambers."
Testing her arms and legs, Marian stretched. Her limbs worked
fine, though her insides felt a little hollow.
She took Bossgond's hand and rose, stood a moment, but no
dizziness occurred. Smiling at her master, a man whose bark was
worse than his bite from all she'd learned of him, she went with
him back down to his study.
It seemed even more comfortable since Marian had experienced the
Power it had taken to raise the Tower, the money- known here as
zhiv-to furnish it.
Attentive, Bossgond settled Marian in the nest of pillows in the
center of the room, then brought her coffee. She'd discovered
through their bonding that coffee wasn't rare-not as rare as
tea-but Bossgond considered it a treat.
He sat opposite her, his wrinkled cheeks faintly flushed. "We
are bonded, but not as deeply as usual between Master and
Apprentice. To compensate for my failure to complete the full
bonding I will show you something special tomorrow morning."
Marian stared at him, recognizing that his self-condemnation at
such a "failure," wasn't attractive. He'd done his best, hadn't he?
They did have a bond, a Song, and it felt strong to her.
He'd done neither of them harm. In fact, harm to him had been
averted, since the strangeness of Earth had threatened his sanity.
Yet he expected her to condemn him? She didn't know what to
say.
He waved a hand irritably. "You may go."
So she curtsied and left. Head crammed full of the day's
experiences, she wound down the stairs thinking that she should
keep a journal. She entered her room in full dark, but before the
door closed behind her, a soft light flickered on.
A lantern atop the large desk glowed-bright on the first blank
pages of an open book. Marian's mouth dropped open, but she was too
tired to make a sound, too weary to mess with the feather pen
sitting in the pretty gold-edged glass inkwell.
Instead she went behind the stained-glass partition to her
bedroom and removed her clothes and shoes, folding her dress up as
she'd found it. Not a wrinkle or a speck of dirt marred the cloth.
On one of the lower shelves she found a pile of pale gowns that
looked like nightwear, and drew one on, sighing with tired pleasure
as the soft material whispered over her skin. When she climbed into
bed and found the sheets warm, she chuckled. Magic could provide
incredible luxury.
Trying her own Power, she said, "Lights out," and smiled as
darkness enveloped her loft.
Just before she fell asleep, a thought occurred to her: all her
skill in being able to shape weather would not help Andrew.
In the morning Marian found a little golden tattoo of a bird on
the inside of her left wrist, but no other scar. When she tried to
converse with Bossgond at breakfast, he replied in grunts, and she
decided he was naturally a grumpy old man who'd tried to tone down
his manner for the past couple of days. She much preferred his
slight deception to her mother's hypocrisy. They ate another bland
cheese omelette and coffee.
She must remember to get them a cook.
After breakfast her heart pumped hard as he gestured to the
oversize binoculars-the ones he used to watch Earth. They had their
own stand of polished brass. The instrument itself was of
copper-inlaid brass and shone-obviously Bossgond's pride and joy.
The eyepieces were the right size; it was the other end that held
great lenses, each about three feet in diameter.
Bossgond went to the stand and adjusted gleaming gears. "I've
been observing your Exotique Terre for half a year now- as soon as
a Circlet reported that destiny tunes indicated more Exotiques
would be Summoned."
"Oh?" Marian encouraged.
"Then the Marshalls Summoned the first Exotique as expected, to
keep and train as one of their own, and indications appeared that
we, the Tower Community of Circlets, should accept the next
Exotique as one of us."
He was leaving a lot out, Marian was sure, but right now all her
attention was focused on the binoculars. She bit her lip, waiting
impatiently.
Bossgond tapped the fancy brass instrument. "This is still
focused on your former abode. See for yourself."
8
Careful not to joggle the binoculars, Marian bent to peer
through the eyepiece.
Her breath caught as she saw the gray carpet of her apartment,
the taped red star. The incense smoke had long since dissipated,
but the little power-light for her sound system was still on. Her
PDA was in the middle of the pentacle.
Drawing back, she nibbled her bottom lip, glanced at Bossgond.
"I know it's been only two days, but my brother is very sick. Could
I check on him?"
He stared at her in silence, and she wondered how much he'd
received and understood about Andrew. She kept her eyes on his. She
wouldn't back down. Bossgond's eyes narrowed.
"How far away is your brother?"
Marian spread her hands. "Across the country from me. My home is
in the middle of a great land mass-"
Bossgond nodded.
"-and my brother is on the West Coast." What was that island's
name? She'd researched the program when Andrew first considered it
a year ago. Freesan!
"You know the geography of your land and where to find him?"
Bossgond's eyes shifted, and she sensed excitement flowing from
him. He'd have someone to help him tour Exotique Terre.
"Yes," she said.
He pointed to a couple of great gears with knobs and calibrated
markings. "This will distance you from the scene, and this gear
will bring you closer."
One eye at the lens, Marian turned the biggest gear. Her living
room shrank and was replaced by her apartment building. As she kept
turning, she saw her street, the city, the state. It was brown-much
drier than Lladrana, even in the spring. With a gentle touch she
angled the viewing field until she saw northwest Washington State,
moved the binoculars again to focus on the many islands. Freesan
was small and undistinguished-long and narrow. She recalled that
the center sat on the north end of the island. Finally, she found
the main structure. She zoomed in, but couldn't see Andrew. A fine
tremor started within her.
"You are blood. Think of his Song," Bossgond murmured near her
ear.
That didn't help. She hadn't ever noticed a Song coming from
Andrew. She set her teeth, drew in a deep breath. Her magic was
strong here in Lladrana. If she couldn't hear him, perhaps she
could sense him or see his aura-or something. She mentally
reached for Andrew, visualizing him. For a moment she
touched him, then lost him. She muttered under her breath,
reached again-and there he was! Quickly, with fumbling
fingers, she narrowed the scope of the binoculars and saw him. Her
heart clutched. She hadn't seen him for a couple of months and his
recent exacerbations had taken a toll. He was very thin, as if his
will sustained him more than his body.
Bossgond nudged her aside, but kept a hand on her upper arm as
he looked through the binoculars. "Ah yes, I hear your family
melody."
He did?
He glanced up at her and clucked his tongue.
"Listen!"
So she did, with her heart and imagination, more than her mind,
and caught a brief series of notes. She did hear that while
her own portion of the twined melody was strong, Andrew's was
arrhythmic and missed beats.
"He does well," Bossgond said. "He is active."
The old man stepped aside, allowing Marian to peek again, and
she saw Andrew laughing in a group as they picked up packs and
walked from the building.
"That is enough," Bossgond said, drawing her away. "You used
much Power for this session, but the worlds of Exotique Terre and
Amee draw apart, and every day it will cost more energy to view.
You have much to learn, and need your strength to do so."
"I want to check on Andrew at least once a week."
Bossgond raised his brows. "We will discuss a price for
this."
"How about finding and supervising the cook, as we spoke
of?"
His eyes went calculating, as if pondering whether she could
survive in his culture, outside his Tower. She wondered, too, but
she'd think of something.
"Very well," he agreed.
Light-headed with relief, she took a couple of paces to the wall
and leaned on it.
Bossgond smirked. "You don't know how to restore your Power
yet." Then he bent and adjusted the gears. "They are focused on
your former rooms again. 'I am a Circlet, behold,'" he said.
He whistled-sharp and nearly at the edge of her hearing- and
made an intricate, swooping gesture. Then he held her PDA in his
hand.
Marian gasped.
He bowed, grinning, and offered it to her.
She snatched it from his hand, clutched it to her chest. "Thank
you."
"You are welcome," he said austerely. "Consider it payment for
my failure last night to complete the blood-bond to its proper
strength."
"You retrieved my...little machine book. Could you possibly find
my pet? He was lost in the corridor when we came here."
She thought of a pocket in the green gown she wore and one
appeared, perfect to hold the PDA. She put her possession- her only
possession from Earth-into the pocket.
Waving her hands, she tried to describe Tuck. "He's a...a
mousekin in a clear ball."
Bossgond shook his head. "The corridor between worlds is
inexplicable. The winds can be absent or like a hurricane.
Monsters..."
"No!"
"I saw you come through, but only glimpsed your pet at that
time. I have not seen him since. The binoculars are not designed to
explore the corridor. I'm sorry."
Marian bit her lip. "Thank you, anyway."
At that moment all the chimes in the open window sounded.
"Visitors come." Bossgond scowled.
"A boat?"
"No." He flicked his fingers to the window. "Go see." He looked
as if he suppressed a smile...at her expense? She crossed to the
window.
A flying horse carrying two people circled the Tower, then
descended to land in front of the main door. Marian found herself
leaning out of the window to stare at the Pegasus. It was the most
beautiful creature she'd ever seen, and she'd never been a girl
fond of horses. But this beast was different. It glowed with
magic.
"Hey!" someone called. "Hey, Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your
hair!"
Marian choked and tore her gaze away from the winged horse to
narrow her eyes at the small woman at the bottom of the Tower.
Alexa-the other Earth woman, the first Exotique in centuries.
"Will that grumpy old man let us in?" Alexa called, and Marian
was torn between laughter at Alexa's words and surprise that they'd
both called him the same thing.
"I'll ask," Marian shouted back in English, then turned to
Bossgond. "Will you allow Alexa to visit?"
"I let the volaran through my shield, didn't I?" he snapped, and
Marian sensed he'd learned enough English from her to know "grumpy
old man." She flushed but didn't apologize.
"I have not spoken with the Exotique Swordmarshall Alyeka yet."
With little grace, Bossgond tromped down the circular stairs,
grumbling under his breath.
Marian followed, excitement fizzing through her. When they
reached the bottom of the stairs, Bossgond ordered, "Light." The
lowest round chamber, which Marian hadn't seen before, lit with a
mellow glow.
The room was so beautiful that Marian gasped: the walls were
paneled in rich wood, carpets covered the stone floors, two large
fireplaces with sculpted marble surrounds held crackling fires.
Several tapestries hung on the walls. There were no windows. A
defensive measure?
Ripples of sound came from the entry doors-a scale rising and
falling, rising and-
"Will you stop that!" Bossgond yanked open one side of the
doors, letting late-spring sunlight flood into the room, and faced
a woman smaller than he. Alexa.
She wore thick tights and a tunic that came to mid-thigh. And
chain mail, with sheaths for sword and her wand-baton. Grinning at
Bossgond, she said, "Shalutashuns, Bossgond."
Marian realized several things all at once: Alexa was about
Marian's own age, small for an Earth woman-about five foot even-and
very small for a Lladranan. And she had a terrible accent.
"Shalutashuns, Marian," Alexa said, sounding drunk. She sighed
and switched to English. "It's the accent. I'm not good at
languages and Lladranan still tangles my tongue."
"Kind of you finally to visit me," Bossgond huffed. "I'm only
the most Powerful Circlet on Amee."
Alexa blinked at him. Her next words were carefully pronounced.
"I had no idea you wished to see me. You could have invited me, or
come to the Castle."
Bossgond drew himself up so he could tower over the smaller
woman. It didn't faze her. "I do not travel."
"Huh," said Alexa. "Sounds like you were just as interested in
me as everyone else in Lladrana and irritated because I didn't come
and satisfy your curiosity." She grinned widely. "As a matter of
fact, I'd never heard of you until a couple of days ago."
He narrowed his eyes and looked like an evil mage. "Th-those
arrogant Marshalls. Those impertinent younger Circlets..." he
sputtered.
"I'm sure you're right." Alexa nodded. "Sometimes prying
information out of them is like pulling teeth."
He looked horrified.
Alexa glanced at Marian. "You think they use that idiom?" she
said in English.
"It doesn't look like it. I think you've shocked him to his
core."
"Hmm. I haven't had any dental problems since I've been here."
She ran her tongue around her teeth. "I wonder what they do. I hope
it's better than on Earth. I hate dentists."
"How long have you been here?" Marian asked.
"Nearly three months. The weeks and days are about the same as
on Earth, you know."
"Yes."
Alexa heaved a sigh. "I suppose we'd better find out what you
know and what you don't."
"A good idea."
"You must have a million questions."
"Somewhere around that."
"Did the feycoocu come with you?" asked Bossgond.
"What?" Marian didn't catch the word.
"Fey-coo-cu," Alexa said slowly. She fingered the baton sheathed
at her side. "She's my sidekick." Alexa grinned. "A magical
shapeshifter."
Marian stared. "If you say so." But a little thrill went through
her.
Alexa laughed. "Yep, we have plenty to talk about." She turned
to a simmering Bossgond. "I am not proficient on volaranback. My
husband brought me. The feycoocu accompanied us in her hawk
form."
"Husband?" Marian asked. "Did two of you come from
Colorado?"
"Nope, I met him here." Alexa shifted, flushed slightly. "I know
it's been quick, but you know that old saying about extreme
circumstances and love. You don't get any more extreme
circumstances than these on Lladrana." All humor left her face, and
she rubbed at the scar on her cheek. "Let's walk and talk."
"I think we'd better," Marian said, swallowing apprehension. On
the whole, she'd been treating this lightly, but there was no
denying that if a bunch of people summoned you from another world,
they were probably desperate and wanted something from you.
Alexa made a half bow to Bossgond. "May I visit with your
Apprentice, Circlet Bossgond?"
He nodded regally. "Send the feycoocu to me if you see her. I
have never met one." His lip curled. "And if you don't see her, I
will talk to your Pairling. I've heard he is a black-and-white. We
need to study those unfortunates more."
"I'm sure he'll be glad to let you examine him," Alexa said
dryly.
"Pairling?" asked Marian.
"Husband, partner." Alexa frowned. "Isn't there a word
'shieldmate'?"
"Yes," Marian said.
Alexa nodded. "Then he's my shieldmate. We fight together."
A chill slithered down Marian's spine and she glanced at Alexa's
sword out of the corner of her eye. It appeared well used, with
plenty of nicks on the fingerguard. Marian couldn't imagine
fighting with a sword or shield. A hint of the dreams she'd had at
home drifted through her mind. She'd fought, though, with magic.
This was feeling more and more ominous. She ran her hands up and
down her arms.
"You may go, Apprentice," Bossgond said in a tone he hadn't used
before with her.
She stiffened and frowned at him. But that made her think, too.
Alexa apparently was a Marshall, which Marian had deduced was a
powerful elite. She was stuck as an Apprentice.
Alexa jerked her head to the door. "You should have seen the
horrible Tests the Marshalls put me through the minute I arrived,"
Alexa said under her breath.
She shuddered, and Marian knew the woman was utterly
sincere.
Marian followed her. "Bossgond showed me an image of you walking
in the mountains. Colorado?"
"Yes."
"You had brown hair."
Throwing open the door, Alexa stepped into the sunlight. It
gleamed on her silver hair. She looked back at Marian. "It was one
of those turn-white-overnight deals. The night I came."
"Really?" Marian's mouth had dried. As she went through the door
she welcomed the cheery warmth of the sun.
"Yeah, and my eyes deepened in color, too," Alexa said, her
curled fingers showing white knuckles as they clasped the top of
her baton.
The door slipped from Marian's grasp and slammed shut.
Alexa smiled at Marian and switched to English again. "You know
your way around here?"
"Not much."
Chuckling, Alexa said, "It's only been a couple of days since
you arrived-but I'm sure they've been jam-packed with
experiences."
"Oh yes," Marian said fervently. "I remember a nice forest path
and a peaceful meadow a few minutes away-will that suit?"
"For sure." She tilted her head. "I'm connected mentally to my
husband, Bastien. He's giving us privacy and hiding from Bossgond.
He says he'll talk to the old mage when he's ready."
Marian led the way from Bossgond's Tower. They paused at the
forcefield for Marian to open a "door" for Alexa. Outside
Bossgond's sphere of influence they stood in the sun and studied
each other.
"I like the looks of you," Alexa said.
Marian felt relief from an anxiety that she hadn't known she was
feeling. "I like the looks of you, too."
She held out her hand and they shook, then Alexa turned Marian's
arm over to see her wrist. Alexa's eyes sharpened.
"You've blood-bonded with Bossgond?"
"Yes, as Master and Apprentice." Marian pouted a little.
"Won't be long until you're a Circlet," Alexa said casually,
confidently. "The Song only Summons the best."
Marian liked her more and more.
Alexa held out her left arm and pushed her sleeve up, showing
her own tattoo: crossed wands. One was green with flames coming out
of the top, the other black with silver twined around it. "This is
my Pair-bond with Bastien-it's a blood-bond, sex bond, love bond.
We haven't had a formal ceremony-like a wedding-the full
binding-yet, though. We're both a little nervous about that."
Then she flipped open the short sheath and drew out the green
stick shown on the tattoo. It looked like jade.
"It's my baton-do you want to see it?" The offer was cheerfully
made, but her gaze watchful.
As soon as Marian touched the cool jade, a hard shock jolted up
her arm. She hung on as the energy-Alexa's energy-whirled through
her, then settled, itchy, under her skin. As she stared at the
baton, carved figures appeared, and the flames at the end
danced.
Alexa's eyes widened and she nodded incisively. "Good. I thought
you might be able to handle and use it. My husband, Bastien, can
hold it for a couple of minutes, use it once, but that's all. It's
good to know that you could wield it in an emergency."
"What emergency?" Marian said faintly, her stomach tightening,
watching mercury flow viscously in a glass tube under the
flames.
"On the battlefield, if I fall," Alexa said.
Marian dropped the baton. Alexa caught it-or rather, it flew
into her hand. Marian stared at the woman, fit and strong, with the
scar running down her cheek and somber eyes. Alexa heaved a
sigh.
"I was afraid that they'd leave this to me. That miserable old
man. But maybe you won't be fighting. Many Circlets don't." She
shrugged, but her voice was faintly condemning. "Let's walk and
talk."
"I'm not staying here. I have a life back home."
"Which is?"
"Boulder."
"Ah." Alexa's smile was quick and charming, but she covered the
ground rapidly. "Thought I pegged you for an academic."
"I'm working on my doctorate in Comparative Religion and
Philosophy," Marian said stiffly.
Alexa halted in the small meadow. A couple of large rocks graced
the center, looking like seats. She turned to Marian and tapped
herself on the chest. "Swordmarshall Alexa Fitzwalter, Esquire,
Attorney at Law."
"You're a lawyer?" It was the last thing Marian would
have guessed.
"Was." Alexa hitched herself up on one of the rocks and wiggled
to get comfortable. "Nice seat, warm from the sun." She smiled
serenely at Marian. "Now I do all my fighting on a battlefield, not
in a courtroom." A shadow lingered in her eyes.
Marian wasn't ready to hear her story. She had to make something
else very clear, first.
"I'm not staying. I can't. I have a life I must return to."
Alexa lifted her chin. "I have a life I crafted here."
"I have a brother with MS."
"Oh, I'm sorry." Alexa held out her hand, and Marian took
it-this time a sweet comfort flowed between them.
"It's progressive regressive MS, so it comes and goes. I'm
hoping to find a cure to take back. Maybe I can become Powerful
enough to cure him with magic?"
Alexa just shook her head. "I'm not sure how healing magic works
here. I've seen great wounds healed." She grimaced. "But it usually
takes more than one person and some serious spell-chants. For a
disease, I just don't know."
"My mother is back home, too," Marian said. She ran her hands
through her hair as she took the rock seat next to Alexa. It felt
as if many had sat there before-to talk, to eat, to watch the stars
at night.
They sat in silence for a moment before Alexa spoke. "I suppose
you'll return to Earth when the Snap comes, and stay. To be honest,
I don't know how much of our magic here will translate to magic
there." She waved a hand. "I never made it all the way back home
during the Snap-"
"The Snap?" Marian asked.
"I'll tell you about it later."
Marian sighed. "All right."
Alexa's hazel eyes appeared greener. "I didn't have any family
at home, nothing much to go back to, not compared to what I have
here." She shrugged and her smile quirked. "Though a vision I saw
indicated I'd become a federal judge if I went back."
Marian didn't doubt it. The woman was walking determination.
"I can't stay," Marian said. "I can't leave my brother."
"All right. But I'd better tell you what's going on,
anyway."
"That's a very good idea."
9
"Let me tell you why you were Summoned," Alexa said.
"As long as you don't expect me to stay," Marian cautioned.
"Too bad. Lladrana needs all the help it can get, and I can tell
by your aura that you'd be a lot of help." Alexa slipped
from her rock to sit on the sun-warmed ground.
Marian did the same and tried not to think about bugs.
Her expression completely serious, Alexa said, "The fact is,
Lladrana is in deep trouble. There are monsters invading from the
north." She shot Marian a glance. "I'm not talking about other
people with differing belief systems, but real, live, evil
monsters. The Lladranans usually call them 'horrors.'"
Bossgond's images of monsters came to Marian.
Alexa frowned. "Watch." With a sharp indrawn breath and narrowed
eyes, the air between them hazed. A huge, vicious-looking creature
hulked into view. It had long, sharp teeth that dripped saliva.
Curving, knifelike claws extended from its lifted forepaws.
"Render," Alexa said. She kept the image up and rotated it,
until Marian had to swallow hard.
The second monster was worse. Bigger even than the render, it
had putrid yellow fur, horns and spines along its arms, head and
back.
"Slayer. It can shoot the spines. They're poisonous, of
course."
"Of course," Marian said faintly, wondering if she was turning a
shade of green.
The slayer vanished and a third horror appeared. Worse. This one
had lizardlike gray skin, a round knobby head with burning red eyes
and a hole for a nose. Each shoulder sported an arm and two
tentacles with suction cups.
"Soul-sucker," Alexa said. "But it really just drains your
life-force." She waved a hand.
Just? Marian thought she squeaked, but Alexa showed no
evidence of hearing her.
The next horror that appeared metamorphosed between two shapes.
A black weblike substance and a dark manlike thing with rudimentary
head, arms and legs.
"It has a penis, too," Alexa said unsteadily. "Sangvile. One
tried to rape me as it sucked my Power from me."
The thing turned its head and its burning gaze struck Marian
like a blow.
This vision disappeared once quickly, as if Alexa didn't like
remembering it. Marian couldn't think how anyone could survive an
attempted rape by the hideous being.
"Dreeth," Alexa said on a sigh, and something Marian recognized
formed. At her exclamation, Alexa smiled.
"They look like pteradons, don't they?" Alexa said.
"More like a quetzalcoatluses with big bellies."
"Quetzalcoatlus. That sounds like the Aztec god."
"Yes, they were the largest of the flying dinosaurs." In her
studies, she'd found that many cultures had stories of dragons.
"Okay. They're dreeths here, as big as a house. A couple of them
nearly fell on me as they died. Bad," Alexa said so casually that
Marian stared at her in pure amazement.
She sorted out the implications. "You battle these things?"
"Pretty much every week." Alexa stroked the scar on her
face.
Marian couldn't imagine it. "You?"
Alexa met her gaze with fathomless eyes. "The Marshalls Summoned
me to be one of them, the best magical warriors in the business."
She shrugged. "Like Joan of Arc."
"Must have been a shock."
"Yeah. In Denver I'd taken one personal defense course from the
free university, several years ago. Big change in lifestyle." Now
she smiled. She waved a hand down her body and suddenly Marian saw
a rope of purple and silver. The link throbbed with life and
vibrated with a pretty melody. "But I'm well compensated. This is
my bond with my Shield, Bastien. As for financial reward, I have
wealth and an estate-you'll get your pick of land, too, if you
stay. And Bastien-" she grinned "-he's rather like a certain rogue
mercenary with a spaceship in the movies." She sighed. "I miss the
movies."
"You-they-the Marshalls, don't expect me to become one of them,
do they?"
"Nope. The Marshalls Summoned you for the Tower Community, the
Sorcerers and Sorceresses-the major ones are called Circlets."
Alexa grinned again. "No wonder they reached Boulder. Mostly
scholars, I think. Though Jaquar is one prime man."
Marian hadn't forgotten the hunk who'd appeared in the pentacle
with her.
"He's had it rough, lately, though. The sangvile ate his
parents."
"Ate his parents!"
Alexa waved her hand. "Okay, to be exact, the sangvile drained
his parents of their Power, turning them into husks that crumbled
into gray dust."
That didn't sound any better.
"He's really grieving. I'm sorry for that," Alexa said quietly.
"I know what he's feeling."
Not wanting to think about the man or his hurt, Marian said, "So
the Tower Summoned me."
"The Tower had the Marshalls of the Castle Community Summon
you," Alexa corrected. "The Circlets do not play well
together."
"What do they expect me to do?" Marian asked plaintively.
"I don't know. But there's plenty of work. The Marshalls are
just dealing with the monsters as they invade. That doesn't address
the underlying problem of where they're coming from or why, or how
to stop them."
Another image coalesced between them, this one of a
topographical map. "The country of Lladrana. Note the northern
border," said Alexa.
Marian studied it. Bright yellow glowed at points, and between
the lights wove a blue line.
"Magical fence posts and shield along the boundary," Alexa said,
explaining further Marian's vision from Bossgond. She always
preferred the maximum amount of facts, and appreciated Alexa's
visit. "The old fence posts were wearing out, the shield failing,
and the Marshalls didn't know how to make new fence posts or power
the boundary. That was my task."
"Sounds incredible."
"Yup, but I did it." Alexa beamed with pride. "Now we know how
to create fence posts and the boundary, but it isn't easy or quick.
You can see we still have big gaps in the border. Thus the
continued fighting-building up the army, which consists of Marshall
Pairs and Chevalier Pairs-Chevaliers are like knights, or
singletons. We're equal-opportunity employers. There are fifteen
Marshall Pairs now."
"So few!"
Alexa glanced at her. "There were six when I came a couple of
months ago. We're ramping up as fast as we can. But we lost three
Pairs before and during the first big battle."
There wasn't anything Marian could say. She stared at the tiny
glow of the fence posts and boundary line. So fragile to keep a
land safe. Magic and muscle, physical courage and a willingness to
fight were the only weapons being used to defend Lladrana now.
"It sounds to me," Marian said carefully, "as if the Lladranans
are missing a lot of knowledge."
Nodding approvingly, Alexa said, "That's right. They'd depended
on the boundary for centuries, killing the monsters as they
straggled over or through weak points. The Lladranans didn't find
their enemy, learn its flaws, formulate a plan to defeat it, or
destroy the threat once and for all."
Marian closed her eyes. "That's exactly what must be done."
"Yup," Alexa said with an exaggerated Western twang. She stood
and brushed off the seat of her pants, but since the leather looked
as if it would deflect an oil well, no dust or grass had stuck to
her. Old habits, Marian mused. No matter that she'd become
integrated into Lladranan society, much of Alexa would always be
pure Earthling.
She held out a hand to Marian. Marian put hers in it, her
fingers far larger than Alexa's. With a smooth pull, the smaller
woman drew Marian easily to her feet.
"Um, Marian." Alexa colored.
"Yes?"
"I think it would be good for both of us if we-uh-had a closer
connection so we could call each other mentally if need be, for
instance."
"A blood-bond? Like 1 have with Bossgond?"
"Yes."
"About that bond with Bossgond. Do you think it was the wrong
thing to do?"
Alexa shrugged. When she met Marian's eyes, hers were serious.
"I've relied heavily on my instincts here. I think it might serve
you well to do the same. After all, the Song sought you out, so you
have what is needed to mesh with the Tower, to stay here on
Amee."
She lifted her hand before Marian could speak. "I know, I know,
you need to get back to your brother, but I have the feeling that
the Song-that's fate, God, Goddess, whatever-doesn't make mistakes,
and it chose you." She hesitated. "Be careful of the Singer-the
oracle-though. She's a sneaky old witch."
Apparently having said all she was going to on the matter, Alexa
withdrew a wicked-looking dagger from her boot. She turned over her
left wrist and nicked the vein, then glanced at Marian. "You
ready?"
No. But she held out her arm anyway.
Alexa was quick and careful. The knife had little bite. Marian
watched blood well from her wrist. Alexa took Marian's arm and held
it against hers.
A wash of visions flowed from Alexa to Marian-recent ones of
battles on Lladrana that caused Marian to sway in horror, but
mercifully they flashed by.
There was Alexa hearing the same gong and chimes and chant as
had Marian. A lovely blond woman dancing in the sunlight down
Denver's 16th Street Mall. Graduation from law school. Classrooms.
Alexa growing younger in a series of foster homes. Each picture
brought a spurt of emotions-terror. . .grief.. .triumph..
.resignation.
Marian's sight dimmed. Her knees collapsed and she was on the
ground again. She flung out her left hand and it hit Alexa's rib
cage.
"Oomph!" Alexa protested.
"Sorry," Marian said weakly.
"No problemo." Alexa sounded as dazed as Marian herself. "Didn't
expect this to be so strong. I saw your brother, Andrew. You love
him very much."
"Yes."
"Your mother would never take care of him."
"No."
Alexa sighed. "Can you see yet?"
Marian blinked. Everything was cloud-thick gray. "No."
"Neither can I. Guess since we're not doing anything, I'll tell
you about the Snap."
"That would be good."
"The Snap is when Mother Earth calls you back-"
"I've lost my connection with Mother Earth." To her horror,
Marian's voice rose.
"Well, I never knew I had a connection until I got here," Alexa
said. "I thought I'd lost it, too, but it did pull me back.
I'm sure somewhere you still have a link to our home planet."
"Go on."
"It's hard to describe-a pull. More, it's a choice-stay or go.
Like I said earlier, I was given visions of what my life might be
if I went back, but I never actually left Lladrana. I could have,
if I wished-just wished to be back, I guess. But by that time I'd
made a life here. I had too much emotional commitment to Bastien
and the Marshalls and Lladrana to leave Amee."
Before Marian could ask questions, a man's honey-smooth voice
purred, "Well, well, well. Look what I've found, beauties basking
in the sun. I wonder what I'll do with them."
Terror froze Marian. She was blind, helpless.
"Bastien, that's not funny. You're scaring Marian," Alexa
said.
There was an instant of silence.
"My apologies, Marian," said the man. He was closer now- on the
other side of Alexa.
"Salutations, Pairling." His voice crooned now, full of
tenderness and love.
Marian still couldn't see the outer world, but a beautiful glow
came from her left side. Her tense muscles relaxed. Then she chided
herself. Knowing Alexa as she did now, if there'd been danger, the
woman-blind or not-would have been up and swinging.
"I'm having trouble seeing or moving, Bastien." Alexa sounded
very drunk-her bad Lladranan accent-and pissed.
"Always impatient."
Alexa snorted. "As if you aren't."
"Hey, another person is here who needs help," Marian said.
"Ladies, join hands and I'll aid you in clearing out your
systems of the aftereffects of an ill-prepared blood-bond.
Pairling-" his voice lowered dangerously "-I don't suppose you
researched the blood-bond before you did it with Marian?"
Another silence. Then Alexa said, "Uh, no. It came to me that it
would be good to have a blood sister. I like Marian. I
thought it would be best for everyone-for Lladrana, even-if we
blood-bonded." She spoke faster and faster, slurring her words, as
if trying to convince them all of the impeccable logic of her
impulsive act.
"Somehow I think Marian would have researched the blood-bond
before initiating it," Bastien said, humor in his voice.
Marian groped for Alexa's small hand, found it, squeezed.
"We're in this together," Alexa said with dignity, and Marian
wondered which "we" she meant.
Marian had no intention of staying in Lladrana, despite Alexa's
yearning for a sister-friend. Then she felt a pulse of clear,
bright silver-Bastien's energy to Alexa, thundering through the
smaller woman, then rolling into Marian. A flash enveloped her.
When it faded, she could see deep blue sky with fat white
clouds.
She turned her head to check on Alexa, but her gaze went
straight to the man. Alexa had called Jaquar a prime man, but this
one exuded charm and virility from every pore. His hair was striped
black and white and the murmuring sound coming from him was like
nothing Marian had heard in this world. Bossgond had said something
about his being a "black-and-white," and...
"Unfortunate?" she whispered, incredulous.
Alexa grinned. "Yeah. He really looks unfortunate, doesn't
he?"
"He looks like a bad boy to end all bad boys." He was a rogue to
the bone-with or without a spaceship.
He winked at her. "Actually," he said, grinning at her with too
much devilment, "I'm better with volarans."
Bastien had read her thoughts, and she picked up images of
winged horses from him. She'd been contemplating sitting up, but
remained still. All the new input was beyond her.
Alexa jumped up and into the man's arms. From there she looked
back at Marian. "Your initial questions answered?" she asked Marian
in Lladranan.
Marian's mind was unfortunately blank. She should have a
thousand more questions, but none surfaced. "I suppose."
"Anything else you need right now?"
Only one thing came to the forefront of her mind. "We need a
cook. Someone who'll get along with the grumpy old man, doesn't
like to socialize and would love to live on an island."
Alexa nodded. "That shouldn't be a problem. I'll find someone
for you. I have connections in Castleton."
Bastien squeezed her and whirled her around in a circle. She
shrieked.
"If you think you're going to Citymaster Masif alone, you're
wrong," Bastien said. His voice was steady despite his exertion.
The man was buff.
Marian managed to rise somewhat gracefully, curtsied to the both
of them, then left Alexa and Bastien to their pastoral idyll,
feeling a little melancholy. The woman had certainly landed on her
feet-though there was that comment about falling in battle. Perhaps
she wasn't much to be envied after all.
Angling off toward the ocean so as not to intrude, Marian
considered what she'd learned. At least she could still go back,
with the Snap. She hoped fervently that she could return to Earth
before Andrew got worried. She could check on him through the
binoculars, and if she had the Power that everyone thought, that
she felt, she'd discover the knowledge to help him
and force her return before he was finished with his
retreat.
She was listening to the ocean, absently watching spray as the
tide pummeled fierce rocks, when she stumbled into it. A tide of
full orchestral sound flowed over her, heavy on the strings. She
stopped. She stood in a large glade, green with grass. The sky
seemed bluer, the clouds whiter, the view of the ocean perfect. She
turned in place. The panorama was exquisite.
Her heart thudded with recognition. This was her
place.
She acknowledged the thought, then added a caveat. This
could be her place, the location where she'd build her
Tower, if she stayed in Lladrana. But she wouldn't.
Though the world tempted her. During her time with Alexa, Marian
had sensed that the Swordmarshall had a great need to be useful,
contribute meaningfully to society. The idea echoed in Marian.
And there was the fabulous magic. If she stayed, she could
become a Circlet at controlling the weather. Was that cool, or
what?
But not at the cost of losing Andrew. She could never live with
herself if she turned her back on him, chose this place instead of
him. An inner, awful trembling came at the thought.
So she determinedly left the glade and went on.
As she drew up to the front of Bossgond's Tower, she saw a large
frog sitting on a paving stone in front of the door. Maybe it was a
toad-she didn't recall enough biology to distinguish them. It was
green and about a foot long. Big, dark eyes watched her.
"Well, look at you." She smiled. She liked frogs.
"Ribbitt."
"You do know that you're blocking my way to the Tower?"
she said, feeling a little like she was in a fairy tale.
"Ribbitt."
Laughing, Marian said, "I hope you don't expect me to kiss you."
There was something intrinsically beautiful about the frog.
No, it said in her mind.
"Excuse me?" She didn't believe she'd heard it.
You do not have to kiss me. 1 wanted to see and speak
with the new Exotique. 1 am a feycoocu.
Marian stared, mind scrambling, though she recalled Bossgond and
Alexa talking about the magical being.
I am Alexa's companion.
That reassured Marian a little, so she let her shoulders relax,
closed her eyes and sighed. So many new things! Something to learn
every minute.
When she opened her eyelids, a fairy the size of the frog
perched on the door lintel. Marian stared. "You're not a frog."
No, and I am not really a fairy. I took that image from
Alexa's mind and yours. You have a different idea of fairies,
though. She glanced at her gossamer wings, the long black hair
that floated around her and her sparkling light-blue dress. She
smiled in satisfaction. Good, I am not all pink. Being pink was
a pain.
She sounded like Alexa. Marian grinned.
You are very Powerful.
The fairy's changing eyes mesmerized Marian. She fell into the
gaze and was caught in a cloud, between dimensions, then abruptly
landed with a jolt. She shook her head and blinked.
You will do. The feycoocu's voice appropriately sounded
like wind-chimes. She launched herself from the door and pirouetted
in the air. You will do very well. But it would be good if you
had a companion.
Marian swallowed. She wasn't sure that she could deal with a
magical sidekick. "You?"
No, I love Alexa and will stay with her. The fairy's
smile bloomed, dazzling Marian. But you have just taken
care of that matter yourself.
"What?"
Instead of answering, the feycoocu gestured and a small golden
sphere appeared to hover between them. Take this and feed it to
him.
The thing plunked into the hollow of Marian's palm so heavily
that it drove her arm down and she staggered under the weight. By
the time she'd braced her wrist with her other hand and lifted both
hands to waist level, the fairy had transformed into a hawk and was
flying away.
"Wait, what-"
Look for him in the place that called to you. Feed him the
walnut. She paused, turning her head back, and speared Marian
with a bright, glinting gaze. I am Sinafin. Guard my
name, but call on me if you have need. She zoomed out of
sight.
Marian opened her hand. The heavy thing did look like a golden
walnut.
A companion. Andrew? The place that called to her-the meadow
near the rocky beach with spraying surf. She ran, slowly and
awkwardly due to the great weight of the magical nut. When she
reached the meadow above the rocky beach, her breath came fast and
raggedly.
There, in the middle of the meadow, was Tuck in his ball.
1O
Marian sprinted to Tuck, who sat in his plastic hamster ball in
the middle of the green glade that had tempted her to stay in
Lladrana.
When she reached him, her legs simply collapsed. She thought she
whimpered at the sight of her pet. He'd pulled an orange wildflower
blossom through one of the plastic slots and sat, munching on it.
In the bottom of the ball was a small hoard of nuts and raisins,
and a bit of dried-up carrot that had been in his cheek
pouches.
He wasn't lost. He wasn't dead. He looked as fat and sassy as
ever. Gently moving the ball until the door was at the top, she
lifted off the lid, reached in and drew him out. Putting him
against her face, she sniffed the unmistakable odor of hamster and
cedar chips, felt the softness of his fur. It stuck to her cheek,
to the track of her tears.
She sat cross-legged and set Tuck in the folds of her skirt.
He looked up with bright eyes and continued to eat, apparently
happy to stay put. She could have sworn he smiled. Though he was a
nocturnal animal, she supposed the circumstances-the trip through
the corridor-how had he made it here?-the new world and the food
kept him interested enough to stay awake.
Marian heard herself croon his name. "Oh Tuck, oh Tuck."
He just ate on.
With a little shock, she realized she'd dropped the walnut.
Looking around, she didn't see it; it hadn't made a hole, and
didn't glow or anything. She bit her lip. The feycoocu had insisted
that she feed Tuck the magical nut, but what would happen if she
did? Would Tuck acclimatize better?
Could Sinafin be trusted?
Looking down at the small, new cut on her wrist where she and
Alexa had shared the strange sensation of mixing blood, Marian sent
her first telepathic message. Alexa, can you hear me?
Yes came the immediate response.
Marian received the vision that Alexa and Bastien were flying
back to their estate on the mainland.
Though she didn't need to speak aloud, Marian wet her lips.
Can Sinafin be trusted?
There was a pause. Sinafin can be trusted to do what is best
for Lladrana, Alexa replied.
That didn't help much. But Sinafin had approved of
Marian, and had wanted her to have a companion.
Alexa said, Sinafin says that the walnut will not hurt Tuck.
It will make him better.
I lost it. I dropped it when 1 saw Tuck, 1
think.
If you have a connection, you might be able to draw
it to you if you visualize it.
Marian stroked Tuck, but he still seemed happy to stay in her
lap. In fact, he'd curled into a ball to sleep. She closed her eyes
and formed an image of the walnut.
A spurt of surprise came from Alexa. So Sinafin took
it. I never thought of it after my first night here.
What?
It's an atomball.
Something in the tone of Alexa's thoughts sparked unease in
Marian. Is it dangerous? Sinafin said to feed it to
Tuck.
She heard Alexa's sigh in her mind, Just be careful. Call it
slowly. Think of it rolling to you.
Marian did, and felt a pull at her mind as if a thread were
attached to a ball she was rolling toward herself. A moment later,
something tapped the sole of her foot. It was the atomball.
Now it glowed. I have it. Thank you, Alexa.
Glad to be of help. Do you need me to stay in
contact?
Marian wanted to say yes, but decided it was cowardly and an
imposition. No.
Feel free to yell if you need help, Alexa said.
That's what Sinafin said. Thank you both.
Don't thank her until everything is all over, Alexa said
dryly. She has her own agenda.
Marian swallowed. Thank you, then.
Bye, said Alexa, and the telepathic connection went
still.
With both hands, Marian scooped up the golden walnut. It was the
size of a real walnut, but she didn't know how she was going to
convince Tuck to eat it. She shifted her legs so she could put the
walnut on her dress against the ground instead of in her lap, and
set it next to a sleep-snuffling Tuck.
He unrolled. His ears perked up. The hamster crawled over the
walnut several times, from several directions, then bit in and
gobbled greedily. The nut disappeared into Tuck at an amazing rate.
She thought she heard him burp, but hamsters didn't do that. Then
he looked up at her and blinked his black eyes, wiggled his nose
and curled back up to sleep.
Marian stayed in the meadow for a long time, petting Tuck with
one finger. Both the lovely wildflowers and the animal soothed her.
The quiet seemed almost luminescent as it sank into her bones.
When she lifted Tuck, he felt slightly heavier, but nothing like
the golden-walnut atomball. She'd have to fashion a cage-Bossgond
would help, she was sure. She put Tuck back in his plastic ball,
set the lid atop the ball but did not screw it closed, and
rose.
She could see Bossgond's Tower from here, and walked back to it,
musing that she now had three things from her old life. Tuck, her
PDA, and a clear, plastic hamster ball. Life was odd.
Bossgond awaited her, arms crossed, frowning-until he saw the
ball and Tuck. Then the gleam of a true scholar lit his eyes.
"What's that?"
"This is my hamster, Tuck, and his vehicle."
"Vehicle?" Bossgond reached for it.
Marian slipped Tuck from the ball and cradled him in her hands.
He didn't stir. She handed the ball to Bossgond.
"I met the feycoocu," she said casually, but kept a sharp gaze
on the old Sorcerer.
All his attention focused back on her. "Yes? What did it look
like?"
Marian started to correct him-to call "it" a "she"-then decided
against it. "First a large frog, then a fairy."
"Fascinating."
"She told me to feed Tuck-" Marian lifted the hamster for
emphasis "-an atomball."
Bossgond took a couple of steps back, glanced a little nervously
at Tuck. "An atomball? Where did the feycoocu get an atomball? What
did it look like? I've never heard such a thing."
"Tuck ate it," Marian said.
Eyes wide, Bossgond jerked his chin at the stairs. "Let's go up
to my suite. I want to study this."
The day had faded into evening, and the moment they walked
through the door, inside lights flared on. They were set in torch
holders, but obviously magic, glowing like the natural light of the
sun. Bossgond strode to his desk and placed the clear plastic
hamster ball on it.
"This is a very interesting substance," he muttered, tapping at
the ball. "Not glass."
"No." Marian studied Tuck, beginning to worry. He was so still,
but his small back still rose and fell with his breathing. "I need
a cage for Tuck."
Bossgond waved a hand and a low cabinet door opened in the wall.
Marian went over and bent down, then sighed. It appeared to be an
old aquarium. Tuck wouldn't like it. He preferred a nice plastic
cage with many toys and tubes.
Bossgond assigned Marian some "basic" lessons and spent the
evening studying the plastic ball and sleeping Tuck. He'd sworn not
to hurt either one.
After she'd demonstrated to Bossgond that she could ground
herself, call fire and cause a bean to sprout, he allowed her to
work with clouds in the weather globe. It thrilled Marian to play
with the clouds. She couldn't create them, or make them rain, but
she could push them around the globe and form images in them-they
wisped, then billowed into castles and dragons and a huge tree-the
world tree. Every culture had a symbol for the world-a globe, a
serpent, an egg, a circle, but Marian had always liked the world
tree the best. With a glance at Bossgond, she wickedly made a
caricature of the man, then his Tower.
Finally she got bored with her limitations and interrupted him
as he was tickling a sprawled Tuck's belly. Marian had the idea
that Bossgond was imagining the hamster's anatomy.
Alexa's description of the Snap earlier in the day bothered
Marian. She needed more details. "Alexa told me of the Snap
today."
"A very interesting phenomenon, the Snap," Bossgond said,
staring at her, fingers pyramided, tips tapping. He nodded once.
"It is an event. The Exotique land will bring you back to it."
Marian blinked. It was that easy? Just wait and she'd be
returned automatically? That didn't seem right. She shook her head.
"I felt the loss of my connection with Mother Earth." Her chin
wanted to tremble so she set her jaw. "It's gone." It
hurt.
His fingers continued to tap. "Very interesting information." He
looked at her, then reached out and picked up a sheet of paper and
a writing instrument. He made a note. "Perhaps, then, the Snap is
not a link to your planet. Perhaps this is an effect of the
Dimensional Gate."
Now he tapped his lips with the pen. "No Circlet is currently
studying the Dimensional Gateway, or Corridor. We will have to rely
on lorebooks about the topic." He made more notes. "The closest
thing the Tower Community has to experts on different dimensions
are me and...Jaquar Dumont, the plane-walker." He looked up from
his pad at her.
She knew the name, knew the man. The great-looking guy who'd
tried to claim her first. She suppressed a shiver at the memory of
her reaction to his touch-the searing certainty that somehow he was
her doom. Fate, and not a nice one.
Bossgond grunted as he studied her expression. "We won't speak
of him now."
Marian straightened. "You're my teacher."
"That I am."
"When does the Snap occur?" She yanked the conversation back to
the topic.
"It is individual to the person."
Marian narrowed her eyes. "Someone must have kept a record,
studied it."
"Someone did."
She released a pent-up breath. "May I have the record,
please?"
He turned to her with raised brows. "I don't think the records
we have on the Exotiques and the Snap will illuminate you, but I
will give you the Snap Lorebook." With a sly smile, he
snapped his fingers and a piece of paper appeared between them.
"That's it? The Lorebook?"
"Yes. An Exotique usually works with the Marshalls. The last one
before Alyeka was Summoned for the Singer and the Friends of the
Singer."
That was the prophetess, the spiritual basis of Lladrana.
"So?"
"So Exotiques have not been of a bent to record great details of
the Snap, or their passage to Lladrana. We Circlets must
extrapolate. Alyeka has provided the most detail of the experience.
I trust you will report your passage also."
"Of course." She went and took the sheet from him. It was hardly
more than a list.
It was the first "reading" she'd attempted since she'd bonded
with Bossgond. She had hoped it would be as easy as absorbing the
language. It wasn't. The alphabet was subtly strange, not quite the
Greco-Roman alphabet.
Bossgond indicated the writing at the top. Squinting a little,
Marian could make out the name "Thomas Lindley," a range of dates
and a phrase.
Bossgond's finger underlined the phrase. "Two weeks," he said.
The words appeared a neon white in her mind, then reshaped into
English, then returned to Lladranan.
Okay, reading would be more difficult and take time.. .but if
she was patient, the words and meanings might come to her.
"Thomas Lindley, two weeks," Marian repeated, moving her fingers
under the words. To the right of the time was a word in red. All
down the list the last word was in red or blue. It looked as if
three-quarters of the words were blue, one-quarter red. Marian
indicated the word. "This means?"
"Returned," he said gruffly. "Thomas chose to return to the
Exotique land."
Marian's pulse picked up. "There's a choice." Alexa had said so,
but Marian needed-emotionally more than mentally-to have it
confirmed.
Bossgond angled his head to stare into her eyes. His own were
dark pools of brown-black, expressionless. "The individual chooses
to stay or go. This list is currently arranged according to the
length of time between Summoning and the Snap." He pointed to the
last name on the page, about halfway down the sheet, "Jessica
Smith." His finger hovered over the time-period column. "Seven
years, three moons, twelve days," Bossgond read.
"Seven years! The Snap took that long for her? Why?"
"No one knows."
The last word for Jessica was "Stayed." Marian imagined so.
After seven years a person would have a whole new life.
"Time passes the same," she said.
He patted her shoulder with a knobby hand. "As far as we know,
yes. Our time units are nearly the same, also. Perhaps because our
lands are close to each other along the Dimensional Corridor."
He flicked a finger at the names and they rearranged themselves
on the sheet. "Now the names are arranged according to most
recently Summoned person."
Excellent.
At the top, Marian read, "Alexa Fitzwalter," scanned over to the
far column and saw the blue word "Stayed." She was the latest
Exotique. After her was Thomas.
Marian scanned the list. "The Snap usually occurs between a week
and six months." Six months was too long for her to wait. If she
wasn't back by the time Andrew checked with her-probably as soon as
he finished with the retreat-he'd move heaven and earth to find
her. She didn't want to contemplate how her loss might affect him,
emotionally and physically.
She took the sheet of paper. It felt slick and repulsive and she
gasped, letting it fall. Bossgond smiled humorlessly. "Parchment,
made from a slayer."
Marian recalled the yellow-furred creature with poisonous
spines.
Bossgond picked it up and placed it back on the desk. "I know
that Alexa told you of Lladrana's-and Amee's-peril."
For comfort, Marian retrieved Tuck from Bossgond's desk. He
snuffled a little. Cradling him in her hands, she met Bossgond's
eyes seriously. "You know of my brother Andrew and his
circumstances. I must be back home in a few weeks. I want
you to promise me that you will help me return, if my Snap doesn't
occur before that time."
Bossgond's lips tightened. "I don't know of anyone who has
returned to Exotique Terre under any circumstances other than the
Snap."
Marian nailed him with her gaze. "You are the oldest, most
Powerful Sorcerer of Lladrana. You can see my abode through your
binoculars. Both Alexa and I have passed through the Dimensional
Corridor, so we can visualize it. She understands my situation and
will help me return. Among the three of us-and anyone you think
might help-I should be able to go back."
He looked pained. "You won't change your mind?"
"No. My brother's health is at stake. He is my greatest
priority."
Bossgond rose and paced to the black-shrouded binoculars and
back. "I will do my best, but Lladrana needs you."
Marian heard more than that from the melody linking them. I
need you. Had he already become attached to her? That was so
sweet. She must admit that she'd already developed an affection for
him, as well as respecting him.
"Very well," he said. "I will request the Friends of the Singer
look through their Lorebooks and Oracle Archives for any
information regarding your brother's disease, as well as requesting
all data from the Tower Community. Occasionally we have had
Sorcerer or Sorceress Medicas. 1 will contact the Chief Medicas
attached to the Castle, the Cities and the Seamasters. If there are
instances of people who have or had your brother's disease, I will
learn of it, along with all treatments or cures."
Unexpected tears stung her eyes. "Thank you." But she was afraid
to hope.
"We are blood-bonded, as are you and Alexa. Though it has never
happened, perhaps you might be able to return to Amee."
She didn't think she'd ever abandon Andrew, even if he were in
perfect health, but Bossgond seemed to expect something from her.
"Perhaps. I was conducting my own Ritual at the time the Marshalls
Summoned me. I might have adequate Power even in Exotique Terre to
come back here."
He nodded briskly. "The Marshalls' Power and ritual coincided
with yours. Your Power is raw and untaught. But by the time I
finish instructing you, you could be our first Interdimensional
Traveler."
A gleam entered his eyes, and Marian got the sinking feeling
that he had a new career goal for her.
Oddly enough, obtaining her doctorate and starting on an
academic career-once her heart's desire-now seemed flat. What
teased her mind, plucked at her emotions, was the idea of becoming
a Circlet Weather Sorceress and raising her own Tower. She knew
exactly the place where she'd build it, too-in the green glen that
called to her. She suppressed a sigh and refrained from shaking her
head. She couldn't figure out how she could get everything she
wanted.
"It has been a long day for you," Bossgond said. "I think you
should retire and rest."
His gaze slid to the binoculars again, and Marian sensed he
wished to pursue his studies alone. Would he check on her
apartment? He now had Andrew's coordinates-would he watch Andrew?
Could Bossgond possibly learn how to help Andrew by observing her
brother?
"I am tired. Tuck and I will go to bed now." On impulse, she
kissed Bossgond's wrinkled cheek. "I could ask for no better
teacher." She thought she saw a tinge of red under his golden
skin.
"Perhaps you'd rather have Alexa as your mentor."
Marian laughed. "I think she is an excellent Swordmarshall." And
would have made a hot-shot attorney. "But I don't think she has the
patience to be a good teacher."
He smiled faintly as he took her arm and walked her to the
door.
"Besides-" Marian stopped "-she is very busy-fighting. She said
some Sorcerers and Sorceresses fight, too?"
"That was true of the last large battle, when Alexa requested
help from the Tower Community." He waved a hand. "Jaquar Dumont
organized our contribution. At that time the fence posts were still
falling and no one knew how to make new ones. The magical shield
along the north boundary of Lladrana was failing. A large number of
horrors had massed to invade."
Marian's imagination painted a vivid picture of the
conditions.
Bossgond finished, "So some of the younger Sorcerers and
Sorceresses used their Power in battle."
Marian's admiration for Alexa increased. She'd literally saved
the country-how had she felt as Joan of Arc? Marian wanted to know
the woman better.
Another wish that would not be fulfilled.... Time was too short
for everything Marian wanted to do, to learn, to explore.
"But during the battle, Exotique Alyeka discovered how to create
the fence posts." Bossgond looked grim. "Every Sorcerer and
Sorceress of the Tower made twenty copies of the information as to
how the fence posts are made, how the border shield is energized.
We sent Lorebooks to every contact we had in the other Communities.
The knowledge will never be lost again."
"A very good thing," Marian said quietly.
"Essential." Bossgond opened the door and ushered her out with a
small bow. He hesitated, then said, "Sleep well, and the hamster,
too."
Marian smiled. "We will. Sweet dreams."
Bossgond looked a little startled, and Marian went down the
stairs, smiling. It was good to surprise a teacher now and
then-keep him on his toes.
The next morning, Marian awoke to a small squeaky voice calling,
"Here's Food! Here's Food!" She blinked and struggled from sleep,
and the words went on and on. Cocking her head, she realized the
voice was close-coming from the table she'd brought into her
bedroom.
Coming from Tuck's aquarium.
A shiver feathered down her spine. Time to brace herself for
more magic.
Slowly she walked over to the glass cage. Tuck rose and placed
his little pink paws on the glass. He smiled.
He was not just a hamster anymore. She didn't know what he was,
but she knew he'd changed-become a companion to her.
"Hello, Tuck," she said.
"Hel-lo, Here's Food." He beamed. "Hun-gry."
11
Marian stared into the old aquarium. Tuck had just spoken to her
in squeaks she could understand! She blinked. "My name's
Marian."
"Here's Food," he said.
Glancing at the corner of the cage where he kept his food, she
saw his hoard wasn't as large as he preferred. She left the bedroom
for the "kitchen" area of her circular loft and pulled out a small
bowl of nuts and dried fruit that Bossgond had given her. Taking
the handful, she went back to the aquarium.
"Here's food," she said, and stopped to listen to her own words.
Tuck associated her with food, with those words. No wonder he
called her that.
She shrugged and put the handful of food in his cage.
He hurried over and began arranging it, eating an especially
tasty piece now and then. She stood and watched. A few moments
later he was done. Then he paced the cage. She'd lined it with
shredded paper. "No fun," he said.
The hamster had vocal cords. She wondered if she would ever be
able to study them. Then again, she didn't know what human vocal
cords looked like, and there were plenty of other topics that
demanded her attention.
He squeaked, "Out!"
"If I let you roam, will you stay, or run off so I will never
find you?"
He scrabbled against the glass. "I will stay in this place."
"This room," she said firmly. "No crawling down any pipes,
wiggling into any holes in the floor or walls and not returning."
She shook a finger at him, even as she wondered if he could
understand her. How he could understand her. Only one answer
occurred.
Magic.
Tuck wrinkled his nose. "Bad house. Want new one."
It might be interesting to make him a little house, without a
cage. She'd feel better if he were off the floor, but he climbed
well-a low table would be fine.
"Out! Out! Out!"
"All right!" She scooped him up and placed him on the floor.
She'd really have to learn to mind her step. He had only roamed her
apartment in his ball. "Do you want your ball?" Bossgond still had
it.
Tuck ran under the wardrobe. Gleaming black eyes peered out at
her. "No."
Marian sighed. "All right, but be aware that I might not see
you, so you have to be careful underfoot."
"Yes. More food. Soft food."
She smiled, figuring "soft food" meant a bit of cheese or egg or
fresh vegetables. "I don't have any here. I'll check with
Bossgond." She headed for the speaking tube.
"Old man teacher," Tuck said.
"Yes."
"He smells funny."
Marian stopped at the edge of the stained-glass partition and
looked back into the bedroom. As she watched, Tuck appeared,
crawling up the far side of her bedspread to explore her bed. He
sat, Buddhalike, in the middle of her bed, paws clasped.
"Smells funny how?"
Tuck sniffed. "Mostly big sweet smell, then man smell, then old
smell."
"Ah."
The hamster blinked at her and smiled. "You smell sweeter."
To her amazement, Marian found herself dipping a curtsy, smiling
herself. "Thank you, Tuck."
"More food."
She laughed. Cocking her head, she quieted her thoughts to sense
Bossgond. His thoughts sparked, indicating he was awake.
She went to the tube and spoke into it. "Tuck and I are
hungry."
Bossgond grunted. "The oeuf is ready. You can share it with
him."
Marian grimaced at the thought of the tasteless omelette. "We'll
be right up." She hurried to wash and dress, then picked Tuck up
from her bed.
"Shoulder," he said.
Looking at him askance, she said, "Are you sure? I don't want
you to fall."
"I will not fall."
Marian shrugged, then made a note not to do that when Tuck was
riding her shoulder. She set him on her right shoulder and winced
as his sharp little claws dug through the material.
As she ascended the stairs at a quick pace, Tuck kept steady,
and she knew they were both pleased at this new way of transporting
him.
When she entered Bossgond's chamber, the first thing she noticed
was his crystal ball flashing a rainbow of colors.
He followed her gaze, sniffed in disdain and snapped his
fingers. "Requests to visit. Or demands. I do not want to see
people, and I want you to concentrate on your training
before satisfying others' curiosity."
"Alexa came yesterday."
"That was different. I had not met her."
His curiosity had needed to be satisfied, and not only regarding
Alexa. Marian knew he'd wanted to meet Sinafin.
Bossgond studied Tuck on her shoulder. "Is that a safe way for
the hamster to travel?"
"Yes," Tuck squeaked.
The old mage froze, his eyes sharpening. "It speaks."
"Me! You talk to me. And I am a he."
Bossgond swallowed. "He knows grammar."
Marian gave a nervous laugh herself. "I think it must be the
atomball. He's sentient."
"What is sentient?" asked Tuck.
"You think," Marian said.
Tuck grumbled. "Of course I think."
She shared an amazed glance with Bossgond. He narrowed his eyes,
and Marian lifted her left hand to curve it protectively over Tuck.
"No dissecting!"
Bossgond looked affronted as if the idea hadn't crossed his
mind. "Of course not. The longer we have him to study- hmm-as your
companion, the more we can learn of him, of the atomball. It must
have been the atomball that made him intelligent-but how the
atomball..." Bossgond shook his head. "I had a few notes on this
atomball. The Marshalls made it as a Test of Exotique Alyeka's
Power. So twelve Marshall minds might have imprinted it-four of
those people are now deceased. I believe both Alyeka and the
feycoocu transformed the thing. Now it has been eaten by a hamster.
Very interesting." He looked distracted and headed for his desk,
instead of the table where two cheese omelettes sat.
"Food!" cried Tuck.
Before Marian could stop him, he scrabbled down her dress,
snagging his claws in the embroidery, which she watched reweave
itself. He hopped to the floor and ran to the dining table, up the
leg and onto the table to sit on a plate and shovel egg into his
mouth.
Ick. Despite the fact that she knew the food wasn't very
good, Marian hurried over and cut a quarter of the omelette for
Tuck, saving the rest for herself. She recalled where Bossgond kept
the extra plates and the coffee. She poured a mug for herself and
one for her teacher, giving him the coffee, omelette and a fork and
napkin as he sat at his desk.
While he ate absently, she sighed and returned to her place,
wondering how long it would take Alexa to find a cook for them.
After breakfast, Tuck explored Bossgond's room and the old mage
requested that she take the largest of her weather terrariums down
to the lowest floor and work with it there. Marian did as he
asked.
When she'd actually settled into the luxurious room, she found
herself smiling at having such rich surroundings. Better than the
best home office she'd ever seen. She allowed herself another cup
of coffee, then began her lessons.
Bossgond had printed instructions for her. Just reading was a
lesson in itself. Following his directions was even more fun. Today
she practiced stirring the wind and waves in preparation for making
clouds.
She'd mastered Wind-the scudding of the clouds around the
enclosed environment, little breezes that ruffled the tiny tree
forms and slapped up waves. She'd even managed a little hurricane
in the ocean and a tornado on land.
Now she studied Water. When Bossgond wasn't looking she'd tried
a little Tide and flooded most of her seacoast. Then, of course,
there was no way to hide her mistake.
He'd snorted with laughter, made her do her Wind exercises
again, and commented that she'd better not try Lightning without
him-she could take out the Tower. Abashed, Marian had agreed.
She was slightly distracted whenever Tuck skittered across her
line of sight. Joy and affection welled in her at the thought of
having him back-and as more than a pet. Whether he could be a real
companion she didn't know, but she enjoyed seeing him explore, and
listened with half an ear to his squeaky comments. "Good smell,
here!" "Nice hole." "Stone too cold on paws here. Stay away."
With incredible effort she visualized raising minute droplets of
water from a river and bay-she discovered she didn't have the
energy to handle a whole ocean, she had to limit herself
geographically. A good education, including basic science, had
saved her from lectures by Bossgond on how water became clouds.
He'd seemed impressed, but had grumped off to his own desk.
Marian was muttering to herself, lowering the temperature so the
droplets might coalesce, when she became aware of someone looking
over her shoulder. More than one someone.
She lost control of her condensation and the water fell back
into the sea. Turning, she scowled-and found herself looking at the
other two who'd appeared in the pentacle when she'd been Summoned.
Searching her memory as she nodded to them, she recalled their
names. The woman was Venetria and the man Chalmon.
The way they stood together, it seemed they were intimate- but
she knew each had wanted to claim her as an Apprentice.
Relationships must get as tangled here in Lladrana as they had
among scholars at the university.
"Salutations," she said, now knowing why she was using the
ground-floor parlor for her experiments. Bossgond had anticipated
the advent of other Circlets. He wouldn't have wanted to show them
into either her or his working space.
They'd come to check out the new kid on the block, she supposed.
Only natural, but it ate into her time. For an instant her gaze
went to the door that was open on the pretty spring day, but no
shadow of sexy Jaquar announced him. Just as well- she hadn't
forgotten that touch of warning.
"Salutations, Marian," said Chalmon. He held out his hand, and
Marian recalled that she hadn't touched him. Jaquar- a cascade of
notes; Venetria-a clash of chords; Bossgond- a streaming tune.
Carefully she put her hand in his. There was a tiny shock and a
little hum between them, as if he could become a friend-but only a
friend.
All three of them relaxed. Marian sensed Venetria had been
prepared to be jealous, and Chalmon had been unsure of what he
truly wanted from Marian, but now was willing to settle for what
had naturally occurred.
Marian released his hand, gestured to the open door. "Shall we
walk?"
Venetria cast a nervous glance at the stairs winding up the
Tower wall. She licked her lips. "Will Bossgond mind?"
"I'll tell him. We're blood-bonded," Marian said.
The other two exchanged glances, and irritation rose in Marian
that she wasn't conversant enough with the culture to understand
nuances.
"I would like to walk and talk," Chalmon said, with a half
bow.
Bossgond, Marian sent mentally, I am taking a
break. Venetria and Chalmon are here and we will stroll along the
meadow path. She wasn't going to lead them to the place that
resonated to her. Their inherent formality kept her at a
distance-of course, anyone seemed more formal than Alexa and
Bastien.
Bossgond replied telepathically. Good, get them out of my
Tower. 1 don't want to talk with them. And, he added with a
cackle, this will allow your coastline to dry
out.
Please watch Tuck, Marian said stiffly.
An absent grunt came from Bossgond.
Chalmon nodded to her practice sphere. "Your Power is for
weather?"
"Yes."
"Jaquar," Venetria muttered under her breath.
Marian looked at her quizzically and the other woman flashed an
insincere smile. "Jaquar Dumont also has that Power. No doubt
sometime in the future you must study with him."
Her expression went blank, and Marian sensed she hid something.
She sighed and led the way out of the Tower.
The day was beautiful, spring edging into summer. The scents
particularly pleased Marian-crisp sea breeze, flowers, grass. She'd
miss the freshness of unpolluted air when she returned to
Earth.
Breathing deeply, she smiled.
But the other two wore all-too-serious expressions.
"You know why you were Summoned to Lladrana?" asked Chalmon.
"Not specifically," Marian said. "Swordmarshall Alexa dropped by
yesterday and told me I would be working with you of the Tower
Community, but no one of this Community has stated why you
requested I be Summoned." Of course, it had been only three nights
and two-and-a-half days, and Marian had her own priorities.
Chalmon cleared his throat. "Much of the knowledge regarding the
Dark that invades Lladrana has been lost over the centuries." He
waved a hand. "Since the magical fence posts and borders protected
the mainland, we of the Tower Community focused on our own
studies."
Marian supposed that was the rationalization all the Circlets
were using to explain their inaction.
Venetria took up the story. "Then the fence posts fell. The
monsters invaded the mainland and Alyeka was Summoned. She
convinced Jaquar and some of us to fight. More terrible horrors
invaded-dreeths-" Venetria put a hand to her throat "-then the
sangvile." Her lips quivered. "The sangvile ravaged a town where
many Sorceresses and Sorcerers lived-Coquille-on-the-Coast. I lost
an aunt."
A cold chill raised the hair on Marian's neck as she recalled
Alexa's image and story. Venetria's aunt might have been about the
same age as Marian's mother.
Stepping closer to Venetria, Chalmon wrapped an arm around her
waist and looked directly at Marian-and she saw cool determination,
perhaps even the edge of fanaticism. "More sangviles may return. We
must stop these evil beings."
So now that the Tower Community was actually threatened-Marian
hadn't forgotten that the sangvile targeted Power users-Circlets
would actually bestir themselves to contemplate the problem.
Sounded a lot like the scholars of her own world. But Marian didn't
think Alexa had had much of a choice in ignoring the problem, and
now it appeared Marian would be integral to the Tower's effort.
"Alexa was Summoned to fight? Why did you Summon me? What do you
want of me?" she asked. When both pairs of eyes shifted away from
her, a cold feeling spread along her spine to her gut.
"We want you to learn. Then you will be able to help," Venetria
said gently, still not looking at Marian but at the path through
the serene forest.
"And what is my compensation?"
"Learning for learning's sake. Making a world safe-" Chalmon's
voice rose.
"It's not my world."
Venetria stopped, so Marian and Chalmon did, too. Venetria said,
"You can raise your own Tower and teach students, if you want.
Also, as a Summoned Exotique, you receive an estate and a certain
amount of zhiv." She waved her hand. "We have islands to spare, and
will collect jewels to ensure you live well."
"This is not my place. I will not stay. I have a sick brother I
must return to. If you can find me a cure for his disease, I
will do what you want." As soon as the words were out of her mouth,
she felt infinitely reckless. But it would take a miracle to cure
Andrew.
Chalmon frowned, absently took Venetria's hand and kissed the
back of it, placed her fingers on his arm and began walking again.
"A Circlet Medica is rare. One has not raised a Tower for over two
centuries."
"Pity," Marian murmured. "I will, of course, learn all that I
can, but when the Snap comes, I will return home. And you still
haven't given me any details of what is expected of me. Nor has
Bossgond. Hard to fulfill a goal if I don't know what it is."
Again Chalmon cleared his throat. "We are still formulating a
plan to fight the Dark."
"Who is 'we'?" asked Marian.
"Chalmon, myself, Jaquar, some others." Venetria made a moue.
"Planning will take some time-now all you must do is learn." She
looked at the pretty meadow ahead of them and sighed. "Truly Alf
Island is graced. Spring has barely touched my own island of
Zi."
"What are your specialties?" asked Marian. Perhaps she could
figure out what they might want of her from what they studied.
"I am studying cold," Venetria said. "Ice. I was able to freeze
the thin membranes of a dreeth's wings. In battle-" She choked.
Marian had a flash of the horror from the waves of fearful
memory coming from Venetria.
"I study the pulses of the world core and the intervals between
them," Chalmon said.
They walked for several seconds in silence while Marian thought,
shuffling his words around until they might make sense. There was a
faintly patronizing smile on Chalmon's face when she said coolly,
"So how have the pulses and intervals been? Weakening?
Slowing?"
He stopped, eyes widening. "How did you know?"
Marian shook her head. Another scholar blinded by the intricacy
of details and failing to see the whole picture-the forest for the
trees.
Staring at her, he muttered, "You are bright. All the more
reason...for you to progress quickly."
Venetria stepped up to Marian, linked arms-and neither of them
were shocked. Pondering it, Marian thought Venetria had dampened
her personal magnetic field.
"A very valuable insight," Venetria said, lifting her chin
arrogantly in Chalmon's direction. "Another reason to consider our
options when planning."
Chalmon's eyes narrowed. "How did you guess that Amee's Song has
diminished?"
Marian raised her brows. "Not a guess, a deduction. I've heard
two World Songs." And despite all the harm humans had done
to Earth, it was strong and intense and Powerful compared to
Amee's.
"Humph," Chalmon said. Then he turned on his heel and headed
back toward Bossgond's Tower. "I've discovered all I need to know
about you."
Marian didn't follow him and neither did Venetria. "How nice for
you," Marian said.
He shifted. "Do you have anything you wish to ask us?"
"A fair trade, do you mean?" Marian said.
Lips pressed together, he nodded.
"How kind of you to ask. Yes, Bossgond and I need a cook."
Both of them looked at her with surprise.
It was good to surprise colleagues, too-let them know that she'd
soon be a force to be reckoned with.
They walked back to the Tower in a not-quite-comfortable silence
that Marian refused to break. She'd wanted to meet more
Circlets-and still did. There must be more compatible people for
her, those who could grow into friends. Naturally, the image of
Jaquar popped into her head and she strove to keep from coloring.
She could share commonalities with him, but he struck her more as
"lover" than friend. If she ignored a vague warning and let herself
get involved with him...
When they reached the Tower, they saw Bossgond talking to a
little glass orb as he watched Tuck roll around the flagstones in
his hamster ball.
As soon as Tuck saw her through one of the slits he attempted to
roll to her-and the ball lifted slightly from the ground to
glide.
He squeaked angrily. "Out, out, out. Nasty ball."
Marian wrinkled her nose. It was cloudier than before, which
meant Tuck had peed in it.
As Bossgond disappeared into his Tower, she ran to meet
Tuck.
"The grumpy old man would not let me out! I am not a
dirty animal. I tried to go through a slit, but-" His words were
more like high-pitched squeals in her mind than real verbalization.
He stopped and stood, nose twitching, pounding the ball with tiny
clenched paws.
"I'll get you out. Just a minute," Marian soothed. She bent down
and unscrewed the cap. Ick, eau de hamster.
She tilted the ball and Tuck bulleted out to roll in the sweet
grass, then moved onto a clump of wildflowers.
"Throw it away, away, away!" demanded Tuck. "Out of that mean
old man's reach."
Chalmon and Venetria stared at him. Marian didn't like the look
in Chalmon's eyes, even more detached and examining than
Bossgond's.
With two fingers Marian sailed the lid away like a Frisbee. Then
she pulled back her foot, called on her Power and kicked the
plastic ball. It made a satisfactory crack and flew out of
sight. "It's gone."
Tuck ran back to her, smelling much better. He scrambled up her
dress and into her pocket, hiding in embarrassment.
Marian aimed a cool glance at the pair of Circlets and smiled
superficially. "Nice meeting you."
Chalmon half bowed, Venetria half curtseyed, amusing Marian.
Apparently her status wasn't high enough to rate full honors.
As soon as Marian entered Bossgond's Tower, Chalmon started off
in the direction of the strange orb that Exotique Marian's creature
had been in.
"What are you doing?" Venetria asked, hurrying to keep up with
him.
"An experiment, a trial run," he said. "We've hypothesized from
what the Master told Jaquar that even the essence of an entity from
Exotique Terre could harm the Dark's nest."
"Ah!" Venetria said, excited. "In that odd sphere is the essence
of an entity of Exotique Terre."
"I'm sure we can find a way to send it into the maw as a
weapon-observe whether it can truly penetrate the shield and, if
so, what result it might have on the nest."
Venetria frowned. "We don't know where the nest is
geographically, on the physical plane. We only know it isn't near.
So we must transport the sphere on an etheric plane and fire it
from there. That will take great, great Power."
Chalmon stopped and looked down. The ball lay at his feet. It
wasn't as odoriferous as it had been. He hooked a finger in the
opening and lifted it. Cracked but whole. "The orb is made of a
strange substance that is very light."
Feeling as if she was already several paces down a slippery path
leading to immorality, Venetria whispered, "How can we do
this?"
"It is time to replace observers loyal to Jaquar with those who
respect me more. With the aid of many, we should be able to
accomplish sending this sphere into the Dark's nest."
She stared into his brilliant, glittering eyes. "I meant how can
we consider sending a person into the Dark maw?"
His mouth tightened. "We need the knowledge. She can harm it,
stop it from spewing out more horrors, more sangviles."
Shaking her head, Venetria said, "You are becoming someone I'm
not sure I know."
His voice was tough. "I am refining down to the man I must be in
dangerous circumstances. We cannot do nothing. We must
act."
"At the expense of a woman's life?"
Chalmon started back to the landing area where they'd left their
volarans. He sent her a glance, one side of his mouth lifted in an
attempt at a smile. "She is very strong. She could destroy the nest
and survive."
Venetria snorted. "You say that to pacify me. I'd rather wait,
let the Exotique develop into her Power."
"Who knows how long that will take? And she does not wish to
stay here. We need to know what happens in that nest. The more
knowledge we have, the easier it will be to defeat the mind behind
all this-not only the horrors, but the Master and his master." He
stopped. "I am proceeding with this plan, Venetria, and nothing you
can say will stop me."
"But why?"
His eyes fastened on her. "For you."
For the rest of that day and the next, Marian waited for the
third Sorcerer she'd previously met to show up. She braced herself
to see Jaquar. Surely now that she'd gained her balance in this new
world-and had Tuck-she would find that her initial response to him
was exaggerated by circumstances. He'd be attractive, of course,
but no more so than any other man. In the back of her mind, she
fretted about that vision she'd seen when they'd touched. She
didn't recall the images that had flashed before her eyes-just the
feeling of overwhelming danger.
Exactly the way she wanted to feel for a hunk. But better that
than making a mistake and injuring her pride or her heart later.
This time, of course, she'd be cool, knowledgeable, graceful.
But he didn't come.
Since Bossgond loaded her with work, she let her expectation of
meeting Jaquar fade. She received the idea from Bossgond that she
moved rapidly from one level of spells to the next...and the next.
For herself, the lessons seemed to open someplace in her that
inherently knew what to do, what to say, how to form her spell
tunes, whistles and chants for the best results. Some of this was
her training, but most of it sprang from her irregular studies of
New Age beliefs.
By the middle of her second full week, Marian worked in all
three of her "terrariums." Oddly enough, she was most proficient
with Lightning and electrical storms. There had been no scary
"incidents."
Bossgond had allowed her a brief look at Andrew one morning, but
when she'd come up the next day for breakfast, he'd covered the
binoculars. He told her there would be no more viewing by them
both. He would watch and report, but the Power to coordinate so
they both could look through the binoculars was draining energy
they needed. Marian glared at him but said nothing.
One morning during her third week on Lladrana, the bells from
the harness of a volaran rang near her windows, and Marian rushed
to one, hoping Bastien had brought Alexa to visit.
Jaquar rode a black volaran with small white spots. The Circlet
was sexy. Every time she saw the man, he was more
attractive. Marian snorted. She couldn't afford to fall for
him.
"Marian!" Bossgond's irritated voice came from the trumpet tube
next to her desk.
"Yes?"
"That boy is here. He has good intent toward me so he just flew
through my shield-"
A knock echoed like thunder through the Tower.
"Ever since I took you as an Apprentice, there's been no peace.
You'd think if people saw that a door didn't have a harp, they'd
know they weren't welcome," Bossgond grumbled. He'd taken the door
harp off several days ago.
"I'm not answering it," Marian said, and got an immediate image
of the old man's ears perking up in interest.
"Why not?"
"Because I had a vision when we first met."
"Ah! That has happened in the past with those who were Summoned
for the Tower. Visions upon their arrival. What was it?"
Marian sighed. "I can't recall. Too many experiences since then
have piled on top of that memory to remember it clearly. I just
know he's Trouble."
"Hmm," said Bossgond, sounding more cheerful. "I've changed my
mind. I want to talk with the boy."
12
Marian wanted to argue with Bossgond about admitting Jaquar to
the Tower, but Bossgond appeared at the door to the stairs from her
suite, opening it.
"Coming?" he asked, eyes bright with curiosity.
"Yes." Marian shifted her shoulders. A tingle had run up her
spine to lodge itself at the back of her neck. For the first time,
she realized that there was no mirror in her outer room. There was
a small one that showed her face in the bedroom of her loft, but
nothing else. Bossgond had plenty in his chambers, but they were
for magical work.
She looked at him. He was neat and tidy in a midnight-blue tunic
that looked brand-new, but only his clothes seemed ageless. He was
ugly. Cute ugly, like a bulldog puppy, but it was no wonder he
didn't hang mirrors around.
With lagging steps, she followed him down to the bottom-floor
parlor.
Jaquar stood there. The sight of him-tall and well built and
handsome, with those wide streaks of silver over each temple and
the blue, blue eyes-sent hormones zinging through her veins.
She caught him staring at her, and a whispered tune fluttered
between them.
Marian had learned enough to know that this could mean real
trouble. Best she stay away from the man. So she moved from the
stairs and put a wingchair between them.
His eyebrows rose, but his attention turned to Bossgond, who
watched them both with a sly smile. The old mage held out both
hands, wrists straight and palms up.
Jaquar glanced at Bossgond's gesture and his lips tightened.
Marian realized she'd noticed his full mouth, and tried to gather a
little shield around her that might block out the string of notes
between them. It didn't work.
Carefully Jaquar placed his palms on Bossgond's, overlapping the
older Sorcerer's hands. Jaquar jerked, and Marian saw the flash of
energy between them, the blending of auras.
"I see I made a mistake years ago," Bossgond said. "Your parents
requested you spend some months under my tutelage, and 1 was too
immersed in my own studies and declined. But you would have been an
excellent student and would have helped me, and would have gained
your Circlet status earlier." Bossgond sighed gustily and dropped
his hands. "That's in the past."
"You have an Apprentice of your own." Jaquar inclined his head
to Marian. "Marian."
She nodded coolly. "Jaquar Dumont."
"She won't be an Apprentice for long," Bossgond boasted. "I'll
have her a Scholar by the morrow and a Circlet by the end of the
month."
Jaquar looked surprised. "Indeed."
Marian's stomach churned. Tests ahead. She wished she hadn't
known, and wondered if there was any mention of Testing for Scholar
in her books upstairs-if she could find the notes and prepare
somehow.
"Come upstairs to my suite," Bossgond said silkily, like a
spider to a fly.
Jaquar eyed him warily. "Why?"
Bossgond snorted. "Because I want to speak to you alone."
Marian gripped the back of the chair. "You could talk to him
here."
Waving her suggestion away with an impatient hand, Bossgond
threw them both an admonishing look and started up the stairs.
"Come, Jaquar."
The younger man made a half bow to Marian, then followed
Bossgond.
Bossgond's voice floated down. "Marian, I want you to rearrange
the western coastline of your continent in your planet ball,
generate a force-three storm, then bring the sphere upstairs to us.
Jaquar should see the results of your lessons with me and your
level of expertise."
Her pulse pounded in her ears. He'd just assigned her two huge
tasks and expected them to be carried out quickly! More, she would
have to gather the storm, then hold it as she walked from her rooms
to his. She calculated-it was a trip up twenty stairs. If she took
it slow and breathed properly she might be able to do it.
"Oh, and we will be talking in the ritual room at the top of the
Tower," Bossgond said.
Her hands fisted. She couldn't make another twenty stairs, a
full two stories, could she?
She heard Jaquar's grunt of surprise. Something in the sound
sent adrenaline coursing through her and she set her teeth. She
didn't have any time to waste. Everything she had must be focused
on her task.
She didn't want to fail the old Circlet. More, she didn't want
to fail in front of Jaquar. A woman had her pride. Even though
she'd been here only two and a half weeks, she refused to fail.
For a moment she just stood, jaw clenched, then she heard a
scrabbling noise and found Tuck sitting on his fat rump on her
desk. He stared at her with wide black eyes, his paws clasped
together. "I will help!"
She deliberately relaxed her mouth, rolled her shoulders and
eyed him. No doubt many people would dismiss the aid of a small
rodent, no matter how magical, but Marian just nodded gravely.
"Thank you." Who knew what an animal who ate an atomball could do?
Best to stretch his abilities as much as her own. Her pulse jumped
at the thought that he might not want to return to Earth with
her-something she didn't want to think about, couldn't think about,
right now.
Walking over to her desk chair, she settled into the fat cushion
that was beginning to take on her form. She looked at Tuck. "How do
you want to help?"
He chittered a few seconds-his thinking sound, she'd
learned-then said, "I will keep you calm."
"Keeping my hands from shaking as we take the terrarium up to
Bossgond will be a great help. Thank you."
His nose wiggled. "I need food," he squeaked slyly.
With a chuckle she scooped him up, rubbed him against her cheek,
then set him carefully down. "Come back to the desk when you're
done eating," she said absently, already focused on the planet
globe, parting the clouds to see the coastline. She took a moment
to loosen her muscles, inhaled deeply and placed her hands on each
side of the two-foot terrarium.
Frowning, she nibbled her lower lip as she considered how
extreme the alteration to the coast should be-or rather, how little
alteration she could do that would be acceptable to Bossgond. The
real test was gathering the storm and holding it so it didn't break
apart or go inland before she reached the two Sorcerers.
From what she'd experienced on Lladrana, equality of the sexes
was close, but some men would always innately believe that strength
made them superior to women.
Not Bossgond. He was an intellectual snob. As long as a person
had Power, they were respected.
Jaquar intimidated her because he was a Circlet, intelligent,
handsome.. .and very attractive.
There was that warning she'd received when they'd first touched.
Perhaps she could recall the brief vision if she touched him
again....
"Four minutes, Marian," Bossgond said through the speaking
tube.
Marian jolted-stared down at the west coast of the continent in
her terrarium. Concentrating, she delicately warmed the globe,
causing the polar ice cap to melt. It took time and mental effort,
but better that she be late arriving than not get her project
done.
Melting the ice cap raised the water level of the ocean and
changed all the coastlines of her continent, but she was
following the rules. As she watched the ice liquefy, she let out a
slow and steady breath, blowing at the terrarium. She used this to
symbolize a rising wind-energy she sent to stir the air and whip up
the seas until a force-three storm whirled in the ocean, sucking in
clouds and water.
She moved a little faster and harder than she'd thought, and the
storm whirled apart. Teeth clamped again, she struggled to keep the
energy steady, growing, spinning the storm off the coast.
A few seconds later she heard a squeak and automatically angled
her foot and leg so Tuck would have easy climbing. He hurried up
her gown to her shoulder, then placed a tiny, clawed paw on her
neck. The paw was cold.
But it calmed her. Since most of her mind was engaged in her
task, she didn't hold back when Tuck's energy touched hers-a burst
of light on her shoulder, stronger than she'd expected, a tiny rush
of tuneful notes.
"Sinafin is teaching me," he said.
Her attention almost wandered. She kept it steady, forced
extraneous thoughts from her mind.
"She says when you raise your Tower, I might become a
feycoocu."
No! Marian would not listen. "Are you trying to distract
me?"
He squeaked a chuckle. "Payback for all those times I rattled in
my cage and needed food and you were studying." He sniffed,
then licked a drop of sweat that had beaded around her
hairline.
"Time to go," she said.
Slowly, slowly she stood, lifted the planet globe.
It tipped.
She righted it, expelled a shaky breath. Dropping it would be
disastrous.
With tiny, cautious steps, mind on holding the storm, tension
settling between her shoulders, she moved from the desk to the
door. And stopped.
She'd have to separate some energy from the storm to open the
door latch, or shift the globe to lie along an arm, use her left
fingers to push the latch...
"I will open the door," said Tuck.
It flew open and slammed against the hall wall. His whole little
body felt warm-with embarrassment?
"Thanks," Marian croaked.
Male shouts came from above. Jaquar's "No, I won't!" startled
her, and the planet globe joggled. Marian gasped, struggled to keep
the storm steady. She pursed her lips in irritation that the men
couldn't leave her to do her work in peace.
Her head ached as she climbed the stairs; her arms tensed with
the strain. The forty steps seemed interminable, draining. Her
whole body trembled and she panted by the time she reached the
ritual room.
Again Tuck handled the door. The harp strings sang, the latch
slowly compressed, the door inched open.
When it was wide enough for her to walk through-a graceful glide
was beyond her-she carried the terrarium in, looking only at her
planet, ignoring the men except as shadowed bulks she had to
negotiate around to reach a waist-high table near the pentagram
rug.
"Let the storm go, Marian, but no destruction to the land or
trees."
That would mean keeping the Wind and Lightning in the sky or
moving the storm farther out to the sea. Marian clenched her
fingers around the glass. Sweat trickled from her temple and was
absorbed by her hair.
She couldn't do it. She was going to fail. The storm started
slipping from her grasp, moved quickly inland, and lightning struck
just outside the city in forks that would soon ignite trees-her
anxiety fueled the storm. If she wasn't careful, there'd be an
earthquake, tornado and tidal wave. Heat crawled up her
face.
Her neck strained as she angled her head to focus on the planet
ball. For an instant, she thought she'd grabbed control. Then the
outside of the city went up in flames, and a few seconds later the
tidal wave put out the fire.
"Very impressive," Jaquar said.
She bit her lip. She wanted to shut her eyes, or cry, or scream.
Maybe even all three.
Gasping in a breath, she relaxed her hard, frozen grip on the
glass, finger by finger, cleared her mind of outside distractions
and sent calm through herself and the ball. The damage had
been done. She'd averted an earthquake, but the city model was in
ruins.
As far as she was concerned it had been a pop quiz, and she
hated those. She'd had no time to prepare. If she'd known in
advance, she could have practiced. The wind peaked again and she
forced her thoughts away from self-recrimination to slowly heat the
land and dry it.
"Now restore the coastline to its previous form that you showed
me this morning," Bossgond ordered in a steely voice.
She almost lifted her eyes to stare at him. He must be
kidding-or she wished he was. But his energy beating at her was
stern, forceful.
She had no energy to do the task he required. Another failure
loomed. Her dress stuck to her, then released the scent of fresh
flowers, and she flushed again-they knew she sweated. She snatched
at the heat of her body for energy and re-formed a third of her
coastline.
Now she was cold, her knees trembling. She'd fall down soon.
"Sunlight," squeaked Tuck in her ear. His fur was warm by her
neck. He was the best male in the room, no question.
Good idea. She lifted the globe and paced to a patch of sunlight
slanting through a tower window. The warmth felt good on her back,
more, it gave her energy. She thought she could feel it
sifting through the ends of her hair.
Collecting threads of Power from the sun's warmth, the light
that surrounded her, she visualized the strands braiding into a
rope. A link from the sun through her, to her hands, to energy
forming inside the planet ball.
She hummed low, under her breath, then a little louder as Power
crackled between her hands, became a pressurized force that
reclaimed land from the ocean, solidified it, carved it into its
former configurations.
Again her dress released fragrance, but Marian barely noticed
it. She was concentrating on her world, the eastern coast of
her continent. She sculpted a cliff here in the north,
making it more sheer, a rocky outcropping appeared in the south.
She re-formed the caves and arches she'd enjoyed creating- why had
she done that? It was fierce, intricate work. Finally the last rock
jutted from the sea.
With the realization that she was through, her hands turned
slippery, weakness threatened. She couldn't drop the sphere! No!
Hastily she tottered back toward the table to put the terrarium on
it. The glass slid from her hands and landed with a clank.
But nothing worse happened.
She let her knees fold and she sank to the floor. Not caring
about appearances, she wiped her sleeve across her forehead. Only
then did she turn to look at the men.
They were inspecting her planet.
"What say you, Circlet Jaquar?" Bossgond's voice held a note of
challenge.
"It's a little too pretty. Obviously made by a woman," Jaquar
said.
Tuck ran down her gown to her lap, down her dress to the floor,
crossed to the table and swarmed up the carved leg. From there he
jumped for Jaquar's hand and hung on with all four teeth.
"Yow!" Jaquar shook his hand. Tuck bit deeper, then was thrown
off.
Marian instinctively reached out-a small ball of golden yellow
coalesced around Tuck and brought him to her. She held him in one
palm and stroked him with an index finger.
"How dare you hurt my friend!"
Jaquar smoldered at her. "Whatever it is, it attacked me." He
fashioned a bandage around his hand. "Bad bite."
"Rodent teeth are quite sharp. They grow continually, you
know."
Jaquar's eyes flashed with pain and anger as he turned to her.
He swore hot and long, but since Marian didn't know any of the
words except merde, she just smiled blandly.
"What is that thing?" asked Jaquar.
She lifted Tuck and stroked her cheek with his small body. "He
is my friend."
Jaquar snorted, narrowed his eyes. "I wouldn't have thought it
had the brain power to understand me-but it did, didn't it? It's
sentient, and has the beginnings of a personal Song."
"Tuck-that's his name-ate an atomball."
Jaquar's eyes rounded, his stare fixed on the hamster.
"Remarkable," he murmured.
"Let us return to the point, Circlet Jaquar. Do you agree that
Apprentice Marian has passed her Testing to become of Scholar
status?"
Shaking his head, Jaquar tapped the glass. "She didn't make
Circlet level. Her control was poor."
"But she did succeed in her Tests to name her a
Scholar."
Jaquar sent her and Tuck a hard gaze, cradled his hand. "It's
only been a little over two weeks since she arrived!"
"Time is not relevant. Power and mastery of her art is. She
passed the Scholar Tests."
"Yes," Jaquar agreed reluctantly. "She is no longer a mere
Apprentice."
Giddy delight filled her and Marian was glad she was sitting.
Her muscles were relaxing so much that she might flop to the
ground. That would not be very graceful, but she was so happy, she
didn't care.
Bossgond inclined his head to Jaquar. "We agree she is of
Scholar status, then." Her teacher looked down at her. He was a
short man, but seemed to loom over her. "Marian, you will go to the
hot spring baths in the lowest level of the Tower and cleanse
yourself while I prepare the Ritual from Apprentice to
Scholar."
She stared. Tuck ran from her hands up to her shoulder, then
said, "Let's go, let's go, let's go!" He patted her face with tiny
claw-tipped paws that snapped her from her amazement. She blinked,
nodded and rose stiffly to her feet. Tuck hung on to her gown.
Hesitating at the door, she looked back at the men. Bossgond was
placing a light wooden altar in the center of the star, intent upon
his work. Jaquar met her gaze from under lowered brows, his blue
eyes brilliant. From the tune linking them, she sensed frustration,
but pride in her, a touch of incredulity that she'd already become
a Scholar.
She dipped a half curtsy and left the ritual room, then hurried
to her own chambers where she took a towel, her favorite soap that
smelled of lavender, and a clean gown and underwear to put
on. When Alexa had offered to have someone make bras and panties
for Marian, she'd jumped at the offer and the garments had arrived
a few days later. Now Marian had enough underthings to last out her
stay. She kept the bras just in case her magical robes failed.
Though she yearned for a long soak in the hottest pool, to
reflect on her Tests and what she should have done better, Marian
bathed quickly but thoroughly in the coolest pool- she had no wish
to appear lobster-red before the men-and dried and dressed in
panties and robe. She was pleased that she wasn't out of breath by
the time she climbed the five stories.
The room was lit by indirect sunlight and candles when she
entered. Bossgond stood in the top point of the star, wearing a
golden robe that matched his hair. Jaquar stood to the south,
between the two lower star-points, and had changed into a maroon
robe. Both robes were tied with belts of string and had no
ornamentation. They both wore embossed golden circlets around their
foreheads.
Bossgond bowed to Marian, Jaquar did the same. With a dull,
silver-handled knife, Bossgond indicated to Marian that she should
stand at the left point of the star, the east.
The incense was strong, and mixed with her triumph and relief
and exhilaration. She was giddy. Giggles caught in her throat.
She'd done it! She'd passed her Apprentice tests and become a
Scholar, on her way to being a Circlet. She felt prouder than if
she'd aced her doctoral dissertation. She wondered if she'd get a
robe with a hood- Marian shook the fuzzy thoughts away. She swayed.
Narrowing her eyes, she stared at the scented smoke filling the
ritual room. Was that what made her feel dizzy? Blinking hard, she
turned her head to Bossgond. He stared at her with an avuncular
expression.
She glanced at Jaquar. His eyelids were lowered so that only a
deep-blue glint showed. A flush showed under his skin, and his
mouth curved. He looked as if he was admiring her.
Tuck squeaked loudly in her ear. His claws dug into her neck and
the sharp pain focused reality around her.
"She is here, she is here, she is here!" Tuck's high,
piping voice hurt Marian's ears.
A neon-purple bat swooped through the window.
Marian blinked.
It hadn't swooped through an open window.
The bat zoomed around the Tower room, dizzying Marian again. She
couldn't watch.
Very good, Sinafin broadcast mentally. Everyone turned to
her. The magical shapechanger stood by the planet globe in fairy
form. Leaning toward it, she stared inside and nodded. Very
good, indeed.
"You are here!" Tuck hopped up and down on Marian's
shoulder.
Vaguely she recalled that he'd said something about becoming a
feycoocu like Sinafin. Marian wanted to lift her hand to him, catch
him close to her heart and keep him, protect him from any major
change. Any further major change. But her limbs were too
heavy. Was it the incense?
She stared fixedly at Sinafin, seeing a huge golden aura
surround the fairy, mirrored in small glitters that floated in the
air of the chamber.
Sinafin flew from the table to perch on Marian's other shoulder.
She was lighter than Tuck. The hamster scrambled around her neck to
meet the fairy.
Turning her head, Marian watched as Tuck held up bloody paws to
Sinafin.
You have blooded the new Sorceress. Good, Sinafin said
approvingly. Dipping her head, the fairy lapped blood from Tuck's
paws. He did the same.
Blood. Her blood, Marian thought. Eeeew.
13
Sinafin sent mentally, Bossgond and Jaquar, let us
proceed with the ceremony raising Marian from Apprentice to
Scholar. I will witness for the Marshalls, since Marian will be
working closely with Exotique Alexa.
Marian stood at the altar, Sinafin on one side of the platform,
Tuck on the other, Jaquar watching from the eastern star-point.
Bossgond gave her a chilled golden goblet with thick yellow liquid
she was supposed to drink.
Marian eyed it warily, but whether it was the smoke from the
incense or the aftereffect of her Tests, her mouth was dry and her
thirst horrible. So she braced herself and glugged.
It was the best orange juice she'd ever had, and she coughed to
cover her nervous giggle.
So many strange events-like the ceremony-and so many familiar
things used in different ways-like the orange juice. She'd
congratulated herself on being flexible, on going with the flow,
but now wondered if that had all been a lie and she'd wake up
crazed one morning from the stress of it all.
Before she could grab on to the thought, Sinafin was brushing a
kiss against her cheek and it felt suddenly as if she were drinking
a mimosa.
It is done! Sinafin said, a big smile on her fairy
face. Marian sensed the feycoocu spoke only to her. An
Apprentice could not have handled any trouble, any fearsome magics
aimed at her or demanding responsibilities. But you are now a Third
Degree Scholar.
Oh yes, there were certainly things to be wary of, and one of
them fluttered just beyond her nose. Marian hadn't forgotten that
Alexa had said the shapeshifter had her own agenda.
"I don't know what you are talking about," Marian said stiffly
to the fairy.
There are five degrees of apprenticeship and
scholarship that you must master before you become a Circlet. You
are already a Third Degree Scholar. It is good.
Marian licked the last traces of the juice from her lips and
gave Sinafin a hard look. "What about the rest-the trouble,
fearsome magic and demanding responsibilities?" She didn't mind the
last, but the first two were definite causes for concern.
"Time for you to discard the old robe of apprenticeship and don
the new one denoting a Scholar," Bossgond said, a proud note in his
resonant voice.
That dragged Marian's attention away from Sinafin. Bossgond held
up a robe-this one with a new symbol on it, an open book with a
whirlwind coming from the pages. And the symbol was stitched around
the hem and the ends of the sleeves. Marian liked the symbols, but
would have preferred to have chosen her own icons.
Then his words sank in. She was supposed to strip? Here? Now?
In front of everyone?
Tuck, of course, had seen her naked both lately and when he was
a mere hamster. And of the beings in the room, he was the only one
she felt comfortable seeing her naked and vulnerable. How could she
bare herself to everyone's-to Jaquar's- stare?
Bossgond shook the robe impatiently. "Come, Marian, undress that
I might robe you."
"Couldn't you just give me the gown?" She reached for it,
but he whisked it away, narrowing his eyes.
Alexa, too, has a problem with nudity, Sinafin announced
to them all.
Heat crept up Marian's neck, her face.
Alexa, too, does this changing-color thing, Sinafin
transmitted.
Grim, Marian snatched off her gown and dropped it to the floor,
then grabbed at the new dress Bossgond held, missed. It was already
too late to be ladylike, unconcerned and dignified.
He stared at her panties. "You aren't naked under your robe!" he
said indignantly.
Alexa, too, wears such strange garments, Sinafin
chirped.
Marian wanted to strangle the little being.
"Nice," rumbled Jaquar from somewhere at Marian's left.
Of course she hadn't forgotten he was there. She leaped at
Bossgond, wrenched the new dress from his grasp and pulled it over
her head.
When it slipped down she felt respectable again. "Is the
ceremony now over?" she asked.
Bossgond huffed, then went to the altar and picked up a long,
sharp knife. He dipped it in a bowl of earth, then water, held it
over a flame, then incense. The Sorcerer chanted as he did so,
words stirring the air.
Marian stared in horror. Surely she wouldn't be cut or branded!
Why hadn't he told her he'd-
He took her left wrist-the one both he and Alexa had cut-and
laid the flat of the blade on her arm, beneath the tattoo that had
appeared on her arm after she and Alexa had blood-bonded-a crossed
wand and jade baton.
But the knife was warm, not hot, and when he lifted it there was
a small red triangle.
"When this fades, you will be a Circlet," he said. Then he
nodded to Jaquar. "She is your pupil, now, formally under your care
and protection."
Marian yelped as if the knife had burned her. "What?"
No one answered her, they all concentrated on finishing the
ceremony. A moment later Bossgond, Jaquar, Sinafin and even Tuck
clapped their hands once. The sound echoed like thunder through the
room.
"It is done," Bossgond said.
This time Marian believed it. The room dimmed, then
brightened.
Bossgond addressed Jaquar. "Teach her Weather but not
plane-walking. Her bond with Amee is not strong enough to keep her
here rather than lost in the planes. I will speak to both of you
each evening. Separately."
Jaquar's face turned impassive. He jerked a nod at Bossgond.
A sound like a foghorn came. That's the boat with the
cook, Sinafin said.
"Stay in the pentagram, Marian. Jaquar, join with her and I will
send you to Mue Island," Bossgond said conversationally.
"No, wait-" Marian objected.
"Will you help me, feycoocu?" asked Bossgond.
Yes.
"I'll send your volaran home, Jaquar," Bossgond said.
Marian didn't see him, but Jaquar moved behind her, wrapped his
arms around her waist. "We're ready," he said.
Tuck ran to her and crawled up her dress to a low pocket.
"No, I'm not ready," Marian said crossly. "What's going on
here?"
"I'm a Weather Sorcerer, Bossgond isn't. He can't teach you what
you must learn." Jaquar's breath ruffled her hair and Marian
shifted away. His arms tightened.
He was too close. Too...dangerous. And though she didn't
experience the same flash of foresight she had now as when they'd
first met, warning bells rang in her ears.
She wanted to change her major.
Marian and Jaquar arrived in his Tower with a soft pop of
displaced air. Marian stumbled, but Jaquar held her and she didn't
fall. She was all too aware of his fast heartbeat. From the trip?
Or from proximity to her? She'd like to think the latter, but
didn't flatter herself.
As soon as her balance was steady, she pulled away and his arms
dropped from her. She strode across the parquet floor.
"Don't cross the circle!" he ordered.
It didn't seem smart to breach magic. She'd already walked down
a star-point and was near the circle that surrounded the pentagram.
She crossed her arms, turned back and scowled at him.
"I didn't agree to be your student."
He raised his brows. "I didn't ask that you be my pupil. That
was arranged by Bossgond and the feycoocu. Two beings who should
not be crossed." His hand dipped to a pocket near his belt. He
withdrew his fingers, holding a stick slightly larger than his
hand. With a flick, the rod lengthened and thickened until it was a
seven-foot staff of smooth and gleaming white-gold. Atop the staff
was a real miniature cloud that wisped and flowed with the
currents of air in the room. Or maybe from Jaquar's emotions. It
was looking like a thundercloud.
Excellent trick. Marian tightened her jaw to keep her mouth from
falling open. She itched to examine the wand up close. How would it
feel to keep a cloud in your pocket? To what use could you put such
an item? The notion captivated.
He tipped the staff to the star-point to her left. A
crack and flash of lightning and the whole pentacle smoked
gray, then turned into a silver pattern inset in the floor.
"This is my ritual room. Let's descend to my study. I have my
Scholar planet spheres in storage there. You can use them. Today
I'll want to judge the scope of your Power. If you are as well
versed as Bossgond believes, we can start your practicum outside
tomorrow."
She could feel her eyes round, her heartbeat rushed loud in her
ears. Outside-that meant with real weather. Wind. Clouds. Ocean.
Thunder. She focused on the cloud hovering atop his staff.
He chuckled. "Bossgond said you were particularly adept with
Lightning. But we will start, as always, with Wind and clouds."
"Of course," she said, trying to be calm.
A rustling came from her gown and Tuck popped his head out of
the pocket. He fixed his eyes on Jaquar. "I am hungry."
Jaquar scowled, cradled his hurt left hand against his chest.
"What are you doing here, mouse?"
Tuck issued a miniature growl she'd never heard before. "I am
Marian's companion. I am a hamster," he squeaked. "I eat nuts, and
fruit and atomballs." It sounded like a challenge.
Jaquar blinked, then he flung back his head and laughed.
"So you do." He set his wand aside to stand by itself and
snapped his fingers at Tuck. "Come here so I can meet my guest and
provide for him well."
Tuck narrowed his eyes, cocked his head. Take me to him,
please.
Marian started at the tiny voice in her mind. Tuck's voice. She
froze. Another thing that was far out of her experience. Having a
magical shapeshifter from another world, or an old Sorcerer speak
to her mind-to-mind was far less shocking than hearing her hamster.
Blindly, she reached into her pocket, closing her fingers gently
around his soft fur and sturdy little body. She cupped her hands so
he could sit in them. As she walked to Jaquar, Tuck rode as if he
were a king. King of the hamsters?
Incredible.
She stopped within a couple of feet of Jaquar, eyeing him
warily. He scrutinized Tuck, who wore his hamster-Buddha aspect.
Tinkling music emanated from him. She almost expected Tuck to spout
wise instructions.
"May I pick you up? I'll be careful," Jaquar said to Tuck.
"Yes," Tuck said.
Jaquar slid his hands under Marian's. A ripple of hot notes
licked between them. Jaquar's deep-blue eyes met hers and they
stood, linked by music and warmth and gaze. The world, even Tuck,
seemed to fall away until only Jaquar mattered.
Tuck nipped at her right index finger and Marian gasped, jerked
and spilled the hamster into Jaquar's steady hands.
Even as she stepped back, Jaquar was lifting the hamster to eye
level, studying him.
"I'd like to see all of you," Jaquar said, and turned Tuck to
look at his belly, check his ears, even look at his back end under
his stubby tale. Then Jaquar peered at the hamster's ears and eyes.
"Not a mouse, not a rat," Jaquar murmured. "Could you open your
mouth?"
Marian said, "Bossgond has representations of Tuck, perhaps even
of his internal organs and skeleton. I'd prefer you ask Bossgond
for the Hamster Lorebook instead of prodding Tuck."
Jaquar didn't look at her but raised his eyebrows. "And what
would Master Tuck prefer?"
Tuck preened. "Food," he said.
Laughing again, Jaquar said, "We'll get some for you." He placed
Tuck on his left shoulder, took the staff and strode from the
pentacle to a door in the far wall.
Unlike Bossgond's Tower, Jaquar's was octagonal. Marian wasn't
sure what that said about him. From what she'd read, when a
Sorcerer or Sorceress raised a Tower, it came from the image of the
"perfect" Tower in their mind. So did the shape indicate that the
man had many angles?
"I don't have any food in this room. Let's go down to my study."
He opened the door, and instead of a hall and stairway winding
around the full building like Bossgond's, Marian saw a tiny
circular stair built into its own round Tower, straight up and
down. It would be steep.
"Wait," Marian said, staring at the empty center of the circle.
She frowned. "Once again I've been transported without any of my
belongings."
Jaquar tilted his head. "I have some bespelled cloth you could
make into gowns, if you know how."
"I don't." To her dismay she felt a sting at the back of her
eyes. She straightened her spine, waved at him to go on.
His face softened. "I'm sure Bossgond will send your things with
my volaran."
That hadn't occurred to Marian; she still fumbled with small
daily strategies of planning and doing. Irritated at herself, she
nodded at Jaquar and said, "Of course." She walked over to the door
and waited for him to descend.
"The door will close and lock behind you automatically," Jaquar
said, his voice carrying up from the shadowy stairway. "I'm sorry
to be discourteous, but I would prefer that I know you better
before I give you the Songspell to my ritual room."
"Naturally," Marian said. How could such a thing be
discourteous? She hated when people messed with her stuff; it was
one reason she lived alone. She reached out and found a pipelike
rail against the curved wall. Passing a window, she looked out.
Bossgond's Tower had been five stories high, and this one looked to
be the same. Was the mass of a Tower also the measure of the
Sorcerer's Power? Jaquar's ritual room hadn't been as large as
Bossgond's. But it had been more beautiful. Airier, with pairs of
long pointed windows around the walls.
Since her new gown lifted itself from her feet, keeping her from
tripping, Marian had no trouble with the stairs, except that they
were in such a small space. Claustrophobia had rarely bothered her
before, but perhaps that was another change. She seemed to
metamorphose daily, perhaps even moment to moment, as if she
unfurled and tried new butterfly wings.
The pleasant fancy kept her mind occupied until she reached the
lower floor of Jaquar's study.
She entered to find this room was much like the one above, with
pointed-arched floor-to-ceiling windows in every wall, but the
chamber was larger by about a third. The octagonal proportions were
lovely, though it had fewer shelves than Bossgond's study, due to
the magnificent windows. She could see the whole room; it wasn't a
partitioned loft with study, sleeping space and tiny kitchen as
Bossgond's had been. Again the floor was parquet strips in an
elegant pattern.
Jaquar stood at a pretty sideboard, wooden with a top of
colorful tiles. One of the tiles glowed red-hot under a
teakettle.
Marian's mouth watered. She could almost taste tea-wanted it
more than coffee. Tea was a comfort drink.
At a small table next to the sideboard, Tuck sat. "Food," he
demanded.
Slanting a glance at Marian, Jaquar said, "Food?"
"Nuts, fruit. A bit of soft cheese. Some grains and greens,
dried vegetables and seeds."
With a gesture, a large china bowl appeared on the table with
Tuck. It was filled with various nuts, many of which Marian didn't
recognize.
Tuck cheeped in delight, hoisted himself over the rim and
plunged into the bowl, scattering nuts. Jaquar shook his head and
chuckled. "He really did dive into his food."
"Yes." Marian found herself smiling back at him. "He really
did."
The kettle whistled and Jaquar poured water into a teapot.
Matching mugs sat on the sideboard. He handed a cup to Marian. "Let
us sit. The tea will come when it is ready."
She wasn't quite sure what to make of that, but followed Jaquar
to a couple of large, soft chairs made of pillows. They were set
before windows looking out on a view across the island and to the
western ocean, not toward Lladrana. Marian realized from the shine
of the floor that he'd moved the chairs to this pair of windows
from across the room-and recently. Sensing that it had something to
do with his lost parents, she said nothing.
Jaquar sat and stretched out his legs. "Tell me what you want to
learn, Marian."
He almost sounded like a departmental counselor. But his voice
was too much a tool-even more than a professor's voice was-to
belong to a counselor, and she thought he probed more sharply than
any counselor would. Less interested in her and her wants and needs
than how she might fit into his plans. Her stomach tightened. She
hadn't had a return of the strange feeling that he was a dangerous
threat, but she wouldn't forget it. Still, there shouldn't be
anything wrong with honesty. Perhaps it would prompt him to be open
in return.
"I want to find a cure for my brother's disease and take it back
to Exotique Terre."
He stared at her in surprise.
"Bossgond didn't tell you?" she asked.
"No." Jaquar's voice was a mere whisper. "You don't intend to
stay here in Amee, then?"
She narrowed her eyes. "No. More than that, if the Snap doesn't
happen within the next few weeks, I'll be asking for help to return
to my home. My brother has a degenerative disease."
"I'm sorry," Jaquar said, and she thought he meant it.
"And what do you want of me?" she asked.
14
Jaquar's eyes widened. He opened his mouth, then shut it, and
his lips shaped a grim line. When he met her gaze, his was darkly
serious. "What do I want from you? I wish you to progress rapidly
to Circlet status." A corner of his mouth kicked up. "Despite what
Bossgond says, and your spectacular demonstration of Power this
morning, I do not believe that you learn so quickly."
"Oh? And how long did it take for Alexa to become a
Marshall?"
His head jerked back in surprise. "I, uh-" He blinked, then
looked as if he were calculating.
"The Marshalls have Tests, too, don't they?"
"Yes, yes they do." Again he half smiled. "Many would say they
have the hardest Tests in all of Lladrana. Alyeka was Tested the
moment she arrived and had passed by the time she went to bed. Say,
three hours."
Marian stared at him, struggling to keep atop the discussion.
She recalled what Alexa had said had happened the first night she
was in Lladrana. "But it cost her-her hair turned white."
Jaquar inclined his head. "Very true, and though she became a
Marshall at that time, it took her weeks to develop her Power, to
become a Marshall in more than title only. I may be wrong, you may
be extremely quick." He shrugged. "You are more mature than
most Scholars who are so innately Powerful."
"I've been told that the.. .Song.. .and your Tower Community
chose me in some way. That I heard the Summoning and answered it
because I fit your requirements."
"Also correct," he said.
At that point, the teapot sailed between them. It went first to
Jaquar. He held out his mug and the teapot tipped, pouring a
golden-brown stream of liquid into his cup, stopping when it was
about a quarter-inch from the top. Then the pot slowly turned, and,
as if it were a heat-seeking missile, aimed for the cup Marian
held.
Though her hand wanted to tremble, she forced it still while the
tea decanted into her mug. "Wonderful." She couldn't help a sigh of
pleasure.
Jaquar smiled. "I keep black tea for Alyeka. She has a weakness
for it, and apparently it is not as easily available here in
Lladrana as it is in your own land."
"That's kind of you."
"Not really. I like her, and she is an excellent Marshall, which
means that she can provide us with very interesting items such as
dreeth acid sacs."
Marian willed herself not to pale. She nodded.
"And it riles Bastien when a man pays attention to Alyeka.
Before she tamed him, Bastien had a habit of irritating people. I
am no exception."
Marian wouldn't have called either Alexa or Bastien tame. The
teapot finished turning another circuit and settled itself on a
small, solid wooden table in front of them. Since the top was
heavily scarred as if the table had been used for many purposes,
Marian didn't move to protect the surface. Jaquar didn't even seem
to notice that the pot might have left another unsightly mark.
Sorcerer or not, he was a real guy.
She had let new magic distract her long enough-as it had far too
often lately-so she returned to her priority. "Do you know much
about diseases or healing? I can tell you my brother's
symptoms."
But he was shaking his head. "I am sorry. I have no skill in
that area. I cannot help you."
Marian nodded and sipped her tea. Disappointed again.
Jaquar finished his drink, picked up the teapot and crossed the
room. She could hear him, but didn't take her eyes off the view
from the windows. Green land, a winding stream, the ocean beyond. A
lovely view. And nothing like the Flatirons of Boulder or the
mountains of Denver. Home.
An odd clatter caught her attention, and she turned her head to
see Jaquar pushing a cart containing the spheres. "Why don't they
float like the teapot?" she asked.
"Because the teapot is imbued with generations of household
magic and is used often. I fashioned these planet spheres a while
back in my first year as a Circlet when I wanted to experiment with
weather in a controlled environment. When I was done, I removed the
energy from them to use elsewhere." He wedged the cart into the
space between her feet and the table, then waved a hand. It lowered
to angle over her chair like an adjustable desk.
Marian chuckled. No, Lladrana wasn't home, but it continued to
be endlessly fascinating. She could make a home here- even
raise a Tower-if she didn't need to return to Andrew.
"Revive the spheres," Jaquar said.
Though his tones were low and spoken like a request, Marian
didn't delude herself. The downtime they'd spent together was
finished and he now watched her with the keen gaze of a judging
prof.
It was easier than she had anticipated, and obviously far less
difficult for her than Jaquar had expected. But the glass and the
models-the land and cities and dried plant life-all resonated of
Jaquar, and Marian found the patterns simple to work with, as if
the man had familiar thought processes. In a few moments, all three
terrariums were vivid with "life"-and weather. The smallest jar
showed a pretty ocean lapping at newly plumped trees, opening and
stretching under bright sunlight and a sky with a few clouds..
.that spelled Marian in English. It was a signature that she
just couldn't resist. The middle terrarium was dark with rain and
storm. The largest planet sphere had new continents, oceans and
trade winds.
Jaquar studied her work from under lowered brows. He lifted his
head, shaking it. "Unbelievable."
Marian smiled sweetly.
"We will definitely begin your practicum outside, tomorrow
morning."
Tuck waddled up, squeaking something that Marian couldn't
understand because his mouth was full and both of his cheek pouches
were distended. He looked nearly two-thirds bigger than usual.
"By the Song!" Jaquar said. He squatted. "May I pick you up,
Tuck?"
There was mumbled hamster agreement.
Once again Jaquar scrutinized the hamster nose-to-tail, paying
particular attention to his cheeks. "What a remarkable animal."
Tuck smirked.
Jaquar looked to Marian, and for the first time she thought she
saw him without any mask. His eyes held a dark shadow, his faint
smile had no practiced charm, his whole body exuded interest and
attraction.
"A remarkable companion to a remarkable woman."
Warmth bloomed in Marian, both simple and complex. She felt
pleasure at the sincere compliment, and a low ache at the magnetism
humming between them, all too tempting to act upon.
Tuck wriggled in Jaquar's grasp. "Bed!"
It was too close to Marian's drifting thoughts. She
straightened. "Yes, what of the sleeping arrangements? I had my own
apartment in Bossgond's Tower."
"My Tower is just as well equipped as Bossgond's," he said. He
gestured upward. "As you know, my ritual room is the top of the
Tower, as is customary. This room is my study." He waved a hand.
"It has many windows and great light. I prefer dimness in my
personal rooms, so the lower three levels have only a few square
windows." He hesitated. "I was quite young when I raised my Tower
and gave little thought to having an Apprentice. I have never taken
one. But there's a suite of rooms-half the bottom floor-that should
serve."
He held Tuck up to gaze into the hamster's eyes. "Do you want to
stay with Marian, me, or have a little house here, Tuck?"
"A house!" Tuck squeaked.
Jaquar strode over to a shelf that held an elaborate model about
four feet square. The top was a church and attached buildings that
looked like a monastery or nunnery. But it was what was
below the building that fascinated-a series of tunnels and
"underground" chambers. Some were stone vaults and paved, others
rough caverns. Marian glanced down to the brass plate at the bottom
of the model. It read "Portions of the Singer's Abbey."
"Portions?" she asked.
He grimaced. "The Friends of the Singers are the most secretive
people in Lladrana. Much to the Tower Community's dismay, we don't
have accurate maps or models of the Singer's Abbey. This construct
is the best we have."
His gaze met hers and they shook their heads in unison. No
knowledge should be hidden. It wasn't right. She smiled, then his
lips curved, too.
Tuck squeaked and wiggled. "My house!"
"I think he likes it," Jaquar said. "One moment, Tuck, and I'll
take it off the shelf. The model has its own stand that rises from
the floor." Jaquar handed Tuck to Marian. The hamster quivered with
excitement. Jaquar ran his hand down the carved front support of
the bookcase, found a sculpted cloud and turned it. There was a
soft whirr and a pedestal rose from the floor and sat in one
of the octagonal corners of the room.
"That location matches the geographical placement of the
Singer's Abbey in relation to the sun," Jaquar said.
Tuck clapped his paws in delight, causing notes like glass
windchimes to tremble through the room.
Marian chuckled and walked over to the heavily carved stand that
consisted of a bottom, four pillared legs and an open top with
inset grooves for the model.
Jaquar overtook them and carefully placed the dollhouse on the
stand, then stooped, reached up and hooked his fingers into the
bottom of the construct. With a pull, a small ramp descended to the
floor. He grunted, then looked askance at Tuck.
"When old Sorceress Entanra gave this to me, neither of us knew
why she'd included the staircase." He stood and dusted his hands
off. "There are several Lladranan noble families that have a touch
of foresight, and she came from one of them."
"Put me down, down, down!" Tuck demanded. He obviously
yearned to try the staircase made just for him. Marian set him on
the floor. He ran to the little wooden ramp and climbed it until he
disappeared into the model.
"Entanra was of the Chiladees-Bastien's mother's family," Jaquar
said.
Marian shot him a startled glance. "Bastien has the gift of
foresight?"
Jaquar grunted as he tested the fit of the model in the stand.
It was solid. "No, but his brother Luthan Vauxveau does. You might
remember that if you happen to meet him." Jaquar tapped a finger on
the chapel. "He's a noble Chevalier with land and volarans of his
own, but he's also the representative of the Singer to the
Marshalls' Council. The Marshalls usually lead Lladrana-they are
the ones who like to do that sort of thing."
"Ah."
"Chevaliers of the Field are our main fighting force- knights
who ride horses or fly volarans."
At that point, Tuck popped out of one of the holes in the cavern
bottom and wound his way up to a large chamber, sniffing madly all
the way and making his usual comments to himself. "This is dusty,
no good. Smells like incense here, not nice for food. Where to
store the food?" He stopped and turned to them, clasping his
paws.
"Thank you, Jaquar. Thank you, Marian. This is a wonderful
house!" Then he hopped into a tunnel that vanished into the depths
of the model.
Marian frowned. "Is there somewhere we could see the whole thing
if we wanted?" A twinge of abandonment rushed through her.
Jaquar shrugged. "Each side provides a different angle, of
course, and if absolutely necessary, the model is constructed in
different, interlocking-spell layers and could be disassembled, but
I would prefer not to do that. Does having Tuck up here in my study
instead of your rooms bother you?"
Marian shifted. "A little." Jaquar's eyes had deepened into
sapphire. "I lost him during the Summoning. He was trapped in his
ball-his vehicle-and the wind took him away." She choked. "I
thought he was dead."
"How did you find him?"
"The feycoocu told me where to look. He was on Bossgond's
island."
Eyes widening, Jaquar said, "How did he get there?"
"I don't know." She shivered. "I don't know," she repeated in a
whisper. She glanced at the new hamster house. "I asked Tuck, but
he only vaguely recalls when he was just an animal."
"Hmm," Jaquar said. "He should be safe enough in the model, and
in this Tower. Outdoors is another matter."
Marian fisted her hands. "I don't know if I could lose him now.
He's a real companion." She couldn't imagine how hard it would be
to leave him here on Amee when she went back. More and more she
feared that Tuck wouldn't want to return to Earth.
"Sleep!" came Tuck's high voice, and as Marian turned to look at
the model of Singer's Abbey, the light in it dimmed. That gave her
a jolt, too. Hamsters were nocturnal, but since he'd awakened after
feasting on the atomball, Tuck had become more diurnal. And he had
enough Power to dim the light in his own house.
"You worry too much," Jaquar said. He reached out and took her
closed fingers in his large, elegantly long-fingered hands, lifting
one of her hands, then another to his lips.
With the brush of his mouth on her fingers, an intricate Song
bloomed between them, full-bodied, with a long melodic line.
Marian shivered. Her hands opened and her fingers twined with
his. As they joined palm to palm, a current of music twisted
between them.
The intensity of feeling, and the orchestral music, built until
her every nerve ending shivered.
"Dance with me," he said, voice low.
That was the last thing she'd expected.
Slowly, slowly, he raised her left hand to the top of his
shoulder. His smile was edged with challenge and irony-and she
sensed he dared both himself and her.
Jaquar's smile looked more ironic than amused. Then he stared
down at her. "You're surprised. Odd."
"I'm not used to.. .to melodies between people."
"But your people cherish music. I know this is so, because I
know Alyeka."
"Our.. .Power.. .doesn't manifest itself in music." It was all
Marian could say. She didn't really know how strong or how
pervasive true magic was on Earth. Surely it was secret knowledge,
practiced by only a very few.
"Do you dance?" he asked.
With the words came a rush of kindness, interest, attraction
from him. She grew light-headed.
"Yes," she said.
He set his left hand on her waist, in waltz formation. Did they
waltz here? Did Lladranans bring the waltz to Earth or vice versa?
Or did an Exotique learn it and take it home during a Snap?
The music between them surged, developed undertones, harmonies.
Jaquar swept her into a waltz, and the only music they heard was
that which they made between themselves.
He was graceful, supple, his steps wooing. More than the turns
made her dizzy. She'd never felt so womanly, so pretty. Nothing in
his gaze, his touch, his aura made her feel too tall, or too
plump.
Along with that came another realization-no one on Lladrana had
looked at her with critical eyes. Bossgond had studied her work and
snorted at her early efforts, but he'd never examined her person
with a judgmental gaze.
No one seemed to think she was overweight and out of shape. Her
body didn't seem to matter.
She felt beautiful.
And the man dancing with her was achingly alluring.
Her focus changed from herself to them, as a unit. The
dance.
Their steps matched. His body angled toward her, tempting, his
eyelids were heavy over gleaming eyes, his mouth relaxed to show
the natural softness of his lips...
With another turn, the scent of him, something male that spoke
of storms and windswept cliffs, flowed through her senses. The Song
between them mesmerized, was a primal mystery meant to be
explored.
Without thought, her body became supple, pressed against his.
Her blood heated until she felt flushed, ready, open.
The Song could go on forever and she'd enjoy every moment.
Rhythm and tempo changed, the music became slower, languorous.
He led and she followed, her senses filled with the pulse of desire
between them, soft air caressing her, embracing her as she danced
with him.
Daylight faded from the windows, let in whispering dark, and
still they danced, caught in the moment, never tiring, building a
strong connection between them.
It seemed like a dream.
Dream.
The word dropped coldly into her consciousness, opened her
memory. She'd had many lately. Dreams of the Songs and Summoning,
of Power, of doom and death. She stiffened, and with her thoughts,
the music spiked harshly.
The expectation in his eyes changed from misty to wary. He
slowed, brought them to a stop after a quick whirl, then bowed
before her, keeping his gaze on her face. "A lovely dance
indeed."
Though his voice was still quiet, Marian could almost hear his
defensive shields snapping up.
They stepped apart.
Marian cleared her throat. "It's a very strong Song between us.
Stronger than the one I have with Bossgond, even, and we're
blood-bonded. No doubt because you're my teacher and I've advanced
to Scholar?"
He smiled, and it was empty. "No doubt."
Irritation washed through Marian. He was keeping things from
her. She wondered if the same thing had happened to Alexa, and
would have bet her doctorate that it had. She'd have liked to ask
Alexa, though. Marian had discovered her telepathy didn't reach the
Castle from the islands. Where was a good telecommunications system
when you wanted it?
But Jaquar had masked his expression and moved to the doorway to
the circular stairs. "I think we should survey the small suite at
the bottom of the Tower. I haven't been there recently and don't
know how comfortable the rooms are."
"Of course." Marian smiled politely. She wanted to talk to
Alexa. Yearned for a telephone, or the crystal ball they used here.
Marian wondered who was the Circlet specializing in communications
and what they'd charge for making a link with Alexa.
She was walking briskly when she saw something on the floor near
the shelf where the model of the Singer's Abbey had been. She
didn't know why it snagged her attention, or how she saw it so
well, except that it, too, had a Song, and the minute she focused
on it, the dark tune came clearly in her mind. As she grew closer
she saw an intricately knotted length of six-stranded embroidery
floss in ox-blood red. She certainly would have missed noticing it
except for the low and slow drumbeats emanating from it.
As she picked it up, her fingers closed convulsively over the
floss and drumming poured through her, drowning all her other
senses.
Danger!
15
Only the thread in her hand had substance, and the drumming of
it eradicated all sight, sound, and even the pressure of the air on
her body, the floor under her feet. She hoped she was standing.
She wanted to scream but didn't even know if her mouth opened. A
symphony of drums would drown her out.
Don't panic. Panic could only make her situation worse.
Focus!
Feel!
And she did. She felt the tide of her own body moving in
counterpoint to the drums.
More!
She felt her Power. Pulling it, gathering the magic, started a
warmth in her feet that rose through her, accumulating speed and
heat. Her skin felt hot, tight, flushed with the magic she
contained. It spread up her neck, finally reached her face and
head.
Her ears popped and for a moment she was dizzy enough to think
the top of her skull was exploding with heat and light. The drums
subsided into a thrumming whisper just above the threshold of her
hearing.
Then she heard Jaquar's voice.
"What do you have there?" he asked sharply.
Light painted the insides of her eyelids red and she realized
she'd closed her eyes. She opened them and shook her head.
Jaquar stood a pace in front of her. "Can I see what you
have?"
Marian blinked up at him. Tension was back in his superb frame,
lining his face. "I-" It came out as a squeak lower than Tuck's at
his quietest. She tried harder. "I think this fell to the floor
when you took the model off the shelf." Relaxing every muscle of
her hand, her fingers curled open to show the thread.
Jaquar's mouth tightened. "The weapon-knot."
"Weapon?" Marian asked faintly.
He nodded. "Interesting that you can handle it. I never
could."
"What kind of weapon?"
"I don't know. We, the Circlets of the Tower, don't know."
"Please explain," Marian asked.
Shrugging, Jaquar said, "As usual, after a successful Tower
raising, I had an open house." He grinned. "You get gifts. Entanra
brought the model of the Singer's Abbey, and I put it on the shelf.
When I started cataloguing my gifts the next day, the knot was
here. I didn't know what it was, but I could feel the energy. My
parents had spent the night, and Mother realized it was a weapon,
but not what sort or how to use it. We sensed its danger. None of
us touched it. I never did. Now, there it is, in your hand." He
nodded to the thread.
Marian opened her hand flat. She seemed to have mastered the
latent energy of the thread. The drums were muffled. The dark-red
strands of the floss gleamed wetly, like living arteries. If they'd
pulsed, Marian would have dropped them and run screaming from the
room. She tried for a casual tone.
"I suppose you untie the knots to loose the weapon."
"Probably, but do you want to try it?"
"No!"
He laughed shortly. "Neither do I."
"Should I put it back?"
Jaquar turned and strode back to the door. He opened it and
started down the steps, his voice echoing hollowly back to her. "Do
what you please. As I said, I never could handle it. Consider it
yours."
Her fingers closed back over the floss. Carefully, she returned
it to the shelf.
Jaquar stood at the night-black windows of his Ritual room, the
northeastern windows facing the Dark's nest. Marian and the
mousekin had retired and now was time for thought- which should
have been full of regret, but wasn't.
He'd done it. Despite his original plans, despite all that was
wise, despite the vengeance that still raged inside him, he'd made
a Song with the new Exotique.
In the weeks since he'd found the nest, with around-the-clock
Scholars and Circlets watching it from other planes, they'd only
discovered that the place wasn't true north, but northeast. During
that time, the Exotique had gone from Apprentice to Scholar with
lightning speed. Then, just a few moments ago, she'd strolled to
the weapon-knot and picked it up, as easily as if she plucked lint
from her gown.
Obviously she was the one to send into the nest, to learn of the
monsters and the master and the Dark. To harm it, perhaps destroy
it.
A hive of activity seethed around the maw of the nest, as if it
would disgorge new sangviles soon. Sangviles that had hideously
destroyed his parents, killed exponentially, and threatened the
Tower Community.
Yet he had formed a bond with her. Vengeance warred with desire.
Not the desire of baseless lust, but of affection mixed with
caring.
He'd liked holding her.
He couldn't send her. Not without great preparation, spells of
protection, knowledge. Jaquar knew her now-Marian. Not the
Exotique, the tool for revenge, but Marian, the eager Scholar with
shadows in her eyes from pain for her brother. The woman who had a
ridiculous but powerful mousie as a companion.
He'd liked having her hands on him even more than he'd enjoyed
holding her. The dance had been wonderful. Inside the moment, his
despair had dropped from him until there was only the woman and the
emotions she made him feel.
The emotions, the Song that had resonated between them.
Affection, desire, even delight in the discovery of one who shared
talents and thought processes.
He could not send her to her destruction.
His hands fisted and a great pressure built inside his chest-
grief needing to break free. But he didn't know how to release it.
It filled him until he could hear it pounding in his ears, stinging
his eyes, drying his throat.
Beating at the shields of his emotions.
Fumbling, he opened the latch of one of the floor-length
windows, stepped out onto the roof of his study, raised his arms
and called the wind.
A gale whirled around him, sucked him up inside it, and he was
the strength and the power and the raging of it. The funnel spun
him away, shrieking out his rage. Then air whipped his eyes and he
laughed until tears ran down his face.
He rode the wind into a storm.
Another awakening in a new place.... The next morning, Marian
blinked sleep away, her eyes growing used to the gloom-and the
silence. The undertone of the music of the island, of Jaquar's
Tower, of inanimate objects still pulsed, but there was no clatter
of Tuck. Or of Bossgond.
Or Jaquar-though, as she thought of him she heard notes
cascading from above like those from musical strings.
Sighing, she stretched under the quilt. There was a feel to the
room as if the season was deep winter-the chamber was warm and dark
and cozy, with threatening cold outside. It seemed to have missed
rejuvenating spring. Frowning, she tested the whole Tower and found
that the "winter" was Jaquar's underlying grief and low-level
depression, the "threat" was the sangvile.
She didn't want to remember the image of the sangvile.
And the quiet was too much. So she hurried to the shower cabinet
and bathed and dressed. Then she left her rooms for the corridor
that bisected the floor, and went to the door to the staircase
tower and up.
She learned something immediately. Jaquar's Tower wasn't nearly
as soundproof as Bossgond's.
"No! I won't. That's final." His tone was sharp even through the
door.
He'd said no to Bossgond. Was the old mage pressuring him
again?
"I'll see you this evening, and I'll come alone."
Marian hesitated. Should she strum the doorharp or leave?
"Marian, Marian," squeaked Tuck. He scrabbled on the other side
of the door, tiny paws showing under the crack.
"Scholar Marian awaits me. Until later," Jaquar said
tersely.
So Marian ran her thumbnail over the doorharp and smiled at the
pleasing riff of notes. She wanted to do it again, and recalled how
Alexa had enjoyed sounding Bossgond's. Easily amused, we Earth
women, she thought with a smile, then looked up as Jaquar opened
the door.
He was scowling.
She curtsied. Tuck shot forward and patted her foot in greeting.
She scooped him up and put him on her shoulder. "Good morning,
Tuck."
The hamster cuddled close to her neck, thrummed against her
throat. With surprise, she realized a Song ran between her and her
companion now. They'd both progressed in their own way to make one.
And it resonated with memory-tones of Earth as well as new and
exciting experiences in Lladrana.
Jaquar took a pace back and held the door wide. "Come in. I have
reviewed your work in the planet spheres. They continue to progress
extremely well. It is definitely time to start your practicum. We
will work outside this morning."
Marian raised her brows. "Good morning to you, too." She entered
the room.
Color deepened under the golden tone of his cheekbones. He
inhaled deeply, closed the door quietly behind her. Then he
inclined his torso in an elegant half bow that emphasized his body
under the fine cream-colored linen shirt and brown suede trousers
he wore. "Forgive me, I was concentrating on work." He gestured her
in. "Breakfast is in the hotbox."
Something about him was different. She studied him closely from
under her eyelashes. He was pale, lines of weariness slightly
deeper at the corners of his eyes, but his muscles seemed...looser.
He no longer hummed with stress. With exquisite care, she sought
the tune echoing between them, analyzing it. The edge of his grief
was gone, mellowed into resignation. Perhaps the feeling of
melancholy would soon fade from his Tower, too. He wouldn't thank
her for commenting on either him or his Tower, though.
He led her to the chairs they'd sat in last night when she'd
revived his terrariums. When she sat, he placed a lovely black
lacquered tray over her knees. The dishes looked like fine china,
but the coffee mug was sturdy. On her plate was an omelette-since
two sorts of cheese oozed out the end and the top had a sprig of
what looked like dill, she could only hope that the meal was more
than fuel.
Cautiously she tried a bite, and moaned in pleasure at the
delicious mixture of tastes.
That pulled him from his brooding and he actually smiled. "I'd
heard that Bossgond's meals weren't too tasty."
"Mmm," Marian said. She didn't want to criticize Bossgond, but
couldn't disagree. "I would have liked to interview the cook who
arrived, though."
"You can trust Alyeka," Jaquar said.
Marian smiled. "Yes." In fact, Alexa was the only one
Marian trusted.
Meanwhile, she enjoyed the meal he placed before her and darted
looks around his den as he sat staring into his coffee.
Tuck had already eaten and was exploring Jaquar's study. From
the hamster's comments, she understood that he found it a
wonderfully fragrant and interesting place. She wanted to
investigate, too, but from Jaquar's closed expression, figured that
he'd hustle her out of his space and on to the less intimate
environs of the island as soon as she took her last sip of the
excellent coffee.
She'd already noticed that his octagonal room captured more
sunlight than Bossgond's round Tower.
He had more bell jars than Bossgond-for experimenting with
weather? And a lot of what most Earth people would call magical
tools-staffs of different woods and metals, wands,
ceremonial knives with no edge and wickedly sharp daggers. There
was also a collection of small boxes, as varied as the staffs, and
Marian longed to open them all and see what treasures they
held.
The chamber had an underlying elegance that was so much a part
of Jaquar. She took her gaze from the sweeping shelves of tidy
books to the man as he lounged, and a stray thought came that he'd
be devastating in a tuxedo. Not that she'd ever see him in one.
He wasn't what she'd expected. Of course she'd only met him
briefly, but she'd sensed he was trying to sweep her away with his
charm. Since they'd met again, he hadn't acted deliberately
charming at all, and she liked that.
In fact, she liked him, and the Song that twined between them.
They had much in common-love and concern for their family, a
passion for study, and weather Power. Absently, she drained her cup
and set it on the tray.
"Are you ready?"
"Yes."
He whistled a note and the dishes disappeared. Marian grinned.
For all the times she'd seen the spell, it was still one of her
favorites. She'd learned the task her second evening with
Bossgond.
Jaquar tilted his head, his gaze fixed on Tuck, who was sniffing
the lowest shelf of boxes. "Tuck, Marian and I will be spending the
morning outside. Will you be fine here?"
"Yes." Tuck didn't even look in their direction.
"Can you please stay in this room?"
Tuck hesitated, raised his head and looked at them. He bobbed.
"Yes."
"Thank you," Jaquar said, still polite.
His manner toward Tuck warmed Marian. That was another thing she
and Jaquar had in common-they liked and respected Tuck. Marian had
always sensed that Bossgond wanted to dissect Tuck, searching to
see if the atomball he ate was still lodged somewhere inside.
Still courteous, Jaquar led the way to the narrow curving stairs
and started down them. Marian carefully shut the door behind her,
testing it to make sure it was shut, then followed Jaquar.
He strode from the bottom of the stairway turret through the
hallway on the bottom floor of his Tower and threw open the heavy
front door. Bright sunshine painted the hallway floor yellow.
Interesting that both Bossgond and Jaquar had main entrances that
faced east-was that a male thing, an innate preference to look
toward Lladrana and not out to the sea, or did all main doors face
east?
He went out and stopped at the edge of a golden line-his
protective spell, no doubt-and carved a door in it with his
telescoping wand that currently was the size of Alexa's baton.
Marian stood at the threshold and inhaled the scent of Mue
Island-it was as different from Alf as Jaquar was from Bossgond.
There was more of the mainland scent, since the island was closer
to Lladrana; there was also more ocean because the island was
smaller. The fragrances of the island soil and flowers and trees
varied subtly, and were more pleasing to her than the astringent
air around Bossgond's tower. The atmosphere burgeoned with early
summer.
Her spirits lifted and she caught herself humming counterpoint
to the tune of the island, a tune that was one chord of the melody
comprising Jaquar's personal Song. Then Marian sighed. Would she be
here on Amee long enough to fully develop her own Song?
The wish to stay condensed into a hard kernel of yearning within
her-something she couldn't fulfill if she wanted to be near
Andrew.
Jaquar motioned for her to join him. When she did, he hesitated
a moment, then took her hand, closing his fingers over hers.
Warmth, and simple pleasure at the easy link flowed through Marian
and she smiled up at him.
He returned her smile, and it reached his eyes, banishing the
dark shadows of grief.
"As 1 said last night, we'll start with wind and clouds. The
best place for that is on the western coast of the island where the
wind blows in from the ocean." He shrugged. "There are only a
couple of tiny islands that no one of the Tower Community has
claimed between Mue and the Brisay Sea."
Excitement bubbled through her. She would have rubbed her hands,
but wanted to keep her fingers in his. "Great!"
He chuckled. "1 don't anticipate that you will have any problems
with the clouds-that's Second Degree Scholar work and you are at
the upper edge of Third Degree."
Her step hesitated.
"What?" he asked.
"Third Degree means something entirely different-a negative
connotation in my own language."
Interest sharpened his gaze. "What?"
Oh boy. How to define the phrase? "It is a very harsh
interrogation by the authorities." And then "the authorities"
needed explaining.
They had walked across a meadow of tall grass to a grove of
evergreen trees, and Marian looked back to see the Tower in its
entirety.
As she'd suspected, the lower two floors were of greater
diameter and the reddish stone looked small, more like cobblestones
or bricks. The other three stories were definitely octagonal, with
large pairs of pointed windows, airy and graceful from the outside
as well as the inside.
She frowned. Every few feet around the lower two stories were
jagged dark marks, like soot or gunpowder. She stopped and stared.
"What happened?"
Jaquar tensed beside her, then replied neutrally. "Even as a
Circlet, fire isn't my strong suit. As I raised the Tower and
called Lightning, it came-and singed the stone, and pointed
directly to my keystone. I couldn't clean it, so the only option
was to call it down several times to keep the stone's location
secret."
"There must be twenty marks around the base of your Tower."
Jaquar dropped her hand, turned and strode away. "I called a
lightning storm. That was the result. I was still quite young at
the time."
It was obviously a sore point, so she abandoned the subject and
hurried to catch up with him. "Is the meadow close?" She hadn't
walked so much since her trip to Paris as she had the past two and
a half weeks.
"Close enough. Your practice with clouds-" he glanced up as if
confirming there were plenty to work with "-should only take a
quarter-hour. Then you can progress to other 'air' lessons such as
Calling the Wind. The meadow is flat and also a perfect spot to
practice Wind Dancing."
Calling the Wind. Wind Dancing. Anticipation zipped through her.
"How lovely," she said, and swung into step with him.
He looked down at her and chuckled. "You're a Sorceress through
and through."
"A scholar," she said, nodding. "I always have been." Wistfully,
she thought back to her apartment, her old studies. They'd been
ongoing, but not nearly as enticing as learning magic-Power.
The moment they reached the meadow, he put her to work. They lay
side by side on the sunny grass and looked up at the clouds. After
all the time she'd spent with the terrariums, it was easy for her
to send her mind and will and Power into the sky to shape the
clouds and move them around. She was concentrating so on proving
her worth that the awareness of his big body beside hers, nearly
touching, almost didn't register. Almost.
She couldn't afford the distraction of thinking about the strong
aura of him, the well-formed muscles, the thickness and sheen of
his hair....
It had definitely been too damn long since she'd had sex. And
the moment that idea crossed her mind, the cloud she'd been
herding disintegrated into a dozen little ones. Luckily, Jaquar had
just said, "Done." Her timing had been perfect.
Still, she didn't roll over to look at him, but scrambled to her
feet, took a handkerchief from her gown pocket and wiped her
forehead. Then she grinned at him, pretending the heat in her had
been generated by her Power instead of thoughts of rolling around
with him. "What's next?" she asked.
His eyes narrowed, then took on a twinkle. The little Song
between them spiked in intensity and beat, but he replied with a
smile, "Now you Call the Wind."
16
Marian clasped her hands together to keep them from trembling
with excitement. Her first real use of Weather Magic came now!
Again Jaquar's instructions were succinct and the Songspell easy
to learn. The whistling words and rushing rhythm made innate sense
to Marian, as if she'd always known this Song. She only needed to
discover it within herself.
So she lifted her arms and spoke-sang the spell, and a gentle
breeze wafted tendrils of her hair that had escaped her braid, then
died when she laughed, forgetting to hold it. She looked to Jaquar,
aching to share her delight in this first real proof of her magic.
Bossgond was so old, she didn't think he remembered what it felt
like when magic was new and exhilarating and shooting through your
veins.
Jaquar was relaxed, leaning against a tree and smiling at her.
Since he also had the old-memory look in his eyes, she guessed that
he recalled very well how she felt. Their eyes met. Another moment
shared.
A bubble of happiness broke from her mouth in a giggle. She
lifted her hand to put it over her mouth at the silly sound, then
let her fingers drop. She didn't need to be anyone except her
essential self here and now, did not need to wear a mask, to
project an image. So she laughed and stretched her arms high and
shouted, "Yes!" Then, "What's next?" she asked eagerly.
He didn't move from the tree at the edge of the clearing,
staying out of her magical space, giving her room to work. His
brows rose. "Now you summon a stronger wind." His gaze turned
considering. He rested his hands on his hips, nodded decisively. "I
think you are ready to Call the Zephyr, the wind you will use most
often over land to modify weather, and Dance with it." He swept a
judging glance over her and she sensed he was examining the potency
and energy of her Power. "Ready?"
Marian shifted, settled into a stance that connected her with
the island. "Yes."
"This is the Zephyr Songspell." He sang it and the richness of
his tenor thrilled her so, that she had to ask him for the first
words again. She flushed when she didn't get it right the first
time. Patiently he repeated the words.
She mouthed the whole Song to herself, then looked at him with
drawn brows. "Can I alter a few words? They seem a little-" she
opened and closed her hands as if trying to grasp something
"-masculine. Or something."
He tilted his head. "Which words do you want to alter? Tell me
your Song."
Running through it again with the minor modifications, she
waited, not breathing, until he nodded. "That will do fine. You
are a quick study, and progressing, too, if you are shaping
the Songs to fit you."
She nodded in return, licked her lips and loosened her
shoulders. Then she raised her arms and sang.
The breeze spun around her, bringing all the scents of
spring-the wildflowers as well as the awakening soil, the hints of
dark pine and fading blossoms from the forested hills-and she
laughed in delight.
"Keep control," Jaquar instructed, "but provide more energy,
more Power, more stirring and push. See if you can have it
lift you from your feet. The air is already in motion, it shouldn't
be too difficult."
The thought of it, and her breeze, took her breath from her. She
followed directions. In her mind's eye, she visualized her large
yellow mixing bowl, the whisk she used to beat eggs, and applied
the memory of physically whipping the eggs to the use of her Power.
In an instant the wind increased, battered her, flipped her gown
high around her waist, lifted her several feet in the air, spinning
her. The little grooming spell on her long hair didn't survive.
Strands lashed her face. Her laugh turned into a shriek, part
excitement, mostly fear.
She didn't know what to do next. The wind was too strong for
her.
Hold. Jaquar's calm voice came in her mind and she didn't
know if he spoke to her or the wind. And still.
The rotation of the air-of her-slowed, and she lowered. She
misjudged the height and the moment when the breeze stopped, and
landed awkwardly off balance. She took a couple of stumbling steps,
windmilled, but fell.
Then she stared at the blue sky and the clouds.. .clouds she
could move and shape. She stretched out her arms-she felt as if she
were breaking from a constricting cocoon. Yes. More, more,
more!
Jaquar's shadow fell over her and the man himself looked down
with an odd expression on his face, as if he'd been surprised by
some new fact that killed a pet theory of his.
Marian laughed. Though handsome as the devil, he was like many
other scholars she'd known. Like her.
So she smiled up at him.
His face scrunched further, emotions warring behind his gaze.
Then a great breath escaped him. He smiled, sadly, shrugged and
offered her his hand.
She took it and welcomed the Song that rang between them. It was
all part of the beauty of the day.
With a tug, he drew her to her feet.
And into his arms.
She glanced up at him in surprise and he took advantage of her
parted lips to press his mouth on hers.. .and everything else
faded.
The kiss seared through her like a scorching wind, leaving her
knees so weak that she leaned against him and learned him in a
whole new way-his body in intimate comparison to hers. Taller,
broader, stronger.
Harder.
Except his lips-they were soft and intoxicating, nibbling at her
mouth just as the sensuality of their Song nibbled at her
reason.
For a while she just gloried in the rush of passion, of all the
sensations that told her she was strong and womanly and desired.
His arm was a solid bar across her back, holding but not forcing.
His other hand curved around her hip, then squeezed as he exhaled a
small groan. The tip of his tongue penetrated her mouth and she
tasted him, exotic and spicy and rich as the darkest bittersweet
chocolate. She wanted more of this, too.
The music was nearly overwhelming. If she let it, the melody
could sweep away reason and logic and sense. Something that had
happened before only at the peak of orgasm. She should be
frightened at the undercurrents and riptide of passion, but instead
it was tempting, for once in her life, to forget reason and only
feel.
His hand went to her bottom, brought her into his body and
against his hard erection. A moan of hunger escaped her-she wasn't
positioned quite.. .right. But his mouth had moved from hers to
below her ear, trailing down her jaw to her neck, and her skin
heated and her pulse pounded and she thought she was melting into
him. The beat of their music wound tight.
A moment later he lowered her to the ground, followed her down
to lay beside her, his hand going to her breasts.
The ground was sun-warmed beneath her, but it hummed an alien
tune. No familiar Song of Mother Earth, but something odd and
thready and broken that jolted her from the haze of passion.
She rolled away. His hand reached, but she kept moving until she
was beyond his grasp, beyond his close scent that called to her to
mate. Marian forced herself to one elbow, then the other. Panting,
she dared not look at him in case she lost all rationality again.
The man was definitely dangerous.
He stood and said nothing. She didn't think he'd offer his hand
again, but in case he did, she scrambled to her feet.
She'd known the sexual awareness was there, had half-fantasized
about the man, but didn't realize until now how utterly she could
succumb to him. It wasn't just fighting her own attraction to him,
but fighting his great magnetism. And the Song that spiraled
between them burst into full orchestral Power when they touched.
Too many things were in the "minus" column, but the way her body
felt, the way he made her feel beautiful were huge pluses.
Not looking at him, she shook out her dress-unnecessary since
there weren't any wrinkles-to give herself something to do. Then
her hands went to her hair and she tunelessly whispered the
grooming spell that tucked strands smoothly into a braid. He gazed
at her.
"I thought," he said in a husky voice, "you had a repetition of
that vision you received the moment we met so soon after you were
Summoned. But that isn't why you drew away, is it?"
Marian composed her expression and looked at him. His eyes were
deep blue, and she thought she could see sparks in them. His lips
were more red than she'd seen on any Lladranan. She ran a tongue
around her own and found them plump, and the taste of him jolted
her once more. She took a step back.
"No." She wasn't sure she could explain why the Song of the
world of Amee had affected her so.
"Since we are on the topic of our first meeting, what revelation
did you have about me?" His muscles tensed.
"I don't know," she said on a sigh, and met his now cool gaze.
"Just that you were my doom." It sounded stupid.
He stood and looked down at her, expression serious. "My
emotions were raw at that time."
She narrowed her eyes. He was still keeping something from
her-but what right did she have to demand he tell his secrets?
None. They had a lot in common, but they weren't close friends.
Acquaintances, colleagues-with him being the senior-perhaps even
bordering on lovers... That might be it! She worked it out in her
mind, slowly speaking the logic aloud.
"Are you talking about a bond between us-like I have with
Bossgond-that might have harmed me?"
"My emotions were raw," he said again, with just enough emphasis
for her to know that he hated admitting it.
"I've learned that bonding with people here can keep me on Amee
instead of returning me to Earth during the Snap." She turned her
arm so he could see the two magical tattoos-Bossgond's yellow bird
and Alexa's jade baton.
Jaquar's mouth twisted. "You already have two bonds, and you
still want to go back to your brother." He started walking, but not
toward his Tower. Another lesson? Perhaps. They were both dedicated
scholars.
"Bossgond has been solitary for a long time. He knows how much
my brother Andrew means to me and has said he'd help me
return-perhaps even come back to Amee if I'm successful in helping
my brother. So he won't hold on to me." Marian matched steps with
Jaquar. "As for Alexa-she's from Earth so her bond isn't completely
Lladranan. She, too, understands about my brother and wouldn't keep
me here against my will."
"Sounds logical, but what is logical in theory is not often true
in reality," Jaquar said softly.
Soon they reached a tiny cove surrounded by rock. Narrowing her
eyes, Marian thought she could see the coastline of Lladrana-so
this was the eastern side of Mue Island.
"You are excellent with Wind- Fourth Degree edging into fifth,"
Jaquar said. "Let's work with Water and Rain. There are several
pools in the cove where you can practice tides and surf and wave.
The cove itself is an excellent shape and size to develop rain. We
won't work with thunderstorms today-that is best conducted on the
far southwest of the island."
That was a blessing. Marian was beginning to feel tired.
Jaquar gestured to a nearby pool. "Why don't you start with
something simple, like evaporating the water and holding it in the
air."
Marian walked over to the pool, smiling, then stopped. "I
can't." She shook her head. "There are creatures in this pool. I
can't harm them." She glanced at Jaquar, to see an approving look
in his eyes.
He nodded shortly. "Good. You have a strong ethical basis
and a realization that the use of your Power to modify
Weather could greatly affect them."
"Thank you," she murmured.
"However, the residents of this particular pool won't be
affected by your evaporation unless you also draw all the moisture
out of their bodies-"
Ick.
"-and I'll be here to ensure that doesn't happen."
That's when the work began.
The water was slippery-as slippery to hold with her mind as it
was to cup in her hands. Time and again she slowly lifted the
water, to find it escaping her mental grasp before she could fold
it into the air. She started enthusiastically with about a
pitcherful, but after a couple of hours she was down to a cupful,
and of that, could only make a few drops evaporate.
Jaquar was so even-tempered that it grated on her nerves. She
sweated in the warm sunlight and he lounged on a rock, writing on a
scroll and watching her lack of accomplishment.
Exasperated, she rounded on him-and found his patience was
nothing but a pose, his mouth curved in an amused smile.
"What are you laughing at?"
He just raised his brows. "I was wondering if you would prove to
be the exception to the rule that Weather Sorcerers are better in
one element than others. It would have been trying if you were
perfect."
Marian stopped in midsnarl, relaxed. Then she rubbed her
temples. "The water is so damn slippery."
"It is at that," he said in suspicious agreement.
"I suppose you have no trouble with water."
"I had the same amount of trouble with it as you are having when
I was a first-degree Scholar."
She sighed. "A long time ago. So it will take me years to become
proficient with it."
"Probably, even though your Power is strong and you've advanced
rapidly, this could be your weak point."
She had others-her need for perfection was one. She grimaced. "I
suppose we should call it a day."
"Yes, I have my own studies this evening, but I will leave you
with my entire medical library to peruse."
That drove every other thought out of her mind. "Great!" Her
eyebrows dipped. "Something-I don't know-something today made me
think that there is help for him here." She couldn't understand it,
but once she spoke the words aloud, she knew it was true. She
instinctively believed Lladrana had the answers her brother
needed.
Jaquar stared at her thoughtfully. "Everyone has been speaking
about you-that would include Alyeka, and she knows your world and
ours. Today you called the Wind and the Zephyr. There might have
been notes of a tune, perhaps even a melody within the winds that
told you this."
She blinked at him, then wondered if she'd ever understand
enough about Lladranan Power.
When they reached Jaquar's tower, his huge black flying horse
was cropping grass near the building. The sight of packs loaded on
the volaran made Marian blink. Nothing in the world-in two
worlds-looked less like a beast of burden.
It raised its head, tossed its mane and whinnied. Marian heard a
faint Heyy in her head, obviously a greeting. It watched her
with huge dark eyes, seeming as interested in her as she was in
it.
Jaquar strode over to it and stroked its neck, his face
softening into a smile. Then he glanced up at Marian. "This is
Nightsky. He is honoring me with his companionship." Jaquar
whistled and the packs vanished in a riffling breeze. Marian made
an involuntary sound-she'd noticed the hem of one of her gowns and
it was hard to see it disappear again. She bit her lip and looked
up at the Tower.
"I sent them to my study," Jaquar said.
She nodded.
"Come meet Nightsky."
There was nothing she wanted more. She walked slowly to the
volaran, held out her hand, fingers down, for him to snuffle.
Heyy, he said again, aloud and in her mind. Slowly lifting
his muzzle, he sniffed at her hair. Good. It was more of a
feeling and an image-of a lump of sugar-than a word.
Marian laughed and Jaquar smiled. "Not many volarans deign to
speak to humans. We are honored." He bowed to the horse, who blew
air from his nostrils.
Going to the steed's other side, Marian stroked him herself. His
coat was finer, silkier than a horse's, feeling almost like tiny
feathers, over a strong muscular body. She frowned. "How do they
fly?"
She met Jaquar's eyes.
He raised his brows and smiled. He patted the volaran again. "We
have studied that and have come to the conclusion that they are
pure magic-Power."
The volaran felt awfully solid to her. She narrowed her eyes at
Jaquar. He shrugged.
"Very well. It's a combination of aerodynamics-" the word barely
translated in Marian's mind "-and Power."
"He's real, physical."
"Of course."
Marian shook her head, smiling. Pleasure emanated from the
winged horse, wrapping around both her and Jaquar. The smile faded
from Jaquar's gaze, turning into something more- affection,
tenderness. They held the stare and the late-afternoon air warmed,
almost sparkled, definitely hummed. Added was the resonant note of
the nearby Tower and wildness mixed with Power that was
Nightsky.
The soft mood spun between them-affection, respect, this shared
moment that contented them both.
A sharp trill of metallic chimes echoed from the open window of
Jaquar's Tower. His expression turned wry. "I'd say that Bossgond
sent you a crystal ball and he wants to speak with you."
Bossgond. Andrew! The old man had promised to keep track
of Andrew for her. She ran to the door of the Tower, flapped her
hands at Jaquar to hurry him up. It didn't work. He sauntered to
her.
She gritted her teeth, she wanted to hop up and down. "Bossgond
may have news of my brother, Andrew!"
Jaquar's brows winged up. "What?"
"Bossgond has binoculars focused on Earth-Exotique Terre-and my
brother."
"Those binocs of his are trans-dimensional?"
"Yes, yes!" She stepped aside and let him chant the opening
spell under his breath. He strode through the corridor and over to
the stairs. She hurried after him.
They ascended fast and flung open the door at the top. He
stopped and she tried to jostle by him, but the man filled the
small doorway. She poked him and he stepped aside, shaking his head
and staring.
She followed his gaze. Tuck had unwrapped all the packages and
had made a nice nest of her underwear. Marian trapped a groan in
her throat, felt her face warm with embarrassment. It wouldn't be
so bad except the garments were like her-Exotique.
The chime came again and she leaped for the small yellow glass
ball sitting atop the folds of her maroon dress. The orb was small
enough to fit in her hand. She curled her fingers over it and said,
"Hello? Hello?" When nothing happened, she shook it, like it was a
snow-globe, then stared at it futilely.
Jaquar plucked it from her hand, held it in his palm and tapped
his thumbnail against the glass. "Bossgond," he said.
Bossgond's face stared out at them, scowling.
"Andrew?" asked Marian.
The old man's frown deepened. "He looks as usual. Salutations,
Marian."
She let out a relieved breath. "Salutations, Bossgond." She
dipped her head a little in courtesy.
He studied her, face smoothing into his usual grumpy wrinkles.
"I need-wanted to ensure that you were well."
"Very well. Today I heard something in the wind that said I
might find help for Andrew."
Bossgond snorted, looked at Jaquar. "Report on the Scholar
Marian," Bossgond demanded.
Marian's face went perfectly blank. An oral evaluation with her
present?
"She is progressing well," Jaquar said easily. "Level five with
Wind, a solid level one in Water."
Grunting, Bossgond said, "Has a problem with Ocean, eh? Wasn't
noticeable in the ecospheres."
"No," Jaquar agreed.
"Told you she was best with Lightning, so is naturally weakest
with Ocean. Have you given her any practicums in Lightning?"
Jaquar's cheeks tinted red. "No. That will come the easiest, and
the best Lightning Study grounds are at the far end of the
island."
"Very well. I heard from Chalmon that the maw of the nest is
quite active."
Marian listened sharply. This wasn't a topic she knew of or
understood.
Jaquar shrugged. "It has been so the past few days. Hard to
extrapolate what is happening or may occur."
Bossgond grunted again, turned his stare back to Marian. He
smiled, and Marian nearly jumped at the unexpected charm of it.
"The cook is good, Marian." Bossgond licked his lips. "Thank
you."
She returned his smile. "You're welcome."
He seemed hesitant. "I miss you," he said gruffly.
Touched, Marian felt tears behind her eyes. "I miss you,
too."
"I'm working on a Sending to return you to Exotique Terre. We
can probably do it in the time period you require-three more
weeks."
Squinting into the small orb, Marian could see his desk piled
with papers and scrolls and books. She cleared her throat. "Thank
you."
He nodded, glanced at her, then Jaquar. "Proceed with her
training. When she is close to Circlet in all areas, bring her back
to me."
Jaquar raised his eyebrows, but all he said was, "Yes."
"Good studies," Bossgond said, and the crystal ball went
dark.
"Marian! Jaquar," Tuck said, sitting in his nest of Marian's
underwear.
She hurried over and picked him up. Holding him up to eye level,
she said, "Hello, Tuck."
"Hello, Marian. Hello, Jaquar," Tuck said. "Marian did well
today?"
"Very well," Jaquar assured the hamster seriously. "She has
great Power and will and is rapidly learning basic technique in
Wind. She just needs the skill of control."
Marian flushed at the memory of tipping and falling in the wind.
She hoped she did better with Lightning.
Tuck nodded. "I will tell Sinafin."
Jaquar continued. "She is not as skilled with Ocean."
Tuck waved a paw. "Water is not as important for Marian as
fire."
They stared at him, then at each other. Though they both had a
thirst for knowledge, Marian sensed Jaquar was as reluctant as she
was to question Tuck about Sinafin. This whole conversation seemed
to be straying into prophecy. From the tension in Jaquar's muscles,
Marian thought he no more wished to learn of the future or
Sinafin's agenda than she did.
"Nice garments," Jaquar said, and Marian realized he was staring
at her underwear. He grinned wickedly. "They look better on Marian,
though."
With a sniff, Marian set Tuck on her shoulder, scooped up her
clothing and held out her hand for the crystal ball.
Suddenly she wanted to be alone and as far away as she could
from all the strangeness-which meant holing up in her rooms. "With
your permission, Circlet Jaquar, I would like to retire to my rooms
and eat dinner there." Maybe she could conjure up food that was
close to American cuisine. "I think you have an appointment this
evening."
All expression vanished from his face, and Marian stilled in
wariness. Cool, unreadable blue eyes met hers.
"That I do. I will transfer my lorebooks on medicine to your
desk." He turned and walked away.
Tuck's claws dug into her shoulder. Danger, he said.
"How do you know?"
"Sinafin said-"
"Am I safe here in the Tower?"
He came up close and rubbed against her neck, his soft fur
comforting as well as tickling. "Yes."
She nodded decisively. "I'll be careful." Walking to the stairs,
she started down. There had been that warning premonition about
Jaquar. Thinking about the man-his sad and steady blue eyes, the
lovely dance they'd shared, the fun of playing with the
Wind-created a warmth inside her. The sexual attraction between
them was potent. She also liked him a great deal-and that was a
priority. Never again would she let simple physical attraction lure
her into intimacy with a man as she had with the late, unlamented
associate professor Jack Wilse.
But Jaquar Dumont was not Jack Wilse. The Sorcerer had a
presence, probably from his mastery of Power, that Marian
believed Wilse would never have.
Jaquar definitely made her insides tingle and her toes curl.
What harm could it do to have a good, hot fling here in
Lladrana?
She didn't know.
She had no idea what sort of ramifications emotionally, but more
importantly, socially, a sexual affair might entail. The worst was
the idea of a bond. They already had a potent Song between
them-stronger even than hers with Bossgond, and that had included
blood.
She'd have to beware of becoming emotionally involved with
Jaquar. She couldn't afford to have sex with him-not if it would
bind her to Lladrana.
17
Though Marian had gone to her rooms to feel less alien, the
rooms were, of course, as different from her own apartment in
Boulder as everything else on Lladrana was different from her other
life. She sat at the intricately carved desk, which repeated the
pattern of Jaquar's golden circlet, and brooded. By the time she'd
reached the apprentice suite a few minutes earlier, books and
scrolls had already materialized on her desk.
Tuck had clamored to explore, so she'd put him down and heard
scrambling and peeps in the background as he took stock of her
quarters.
She'd spent most of her time in practical lessons and hadn't
read much the past few days-a unique situation for her. Usually she
consumed books, both fiction and nonfiction. After eyeing the
books, she knew when she opened one that it would be in unfamiliar
script. She had bonded with Bossgond, who certainly knew how
to read, and Alexa who probably knew how to read in both English
and Lladranan, so Marian should be able to read, too.
She propped her head on her elbows and rubbed her temples. A
slight whoosh came to her ears, and the Tower's atmosphere
changed subtly. Jaquar was gone.
Tension drained from her, and only then did she realize that
she'd been waiting for him to leave. Now she was totally alone for
the first time since she'd arrived on Lladrana, and it felt...
good. Not at all scary.
As he flew on Nightsky to Chalmon's island, Jaquar considered
Marian. Since the dance the night before, she had seldom left his
thoughts.
Jaquar shouldn't want to bond with Marian. She wasn't staying in
Lladrana, and the heartache wasn't worth the passion. He lied to
himself. With Marian, he felt so alive, so complemented by another
person, that he knew the sex would be better than he'd ever
had.
But he wanted more. He wanted what his parents had had.
Bossgond had called to check up on him, and that fired Jaquar's
blood. As if Bossgond thought he'd hurt her.. .continue with his
original plan. It had been tempting, until he kissed her. Then
Sending her to the Dark's maw had become impossible.
Even now, unemotional logic said that her connection with the
weapon-knot made her perfect for the task of destroying the nest.
All she had to do was pull a thread.. .and kill herself.
Perhaps that was not true. No one knew how Powerful the knot
was, whether it would destroy the nest, whether it would kill if
she used it. But he wouldn't mention this to Chalmon and
Venetria.
No one knew whether the nest would be wounded, how much, if
Marian was Sent there. So logic bolstered his emotional decision.
He wanted vengeance, but not at the expense of an injured Marian.
His goals had changed. He would not use Marian as a weapon against
the Dark. He'd convince Chalmon and Venetria not to act on their
own. Now he must concentrate on teaching Marian, and her
best weapon would be Lightning.
Marian still hadn't opened a book when Tuck cheeped excitedly,
"What's this, what's this, what's this?" A scrabbling noise.
"Food!"
Marian tilted her head. She didn't recall having any food in her
rooms. There was a crash from the bedroom. It sounded... Earthlike.
Dread speared her, she shoved back the chair and ran into the
bedroom, yelling "Light!" Fire crackled to life in the fireplace.
Crystal globes flared brightly.
Tuck put his paws over his eyes, squeaking indignantly.
"Hurts!"
Humming, Marian lowered the light, then saw the destruction. Her
stomach cramped.
Tuck sat in the midst of the remains of her PDA. She stared at
it, horrified. Tiny electronic parts, as esoteric to her as any
magic she'd learned, were scattered in bits around the hamster.
Anger flashed through her. She'd considered the PDA her very own
tangible link with her homeland. It had been the symbol of the
control she had over her life, the knowledge she'd mastered-control
that was currently missing in the chaos of adapting to a whole new
world. She stared at the hamster, who sat back on his haunches and
groomed his whiskers with tiny claws. Obviously he had the digits
and Power to open the computer.
"What have you done?"
"It was dying."
She flinched. She hadn't wanted to admit that, even though she'd
only been turning it on for a few seconds at a time to see familiar
colors and menus and notes that represented her old life.
Tuck burped. "So I ate it."
"What?"
"I opened the nut up and ate the kernel. Now I know everything
it knows."
Marian was speechless.
Tuck squeezed his eyes shut and emitted a huff. When he opened
his eyes, they were all too sentient, all too understanding of her
emotions. What had she kept in her Personal Notes section?
"Just like I ate the golden nut Sinafin gave me, I ate the nut
inside that thing that beeped."
It had-every morning when it was time to leave for her bus to
work, when she had important meetings, lunches, parties.
Thanksgiving at her friends', for heaven's sake! Somehow she
couldn't see Tuck beeping.
"You know everything?" she asked weakly.
"Pick up the laundry every Tuesday evening at 6:00 p.m.," he
said, then continued, "Andrew's birthday March twenty-second."
"That's the appointment book," she confirmed. "May I pick you
up?"
"Yes. It was a tiring dinner."
"Oh." She took Tuck, went to the armchair she'd created in which
to talk to him and placed him in his tufted nest. He curled up and
watched her with bright black eyes.
Marian settled into the deep chair. It conformed to her body and
she sighed in pleasure. With a wave and just a little grief, she
dissolved the remnants of her PDA into molecules and sent them into
a storage lattice of Power that Bossgond had shown her how to use
and had sent with her things that were now spread out on the bed.
She wasn't sure how she'd use the complex molecules but was sure
she'd figure out something.
Tuck blew out a breath.
She shook her head. "I really can't see how I can play Solitaire
with you."
He hunched up and hummed quietly, just as her PDA had!
"Watch."
Midway between them, a small image of her last Solitaire game
appeared.
"Wow. I'm impressed." She was beginning to enjoy herself.
"Music?"
His eyes bulged even more than normal and he opened his mouth.
Strains of "Over the Sea to Skye" played on guitar poured
forth.
Marian listened, entranced, tears again coming to her eyes. This
time they rolled down her cheeks. That had been her favorite track
on the last album Andrew had given her. She summoned a tissue,
wiped her eyes and blew her nose.
"You played that one the most," Tuck said, sitting again on his
rump, paws in front of him.
"Yes."
"I didn't understand music before. Your music in the square nut
is different from the Songs I learned when I crunched the golden
walnut. I ate the shell of that nut, but not yours."
"I'm amazed that you could eat the meat of my 'nut' at all," she
said.
He opened his mouth in what she'd come to know was his smile.
"You liked the nut and didn't want it to die. I wanted more
mind-food. I thought how I could do it, and I did."
Like person, like animal companion. "Yes, you did!" Songs. That
meant prophecies in Lladrana. What sort of Songs had the golden
walnut carried and Tuck absorbed? "So what did the Songs in your
first nut say?"
His whiskers twitched, his paws clasped each other. "Sinafin
said I was not to tell."
Marian could probably coax it from him, but respected him enough
not to try. She respected a hamster. That sounded crazy. She
bit down on her lip. He was an intelligent being, and he was her
friend more than he was a pet or animal companion. And now he was
the only thing she had from Earth. Her eyes widened in horror. And
what would she do if she lost Tuck? The bits of plastic and glass
and metal around him that had been her mainstay in Colorado were
nothing compared to him.
She'd have to find some way to protect him.
He said, "You do not need to worry. I am very strong. I will
live long, now, and I have much Power."
She wondered how much hamster and how much magical being Tuck
was. It would be fascinating learning what he could do. Like Alexa,
Tuck was now a mixture of Earth and Lladrana.
A twinge of anxiety nibbled at her. She didn't know how she'd be
able to take him back to Earth. If he retained his Power on Earth,
she shuddered at the idea of his falling into scientists'
hands.
After chittering to get her attention, Tuck said, "I want to go
back to my house now. I have good drink and salty nuts there. I
want my better food."
Marian wanted to listen some more to Earth music. Instead she
gestured to the speaking tube by the bed-this one with a trumpet
painted like a blue morning glory and the tube a green stem with
embossed varicolored green leaves. "Jaquar's study is locked to me.
Can you climb up that?" Four floors.
He perked up. "Yes." Staring at her with his protuberant black
eyes, Tuck said, "I'd like to go outside tomorrow with you and
Jaquar. You can watch me."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes." He nodded emphatically.
"Very well. Ready to go upstairs?"
"Yes."
Marian set him in the bottom of the tube. He grinned at her,
cheeped, and zoomed up the shaft. The opening strains of Mozart's
"The Magic Flute" echoed down and kept her company as she headed
back to her desk. Lladrana had changed Tuck, wondrously. Perhaps it
could change Andrew, too.
Impatient that he had to explain himself to other Circlets,
Jaquar strode into the parlor of Chalmon's Tower. Venetria and
Chalmon stood by the large table, arguing. They stopped as soon as
they saw him.
"Salutations," Jaquar said.
Chalmon placed a hand on Venetria's shoulder. "I think we all
agree that we must cooperate and that the Dark can no longer be
ignored. It was for that very reason that we had the Marshalls
Summon our own Exotique."
Jaquar said, "Since she comes from outside our community, and is
exceptionally Powerful, I think she will be an able leader, given
time."
Frowning, Chalmon said, "We definitely need a report on the
Exotique. That is why we asked you to come. We must learn when she
will be ready to infiltrate the Dark's nest. All the signs point to
the maw opening in the next couple of days. Will the Exotique be
ready to enter then?"
"I have another idea," Jaquar said. "Perhaps we can form a team
to seal the maw. Close their own shield. We may not be able to
infiltrate it and learn of the Dark, but we could delay, perhaps
even stop the master and the horrors he controls."
Chalmon tapped a crystal ball. "One of the younger Sorcerers
tried to lob a fireball in-nothing. We've tried everything, and
nothing works. All our Power slides away from the place. Nothing
penetrates and nothing sticks." He grimaced. "Ten people have
attempted spells."
Jaquar's gut tensed.
"Is it true the woman is already a Third Degree Scholar?"
Venetria asked.
"True."
Both Chalmon and Venetria exclaimed in astonishment.
"When do you anticipate her becoming a Fifth Degree Scholar or a
Circlet?" Chalmon asked.
Jaquar had already considered the question, estimated the time,
lengthened it to protect Marian. "I believe no longer than a
month."
"That's not soon enough." Chalmon's voice hardened. "I believe
the maw will open within the week. We must send Marian in to learn
of the Dark, to harm the nest and perhaps destroy this once-human
master who taunts us and directs the horrors."
"I think your plan disastrous," Jaquar said. "What can you hope
to learn through her?"
"I've made a little echoing spell-it will send back all she sees
and hears when she is within the nest," Chalmon said.
"No," said Jaquar.
"It was your plan in the first place!" Chalmon snapped.
The words were like a blow to the chest. He nearly staggered.
"Made in the heat of anger and vengeance."
Chalmon lifted and dropped a shoulder. "That may very well be
true, but what choice do we have? You saw what one sangvile
did. Its damage multiplies rapidly. Marian is very Powerful
already. She might be able to return by herself. Who knows what she
could do."
"I am her teacher and protector. I will not allow this," said
Jaquar.
"The Exotique Marian would not have been sent to us now
if we weren't to use her for this purpose," Chalmon said.
"That's convoluted thinking," Venetria argued. "That sounds as
if you believe in fate and not free will. Why do you think that now
when you never have before? Or is it only that you want to
sacrifice someone else?"
Red flushed beneath Chalmon's skin. "Don't call me a
coward."
"Why shouldn't I? You haven't plane-walked to that place. I
have." Venetria gestured grandly. "Jaquar has."
"Plane-walking is not one of my talents," Chalmon muttered.
"You'll sacrifice her. Is it so easy for you? I always thought
you were a man of character," Venetria said.
Chalmon's face contorted in anger. "I want to protect us. If
that means sacrificing some stranger, so be it."
Venetria said, "I'm not sure we should-"
"You always vacillate!" Chalmon accused. "I tell you, the worst
monsters are about to spew from that maw. Dreeths. Sangviles that
could easily target the Tower Community and eat us all!" He grabbed
Venetria's shoulders. "Woman, your island is the northernmost!
Close to the damn border where those monsters congregate. Your
defensive shields are pitiful. I won't lose you."
She stared at him, eyes wide. Her mouth trembled. "You would go
to such lengths to...to keep me from harm?"
Chalmon shuddered. "Everyone of the Tower Community has seen the
memory-vision of how the sangvile attacked Alyeka. I won't have
that happen to you. And that was only one sangvile."
Face set in hard lines, he stared at Jaquar. "Dreeths fly, and
have you forgotten that if the boundary is not fully Powered
between magical fence posts-and there are plenty of gaps- a horror
can manifest as far inside the country as one of its own
reached?"
"That hasn't happened in known history," said Jaquar.
"No? But all our Lorebooks say that it's true. And the sangvile
was in Castleton, in the Castle, in Coquille-on-the-Coast! Once the
nest opens and another of its kind spews out, it could manifest in
one of those places!" Chalmon said. "We have no choice: if Marian
can harm the nest, we must Send her."
Jaquar fought for the woman he'd come to admire. "We could go to
the Marshalls-specifically to the Exotique Alyeka, and ask her help
in penetrating the force that shields the maw. She's a trained
warrior-both physically and magically. She knows what we're facing.
She's fought a sangvile twice. She is one of us, now, a Lladranan.
We could use her as a spearhead into the maw, follow her in. That
could work."
Silence filled the chamber as all three of them considered the
plan.
"I always liked that idea." Venetria's face shone. "She can
penetrate the nest's shield and the rest of the Marshalls will
follow immediately. We could go, too."
Her Song was utterly sincere, and Jaquar relaxed.
Chalmon sat on a sofa and leaned back, pulling Venetria down and
close to him. He smiled patronizingly, his usual expression around
Jaquar, and nodded. "A good idea."
"And the Marshalls can move fast! They're used to mobilizing
quickly," Venetria said.
Eyebrows raised, Chalmon said dryly, "If Bastien and the other
Marshalls don't kill you for mentioning the idea to Alexa."
Jaquar decided to speak to Bastien alone, first. Relief flooded
him that he'd found a new plan. Chalmon and Venetria had been
convinced. "I'll contact Bastien and Alyeka in the near future,
before the maw opens again." His gaze swept the room.
"Alyeka is a very Powerful, strong, experienced fighter and
foresighted woman. I think she'll agree to spearhead our force." He
smiled sharply, "And she is linked to the Marshalls. We will
follow. And do you think any Marshall won't support her? They
always work as a team."
"The last time the Tower and the Castle tried a joint
effort-some two centuries ago-it didn't work," Chalmon said,
considering.
"Who will hold the focus of this combined Power?" Venetria
frowned.
Jaquar smiled. "Why, our Exotique, who is bound to Bossgond and
Alyeka. I will provide support, since I had a tentative link with
Alyeka, and thus the Marshalls, in that last battle." He met each
Circlet's eyes, impressed upon them his determination and
confidence that this was the right path to take.
When no one denied his logic, he bowed to them all, turned and
left.
Just before he shut the outer door behind him, he heard Chalmon
say thoughtfully, "Do you think Jaquar's bonded with our new
Exotique, too?"
"There is definitely a chord sounding between them," Venetria
said.
Jaquar closed the door, smiling a little. He had won the game,
and Marian would never know the depths he had sunk to, when ravaged
by grief.
For Marian, the books hadn't been too hard to read after all. At
first, the sight of the words seemed to sear into her head as if
they were written in neon. But when she put her finger on the
words, trying to learn the alphabet and sound them out, she heard
the sound-songs of them in her mind.
By the time she felt too exhausted to continue her search
through the Medical texts, she knew how to read. Some of the more
complex words still stymied her, and connotations and concepts
might be difficult, but overall, she was pleased with her work. She
didn't think she'd be able to read aloud anytime soon, though. And
as she dressed in her nightgown and climbed into her bed, she
wondered how soon the language of Lladranan-reading and
speaking-would vanish from her mind when she returned to Earth.
Would she go to France in the future and speak with a Lladranan
accent? Or would she have to relearn French?
She smiled to herself as sleep crept close. Her concentration
had been intense, and with the unaccustomed activities of the day,
she hadn't been able to read more than a couple of hours-not even
long enough to listen to the entire "Magic Flute." But she had
found small traces of information regarding something the
Lladranans called "cortifremi," which sounded like MS. As she
slipped into sleep, hope filled her that she'd be able to find a
magical-Powerful-cure she could apply to her brother.
She awoke to stifling dark and stark terror. The horrible sound
of swooping wings accompanied the brush of dusty feathers on her
face. She screamed and heard no sound.
This was not a nightmare. She was awake, cold sweat coating her
body. She couldn't move.
The thing perched on the bottom frame of her sleigh bed,
eyes gleaming.
18
Clutching the covers until her fingers hurt, Marian stared at
the bird. A black vulture with a bare red head.
It stared back. There was something about the tilt of its head,
the glow of its eyes, the...the...delicacy of its Song. It loomed
about a foot high. Weren't vultures bigger?
Sinafin? Marian sent the being a mental call. Sweet
relief poured through her.
The glittering black gaze pierced her. She could have sworn a
splinter of pain entered her chest.
Are you sure? whispered like dry dust in her mind.
Marian wasn't at all sure.
The bird lifted wings and sidestepped down the footboard with
the sound of sharp claws scritching against the wood, raising
gooseflesh on Marian's arms. Her heart thundered in her ears.
What do you want? Even if she could move, she didn't know if
she'd be able to speak.
Are you trying to talk to me? asked the creature. 1
can't hear you. Try harder.
The tone slapped her mentally-an order, nearly a compulsion.
Sinafin? Marian mind-whispered.
A flash of blue lightning blinded Marian, and when the spots
faded from her vision she saw the creature was now dead white, a
skeletal thing. Only the eyes were alive, and they were cold and
demanding.
But Marian knew what it was. It was the magical
shape-shifter, the feycoocu. Sinafin. What did the being want of
her? Marian could think only of Alexa's parting words. Sinafin
can be trusted to do what is best for Lladrana.
I can't hear you. Lightning flashed again and,
blinking, Marian saw the vulture was now covered in a long black
robe, a cowl draped over its head, showing only beak and glowing
red eyes that stared at her inimically.
It clicked its beak in threat. Marian moaned. No sound emerged.
She could make no sound!
1 can't hear you. You must call louder. The vulture
hopped down from the rail, robe flapping, and lit on her feet.
Claws curled over her toes. It felt heavy, pressing hard against
her feet. Marian shrieked silently in her head.
Marian watched in horror as it extended one clawed foot and set
it down on her ankle. It would walk up her body! She thought her
heart would burst from the terror.
Her mind gibbered, then put syllables together in a mental cry.
Sinafin!
I can barely hear you. Try harder. Another step and it
settled on her ankles, not heavy now, but moving with a dry
rustling that made Marian tremble.
Sinafin!
Better. Try again.
SINAFIN.
It stopped, foot raised, ready to step up on her shin. Its beak
opened in what appeared to be a grotesque smile.
SINAFIN! Marian screamed with her mind. Pushed aside fear
to grasp at the elusive wild Song of the small magical being.
SINAFIN!
Marian envisioned it as a she, a pretty fairy. SINAFIN,
FEYCOOCU! The bed seemed to vibrate with the force of her
mind-call.
The vulture flew-backward-to the footboard. Tilted its head.
Louder-use all your senses, all your will.
The feycoocu was a fairy, with black hair and blue wings, with a
wild, delicate, fascinating Song. She had smelled of... of.. .a
spicy floral scent. She was not heavy, she was light. An...
aura...a rainbow of Power surrounded her. Marian clutched the
knowledge to her, built the little being as a three-dimensional
entity. Marian used all her senses. Holding the image of the
feycoocu in her mind, Marian yelled, SINAFIN!
The Tower itself seemed to tremble with the reverberation of her
cry.
Sinafin perched on the curving wood of the footboard. That
might do. Her wings were hunched up around her head.
You have learned your lesson. The bird shot by Marian,
curved beak skimming her face, leaving a tingle. Tell no
one of this. It disappeared through the wall above Marian's
head.
"L-light," Marian gasped, and all the wall sconces, every candle
and both fireplaces flared to life.
It wasn't enough. She was chilled and could think of no spells
that would warm her.
She was so cold she couldn't think-from the terror? Had Sinafin
harmed her somehow?
As the trembling subsided, Marian began to scrape together some
logic and reason. If Sinafin acted in the best interests of
Lladrana, why had she terrorized Marian? How could that help the
land?
And she wasn't going to let a-a vulture intimidate her,
keep her quiet. No. Sinafin wouldn't hurt her. If Sinafin was once
a creature like Tuck-or if Tuck could metamorphose into a being
like Sinafin-a feycoocu was not an evil or cruel entity. The
reasoning cut through the last dregs of terror, let other thoughts
well up-how Marian had initially been amused and pleased with
Sinafin, had sensed that the fairy had been concerned for her,
later approved of her.
Sinafin had said she loved Alexa. A being like that wouldn't
torture without reason. Would she?
"Let's send the hamster ball to the Dark nest," Chalmon said
calmly as soon as they heard Jaquar's volaran take to the
skies.
Venetria jerked. "What? We decided to follow a different
plan."
"No," said Chalmon calmly. "Jaquar decided to remove himself
from his original plan and try another. It has merits, but he'll
fail. The Marshalls won't listen to him, and even if they do, they
will take time to think and act. Didn't they wait nearly a year
before informing the rest of Lladrana that the fence posts were
falling? Summoning an Exotique was their last, most desperate
solution to the problem."
"They are committed to fighting the Dark now," Venetria said.
"There are many more of them. They'll listen to Jaquar and move
quickly." She was speaking fast, but she liked the new plan, didn't
want the worry and guilt that had enveloped her when she'd
considered the old solution to the Dark.
Chalmon snorted. "Have you ever heard of a Marshall
plane-walking? They won't cooperate with us, and they won't want to
fight on an ephemeral plane."
"But we don't have the experience of the Marshalls in working
together to do a Sending or a Summoning. We might not be able to
send the Exotique into the nest."
He raised his eyebrows. "That's why we need to follow through
with the experiment." He glanced at the water clock. "Other
Scholars and Circlets who agree with me will be arriving
momentarily to help."
"Tonight?" Venetria said blankly.
Chalmon brushed a soft kiss over her mouth, the pure tenderness
in the stream of his Song softening her.
Then the doorharp trilled and Bossgond answered to the first of
fifteen people. Venetria watched, torn, as he calmly prepared for
plane-walking, a skill he wasn't proficient in. Finally, he was
ready, and gestured the others to ascend to his Ritual room on the
top floor.
That had been open and ready, too, and Chalmon hadn't told
her.
"I know you are conflicted on this matter. I want to make it as
easy as possible for you." He held out his hand. "I need our Song,
too."
"What plane do you visit?" she asked dully.
"The fifteenth."
"One Jaquar does not frequent."
Chalmon shrugged and his lips thinned. "You insist on remaining
at your vulnerable Tower. I will protect you with my last
breath."
She tossed her head. "You want information about the Dark-"
"We all do."
"You want to destroy the Dark's nest."
"A worthy ambition."
"Not if it means sacrificing an innocent woman!"
"We've had this discussion." He dropped his hand and turned to
the door. "Come or stay."
"What if I say I will live with you until the Dark is
destroyed?"
He turned away, glittering gaze meeting hers. "Will you?"
"Yes."
"Promise on your keystone?"
"Yes."
He inhaled deeply, then let out the breath. "Then I'll say we
should go forward with this experiment, just to see what
happens."
"Will you consider Jaquar's new plan?"
"We will wait and watch."
How long? She didn't want to push him, because then he would
turn intractable. A great weight bowed her down. She would be
making hard choices. Walking up to him, she put her hand in his.
"I'll come."
The Ritual passed quickly, as if each person had been practicing
it. Only Venetria and Chalmon and a third Circlet with an explosive
arrow would actually travel, the rest sang Songs that bonded them
temporarily to Chalmon, sending him strength. He, in turn, would
allow those left behind to experience what he did. He held the
strange orb of the Exotique's companion in his hand. It still
smelled.
Venetria struggled to stay on the fifteenth plane, and Chalmon
helped her. Finally they reached the observation point overlooking
the Dark's maw.
Watch for me, and tell me the next time the shield
darkens.
Her form wavering, Venetria watched. Now! she cried.
With a mental grunt of effort, Chalmon threw the clear hollow
ball at the nest. Another Circlet lobbed the small arrow of an
explosive spell.
The ball penetrated the shield.
The seething maw stilled.
The arrow broke as it hit the shield.
It worked! the other Circlet screamed. Exotique
essence harms the nest.
Venetria lost control, and Chalmon and the other had to hold her
within this plane.
But the arrow failed. The Exotique Terre artifact was
not strong enough. Chalmon's mental voice held the hollow
echoes of doom. Watch the nest, ordered Chalmon. Send me
word when it is active once more. He cut all the strands but
Venetria's that sent him energy with a sweep of his arm. His form
shuddered, wisped into nothing. She followed, fearing what would
come back to his tower, where she would stay with him.
Finally Marian called Alexa. Alexa! she shouted.
Through her bond with the other woman, Marian felt a pulse of
surprised fear. Shit, Marian, could you scream a little lower?
You woke me up.
Marian closed her eyes. It had worked! She'd added a little
wind-spell chant to her call and it had worked! She giggled. It
sounded high and nervous to her ears. No more crystal balls for
her.
Is Sinafin there? Marian asked, opening her eyes and
scanning her place for the dozenth time.
Mind grumbling, Alexa seemed to check, then said, 1 don't see
her. She is her own person. 1 don't keep tabs on her.
Marian puffed out a breath. Alexa, she was just here, in my
rooms at Jaquar's Tower. Terrorizing me.
What?
I swear she did the best she could to scare me out of
my skin. She was a vulture.
A vulture, huh. Another name for buzzard, right?
Yes.
Alexa's mind-tone almost sounded amused. Marian received the
impression that Sinafin had been everything from a cockroach to a
chinchilla. Then Alexa's mind turned to thinking. I hate to say
this-
Marian could almost see Alexa making a face. Yes? She
prompted.
But if Sinafin terrorized you, it was probably for
your own good.
The chill of fear crept back into Marian's bones. She wrapped
the comforter tighter around her, hummed the little fire-tune that
had gone out of her head earlier. Warmth enveloped her, but her
insides remained cold. That doesn't sound good. The deductions
one makes from that statement...
Yeah, Alexa agreed. If she's terrorizing you for your
own good, she probably thinks you're gonna face something even
scarier.
She did say I'd learned my lesson.
Huh, Alexa said. Then I'd be sure to practice what she
taught you. What lesson?
At that moment a siren shrieked-and it was Alexa hearing it. The
sound punched through their connection accompanied by Alexa's
sweeping emotions-feelings spurred by upcoming battle.
Gotta go. Invasion alarm. They aren't supposed to
attack at night. Something's up.
Marian received an impression of Alexa jumping from bed, racing
to her chain-mail, baton flashing into her hand and Bastien at her
heels.
Take care.
Yeah, Alexa sent absently. Like they say in e-mail,
"virtual hugs." But her mind had fallen into a strange
rhythm.
She was preparing for battle. To fight and kill monsters,
perhaps to die.
God bless! Marian sent strongly, then broke the
connection.
She slid from bed to pace the room a few times, then, when she
was warm, slipped off the comforter and spread it back over the bed
until it was perfectly aligned. Then she crawled under the covers
and hoped for sleep without dreams. And prayed for Alexa.
Jaquar's flight back to Mue was full of thoughts of Marian. The
sight of her as she'd called the Wind haunted him. Her dress had
lifted to show her body-the body he was trying hard to forget that
he'd seen naked twice-and the odd undergarment she wore only
accentuated her loveliness. Her hair had floated around her, deep
red with fiery highlights.
Most tempting of all were her blue eyes, wide with discovery and
excitement, and the joy on her face. How was he going to resist the
temptation of all that?
He gritted his teeth. He would have to. Marian intended to
return to her home and her sick brother. If his parents had needed
him, nothing would have stopped him from helping.
Jaquar had rediscovered his honor and thanked the Song he hadn't
committed an action that he would not have been able to live with.
He wasn't about to stain his precious honor by having sex with
Marian and binding her to Lladrana through him when she believed
she was needed elsewhere.
So perhaps he should help her hunt for medical aid for her
brother-the sooner she was gone, the sooner he could craft a new
life without his parents and continue on.
He might even consider taking an Apprentice.
When Nightsky and he landed near the Tower, Jaquar saw no light
from Marian's windows. She must be asleep.
He realized he'd wanted to see her, spend a little time in her
company, just enjoy the humming notes between them. Best she had
retired.
Jaquar sniffed the air. A storm was coming. It would bring rain
for Marian to practice manipulating-and lightning. Though it was
years now since he'd called the lightning storm and it had raged
beyond his control, he shuddered. Still, Bossgond was right: Marian
had an affinity for Fire.
Though Jaquar would never match her mastery in that element as a
Weather mage, he knew how to call the lightning, ride it even.
Better yet, he could teach her the basics, guide her practices and
watch her learn and become proficient with her Power, and that was
almost as good as using it himself. He didn't think she'd
ever-quite-match him in controlling Wind and Air.
He would teach her. He would protect her, and instruct her how
to protect herself.
So Jaquar tended to the volaran, then went to his rooms and,
listening to the rising wind, fell asleep.
A sound woke him. An odd noise he'd never heard in his Tower.
Foggy with sleep, he listened, heard clicks coming from the
speaking tube near his bed.
Before he could determine the source of the noise, a tiny, cold,
sharp-clawed paw patted his face. He jerked in reaction but stopped
the whistle that would have flung the hamster against the wall.
"You are thinking of Marian," the little being squeaked.
He'd been dreaming of her-lush and wanton and laughing in his
arms as they rolled on the bed and she opened her thighs and her
mind and- He grunted noncommittally in response to Tuck.
"You should go to her." Two small paws tapped his cheek.
"I don't think so."
"It would be best if you go to her and mate. I am Marian's
companion, but I want to stay here in Lladrana. Her place is here,
too. She is a Sorceress." Tuck hissed, "The feycoocu says she
should stay."
Ah, the instigator and the reason the mousekin was bothering
Jaquar. "You mean the feycoocu wants me to bond with Marian so that
when her Snap comes, she will be more likely to remain here. Marian
is concerned for her brother-that's who she wants to help. That's
who she's bound to the most, emotionally."
"That should change. Andrew is good, but he is not as important
as you."
The brother wasn't as important to the hamster or the feycoocu
as Jaquar, is what Tuck meant. Jaquar didn't want to listen any
more to the creature.
"I'm not going to have sex with Marian just to please you or the
feycoocu."
The hamster withdrew his paws, but a moment later, Jaquar felt
the tug on his hair and scalp as the rodent climbed onto his
head.
It sat on his forehead, warm and furry...and tickling. Rolling
his eyes back, Jaquar could see the gleam of Tuck's tiny black
eyes, serious with a knowledge that Jaquar didn't want to face.
"Your Songs match," Tuck said.
Jaquar didn't want to hear that.
"She belongs here. With you. With me. With Bossgond."
"That may be what you want, may truly be best for her, but
Marian must decide for herself."
Tuck grumbled, huffed, climbed down to walk back and forth
across Jaquar's chest. "You won't go to her tonight?"
"No. If we.. .mate, our pleasure will be a mutual experience,
one she wants as much as I. I will not seduce her. Furthermore, I
will endeavor not to bind her to me with a strong sexual
tie."
More mutterings from the hamster. Finally Tuck sniffed and said,
"It would be better if you love tonight, in the Tower. Best if you
twine your Songs into one. But we must trust the Song."
The philosophy was far beyond what Jaquar thought Tuck could
achieve. The hamster had been talking better, too. Jaquar wondered
how Tuck had made the intellectual leap. The feycoocu? Practice?
Jaquar didn't know, but uncomfortable personal conversation or not,
the whole episode was going word for word in his personal
Lorebook.
"Good night," Tuck said. His claws skittered as he stepped into
the speaking tube.
To Jaquar's amazement, the hamster flew up.
A moment later, Jaquar found himself smiling. There were now
three beings in this Tower who were masters of Air.
When she met Jaquar at the door to his study the next morning,
Marian noticed a constraint between them in their stilted
conversation. Perhaps he thought that she was going to ask awkward
questions about where he'd disappeared the night before. Marian
didn't consider it any of her business, but didn't know what
formalities or rules there might be between student and teacher.
She was certain that she didn't want to talk to him about Sinafin's
visit, and he'd no doubt ask if she commented on his night.
So breakfast talk was desultory. One glance at Tuck's house
showed Marian that he was curled up in a ball in the plush room
he'd taken as his sleeping space. The sitting room that adjoined
Tuck's "bedroom" was piled high with his hoard.
Marian shook her head at the sight. "I think Tuck has finally
adapted to Lladrana and gone back to his old nocturnal habits."
An odd expression crossed Jaquar's face, but all he said was "It
seems so." He hesitated, gestured to the trees thrashing in the
wind outside the Tower windows. "A storm's coming in. The height of
the front will strike the northwest part of Mue Island
midafternoon. This is excellent weather for you to practice Water
Power. The hike across the island is an hour, so we should leave
after lunch."
Forcing a smile at the thought of a long hike in bad weather
just to fail at lessons, Marian agreed to the plan. He was the
prof, after all.
He must have guessed her thoughts, or perhaps the notes
stringing between them went a trifle flat, because he smiled
genuinely. Pushing his clean plate aside, he leaned forward on the
table and whispered, eyes glinting, "We can also see how you do
with Lightning Magic."
Immediately Marian cheered up. She felt her eyes widen. "For
real? I'm very good with Lightning in the ecospheres. It's my best
subject. But you'll let me try it in a real-life situation?" She
found herself whispering, too, in excitement.
Jaquar chuckled. "Yes. A practicum."
Marian nearly shuddered with delight. "This is going to be the
absolute best class in my entire career."
He set his hand out on the table, palm up. His gaze was
gentle.
She put her hand in his, squeezed his fingers, then noted the
rolling melody streaming from him to her and back, redoubling in
strength. Lifting her glance to his, they connected that way, too.
His eyes had deepened to dark blue, blue she hadn't seen on
Earth-Lladranan blue, or perhaps it was the silver glints in
them-magic, Power. Power blue.
"Your eyes are so beautiful," she said.
His expression closed and he pulled his hand away, stood and
banished the dishes. "Be prepared to leave for the shore after
lunch. Practice Water and Lightning in the spheres this morning for
at least three hours."
Well, that was certainly a dismissal. Consultation with the prof
over.
Marian stood and curtsied formally, which made Jaquar narrow his
eyes as if he wondered whether she was being sarcastic. She looked
once more at the sleeping Tuck, then went down to pursue her
studies.
When she started working with the ecospheres, she understood
she'd always used the wind or the sun to work with the water, not
handled that particular element itself. She flushed again at the
thought of how easily she'd failed in the task the day before of
holding water in the air, and how well she'd thought she'd been
progressing before that. Sighing, she knew she'd had a touch of
hubris and had been squelched.
She studied hard, experimenting with water for a solid hour,
starting with the smallest terrarium through to the largest. Her
efforts at mastering water in the terrariums were mediocre. To
truly master Water magic, she'd need step-by-step instruction from
Jaquar.
After struggling with Water, she spent some time with Lightning,
then looked over the lesson plan and found she'd completed every
task. She spent another half-hour being creative with Lightning,
then went back to Water before she finished manipulating the
elements.
Marian was deep in her medical reading when Jaquar announced
lunch. She had it sent down in a dumbwaiter type device, and ate at
her desk, reading. When her waterfall clock pinged that she had a
few minutes before Jaquar came down, she freshened up and donned
her sturdiest gown to hike across the island. Still, she waited for
him for about five minutes, not daring to immerse herself again in
the scrolls. She wished Tuck or her PDA had been around to set the
alarm- the waterfall clock was too imprecise for her taste. She
eyed the thing. Surely there were better timepieces. Some
Circlet had to be studying time.
Jaquar arrived and knocked on her door. He was dressed in a cape
the color and texture of duct tape and wore the stupidest hat
Marian had ever seen, low crowned and broad brimmed but not nearly
the elegant proportions of a gaucho's. Furthermore, it was made of
some horrible gray material that reminded Marian suspiciously of
the texture of "soul-sucker" that she'd seen in Alexa's and
Bossgond's images.
She drew back a little.
"I was right. It's raining and there are lightning storms at the
shore. This storm will provide you with good practice with water
and fire," Jaquar said. "Rain or running water is easier to
work with than pools or even the tide." His smile was warm. "Do you
have a rain cape?"
"Actually, I do." It was still marked with yellow birds as
befitted Bossgond's Apprentice, but she didn't care about that. She
went into the bedroom and pulled it on. As she crossed back into
the living room/study she noticed that Jaquar had not stepped over
the threshold, and her heart began to pound. She hadn't invited him
in, and he respected her enough that he hadn't entered without her
asking. So different from some of the men she knew. Like Jack
Wilse.
His head tilted to the side and she saw his nostrils flare. He
smiled again. "The place holds your fragrance. From what I can see,
you've made it your own. Good."
"Where's Tuck? I thought he wanted to go outside today-and
with at least one of us watching him, he will be protected."
Jaquar pulled a face. "In the rain? He was disgusted when he saw
it on the windows. I think he's rearranging his hoard."
"Always a hamster's favorite thing-besides eating. They are
originally desert animals."
"Ah." Jaquar touched her shoulder and the cape rippled. When the
fabric finished moving, it was plain gray, no pattern of little
yellow birds.
Marian chuckled. "Thanks." She pulled the hood of her cape over
her head.
"You are welcome. You'll need a hat to keep the frink-" He
stopped, a considering look coming to his eyes. "Perhaps not.
Frinks don't seem to fall around Exotiques." He offered his hand,
and she took it.
Once again, she sensed that he'd experienced an emotional sea
change in the time they'd been apart.
He opened the door and they stepped out. The odd pinging on the
small flagstone patio stopped. Blinking rain from her lashes,
Marian noticed the rain looked less dense than before.
"Lovely, no more raining frinks," Jaquar said in satisfaction.
His grin flashed. "There are definitely more benefits to having you
around than just looking at your lovely person, Marian." He
squeezed her hand.
On the way to the beach, Jaquar quizzed her about her studies in
a casual manner that made her feel as if he wasn't judging her or
holding to strict expectations-not nearly as harsh as she judged
herself, and his standards for her seemed lower than her own. Was
she being too hard on herself again? Too concerned with perfection?
Probably. No one could say that Jaquar wasn't an excellent teacher
or a very Powerful Circlet.
Now and then they paused while Jaquar patiently instructed her
in Rain Power-once when it was pouring, once in a drizzle, once in
a light shower. He was right-rain in motion was a lot easier to
manipulate than still water.
Finally they reached the beach and it wasn't more than a minute
before lightning struck a few yards away. Marian itched to get her
hands on it, wrap her mind around Lightning Power.
Instead, Jaquar made her practice with storm-tossed waves and
tide pools rippling with rain for what seemed like hours.
Then a roar came from overhead and lightning struck close, and
Marian lost her concentration and the bit of rainstorm she'd been
managing.
The lightning sang to her-to her mind, but even more, to her
blood. She knew it, each crackle, each beyond-hearing hiss and
zing. Even before Jaquar showed her, mind-to-mind and by
demonstration, how to weave it into patterns, how to Send it,
Marian knew the Song. Linking hands with Jaquar's, he called it and
controlled it, forking it down beyond their feet, sending streaks
across the sky.
She'd never felt anything like it-nothing so Powerful, so
satisfying as playing with lightning, creating designs. It was as
if she'd taken the electricity inside to sizzle in her blood. As if
she was lightning.
He'd start a Song to teach her, and she'd pick up the tones, the
rhythm, the melody and sing herself. Marian's Song of Lightning,
the words more facile on her tongue than his.
So, eyes narrowed as if he gauged her every note, he set her
tasks, and though she knew they were tests, she just laughed.
Nothing came easier to her in her life than taming lightning.
She danced it across the sky, sent it from cloud to cloud, from
cloud to ground, to rock, splitting a boulder. She made tiny
sparks, long forks, curtains of the stuff.
Spectacular.
She played, she designed, she drew and dismissed. And finally as
the rain pounded down and she'd done all he'd said, she whirled
around in the wind and faced him, grinning.
He smiled back.
But as she took stock, she realized something in the Song of
Lightning was missing. Something she hadn't grasped. It was not
complete.
Marian lifted her face to him, questioning.
"You need practice inside a storm." He gestured to a
cliff. "From there we could step into the wind and let it take us
through the storm front." His eyes had deepened to dark blue and
the expression was pure challenge.
But Marian had always loved storms. "Ayes," she agreed in
Lladranan.
Jaquar grinned and held out his hand. She put her hand in his,
liked the connection when his long, elegant fingers folded over
hers.
"Let's go!"
They ran up the hill. She wasn't in the best of shape, but
Jaquar matched his steps to hers, not dragging her, not pushing
her. She liked that, too.
He led her to a huge rock jutting out in space. Though she
wasn't usually bothered by heights, the wind was strong and another
large curtain of rain was marching closer.
Jaquar stepped forward and closed her cape, smoothed it over her
body, sealing it. The Lightning Song was inside her and transformed
into sexual sparks. She trembled beneath his touch. A smile hovered
on his lips. He kissed her nose but didn't speak above the rain,
the thunder.
Instead he moved behind her and wrapped his arms around her
middle.
What next? she asked, because there had to be a
next.
Sing with me. He took up a spiraling chant.
She followed.
When the melodic line was established, he dropped his voice to
harmonize. At the next break in the chant, he said, "Ready?" There
was a tone in his voice that told her he'd step back if she
wanted.
"Ayes," she said.
"We'll do this together." He started a low, intricate chant.
After a few measures, she felt the cadence of it, figured out
the twisting chords.
"Now!" he cried. A gust of wind blew them into the air.
For an instant, she was only conscious of his arms around
her-the strength of him, physically and in his psi Power. His body
was pressed to hers and many Songs wrapped them both. His Song and
hers and theirs, and the Song of Mue Island, the Song of the Air
and the Storm and the Ocean. All rang in her mind like an
orchestra.
Then the sheer magnificence of the storm, of their wild ride
inside the clouds, whirling with the wind made her shriek with
excited laughter. Oh, she could experience this forever. The
glory of it was beyond human comprehension. She felt the vibration
of Jaquar's chest behind her and didn't know whether he laughed
with her or Sang, and it didn't matter.
They followed the storm winds for a while, then a black fist of
a cloud loomed, could not be avoided. Something about it chilled
her. It didn't feel right. When they were in it a fog dulled
her senses. She clamped her hands on Jaquar's wrists and told
herself she could feel his muscle, sinew, bone under her fingers
when she doubted, when her fingers grew too cold to tell. The cloud
battered her with a mean sleet she writhed to avoid, ducking her
head. The Songs faded to a horrible hum like a high-pitched cry of
a straining car engine, a series of pings that were nearly beyond
her hearing.
She felt pummeled for an endless time, then they dropped-
straight into a rain cloud where sweet water drenched her, slicked
her hair, stuck her magical gown tight to her body. She could hear
the Songs again, and Jaquar shouting in her ear.
"Look ahead," he cried. "Lightning. Do you want to try and ride
it?"
All the joy in the storm, the reckless energy around her
throbbed through her on a rising tide of music. "Yes," she
screamed. "Yes, yes, yes!"
Now we call the lightning and ride
it!
19
A flash of fire rolled over them, encased them. Took them.
Whisked them up with the speed of light.
Snatched her breath so she couldn't sing.
They dipped, fell, and Jaquar's voice came rich and deep.
They spun in a sea of electrical sparks. In heavy, dewy
clouds.
Curving his hand around hers, he lifted them, spread their
fingers, palm out. Marian followed his movement.
Call the lightning now!
She did, so again they were swept away, shot from cloud into
night, plummeting downward.
Jaquar held a note, Marian joined him.
And time slowed.
They were on the bolt itself, shooting from the cloud, across
the sea to other clouds.
The speed was awesome, something she shouldn't have been able to
experience. Couldn't rationally explain.
Jaquar stopped singing. And Marian lifted her voice and sang and
they rode the lightning.
Finally a huge arcing stream, thicker than both of their bodies,
caught them, sent them rushing down to land, darkness punctuated by
city lights.
As they zoomed down the lightning, Jaquar guided them so they
lit in a field and avoided the town. The rich soil had been turned,
ready for planting, and it, with the scent of ozone and the feel of
the lightning still fizzing in her bloodstreams, made her crave
sex. With Jaquar and only Jaquar. She didn't want to think, didn't
want to weigh the pros and cons, didn't want to speculate what
consequences might occur from their coupling. She wanted to tear
his clothes off.
So she did. She shoved off his cloak, grabbed his tunic and
ripped, and he stood staring at her. She yanked at his pants and
then he was clothed only in a loincloth. Her breath caught in her
chest at the sight of him. It was raining, slicking his muscles,
droplets defining them. He was beautiful.
She'd never seen a better proportioned man-broad shoulders, lean
hips, muscular thighs... The pounding of the rain around her
thundered in her ears. He stood tall and sexy and, in this instant,
hers. She knew it.
Her hands curved over his shoulders, then his nostrils flared,
his expression went wild and he yanked her to him. His body was hot
and hard...and ready. Then his mouth was on hers, wet and
demanding. She opened to him.
They slipped and fell to the ground, landing softly. She didn't
know if that had been his Power or hers, or Amee's, but she heard
overwhelming orchestral chords that combined into a pulsing,
rhythmic drumbeat. A sexual beat. She cried out as her own clothes
disappeared and warm rain slipped down her body in a sensual
caress.
His hands were on her body, sliding, stroking, probing, the
sensations so intense she could only cling to him, yearn for
him.
And his tongue was in her mouth and she was tasting him as he
took her. Their bodies met and melded, arched and twisted. Their
minds touched and linked and shattered with pleasure.
Marian lay under his weight, panting, enjoying the lovely Song,
the sluicing rain, the heat of him. She'd never felt so abandoned,
so free. Her mind had totally blanked, not a rational thought to be
found.
She laughed.
A tremor went through him. His head was next to hers and he
whispered, "Marian." The richness of his tone, the lilt of it made
her quiver.
Long moments passed as they lay together. Finally he shifted
beneath her and she let the reason she'd banished in experiencing
the physicality of the now, rush back to fill her head.
The rain had stopped. She used a hook of Wind to lift and hold
her, dry a bit of ground and set her on her feet. With a three-note
spell, her dress-warm and dry-slid over her head and draped her. It
was a little harder to find her new underwear, and when she did,
she drew on the panties, but used a pocket in her gown to hold the
bra. The dress bodice was doing just fine as a foundation garment
for her breasts.
By the time she'd dressed, the sheathing clouds had dissipated
to show a large, white moon. The night sky held swaths of stars.
She tilted her head back to experience the night, found a bubble of
happiness shimmering through her. She felt lighter, freer than she
had for a long time. Too much work and not enough play. And what
spectacular play sex with Jaquar had been!
She rolled her shoulders, aware of the new range of movement now
that the tension built up over the past few weeks had eased.
Smiling, she looked to Jaquar.
He stood gazing down at her. Inscrutable.
"Do you think we made a mistake?" she asked.
He pushed his stupid hat onto his head. "I don't think we need
to talk about it."
Men were the same even across worlds.
"All right," she said coolly.
He took her hand. Music crashed through her-the intensity of
emotion from him made her stumble and he slid an arm around her
waist. His tender actions seemed at a variance from his cool
manner, so she set his earlier words aside. She didn't want to
analyze anything-his words in relation to his actions and emotions,
or her own.
"I have you," he said, his voice softening.
"I have you," he repeated, lilting, and she didn't know if he
meant that he wouldn't let her fall or that he was keeping her as a
lover-reluctantly. She shivered from the strange fury of emotions
she'd experienced in the past couple of hours and he stopped to
drape his cape around them both, pulling her close to his side.
Still befuddled, she nevertheless realized that they kept pace with
each other-she lengthening her stride a little, he shortening his
own. Their steps matched. Something else she didn't want to
consider right now. She shook her head to clear it, looked once
more at the brilliant sky glittering with at least two veils of
stars-was there more than one arm of a galaxy visible? As she
inhaled deeply, fresh air helped clear her mind, while the ruts of
the soil centered her.
She cleared her throat before she spoke. "Where are we?"
With his free arm, he gestured to a smooth area in front of
them. "The road between the Marshalls' Castle and the town of
Castleton."
Marian stopped, looked up at him. "That's on mainland Lladrana,"
she croaked.
He raised his eyebrows. "The wind took us to the mainland. The
lightning storm was wide. I thought it best to ride the lightning
down here, near one of the most populated places in Lladrana."
Again, Marian stared at the sky. No trace of clouds. She found
herself shaking her head in disbelief. "One hell of a way to
travel!" When she said it, another bit of knowledge jolted
her-she'd picked the word for "hell"-anfer-from his mind! Her
Lladranan accent was now near perfect, and her comprehension of the
nuances of the language a great deal better than they had been.
His hand squeezed her hip, his eyes darkened. "I can't ride the
lightning by myself. I don't have the skill or Power."
She swallowed hard. "You showed me how, you controlled our
descent." If she'd been by herself more than likely she'd have
plummeted to the ground and made a large dent. End of Marian.
Now his teeth gleamed in a smile. "I'd traveled that way with
the last Weather Mage, Sorceress Entanra, when I was an
Apprentice." He shrugged. "And I knew the theory, of course."
"Of course," Marian said faintly, trembling.
He wrapped his arms around her. "Shh," he said into her
hair.
She felt his warm breath, but couldn't seem to stop
shivering.
"You have the knowledge to Ride the Lightning, to Dance with the
Wind. If you don't think about failure, it won't happen."
"Are you sure?"
Chuckling, he said, "No."
Oh yeah, that made her feel a whole lot better. Her nerves were
shot. The intimacy between them was growing and that scared her,
too. She liked him far too much, didn't dare become deeply
attached to the man if she planned to return to Earth. No future in
it, and she didn't know if she had the finesse to handle an affair.
The emotional connection between them was already stronger than it
would be for any casual fling.
She needed balance. So she stepped away from the comfort of his
arms, but was still glad when he slipped his arm around her
waist.
She looked at the road, glanced up the hill and saw the dark
hulking shadow of the Marshalls' Castle. Alexa. She sighed in
relief. Alexa would be the perfect person to help Marian sort out
her feelings. So she gazed toward the Castle and sent out a mental
call. Alexa?
A fleeting surprise throbbed to Marian from her link with
Alexa.
Marian? You sound close.
I am close, on the road between the Castle and
Castleton.
Confusion. Why did you fly in?
1 didn't, Marian sent dryly. I rode the lightning as
part of my training and we ended up here. Jaquar is with
me.
Pure stupefaction throbbed from the other end of the bond with
Alexa, then curiosity, excitement. Rode the lightning! That is
so cool!
Jaquar's mouth tilted up, and Marian knew he was hearing a small
echo between Alexa and her. He urged her onto the road and they
turned to the Castle.
We'll be at the Castle shortly, Marian sent.
Wait! I'm at the Nom de Nom, a Castleton inn that the
Chevaliers frequent. The noise around their mental bond
increased.
Oh.
1 think Jaquar knows of it. See you in a bit,
Alexa said.
Marian glanced up at Jaquar. "Did you hear? Do you mind going to
the Nom de Nom?"
"I heard. Are you sure you want to visit the inn? The Chevaliers
can be...rowdy." Again his arm tightened around her waist, and she
thought she felt a tendril of jealousy. Chevaliers were the knights
of Lladrana, those who fought the horrors. They probably were real
testosterone guys, adrenaline junkies.
A chuckle rumbled in her throat before she could stop it.
"You're an exceptionally sexy man, Jaquar."
He stiffened, then picked up the pace. "You think so?"
"Very, and so does Alexa."
"She does?" He sounded pleased. "By all means, let's go to the
Nom de Nom. Is Bastien there?"
"For you to tease by flirting with Alexa?" She pinched his arm.
"You're with me, and I don't approve of that sort of behavior."
Jaquar laughed.
They neared the town gate. The archway through the walls was
well lit by huge white balls of magical illumination. Two guards
garbed in green and blue stepped into the arch.
Jaquar didn't hesitate in his stride. "Sorcerer Circlet Jaquar
Dumont and Exotique Scholar Marian."
The men's mouths dropped open and they separated to each side of
the arch.
"The Tower's Exotique!" one whispered in excited tones. "No
one's seen her except the Marshalls and the Tower. This will be
something to tell!"
"She's a nice size," the other said. "Not like that strange
little Marshall."
There was the sound of a blow, a grunt from the guard. "Marshall
Alyeka has always been kind to me. Keep your mouth shut, dolt," one
said to the other.
Marian could feel their gazes on her as she walked away.
Irritation at the men surged. Obviously news of her visit would be
spread far and wide, probably by morning.
Jaquar guided her along wide sidewalks through the equally wide
streets and elegant squares of a town. The city looked more like
late Renaissance or early Industrial Age than Medieval. Each
building had a caged magical light.
Yes, Alexa was right. There were a lot of interesting aspects of
Lladrana.
She heard the inn before she saw it-and felt it vibrate to her
bones from the huge and Powerful Songs. She slowed a little,
tilting her head, trying to sort through the Songs. "So many Songs,
so rich," she murmured.
Jaquar looked startled. "The Nom de Nom is three blocks
away."
Marian just shook her head, tried to piece together what she was
experiencing. "Songs of one person, two..."
"Those would be paired fighters, a Shield and Sword for
defensive and offensive work."
Frowning, she said, "Some crisscrossing and almost woven
nets of Songs."
"Chevaliers working together as teams when necessary."
"Some Songs have one primary tone and branch off, adding other
little tunes."
"Ah." Jaquar led her around a turn. "Probably a Noble with
Chevaliers sworn to him or her." Jaquar waved to a three-story
building that seemed so old it leaned a little. "The Nom de
Nom."
Just before they reached the threshold, Jaquar stepped away from
her with a little sigh. He ran a hand through his hair, smoothed
his clothes, then looked at her. He touched the shoulders of her
gown and adjusted them a little. After one comprehensive, sweeping
glance at her, he nodded, his mouth quirking in a grin. "Any
dishevelment you have could be attributed to a wild lightning
ride."
For an instant, his hand curved softly around her cheek. "You
are quite, quite fabulously Exotiquely beautiful."
She stared at him, stunned.
Then the door opened before them and some Chevaliers emerged,
bringing the scent of smoke and beer. Marian blinked when she saw
four women and a man, all equally tall, all dressed in well-worn
leather. They hesitated a moment at the sight of her and Jaquar.
The men goggled at Marian. Then the women muttered greetings and
went off, hauling the man with them. A spicy musk lingered from
their passing.
"What's that scent?" asked Marian.
"Volaran."
Flying horse. She hadn't noticed that Nightsky's fragrance had
been so strong.
"This will be your first exposure to many Lladranans," Jaquar
said. "And a group not of the Tower Community. Ready?"
Marian nodded.
He grinned again. "It's been a long time since I've been in
here." He tilted his hat. "Not since my early youth." Sweeping open
the door, he held it for her to enter first.
Noise and color rushed over her. To her right was a long bar
with many Chevaliers-men and women in equal number- lounging
against it, talking. She had the feeling women had been part of the
fighting force for as long as men had. She saw people ranging from
an older man who looked as tough as beef jerky to a fresh-faced
teenaged girl who walked toward them. Her eyes widened as she
passed them, and she dipped her head in greeting.
Others stepped back, giving Jaquar and Marian a clear path. She
blinked and finally saw Alexa at the last booth on the left. The
Marshall stood and waved, grinning.
Each booth held four or more people, except the one just before
Alexa's, which held an intense couple clutching hands and sharing a
strained conversation and potent Song underlaid with deep sexual
tones. Alexa's booth held only her.
When they reached the booth, Jaquar indicated Marian should
slide along the leather seat closest to the wall and face Alexa. He
followed, placing his body between Marian and the Chevaliers.
"Salutations, Marian," Alexa said, and Marian heard the more
casual Hey, Marian in her mind.
"Salutations, Alexa," Marian said.
"Salutations, Alyeka," Jaquar said.
Alexa inclined her head to Jaquar. "Salutations, Jaquar."
"I don't see Bastien," Jaquar said as Alexa sat. He slid his hat
to the far corner of the table near Marian.
"No, he's at the Castle volaran stables. A wild, pregnant
volaran flew in and asked for his help. Apparently she thought the
birth would be complicated. My personal assistant, Marwey, just
updated me-you saw her on the way out."
"You have a personal assistant?" The words escaped Marian
before she could stop them.
Alexa laughed and sat. "I have a personal assistant, and
ten Chevaliers." She rolled her eyes. "Some of the
Chevaliers should be in Bastien's employ, but he doesn't like being
a boss. Do you want beer, Marian?"
A serving woman had sidled to the table. She stood near Alexa as
if believing even a slightly known Exotique was better than a
strange Exotique and a Sorcerer.
"Do they have wine?"
"1 wouldn't recommend the wine here," Jaquar said. "The mead
might be acceptable."
"I'm drinking tea." Alexa lifted her mug. "They keep it for
me."
"Mead is honey wine, right?" Marian asked, searching her
memory.
"Ayes," the waitress confirmed.
Marian smiled at her. She took a step back.
Marian said, "Mead is fine."
"I'll have lager," Jaquar said.
Though the barmaid looked like the type of woman who enjoyed
flirtation and male attention, she smiled superficially at Jaquar
and hurried away.
Jaquar lifted Marian's hand to his lips and kissed it, then
linked fingers with her. Alexa tilted her head and her eyes
unfocused. Marian sensed the Marshall was studying their auras and
listening to the Song surrounding them-a Song that clearly rang of
recent sex.
Her eyebrows dipping, Alexa sent Marian a questioning glance.
Do you realize you've formed a sex bond with Jaquar? She
said mentally to Marian.
Hard not to realize, that, Marian said. 1 know
what I'm doing.
Alexa appeared doubtful but didn't contradict Marian.
At that moment the server bustled up with a wineglass she deftly
slid to Marian, and an ale mug for Jaquar. A silver coin appeared
on the table near Jaquar's mug and the woman squealed and scooped
it up.
Marian smiled as she hurried away, then took a gulp of mead that
tasted of spicy herbs, wine and honey. She tilted her head back and
saw them.
Heads. Mounted on the wall.
Monsters.
Her hand holding the glass went limp and crashed to the table.
She forced herself to swallow instead of spew the drink.
She couldn't tear her gaze away from the awful creatures. These
were the real thing of the holographic images Alexa had shown her.
Render-black, bristly fur, wide mouth opened in a snarl with awful,
sharp teeth. Two paws were mounted, too, each with six curved
razor-sharp claws. Slayer-yellow head covered with spines, wicked
tiny eyes. Soul-sucker-reptilian gray skin, round sockets for eyes
and nose, a torso sporting two arms with two tentacles framing each
arm. Her gaze went to Jaquar's hat, which he'd put on the table.
Definitely made of soul-sucker.
Gulping again and again to keep her mead down, Marian tried not
to think of them attacking the humans here. Attacking and
killing.
Her stomach rolled. She put a hand on her throat to force the
sickness down, but still tasted the "tassy water"-as a young Andrew
had named bile-preceding nausea.
Alexa gripped Marian's hands hard, and a soothing balm sifted
through Marian from her.
Jaquar scowled and said, "What is it?" He set an arm around her
shoulders.
"Just keep your eyes from the upper third of the room," Alexa
said in English. Marian got the idea that she was upset on Marian's
behalf, and slipped into the language for that reason. Lladranan
would never be Alexa's first language-but if Marian had the chance
to stay, her English would dim.
Marian took a couple of deep breaths, redolent of beer and fire
smoke-oddly, the latter comforted her, too. The smoke carried the
tang of fire and Marian drew it within her. "It's the heads,"
Marian said.
"Whose heads?" asked Jaquar.
Another thing that Alexa from Earth understood and Jaquar
didn't.
Alexa grimaced. "Sorry, 1 was appalled when I first saw them,
too." She shrugged. "But now 1 face the real things often enough
that they don't faze me."
The fire smoke that had warmed her blood turned cold. Alexa
battled these things. Marian wanted to hug the woman, wrap her
close, take her home. But Alexa had found a new home and a new
destiny and it seemed to suit her-she was truly a warrior woman at
heart.
Their eyes met and Marian saw wry wisdom in Alexa's. "I'm happy
here," she said softly.
Marian forced a smile and a nod. "I can see that," she replied
in Lladranan.
Alexa wrinkled her nose. "Okay," she said in English, then
switched to Lladranan. "I could use a better skill for the
language, and an easier time of riding lessons, both horse and
volaran. Do you ride?"
"Ayes," Marian replied in Lladranan.
Looking at Marian with narrowed eyes over her mug of tea, Alexa
sipped, then put her cup down. "You have it easy."
"I was an Apprentice and am now a Scholar, still studying to
become a Circlet. You became a Marshall that first
night."
Alexa cheered. "You're right. It was awful passing those Tests,
but I did get them all over with." She sighed. "But it took me a
while to Pair, and until then no one considered me a full
Marshall." She shrugged again. "That's over with." Leaning forward
with a renewed light in her eyes, Alexa asked, "Can you really ride
lightning?"
"Ayes."
Wriggling in delight, Alexa said, "That's so cool. Could you
teach me?"
2O
Jaquar squeezed Marian's shoulder and his attention was pulled
back to Alexa and Marian. From the corner of her eye, Marian had
watched him play male eye-and-attitude games, warning other men
away from the table.
He said, "No, Alexa, Marian can't teach you how to ride
lightning. She hasn't mastered the technique herself, and you may
not have Power that's linked to Fire to learn."
Alexa pouted, then cunning crossed her face. Without a word, her
jade baton appeared in the center of the table standing on end and
the bronze flames burst into fire, both real and magical.
An instant of silence, then came sounds of scraping chairs and
rustling garments. Marian glanced around to see the Chevaliers-both
male and female-who had been casually leaning at the bar now
studiously faced it. The sharp whispers fromthe booth behind Marian
stopped. No one looked at Alexa's table.
Only Marian felt Jaquar tense, otherwise he kept an impassive
expression.
"Point taken," Jaquar said.
"Very impressive," Marian said.
With a wave of Alexa's hand, the baton disappeared, probably
back under the table and into its sheath. Since Alexa didn't peep,
Marian deduced no fire had burned her, nor was the baton hot.
Definitely impressive.
Relief seemed to ripple through the room, voices wove back into
normal conversation. Alexa gazed around thoughtfully. "They still
think I'm an unknown quantity, ready to go off like a rocket."
"They aren't the only ones," Jaquar murmured. Marian agreed.
"Two Exotiques and a Circlet Sorcerer, all strange folks, and
the place is still full of Chevaliers." Alexa nodded in
satisfaction. "Goes to show how tough they are."
Marian thought anyone that could hang around in a rough place
like this with a bunch of monster heads decorating the walls had to
be tough.
Jaquar said, "I think about a quarter of the room emptied when
we joined you."
Shrugging, Alexa scanned the men and women again. "The creme de
la creme of the Chevaliers remained," she said.
Marian decided Alexa personally knew everyone who was left. "I
know I can't have a baton like yours without becoming a Marshall,"
she said, "but do you think I can have a magic wand or
something?"
Alexa's eyes opened wide. "You'll get a magic telescoping staff.
All the Circlets of the Fifth Degree have them. Didn't they tell
you?"
"No."
"They never realize the holes in our knowledge." Alexa shook her
head.
"I've figured that out," Marian said.
At that moment the outside door opened. Alexa heard it, looked
up and narrowed her eyes. The door shut, and a new, strong Song
approached them. It was the most intricate, Powerful and potent
Song Marian had heard since coming to Lladrana. The sheer richness
of the music overpowered her for a moment. She realized it was the
Song of a married couple- soul mates.
A few seconds later the young woman Marian and Jaquar had passed
on the way in stopped at their table. On her shoulder was a
warhawk. The girl was followed by a young man who wore bright
purple Chevalier leathers. These were the two with the wonderful
Song.
Eyeing the hawk-Sinafin-warily, Marian addressed her.
"Salutations, feycoocu," she said.
Sinafin preened, then nodded. Salutations, Scholar.
"Salutations, feycoocu," said Jaquar.
To Marian's surprise, the bird stepped from the girl's shoulder
to Jaquar's. He blinked as if also amazed.
The girl gestured to Alexa to scoot over. With a frown, Alexa
moved to the corner, muttering about people taking advantage of a
small person. The girl sat next to Alexa and the young man seated
himself next to the girl.
"This is my personal assistant, Marwey, and my Chevalier
Pascal," Alexa said.
Marian noticed a bright purple badge on Marwey's cloak, and once
again looked at Pascal's tabard of purple. She couldn't help
staring at Alexa. "You like purple."
Alexa growled. "It's the traditional color for Exotiques. Be
glad you aren't dressed in it and that everything around you isn't
purple."
"You're kidding, right?" Marian blurted in English.
Alexa buried her nose in her large mug. "Tho." The Lladranan
"no" echoed hollowly.
Staring at the young couple sporting the hideous color, Marian
shook her head.
Pascal's eyes fired. "It's a perfectly good color!"
Marwey pinkened and nodded.
"Maybe they don't see the exact shade we do," Marian said
weakly.
Alexa's eyebrows rose. "They are an aural society."
Interrupting Jaquar's stare-down with the bartender, Marian
addressed him. "What do you think of Alexa's...livery?" She thought
"livery" was the word for what a noble person dressed the
subordinates in their household in.
Jaquar glanced at Pascal's purple leathers. "Bright.
Interesting."
Marian and Alexa shared a glance.
"I have purple clothes, purple bed hangings," Alexa said
gloomily. She glared at Sinafin, the feycoocu. "A purple
muff!"
"Really?" Marian couldn't believe the being who'd frightened her
so badly the night before could be anything as innocent as a
muff.
A crash of breaking glass diverted everyone's attention to the
bar. Then a streak of purple caught Marian's eye as Sinafin- a
muff-rolled off Jaquar's shoulder and across the table to land in
front of Marian.
My visit last night was necessary, said Sinafin. Her
mental voice was soft as a whisper, meant only for Marian's ears.
I am sorry, but it was necessary.
Marian figured that was the best apology she'd get from the
creature. The thickly furred muff rippled, exuding comfort.
Hesitantly Marian petted the muff and it warmed under her fingers,
sent her a few bars of "Over the Sea to Skye."
With a sigh, Marian gave up her anger and continued stroking
Sinafin. Lovely animal, ugly muff.
Marwey glanced at Pascal. He studied Jaquar and Marian,
shrugged.
"Alyeka?" Pascal said.
"Yes?" said Alexa.
"I have something of importance to ask and think it must be
spoken of now," Pascal said. He squared his shoulders, discreetly
nodding toward the booth behind Marian and Jaquar.
Jaquar straightened and gazed at the younger man. The muff
rolled away from Marian and off the table to the bench beside her,
then onto the floor.
"What is it?" Alexa had set her mug down and had tilted her head
as if trying to hear any Songs coming from the booth.
Marian herself heard erratic, harsh rhythms. Two Songs
inextricably melded together, both hopeless.
Alexa frowned. "I don't understand what you want."
Marwey's lips tightened. "Koz and Perlee Desolly. They're
friends of ours. They're-"
"Desperate," Pascal finished. "They Paired against the wishes of
the noble they flew under and both were dismissed from his service.
They're independent now and penniless."
"Reynardus," Marwey said flatly.
Glancing at Marian, Alexa explained, "Bastien's father. The
former Lord Knight of the Marshalls."
In urgent tones, Pascal said, "The Desollys need support. A
helping Song. Knowledge that they're good Chevaliers, good
people."
Hands wrapped around her mug, Alexa nodded. "I understand. Most
of Reynardus's fliers are now with Luthan or Bastien and me."
"The thing is-" Marwey wet her lips, swallowed "-we're not sure
how Luthan and Bastien feel about Koz. He's antagonized them both
in the past. And-uh-Bastien and Perlee- well, they played together
for a while."
Alexa scowled.
Marwey continued. "But only for a month or two, and they both
moved on. It was a long time ago."
Alexa was shaking her head.
"Please, Alyeka," said Marwey. "Take them on. We will-"
Holding up a hand, Alexa stopped the girl's tumble of words. "I
can't believe you hesitated to ask. Of course they can fly under my
banner," she said. Then her tone sharpened. "They're good, and will
fit in with my team?"
"We'll make sure they do," Pascal assured her.
"All right, then." Alexa screwed up her face. "I think I still
have plenty of zhiv to pay two more Chevaliers."
A yip came from under the table and a small dog scrambled up to
Alexa's lap, then hopped onto the table, where it panted, swiped
Alexa's cheek with a long, pink tongue and curled into a ball. It
was the shapeshifter Sinafin, the feycoocu
frog-fairy-vulture-hawk-muff.
Marian stared at it. "A miniature greyhound?" she murmured.
"Yes," Alexa said, petting the dog. "They don't exist in
Lladrana."
"Of course not," Marian said politely. "That would be too
easy."
She shared a smile with Alexa. Then the other woman stood on
tiptoe to peer over Marian's head into the booth behind her.
Alexa looked at Pascal. "What rank do you want to give the
Desolly Pair?"
Pascal jutted his chin. "Koz deserves Fourth."
"Fourth rank. He must be good, then," Alexa said.
Pascal slipped from the bench and strode to the other booth. The
voices behind Marian stilled, took on the lightness of casual
conversation. Then Pascal began speaking in quiet, reassuring
tones.
Moments later the emotion throbbing from the booth behind Marian
was a relief so pure it held giddiness.
Jaquar tapped a finger on the table. The small gesture had the
three women looking at him. "Alyeka, do you have any dreeth teeth
left, or, better yet, a spur? There are several Circlets who want
those and will pay dearly for them."
Alexa rubbed her hands, grinned. "Oh yes." She looked at Marian
and wrinkled her nose. "Gruesome trophies."
The couple from the other booth approached Alexa's table with
Pascal. Koz was a big, raw-boned man of bluntly handsome features.
Under his arm he sheltered a startlingly beautiful woman with amber
eyes and dark brown hair that grew from a widow's peak. Marian
hypothesized that she, like Jaquar, had some old Exotique
blood-interesting, since progeny from Earth-Lladranan unions were
rare. She wondered if a Circlet had kept track of the bloodlines,
the genetic code...
"Swordmarshall Alyeka Vauxveau, I present to you Koz and Perlee
Desolly, who I think would make an excellent Chevalier Pair of the
Fourth Rank for your household."
"Thank you," the woman whispered.
Koz's jaw worked. "I promise you, Swordmarshall Alyeka, you will
never regret this."
"Welcome to my household, Chevaliers." Alexa held out her
hand.
Desolly touched her fingers briefly with his own, then half
bowed. "Thank you."
The woman and Alexa shook hands.
"I will pay for your lodgings in Horseshoe Hall or the Keep,"
Alexa said.
"Thank you, Lady," Perlee said. She smiled up at Koz. "We'll
have our own rooms. How wonderful!" She bit her lip, glanced back
at the booth they'd left. "We can move in immediately... we have
our dufflecases."
Alexa smiled and waved a hand. "Fine. I'm sure Marwey and Pascal
have it all planned out. Go ahead." Her eyes twinkled at Marwey,
who slipped from the bench and started out of the inn.
The Desollys and Pascal followed.
Alexa tilted her cup. It was empty.
"Do you want more tea?" asked Jaquar.
"Not here. I have a better cache up at the Castle. Let's go
there." Alexa looked at Marian and a small trill of notes ran in
the Song between them. "You can stay in the suite under mine. In my
Keep Tower," she said proudly. "It's really great except it's
always been assigned to an Exotique, so there's the purple
factor."
She turned to Jaquar. "You can stay in the..." She frowned.
"Where do Sorcerers and Sorceresses stay when they're at the
Castle?"
"We have never stayed in the past, but perhaps it is time to be
more active," Jaquar said.
"Didn't stay in the past?" Alexa jumped on the admission. Her
eyes narrowed. "Since this war with the Dark has escalated, all the
Marshalls are living in the Castle rather than on our own estates.
It's time the Tower Community establishes a presence in the Castle,
too."
Jaquar's teeth gleamed in a smile that wasn't quite nice. "I
agree, but you bait me. Well, let's see. We could raise a Tower in
the middle of one of the Castle courtyards."
Staring at him, Alexa said with heavy irony, "Oh yeah, that will
work."
His brow furrowed as if he pondered her phrasing. Marian
chuckled.
"The Castle is called The Marshalls' Castle," Jaquar pointed
out. "We of the Tower would be on your grounds-you would have the
strategic advantage."
"Heaven forbid that any of the communities of Lladrana would
work together to save us all from the Dark," Alexa snapped. "Turf
wars. Shee-oot."
Jaw flexing, Jaquar said evenly, "I said I want to end that, but
I will also remind you that the Marshalls kept the knowledge that
the fence posts were falling and the horrors were invading from the
rest of the country until far too late. No wonder the Marshalls
have alienated other segments of our society."
"Did we hide that knowledge, indeed?" Alexa stood, planted her
hands on the table and leaned forward, every small inch of her
exuding menace.
"Not you-those before you." Jaquar raised a hand in peace.
"Can you tell me that none of the Tower Community knew what was
going on?" she said in a dangerously low voice. "That no one
tracked the Dark? Tell me that you all didn't remain quiet, too,
watching the Marshalls struggling to staunch the flow of horrors.
That you didn't hesitate to inform the other members of Lladranan
society. That you stood back and let Chevaliers die fighting until
I asked for your help. That you didn't really join this action
until you all knew a sangvile was loose and it was feasting on your
own."
The inn had fallen silent, everyone focused on their table.
Anger and suspicion swirled in the atmosphere. Did Alexa know she
was stirring up a mob? The wait staff had vanished.
Jaquar paled beneath his golden skin. He stood, looming over
Alexa. It had no effect on her. "I will say that we made mistakes,
individually and as a community." He swept a glance around the
room. Many of the Chevaliers turned back to their own business. One
tough, rangy man met Jaquar's eyes. "Mistakes we have paid for."
Grief laced his voice.
Alexa sighed and raised her hands, palms out. "Peace between us.
As we say in Exotique Terre, 'That was then, this is now.'" A
considering look came to her eyes. Her smile matched the one Jaquar
had given her earlier. "I suppose we Marshalls could claim one of
those islands off the west coast that you Circlets like. Establish
a presence among you, instead of making rooms available here in the
Castle." She straightened.
Choking, Jaquar flung up a hand in what Marian recognized as the
gesture of a fencer when hit. "That isn't necessary."
"Then the Tower needs a presence here in the Castle. Permanent
rooms. To work with the Marshalls and the Castleton City
Guildfolk." Alexa's glance speared Marian. "Try to integrate the
Tower Community with the Marshalls."
Marian opened her mouth, closed it, then stood.
Jaquar reached out and took her hand, raised it to his lips.
"For tonight I'll stay with Marian." He paused.
When she didn't contradict him, she felt some tension leave his
stiff body.
"Tomorrow we can tour the Castle and choose rooms for the Tower
Community, should any wish to come and stay."
"I'll expect you at the Marshalls' Council Meeting tomorrow
morning," Alexa said.
"Of course. I'll be there."
The outside door opened, and as fresh, cool night air poured in,
Marian felt some of the negative emotions in the room flow
out-given a little push by Alexa and some of the Chevaliers. Marian
was impressed at the teamwork, the willingness to help. Her vision
shifted slightly and she heard Power-a ready tune of support from
the flying knights encased Alexa, and washed to Marian, too, out of
respect for Alexa and her obvious acceptance of Marian. No tune
reached Jaquar.
Sinafin yipped. That was very well done. It is a good
start. She approved.
Marian saw some Chevaliers nod and realized the feycoocu had
broadcast the comment.
A middle-aged, sturdy woman of obvious authority strode to
them.
Alexa inclined her head to the woman, gestured to Alexa. "Lady
Hallard, Representative of the Chevaliers to the Communities of
Lladrana, let me introduce you to Exotique Scholar Marian
Harasta."
The woman's dark brown eyes studied Marian. She nodded once,
briskly, and shot out her hand. Marian untwined her fingers from
Jaquar's and took the woman's hand, found it hard with calluses.
Obviously this woman didn't send her Chevaliers into battle without
her-she led her Chevaliers in battle.
"Salutations, Marian, pleased to meet you." She dipped her head
at Jaquar. "Sorcerer Circlet Dumont, good to see you. We need all
the help we can get." She hesitated, then tramped away to the bar
and the tough, rangy Chevalier that wore her colors-gray and
yellow.
"Let's go now," Alexa muttered. "Before everyone in Castleton
shows up to meet you and ask you questions. At least you speak the
language well," she said enviously. "Better than I do."
She swept out in front of them. Jaquar plucked up his hat and
set it on his head, left the booth and stepped aside for Marian,
then brought up the rear. Marian was amused that she was sandwiched
protectively between the two.
No one stopped them.
The night air was brisk, the sky magnificently star-studded. The
air smelled pure and with her inhalations, Marian tasted Song-the
tang of the City, the mainland of Lladrana.
Once they left the vicinity of the Nom de Nom, the streets and
squares were quiet, though not dark. Plenty of windows were lit,
showing that the culture wasn't simply dawn-to-dusk.
Marian and Alexa walked together and Jaquar trailed behind,
talking with Sinafin who had changed into warhawk form when none of
them were looking and rode on his shoulder.
Soon they reached the road to the Castle. It was uphill. Marian
straightened her spine and tried not to think of her aching feet.
At least the magical slippers had wonderful arch support.
Alexa took off at a rapid pace. Valiantly, Marian kept up.
"Alexa," Marian said in English, trying to keep a whine from her
voice. "Can you slow down a little? I walked two hours to a beach,
practiced Power lessons for another three or four, then rode
lightning here." She glanced back at Jaquar, who was talking to
Sinafin. "Not to mention.. .other activities. My body feels
like..." Her muscles felt whipped, but her inner core felt glowing
at riding lightning and the sex afterward.
"Oh? Sorry. Those 'other activities' can really wear a person
out." Alexa grinned up at Marian.
"Yes. How far is it?"
"To the Castle? About two miles."
Marian suppressed a groan, but Alexa sensed it anyway. "Not used
to walking, eh?"
"No. Bus."
"Car." Alexa sighed. "I'm a bad horsewoman. Of course, since I
used to be a terrible horsewoman, that means I'm improving.
I haven't ridden alone on volaranback lately, not since I broke my
arm again." She shook her head. "I fall off. Everyone, including
the volarans, is appalled. Maybe I have an inner ear problem. No,
can't be that because the jerir got in my ears all three times and
that would have healed."
She continued talking, but Marian paid no mind as she struggled
to grasp the wisps of memories that had come from Alexa during
their blood-bond. "Wait!" Alexa stopped, Marian gestured to
continue walking and they did, but she said, "The jerir pool-a
healing pool. It healed awful wounds."
"Yes, it did," said Alexa. "And little cuts and scrapes, and
bruises. Everything. We used all the benefits up and had to send
the remaining sludge away. I think to some island where a Circlet
could study it." She put her hand on Marian's arm. "But I don't
know how jerir is for diseases. You might want to speak to the
Castle Medica or Swordmarshall Thealia. I know they're working with
a black-and-white baby who swallowed some jerir. Black-and-whites
usually have bad Power flow, but whether that translates into bad
brain synapses or what, I don't know."
"Maybe, just maybe..." Marian whispered.
"Marian, if jerir was a cure-all for black-and-white problems or
anything else, I assure you, rare as it is, it would still be used
a lot."
Marian sniffed back hopeful tears that had lodged in her throat.
"You're right, of course. But it's an avenue to explore."
"Of course." Alex stared at Marian. "You really do look
exhausted."
"Thanks a lot." Marian shrugged. "I ache."
"The Castle baths are spring fed. Hot springs," Alexa said. She
skipped a little up the road.
Marian nearly closed her eyes at the energy radiating from the
woman.
"Hot springs," Marian repeated reverently.
"Yup. The best are the Chevaliers' baths in the bottom of
Horseshoe Hall. Efficacious minerals, good Powerful soothing
spells, a series of different temperature pools." Alexa waved.
"Whatever you need."
"Sounds wonderful."
"They're also the busiest. Probably full right now. Co-ed
bathing." Alexa slid a glance Marian's way.
Marian was shaking her head.
"Yeah, I know, I don't care for it, either. The Marshalls have a
fancy public bath in the bottom of the Keep-pretty mosaic tiles,
greenery." She cocked her head. "No one's there right now. It's
co-ed, too, so Jaquar can keep you company. Between the two of you,
you could ward the door and make it private." Alexa wiggled her
brows, then sobered. "Marian, you do know that every bond
you make-with Bossgond, the blood-bond I forced you into-"
"Don't you say that! I agreed."
"You didn't-don't-know all the ramifications-"
"Maybe not, but I'm an adult. Don't take my choices away from
me. I don't want you feeling guilty over this."
"Oh, all right. But to continue my warning from my vast
experience of three months-every bond you make with someone here,
with Amee itself, will tie you here, and I know that's not what you
want. You have one helluva a Song going with Jaquar already."
"I know."
"Just saying-"
"Thank you, but I'll be fine." I have to be.
21
Whether Jaquar had noticed that their pace had sped up, Marian's
agitated voice or a ruffling of the Song he shared with her, he
caught up and walked with them.
Actually, he strutted. "The feycoocu has graced me with the gift
of her name."
Marian and Alexa shared a glance. "Sinafin?" they asked in
unison, looking at the bird.
Jaquar's mouth twisted. "I should have known both of you knew
it."
Of course, said Sinafin. They are Exotiques. All the
Exotiques will know my name.
His eyes narrowed with calculation.
"That reminds me," Marian said, switching back to Lladranan.
"The woman we met at the Nom de Nom, Perlee Desolly, looks as if
she has some Exotique blood. I was under the impression that
children from Exotique-Lladranan unions are rare."
"True," Alexa said. "But they do occur. My estate-the one gifted
me as an Exotique-and you'll get one and a salary, too, Marian-was
established by an Exotique who had children." Alexa stared straight
ahead. "I doubt Bastien and I will have children. It's not good to
bring children into the world when both parents are fighters." She
shrugged. "And if Lladrana ever wins this war, I still don't think
we'd be blessed. During the two visions I had of my life on Earth
or my life here, children were not in my future. We practice birth
control, anyway."
"How?" asked Marian.
Now Alexa turned her head and smiled. "Really a curious person,
aren't you, Marian."
Marian was glad the dark would not show her flush. "Yes."
"Only to be expected, you being an academic and all. But I would
have thought that Jaquar would say something about it-or Bossgond,
even."
Marian stared at Jaquar's profile. "They didn't."
Jaquar shrugged. "It didn't come up. I know Marian can't stay. I
did what was necessary." Sinafin asked him something and he turned
his head to talk with her.
"Powerful people-such as Marshalls or Circlets-can control
bodily functions. During sex we usually turn up the body heat and
kill the little swimmers."
"Sperm?" Marian asked.
"That's it," Alexa replied cheerfully. "Fry 'em to hell." She
waved her hand. "Poof. They're gone."
"Interesting," Marian said. She was almost distracted from the
topic she wanted to pursue. "Has anyone ever kept track of all the
mixed bloodlines through genealogy?"
"Like an Exotique descendants' Lorebook?" Alexa asked.
"Yes."
"I don't know."
Marian caught Jaquar's attention and repeated the question.
"I haven't heard of any," he said, and picked up the pace so
that Alexa nearly had to run.
"Didn't your parents ever discuss your heritage with you?" asked
Alexa. She wasn't even panting.
"No. I was abandoned as a child. In Krache." He gave a humorless
smile. "A seaport with few decent people. My adoptive parents found
me living in the streets there."
"Oh," Alexa said. "Sorry."
Sinafin rubbed her feathered head against his cheek,
crooning.
Alexa stared at Jaquar, then shook her head. "Well, at least I
don't have to look at that hat anymore. Bastien made it for
himself, you know. Really ugly hat."
Marian followed the new conversational lead. "Very ugly hat.
Uglier than your purple muff."
Sinafin clicked her beak in amusement.
They arrived at the main gate of the Castle. The Marshalls'
Castle. Marian had visited a couple of castles in France, but this
one looked more like Windsor than a French chateau.
There was a drawbridge, and the edge of the iron portcullis
showed near the top of the entryway. The hallway beyond the gate
must have been at least fifteen feet long, leading into a
courtyard.
Since Jaquar and Alexa walked quickly and the buildings
overshadowed the grassy courtyard, details were lost.
Alexa headed toward the far door of the yard. "This is the lower
ward," she said. Pulling her jade baton from its sheath, she
pointed it at a large, square wooden door with iron strap-work and
hummed two notes. The door banged open. Marian caught horrified
looks on the faces of two uniformed soldiers as they flattened
themselves against the inner wall.
"Sorry," Alexa said. "I didn't know anyone was minding the
door." She slipped her baton back in its sheath and stepped over
the foot-high threshold of the door.
Jaquar chuckled and did the same.
As Marian followed she met the eyes of the soldiers-both
middle-aged, one man and one woman-and found them staring at
Jaquar, then her, mouths open.
More gossip would circulate, for certain.
Alexa waved to the massive Keep. "Thealia's Tower is the
closest, mine is behind hers, overlooking the cliff." She angled
toward it.
This yard wasn't grass like the previous one, but stone. A huge
round building about three stories high dominated the far end.
Jaquar held out his hand and Marian took it. He gazed down at
her, smiling. Did she look as lost as she felt at this turn of
events?
Sinafin emitted a piercing cry and Marian wondered if Alexa had
kept track of all of Sinafin's forms; it seemed the creature had an
infinite variety. The hawk flew across the yard.
"She's going to Bastien and his laboring volaran," Alexa
said.
"This is Temple Ward," Jaquar said. He gestured to the round
building. "That's the Temple where the Marshalls Summoned you."
Memory images clicked into place of the gigantic round room, a
pentacle, an altar. "If I want to return to Earth, should I leave
from there?"
Alexa halted, glanced back at them. "Probably best. The
Marshalls are the strongest team in the country. I don't think a
band of Circlets would have the experience in blending their Power
to accomplish such a difficult and delicate task. Or you can wait
for the Snap."
"I'll figure out how to recompense you for sending me home
before I leave. The timing of the Snap is too uncertain," Marian
said.
They entered a cloister walk of open stonework arches that ran
along most of the Keep, then went to the far Tower, where there was
a door. Alexa ushered them through and into a large hallway. She
indicated the left wall. "That's the Marshalls' Council Room." When
they came to an intersecting corridor-another wide hall-Alexa
turned left. "The hall at the end of the building opening to the
right leads to my tower. I'll show you to your suite, then I think
I'll check on Bastien in the volaran stables."
So they traversed the corridors and mounted the stairs in
Alexa's tower. As in Jaquar's Tower, the steps were a tight spiral
of stone.
Alexa crossed the circular inner entryway to a door and flung it
open, then turned left down a dim, narrow passage and threw open
another door. "Your rooms. Be glad the Marshalls only used an
incredible amount of purple in my suite." She grinned at Jaquar.
"You should know lighting and housekeeping spells-you might want to
dust." Then she hurried away.
Whistling several notes, Jaquar entered as light flickered in
crystal orbs on the walls.
"It's beautiful," Marian said. She stared into a richly colored
bedroom-rugs of complementary patterns, a wide expanse of windows
that followed the curve of the tower. To her right was a huge
canopy bed, complete with curtains.
Marian stared at the bed. The heat of her blood seemed to rise
until it pulsed just under her skin, sensitizing every nerve.
She was intensely aware of Jaquar standing beside her, though
she didn't turn to look at him. She could hear his every breath,
sense the waves of his aura, and the melody between them rolled
like thunder in her ears, in her heart. She barely breathed
herself, afraid that moving might shatter her mind, the sensory
input was so great. She didn't know how she stood the feeling
throbbing between them.
"I can't," she whispered in English.
But he must have known it was denial.
His footsteps were mere brushes of shoe upon thick rug, yet she
heard them... retreating. At the door, he murmured, "I'll be in the
Keep baths at the lowest level. Follow our Song if you wish to join
me."
A slight disturbance of air indicated the opening and shutting
of the door.
Marian trembled violently, took one step, two, toward the bed.
Fell across it. She panted and tears leaked from under her eyelids.
She lay there for a moment, doing nothing but existing, as if her
mind spun in starry space, scattered into electrical impulses that
were stars, no thought, only being.
She was afraid her heart had developed a small crack that could
wrench it in two. One part of her longed to stay in Lladrana,
become a Sorceress, fulfill her natural potential...learn more of
Jaquar.
The other part would always need Andrew-for brotherly love, to
protect and be protected. Her family.
How could she merge the two?
She could return to Earth and stay.
She could return to Earth, explain everything to Andrew and
return to Lladrana.
She could stay in Lladrana-but, no, that was not truly an
option.
The most exciting, the most frightening possibility of all was
to convince Andrew to return to Lladrana with her. But could she?
What if he would live longer and better on Earth? What if there
really was no hope for him on Lladrana? What if she couldn't come
back, let alone bring Andrew with her? What price would they pay to
return?
And why was she thinking of all these abstruse matters when
there was a sexy hunk of man waiting to pleasure her in the wet,
steamy, exotic baths...? Because she was afraid her feelings for
Jaquar played a big part in her decision.
But, of course, there was such a thing as thinking too much,
overanalyzing. That was exactly what she was doing now.
Marian stretched, and grit pricked her skin-dust from the road?
Caked mud from lovemaking in the field? Electricity of her body
attracting particles during the lightning ride? Probably all
three.
She hopped from the bed and did a quick exploration of the tower
suite. She was becoming well informed about tower living
arrangements. This one had a bathroom with a shower, but no
bathtub, as usual.
Definitely time for a wash.
Humming-and realizing she was lilting a portion of the tune that
linked her to Jaquar-Marian let the notes seep into her, lead her
feet instinctively. An interesting alternative to thinking-simply
following instinct. She seemed to be much more tied to the world
and people and Songs here than on Earth.
She reached the lowest level of the Keep. Instead of dark and
dank, twisty passages, she found well-lit corridors that were
wide.
For a moment she hesitated outside the door. Their previous sex
could be rationalized away as excitement from playing in the storm.
If she went in now, they'd join together again-knowingly and
deliberately on both their parts.
Letting her emotions, her sexuality, surface and overwhelm the
sharp thoughts, Marian pushed the door open.
He stood waiting for her, shining droplets scattered over his
body. The lush setting of colorful mosaic tiles complemented his
golden skin, dark hair, blue eyes. A man in the prime of his life,
he moved toward her with muscular power and grace. He could be a
sultan, a water god. He was a Circlet, a great Sorcerer. A
magnificent man.
An aroused man.
Her insides began to tremble as her body readied for him. No
need to suppress logical thought patterns now-they were gone.
Memories whirled through her of his hands, his lips, the sound of
his low groan as he climaxed. She wanted it all again. More and
longer.
She wanted to glide her hands over his firm muscles, feel the
teasing prickle of his body hair. She wanted him over her and in
her.
So she held out her hand, but he stepped past her. Half turning,
she saw him place his palm against the door A maroon light flared
around his fingers as he crooned, "Private and special, softly keep
this place for us alone."
That Song was a tune that repeated again and again in her mind
as he came to her, smiling.
Eyes locked on hers, he took her hands, lifted one to his lips,
turned it over and pressed a tingling kiss into her palm, then did
the same with the other. He loosed her hands and her fingers curled
inward, to hold his tender kisses.
His palms curled around her shoulders as he leaned forward and
kissed her forehead, then her eyes closed as he touched his lips to
each eyelid. He was undoing her, utterly. Nothing in the universe
mattered save him, his soft mouth, his gentle wooing of her. She
didn't even care that he comprised her world. No warning alarms
rang in her head. Only the deep languid feelings stirring inside
her were important. Only the yearning that would coil tightly,
demanding to be assuaged.
Her eyes opened again as he kissed the tip of her nose, brushed
her lips with his. All so reverent, as if he was cherishing her.
Her breath left on a moan.
She raised her own hands, placed them on his face, felt the
elegant bones beneath his skin, saw the shadows under his eyes that
grief had painted. Yet nothing in his touch, in his bearing, in his
Song reverberated with grief and she was glad she gave him surcease
from that emotion. She stroked his lean jaw, slid her thumbs over
his full lips. Lips she had to taste. She tilted her head and drew
his mouth to hers.
The meeting of their lips was the most exquisite thing she'd
ever felt. Promising. Infinitely promising. She could believe
anything with his mouth against hers. Feel everything. She opened
her lips, feathered her tongue across his lips, savored his taste
of wild forest herbs, of wind, of man, bringing it into her to
keep.
His tongue followed suit, traced his taste over her lips,
relished her, then plunged into her mouth, penetrating, exploring,
as if all her essence could be learned from this kiss.
He broke the embrace and stepped back, his eyes dark, his face
taut with passion, his chest rising and falling with ragged
breaths. When he raised his hands they trembled, and he met her
eyes and laughed. "What you do to me, Lady. Beauty-of heart, of
mind, of body, of Song. I have never heard such a compelling
Song." Fisting his hands as if checking they still obeyed him, he
crushed the fabric of her dress at her shoulders, then lifted the
gown from her, tossing it aside to lie like an emerald shadow.
A raspy noise caught in his throat as he studied her. He shook
his head. "Exotique. Who knew such splendor existed-pale skin, red,
red hair, nipples the color of-" Again the groan and head shake.
"Beyond any Lladranan delights."
Frowning, he said, "What happened to that-that garment which
molds your breasts?"
She felt herself blush, and since it started above her breasts
he watched with interest. "My bra?" She nodded to the gown. "It's
in a pocket of my gown."
"Yet you wear the lower piece that emphasizes your
femininity."
It was nothing more than a pair of high-cut panties.
Jaquar shuddered. "You'd best hurry and bathe. I have already
done so. I can't stand the wait for you much longer."
She shucked her panties, scanned the tile for puddles and
avoided his tracks as she hurried to the pool. She decided it was
long and deep enough for a flat dive. The Marshalls did themselves
proud.
The water-warm and gliding silkily against her skin-full of
herbs, she guessed. Her fingers touched the bench jutting from the
pool wall and she surfaced. She shook her head to fling her hair
from her eyes and glanced around.
Jaquar slowly walked to the pool. She thought she could see the
heat of desire emanating from him in the steam.
Marian ducked under, then bobbed back up. She wanted to soak her
bruised body-later. She spied a dish of soaps, grabbed the first
one and began a scrub. She'd just done her hair when Jaquar put his
hands under her arms and drew her from the water.
She gasped, but before she could protest, he was washing her
thoroughly. She moaned and hung on to him as his slick hands
caressed her, massaging her breasts until all she could hear was
her own panting. He was relentless, sliding his hands over the
curve of her hips and belly, up and down her legs. His fingers
delved between her thighs, exquisitely, knowledgeably. Her balance
wavered.
Her vision dimmed, but her sense of smell heightened. The
fragrance of the soap rose to her nostrils-aloe and something
sharper that reminded her of deserts more than green Lladrana. It
mixed with a luxurious scent that she realized with a touch of
self-consciousness was her own arousal. Then there was Jaquar's
natural scent, and his own musky arousal. She whimpered as the
combination blew through her like a scouring wind, hollowing so she
could be filled with something else, something new.
And filled with man.
She swayed toward him.
His hands were strong around her waist. "Take a breath. I'll
rinse you, then... then..."
She closed her eyes and inhaled deeply.
"By the Song, your breasts..." he murmured. She was
raised, then lowered gently into the water that lapped against the
soles of her feet, causing her toes to curl. The water flowed up
her calves to her knees, to her thighs. Then it warmed her sex, and
she shuddered, she was so aroused. He slipped her farther into the
pool until her breasts floated, nipples tight, and she began to
moan.
"Breathe!" he warned.
She shut her mouth. The water caressed her neck, rose over her
face, tingled her scalp as her hair spread out.
He smoothed his hands up her body under the water and she could
do nothing but twist under his touch. His fingers untangled her
hair, then he caught her under her arms and pulled her out of the
water.
Releasing her breath in a puff, she finally opened her eyes to
see his face taut, and a flush on his skin that affected her even
more. She needed him.
The cool air evaporating the water on her contrasted with her
heated blood, coiling her arousal tighter. She'd never been so
aware of her entire body, and the throbbing of her sex.
Then he settled her on a soft, fluffy bathsheet, big enough to
hold them both. One of his hands curved around the back of her
neck, bringing her lips close for his kiss. He plunged his cool
tongue into her mouth as he angled his body over hers, slipping his
knees between her thighs. The roughened brush of his body hair
against her sensitized skin had her arching to meet him, welcome
him.
He thrust into her, long, deep, powerfully.
She sucked on his tongue, stared into his eyes. He withdrew
slightly, lunged again, and she shattered into bliss.
He groaned and followed.
Their Songs merged, took from each other, gave to each
other.
Changed them both.
Marian felt enveloped by him. His warmth surrounded her, and the
exotic fragrance of bath and sex whirled around her. Time
slowed.
Finally, he lifted his head and his gaze was as piercing as
ever.
She outlined his cheekbone with the pad of her thumb, chuckled.
"You are back to thinking, Jaquar?"
He opened his mouth, hesitated, cleared his throat. "You
can talk." He set his brow against hers. "I'm going to roll us over
into the pool for a quick cleansing."
"I don't think-"
The water slid over them. They didn't hit the bench as she'd
feared. Nor did they separate. Jaquar kicked, found his feet, and
his hands slid to cup her bottom, entering her.
He flexed his muscles, all of his muscles, and Marian
began the spiraling climb to the center of the storm once more.
"What's going on in there? Open up now!" a woman shouted from
outside the door, banging on it.
Jaquar jerked, withdrew. He grasped her hand and pulled her to
the corner stairs leading out of the pool.
"Don't make us use our batons to get in," threatened the woman.
She sounded like an angry parent scolding unruly children.
Marian couldn't help herself, she laughed.
There was silence, then a more subdued shout. "I don't recognize
you."
"It's Exotique Marian and Circlet Jaquar," Jaquar said coolly,
taking a large terry-clothlike robe in midnight blue from a hook on
one of the pillars. He wrapped himself in it, then brought another
to Marian. It was purple.
Surely this was Alexa's robe.
It was too long for Alexa. It was Marian's robe. She was
so bemused by the startling color and its very presence that she
allowed Jaquar to help her on with it. He stood behind her,
overlapped the front and tied the belt in a loose knot, then
brought her back against him.
He felt hard and solid and wonderful. His breath was sweet and
warm next to her ear. Tenderness flowed from him.
"Ahem," rumbled a male outside the door. "These are the
Marshalls' baths. And we are the Marshalls, yet the door is
warded for privacy against us. Do you think you could finish up
quickly in there? Training took place in mud fields today."
"Quickly?" whispered Jaquar. "I think not-not this next
time."
Heat washed over Marian. "We're coming out. Jaquar, can you
dismiss the ward?"
He heaved a sigh. "If I must." With a wicked grin, he continued,
"Our loving will be better in bed, anyway."
Heavens. An-ti-ci-pa-tion. Marian swallowed, fiddled with
adjusting her robe. She hoped they didn't look as if they had had
hot and sweaty sex, since they hadn't. It had been more like hot,
wet, slippery sex. On the other hand, it was probably too
late to impress the Marshalls. The damage of this little scene was
already done.
On his way to the door, Jaquar picked up her panties and put
them in his pocket.
"I want those!" Marian demanded.
He shrugged, rolled their clothes together and tucked them under
his arm. He touched the door with one finger. "Open."
"Thank you," the man outside muttered.
Jaquar stood aside and people swept in. The first was a huge
man, already shirtless and showing a massive chest covered with
scars. Another was a stately woman with narrowed eyes.
Marian dipped in a little curtsy. "Salutations."
"Salutations," the woman said. "And to you, Jaquar."
He inclined his head to the group, "Swordmarshall Thealia."
Some moved to opposite sides of the room and behind openings
Marian hadn't noticed. Dressing rooms?
Jaquar caught Marian's hand in his own. He smiled charmingly at
Thealia. "Sorry to delay you. We rode the lightning tonight and got
quite dirty."
Those who were still in the main bathroom froze.
Thealia opened her mouth, hesitated, then shook her head and
waved toward the door. "We have business to discuss. Depart."
"Of course," Jaquar said. Tugging slightly on Marian, he led her
away.
After he shut the door, he waited for a moment, and Marian heard
the rise of excited voices.
Jaquar smiled in satisfaction. "That will give them something to
talk about."
Tucking her hand in the crook of his arm, he led her to their
suite under Alexa's rooms. This door, too, he warded for privacy,
and Marian watched him and knew she'd learned enough to do the
little whistle spell herself.
He came back to her and put his hands on her shoulders, rested
his brow on hers. "In the baths, I was too aroused to think. But I
want our coming together to be sharing and mutual pleasure, Marian.
An act of conscious decision. Sleep with me," he said unsteadily.
"More, take me into you and merge with me and hold me and rock me
to infinite Song." He removed her robe in a quick sweeping
movement. "As I will do for you in return."
She'd never believed a person could talk too much, but Jaquar
certainly was doing so. What was that old movie line? "Shut up, you
fool, and take me to bed." Worked for her.
He grinned, and laughter rolled from him. He swung her up into
his arms.
22
Jaquar didn't sleep well. All he wanted to do was forget himself
in Marian's tight body. But he had to speak to Bastien. Once the
Marshalls agreed to the new plan to assault the Dark, Marian would
be completely safe. As it was, he was certain he had a couple of
days before Chalmon and Venetria would act. Chalmon might have
derided the Marshalls when it came to making speedy decisions, but
most Circlets were even slower. And Chalmon and Venetria alone
could not Send Marian; they would have to convince others to help.
That, too, took time, and Jaquar had heard no rumblings.
So he dozed and finally heard Alexa return-alone. He dressed
quickly in just a robe and walked to the volaran stables. The night
was quiet, the sky blazing with stars. Except for a patrolling
guard, he was the only one abroad. Even when he passed from Temple
Ward to Lower Ward, he saw few people. If Chevaliers were partying,
it was in the Nom de Nom or the tiny inn in the outer Castle
wall.
He met Bastien as the man exited from the stable passage into
the ward. Bastien stood and stretched, breathing deeply. He smelled
of sweat-volaran and his own-and other odors that Jaquar didn't
want to identify.
Bastien grinned and joined him. "Beautiful night!"
"The volaran mare?"
"Very fine! With a fine filly."
"Excellent."
"That it is." Bastien made to throw an arm around Jaquar's
shoulders and chuckled as he stepped aside. "So, Circlet, what do
you want of me? Permission to raise a Tower in the middle of
Horseshoe Close, here?"
"As if you could grant such."
Bastien laughed, touched the baton at his hip. "I have more
influence now."
"I've come to speak of the Dark." Feeling a little wary of the
shadows, Jaquar walked to the middle of the ward and slowly began
to return to Alexa's tower. Bastien accompanied him. "Is this about
plane-walking and finding a maw of evil?"
"You've heard?"
Bastien shrugged. "Rumors."
Jaquar told him of his first trip to the nest and the master's
words, then laid out his new plan.
"No," Bastien said flatly, muscles tense. He was all warrior
now. He swept his fingers through his black-and-silver hair. "I
can't plane-walk. I don't have the control due to the remnants of
my wild Power. I am Alexa's Shield, her protector, her Pairling. I
will not allow her to fly into this battle without me."
They'd neared the gate to Temple Ward, and didn't speak until
they'd passed through and were beyond the guards' hearing.
Bastien frowned. "Besides, Alexa is an Exotique. She is tied to
Amee by me, and the rest of the Marshalls, but her bond with the
world is not as strong as that of someone who was born here. She
could get lost among the planes." He glanced at Jaquar. "If it were
on this physical plane, we'd fight, but not otherwise."
"It is Marian's task, then, to fight the Dark in its nest." Bile
rose in Jaquar's throat. He'd make sure she didn't go in alone, and
that she was Circlet of the Fifth Degree before they attempted
it.
"No," Bastien said, and it took a moment for Jaquar to realize
what he'd heard.
He stopped outside the Assayer's Office and stared at Bastien.
"No?"
Bastien shook his head. "I can't think her task is to destroy
the nest all by herself. Powerful as she is, I don't think she
could do it. She might harm it, but if she didn't destroy the Dark,
too, the nest would regenerate."
"True."
Walking to the entryway of the Keep, Bastien said, "All
indications show that every community of Lladrana must be
integrated and cooperating to destroy the Dark."
"Also true." They'd reached the landing below Marian's
suite.
"Don't say anything about this to the Marshalls' Council
tomorrow morning. 1 want to tell Alexa myself, and 1 need awhile to
figure out how to do that."
"Very well," Jaquar said, and watched Bastien take the stairs
up.
His plan was ruined, but only he and Bastien knew. Jaquar had a
couple of days to come up with a new one, but he wouldn't do it
alone; he must consult with Bossgond.
He entered the suite and watched Marian sleep. Her skin was so
pale in the moonlight, her body so beautiful, her expression so
pleased, it made him ache.
Jaquar went and showered, then returned to her. As he slowly
woke her, caressed her into moaning passion and took her on another
wild ride, he wondered how long he would have her.
He loved seeing the passion and affection in her eyes, the hint
of hero-worship. That would die when he warned her, told her what
he himself had set in motion.
He'd dealt with too many deaths lately.
It was dawn when Chalmon dismissed the Circlets and Scholars who
had been practicing the Sending ritual and looked at Venetria.
"Your contribution to the Sending Song was weak. I can't do it
without you."
"Even though I don't agree with you?"
His lips quirked. "If you were violently against this, you'd be
throwing things at my head. Preferably my glassware." His face
hardened. "But it must be done. The nest will open again
soon, I know it!" He shrugged and moved around the room restlessly
in an atypical manner.
Venetria narrowed her eyes. He was sensing something she
wasn't-she could tell through the fluctuations in their Song. His
Power picked up minute variations in the Amee's Song. Venetria
shivered.
"It will be bad, very bad if the maw spews out horrors at this
time."
She hesitated. "Perhaps we should consult the Singer."
He barked laughter. "You think I didn't consider that? I visited
her the night before last and was granted an audience. Not a Song,
for she knew our affairs as usual, but a meeting. Apparently she's
received many Songs recently. No wonder." He strode to the model of
the nest he'd made. She didn't follow. The thing disturbed her with
its slow, inimical pulsing.
Venetria asked, "What did the Singer say?"
Another short laugh that was no laugh at all. "One sentence. 'Do
what you must do.'"
She just stared at him. "That's all?"
Pacing, he nodded sharply. "I had the feeling that the Singer
had received many conflicting Songs of future events." He stopped
and pivoted to face her, his Song all determination. "We must
continue with our plan."
The cry escaped her. "Send an untrained woman into the maw!"
"Partially trained and very, very Powerful. If anyone has the
chance to destroy the nest and live, it is Exotique Marian. We'll
watch. There is a good chance that once she opens the nest it will
be vulnerable to us!" He frowned. "As for being untrained-who knows
but that raw Power might be more effective against the nest than
trained? The more she is instructed, becomes a Circlet, the more
she is learning Amee's ways and dimming her Exotique Terre
essence."
"That's merely rationalization."
He swung on her in fury. "You think so? I don't. If you cannot
help me in this..." He didn't end the sentence.
She knew what he meant and her heart seemed to shatter into a
thousand fragments, only held together by sheer will. Or perhaps
her terror of losing him. She couldn't breathe. Her studies had
lost much of their allure and now he was the mostimportant thing in
her life. She didn't think he felt the same, and didn't dare tell
him. She said, "I will Sing with you."
He straightened, his expression calmer-had he, too, feared their
Song would break?
Marian awoke to the doorharp, followed by a knock: "Shave and
a haircut. Two bits." She smiled sleepily. Despite the fact
that Alexa would stay in Lladrana, some of her thought processes
would be pure Earthling for as long as she lived.
But Marian didn't want to think of Alexa's life span. Like
Andrew's, it could be far too short.
Untangling herself from Jaquar, who grunted and reached out an
arm to keep her close, Marian rose from the bed, grabbed the purple
robe and opened the door.
Alexa grinned up at her, noted the purple robe and rolled her
eyes. "I see the Marshalls were ready for you. There's probably a
robe like that in every building's baths."
"Huh," Marian said brilliantly.
"Do you want to joint the Marshalls' Council Meeting this
morning?"
Marian just stared at her in horror.
Alexa laughed. "Guess not. Well, there's plenty to explore
around the Castle." She waved. "Feel free."
"I thought I might visit the baths again."
Chuckling, Alexa said, "A woman after my own heart. The most
private is the Ritual Bathing Pool in the Temple, but it's also the
coolest."
Marian would like to get a good look at the Temple and discover
if there was any possibility that she could Send herself back to
Boulder on her own.
Alexa whistled sharply. Marian jumped, then goggled as Jaquar
appeared beside her, fully clothed in his maroon Sorcerer's robe
and wearing his Circlet of figured gold. Dressed for success. Wow.
She'd have to learn that trick.
Looking approving, Alexa smiled. "Come along, Jaquar. I'll
excuse Marian from the meeting, but not you. I'm sure the Marshalls
have lots of questions about what's been going on in the Tower
Community."
Jaquar darted a glance at Alexa. Then he brushed back Marian's
hair and kissed her lips softly. "Good morning."
She couldn't help smiling up at him with all the far-too-gooey
feelings she felt for him. "Good morning, Jaquar."
"Well, it looks like another example of a Lladranan man being a
fabulous lover," Alexa said with a chuckle.
Jaquar just raised an eyebrow. He turned to Marian, caught her
around the waist with a hard arm and ravished her mouth. He left
her mind reeling, heat welling inside her. She stepped away from
him, gave him a little push to send him on his way to a dreary
meeting.
"Go away, you two."
"See you later," Alexa said. "You might want to visit the
brithenwood garden. I'd like to know what you think of it."
Marian found her gown and underwear in the bathroom. They hung
suspended in air in the shower stall, and she just stared for a
moment, mouth open. Nibbling her lip, she deduced that Jaquar had
"washed" them with some sort of spell, particularly since his
shirt, trousers and loincloth also floated midair. That thought, of
course, made her wonder if he was wearing anything under his
elegant robe. She banished the distracting idea and dressed.
The Keep was cool, as was the cloister walk outside it, but the
day was sunny and bright. Only a few soldiers and a couple of
Chevaliers were around as she strode up the walk and stopped under
the Temple portico. The door to the Temple was huge and wooden, but
all she did was lift the iron ring of the latch and it swung
inward, opening, the scent of incense wafting out.
She let the ring slip from her grasp and took a step into the
dim building, closing the door behind her. For a moment she just
stood as her eyes adjusted to the light. The room was fully as big
as she remembered, sectioned off here and there by intricately
carved screens that didn't reach the high ceiling.
Following the curve of the wall, she explored. Most of the wall
on each side of the door held a built-in stone bench with velvet
cushions, and piles of lush pillows here and there. She ducked
around all the screens and found a dining room, a toilet closet
with sink and octagonal, tiled tub, even a place to sleep that held
several mattresses covered in silk. There were fireplaces, and
light came from the high windows.
The ceiling showed huge beams studded with Power-storage
crystals and wheel-chandeliers. Very interesting.
Finally she moved to the area of the room that held the altar
and a large pool. When Summoned, she'd thought the pentacle that
the Marshalls had used was incised in the stone. Since Bossgond and
Jaquar both had permanent pentagrams, she'd continued to think so,
but her memory had played her false. Hands on hips, eyes narrowed,
she scanned the room, tested her Power against it and received
incredible echoes of great spells, bell-tones from the crystals
above and the chakra lamp-chimes.
There was no permanent star and circle. Which meant that the
Marshalls created the symbols when necessary, probably drawing and
angling them in the direction that would vibrate the best with
their goals.
Scrutinizing the stones, she found a bit of a vermilion outline
of the pentacle that she'd fallen into. She also discovered an
almost flaming blue-green line that might have been the color of
the pentacle used to Summon Alexa, if her memory of the images
Bossgond showed her were true.
Hands clasped behind her to prevent her curious fingers from
betraying her by touching the altar, she noted the tools, gleaming
with a polish from use and care. The lamp-chimes drew her.
Different-colored candleholders looked cut from gemstones. A small
mallet lay near them, and Marian could recall the Power of the
sounds wrung from them. Her fingers itched to take the mallet and
run it across the seven chimes. Would they sound different unlit?
What of the size of the candle, or the candle's wick-would that
affect the sound? Marian didn't know.
She studied the gong. It looked to be about nine feet in
diameter and of hammered, polished silver, with not a smidgeon of
tarnish. Again she wanted to unclasp her hands and test- flick a
finger and thumbnail against the gong, see what happened.
Better not. Stepping back, she didn't release her entwined
fingers until she was far beyond temptation. She looked at the
pool. She knew it had once contained the famed healing-liquid,
jerir, but now it definitely held herbal water. She glanced at the
door to the Temple. No way was she going to bathe in full view of
anyone who walked in.
So she returned to the little octagonal pool to wash and
shampoo. The moment she stepped from the bath, the bottom opened
and the water disappeared. Wow. New water, with flecks of plant
matter she hadn't noticed, flooded into the pool from eight sides
and it was full again in minutes.
Marian rolled her shoulders, shook out her arms and legs,
testing her limbs. No doubt about it, she felt good from the
bath. Efficacious herbs and minerals, as Alexa had said.
As she walked back to the door, she paused by the large pool and
considered it. She hadn't done any lessons today and maybe working
with water inside, here, might be easier.
Go ahead, Sinafin said. She was a frog again, sitting by
the pool. The Temple is for all human endeavors. Bathing,
eating. The frog grinned. Practicing Water lessons.
"Will the Temple and the pool help me? I don't want to
succeed in lessons here if I can't duplicate them elsewhere."
The frog let out a reverberating crooaaakkk that raised
the hair on the back of her neck. Now any advantage is
neutralized. I will watch but will neither guide nor add my
Power.
"Thanks." She guessed. She stepped into a wide shaft of
sunlight, settled into her stance, called her Power. It was easier
now, as if she could sweep all the latent sparks of static
electricity from the atmosphere, as if she could process sunlight
flowing through the windows into sheer fiery energy. With complete
concentration, she followed Jaquar's instructions step by step, not
daring to modify any of his Songs of Water Power.
She stared at the pool, tried to evaporate some water. As with
her first lesson, she used too much. Sighing, she let the cupful
fall back into the pool and began with a droplet.
It worked. She held it, dispersed it into the air, could find it
and reform it if she wanted! Yay!
The sun glinted in her eyes, so she closed them. She felt the
rays enveloping her, the warmth of the light, the very yellowness.
There were other colors in the spectrum, other stars adding their
signatures to the light, and she gathered them all, used them on
the pool.
She opened her eyes. She'd done it!
Congratulations! croaked Sinafin, glowing green.
With a whoop she danced over to the feycoocu and patted her cool
frog head. "I did it!"
You will not forget this lesson, either.
Marian didn't want to think of her previous one with Sinafin.
She much preferred Jaquar as a professor.
"One more time," she said, rolled her shoulders and stepped into
the shade, keeping her eyes open. This time she tweaked the Songs
Jaquar had given her. She held her breath as she collected the
slippery water, kept it suspended in the air with her mind,
evaporated it-dispersed it into the air-then lifted it to the
ceiling, forming a rain cloud. With exquisite precision, she let
the misty rain pour down, missing both Sinafin and herself.
The feycoocu hopped over to the rain and wallowed. The little
shower ended quickly and Marian punched her arms in the air and
shrieked, "Yes!" Then she whirled around, stopped. If she
had let the rain fall on her, she could have dried herself
easily with a warm breeze, intensified sunlight on her clothes and
not her skin. Oh yeah!
Now dry the stones, Sinafin said.
Grinning, Marian did.
I will see you later. With complete dignity
the frog leaped to the door and through it.
Exclamations came from outside the Temple. Marian chuckled. She
skirted the altar and gong. Despite her recent success with water,
she didn't trust herself to keep her hands from poking into
Powerful instruments that were best left undisturbed by a foolish
student-strains of "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" ran through her
mind. She surely didn't want to explain any dancing brooms or gong
rolling off its stand or gemstone lamp-chimes cracking, or a
strange Song emanating from the Temple.
Her imagination ran riot at all the havoc she could cause. She
supposed it was an honor-the amount of trust everyone placed in her
that she wasn't being watched.
She left the Temple humming, and walked through the courtyard
and gate and down to the Lower Ward. There she lingered a moment,
observing people train in a circular area with swords and shields
and staffs. They were good, and as exciting as any historical
movie. Better choreographed, too.
A scent came to her nose that she recognized as volaran and she
found her way to the Landing Field. There she observed a couple of
Chevaliers depart, one Sword and Shield Pair of male lovers
land.
She gave them privacy and turned away to the maze that linked
the Landing Field and the Keep and Alexa's brithenwood garden.
Wandering through the maze, Marian knew that she liked this
place. Oh, the Castle could never be home to her as it might be to
Alexa-though Alexa had her own estate, too. But Lladrana, the world
of Amee, resonated inside her. Just walking on the soil was an
experience; she seemed to draw a bit of energy into herself at each
step. Even water now answered to her Power, left her a bit of fluid
strength. Dancing with the wind energized her, too, not to mention
riding lightning!
She couldn't imagine herself doing any of those things at home.
Not in Boulder. Maybe, if she was very, very careful, she could
find some deserted mountain meadow in which to practice. If she
even had enough Power on Earth to summon a wind. Her stomach
tightened. Somehow she didn't think everything she learned here
would work there. How much more effort would she have to use to do
magic on Earth?
One more thing she didn't know.
But she did know that she was greedy. She wanted to be the
Powerful woman she was becoming, the woman who could play in
storms, dance with the wind, ride lightning. The woman who could
cook and clean and create with magic. Yet Earth held Andrew,
and her mother. Perhaps, with the perspective she'd learned here,
the new experiences, somehow she might be able to bond with her
mother, love and be loved as family should. She could hope.
Marian laughed when she reached the door to the brithenwood
garden. It was small. She'd have to duck, but Alexa could open it
and walk straight through. No wonder Alexa liked it. Marian opened
the door and hunched her back as she entered the garden. It was one
of the most beautiful places she'd ever seen.
The tree that gave the garden its name, the brithenwood, stood
tall and willowy with white bark and deep green, narrow spearlike
leaves. The scent was floral, but unique as if the perfume
comprised several "notes" instead of just one-perhaps the leaves
and the bark exuded fragrance as well as the blossoms. Looking up,
Marian could see that the top of the tree still held a few white
blossoms.
Around the brithenwood was a bench, and two tracks of stepping
stones wove through the tangle of garden that was lush with
textures and colorful flowers.
Something-the tree, the walled garden itself-dispersed serenity
like a scent. The Temple had been serene, too, with an underlying
muscle of Power-a place that had seen sanctified Rituals for ages.
This garden brought the peace of nature. The tall gray stone walls
emphasized the blue of the sky, the low wooden door seemed to hold
the world at bay.
As she crossed to the bench, Marian spied a twig about five
inches long and half the width of her finger that had fallen from
the brithenwood. It was a pretty thing, so she picked it up and
slid it into her pocket. Then she sat beneath the tree.
Since the morning was so peaceful, Marian decided to meditate.
She drew her legs up and crossed them, rested her hands on her
knees and emptied her mind. When a thought or observation occurred,
she let it drift by, fade.
The Songs around her helped. Not only the individual Song of the
tree, but the sprightly notes of the flowers, the buzzing of bees,
the rustling of grasses and leaves in a small breeze, all combined
into a lulling melody.
Until a horrible screech jolted her. Her eyelids flew open and
she saw a peacock strutting around the garden, tail fully unfolded.
Marian choked.
"Sinafin," she said. "Peacocks are male. Peahens are not nearly
so colorful."
A beady eye turned in Marian's direction. Sinafin sniffed and
continued her progress around the garden.
Marian closed her eyes again, but this time couldn't settle.
Which was just as well, since a minute later the door banged open
and Alexa tromped in.
Meeting Marian's eyes, Alexa winced and flushed. "Meditating,
huh? Sorry." She slammed the door shut.
"I take it the meeting did not go well?" Marian said.
"A couple of the Marshalls put Jaquar's back up and he danced
around what the Tower Community was doing about the Dark. I brought
up establishing a Tower presence here and you'd've thought I
proposed razing the Castle!"
Marian frowned. "Well, I was Summoned for some task, I know
that. It's probably rallying the Tower Community, making
them a community instead of individuals. Then having them integrate
with the Marshalls. But that doesn't mean the effort will be
welcomed by the Marshalls."
"I'll work on them," Alexa said grimly, fingering her baton in
its sheath as she sat next to Marian. Then she saw Sinafin parading
around, opening and closing her feathers. "A peacock again." Alexa
snorted.
"I told her that peacocks have the pretty plumage and peahens
are subdued, but she ignored me," Marian said.
Alexa said, "By the way, word has spread that you're here, and a
Scholar of the Fourth Degree-"
"Fourth!"
Alexa raised her brows, and her smile widened. "That's what
Jaquar told us."
"Wow. Just one more degree-"
"And Finals, probably worse than your doctoral exams. Mine sure
were worse than the Bar exam."
Marian subsided. "You're probably right."
"Anyway, people will be coming to meet you." No sooner had Alexa
said that than a loud knocking sounded at the garden door.
"Who's there?" shouted Alexa.
"Luthan and Faucon," called a man's voice.
"Bringing gifts for the new Exotique," said another voice, rich
and cultured.
"A moment," Alexa called, but she turned to Marian with a smile.
"One really amazing thing about being an Exotique is people give
you stuff to make you remember them, like them. And-" she raised a
forefinger "-since Exotiques are inscrutable in their thoughts and
actions, those gift-bearers don't necessarily expect a return on
their investment. The trick is not to be greedy." She pulled a dark
red stone out of her pocket and showed it to Marian.
Marian stared, open-mouthed. "That looks like the ruby in one of
England's royal crowns."
"The Black Prince's ruby. It's really a spine." Alexa flushed a
little. "I like jewels."
"Who doesn't?" They shared a smile.
"I earned this. I'm sure you will soon have skills to
trade."
"We are still out here," the first voice called.
"Just a minute," Alexa shouted. "I need to tell Marian about you
two."
"That's a few words for Luthan, but 1 would take much longer,"
said the second voice, which Marian decided was Faucon.
Alexa bit her lip, shot a glance at Marian. "I don't know if
you've run across this before-"
"Across what?"
Shrugging, Alexa said, "Some of the Lladranans instinctively
like or dislike us. I think it's a visceral thing."
Marian blinked. "No, I haven't experienced that."
Alexa nodded. "You're about to meet two handsome, sexy and
honorable Chevaliers. Luthan is Bastien's brother and the
Representative of the Singer to the Marshalls. Faucon is a
high-ranking noble."
"I take it one of them has this instinctive like-dislike
reflex?"
"They both do. Try not to think badly of the one who has the
revulsion. He's embarrassed by it."
"Revulsion? It's that bad?"
Alexa wiggled her eyebrows. "And the opposite is the
attraction."
"Oh boy," Marian said under her breath.
"Come on in!" Alexa called, before Marian had time to really
think on all the ramifications of Alexa's words.
The small door opened and two men ducked under the lintel and
entered. They carried scrolls.
"Now there's a pair," Alexa whispered. She leaned closer to
Marian.
The first man was dressed in immaculate white Chevalier fighting
leathers that bore no stain or scar. Remembering the garb she'd
seen in the inn the night before, Marian could only think that the
clothes must have a spell on them, or he'ddressed up-to meet her?
His hair was black with a wide streak of silver at his left temple
and a smaller brush of silver at his right. His eyes were brown
like most of the Lladranan men, but he was taller than average, and
they were a tall race. His build was lean and muscular, his face
was narrow, and something about him reminded Marian of Bastien-so
this must be Luthan. His expression was somber.
The second man was only an inch shorter and his body type less
lean and more athletically muscular-mesomorphic. He had
medium-sized streaks of silver, denoting Power, at each temple
framing a face as elegant as his voice had been, and strikingly
handsome. He winked at them. Marian sat up straighter.
Luthan halted a few feet from them, took a breath. He looked
braced for something, then a shudder moved through his entire body,
but he remained expressionless. Alexa caught Marian's hand and
squeezed in silent support. Try not to hold it against him,
she said with quiet sadness. Alexa had dealt with a brother-in-law
who'd found her revolting.
Marian nodded.
The man came up and bowed formally, looked to Alexa.
Alexa sighed. "Luthan, Lord Vauxveau, Chevalier Fifth Rank,
Representative of the Singer to the other Communities of Lladrana,
please meet Marian Harasta, M.A., Exotique Scholar of the Fourth
Degree."
"I was instructed to introduce myself to you and assure you of
the Singer's support in all things." He held out his hand.
Just then, Marian recalled that this was the man who had
prophetic visions, like her friend Golden Raven back home. Marian
wondered if his was strongest when touch-activated, like Golden
Raven's. Now it was her turn to brace herself. She put her fingers
in his and he bowed gracefully over them.
The peacock screeched.
Luthan dropped Marian's hand.
Both men turned.
Faucon bowed. "Salutations, feycoocu."
Luthan inclined his head. "Salutations, feycoocu."
Marian wondered if one or both of them knew Sinafin's name.
A smile lifted one side of Luthan's mouth as he set two books
and three scrolls next to Marian. "Here are some Lorebooks from the
Singer's Abbey that she sent you. She also told me to inform you
that Alexa, here, was the one who mended Bastien's bad Power
flow."
Marian stared at Alexa, who pinkened and shifted.
"It was an accident. I did it-um-instinctively."
Faucon jostled Luthan aside, bowed deeply and sent Marian a
charming smile. "I see that Exotique Terre has supplied us with
another gorgeous woman." He took Marian's hand and lifted it to his
lips. "Your wish is my command."
Had he really said that? Marian went over the line in her head,
translated it into English, French, back into Lladranan. It scanned
the same in all languages.
His fingers stroked her palm and a flicker of heat entered his
gaze. Obviously this was the man who was immediately and innately
attracted to Exotiques. Marian told herself not to be so pleased,
it was nothing personal-but it felt very personal. "One of
my ancestresses was an extraordinary Medica and Sorceress. I bring
you copies of her studies."
Withdrawing her hand, Marian smiled. "Thank you."
His fingers dipped into a pocket of his breeches. When he
withdrew it, he held a small, square bottle of dark-green stoppered
with a tiny cork. "I have a small pool of jerir on one of my
estates, and had this liquid harvested for you. My ancestress said
this was the greatest amount of jerir a person should imbibe."
"Huh." Alexa eyed it. "Guess I didn't swallow any more than that
in my three dips or I wouldn't be here."
"A devastating thought," Faucon assured her. He handed the
bottle to Marian. "With my compliments. Would you like to join me
for-"
Luthan dropped a hand on Faucon's shoulder. "No, Faucon."
Faucon stepped away from Luthan, scowling. "I will not listen to
any specious lies from you this time, Luthan."
Shrugging, Luthan said, "It was only a word of warning. I've
been told there's a very strong Song linking Scholar Marian and
Circlet Jaquar Dumont. Of course, if you want to irritate
the Circlet-"
Faucon's jaw set. He glared at Luthan, turned his glance to
Marian, shook his head and sighed. "My timing is off once more." He
bowed to Marian again. "Truly, Scholar Marian, should you need
anything I can provide, send word."
"Thank you," Marian said, slipping the bottle into her
pocket.
Sinafin shrieked and made to herd the men from the garden.
For the first time, Luthan smiled fully. "And farewell to you,
also, feycoocu." He bowed to Alexa and Marian and left. Faucon gave
a small salute to Alexa, another melting smile to Marian, and
followed Luthan from the garden.
There was a short silence after the door closed behind the men,
then Marian said, "Lladrana certainly grows handsome men."
Alexa chuckled. "Yes, indeed, and my Bastien is the best of the
lot."
Marian shrugged. "Tell me about curing Bastien."
Shifting again, Alexa said, "Well, uh, it happened during
sex."
"Oh." Marian was eager to know, but couldn't find the right
words to pursue the topic gracefully.
"To be precise," Alexa said, looking away, "I noticed that
Bastien's crystal star had a flaw during sex, and afterward, I
removed it."
"What crystal star?"
Alexa looked surprised. "When we make love, we both project
multi-pointed stars that touch and meld together."
"Oh."
"That doesn't happen with you and Jaquar?"
"No, I, uh, don't get visuals. Mostly I just get swept away by
this spectacular wave of music."
They met each other's gazes, began to laugh.
"Oh," Alexa said.
They laughed some more.
Alexa tapped her fingers on her baton sheath. "That's
interesting. You might be better suited to Lladrana and Amee than
I, since you seem to have a more aural than visual sense. I'm gonna
have an accent for the rest of my life."
Marian touched her fingers to the books beside her, sending her
mind and intuition questing, hoping to receive an indication that
help for Andrew lay within one of the tomes. Nothing.
"Perhaps when you get back to Earth, you'll still have Power, at
least enough to cure your brother," Alexa said reassuringly.
"I hope so," Marian murmured.
"It will be interesting to know whether and how much Power works
on Earth."
They shared another smile. "Yes," Marian said.
A cautious tapping came on the door. It creaked open and a young
man poked his head inside.
"Oh, you're here," he said.
Alexa shrugged. "Come on in, Urvey."
Steps dragging, the youngster did. Marian thought he was about
the same age as Marwey-late teens. He was dressed in fighting
leathers and a midnight-blue tunic that after a few instants,
Marian placed as Bastien's livery. Bastien's servant, then. He
darted a glance around the garden as if it were a strange and
threatening landscape.
"This place sounds funny," he said.
"It's mostly our Exotique Songs," Alexa said. She tilted her
head as if listening, touched Marian on the forearm. "Though since
Marian is still connected with Earth-Exotique Terre- I can hear
echoes of my mother planet, too."
Alexa looked a little wistful, but nothing in Alexa resonated
with a wish to return to Colorado. She was certain of her course.
Marian envied that.
Urvey appeared unconvinced. He fingered the piece of paper he
held.
"You have a message?" asked Alexa, putting out her hand.
Shifting his feet, he stared at Marian. "It's for her. And the
Circlet," he whispered.
"Oh," Alexa said. "Marian, this is my husband Bastien's squire,
Urvey Novins. Urvey, this is Exotique Scholar Marian Harasta."
He was not like any squire Marian had envisioned.
Urvey bowed. "My pleasure," he said.
"Salutations." Marian nodded, then held out her hand.
Urvey dropped the note in it. The paper was slightly damp.
Marian unrolled the paper and read the letters easily-a benefit of
her bond with Jaquar.
Guildsman and Townmaster Sevair Masif requests the presence of
Exotique Scholar Marian and Circlet Jaquar Dumont to discuss the
matter of Weather Magic and frinks. Please come as soon as
possible.
Though the note was courteous enough, Marian felt searing
anger.
23
Blinking several times Marian handed the message to Alexa.
"Frinks are worms that fall with the rain? I've never seen them,"
Marian said to Alexa.
"I have, but only once." Alexa looked up with a frown. "I think
I'll go with you. I don't know what Jaquar's relations are with
Sevair, but the underlying tone of this note concerns me, and I
won't let him push you around. He's a nice guy, really, so I don't
know what's wrong."
She was throbbing with curiosity.
"The Guildmaster's journeyman is waiting in the cloister walk
outside the Keep," said Urvey.
"Can you call Jaquar mentally, please?" Alexa asked Marian.
"You don't think we should refuse?"
Drumming her fingers along her baton sheath, Alexa shook her
head. "I don't think it's a good idea. The various communities of
this society are distant enough. I'm sure one of our jobs is
bringing them together to fight the Dark. Let's not alienate a good
man."
"All right," Marian said, and stood.
Alexa rose, too. With obvious relief, Urvey ran to the door and
held it open for them.
Jaquar! Marian called, holding an image of him in her
mind.
Alexa took Marian's forearm, smiling. "Just tell him that you
got an invitation to visit Sevair Masif. From what I know of men,
he'll insist on accompanying you. Then we can hand him the note on
the way down."
"All right," Marian said. I am going to Castleton to meet
with- She had used visual symbols for herself and the city,
but had no symbol for Sevair. Taking the note back from Alexa, she
scanned it for any sort of icon, noticed a stone block and a
hammer.
Marian? Jaquar asked. His voice was filled with
affection, making her smile. He sounded as if he were in the Keep
somewhere.
I am going to Castleton to meet with Sevair Masif. She
sent the mental image of the stone block and hammer.
What?
For a third time, Marian began forming the pictures she needed
to communicate mentally with him. I am going to-
You're going to the cloister walk outside the Keep, he
said, obviously more accustomed than she was to sorting images from
their mingled Songs and occasionally touching minds.
I'll meet you there, he finished.
"It worked." Alexa grinned.
"I guess so," Marian said.
Since they had to go through the maze, Jaquar was already in the
walkway, leaning against a post with his arms crossed, when they
met him. Another youngster about Urvey's age, dressed in dark gray
livery, stood in simmering silence.
Addressing the young man, Alexa said, "Marian, may I introduce
you to Jumme, Townmaster Masif's journeyman."
Marian hesitated, then dipped a curtsey.
The youth responded by whipping off his hat and making a
flourishing bow such as Marian had never seen outside of the
movies.
"My pleasure." His voice vibrated with sincerity, and a little
more.
"Do you know-" Alexa started, gesturing to Jaquar.
"He introduced himself," Jaquar said coolly, pushing away from
the pillar to take Marian's hand and tuck it under his arm. He
scanned her face. "You look a little different."
She smiled. She wasn't ready to tell him she'd mastered Water.
She wanted to be able to practice outside in the ocean and be
perfect when he next tested her.
"Do you want to ride?" Jaquar asked. "It's only a couple of
miles, but riding-"
"No, thank you. Let's walk. It's a beautiful day."
So they walked, two and two-Alexa and Jumme, and Marian and
Jaquar-back down to Castleton.
Sevair Masif's gray stone house sat across from a pretty green
square. Both the outside and the warmly paneled interior were
distinctive and obviously quality work. The earth-tone furnishings
of the den Marian, Jaquar and Alexa were issued into were of
excellent material and well-tended.
Jaquar led Marian to a small beige couch that would hold two,
and Alexa took a chair of deep gray.
Sevair stood stiffly behind the desk. In a work shirt, his arms
and shoulders appeared well-honed by his occupation. He was as tall
as Faucon had been, and like Luthan, he had a streak of silver hair
on the left side of his forehead.
His jaw was clenched, his eyes narrowed. He leaned forward on
long, scarred hands, piercing Jaquar with his stare.
"Weather Sorcerer Circlet Dumont, were you ever going to answer
our requests for help?" he asked icily.
Jaquar stood and straightened to his full height-a couple of
inches taller than Masif, but not as heavily muscled. He still
managed to look down his nose. "I received no request for
help."
Masif's gaze snapped with angry fire. His jaw flexed, then he
said, even more coldly, "Every few months for the past two years,
we sent a message to you asking for help."
Jaquar's manner changed subtly, from challenging to listening.
He shook his head. "Townmaster Masif, I received no message. How
did you send it?"
"Through the Marshalls, to be forwarded to you-" He stopped,
glanced at Alexa who was no longer lounging in her chair but
sitting up straight.
Making a disgusted sound, Masif moved to a chair-not the one
behind his desk, which would give him a better placement for
authority, but one near the fireplace. "The Marshalls. They didn't
forward our messages. They never responded to our questions
themselves, and now I learn that they actively worked against my
Townspeople." His fingers fisted, released. "The Marshalls let my
people worry, turn into mockers, and betrayed us."
"One moment!" Alexa raised a hand, her brow knit, and Marian
could hear the faint echoes of Alexa's conversation with the other
Marshalls. After a minute, Alexa said to Masif, "The Marshalls made
the decision not to tell you that they didn't know how to combat
the frinks. However, neither Thealia nor any of the older Marshalls
received any messages from any Townmaster to pass along to the
Tower Community or Circlet Jaquar, the Weather Sorcerer."
"Reynardus." Masif's mouth thinned.
"Not necessarily," Alexa said. "When was your last message?"
"A few weeks ago..."
"After I'd joined the Marshalls?"
"Yes."
There was silence. Finally, Masif stood and bowed to Jaquar. "My
apologies. It looks as if the problem regarding a traitor is mine.
And forgive me my inhospitality. Would you like tea?" he asked
Marian.
"No, thank you."
Jaquar offered his hand to Masif. "I am sorry."
Masif clasped Jaquar's hand and the men's energy merged, flared,
their Songs ringing in the harmony of like minds. Both looked a bit
stunned. Masif dropped his hand and took a step back. Jaquar came
and sat beside Marian, setting his arm along the back of the sofa
behind her.
"I am also sorry to tell you that I can do nothing about the
frinks," Jaquar said. He huffed out a frustrated breath. "I've
tried, the Song knows how often I've tried, but I can't
sense the frinks in the clouds. Not all rain clouds carry
them, and there is no pattern as to which do and which don't."
"Before Alyeka came, every rain brought frinks."
Jaquar rubbed his left temple. "Then perhaps they develop at a
lower altitude than I can operate inside a cloud-they might even
form as they leave a cloud. I can only tell you that I don't know
much about the matter, despite intensive study." He shrugged. "They
are elusive to me."
It was obvious he didn't like admitting that. Marian shifted
closer to him in comfort and Masif's gaze went to her.
"Last night there were heavy rains on farmer Ciboul's fields.
Since Alyeka came, the outer fields that border the road to
Castleton have received fewer and fewer frinks in the rain. But the
inner fields, frinks were still a problem-until this morning.
Ciboul reported to the Citymasters' Council that there was no sign
of frinks in several fields."
Marian felt herself blushing. Suddenly she recalled the deep
ties everyone seemed to have with the land. Would the farmer have
realized she and Jaquar had had sex in his fields? How
mortifying.
Jaquar said, "I was instructing Scholar Marian in weather
yesterday, particularly storms and lightning. We rode the lightning
onto a field near the road between the Castle and Castleton, then
walked out to the road."
"Excuse me," Marian said. "But what do frinks look like?"
Masif smiled. "I anticipated that question. It appears as if I
am the tutor for the Exotiques in frinks. You learned of frinks
with me, didn't you, Alyeka?"
Alexa shuddered. "Yes."
The Townmaster walked back to his desk and took out a round
pottery bowl. He shook it a little and the sound made Marian's skin
crawl. It was reminiscent of rattlesnake tails, with an added tinny
note.
"Ewww," said Alexa.
Masif stopped beside her and showed her what was in the bowl.
"Ewww," she said again, took the bowl and wrinkled her nose, then
handed it to Marian.
Marian decided to be more classic in her exclamation. "Ick." The
bowl was full of little metallic shells that looked like
articulated, armored cocoons. Each was about three inches long and
as wide as her thumb. She grimaced. "Double ick."
Jaquar took the bowl and poked his finger into it, stirring the
contents. The repulsive, tinny scritching sound came again. Marian
and Alexa shuddered.
"Most frinks that fall, die. Only some survive and burrow into
the soil," Jaquar said absently. He picked one up. Holding it by
one end, he wiggled it.
Marian leaned away from him. "It sounds like a rattlesnake tail,
only worse," she said.
Jaquar and Masif looked at her quizzically.
"Yes!" Alexa said. "That's what they remind me of. One of my
foster parents had a rattlesnake tail. Ick."
"Ewww," said Marian at the same time.
Turning it over in his fingers, Jaquar frowned. "Even this shell
has weight. If I felt these in the clouds, I'd know it."
"Oh!" Marian stared at Jaquar, wide-eyed, understanding now what
they'd flown through in that black cloud the afternoon before.
They all looked at her.
Jaquar's scowl vanished and he sent a little tune to her, which
echoed back with her puzzlement.
"What?" he prompted.
With an inward shrug, Marian tried an explanation. "That black
cloud, with the-the sleet." It hadn't been sleet. It had been
frinks. The thought of those obscene things pummeling her creeped
her out. "The noise instead of the Songs."
"Marian," Jaquar said quietly. "I saw no black cloud. I would
not have taken you into a cloud with sleet. I'm a Weather Sorcerer.
I know which clouds hold ice pellets. We went into rain, yes, but
not sleet. I heard no strange noise." He kept his cool, blue gaze
on hers.
Marian lifted and spread her hands in a helpless gesture. "I
don't understand."
"She's an Exotique. Perhaps she can perceive the frinks that
escape your notice, Circlet," Masif said, equally coolly.
Never looking away from her, Jaquar nodded. "Perhaps so. Tell
us."
Grimacing, Marian looked at Masif. "Could I have that tea now,
please?"
"Certainly." He picked up a horn that wasn't connected to
anything and ordered tea.
Momentarily distracted, Marian asked, "How do you do that? Is
the horn magic, or-"
Masif smiled. "The horn has a small spell on it, but, I, too,
have Power."
"Oh." She narrowed her eyes and stared at him, trying to see his
aura. Nothing.
Jaquar put the frink back in the bowl and set it aside. Then he
wiped his hands on a handkerchief and grasped her hands. Until his
fingers touched hers, Marian hadn't realized how cold hers were. He
rubbed them between his own.
"Tell us about the cloud."
With a frown, Marian searched her mind for details. "I don't
know when or where we blew into it." She lifted and dropped a
shoulder. "Playing in the storm was so exciting, I couldn't measure
time-you know how it is."
"I can guess that you got caught up in your work." Masif smiled
at her.
At a tap on the door, he opened it and took a small tray, which
he placed on the low table in front of her.
Marian made herself strong, sweet tea, and curved her hands
around the china cup for the comfort of a known thing-a china cup
of tea. The men were unknown, the furniture slightly different.
Songs of the people in the house flowed around her in music unknown
on Earth. A hot cup of tea was familiar.
When Alexa followed her lead and smiled at her, Marian was even
more comforted.
"Marian?" Jaquar prompted, more teacher to student than lover to
lover.
She sipped the tea. It was good as tea went. She drank a bit
more. "As I said before, I can't judge when or where the cloud was,
but it was huge-a big, black cloud shaped like a fist." Jaquar
tensed beside her, but she continued. Frowning, she looked into his
eyes. "I nearly lost contact with you. I couldn't feel you.
So I grabbed onto you, hard."
Nodding shortly, Jaquar said, "I remember you doing that, but
not when or where, either." He glanced at Masif. "But it was her
first Storm Ride. It's not unusual to have a student panic."
Masif poured himself a cup of tea. "Rather like taking an
Apprentice up the scaffolding of a spire, I'd imagine. You're not
sure what they'll do when the excitement wears off."
"Sounds right," Jaquar said.
Marian continued with her story. "Anyway, my head went foggy.
The Songs disappeared. There was this awful noise like pinging,
then an-" She looked at Alexa and said in English, "It sounded like
an engine revving too high, ready to blow."
Alexa nodded.
Marian turned back to the men. She didn't know the Lladranan
word for engine, hadn't seen any such thing. "A very
high-pitched noise, long and rising. Then I felt things hitting me.
I thought it was sleet." She glanced at the pile of frink husks and
quickly away, then gulped her tea.
Reaching out, Alexa patted her arm. "Hideous."
Marian tried a weak smile. "Yes."
The men stared at her for a long moment.
"I would say that the Townmaster is right. You felt the frinks,
even their evil cloud, while I didn't. Something the Dark can mask
from us but not you, perhaps. Extrapolating from the experiences of
both you and Alyeka, the frinks cannot make contact with you, or if
they do, they die."
"This is a great discovery," Masif said. "With your aid,
Scholar, we might forestall any more frinks from falling live and
burrowing into the ground." He looked at Jaquar again. "Does the
Tower Community know what evil the frinks will do to the land?"
Jaquar shook his head. "No. We are watching them, just as you
Cityfolk and farmers are. We do not know what disaster they might
be germinating. We have no records of frinks, no Lorebook in which
they are mentioned."
"Nor do the Marshalls," said Alexa.
"Not good," said Masif.
Marian took one last cup of tea and prepared to disappoint the
man. "I'm sorry, but I will not be able to help much." She met
Masif's intent gaze. "I have a sick younger brother at home. I am
studying as much as I am able, with the hope that something here
might help him, perhaps even cure him and others who have his
disease. But I can't stay here in Lladrana." She braced for
anger.
Instead Masif's face went impassive. He turned his head and the
light touched the wide band of silver at his left temple. "I lost a
young sister," he said, almost too low for her to hear. He jerked a
head at Jaquar. "The Circlet lost his parents. I do not doubt that
if we had had the chance to save them by visiting Exotique Terre
and returning, we would have done so."
"Thank you," Marian said.
"We Guildspeople of the cities and towns and fields thank
you," Masif said gravely.
They took their leave, and a few minutes later, Jaquar and
Marian strolled through the streets of Castleton. A Chevalier
joined them and he and Alexa dropped back to speak of Castle
politics.
"It's a pretty city," Marian said. "Very clean."
"Very. Not like the one I grew up it, but Krache is a seaport in
the south, a lawless city in both Lladrana and the country to the
south, Shud."
Marian squeezed his hand. During their lovemaking, when they
were connected mind to mind, emotions to emotions, she'd received
flashes of memories from him. She supposed he had experienced the
same. At least it wasn't as detailed as the memories that had
flooded her during the blood-bond with Bossgond.
"I'm sorry," she said.
His smile was crooked. "I know that your childhood wasn't
pleasant, either."
Marian shrugged. "How many people do you know who had a great
childhood? Alexa didn't."
"Of the Circlets? Most, I would say. Extraordinary Power tends
to show itself early. If their own parents weren't of the Tower
Community, they'd be fostered, then apprenticed to a Circlet while
still young. For instance, both Chalmon and Venetria had an easy
childhood and student life."
As he said it, Jaquar felt another tingle at the back of his
neck, as if they were being watched. He'd experienced it a couple
of times since they'd entered Castleton-once when they'd entered
the city gates on the way to speak with Masif and again when they'd
left the stonemason's home.
They were in a busier portion of the town, with small shops and
narrower streets. Mentally, he stretched his Power, and caught a
flicker of pulsing Circlet Power and a glimpse of a tall, lanky
youth and the bright green cape he wore. Chalmon's recent student
who'd raised his Tower and advanced to Circlet had chosen that
color green as his own.
Jaquar set his arm around Marian's waist. They were lovers now.
He knew a little more of her mind, and how completely unaware she
was of some aspects of Lladranan culture, like the competition
between the Towers. He'd protect her.
The Marshalls' Council Meeting this morning had not gone well.
He'd told them of the plane-walking and the dark maw and the
master-but not all of the master's words-and they'd demanded
information about where this evil place was, despite the fact that
he'd told them the Tower wasn't sure of the location.
He'd spoken of the Circlet observers and the Marshalls had
insisted that they receive all previous and future reports of the
watchers. The Marshalls wanted the Tower Lorebook. As usual,
the Marshalls did not listen but commanded. Jaquar had hoped this
would be different now that Alexa was part of the Marshalls, but
tradition and ingrained distrust of the Tower were too strong to
overcome, at least in one meeting.
Marian sighed and leaned into him, and Jaquar realized that
they'd just passed through the city gate and onto the road up to
the Castle. He'd been lost in thought.
She hadn't demanded to know what he was thinking, hadn't
chattered or tried to converse while he was in deep thought. A
jewel of a woman. Truly a Scholar and a lady.
As she kept step with him, the Song they'd made between them
resonated low and potent. Her body brushed against his, hip and
thigh. Under his arm her waist was soft and supple. Her fiery hair,
different in texture than any he'd known, caressed his cheek. The
fragrance of her rose to his nostrils and he inhaled, believing
that he could never get enough of that scent.
But she was bent on returning to Exotique Terre. Now that he'd
bonded sexually with her, he knew firsthand of her love for her
brother, how much Andrew meant to her. Jaquar could not keep her
from the young man. If Jaquar's parents had been alive, or if he
had stronger bonds with other Circlets and they had the time and
incentive, he'd have proposed that they Summon Andrew. But even
then, the young man's health was too fragile for that. Not that the
Circlets of the Tower worked together well. They simply didn't join
together often enough to practice merging their energies. They
hadn't had a strong enough outside reason to cooperate.
Until now.
The sangvile and the threat of many sangviles all feasting on
the rich Power of Circlets in a few days scared Jaquar down to the
bone. And he was sure he wasn't the only one. Even Bossgond had
expressed a fear of the monsters. Time to consult the old mage.
He'd help with a plan.
Marian hummed a little tune and Jaquar's focus returned to her.
The tune, like so much else about her, was unfamiliar. He liked
it.
He liked her. More-she fulfilled him. Sex with her wiped
his mind clean of concerns. Her conversation stimulated him. Her
joy in learning her Power reminded him of his own past, helped him
recall lovely moments between himself and his parents, instead of
remembering them as gray husks echoing of emotional torture.
She stumbled and he steadied her, held her close, noting with
wry amusement that his heart rate sped up at the contact.
Marian smiled up at him and his thoughts scattered.
He wished she could stay. He'd court her if she stayed.
The idea terrified as well as delighted him. He'd been spoiled
by his parents' Pairing. They were a rare Circlet Pair-equal,
trusting partners. Much more likely was a string of lovers, or a
live-in lover who wasn't a Circlet, or the bickering and mistrust
shown by Chalmon and Venetria. Before Marian, he'd never thought
he'd be so lucky as to find a Circlet who'd complement him. His
rough early childhood had made him cynical enough that he hadn't
aspired to a Pair-bond with a woman.
Now there was Marian.
Her hand slid into his and the touch of her fingers along his
palm fired every nerve in his body. He was completely, achingly
aware of her and aroused.
He glanced to the side of the road. No wonder, this was the
place they'd appeared last night.
Blood had rushed under Marian's skin, too, and since her
coloring was so much paler than a Lladranan's it was easier to see.
Enticing.
How fast could they get back to their bedroom?
24
As they walked up to the gate, a deafening alarm shrieked.
Alexa passed them, screaming, "Let me by!" People got out of her
way, fast. The Chevalier she'd been talking to ran with her. The
Castle guards stiffened, became more alert.
Bastien appeared at the far end of the thickly-walled entrance
tunnel, grabbed Alexa and dropped a chain-mail tunic over her. Two
other people came to dress her in armor. An instant later the sound
of volaran wings beating the air reached Marian. People tilted back
their heads and looked up. At least twenty volarans took to the sky
in the first wave. Marian recognized several Marshall Pairs, as
well as noble and independent Chevaliers, flying singly and in
twos.
"Let's go!" Bastien said, and whistled. A huge dappled volaran
strode into view.
Marian's heart clutched. Her friend was going into battle. She
didn't know what to say, what to do, could only stand and stare.
Though Bastien's face was creased in a wide, fighting grin, Alexa
looked pale under her helmet as she squared her shoulders.
"Good luck!" Marian shouted.
"Merci!" Alexa called back, in Lladranan.
Bastien dipped his head to Marian, picked his Pairling up by her
waist and tossed her onto the volaran. He leaped to the flying
horse's back behind Alexa. "Fly!" he cried.
The volaran's muscles bunched, wings extended. He took to the
air, disappeared behind the Castle walls, then soared above them.
Other volarans flew in formation behind Bastien and Alexa. Marian
saw Pascal and Alexa's new Chevaliers, Koz and Perlee, all riding
beautiful volarans. Under her helmet, Perlee's hair showed red in
the sun and she stroked her volaran's neck and laughed with
excitement. Koz glanced over at her and smiled. They looked years
younger than the desperate couple Marian had first noticed at the
Nom de Nom the night before.
Alexa and Bastien were the only ones who rode double- because
she didn't ride well, didn't fly well, Marian remembered.
The klaxon stopped and the great silence pressed on Marian's
ears, not mitigating the dread in her stomach. People moved around
them, going in or out of the gate, on their daily business. Marian
clutched one of Jaquar's hands in both of hers.
More shouting came from beyond the gate, and another wave of
volarans rose. This time their leader was Luthan Vauxveau in his
pristine white fighting gear. His hair was wet as if he'd been
bathing when the alarm sounded. No woman rode with him and his
expression was severe.
Marian gulped. "Alexa's gone," she said, her voice raspy.
Jaquar slipped his arm around her waist. "Yes."
"I thought since she found the answer to the fence posts, there
would be fewer battles!" The connection between Alexa and her grew
every day, as did their affection.
Marian and Jaquar were now alone on the road.
He urged her forward. "The Marshalls can now raise more fence
posts and energize the magical boundary that keeps the horrors out,
but there are still old gaps, and the ancient posts continue to
wear out and fail."
They came to the gate and the Castle soldiers looked at Marian,
intrigued. Then one stared at Jaquar and her eyes hardened.
"The Marshalls fly to defend Lladrana from the Dark. What does
the Tower Community do to defeat the evil?" The soldier
sneered.
"I reported to the Marshalls of the Tower's efforts this
morning," Jaquar said. "The Marshalls are responsible for sharing
the information."
Marian raised her chin. "We destroyed a mass of frinks in the
clouds yesterday," she said.
The soldier's expression softened. She gave a little bow to
Marian. "Our thanks. Exotiques are such a boon in these dangerous
times. Thank you for coming to help us."
Marian nodded, flushing. She was a fraud. She'd been learning
her Power and playing, and the only help she'd given was
inadvertently. She hurried with Jaquar through the Castle gate and
into the Lower Ward.
There she saw great activity. More Chevaliers, even a Sword and
Shield Marshall Pair, ran to the stables and Landing Field,
continuing to respond to the silenced alarm.
"What am I going to do?" Marian murmured under her breath.
Lladrana needed her. Alexa needed her. Surely Marian should fill
the position of Tower Exotique as Alexa had that of Castle
Exotique.
The longer Marian stayed, the more she was torn.
Andrew needed her. How could she abandon her old life? Andrew?
Her mother?
How could she turn her back on this new opportunity that
fulfilled her more than her life on Earth had done?
"Come," Jaquar said, as if he felt her agitation through their
sex bond. He led her through Horseshoe Close, to the stables and
inside to a small training ring.
There stood a lovely roan volaran watching a tiny cream-colored
foal. The beauty of the sight caused new tears to sting behind her
eyes. The little flying horse was practicing running, stretching
its wings, and now and then hopping into the air and gliding a few
feet. The mare looked on indulgently.
Jaquar leaned against the rail. "Bastien asked the mare if the
foal, which is a filly, can stay with him and Alexa and train to be
Alexa's mount." Jaquar chuckled. "By the time the foal is adult,
Alexa should be ready to fly on her own."
Marian watched the small horse, exploring as all babies explore,
learning new things every minute. She knew Jaquar had brought her
here to give her pleasure, and the visit had, for a moment, but now
all the uncertainties of Lladrana's future seemed emphasized.
"She's going to be a battle mare, then." Marian choked, her gaze
following mother and child as they circled the ring.
Jaquar drew her into his arms. "Yes. We live in a difficult
time. An era that wouldn't have been so hard if our ancestors had
concentrated on discovering the nature of the Dark and defeating
it." He snorted. "They studied its creatures, deduced how to
contain the invasion of the horrors and, when thatworked in
general, went on with their lives. A terrible mistake." A hint of
bitterness emanated from him.
Marian circled him with her arms, leaned against him and closed
her eyes. The solidity of his tall, strong body comforted her-the
woodsy scent of him, but most of all she was reassured by his
determination to find out the nature of the evil that threatened
Lladrana and work with others to destroy it.
"I can't stay." Marian opened her eyes and stepped back,
repeating the words that had become her mantra. "I must return to
Andrew."
Jaquar smiled sadly, brushed a thumb over her cheekbone. "I
know. So we have a short time together. But I will help you,
Marian. Bossgond and I will make sure that you return home." His
voice lowered. "Perhaps you could consider coming back.. .and
bringing Andrew if possible. As you saw, Exotiques are prized."
He leaned forward, brushed his lips against hers, back and
forth, sensitizing them. "Before you leave, we will generate a plan
for you to come back. Please consider, Marian."
She swallowed. "You think we could do it?"
His eyes fired. "We can try."
Slowly, she shook her head. "I don't know if Andrew is strong
enough."
Jaquar dropped his arms. "Bossgond watches other dimensions. He
knows a great deal about the Dimensional Corridor and will try to
make all the Exotiques' trips safe and easy in the future. He is
studying Summoning Power and Ritual to the exclusion of all else. I
am a master of plane-walking. Between us, and with Alexa, we should
be able to bring you back, and Andrew, too. The gate soldier was
right, Marian-Lladrana needs you." Jaquar grasped her hands, lifted
one and kissed its back, then did the same with the other. "And I
think you need Lladrana, as well." He shook his head. "I don't know
much of your life on Exotique Terre, but the Song wouldn't have
chosen you for the Tower Exotique if you couldn't enjoy a life on
Lladrana."
Marian withdrew her hands. "I'll think about returning. But only
if I can bring Andrew and if this place would be good for him,
too." She met his eyes. "I'll want to see all your plans and
Rituals for Summoning us before I decide."
He chuckled and swept her a bow. "I'll ensure that you do,
Scholar Marian."
That reminded her. "You told the Marshalls I was a Fourth Degree
Scholar."
"I lied."
"What!"
Setting his brow against her forehead, he snagged her gaze with
his. Such beautiful blue eyes he had, and now they were open and
earnest. "When we left Mue Island you were a Fourth Degree Scholar.
You have Circlet status now, I think perhaps as much as second
degree already. You learned to control the lightning ride-that
should have made you Circlet status... There was something more,
too-when you found and faced and defeated the frinks in the
clouds."
Her breath came heavy, but she couldn't look away from him.
"Second Degree Circlet?" What would her mastery of Water lift her
to?
He straightened, nodded. "Yes. But it is Bossgond's place to
Test you, and you won't come into your full Circlet Power until you
raise your Tower."
Marian shivered. "So quickly."
Jaquar took her right hand again. "Lladrana needs you, so the
Song found the most Powerful Exotique in your land." He chuckled.
"And you have good study habits."
She nodded. "A thirst for knowledge. I always have."
"Circlets of the Tower are like that." He turned to go, tugged
on her hand.
Glancing back, Marian saw the little filly nursing. So young, so
tender, such a huge fate in store for her. The mare's gaze, wise
beyond that of a mere horse, met Marian's. "She might die in battle
with Alexa," Marian said of the foal to Jaquar, envisioning a
hideously bloody volaran and rider, dead and pale.
Tho. The negative grated in Marian's mind. With a jolt,
she realized it was from the mare.
Jaquar halted. His head lifted and turned, looking at the mare
as if he, too, had heard.
He and Marian stared at the mare.
The volaran observed them with steady eyes. Alexa and Fleche
will not die in battle together.
Releasing her held breath, Marian said, "Is that her name,
Fleche?" It meant Arrow.
The mare snorted. Alexa named my filly Cloud, but her True
Name is Fleche Obscur, "Arrow for the Dark." The volaran's
words Sang of Power, of fate. I was sent to foal here by
the head wild stallion. Fleche is his filly, too.
Jaquar bowed to the mare. "Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
We take our leave, now."
The mare dipped her head to nuzzle her filly, but kept one
shining eye on them. I would not tell you more. It is not for
you to know. You are not Our Exotique.
Marian's stomach turned over.
Jaquar nodded. "The Chevalier's Exotique, the Exotique of the
Field."
The mare lifted her head and neighed a laugh. The Volaran
Exotique. Then she turned away from them and focused on her
baby.
Marian was glad to hurry away from the stables, matching
Jaquar's long strides. "Chevalier Exotique," she found herself
muttering.
"Swordmarshall Alexa is the Marshalls' Exotique, the Exotique of
the Castle Community. You-" Jaquar squeezed her fingers "-are
Circlet Marian, the Sorcerers' and Sorceresses' Exotique, the
Exotique of the Tower Community."
"And one will come who is the Chevalier Exotique."
"Or the Volaran Exotique-depends on your point of view, I
suppose. Do you have people well versed in volarans in Exotique
Terre?"
Marian thought of all the ranches in Colorado, of the rodeos and
horse shows, the breeders and associations, even of the polo club.
Her mother stabled two horses. "We don't have volarans. But my
land, Colorado, has many horses." She drew in a deep breath. The
scent of volaran clung to her gown, the Song of the mare and her
filly still played in her mind. "Alexa comes from the largest city
in our area. I come from a smaller city close to Alexa's that is a
seat of learning. But we have horse breeders and horse farms. We
are well known for our ranches." What sort of person would be
Summoned as the Exotique for the volarans? Would it be another
woman or a man this time?
If it was a woman, would she accept her destiny on Lladrana or
seek to return like Marian? Since she'd be a Chevalier, too, would
she form a stronger bond with Alexa? Alexa would have another close
friend, then, a woman who had belonged to both worlds, too. Envy
swirled through Marian. She had no close friend like Alexa at
home.
Marian wished Andrew were a horseman.
"How many?" she asked blankly. She should know, but was a little
too shaken by the pressure of fate, of options spinning in her head
to recall right now. Maybe if she waited, Andrew would be
Summoned.
Jaquar ushered her from the Lower Ward into Temple Ward and they
made for the Keep. "How many Exotiques can be Summoned in the next
two years? Why, the same amount as there are communities of
Lladrana. Six. Obviously the Song has a master plan, but what it
is, the Singer hasn't told us."
She glanced at him and saw that though his voice was light and
ironic, his eyes were narrowed and his lips had an irritated curl
to them. "Six." Marian sighed.
He pressed her fingers in reassurance. "And obviously you two
ladies are here to provide a link between the communities, so we
will be able to combine and function as one. Perhaps we can destroy
the Dark."
"Two years," Marian breathed. Everything might be resolved in
two years. An incredibly short time.
Jaquar walked fast, whether out of suppressed anger or some
other passion, Marian didn't know. "Probably more. Each Exotique
must learn of Lladrana, complete her own task, whatever that is."
He definitely sounded angry.
But Marian didn't know why he was furious, and since it didn't
seem aimed at her, she ignored it, still caught in the idea of
other Exotiques, the grand plan that might be unfolding. What would
she be doing on Earth in a little over two years? Even working to
fund her last years, she should be finished with her doctorate and
cozily settled into an academic career path.
How flat that sounded.
Andrew might be fairly healthy and active. Or he might be
dead.
She shuddered. She'd been thinking that leaving through Ritual
and being Summoned back might be a possibility. Jaquar had spoken
as if such magic could be done. But she was deluding herself into
thinking it could be quick and easy. Or cheap.
The Tower had paid the Marshalls to Summon her. Those very
Marshalls were out fighting today and would continue to battle.
Some could die, and the strength of the Marshalls' Power
diminished.
They reached the cloister walk outside the Keep and Jaquar said,
"Sit with me, Marian," in a tone that made her blood turn cold.
Marian looked at him, eyes wide, and stilled. Her Song
fluttering, she sat.
Jaquar joined her and took her hands. "I wanted you to
concentrate on your studies, but there are things you must know.
Just before you came, I followed the sangvile who killed my parents
back to its nest-the home of the Dark." He told her everything, and
as he watched, her skin went pale, even her lips took on a tinge of
white. It was fascinating-and wrenching-to watch.
Her breasts rose and fell with quick breaths, her hands went
cold in his. He folded his fingers around hers, sent warmth to
them.
She finally said, "My task is to plane-walk to the maw and
destroy the nest?"
"No!" He believed that with every note in his body.
She tilted her head, frowned. "It must be."
He thought back to what Bossgond and Bastien had said, both men
less emotionally involved with the nest and Marian than he. "It
can't be now. Your bond with Amee is not strong enough to
plane-walk."
"But the horrors-"
"The horrors have invaded Lladrana for centuries. We are
watching and waiting, and planning. Every Apprentice, Scholar and
Circlet in the Tower Community knows how to kill sangviles with
fire. Some wear amulets. You-" he leaned forward and kissed her
brow "-my lovely Circlet, Summon fire with a thought."
"It must be my task," she repeated.
"But not now," he said firmly. "No one could expect you to rise
to Circlet so soon." He rubbed her hands. "I'm working with Bastien
and Bossgond." He wanted to hear, soon, if Bastien had any ideas.
They must speak as soon as possible.
"Bastien?" Marian looked startled. "This is a Tower
problem."
"No, dear one. This is a Lladranan problem-you taught me
that. I think your task must be to organize us to be a viable force
against the Dark."
"I see," she said. She leaned against him for a moment, then
stood.
He was grateful when she dropped only one of his hands and they
linked fingers with the other.
"I want to go up to the suite, now." Her smile was lopsided.
"I'd like thick walls around me."
He kissed the top of her head. "You are so brave."
She wasn't brave at all, but once again buried under a huge
amount of information-and expectations.
Jaquar wrapped an arm around her waist, but she still felt cold.
She wanted to be in a quiet place where she could shove aside her
emotions and begin to think logically.
As soon as they reached their suite in Alexa's tower, Jaquar
flung open the door.
Loud chimes rang a few notes of Bossgond's public Song, then his
peevish voice boomed. "Where are you two? Do you know how difficult
it was to find you? It took me time away from my studies. I need to
consult with Jaquar. Contact me at once."
Bossgond would not speak with her. When she'd called him via the
crystal ball in their suite as Jaquar was changing into more
everyday clothes than his formal Circlet robe, Bossgond had painted
a strained smile on his face and his eyes had shifted away from
her. He'd wanted an in-person meeting with Jaquar as soon as
possible but had not invited her.
Marian continued to mull over different scenarios as she rode
double with Jaquar back to Mue Island on a huge volaran that
Bastien's squire had loaned them. Apparently the Pegasus had never
flown over the Brisay Sea and wanted the adventure.
Bossgond must have known all along about the Dark and the maw
and the imminence of it opening and spewing out monsters and how
she might be able to harm the nest. But he hadn't said anything.
That comforted her. Wait! He had said something. He'd told
Jaquar that Marian couldn't plane-walk. Furthermore, she
knew Bossgond had treated her like a regular Apprentice.
Every time she had asked any Circlet what they wanted of her
before, they'd said "learn." She had, but she wouldn't be around to
pay them off, not quickly. When she came back... She lifted her
chin. When she came back, she'd fight-in her own way.
The trip didn't take long enough to sort everything out. Jaquar
explained that Powerful volarans, and Bastien's were all very
Powerful, had "distance magic" that shortened the flight, as if
each beat of wings carried them many miles instead of yards. Soon
they were circling down near Jaquar's Tower.
Wait, wait, I am here, cried Tuck's voice in her
mind.
Jaquar cocked his head and the volaran's ears flicked as if
they'd heard her hamster, too.
Oh, how she wanted her hamster! She pinpointed Tuck: to her
horror, he was outside. Not only that, but he was beyond
Jaquar's security forcefield. She wanted to scream and carry on,
but since he was obviously safe, she suppressed the urge, though
both Jaquar and Tuck must feel her distress through their bond with
her.
Sure enough, Jaquar tightened his arms around her and soothed.
"He's fine." Jaquar chuckled. "He isn't stupid. He has Nightsky
with him."
"Oh." Marian let out a relieved breath.
See, strange beastie? The volaran they rode turned his
head back, blinking with curiosity.
"Yes," said Jaquar. "Look for your fellow volaran,
Nightsky."
Their volaran angled toward the far side of the island. It was
easier to see Nightsky, of course, than Tuck. Nightsky galloped
down the beach, stopped and lifted his wings in greeting to the one
they rode.
As they descended, Marian finally saw Tuck jumping up and down
on a rock jutting into the ocean, waving his paws and squeaking
madly. I am here!
Since he appeared so delighted with himself, she could only
smile. Their volaran gently spiraled down. He nodded at Nightsky,
then delicately stepped over to Tuck. Lowering his head slowly, he
eyed the hamster, then snuffled at him.
Tuck squeaked with laughter, patted the volaran's big nose with
a tiny paw. Pretty vo.
"Vo?" asked Marian.
"Volaran," Jaquar said, dismounting and helping Marian down. She
stood a moment, leaning on him until she got her legs back from the
ride.
"Of course," Marian said.
Their communion done, the volaran lifted his head from Tuck,
then turned and greeted Nightsky, nickering. Marian sensed the
other, telepathic communication between the two volarans, but could
not understand it.
Jaquar hunkered down so he was close to eye level with Tuck.
"Well, Master Tuck, did you have a good time outside? You certainly
scared Marian and me with your adventuring."
Tuck looked away. "Not speaking to you."
Raising his eyebrows, Jaquar stood. "Is that so?" Without
waiting for a response, he went to the volaran they had ridden in
on and stroked him from nose to tail, singing. Marian observed how
the coat seemed to gleam, how the volaran moved more easily. Jaquar
had groomed him and given the flying horse more Power, to make the
return flight.
When Tuck screeched for attention, Marian walked over to him. He
sniffed. She bent down and stroked him with her forefinger. He
huffed.
"I thought we'd agreed that you wouldn't go outside," she said.
She couldn't lose him.
"For one day and night only." Since his black eyes bulged, they
couldn't slide slyly in her direction, but he tried.
"I see." She bit her lip. "I was very, very scared when I knew
you were outside."
"Nightsky was with me."
"Yes, thank you for bringing him with you."
"We talk. He's a good vo." Tuck sat back on his haunches. "I
wanted to see the ocean. I heard the ocean." He opened his mouth
and sound of surf-Earth's waves-rolled out in counterpoint to the
island's. "I never saw the ocean."
"Oceans are hard to come by in Colorado."
"I only saw the front yard. It was little."
"Yes, it was-is." It was about a three-by-six-foot piece of
grass at garden level. Suddenly, with all her heart, she wanted to
be back there, back before everything started.
But Tuck twitched his whiskers and rubbed his paws as if
dismissing the subject.
Bide well, Exotique, Bastien's volaran dipped his head at
her. Bastien returns.
Trepidation for herself was swallowed by fear for Alexa. "The
battle's over? Is Alexa all right?"
Most live.
Marian winced.
All you know well, live, said the pegasus.
Well, that was good news, though she felt sad for the strangers.
She curtsied to the flying horse. "Thank you for that information,
and for the excellent ri-flight here." She thought she was doing
well, acting naturally when her head buzzed with options-go and
never return, go and heal Andrew and come back, go and bring Andrew
back, stay and fight the nest. Surely the cowled figure in her
dreams was this evil "master."
The pegasus looked out to the ocean, then studied his
surroundings in all direction. He bowed to her, whinnied and sent
mental messages to Nightsky and Jaquar, then took off again, flying
inland.
Jaquar glanced at Marian, his hand on Nightsky's neck. "Nightsky
is ready to go. We should leave shortly so I can consult with
Bossgond and return before the evening meal." He scowled. "You're
fretting. Do you want me to stay?"
"No. I want you to talk to Bossgond. But even more than that, I
want you to bring him back here so I can talk to him." By the time
they returned, she'd have her thoughts in order.
He looked at her soberly. "I'll do that. Return to the Tower. Go
to my study and Sing 'Open, water, access.' The floor in one
corner of the room will open to a large square pool. Practice
Water." Prof to student. The words reassured her enough to make a
small joke.
"Still not willing to eat with Bossgond, even with the new
cook?"
"I would rather eat with you," Jaquar said simply.
Tuck grumbled.
"Oh, and Tuck," Jaquar added.
"Bossgond called," Tuck muttered. "Other Circlets called. Much
noise. Worse than telephone and answering machine." He made a high
beeping noise like one of the sounds Marian's PDA had programmed
into it, and opened his mouth. "Call me at once on my new
cell number 720-MRS-RICH," issued from Tuck in Marian's mother's
perfectly elocuted tones. Marian recalled she'd recorded the
message with her PDA just in case she couldn't remember the new
phone number. As if she could forget MRS RICH.
Jaquar laid a hand on her shoulder, his face shadowed. "Your
mother?" He shook his head. "I couldn't understand the words, of
course, but our link told me it was she. She doesn't treat you as
you should be treated, with respect." And Marian felt his response
to her mother's message through the bond. He was grateful he'd had
loving parents. Marian had reminded him of that.
"I must go," he said. Gently, he pulled her into his arms. He
tipped her chin up with one hand. "You are so lovely, inside and
out." Brushing a thumb over her lips, he said, "So very worthy of
respect and love."
25
Marian's heart thudded hard as she stared into the deep blue of
Jaquar's eyes. The waves along the shore crashed, the odor of the
briny ocean nearly overpowering the scent of man, of Jaquar, that
she craved. All her senses were extraordinarily keen. She thought
she could feel the weight of his gaze as it traveled over her face.
Knew she could feel their auras, their Power, mingling. Their bond
opened, emotions flowing between them. Tenderness. Respect. The
faint edge of love.
He bent his head and his lips touched hers softly, yet a
yearning stormed through her. His lips pressed hers, withdrew.
He stepped back. "I must go. If I stay an instant longer, we
will mate on the sea."
She nodded.
Jaquar took another step back. "Go to the Tower. Beware of other
Circlets." He ran for Nightsky and jumped onto the volaran's back.
The flying horse leaped into the sky, lifting with wings and Power.
They flew in the direction of Alf Island and Bossgond. Jaquar
lifted a hand to wave.
I'll be back before dinner! he sent, mind to mind.
Fear spiking again, Marian didn't wave back.
Tuck gave a tiny growl to attract her attention. He looked up at
her, his face furrowed in a hamster scowl. "You left me alone a
long time," Tuck accused shrilly. Marian picked him up, but
he wouldn't settle in her hands and he nipped the fleshy part of
her thumb in irritation.
"Ouch!"
"Serves you right," Tuck said. "I was lonely. I was afraid for
you. Many speak through the glass ball but not you and not
Jaquar."
"I'm sorry."
He sat back on her hand, his little chest puffed out. "I am your
companion now. Sinafin says so."
"And of course Sinafin is always right," Marian murmured.
Tuck nodded. "Yes."
Marian sniffed.
Tuck had a hard time narrowing his bulbous eyes, but he
tried.
Marian chuckled.
"You remember that she is teaching me, and when you raise your
Tower I can become a feycoocu."
All humor faded before renewed anxiety. What did Sinafin know?
What would the feycoocu tell Marian if she asked? She stared at
Tuck. What did he know and what would he tell her?
"Let's go back to the Tower and have a little talk."
"And food," Tuck said.
She'd bribe him with anything. "And coffee."
Tuck scrabbled up to her shoulder, set his pointy claws through
the material of her gown, tugged at her hair.
"Ouch!" Marian said. "Let me make a pocket for you." So she did,
right above her breasts.
Tuck settled himself inside. "Nice. Warm. Heart sounds good.
I'll take a nap." He wriggled a couple of minutes more.
Marian eyed the cove, almost wanting to see if her mastery of
Water worked here, too.
Almost. She decided that Jaquar's pool would be another good
test.
She found the path from the beach to the interior of the island.
Nibbling her lip, she visualized a map and thought this beach must
be on the southwest portion of the island.
The sun's warmth soaked into her, reaching every cell. She was a
Circlet and specialized in Fire! Lightning, as a matter of fact.
Now she only had to prove she had mastered Water.
How much would she be able to do in Jaquar's study? She thought
one of the reasons that she hadn't been able to manage Water was
the pressure of having Jaquar watch her-and judge her work. Always
disliking error, she became paranoid about making mistakes while in
his company. She'd never had an intimate relationship with a prof
before-not that he was much like any teacher she'd known.
The attraction between them was so strong-not only physically,
but of like minds and values. She had the idea that if she was
given a choice between furthering her studies in Power or having
Jaquar as a lover, she'd choose the man. That notion scraped her
nerves-it sounded too much like her mother, who needed an admiring
man around at all times.
So Marian stretched her legs on the walk back to the Tower. Her
body was toning up, as much due to daily exercise as the calories
she and Jaquar burned off in bed. He was such a fabulous lover.
But no doubt he'd want to see how she progressed with her
lessons in Water. She grinned. She was hoping to show him she'd
mastered it!
To bolster her confidence she crafted and refined a tune, and
hummed what she whimsically called "Marian's Rain." It was both a
mnemonic song to prod her memory for the right steps, the right
feelings, she should have when practicing the cycle of
seawater to rain, and a Powerful Songspell.
She was nearing the protective circle around the Tower when she
stopped and stared at a carriage, without horses or volarans or
even wheels, sitting in the meadow. It was an elegant
equipage of bright green and gold with small pink-and-white striped
flags on each corner.
Before she could figure out what it was, the Circlets Chalmon
and Venetria walked from the direction of the Tower, calling,
"Marian!"
Beware of other Circlets. Fear gripped her. They were
between her and the Tower! But she could run, find a place to stop
and open the protective circle. Escape.
She turned and raced. A hot splinter of pain speared into the
back of her right shoulder.
Dizziness. The ground rose up. She managed to land on her side,
sparing Tuck. Tuck...stay...still.
She fought unconsciousness, but wished she hadn't when she heard
Chalmon say, "This was all Jaquar's plan. I wish he'd stayed to
carry it through."
His voice rang with sincerity, and Marian knew he'd spoken the
truth.
Marian woke suddenly and completely. She stood in the center of
the smallest of several pentacles increasing in size that were
incised into the flagstones of a huge courtyard between stone
theater seats open to the evening sky.
To her right, beyond the courtyard, was an opening to the
theater where the carriage sat. To her left was a dilapidated
Tower. She recognized this place. Parteger Island, the Tower
Community gathering place.
It would soon be full dark, yet it was still light enough for
Marian to see about thirty people watching her.
Trapped.
26
Tuck stared up at her with wide eyes from her bodice pocket.
About twenty people stepped up to an outer circle about six feet
from her. They placed their palms out, spread-fingered as if
holding her in place.
Marian's breath stopped. She threw herself bodily against the
barrier.
It didn't give. They had her caught inside the pentacle.
"Line up around the pentacle, immediately," Chalmon commanded
those who hung back. He stood on the inner circle closest to her,
along with Venetria and three other Circlets- just beyond arm's
length, though she reached and reached with fingers curved like
claws.
Fear dried her mouth, buzzed in her head as she strove to reason
at what was happening. She'd wanted to be Sent home to Boulder. It
looked like she was going somewhere else, and she trembled to
imagine where.
A young man looked uneasy. "I don't know about this-"
"If you won't stand with us, stay out of the way or leave."
Chalmon's voice was hard. "The best estimate is that the Dark maw
will open and release monsters, including sangviles targeted at us,
before morning. We must prevent this!"
"I don't like this," a woman said. "I'm only a Scholar, and
wasn't told of this. I won't do it. An Exotique is a precious
resource, and this is gross betrayal."
Damn right. Marian struggled to break free of the bonds again,
this time buffeting the forcefield with her mind. Her Power
fluttered like a butterfly inside a killing jar, though she saw
sweat running from the Circlet's headbands down their faces.
One against far too many. She could hardly breathe. She didn't
know what was going on, but sensed it was very, very bad.
"Where are her teachers-Bossgond, Jaquar?"
Good questions. Venetria raised her voice and began an
intricately toned spellchant that drowned out others, and the Power
wove thick around her. Marian's palms dampened. Where was
Jaquar?
"This was Jaquar's plan in the first place," Chalmon said. "He's
been informed of the danger of the nest opening shortly, and is on
his way."
Oh God. Doomed.
Just like that first premonition she had when she arrived in
Lladrana. She wanted to shriek. She fisted her hands and flung
mental bolts of Power toward the shield, fueled by sheer hurt and
anger and fear. The invisible trap held.
"We must link and conduct the Ritual now. Join us or
not." Chalmon stepped into place, slapping his right hand into
Venetria's left. All around the circle people linked hands.
The Song swelled, added harmonies. Marian was caged with pulsing
beams of red light sounding like the rush of a mighty river. She
swayed, glassy-eyed, as if not only her body was captured and
controlled, but her mind, too.
When she saw Jaquar running toward her, she sent him loathing,
her mouth open with a silent shriek of horror and betrayal.
He stumbled. His gaze bored into hers. His face was all angles,
tight expression. She couldn't read him.
She couldn't face him, either. Underlying her fear, her rage,
her desperation was the burning acid of his lying and
treachery.
She'd turned her back on him! Jaquar's fury at the others dimmed
beside his anger at himself. He should have told her what he'd
originally planned, but he hadn't wanted to see her respect for him
destroyed.
Fool.
He had to reach her, prevent the others from Sending her, or go
with her into the maw.
No price was too much to pay.
Her head tilted away from him. The Song between them ceased with
a sudden, sharp shock. She'd cut the link.
Agony whipped through him-pain at the severing of the sex bond
and all the emotions that had attached to it and spun delicately
between them.
She shuddered time and again, hunched her shoulders, but did not
face him.
He reached the outer circle of Circlets and Scholars and they
blocked him-moving, dancing, arms linked. With gritted teeth he
grabbed the clasped hands of a man and a woman passing by, inserted
himself into the energy stream and winced when a crash of cymbals
ripped through him.
But they hauled him up, kept him on his feet, moving forward in
the circle. His mind wheeling to find balance, to think.
The loud chant diminished as it transformed to a voiceless
Songspell that traveled mind to mind and was below hearing. He
reached for the meaning of the words, struggled to comprehend, to
counter.
But he could not stop it. The melody being forged was too great,
created by Powerful, determined people, for once in concert. They
were Sending Marian to explore and harm the nest-atop the shoulder
of her gown was a tiny crystal ball that would relay the sights and
sounds of the Dark's headquarters to waiting observers.
He broke from the outer circle, ignoring the cries of the
participants as he wrecked their energy flow, and staggered toward
the inner circle. One glance at the five people and he had another
thing to be thankful for.
Bossgond wasn't there. They had spent some time discussing the
rumors he'd heard of Jaquar's original plan, then how to watch the
nest. They'd come to no conclusions about how to attack or destroy
it quickly. Then the old mage had drawn Jaquar into a long
discussion about the Dimensional Corridor and Sending Marian back
to Exotique Terre. Jaquar had returned to his Tower later than he'd
planned, to hear Chalmon's curt call. Doubt had crept into Jaquar's
mind as to whether Bossgond had delayed him on purpose. But no, he
hadn't betrayed Marian. Her mentor hadn't betrayed her.
No, Jaquar, her lover, had.
Narrowing his eyes, Jaquar gauged his timing to push into the
inner circle, past the swirling figures to the pentacle and Marian.
The Sorcerers and Sorceresses of this round danced with hands
clasped but arms outstretched between them. And with each step, the
music rose, nearing a crescendo.
There! Jaquar flung himself between two tall men, under their
arms, into a stinging, ear-pounding thump of a drum. Bang!
He pushed, penetrated the field, fell to his hands and knees, felt
warm blood run from his nose.
He lurched to his feet, hurtled forward to the red-sphere cage
surrounding Marian. He reached it, tried to penetrate the
forcefield. Cacophony pounded through him-hissing, screaming,
noise. He pressed onward. He had just touched Marian's fingers when
Venetria ordered, "Go!"
Chalmon's deep voice followed. "Go!"
Jaquar grabbed for Marian's hand. Missed.
"Go!" chanted a third Sorcerer.
The spell cloth encasing the weapon-knot Jaquar had snatched
from his Tower fell from his fingers into Marian's palm. It was the
strongest weapon he could give her.
Her hand jerked closed over the thread.
Once again she turned terror-filled eyes upon him, and he knew
in that instant that she thought his actions, too, had been part of
the spell, of the plan.
"No!" he screamed, but he didn't know whether she heard him
before she vanished.
Utter silence descended-except for the echoing of his last
no, around the stone theater of Parteger Island.
At the last minute, when terror overcame the haze in her mind,
Marian understood that the Power flow was uneven, flawed. Unlike
the Marshalls, this group wasn't accustomed to working together.
Further, none of them entirely trusted one another or the process
of connection.
Deep inside, Marian screamed. It was bad enough that she was the
puppet and the tool of this group. To know that they might be
incompetent in their spell was terrifying.
What would happen to her?
Off balance, the Circlets' minds and will yet managed to merge
for one clear moment, and they flung Marian to the Dark maw. She
shivered and shuddered and spun through planes of existence she
hadn't known about but recognized through the touches of minds
against hers.
Wind didn't take her-she could have mastered it. Lightning
didn't sweep her through the night-she could have bent that to her
will. She traveled on the push of minds, on the waves of
sound of a mighty Songspell.
Mordantly Marian realized their aim was off. They had not shared
a common vision of their target.
She rubbed the cloth Jaquar had given her and the outer covering
fell away. The weapon-knot twined around her right middle
finger.
Betrayed. Emotional pain stabbed her, tears backed behind
her eyes. They were sending her to the heart of evil, and Jaquar
had given her the weapon to destroy it-though she didn't know how
to use it. It probably would kill everything, including her.
She flew through gray landscapes, through black space studded
with a glistening swath of stars. Then she plummeted down, down,
down to a seething black place with an open maw that looked like
unhealthy red flames, like a scabby, open mouth with razor-sharp
teeth.
She hit a Powerful shield that slimed her as she plunged
through, screaming until fear took her very voice.
Tuck squirmed in her chest pocket. Just the feel of him calmed
her. She wasn't alone. She had someone to protect. As she fell
through rocky darkness and saw a stone floor rising, she twisted
and landed hard on her side. Again.
"Oomph!" Her breath thumped from her body and she lay stunned,
gasping.
The smell-of putrefaction, burning, dead things rotting.
She didn't want to inhale, but her lungs struggled to suck air. All
this time on Lladrana she'd become more and more aware of sounds,
but now odor overwhelmed her. She flopped an arm over her nose to
try to limit the stench. Already she felt it seeping into her
clothes, her hair.
Her mind cleared enough to take stock of her surroundings. Dark
brown cavern walls, oozing damp. A pitted, rocky path upward,
blackness shrouding the cavern and any passageways beyond her feet.
The air was hot, sulfuric, laden with the horrible odor.
All too familiar from her nightmares.
Chittering frantically, Tuck popped from her pocket and
scrabbled to her neck, where he patted her face. "You are okay.
Okay. Okay!"
Just the sound of the English term steadied her. Her next breath
succeeded; she drew air into her lungs.
It tasted vile.
She choked and coughed and doubled over. Tuck clung to her hair,
patting, whispering, "We are fine."
She didn't think so, but couldn't spare the breath to tell
him.
A horrible thud came from the dark corridor beyond her
feet, followed by scratchy, ragged breathing.
Not her own.
Her heart beat hard enough for her to feel it. Just like in the
dream, something huge lumbered at her. Ready to eat her. Or
worse.
She'd been in Lladrana long enough to know there was worse.
Marian scrambled to her knees and found that her magical dress
had ripped and showed no signs of mending itself. She couldn't
spare the Power to fix it. She'd need all her wits, all her energy,
all her Power to escape this.
The maw of the Dark. The center of the evil that was
invading Lladrana. They'd sent Tuck, innocent Tuck, with her.
Bile coated her tongue and the back of her throat.
She would survive, and they would pay.
Jaquar would pay the most.
An awful croaking echoed in the cavern. Slow, slithery movements
sounded, closing in. Marian hopped to her feet, swept up Tuck,
thrust him in her pocket. But he wriggled and escaped.
"No, 1 want to be out. I want to see."
Marian didn't.
She had to move!
Grabbing her gown, she straightened it with a flip of the
fabric, saw that the tear was mending threads one at a time as if
the spell labored against the noxious atmosphere.
A small crash of rock behind her made her jump.
Which nightmare would this be-the vicious, huge monster she
couldn't see, or the evil once-human Sorcerer? The master that
Jaquar had told her of.
Not one of them-not Bossgond, not Jaquar, not any of the
others-had given her any real information about this place. She had
no knowledge of her enemy, of his weaknesses, nothing she could use
to craft even a half-assed spell, let alone a perfect spell, or at
least a competent spell.
Tuck set his claws in the shoulder of her gown. Run! he
cried mentally.
Marian ran. She had no breath to spare for prayers. Her
feet thudded up the cavern. There was enough reddish glow-light for
her to see as she ran.
Which nightmare? Would she break out onto a cliff edge and see
Andrew lying dead? How could she? What were those fearsome
dreams-predestined truth, or fiction?
They seemed all too real right now.
She bumped off the wall, and an odoriferous slime-smear
decorated her sleeve, her arm hurting where she'd hit the rock.
Like in her dream. Pumping lungs, pumping legs. Her shoes seemed
loose, not tight around her ankles or cushioning her soles.
Flop. Flop. The more she thought about her shoes, the more
she felt them slip.
Chhrrrhh. The hot breath of the creature touched her
back. Adrenaline flooded her and she ran faster than she'd ever
thought she could.
The passage twisted, and she careened from one wall to the
other, no pain now. Too frightened. Ran into something that gave
before her-cloth over a doorway? And she was through. Was this the
cliff edge? She pivoted, slammed against the wall.
Beside her, the tapestry went up in flames.
She stood on a huge ledge, but it wasn't outside. She was near
the top of a cavernous room on a great balcony. To her right was a
wooden rail that looked all too flimsy. Roars and rumbles came from
below.
"Well, well, well," creaked a sly voice. "What do we have here?
A little intruder."
It was the man in the cowled robe, but he wasn't a man, he was a
giant-nearly a third taller than she, with misshapen hands furred
with hair on the backs, the only flesh she could see. He might once
have had the coloring of a Lladranan, but his skin now showed a
distinct shade of green.
He rose from a thronelike chair and walked slowly to her. She
couldn't see into the hood that covered his face but got the
unsettling impression of movement, like a mass of wriggling worms,
or tentacles. Marian set her back against the wall.
At that instant, the monster chasing her lumbered through the
doorway.
Lurching from side to side, it reached the balcony, stretched
its wings and tottered to the rail.
A dreeth. A small dreeth, but still terrifying.
The flying dinosaur's leathery wing-tip brushed against an
invisible forcefield over the railing and sparked. The beast
hissed. Flames shot from its mouth.
Marian gulped. "I didn't know dreeths were fire-breathing." The
comment came from her, all right, though she didn't know what
possessed her to speak.
The once-man chuckled wetly. "I am working on it. But if they
have fire, they must be small. I picked the image from the Exotique
Alexa's brain." Another snicker that made Marian's skin crawl. "You
Exotiques do have a rich imagination for monsters."
Marian tried to keep images of movies, of graphic novels, of
fantasy gaming cards showing evil beasts, from flooding her mind,
ready to be culled and used by this creature.
The dreeth turned toward them.
"Go!" The cowled figure waved a three-fingered hand studded with
pus-filled lumps at the dreeth and the rail. A shimmer and hum and
the forcefield vanished. The dreeth screamed as it flew away.
Marian was sure that whatever awaited in the room below was
worse than what she faced here. At least it sounded as if there
were massed monsters down there, but still... She crept toward the
rail, looked over it.
Sure enough, there were at least a hundred. She recognized
slayers, renders, sangviles-three more dreeths, these gigantic.
There were other horrors, lesser and greater, that she had no names
for. Most of them were eating live, writhing animals. Would she be
dinner, too?
The inhuman creature rasped laughter. "There is no escape for
you that way. There is no escape for you at all." He advanced on
her. "An Exotique Scholar, what a prize. What shall I do with you?
What pretty hair."
His hand reached for her, stopped. His head tilted. "What do we
have here?"
She froze in terror. Tuck hid in her hair. Please, no, not
Tuck.
The man-beast roared with laughter, his fetid breath washing
over her, a drop of spittle hitting where her neck curved into her
shoulder. It burned. Marian set her teeth against a scream.
She shrank against the wall. She had to do something.
She'd survived in her dreams! Blue fire had sizzled from her
fingertips. She had no clue what blue fire was, how to find it
within her Power, how to use it.
Think!
"You have a little spy. Something the Circlets set upon you. How
cute."
He couldn't have said "cute." No, he hadn't-she'd just heard it,
filled in the blank. She wondered how much she was feeling, sensing
from him, and what she actually heard. What was real.
"But I am the Master and though I enjoy toying with you, it is
time to send your poisonous presence where you cannot affect the
nest. Yes, I am the Master." White, curved fangs gleamed in the
darkness of his hood. His fingers, elongated and multi-jointed,
plucked a little glass orb the size of a marble from her shoulder.
She hadn't even known it was there.
With thumb and forefinger, he flicked it over the rail. There
was a tiny flash, a roar from the monsters.
"Oooh, and you have a mousekin, too. An Exotique animal with
Power, also a threat to our home," the un-man said. "I think I have
sensed his essence before." He reached again.
"No!" Her fingers closed on something in her skirt pocket- the
brithenwood stick.
"Yesss." Now his voice was sibilant, snakelike. His fingers
curled and claws sprang from the tips, swiped at her neck,
severed a swath of her hair. Missed Tuck.
"No!" She flung the brithenwood, wrapped in anger and Power. It
struck his eye and pierced it!
He shrieked in agony, plucked the stick from his eye and dropped
it, snatching his fingers back. A droplet of blood fell on her
hand, burned as much as his spit, trickled to her wrist tattoos and
flashed white, searing her.
The Power of his pain and rage lifted her from her feet, flung
her over the rail to fall to the horrors below.
Death. And her last sight would be the deformed mage, eye
exploded, black blood coating the empty socket, trickling down his
cheek. Long tentacles around his mouth wriggling in pain.
But he slowly closed his fingers into a fist and her fall
halted. She hung suspended in air.
Not such an easy end for you! His malevolent voice hit
her like cudgels, bruising. You are Powerful. I will suck that
Power from you, drain it drop by drop, and your agony at its slow
loss will make it all the tastier, all the stronger for my own use.
And when my little horrors need some special energy, I'll carve off
a piece of you for them. 1 wonder what will go first? A finger?
Perhaps a whole hand or foot...
The monsters screeched and the noise drowned out even the
master's mental words in her head.
After a long moment when he communed with his underlings, he
turned back to her, flicked his fingers. The blow was a strong
backhanded slap that snapped her head back. With a screeching yell
he sent her into the dark place. Go, now, to the larder where
your obscene alien vibrations do not disrupt us. Go!
Larder. Larder. Larder. The word reverberated in Marian's
mind, increasing in loudness with every repetition until it struck
her unconscious.
27
Marian awoke to nothingness. To silence and darkness and no
physical sensation. She could hear, see, sense nothing. Knew
nothing.
Was nothing.
She had not a bit of control in her life, in her fate. Panic
shredded her.
She couldn't hear her breath or her heartbeat.
She couldn't smell any fragrance from her dress or even her own
perspiration.
Nothingness.
She screamed.
There was no sound.
No intake of air, no taste on her tongue.
She couldn't feel the gown against her body.
Worse, she couldn't feel herself. She tried to close her
hands into fists, felt no flex of muscle, no pull of tendon, no
touch of finger on finger, fingers curled into palms.
Biting terror filled her, shrouded her mind.
What was left of her?
No body.
Only mind.
For untold aeons she screamed inside until her fear subsided
from sheer weariness.
Slowly, slowly one thought connected to another. She became
aware again.
Was she dead?
Was this limbo? Absence of sensation. Best definition of limbo
she'd ever come across and she was living it. Maybe she was living
it.
If she was dead, why was her brain still working? Why did she
still have an idea of self?
Marian.
She was Marian Dale Harasta.
Relief fluttered through her. If she could think, perhaps she
could somehow get out of this mess.
With her mind.
She'd had Power once.
Before she'd failed.
She'd made mistakes. She'd not listened to her instincts, she'd
trusted the wrong man, she'd failed.
Humiliation flooded her, self-accusation. She'd failed.
And now she was here, in limbo, unable to control anything.
Maybe.
Inside her head she sang a spell to move the air.
Nothing.
She tried licking her lips.
No tongue, no wetness, no plump lips.
Thought vanished under quivering fear.
But this time the descent into panic was shorter. She
believed.
She reasoned. She knew her identity, she felt hot and cold- or
perhaps it was just the recalled wash of hot and cold through her
body as it reacted to emotion-icy fear, flushing embarrassment,
guilt.
Marian Dale Harasta.
Yes, the edge of panic receded. She still hung in the limbo of
the lost. It wasn't as dark as she had thought. Perhaps that had
been black terror pressing upon her brain, binding her spirit. She
thought her eyes were open but saw nothing but grayness, like fog.
It tricked her mind into making shapes where she knew there were
none.
Was Tuck still with her? Hanging on to her shoulder? She hoped
so but he could be biting her ear and she wouldn't feel it. Perhaps
he hadn't lost reason like her. Maybe she hadn't thrashed around in
panic and bucked him off. She could only hope he was with her and
coping better than she.
Was the knot still twined around her finger like a ring? She
didn't know. She couldn't feel it, so she certainly couldn't fumble
to untie it.
Once more she moved her feet, but could not feel the stretch of
tendon. Dark humor welling up, she sent instructions to her feet to
close together, to tap heels together three times, her mouth formed
the words There's no place like home.
It didn't work. She hadn't expected that it would. She couldn't
feel her feet or any vibration in her throat.
She was truly helpless. Her worst fear come true. And nothing
she'd done all her life to be perfect had saved her from this. None
of the knowledge she'd slaved to learn, to remember, could help
her. None of the innate Power she'd felt and honed in Lladrana
could save her. All those lessons-useless.
Lessons. The word sat in her mind like a silver splinter.
Pointed, hurting a little, prodding her, like there was something
she should remember. What?
At least she had her brain. She could think. She didn't know if
time passed in this limbo, or how it passed. Whether nanoseconds or
years passed in the worlds outside. Whether she herself aged.
Another tiny bit of calm trickled through her-at least her mind
still worked. Perhaps her studies provided her with help after all.
She might be able to amuse herself for quite a while, and that
could keep her from going mad.. .again.
She wasn't pleased that she'd lost control so totally, given
herself to fear and panic and self-condemnation at a stupid
mistake.
Well, she should cut herself a break-no one she knew had ever
experienced what she had, found themselves suspended in
nothingness. So who knew what they would have done? How
could she measure herself against the unknown courage of someone
else? Except she did it all the time.
She'd gauged her prettiness, her sexual attractiveness, her
social skills against that of her mother, or other girls and women
in Denver society. Had always found herself lacking there.
She thought of Andrew. She wondered if tears welled up in her
eyes, if her throat closed, because the tightness she felt in her
spiritual heart should have brought such physical reactions. Her
love for Andrew was, and had always been, powerful and
unconditional.
Thinking of Andrew steadied her. She wondered how he was doing
in his new retreat, whether she'd found any way to help him, or
could have found some in the future.
Marian considered whether-when-Alexa and Bossgond would miss
her. Fury overwhelmed her at Jaquar's betrayal, at his last gesture
of shoving the weapon-knot in her hand so she could destroy the
nest, while destroying herself, as well. He had been her
doom and she hadn't listened. Instead, she'd listened to the
stupid, false Song between them and his words. She'd been so
pleased that he'd found her beautiful, so blinded by their
lovemaking.
Another lesson wasted.
Lesson.
Maybe the thrill of riding the lightning, of feeling immense
Power crackle through her, of the acceptance by Alexa and Bastien
and the Marshalls in the Castle had made it easy for him to deceive
her. Especially after that ghastly experience with Sinafin.
Knowledge blinded her: she could have sworn it flashed white-hot
and atomic in her mind.
You have learned your lesson, Sinafin had said. And
before that-in the endless moments of that traumatic
experience, the feycoocu had repeated again and again, I
can't hear you.
As if Sinafin knew that Marian would have to call for help one
day....
Hope nearly sent her spiraling into mindlessness again. To hope
and attempt and fail was worse than not hoping at all.
Easy, easy. She tried to take deep, even breaths. Inhale, hold
for a count of eight, exhale. She didn't know if her body did as
her mind directed, but either way, it couldn't hurt to pretend.
Harking back to Earth lessons, Marian visualized a stream of white
light entering her body, through her head, flowing down her as she
imagined relaxing tight muscles one by one. She'd been meditating
for a couple of years and easily sank into a different state-a
state of clarity and altered brain waves.
Reaching deep, gathering the greatest amount of self, and Power,
and sheer will, she yelled at the top of her lungs, SINAFIN!
FEYCOOCU!
Very, very faintly she heard a whisper. Too quiet to understand.
Perhaps even imaginary. Marian collected herself again. Screamed
again, putting an extra punch of Power-she hoped-behind her
call.
SINAFIN!
Another tiny.. .echo?
Marian built an image of Sinafin in her head as the feycoocu had
taught her-but unlike that time at Jaquar's Tower, she didn't see
Sinafin as a fairy. No, this time, the shapeshifter was the
warhawk, sitting on Jaquar's shoulder in the Nom de Nom.
Marian "closed" her eyes and brought back every sensation,
physical and emotional, of that scene. The smokiness of the bar,
the red leather of the booths beneath her, Jaquar's warm and tender
arm across her shoulders- The image faded. Damn it!
Again she built-this time from the emotions out. Now she
realized Jaquar had an aura of a man well satisfied with sex and
the anticipation of more. Alexa sat across from Marian-quivering
with curiosity and yearning to ride the lightning, deep green eyes
alight with interest. The Song between them flowed with Alexa's
pleasure that Marian was there as well as friendliness, affection.
Alexa was solid in the vision. For a moment their Song filled
Marian's mind, and she held it close, worked to remember it.
Jaquar-do the breathing exercise even if you can't feel
it-Jaquar had been a man throbbing with sexuality, a Circlet
radiating Power. A lover, a man who'd weathered and come to terms
with his grief. An underlying, innate note in his being had matched
hers-an Earth tune, from the last essence of Earth blood he
carried. The Song they had made together-passionate, wary,
inescapable, tempting. Marian remembered that tune too well. Before
it could hurt her, she gently, gently drew away, but kept it in her
mind.
She recalled other portions of the scene-the twisting and
twining notes of the individual Chevaliers standing at the bar. The
lower, duller strains of the bartender and barmaids.
The intense emotions of the couple in the booth behind her that
Marian hadn't noticed at the time, came back- love, desperation,
shock at Alexa's offer, thrilling hope and acceptance. Incredible
relief. The Song between the two Chevaliers.
The Song of Marwey and her lover Pascal. Deep, abiding love with
knowledge of their past, commitment to each other and a shared
future.
The Song of Marian herself. Bright with Power, intricate and
weaving chords from Earth into a Song of Lladrana-or vice versa.
She knew that Song now-Song of her bones and blood-though she
couldn't feel them. Song of her heart and mind. Song of her
soul.
All these twisted like strands of harmony into a thick rope that
Marian used to gather her Power and send it forth in a great shout
that rolled from her, taking everything she had. SINAFIN.
SINAFIN. SINAFIN.
Marian? The voice was muted but clear. Relief rushed
between them.
Help! Marian thought she should be weeping buckets with
the word.
Hold on. 1 have your Song-rope, Alexa said
grimly.
An instant later Marian felt a surge of Power come to her. She
imagined a warm embrace from the smaller woman- ephemeral, but
true.
And her wrist burned. She could feel it, feel the pattern
of the heat-Alexa's jade baton.
Where are you?
In the nest. In limbo. In the larder. Marian suppressed a
wild surge of black laughter. The evil Sorcerer called the
Master who serves the Dark cast me here. Whatever happened,
Alexa needed to know what was going on.
Wait to tell me. Call again. You are not alone. Send
ropes to your friends.
Help! The word shot from her. Was caught.
1 have you, said Jaquar.
Again she felt desperation-this time from him. Rage. Her whole
body heated with warmth. She felt the curling of her toes, the very
lifting of hair on her scalp. She didn't want the warmth. But she
wanted to go back.
I have you, he repeated.
She didn't reply, but used her turmoil of emotions to send
another call. BOSSGOND!
Here! His voice was deep and old and solid.
Alexa said, I am joined with Jaquar and Bossgond,
hand-to-hand. Bastien is arriving momentarily. The Marshalls are
here in the Castle Temple. We will bring you back.
Marian shuddered, felt the tremor through her body.
Marian! It was Tuck, warm fur rubbing against her neck.
I have been talking and talking and you didn't say
anything. He sounded fearful.
"Sorry, Tuck," she said, and her tongue felt thick, her throat
clogged with tears-of panic and hope and relief. She cleared her
throat and said, weakly, "Could I hear a little Beethoven? The
Ninth, please?"
Tuck vibrated against her and the orchestral piece rumbled from
him. She breathed deeply, enjoying the sensation of her lungs
filling, expanding, emptying, shrinking. Blessed sensation.
She still saw nothing but fog.
Time to Call for Sinafin again, Tuck said. He chuckled in
her mind. You Call and I will broadcast Sinafin. Soon we will be
Summoned to the Castle Temple. Then we can go home.
Home. She didn't know where that was-her first thought was of
Bossgond's Tower, then her apartment. She didn't ask Tuck where he
meant.
Power roared to her from Alexa, strong and wild.
Alexa? Marian asked.
Bastien is here. So is Sinafin. Call her again.
Sinafin! Marian shouted.
I am here. You did very, very well, Marian.
Marian gulped at the praise, lifted her arm and saw the deep
emerald velvet. She wiped her eyes on the sleeve.
Alexa broke into laughter. Beethoven's Ninth! We can all hear
it! You should see the Marshalls' faces. Stopped them in their
tracks.
I have Called Circlets 1 trust as well as those who hurt
you, Bossgond added. My friends will link with me. And
Jaquar. With the Marshalls' help it will be but a puff of breath to
bring you back. You are bringing us together, the Castle and the
Tower, this day. Well done, Marian. It will be only a few
moments....
I'll hang in here, Marian sent to Alexa, and her friend
laughed again.
One by one new Songs were sung to Marian, drowning out
Beethoven, so Tuck stopped the Earth music.
Songs of people were so much more fascinating. As each Pair of
Marshalls was added-Swordmarshall and Shieldmarshall-three Songs
enriched the links between them, each individual and the Pair
Song.
In her mind, Marian saw the Circle gather and expand as others
joined. After Alexa, Jaquar's Song was the strongest- cruelly
familiar, though she'd cut the bond between them.
She knew she had, she'd felt the whiplash of it, then the empty
place inside her where it had sung.
Jaquar hadn't spoken to her after those first words, and she
hadn't talked to him. It was hurtful enough to realize that he was
the second person who'd heard her. If they'd had more time
together, he probably would have been the first one her Song would
have flown to.
Would he have ignored it? Would he, could he have brought in the
strong force that Alexa had to save her? Marian didn't know, but
she dreaded facing him and the other Circlets, trying to be
civil.
When all the Marshalls had joined the Circle, the rainbow
brightness, the incredible Power Marian sensed amazed her. It was
far greater than the Power the Circlets and Scholars had used to
Send Marian to the Dark nest. Even Bossgond's and Jaquar's Powers
looked puny.
The Marshalls' individual Power might not have the depth and
breadth of a Circlet's, but they were used to working as a team. No
wonder the Tower Community had given the task of Summoning Marian
from Earth to the Marshalls.
Marian's shoulders sagged in relief. She knew she'd be saved.
The change in her body caused her to spin slightly in the
nothingness. She lifted her hands as if she could paddle as she
might in water, and caught sight of the weapon-knot wrapped around
her finger like a fancy ring. Bloodred and pulsing, as if it, too,
soaked in Power from the Song-web that wove around her. Though,
that image wasn't quite right for sound instead of sight. She was
more like a solo performer surrounded by a huge and mighty
orchestra. She smiled at the notion.
Now her immediate fears were banished, Marian had time to truly
think. She laughed shortly. Atavistic fear had banished thought,
the physical triumphing over the mental as usual in a human
being.
She was deep in the Dark's nest. Dare she try to destroy it with
the knot? She sensed the knot had several spells woven into it and
each, when loosed, could do damage.
No, said Bossgond. 1 will demand all Lorebooks of
weapons or knots to be sent to me. We will study them
together.
Another wisp of relief. Marian swallowed hard. She'd be going
home with Bossgond, not staying at Jaquar's.
Tuck sniffed in her ear. I love my house.
Two jolts swept her as familiar energy, tainted with guilt and
shame, came into the Circle. Venetria and Chalmon.
They begged to add their Power to Summon you back, Alexa
said acidly. And Sinafin agreed. Hardly anyone goes against
Sinafin. Know this, Tower Community. Alexa's voice reverberated
and Marian knew that she spoke in a loud voice to the whole Tower,
as well as sending her speech mentally. When a community Summons
an Exotique, they must provide her or him with an estate and
life-stipend. That is true of this Tower and Exotique Marian. You
will gift her with an island and zhiv-or you will pay zhiv
to the Marshalls in return for an estate on mainland Lladrana,
should she choose to stay with us. As for those who sent
Marian to the Dark nest, you all owe her a life.
That stunned Marian. She was owed a life-by about twenty-five
people.
Emotions roiled through her.
Anger. They had sent her to her death.
Vengeance. She would make them pay, each and every one.
Then glee! Did she have a bank of favors to be sent home and
bring herself and Andrew-God willing-back, or what?
She'd let Bossgond and Alexa and Sinafin collect for her. Marian
giggled. She figured no one was going to set themselves against
Alexa or Bossgond, either. Good.
And she had repaid the Tower for all the teaching Bossgond and
Jaquar had given her. She could go back to Boulder with a clear
conscience in that area, free of any emotional debt.
Ready, Marian? asked Jaquar.
Ready, Marian ? said Alexa an instant later.
Yes!
You know where the nest is. Situate yourself in the
coordinates. Then visualize the Castle Temple and come to
us! Jaquar said.
Marian shut her eyes, glad she'd spent some time exploring the
Castle Temple-that morning? She pictured the huge open space, the
wooden screens, the rafters with Power crystals glowing. The altar
with the chakra lamp-chimes of precious stones filled her mind, as
did the great silver gong. She'd never forget the details of the
pool where she'd mastered Water.
Her memory harkened back to her previous Summoning there, the
Marshalls in colored robes wearing batons at their sides. Bossgond
and Jaquar, Venetria and Chalmon in their formal robes, with
circlets gleaming on their brows. She brought Tuck from her left
shoulder and cradled the hamster in her hands, curving her fingers
around him. She held him tight to her breasts. He huddled down
inside the protection of her fingers.
The music rumbled, surrounding them, encasing them in a sparking
sphere of lightning! Marian lifted her foot to touch the arcing
energy, and she and Tuck rode the lightning that rippled with
chimes.
Crack! Bong!
Her feet thudded against soft carpet and her knees bent,
absorbing the shock.
28
Choking, Marian opened her eyes to see a circle of sixty people
still enveloped in an aurora borealis undulating with Power. All
had hands linked and raised over their heads.
Gaze locked on hers, Bossgond lowered his arms, softened his
voice, drew the chant to the end. The circle broke hands.
Tuck wriggled and Marian opened her fingers. The hamster flew to
Alexa's shoulder, where Sinafin sat. He started chittering as if
telling all their adventures.
Propelled by the need to feel another person, Marian flung
herself into Bastien's arms, and he and Alexa cradled her
close.
Marian felt enveloped in life, in...in...honor. All the
slimy horror of the Dark nest and the master faded. The underlying
evil intelligence that lurked there had seeped through her pores
and down to her core like malevolent oil. This, too, diminished
when surrounded by Alexa and Bastien. Good people, dedicated
people.
"Marian," Jaquar whispered.
She didn't take her face from Bastien's shoulder.
"Don't touch her!" snapped Bastien in a cool and deadly tone
that Marian hadn't heard from him before. "You may return to your
island." He spoke over Marian's head. "Venetria and Chalmon, you
leave a list of those who perpetrated this wickedness upon Marian,
then return to your islands, also. You are not welcome here.
Consider how much your life is worth. That is how much each of you
must pay to Marian for this grievous wrong. Every Circlet and
Scholar who took part in the Sending will forward to the Marshalls
a statement of what they owe Marian-the value of their own life.
They will pay- forever, if necessary. We Marshalls will keep the
accounts."
"My life is worth anything I have, everything 1 have," Venetria
whispered.
"I, too, will pay anything she requests from me," Chalmon said.
"But I will point out that the plan succeeded. The maw did not
disgorge monsters. It was harmed by her presence. It does not
appear as if the nest will send out horrors for an unknown amount
of time in the future. All is quiet-"
"Watch!" Tuck shrieked. He opened his mouth and held up his
little pink paws tipped with white claws.
Marian stared as a hologram appeared, recalling that her PDA had
video- and sound-recording capabilities. Tuck could report
everything to the Marshalls. What an incredible show-and-tell!
"No!" Marian whispered. Her face was pale and set,
hair wild and looking as if it glowed red. Her eyes were wide. She
trembled.
"Yesss." The mutant Sorcerer's voice was sibilant,
snakelike. His fingers curled, claws sprang from the tips, swiped
at Marian's neck, severed a swath of her hair, missed Tuck. The
image bobbled.
"No!" Marian cried. A green-brown stick sparking with
Power shot from her fingers. It struck the master's eye and pierced
it!
A shudder rippled through everyone in the room.
Alexa cleared her throat. "Nice shot. Excellent weapon. What did
you use?"
With one last squeeze for Bastien, Marian stepped away from him
and Alexa.
Marian flicked her robe, trying to remove dirt. "A brithenwood
twig I found in the garden here."
"Interesting," one of the female Marshalls said. "I would say it
had special qualities. We must investigate this."
"Yes," Chalmon said, a little too loudly. "The information
Marian sent back about the Dark's nest will be invaluable in our
fight against it."
Jaquar's right fist slammed into Chalmon's jaw, knocked him to
the ground. Venetria hurried to his side.
Jaquar looked straight into Marian's eyes. "I swear, Marian, by
my most solemn word of honor, by my parents' lost lives, by the
keystone of my Tower, I did not participate in this
action."
Anger fired inside her. "You set me up." Her voice was
shrill-and accented with French.
Apparently he understood, because he lifted both hands, palms
out. "I swear, Marian, I did not betray you."
Sinafin clicked her beak.
She steadied her nerves and spoke slowly and clearly. Marian met
Jaquar's dark sapphire eyes and said, "You knew. They said
it was your plan." She shot a glance at Chalmon and Venetria, who
had withdrawn to one of the screens that partitioned the
Temple.
Marshalls flowed between her and the Circlets, as if protecting
her.
He reached for her, stopped. "Long ago."
"You gave me this." She held up her hand, fingers spread to show
the dark bloodred weapon-knot encircling her finger, wide enough to
reach her first knuckle.
"For defense. I arrived too late." His mouth twisted.
Too many feelings whirled inside her, like storm clouds shaking
with thunder and lightning.
Bossgond stepped forward, gently embraced her, kissed her on the
forehead-and all that gesture did was remind her of Jaquar's tender
habit of talking to her with his brow against hers.
When Marian didn't hug Bossgond back, he dropped his arms and
took a step back. She glanced at him. He looked older than when
she'd last seen him.
"I knew, too," Bossgond said. "I heard rumors but did not act.
Did not tell you about them."
She had sensed he was avoiding her, hiding secrets from her. His
dark brown eyes filled with grief; his shoulders slumped.
Marian drew in a deep breath. "Maybe tomorrow I can forgive
you." She didn't look at Jaquar when she spoke to him. "I
don't know if I can ever forgive you."
From the corner of her eye, she saw him flinch, incline his head
in acceptance. He walked into the shadows near the circular walls
of the Temple, out of her range of vision. Since she didn't hear
him open the large door, she knew he stayed.
Bastien draped an arm around her shoulders. "Come have a late
dinner."
Another surging fear swamped her, made her lean against Bastien.
"How...how much time passed?"
Alexa took one of Marian's limp hands, squeezed it. "You were
gone for about six hours."
Marian nodded, moved away from Bastien and withdrew her hand
from Alexa's. Much as she'd like others to fight her battles, they
were her problems and she had to deal with them.
She scanned everyone in the room. Many she didn't know-
Chevaliers and the Circlets whom Bossgond had called. But she
recognized all of Alexa's and Bastien's household that she'd been
introduced to. She saw the Chevalier's Representative, Lady
Hallard, and her staff; the Singer's Representative, Luthan
Vauxveau. The sexy noble Chevalier Faucon.
So many people had helped her!
They'd come when she Called, given her support when she needed
it, even if they didn't know her.
They were fighting a war against monsters and were finally
coming to work together.
She stared at every Circlet who'd come to retrieve her from the
Dark. A greater number than those who had Sent her, and of all
ages, from a teenager who fiddled with his circlet as she nodded to
him, to a woman who had to be as old as Bossgond but wore her white
hair high and held her matronly body proudly.
She was blessed.
Then she swept her glance to Chalmon and Venetria. Venetria
didn't meet her gaze. Chalmon watched her from under hooded
eyes.
Marian curled her lip. "You attached that-marble-to me and saw
and heard everything before the master found it and destroyed it."
She lowered her voice. "But you don't know what happened after
that." She gestured to Tuck. "Tuck can show others, the Marshalls,
the good Circlets, what happened. I can tell them what
happened." She paused significantly. "I can tell them of what I
know and my deductions from my experiences."
Venetria bit her lip. Chalmon reddened. They hummed with
suppressed desire to hear. Served them right-perfectly right- that
she would tell the Marshalls and not them.
"I know something of the master and what he serves." She waited
a beat. "And the reason the Dark invades."
Jaquar soaked in the solitary splendor of the baths beneath the
Noble Apartments, a building across the courtyard from the Keep. No
one joined him. He wasn't sure whether or not the other Circlets
considered him an outcast, but the Chevaliers and Marshalls viewed
him with distaste.
Alexa and Bastien had whisked Marian off somewhere. Reflexively
he mentally reached for her through their sex-and-affection bond.
Nothing.
He groaned and rubbed his chest over his heart. It hurt, the
cutting of the bond, the instinctive searching for her and finding
nothing, the knowledge that he'd ravaged her emotionally and lost
whatever affection and respect she'd had for him. The bond had been
more than sex. How much more, he didn't know, but dangerously close
to love on his part, a more-than-sex-and-affection bond.
Marian had no affection for him now, and there sure wouldn't be
any sex with her in his future.
He wanted to close his eyes and let the bath water lap away his
tension. But he dared not.
He'd tried sinking into himself, listening to the sound of the
gently moving water and letting it soothe his mind as the hot water
eased his body, but when he shut his eyes he saw Marian.
Marian dazed and terrified within a red cage of Power... Marian
white and trembling, with a wide streak of newly silver hair at her
left temple, clinging to Bastien, hiding her face from Jaquar...
Marian too hurt to look at him directly...
None of those images were ones he wanted to see again, or
remember.
He didn't want to recall Bossgond's flinty and accusing gaze,
either. The older mage had not spoken, not looked at him except for
one scorching stare that made Jaquar feel four years old with a
mess in his pants.
Bossgond and the other Circlets had socialized briefly with the
Marshalls, and accepted lodgings in the Keep. No doubt they were
surveying the suite Jaquar himself had chosen that morning for a
representative of the Tower to occupy.
Enough! Time to regroup and plan. He must offer Marian all his
support, mend the rift with her. Then he would work with Bossgond
and Bastien and the Marshalls to neutralize the nest. He was the
best plane-walker.
Soft footsteps whispered over the stones. Jaquar sat up; the
movement caused water to slosh up to his chin. Luthan Vauxveau
disrobed and slid into the six-person tub with him.
"Salutations, Circlet Dumont," Luthan said quietly.
"And to you, Chevalier Vauxveau," Jaquar said.
Luthan slid down the bench so that his shoulders were
underwater. He rested his head on the padded neck roll surrounding
the tub and closed his eyes.
Jaquar was at a loss. He didn't know Luthan well, and everyone
else in the Castle was avoiding him-why wasn't Luthan? Deciding he
didn't want to know, Jaquar settled back into the welcoming hot
water. But a hum of tension lived in his muscles.
After a moment, Luthan said, "The next couple of days are going
to be very important. I wanted you to know."
As if the past few had been commonplace! Jaquar recalled that
Luthan Vauxveau had a small gift of foresight. He was also the
Representative of the Singer, the prophetic oracle of Lladrana.
Which had brought him to Jaquar?
"You wanted me to know so I could do what?" asked Jaquar. Luthan
didn't open his eyes. "Be alert." When the silence became too heavy
for Jaquar to endure, he left.
Marian choked down some herbal tea that was supposed to be
calming, and managed to eat half of her small dinner in the
Marshalls' dining room. Tuck was sleeping in her breast pocket,
limp with exhaustion.
She felt discombobulated-sometimes mind and body working
together, sometimes distanced from her body, uninvolved with her
emotions. Time moved in jerky increments. Slow moments of
tolerating dinner conversation. Fast flashbacks to the Dark evil's
nest, when her mind worked to remember every tiny nuance of the
experience, consider it, correlate it with every other small fact.
She needed to be sure of her conclusions.
"Marian?" Alexa said.
Looking up at her concerned friend, Marian understood that Alexa
had spoken her name more than once. "Do you want to bathe or go to
bed?" Alexa asked.
A bubble of hysterical laughter caught in Marian's throat. Use
the elegant, colorful baths of the Keep where she and Jaquar had
made love? Slip into the sheets of the same bed they'd slept in,
then later torn up during sex?
She didn't think so. "No. And I don't want to sleep in that
suite under yours, either."
"I understand," Alexa said. She looked to Bastien.
He smiled at Marian. "We've put you in the suite under
Swordmarshall Thealia and her husband."
"Oh. I'm sure that's fine. It has a shower stall?"
"Yes," said Alexa.
Bastien leaned forward, covered one of Marian's hands with his.
"So you're buzzed on the battle aftermath, mind humming, muscles
twitching, too restless to sleep-"
Marian's eyes widened. "I didn't go into battle."
"You certainly did," Alexa said. "Against the master, and
won."
Shaking her head, Marian said, "I didn't win, either."
"You're alive and safe. He's crippled and his plans are shot to
hell. That means you won," Bastien informed her cheerfully. "So
what do you want to do to wind down? Walk to Castleton and back?
It's a nice night-um, early morning."
A little shudder passed through Marian. She didn't think she
could face the expanse of dark sky, even sparkling with the stars
of two sweeping galaxies. The panic that had coated her had been
too black. "I want to visit the brithenwood garden." She only knew
that when she said the words.
"Sounds great." Alexa smiled at her and stood.
Marian coughed at the pun. "The garden does have a great
Song."
"Fine with me," Bastien said, rising.
"You're going, too?" Marian got up from her chair.
He smiled genially, tucking her right hand in his left arm,
angling his right elbow out for Alexa to take. "From now on,
Circlet Marian, you will be escorted at all times. You are
too valuable a gift to be unprotected."
Marian didn't know whether she liked the idea or not.
Alexa winked at her. "I've lined up Faucon Creusse to be your
companion."
Then Marian realized what Bastien had called her. She looked up
at him as he led her from the Keep to outside the Castle and to the
shortcut through the maze. "You know I'm a Circlet?"
Bastien shrugged. "The strength of your Power was evident as
soon as you landed inside the pentagram. Fifth Degree Circlet."
Marian gasped.
Alexa hurried forward to open the garden door and went through.
Marian and Bastien ducked under the lintel, then Bastien closed the
door behind them.
The scent was marvelous, comprising of early summer flowers, the
brithenwood tree itself, sweet grasses and the faint tang of the
deep forest to the west. That reminded her of Jaquar's scent. She
automatically tested their bond. It was gone. She'd cut it
deliberately. Marian swallowed.
Alexa was helping her to the seat around the tree. Then the
small woman shifted from foot to foot before Marian.
Alexa cleared her throat. "Urn, Marian. Uh, I don't want this to
be a shock to you like it was to me." Alexa touched Marian's
hair.
Marian jolted. "I've gone white?" No! She was far too young.
"No," Alexa said.
Marian relaxed.
"Not totally," Alexa said. She took a wide lock of Marian's hair
at her right temple and tugged gently. "Just this much."
"Feels big," Marian muttered.
"It's very attractive," Alexa soothed.
Bastien kissed Marian's fingertips. "Very attractive. The color
of your hair is exquisite. The streak only emphasizes it."
"Oh," Marian said hollowly. She was torn between wanting a
mirror immediately, and hiding forever from the fact that she wore
a silver Lladranan Power streak.
Alexa plopped down beside Marian. The Swordmarshall fluffed her
hair. "The question is, will my silver stuff grow golden with age?
That's what happens here-the older the mages get, the more golden
it becomes."
Marian chuckled. "You aren't a native. I don't think so."
"I don't, either." Alexa sighed.
The short exchange had lightened Marian's mood.
There was a rustle in the branches above her. She looked up and
saw a blue squirrel. She blinked, but it remained blue.
The Song chose wisely when it Summoned you, Circlet
Marian, Sinafin said. You are close to fulfilling your
specific task.
"Not yet," Marian said quietly. "Not until I tell everyone
tomorrow at the Marshalls' Council Meeting my deductions." She
frowned, fretting. "And there's one bit I don't quite
remember...."
Alexa hugged her. "You will."
Bastien smiled with wicked charm. "You're an Exotique
Circlet-nothing will escape you."
Sinafin dropped a brithenwood branchlet in Marian's lap.
29
Tuck woke Marian up by tugging at her hair. "Pretty, pretty," he
said. "Now you look like a Circlet."
Marian grunted and rolled over, feeling as stiff and sore as if
she'd been beaten. Groaning, she stretched cautiously, inch by
inch. The bruises from when she'd pinballed through the caverns
painted her skin in blues and purples. Ick.
But she could feel her muscles, and that was way over on the
plus side.
She hadn't had any nightmares. That was good, too. She buried
her head in the pillow, wanting more sleep.
Tuck nattered on. "We are going to report to the Marshalls. I
will use my amazing abilities and astound them all."
Marian cracked an eye open, saw the suite that had been
furnished for a teenage girl. Full of ruffles. It really didn't
matter. The shower had hot water and the bed was soft.
"I am going to be a star," Tuck said.
"Is that so?"
"But to be at my best, I need food." He smiled, showing
his little teeth.
She subsided back into the pillow. "Ask Jaquar-" Just that
easily, she reached for their bond, and all the hurt of a
love-affair gone bad crashed over her. She put her hands over her
heart to keep it from cracking with the grief.
Their bond was no more. She'd cut it in anger and fear and the
horror of betrayal. Nothing had changed that. She should want a
connection with him again.
Jaquar had said he hadn't betrayed her, had tried to save her,
then given her the weapon-knot. Her eyes went to where it rested on
the bedside table.
She noticed tear tracks on the pillow, and her chin wobbled.
She'd cried in her sleep for him.
But her judgment for men had been wrong again. She'd trusted a
man who could send a person to a hideous death. The original plan
had been his. He'd put the idea of sending her off into the maw of
the Dark into Chalmon's and Venetria's heads.
Tuck said, "Yes, Jaquar would feed me well, but I don't know
where he is. He must be in the Castle, but his heart does not beat
in the Keep. I need food now. Much food. Excellent quality food.
Now!"
Marian was distracted by Tuck's observation, and it was so much
easier to consider an intellectual problem than to wrestle with the
emotions ripping her apart. At this moment thinking was good,
feeling just plain hurt. Switch to reasoning mode.
"You can tell who is in the building by their heartbeats? You
can recognize that?"
Tuck pulled her hair.
"Ouch!"
He grinned at the two strands he held in his paws. "You must
listen to me, and get me food."
They weren't in Jaquar's or Bossgond's Towers, where Tuck had
stashes. Marian certainly was his caretaker again, and she didn't
want him running around the big Keep by himself. "All right, all
right." As she sat up, another groan tore from her. Despite the
couple of weeks she'd spent here, being physically active,
yesterday had tested her body to its limits.
Grumbling, she moved to the wardrobe. It held two gowns. One
she'd worn for the past two days. She checked it, but there was no
sign of the tear she'd seen in the Dark's cavern. It looked and
smelled fresh, but she didn't know if she could wear it again. Too
many memories-donning it in the morning after great sex with
Jaquar... No. She should not think about that.
She should focus on Tuck and her presentation-report,
debriefing?-with the Marshalls and Circlets. Probably some
high-ranking Chevaliers and other community representatives to the
Castle. There'd be a full house. It would be as bad as her
doctorate oral exams.
Somehow it didn't scare her. She wondered if that was just the
nonchalance that came after a truly terrifying,
life-threatening-and-worse experience, or if she'd grown beyond her
compulsion to be perfect. She hoped she'd grown.
"Come on!" Tuck hopped up and down on her bare foot, his claws
scratching.
Marian took the other dress out. It was purple.
Still, she put it on and scooped up Tuck. He'd like the elegant
Marshalls' dining room. She wondered what the reaction would be to
a hamster sitting on a linen tablecloth, eating fruits and nuts
from a bowl. The thought amused her.
When she opened the door of the suite, a rangy man in well-worn
Chevalier flying leathers pushed away from the wall of the
entryway.
His bow to her was minimal and had little grace. "Marrec
Guardpont. Chevalier attached to Lady Hallard's household.
She's-"
"The Representative of the Chevaliers to the Marshalls. I take
it you are my escort?"
"That's right."
She studied him. Tall and strong like most Chevaliers. He looked
tough, with lines beside his steady brown eyes. He had small
streaks of silver at each temple, denoting modest Power. Marrec
radiated solid responsibility.
"1 saw you in the Nom de Nom a couple of nights ago, and you
were with Lady Hallard last night when everyone Summoned me from
the Dark's nest."
"I added my bit," he said, then gestured for her to go before
him down the stairs.
He was a man of few words, but the knife on his right thigh and
the sword on his left made her think he was most definitely a man
of action.
Running bootfalls of more than one person sounded. Marrec
slipped in front of Marian, drew his sword, tensed.
Surely there wasn't any threat in the Castle? In the very
Keep?
"Let's be cautious," Marrec said, and Marian stiffened. Was he
telepathic? Empathic?
At the next crossing corridor, guards ran past. They didn't even
look at Marian and Marrec. The rest of the walk to the dining room
was without incident.
Bossgond found them as Marian was finishing the last bite of the
croissant that came with her eggs Benedict. Tuck was still
munching. Marian had had to remind him time and again that a
hamster with cheek pouches stuffed to twice his size was not
elegant or star material.
As soon as Marrec saw Bossgond, he pushed his chair back, stood,
bowed to her and inclined his head to the older mage, then left the
dining room.
"The Marshalls and other Circlets await," Bossgond said as he
stopped by their table. He eyed Tuck. "The hamster will show us
what occurred during your tribulation in the Dark's nest?"
Tuck withdrew his nose from his bowl and sat up straight, paws
curled inward. "Yes," he said, then opened and curved his mouth
roundly in the way Marian knew meant he was about to broadcast.
She picked him up and stroked him, head to tail. He wiggled in
pleasure. "Not yet, Tuck. Let's save it for the Marshalls." She set
him on her shoulder and he began grooming, paying particular
attention to his whiskers.
"I'm ready," she said, but now her stomach jittered.
Bossgond took her elbow. "Jaquar will be present, and
afterwards..."
Marian frowned down at him. "Yes?"
Sighing, Bossgond led her from the room and down the wide
corridor. Finally, as they made the last turn, he said, "Jaquar and
I collaborated on a Ritual to Send you back to Exotique Terre and
return you-and perhaps your brother- from there. The timing is
difficult, but we think it might be done within a week."
At that moment, Luthan Vauxveau, Bastien's brother, opened a
door, saw them and gestured them to him. On the door was a fancy
harp. Underneath was written in elegant gold lettering "Marshalls'
Council Chamber."
The Marshalls and Bossgond's Circlets sat in a long rectangular
room with a scarred and dented wooden table and elaborately carved
chairs.
Alexa took a chair with a stack of pillows atop it. The chair
back showed a sword. Bastien sat to her left, in a chair carved
with a shield. Other Marshalls followed, in color-coded pairs,
sitting in appropriately carved chairs.
Luthan Vauxveau took the chair that showed a woman lifting her
arms, head thrown back to the stars, her mouth open. He was the
Representative of the Singer, the Lladranan oracle, Marian
remembered.
With a big smile, Bossgond slipped into the chair with a carved
back of a tower. He tugged Marian's hand and she sat next to him in
a chair with a shield. The other Circlets followed. Jaquar was at
the far end of the table. After one glance at his strained
expression caused her stomach to pitch, Marian looked away,
observing others.
Lady Hallard greeted Marian with a short nod, then took the
chair showing an almost three-dimensional volaran on its back.
Everything neat and tidy. Everyone in their place. Marian
approved.
As soon as they all settled, Lady Knight Swordmarshall Thealia
Germaine called the Council to order, then introduced Marian-as a
Circlet of the Fifth Degree.
Marian stood, not knowing exactly where to start. Then Tuck ran
down her arm from her shoulder to her hand, which lay on the table.
He strutted to the middle of the table, sat back on his haunches,
wiggled his butt as if to get comfortable and opened a rounded
mouth.
A projection like a hologram appeared in front of him, in a
three-foot sphere.
Marian stood dazed and vacant-eyed in the middle of a
series of pentacles. She woke suddenly and completely, then
threw herself against a barrier.
It didn't give.
"Line up against the second pentacle immediately,"
Chalmon commanded.
Tuck showed everything in gruesome, colorful, amplified
detail-from his own perspective. Marian couldn't watch, wanted to
put her hands over her eyes, to slink from the room. Instead she
sank back into her chair, closed her eyes and suffered through the
betrayal again.
She heard a chair slide against the wooden floor, and someone
came to stand behind her. Jaquar didn't touch her, didn't try to
renew the bond between them, but his aura wrapped around her in
warm support. She didn't know how he did that, but she was
grudgingly grateful for his presence. Everyone else around her was
completely enthralled by the show.
Now and then people gasped with horror, swore or muttered
phrases she didn't understand. The comments around her were often
drowned out by her whimpering, moaning, occasional screams in the
movie.
Her hands fisted in her lap. Bad enough to relive this, without
understanding that she hadn't shown much courage.
When she heard Tuck squeaking wildly, "Marian, Marian, Marian!"
she opened her eyes to see herself, face expressionless and body
completely motionless, surrounded by a backdrop of black, seething
smoke.
Marian froze in her seat. The larder. Obviously Tuck hadn't been
affected.
In the hologram her eyes darted from side to side, but appeared
unseeing. She opened her mouth and screamed so loudly that the
small diamond-shaped windowpanes rattled and jolted several of the
people at the table. Jaquar tensed behind her. She realized he was
swearing under his breath, words she couldn't guess at.
Now Marian couldn't look away from herself hanging there. In the
hologram, her hands fisted and lifted before her face. "Maybe we
should fast-forward, Tuck?"
Alexa choked. She looked pale and turned tear-filled eyes to
Marian. "What was happening to you?" Her whisper was hoarse.
Shrugging, Marian said, "Nothing. I felt nothing. No physical
sensations at all." She grimaced. "That's why you see all the
contortions-"
"Quiet!" snapped Thealia, cocking her head to listen.
On screen, Marian was tapping her heels together and chanting,
"There's no place like home."
She squirmed in her chair.
Alexa choked on a sob, sniffled. Her lips curved upward.
"Might've worked, who knows?"
"It didn't." Then she realized that in Tuck's movie, a low chant
hummed around her. She strained to catch the words. Everyone at the
table did.
Thealia hissed and leaned back in her chair. "I can't quite
understand the words. They're mangled."
A murmur of agreement ran around the room.
Marian looked at Alexa. "Alexa?"
Alexa shrugged. "No, of course not."
"They're French," Marian said.
Everyone stared at her.
Flushing, Alexa said, "I'm bad with languages."
Marian tilted her head. "And maybe some bastardized Latin.
Anyway it started out with the witches' scene from
Macbeth."
Alexa's mouth dropped open. "You read Shakespeare in
French?" Then her brows drew together. "Like 'eye of newt,
toe of frog'?" she asked in English.
"Yes." Marian translated for the Lladranans. "We're listening to
archaic French and Latin demonic spells. Maybe that's why I came to
the conclusion I did."
At that moment, Marian-in-the-movie twitched and began
screaming, "Sinafin!"
"I think we should definitely stop this production," Marian
said.
"No, let's watch it to the end," Thealia said.
Sitting back, Marian noticed that Jaquar had taken his seat at
the end of the table. His hands were tight fists atop the table and
he appeared to be staring into space.
Beethoven's Ninth Symphony filled the room, and both Marian and
Alexa broke into relieved laughter.
Luthan leaned forward and asked Marian, "What is the name of
this Song again, Circlet Marian?"
"It's the Ninth Symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven."
His lips moved as if memorizing the information. Then he nodded
and resumed his impassive expression.
Tuck soon finished with the show and Beethoven's music cut off
abruptly. Tuck exhaled a huge sigh and rocked onto his back, paws
curled. If Marian hadn't felt the strong thrum of his Song through
their bond, she'd have thought him dead. Not even a digit
twitched.
"Tuck!" Alexa cried.
"He's weary, but not debilitated," Marian said. She scooped him
up and cradled him in her hands. "You were a star," Marian
whispered to him. He opened one gleaming eye, closed it. Then she
set him on her lap.
"Get some food and water for the hamster," Thealia ordered.
A woman Marian hadn't noticed before stared at Tuck, then
hurried to the door. "What kind of food?"
"Nuts, Umilla, bits of fresh fruit," Alexa said patiently, and
Marian realized the serving woman was a black-and-white, like
Bastien.
Marian felt erratic bursts of Power pulsing from her.
The woman bobbed her acknowledgment and scurried from the
room.
"So." Thealia tapped her finger on the table, gazing at Marian.
"What are your conclusions?"
Inhaling deeply, Marian prepared herself. "The master is a
Circlet gone bad."
"Over to the Dark Side." Alexa's mouth twitched.
Marian blinked. "Yes. When I was with him, I sensed he'd
apprenticed with a Circlet on one of the islands, but the man
failed when he tried to raise his Tower."
One of the female Circlets shivered. "When that happens, a mind
can be fractured, the energy can warp one physically, too."
"A Circlet of the First or Second Degree," Bossgond said,
shrugging with dismissal.
Irritation spurted through Marian. The people in this room were
the most Powerful in the land, perhaps in the world of Amee, but
most displayed the arrogance that came with such power.
She met Alexa's steady green gaze. The woman dipped her head and
Marian felt another tie of kinship. Marian had all too often been
sneered at when she appeared in the "society" circles her mother
preferred. And Marian knew there were several "misfits" at the
table. Bastien, the black-and-white; herself; Alexa, the Exotique
and former foster child; even Jaquar. He was a man who'd been
abandoned as a boy because of his Exotique coloring. Yet all of
them had found their way into the circles of Power.
The door opened and the serving woman brought in a large bowl of
nuts, a grainy composite that looked like granola, and bits of
apple and pear. Tuck perked up in Marian's lap.
He reached the bowl as it was placed on the table and dove in,
chirping with delight.
"This 'Master.'" Bossgond fingered his lower lip. "He was very
large. I can think of only four male Circlets who failed to raise
their Tower." He named them. "And none of them was above average
height or weight. Raising a Tower can warp you, but not add
mass."
"Perhaps the one he serves gave him...more, or his diet." Marian
shut her mouth. She didn't want to think about the tentacles on his
face and what his diet might be.
Bossgond scanned the room. "All the Circlets here have raised
their Towers. We cover several generations. Can you think of anyone
I didn't?"
Silence held the room for several heartbeats.
"Bonhlyar," Jaquar said. "He was normal, too." An undertone
in his voice made Marian think that Bonhlyar hadn't considered
Jaquar normal.
"Bonhlyar," Marian muttered. It rang a bell. "Not-oh! He calls
himself Mahlyar, now." She'd received a lot of information from his
blood and spittle that had seared her.
"Ah," said Bossgond. "I was never convinced that his Circlet
Testing was properly witnessed."
"What else did you learn of the master?" Thealia asked.
"He serves the Dark. He is the one who breeds and organizes the
horrors, both in the maw and in a breeding ground to the north of
Lladrana," Marian said.
"We knew that," said a Circlet.
"I didn't. No one told me," Marian shot back.
There was an embarrassed silence.
"We were informed rather late ourselves," Thealia said steadily.
"Obviously the Singer has been right all along that the efforts of
the various communities need to be integrated."
"The master forms them into battle groups, and orders them where
the Dark wants them sent. The Dark has Power to transport them from
the maw to other places, but not in large groups."
Marian licked her lips. "There's more." She felt the weight of
their stares. "I think the Dark is not native to Lladrana."
"That has been extrapolated before," Thealia agreed.
"I think it came through the Dimensional Corridor." Marian
frowned. "Though when I was in the nest, I got this feeling of..
.immensity.. .immense age and immense size."
"And immense evil," Alexa said. "Fire-breathing dreeths." She
covered her eyes. "The master got that idea from me. I'm so sorry."
She shook her head. "You were wise to shield your mind."
Marian blinked. "How did you know?"
Alexa dropped her hands. "Weren't you watching-no, of course you
shouldn't have. But the Power aura around your head was quite
clear."
They saw much more than she would have believed they could. It
had been a mistake not to watch, not to see what everyone else had.
She stiffened her spine. She'd have to live the events a third
time, have Tuck repeat it for her again, so she could observe every
nuance. She hated making mistakes. More often than not, they
hurt.
Thealia leaned forward and pierced Marian with her gaze. "You
were Sent there and Summoned back. When you were there, you formed
an image of the location of the nest in your mind. Tell me you know
where the nest is physically."
Her voice held the command of a spell, but only her emotional
need affected Marian.
30
Marian looked around, managed a reassuring smile. "Do you have a
globe?"
Someone whistled and a big globe appeared before her. Marian
located Lladrana, followed the curve of the continent northwest
beyond the two seas-one landlocked, one not- and pointed to an
island of one high volcanic mountain. "Here," she said.
"Of course," whispered Bossgond.
"Damn!" Thealia slapped the table. She shook her head. "Too far
to launch an immediate attack. We might ask for volunteers to
survey the place."
"Not yet," Jaquar said. "Let the Tower observers gain as much
information about it from all the planes, first."
Thealia pursed her lips, nodded. "Fine." She looked at Marian
again. "Other conclusions? You said you knew why it was
invading."
"I think the Dark originally came through the Dimensional
Corridor here." She struggled to put into words the deductions
she'd formed from clues she'd picked up unconsciously. She'd been
too terrified at the time to put the puzzle together, but had since
examined every detail. Shrugging, she pulled Tuck from where he was
wallowing in his food bowl and put him back on the table. "Replay
that time-" She gulped. "After the master struck me."
Tuck started the replay with Marian throwing the brithenwood
stick into the master's eye. Oddly enough, the bloody scene
comforted her. She'd defended herself, and hadn't done too
badly.
Then there was a roaring, a chanting not quite in sync. "This is
what I heard. At the time, I was understandably not listening." She
managed a strangled laugh at the memory of being suspended over the
room full of monsters. "But I remembered later."
Again the others frowned in concentration. Shook their
heads.
"Tuck, can you choose the loudest group of chanters and refine
the sound to project only their voices?" She had no idea of his
capabilities.
Tuck stopped, waddled over to his water dish and lapped. Then he
centered himself in the table, sat with paws curled inward and
opened his mouth.
"Get it. Get it. Get it. We will get it, Master. Master.
Master." The last word emphasized the sibilant.
"Sangviles." Jaquar choked.
A chill pall enveloped the room. Sangviles feasted on Power.
Every person here would be a tasty treat. Marian shivered.
"I think the Dark entered Amee by the Dimensional Corridor and
arrived in Lladrana first. When it moved on, it left something
behind, and wants it back," Marian whispered, but the chamber was
so quiet it was as if she shouted.
There was a full minute's silence.
"That's all?" someone sputtered. "Just give it back."
"You're not thinking," Alexa snapped. "Whatever it needs would
only make it stronger, I'm sure. What we don't want is an
even more formidable enemy. It is an immense Dark evil as it is,
affecting the entire world of Amee. Amee cries," she ended
softly.
Marian lifted her chin and swept the table with her gaze,
meeting each person's eyes except Jaquar's. "Both Alexa and I know
that Exotique Terre's Song is much stronger than Amee's, yet
Exotique Terre probably doesn't have the same abundance and potency
of Power. So how much greater was the Power on Amee before the Dark
drained Amee's and broke its Song? Every minute the Dark feasts on
Amee."
Bossgond grunted. "A very good question." A smile flickered on
his lips. "Both the Exotiques are excellent students, good thinkers
and natural Power Users. The Song would not send us anything less
in this time of need." He stood and bowed to Alexa, then turned and
bowed to Marian. "Good work. We now know more about the master and
the Dark and the reason the Dark is invading Lladrana. There is
much we still need to learn, and ultimately we must destroy the
Dark before it demolishes Lladrana, but you have increased our
knowledge base significantly. I salute you." He bowed again.
Marian sat up straighter. "Thank you."
"I think the Marshalls will want to discuss all the information
they learned privately," Bossgond said to the Circlets. "You all,
go disperse everything you heard to the rest of the Towers. Jaquar,
come with me, we must speak of the Dimensional Corridor," he ended
coolly.
"One moment," Swordmarshall Thealia said. "The Marshalls
understood last night that Exotique Marian did us a great service,
so we wish to thank her with a presentation of our own."
Bossgond settled down into his chair, eyes bright with
interest.
Thealia lifted the speaker-horn. "Come in, now, please,
Medica."
The door opened and a woman wearing a dark red tabard with a big
white cross entered, holding on her hip a baby girl about a year
old. The woman was a Medica-a doctor-healer. The child was a
black-and-white, a person of potentially great Power that was
fragmented and erratic.
Marian tensed. This was the child that had nearly drowned in
jerir. She'd swallowed the magical brew-inhaled it, too.
The Medica sat in a chair with a shield carved on it. She put
the little girl, clad in a diaper, on the table. The baby grinned
and started crawling as fast as she could down the table.
Marian looked around. The Circlets observed the baby detachedly,
the Marshalls wore goofy smiles and tried to attract her attention.
She scuttled directly to Thealia's husband, patted his round
face.
"Her name is Nyja," the Medica said. "Like many
black-and-whites, before her dip in the jerir, her Power flow and
mental processes were splintered." She inhaled. "I have copies of
my notes of her condition before and after her plunge."
Marian felt Alexa simmer with anger through their bond, and sent
comfort to her.
Like most black-and-whites, the child was subject to
frissons, convulsions," the Medica continued.
Bastien, now master of his wild black-and-white Power,
stiffened. Alexa twined her fingers with his.
The Medica pushed a book that looked like a journal onto the
table. "I understand that your brother has that symptom?"
"He has muscle spasms," Marian said. The little girl was basking
in the attention, going from person to person to play with each.
Her Song was clear and steady and strong.
"Ahem." The healer cleared her throat and shifted a little
farther from Alexa. "The night the babe was immersed in the jerir,
she inhaled the liquid into her lungs, swallowed some, and-" the
Medica sucked in a breath "-had a tiny hole in her skull. The jerir
reached her brain."
"What!" Alexa jumped to her feet, furious.
The baby began to whimper. Alexa tromped to where the child sat
and scooped her up, cuddling her. The little one settled against
Alexa's breasts, obviously comfortable with her.
The healer had paled and did not meet Alexa's eyes. "We Medicas
are very well versed in head trauma, treatment and surgery. The
hole was drilled a few moments before the jerir experi-uh, therapy,
and closed as soon as I revived her."
Alexa rocked and patted the baby, narrowing her eyes at the
Medica. "I don't remember that."
"I beg your pardon, Swordmarshall, but you were not in a very
observant state at the time." The healer still didn't meet Alexa's
eyes.
"Feycoocu, is this true?" asked Alexa.
Yes, projected Sinafin mentally, strolling out from under
Alexa's chair as a long-haired white Persian cat.
Alexa snorted. "I can see I won't get any answers from you-
you're a cat." Her mouth snapped shut, then she sent a fulminating
glance around the room. "I won't stand for such experiments,
do you hear?"
Thealia rose and took the little girl from Alexa, looking down
at the Exotique Marshall. "We wanted to save our
granddaughter."
Bastien curved an arm around Alexa and brought her against his
body. "They tried something different to cure Nyja and it worked,
evened out her Power flow."
Alexa fingered her baton.
"You think her brain was affected beneficially by the jerir?"
asked Marian.
"Yes."
Marian trembled with excitement, with hope. "My brother's
disease is one of the nerves, particularly in the brain and the
spinal cord." But did a black-and-white's fragmented Power flow
have any resemblance to multiple sclerosis? Could the jerir liquid
help Andrew? And would he have to have brain surgery in Lladrana to
cure him?
The Medica rose, then placed her hand on the journal. "These are
copies of our notes regarding Nyja. She is an exceptional child,
now." She gave a half bow to the room and left, back straight.
Marian stood and took the book, held it close. "Thank you," she
said to Thealia.
Bossgond rose and snapped his fingers. All attention focused on
him. He stood like a king, like the most Powerful magician in the
world. "Exotique Marian was my Apprentice. I believe she has proven
her worth to all of you. She would be an invaluable addition to the
Tower and to all Lladrana in our fight against the Dark.
"I think you all know of her circumstances. She has an ill
brother on Exotique Terre-Jaquar Dumont and other Circlets are
prepared to return her to her home with the hope that we may Summon
her back once again, and perhaps her brother, too. Who will stand
with us in this endeavor?"
Thealia laid her hand on her husband's shoulder. "I speak for
myself and my Pairling in offering our aid." She glanced around the
room. "I would prefer if all the Marshalls agreed to be part of
this Summoning, as we are the most trained in the technique."
"There are others to be Summoned in the future, too?" a Circlet
said.
Luthan rose. "The Song predicts that the battle against the Dark
will be most effectively pursued and won if four other
Exotiques are Summoned. The other segments of our society are
interested in people who will work with them. The best times for
the Summonings over the next two years are known."
Bossgond said, "The calculations regarding Exotique Circlet
Marian's travels through the Dimensional Corridor are specific to
her and will not interfere with any other Summonings."
A burly-looking Swordmarshall rolled his shoulders. "More
Summoning spells lie ahead of us. My Shield and I will participate
in Summoning Circlet Marian. Good practice."
All of the other Marshalls murmured agreement. A huge burden of
stress dropped from Marian's shoulders. She exhaled a prayer of
relief.
Nodding at the Circlets, Bossgond said, "If you wish to take
part in this exercise, both Sending and Summoning, please let me
know." He turned to Jaquar. "Come with me and we will refine our
plans. Marian, we will be ready to speak with you in about an
hour."
Everything was moving so quickly. And so well! Marian just stood
and watched the others file out until only Alexa and Bastien were
left.
"We'll be behind you all the way," Alexa said. "If it can be
done, it will be done."
"Thank you," Marian said.
Marian sat at the desk in her Castle apartment and studied the
vial of jerir Chevalier Faucon had given her. It was a viscous dark
liquid the consistency of thick maple syrup. When she held it up to
the window, it was opaque to the light, but deep within the glass
she thought she saw a sparkle or two. She didn't know what that
was, and nothing in the research notes mentioned sparkles.
She'd already read the notes on baby Nyja, how much better the
child had progressed after the submersion in the jerir than before.
Drawings showed where the hole had been made in her skull. Marian
had leafed through a fat volume on head injuries and surgery.
Apparently the Castle Medicas had made that a specialty for
generations.
Her thoughts kept straying from her studies, particularly since
she thought she'd absorbed everything she could about the jerir and
healing. She continued to consider the people of Lladrana.
The Marshalls and Circlets had ill-hidden their excitement at
the information she'd given them. She suspected that they didn't
think the price she paid was too high and that the ends justified
the means.
Only Alexa, Bastien and Bossgond, the three closest to her, knew
her trials and what it had cost her in terror and pain.
As for Jaquar, he'd looked as if he had suffered every step of
the way with her. She still could not banish him from her thoughts.
She shifted in her seat as she thought of their lost bond.
She tried to think about him in a logical fashion. Since she'd
sensed facts about the Dark's maw, had reviewed them, and then had
come to conclusions about the inhabitants in a way that had helped
all of Lladrana, hadn't she also come to conclusions with Jaquar
and Bossgond?
Yes. She leaned back against the soft pillow back of the chair
and closed her eyes, remembering the atmosphere of Jaquar's
Tower-the grief and rage and despair. She could believe him when he
said his original plan was made in the craze of vengeance.
Objectively, she could envision how the whole scheme unfolded. .
.and how Jaquar might have backed off when his sorrow lessened and
when he came to know her, as he'd said.
After all, she'd only had that brief, deadly premonition about
him once, the first time they'd met.
But reason did nothing to ease the very real hurt.
The little waterfall clock tinkled that it was time to join
Bossgond and Jaquar in the chambers now allocated to the Tower, a
suite of several rooms on the top floor of the west wall of the
Keep. Prime space, she knew. She wished Tuck had been her PDA alarm
clock and accompanied her, but after the meeting, Sinafin had
carried him to the brithenwood garden.
Marian hesitated to see Jaquar again, didn't know what emotions
would batter her. She set her shoulders, donning her most
professional manner.
Picking up the vial of jerir, she stared at it again, seeking
the glimmers. They seemed to symbolize hope, and she took comfort
from the small bottle. She put it in her pocket as an odd talisman
and touched it as she walked to the Tower's suite. She recalled how
Alexa fingered her baton, and thought that if all went well, Marian
herself would have a telescoping wand to hold and keep her fingers
busy in the future.
Though she ran her thumb only softly over the doorharp, they
heard her, and Bossgond impatiently shouted, "Enter." After a
seconds' hesitation, Marian set her fingers in the door latch and
pulled it. The door opened outward and she slipped into the room,
then closed the door behind her.
Bossgond and Jaquar stood by a large library table under a bank
of windows. The desk was covered with papers held down by various
objects.
The men were a study in contrasts-Jaquar big and handsome and
young, Bossgond small and bony and wrinkled.
But the sharpness in their eyes showed their minds, and
Bossgond's Song had an echoing depth and brilliance that Jaquar had
not yet achieved.
They were master Sorcerers.
Now she was, too.
Jaquar met her gaze with dark blue eyes shadowed with pain he
made no effort to mask. She had to look away, especially since her
loss of their bond throbbed with the same hurt.
"Come here, come here," said Bossgond. "Look at this sketch of
the Dimensional Corridor that Jaquar and I have done."
She walked over to the table. The white papers only emphasized
the green of the fields and forests seen from the windows.
The paper on top looked old. It showed an octagonal tube with
round doors or portals on each side. She touched her forefinger to
the drawing and inhaled sharply as the residual Song of the person
who'd drawn this conjured up the brief vision she'd had of the
corridor between worlds.
"Yes," she said. "It was like this, except I didn't notice all
the doors, or that there were other angles with portals."
Bossgond said, "We believe this corridor links eight worlds, all
generally alike, and the easiest passage is between opposite doors.
The drawing shows the axis of Exotique Terre and Amee as the angles
that are ninety degrees to us, or straight up. We think the angles
slowly rotate so that eventually Amee is closer to some other world
than Exotique Terre, but it is only from Exotique Terre that we
have Summoned others."
"So I should ignore the other angular walls with doors if I am
able to control my trip through the corridor." She sure didn't want
to get stuck somewhere else, where dimensional travelers weren't
understood or welcomed. Dreadful scenarios flashed through her
mind. She banished them, concentrated on the drawing.
"That would be safest," Jaquar said in a raspier tone than
usual.
"Indeed," Bossgond said absently, riffling through a stack of
papers.
"The Dark knows of the corridor and can open it," she
whispered.
Jaquar nodded abruptly. "Yes. Because it sent a render after
Alexa. But we will protect you." His words hummed with a solemn
vow.
Bossgond crowed when he found the page he wanted. "With the help
of some of the other Circlets, we've calculated the days when you
should be Sent and when we will Summon you back."
He shoved a paper at her. "This copy is for you, to take when we
return you. These are the recent and upcoming dates that the
Dimensional Corridor resonates best between Exotique Terre and
Amee. As you can see, the best time to Send you would be the day
after tomorrow, but that is far too soon to prepare us all for a
Sending Ritual. If it were a Summoning, it would be different-we
know how to connect and perform that spell, since we did so last
night, but a Sending.. .no."
Marian took the paper and glanced down at it. She saw a bold red
line-graph that peaked a couple of days from now, smaller apexes
along the line. Lladranan dates were written horizontally beneath
peaks and valleys. The largest peak, at the far left side of the
paper, was the day the Marshalls had Summoned her. Another high
mark was last night, when many of the Marshalls, Circlets and
Chevaliers had pulled her from the nest.
Bossgond tapped the page Marian held. "Also included is the
specific hour that is best for our Summoning Rituals." He looked at
her from under lowered brows. "Since you were first Summoned when
you were performing your own Ritual, I think it makes the
connection between us and the chance for success all that stronger
if you do so again. I have written the chant that we will be using
to Summon you back, and the chant you should do at the same
time."
Marian licked her lips. "I see." She smiled weakly. "You've been
busy."
"I've had help," he said gruffly, nodding toward Jaquar but
looking past him. "Circlet Dumont drafted the chant." Bossgond's
voice turned stiff. "He knows you better in some ways than I do.
Exotique Alyeka reviewed the words this morning."
"Quite an effort. My thanks," Marian said. She, too, dipped her
head to Jaquar but didn't meet his eyes.
Bossgond said, "Your task now is to place the dates of Exotique
Terre beneath the Lladranan dates, so the time corresponds to the
moons and days that are the most familiar to you." He gestured to
another small desk. "Do that now, and when you are finished, you
can go." He looked pointedly at Jaquar. "The tension in this room
is too high."
"Yes, Bossgond," Marian said. "When do you think you will Send
me?"
He pointed to a yellow star on a date six days ahead. "Here,
within the week, and the Summoning a few days after that."
Marian stared at the paper in dismay. Those times were a lot
less favorable than all the previous times, and she wanted it
better-perfect-for Andrew. "It's diminishing. Couldn't we wait
until it builds again? Surely it does."
"Yes," Jaquar said flatly. "But the Chevaliers have already
approached the Marshalls to do a joint Summoning for an Exotique of
their own. I, and some other Circlets-but not Bossgond-have agreed
to participate."
Marian forced herself not to tremble. "I see." She attempted
another smile. "My wanting to return to Exotique Terre and then
come back here has placed a lot of stress on you all."
Jaquar strode forward, held out his hand as if to touch her,
then dropped it. "We need you." He cleared his throat. "Right,
Bossgond?"
"Yes. Go do your work, Marian." Bossgond bent back over the
table.
She took the paper to the small desk, picked up a feather pen
and tapped her cheek with it. The first, highest peak showed the
date of her Summoning underneath. It had been the night of the full
moon on Earth. She'd never forget the May night-the full moon, the
day before Andrew left for his retreat, the date of the big charity
ball that her mother had expected Marian to attend. She knew the
date well, and though she had come to think in terms of the days of
the Lladranan moons-moon months-she'd kept track of the time that
had passed. It only took her a moment to finish.
But before she could show it to Bossgond for his approval, the
Castle's klaxon sounded.
31
Bossgond and Jaquar looked toward the south and the volaran
Landing Field. Marian jumped from her seat, stuffed the piece of
paper in her pocket, the note wrapping around the vial of
jerir.
Hurrying to the windows, she reached them just in time to see
the first flight of volarans take off-all the Marshalls. She caught
her breath at the awe-inspiring flight. Sword and Shield Pairs in
colorful battle armor flew, helms glistening.
The Circlets watched in silence as Chevaliers followed the
Marshalls, lifting into the sky.
Marian bit her lip. "They fly to battle often, don't they?" Her
hand went to the paper in her pocket. "What if they are gone- or an
alarm sounds during my Ritual?" She hated being so selfish, but
didn't want to contemplate failure.
Again Jaquar lifted a hand as if to cup her shoulder. Again he
didn't touch her. Bossgond threw an arm around her and
squeezed.
"You are a Circlet, an Exotique. Lladrana needs you. The Tower
needs you. I am sure the Marshalls will do as they did before-"
"Summon us at night? Both Alexa and I were Summoned at night,
and it is rare for the horrors to invade at night." She was
crushing the paper. "But all the rest of the good times to Summon
are during the day." She'd noticed that.
"The Marshalls will commit to Summoning you and perhaps some of
the more Powerful Chevaliers, too. If the alarm rings, others will
go-lesser ranked Chevaliers."
Blood drained from her head. She leaned on Bossgond. "In that
case, in sending Chevaliers without the most Powerful, I may be the
cause of deaths."
"There are always priorities, some people who are more
expendable than others. I assure you that the Marshalls protect
Exotique Alexa more than any other person in their group, and they
would do the same for you," Bossgond said.
Marian didn't like that thought, wanted for an instant to be
held by Jaquar instead of Bossgond, since his face had gone
expressionless. She sensed he didn't like that option, either.
Straightening her spine, she stepped back. "I'm finished with my
exercise." She showed the crumpled paper to Bossgond. He glanced at
it and grunted approval.
"I saw the feycoocu flying with Alexa and Bastien, so Tuck
should be back in my rooms," Marian said. The strain of being with
Jaquar, wanting him and their link, and disliking herself for that
wanting, was becoming too much.
"Tuck will probably not wish to be Sent back to Exotique Terre
with you," Jaquar said quietly. "May I have your permission to ask
him to stay in his house in my Tower?"
Once more Marian had visions of Tuck being dissected by Earth
scientists. "I don't think he should return with me. You may ask
him, and if I am not able to return to Lladrana after I am sent, I
would like you to offer to be his companion." She didn't trust
Bossgond entirely with Tuck, either.
Jaquar bowed deeply. "I thank you for your faith in me in this
matter."
Marian had no answer for that. She stared at Jaquar, wishing
he'd been the incredible man she'd considered him, a man in her
eyes that had fantasy aspects. Too good to be true. But he was all
too human, and her disillusionment would take a while to fade. He
had plotted her death.
Her judgment of men sucked.
Emotions churned inside her.
She turned to Bossgond with one last question. "What's
next?"
He scanned the room around him with approval. "It has been a
long time since I stayed at the Castle, and I've never been given
the freedom of their library." He shrugged. "I don't think they
know what treasures they have. The closer I bond with them, the
easier it will be for us to link during Rituals. Also-" he grinned
"-they are an excellent source of monster parts for spell
ingredients."
That was another thing she didn't want to think of that might
roil her feelings-Alexa and Bastien at war, fighting monsters, and
claiming trophies of those that tried to kill them and were
destroyed instead.
"So you want to stay here?" Marian asked.
"Yes. Some Circlets will visit me each day and we will tune to
each other, facilitating a link when it becomes necessary."
"You want me to remain here for the six days until I'll be Sent
back to Exotique Terre?" Marian sank into a nearby chair, trying to
ignore the hum of Jaquar's Song that insisted on feathering along
her nerves.
"Yes. The Marshalls should become better acquainted with you,
your Power, your skills."
Marian sighed and rubbed her arms. "Where are my things?"
"At my Tower," Jaquar said.
"I have them," said Bossgond at the same time.
"Spread all over the countryside as usual," Marian muttered.
Bossgond glared at Jaquar. "You rent a volaran and gather
all Marian's possessions in your Tower. I," he continued
grandly, "will tell my cook to pack your things. Jaquar can fly to
Alf Island, pick up the rest and deliver them here."
Jaquar narrowed his eyes but said nothing.
"Don't you want to check on your dimensional telescope?" Marian
asked.
Bossgond's face went blank. The hair on the back of Marian's
neck rose. He was definitely keeping something from her. She popped
from her chair and gripped the front of his tunic. "Andrew is all
right, isn't he?"
The old mage patted her hands. "He is alive and as well as can
be expected." He craned to scowl at Jaquar. "What are you waiting
for?"
Lifting an eyebrow, Jaquar said, "I have another task I must
complete before I leave. I will, of course, follow your
orders."
Marian got the distinct feeling that both Bossgond and Jaquar
himself were punishing him for his actions. It made her
uncomfortable.
Jaquar glanced at her, and she saw that despite his casual
manner and cool words, his eyes were stormy. Was he watching her to
see if she approved of him flagellating himself?
"You are welcome to stay in my Tower, ever and always,
Marian."
"Circlet of the Fifth Degree Marian," Bossgond said pointedly.
"When she returns she will be raising her own Tower, and I know
she's chosen a place on Alf Island, with me!"
"The stress in this room is certainly beyond what my frail
nerves can stand," Marian said. She spared a sober look for each of
them. "I do want to return, but it will depend upon my brother
Andrew's needs. It isn't certain that I-or Andrew and I-will come
back to Lladrana, or that a second Summoning will be a
success."
Marian couldn't settle down. She paced the tower suite. It had
been decorated for Marwey, who now lived with her Pairling, Pascal,
and reflected the innocence of a gently bred young girl. Marian
didn't think she'd ever been that young or naive, so the room
evoked a vague discomfort in her.
Tuck had found a fluffy white pillow rimmed with lace on the bed
and claimed it as his own. He snored peacefully in the center of
the pillow, as if he were a living jewel or a gift ready to be
presented to a dignitary. She smiled briefly, then drummed her
fingers on the windowsill and stared into the maze below, tracing
the path from the Keep entrance to the Landing Field, then the
brithenwood garden. Her mind felt trapped.
No. Not just her mind. She felt constrained. People here had
moved her around at their will. Events had been happening to her
and she'd reacted. She wasn't in control of her life, wasn't even
in control of her pet hamster, who had turned into an amazing
entity.
Was she such a passive person?
She'd been learning.
She'd been developing her Power.
She'd been changing-she hoped.
Her will had been strong-at all times she'd acted with the
foremost thought of helping Andrew.
There were times when she'd taken an active role. She had
chosen Bossgond over the other Circlets when she first came. She
had taken a lover. She had fought the master.
At no time had she acted impulsively. Was that a virtue or a
failing? Perhaps she should have acted impulsively.
It was her wish to be Sent back to Boulder. It was her wish to
return to Lladrana if at all possible, and with Andrew, too. Surely
that wasn't passive?
Perhaps she couldn't sit still because she'd studied so hard
that now she felt she needed to act. She prowled each room
of the suite, looking out the windows at the day, scanning the
clouds to check the weather. Maybe she could find a good frink
storm to annihilate. She puffed out a breath and shivered when she
recalled the feel of the creatures against her skin-but it would be
something to do.
Again her gaze fell on the maze and the Landing Field beyond. It
might be interesting to have a flying lesson.
At that moment she heard the strum of her doorharp and
everything in her stilled. It was Jaquar. She knew without
stretching her senses to hear and feel his Song.
She'd instinctively been waiting for him. Somehow she'd
unconsciously understood, through their shared glances and
body language, that he would come to her.
That she was his last task before he set out on the errands
Bossgond had given him.
She cleared her throat. "Come in."
Jaquar entered, closed the door behind him and just stood and
stared at her, yearning and torment in his eyes. "I need to talk to
you." His jaw set and he held his body tight as if awaiting
dismissal or rejection.
Marian shrugged with more casualness than she felt. Her
heartbeat had picked up when he was outside her door. Her nerves
now quivered at the sight of him.
He took a pace or two into the room. "I know it is too soon for
you to forgive me." He shuddered. "I can't imagine what being in
the maw was like. I deserve your disdain.
"I will say," he added in a low tone, "that when the sangvile
led me to the nest, I was mad to get in there, to destroy it." His
mouth curved down. "I tried. I'd have given my life to do what you
did." He inhaled. "I was ashamed that I'd started the whole matter,
and once I knew you, I didn't want you to find out and lose respect
for me. So I planned on stopping it and you'd never know of my
dishonor."
"You've explained yourself. Are you done?" she asked
quietly.
Flinching, he said, "No. I wish to apologize deeply for my part
in the ordeal you faced, to ask your forgiveness."
Marian nodded slowly. "I accept your apology."
He dipped a hand in his pocket. "This is not a bribe for your
forgiveness. It is a gift. And since I know you are more concerned
for your brother than yourself, it is for him." He withdrew a small
golden stone like a tiger's eye that shone with Power. He cupped it
in his palm.
"What is it?"
"Energy, to help your brother cross with you." He shrugged a
shoulder. "I drew it down from the Castle Temple's storage
crystals. Just imagine, energy from the strongest Rituals of the
most Powerful team on Lladrana is captured here." He offered it to
her. "They won't miss it."
She took it without touching his fingers. His face
tightened.
The stone was warm from his hand and the bit of his aura
clinging to the tiger's eye sank tingling into her skin. He said,
"The Medica told me they gave one to the baby after her dunk in the
pool, and it might help with jerir."
"Thank you." She rolled it in her hand. The crystalline
structure was full of Power in every lattice. "Though, I don't
think I can convince a healer on Exotique Terre to drill a hole
into my brother's skull and pour jerir onto his brain."
"Whatever you want of me, I'll provide. Before you go to
Exotique Terre and after you return." He hesitated. "You do plan to
return?"
She met his gaze. "Yes, if my brother agrees. I believe I have
friends enough here who have the Power to Summon us back."
"You have more than a friend in me." His voice remained quiet
and husky. He took another step forward, closer to her, just beyond
arm's reach.
Marian stepped back.
Jaquar stilled. "What do you think the odds are that you will be
able to convince your brother to come with you?" he asked
carefully.
Slipping the stone in her other pocket, Marian stared out the
window. "It depends upon his disease. If he is doing well, and
there is a better prognosis for him, then we may stay."
"I cannot wish him ill, but my life will have lost something
precious when you leave, Marian."
She really didn't want to hear that. Was he trying to win her
over because of his shame, because he didn't like people thinking
poorly of his character? That would be the basest motive.
"Thank you for the stone," she repeated.
"There was another reason I wanted to speak with you," Jaquar
said.
"Yes?"
Jaquar shifted. "I haven't had many women in my life. But you
are the most amazing, and I deeply regret what has happened between
us. The Song between us was extraordinary. It developed so quickly,
was so strong and complex." He braced himself. "I want.. .I want a
bond between us again. Even if it is only acquaintances, only
friends, I need that link." Once again his cheeks took on a darker
color. "Please?" Then he stepped forward, stretched out his hand,
palm up.
Marian swallowed. No one had ever said such things to her. She
wanted to believe him.
"Please?" he whispered.
She lifted her hand.
He reached out and touched her fingers-and the Song between them
mended instantaneously. Not a tiny link of affection, but a
full-blown symphonic poem of respect, deep friendship, like minds,
hearts that beat in tune. It echoed like fate along her nerves.
Then it happened.
Fog enshrouded her.
He started fading.
She saw him start to grab for her, then curl his fingers into
fists and step back.
The Snap.
She let it take her.
Suddenly she was in the Dimensional Corridor with fierce winds
whistling around her. She had no idea of the reason for the winds
or what would happen if she calmed them, so she formed a forcefield
around herself, using the Power that swept her around.
For a moment she let herself spin. Her life had just altered
again. Her mind scrambled to keep up. She needed time to think!
On one of her spins, she saw a flash of bare flesh. She stopped
her turn just in time to peer down the corridor and see her past
self pulled by a red ribbon through the door the Marshalls had
opened with their Summoning.
Shock hit her.
She was seeing the past! Those doors behind her opened on the
past!
Marian wondered if she could go farther back than her own
original experience in the corridor. Could she travel to where
Alexa was being Summoned? Would there be some way for Marian to
help Alexa defeat the monster who had attacked her? And if she did,
would she change history for Alexa and even herself? Scary
idea.
She moved away from the shining portal to current-day Earth,
opposite the one she'd exited. She turned into the dimness of the
past.
Marian hurried to the old door that had opened for her previous
self, but it had closed. Marian-of-before was gone-now landing on
the stone floor and meeting Jaquar and the Marshalls.
Her heart remembered the fear and pain and confusion. The door
to her right-to Earth-closed into a small black crack, then
vanished. A few feet into the future there was still a door.
A tiny rattle attracted her. Tuck in his hamster ball! She had
to concentrate, focus if she was going to achieve her goals.
She scooped up Tuck, looked at him through the clear ball.
Bright unintelligent animal eyes gazed back at her. If she kept
him now, would he develop as she had? She didn't dare change the
past.
The wind whisked her gown around her ankles.
She had no time!
Always, always she was distracted and missed the optimal moment
to act. She turned to the "Lladranan" side of the corridor and
stared at the next door.
A passage she hadn't understood in the notes of the
interdimensional traveler finally made sense, echoing in her mind.
"One can never go through a previous door. An opening is available
for only a single use."
Beat. Beat. Beat. She heard the rushing in her head and
didn't know if it was her blood, the winds of the corridor or the
pulsing of many world-Songs.
Perhaps it was time itself.
She pressed against the door and it opened on a bright rainbow.
Why the rainbow? Because it was the past? Was it an omen for her?
Would the rainbow appear just to her, or for certain Powered
people? Or for everyone?
Focus!
She stood on the threshold, drew in a deep breath and felt as if
fizzing champagne entered her body-what would it do to her?
Focus!
Her hands gripped the plastic ball, relaxed.
Blowing on it as if it were a bubble, she set it gently wafting
on a small breeze, watched as the ball-and Tuck-settled into the
flowered meadow where she'd found him. A kaleidoscopic twist of her
sight and she saw her former self speaking with Sinafin.
The door snapped closed.
Marian pivoted, fought against a huge wall of pressure that
constricted her lungs, forcing air from them. Five steps into the
past. Her eyes stung. Squinting, she saw that the door to her
apartment had closed. The next dark door began to shrink.
She jumped at it, was struck with hard blows. She kept the image
of her Earthly home strong in her mind. She slipped. Fell.
Into her apartment.
32
Gasping for air, Marian lay still, pulse thundering in her ears.
Her senses dimmed and panic overwhelmed her for an instant as she
viscerally recalled the grayness of the Dark's lair where she'd
also lost all sensation.
"Uh, uh, uh," she moaned. Her limbs convulsed and she curled
into a fetal ball.
Smell returned first-the scent of lily-of-the-valley
incense.
Distantly she heard her clock chime, her phone ring.
She blinked. Haze parted before her eyes. All the colors were
brighter, more vivid, yet sounds, Songs, came faintly, were
muffled. All except dear Mother Earth's Song.
Marian rocked to her hands and knees. Shook her head to clear
it. The phone rang on and on. She stood and staggered until she
reached it. The receiver felt odd in her hand-plastic, alien.
Bracing herself, she answered it. '"Lo."
"Marian, what are you doing still home!" her mother, Candace,
shrilled. "You should be on your way. Must you irritate me at every
turn!"
The sweep of innate love she'd had at the sound of her mother's
voice vanished as Candace's words sank in. Marian leaned against
the kitchen wall and stared at the calendar, the clock, the moon
chart. It was only a couple of hours-no later-from the time she'd
left.
"Marian, do you hear me?" Candace persisted.
"Ayes," Marian said. "Mais oui."
"That's not funny," Candace said. "I don't appreciate you being
snide."
Marian rubbed at her temple. She was undergoing serious culture
shock-something she hadn't anticipated.
"Get yourself down here at once, or I won't deposit the second
half of your college fund. I did teach you to honor your word."
By the Song! "Sorry, Mother, I've been, uh, in an intense French
seminar the past, uh, couple of days-"
"Just get down here as quickly as you can." Candace sounded
furious. She hung up.
Setting the phone carefully back in its cradle, Marian pressed
both hands to her head. Her mouth was dry-her whole body seemed
thirsty. With measured steps she opened the refrigerator. The cold
air blasted her and she flinched, she was so unused to it. Her hand
curled around the filtered water pitcher, her fingers chilling at
the touch. She kept her hand steady as she poured a tumbler full of
water. Then she drank it down. And another.
She needed more-a full immersion, a bath. She might have time
for a shower. Automatically, she undressed.
Candace was right. It was rare for Marian to break her word. She
didn't recall ever doing so with her mother. Yet she'd done it when
she'd left. Because of Andrew.
So much had changed, but her priorities remained the same. She
wanted Andrew cured and only hoped that he could be convinced to
come to Lladrana with her.
She also wanted a loving mother.
That wouldn't happen.
She'd once had hopes that she and her mother could build a
mutually satisfying relationship. Now Marian had limited time to
find words to reconcile with Candace. Marian's gut told her it
couldn't be done. She'd have to leave one of the major threads of
her life dangling, untidy, unfinished, never to be perfect.
It hurt.
Candace was already furious with her. It would be difficult for
Marian to work her out of her stubborn anger.
The shower water cooled as it cascaded over her and Marian
reluctantly turned the faucets off. She used minimal makeup and
shimmied into her black evening dress. It fit better than ever.
She'd toned up a bit in her weeks away-all that stair climbing.
She wound her hair into an elegant twist, grimacing at the new
wide streak of silver over her left temple. Then she checked the
small black beaded evening bag that she kept prepared for her
mother's events.
And hesitated.
Her mind boggled at the thought of driving a stick-shift in the
dark from Boulder to Denver. The traffic! She didn't know if she
could do it.
But when she entered her living room again, the pentacle glowed.
She saw it with new eyes. It held Power.
Marian closed her eyes. She held Power, too. She could
feel it surge through her. It wasn't as strong as when she was on
Amee, but she'd be able to do wondrous, magical deeds.
Slowly she moved into the middle of the pentacle. She knew the
building where the fund-raiser was taking place very well. It was
Candace's preferred place for charities, an old, elegant hall. That
had once been a Scottish Rite Masonic Temple. Marian's lips curved.
Plenty of star symbols there.
Even as she thought of that, a neon-blue star appeared in her
mind-it was in a mosaic on the wall of a large balcony.
Perfect.
With a small chant, Marian raised her arms, Called the Wind and
chanted that she wanted to be in the hall. The zephyr picked her up
and whirled her. There was an emptiness, then her feet hit solid
ground and her left hand touched small tiles. When she opened her
eyes, it was to see her fingers in the center of the star.
Her breath rushed from her and she leaned against the wall. It
hummed with the aftermath of Power. The remaining energy soaked
into her and she accepted it gratefully. It was one thing to be a
Circlet of Lladrana and practice magic there. It was completely
different to do something magical on Earth, where she'd always
considered herself a rational person and where magic didn't seem to
exist.
The babble of cultured voices rose with the scent of costly
perfume from the floor below. Marian let dislike of the event
tremble through her, then set her shoulders and pushed away from
the wall to walk with staggering steps. She barely made it a few
paces down the hall to the ladies' room. It was blessedly
empty.
She checked herself in the mirror. Her mouth fell open and she
snapped it shut.
She looked better than all right. In the dim light she
seemed to glow. Her hair was sexily tousled; her makeup appeared to
have interacted with her skin to emphasize her eyes, cheeks, mouth.
She stared, and felt a slight tingle as if she wore a shimmering
coat of conditioner. An old word occurred to her, magic.
Glamour.
Realizing she was wasting time-time her mother was counting in
seconds-she left.
With the knowledge that she'd never looked better, and slightly
hysterical, bubbling amusement at the effect of Power on her skin,
Marian hurried down the old wooden staircase at the back of the
building and into the ballroom.
She stopped at the bottom of the staircase to look around. The
people and the party furnishings looked so strange after her
sojourn in Lladrana. Nerving herself, she spotted her mother and
crossed to her. She hadn't seen Candace in nine months, and she
looked thin, pale and expensively elegant. She was speaking to two
men with false affection. Her husband, John, smiled vacuously as he
sipped champagne.
Candace's eyes widened, and for one instant Marian heard the
faulty tune between her and her mother.
"Marian, how good of you to finally come," Candace said coolly.
Her expression had hardened.
Marian felt as awkward and gawky as when she was twelve and had
a growth spurt that sent her towering inches over Candace.
"Good evening, Candace," she said.
The men were introduced and bowed over her hand. Their auras had
altered slightly-they were attracted to her, Marian realized. John
stared at her.
Candace watched with sharpened gaze. The mother-daughter Song
brayed with brass. With it came a word from Candace's mind.
Competition.
Marian nearly gaped at her mother, but murmured something
appropriate to the men and offered them a weak smile.
"Please excuse me, gentlemen, I must speak with my daughter
alone." Candace smiled, too, then gripped Marian's arm in a
clawed-handed squeeze and moved her away from the men.
Still stunned by the rapid shifts in her life, Marian didn't
hear Candace's first few words.
"-at my wit's end to keep Trenton's new wife amused. Her name is
Juliet. Go over there and keep her happy so 1 can work on Trenton
for a plump donation." With a tilt of her head, Can-dace indicated
a woman dressed in black knit tunic and trousers with a long,
silver, fringed and beaded evening shawl draped around her. She
moved a little and Marian saw the Chinese pattern for longevity
woven in metallic thread on the back of the robe.
And she heard the woman's tune. Earthy, amused, strong. Clashing
with Candace's own life Song. She listened to her mother's Song,
which fluctuated between strident and whispered sharp
notes...fading.
Shock rippled through Marian as she realized her mother was
seriously ill, perhaps dying. She opened her mouth.
Candace discreetly poked Marian in her back. "Go do your
duty."
Only a rusty, "Yes, Mother" escaped Marian. Operating solely on
instinct, she walked up to Trenton's bride.
The woman took a glass of wine from a server who arrived at the
same time as Marian. Needing something to settle her, Marian took a
glass, too. It tipped, liquid sloshing dangerously close to the
rim.
Juliet reached out to steady Marian's wrist. "Easy," she said,
then, "Thank you," to the server who moved off with his tray.
A tinkle of connection sounded between them. Juliet gasped,
dropped her hand. Her eyes widened, and Marian gained the
impression that she hadn't heard the sparkling notes but had
seen a shift in their mingled auras.
Then she smiled, quite genuinely. "How kind of Candace to
provide someone interesting for me to speak with."
Marian choked on her drink. She spilled a few droplets on her
bosom, watched them soak into her dress and disappear. It didn't
look as if the material would stain. Good.
She racked her brain to recall the meager information her mother
had given her about this woman weeks ago. "You, um, own The Queen
of Cups store?"
"Yes."
"It's the best New Age establishment in Denver," Marian said,
glad it was the truth. She wasn't acclimatizing as quickly as she
had thought she would to being back home on Earth.
"Thank you." Juliet smiled. "What do you like the best?"
"Your books. Excellent selection."
Juliet looked askance. Did Marian have an accent? Did Juliet
think Marian was as superficial as Candace? "And, um, your herbs. I
bought a nice marble mortar and pestle the last time I was in."
Juliet relaxed. "We have a good stock of tools. We recently
received a new shipment of pendulums."
Frowning, Marian said, "Pendulums can be quite attractive, but
I've never used one." She didn't think she'd seen any in Lladrana,
either. Did they use them?
With a tilt of her head, Juliet said, "Is something disturbing
you? You seem.. .distracted."
Disconnected was a better word. Linked to Mother Earth,
but that Song was subdued here in the city. It had faded to a hum
that spoke more to her blood than her mind. Otherwise Marian was
disconnected to everything around her, everything she'd been linked
to a few hours ago.
Except Candace, and the Song between them was so pitiful it was
depressing. Marian shook her head, hoping to jar a little sense
back into it.
"Sorry, I'm just back from an.. .intense retreat. French." She
smiled. "I'm a little tired and coping with language echoes."
Juliet narrowed her eyes. "Maybe you should have some food."
Then, with a sweep of her arm, she called to a waiter who was
circulating with small steak kebabs.
"Thank you," Marian said as she took three. She munched one
quickly and then she and Juliet drifted over to a waste basket and
dropped two of the bamboo skewers into it.
Juliet slipped the wineglass from Marian's hand and set it on a
nearby table. "And I think you should have less to drink."
"Very wise," Marian said, then finished off the second kabob.
She was ravenous, could eat ten of the appetizers. Was this a
reaction to her using magic here, or to the Dimensional Corridor,
or to landing on Earth again, or what?
"Marian," Juliet said softly, as Marian discarded the third
empty stick.
Heat flooded her. "I'm sorry, as you said, I'm distracted, and
here I came just to meet you. Please, forgive."
Juliet looked intrigued. "Just to meet me?"
Marian nodded. "Yes, my best teacher, Golden Raven, just left
for the coast. I thought I'd talk to you about the Denver community
and see if you could recommend someone comparable."
"Ah. Yes, I'd heard Wood Elk and Golden Raven were heading
west." Juliet's brow furrowed. "You want another teacher?"
Actually, that was the last thing she wanted. Thinking on it,
she had a surfeit of teachers lately, but Marian nodded anyway.
"Hmm." Juliet tapped her finger against her lips. "Do you get
our newsletter?"
"The print one, but I think I'd pay attention to an online one
more." That made Marian think about her PDA. She'd been careful not
to touch it when she returned to her apartment. The intricacies of
time-travel paradox had stumped smarter people than she. Marian
caught herself rubbing her temples. "Sorry."
"Let's sit down." Juliet led her to a small sitting area against
the wall. She took Marian's hands.
Their Songs flowed together in counterpoint. Juliet's eyes
widened again.
"Your energy is fluctuating too extremely," she said.
Marian tried to withdraw her hands, but Juliet held tight.
"Breathe with me."
Of course! Why hadn't Marian thought of that? Too fuzzy brained.
She let her eyelids drift closed. For several moments the women
breathed together. At first Marian was aware of all the people and
muted Songs around her, then she focused in on Candace's Song and
felt her mother's disgust at her and Juliet. Marian sent love down
the bond to Candace, but it seemed to dissipate against the shield
of Candace's heart. In turn, Marian searched for emotions from
Candace-pride in her daughter, respect, affection, love,
anything-and only sensed a distant acknowledgment of blood,
nothing more.
Finally she blocked her aching heart and emptied her mind, and
found serenity, solidity. She withdrew her hands and opened her
eyes to Juliet's considering gaze.
"I've been doing too much," Marian said.
"Of course." Juliet pursed her lips, tapped them with a finger
again. "They are getting ready for the silent auction. I'd like to
slip out a moment. I have something for you."
Probably a grounding crystal or an herbal drink. Marian raised
her eyebrows. She should be wary. "Yes?"
Juliet nodded decisively. "Can you come with me out to my car a
moment? I have it there. I knew it belonged to someone, but not who
or when I'd meet the person-so I've been carrying it around."
A low hum seemed to rattle her bones-another feeling of
premonition. Marian took another few discreet, deep breaths.
"Yes."
"Great. Follow me." Whirling so her silver fringe caught the
light and gleamed, Juliet headed quickly through the room to the
exit.
They were intercepted by her husband, Trenton Philbert III, who
was Marian's height and towered over Juliet. He set himself firmly
in their path and raised a brow. "Going somewhere, Juliet? I
believe we discussed this earlier."
Juliet rolled her eyes. "I've found the person the book is
for."
Trenton shifted his gaze to Marian. His eyes cooled. "Ms.
Harasta."
Juliet tsked and patted Trenton's arm, bringing his attention
back to her. He smiled, harsh features softening. "Trey, you are
making judgments again."
"An occupational hazard," the man said.
A lightning bolt of recollection hit Marian. "You're a judge,
aren't you?"
"Yes." His tone was clipped.
Marian frowned. "Do you know Alexa Fitzwalter?"
His stare pinned her. "She disappeared about three months ago.
What do you know of that?" His voice was harsh.
Too many conflicting emotions and ideas clashed in Marian's
head. This return to Earth was as bad as her first hours in
Lladrana. She put fingertips to her temples, trying to find
words.
"Let me remember. Friends told me that Alexa was unexpectedly
called away to handle a.. .delicate situation." That was true
enough. Marian shrugged casually. "I didn't speak to her before she
left and haven't since." Not on Earth. She kept that thought
foremost in her mind when she met Trenton's eyes. "I was wondering
if you've heard whether she's returned?" Maybe she could find a way
to tidy up Alexa's affairs-take care of back rent, close her law
practice.
"Her car was found abandoned near Berthoud Pass."
Shit.
Frowning, Marian said, "I don't know how to reach her. I never
had her cell number." Again truth.
The man continued to weigh Marian's words. A portion of his Song
pulsed from him-powerful, honorable, concerned and with a touch of
personal Power-truth-sensing.
"Her office and apartment have been closed," he said
abruptly.
Marian shook her head. "Then 1 guess I can't help."
"Where did you meet Alexa?" asked Trenton.
"We're gathering attention, and the silent auction is about to
begin," Juliet interjected. She pushed at her husband's shoulder.
"Go buy something outrageously expensive for me to support the
charities and show everyone how much you love me."
He threw back his head and laughed. Even more gazes swung in
their direction.
Juliet lifted her snub nose. "I have business with Marian. She
needs the book."
Book? Trembling started within Marian. A book held infinite
possibilities.
In an unexpectedly elegant gesture, Trenton took his wife's
hands, kissed each of them. Then he looked at Marian again. "I'll
get back to you later-"
"No, you won't," Juliet said firmly. "You will leave her
alone.
I know you don't like unanswered questions, but I believe that's
the best in this case."
Trenton looked pained, shot them a glance from under lowered
brows, then strode back to the plush seats that had been arranged
in rows.
As the auctioneer called the group to attention, Marian and
Juliet slipped from the hall into the cool spring night. Tears
stung the back of Marian's throat. She was home on Earth, in
Denver, where she'd been raised.
Even the city air tasted good on her tongue. The lights were too
bright to see many stars, but she stopped to look up and find
Orion. The scent of blossoming trees wafted to her, even more
familiar and comforting than the brithenwood. How could she give
all this up? Her old, steady life. Her simple dreams. Her home.
A car door clunked closed and Marian realized that Juliet had
left her to collect the book.
Marian looked around-the bright lights from Colfax Avenue, a
couple of streets down, the huge trees leafing out, the interesting
architecture of the hall.... She'd find none of this on
Lladrana.
Could she return?
33
Juliet's silver shawl flapped in the breeze as she hurried to
Marian and thrust a blue book into her hands. It was small but
heavy, and bound in leather.
"Thank you," Marian said. "What do I owe you for it?" "Free, on
the house." Juliet started back toward the hall and
Marian kept pace. "Will you be disappearing, too?" Juliet turned
her head and smiled.
"Maybe." All this indecision wasn't like her. But the choice was
huge and final. "I will definitely be leaving Boulder for
Californiafor a little while. Then I may disappear, and my brother,
too."
"Then why did you ask me about a teacher?"
"In case I stay. I'm not sure what I'm doing and doubts creep
in. And there's my mother-"
Juliet patted her shoulder. "You'll make the right decision."
They stepped into the hall and, instead of going to the ballroom
where bidding was active, Marian crossed the lobby to a red leather
couch and sat back against the squabs. Juliet sat beside her.
Looking down at the book, Marian received another shock. It was
written in archaic Lladranan. She shivered and her fingers clutched
the little blue leather book. She knew enough of the old language
to read "Use.. .Knot.. .Unbinding."
Fate.
The intricate red-silk weapon-knot rested on her bedside table.
In Swordmarshall Thealia Germaine's Tower in the Keep of the
Marshalls' Castle. In Lladrana. On the world of Amee.
Her hands shook and dropped the book onto her lap.
"I knew you were the right person for the book," Juliet
said. "You can read the language, can't you?"
"Yes," Marian whispered.
The door to the lobby swung open and Trenton stalked through.
"I've done my part for the charities, now let's go home." He
scowled at Juliet. "You're my bride. You were supposed to stay with
me. You weren't supposed to abandon me, especially not for
obviously better company than the folks in that room and more
interesting conversation."
Juliet rose and crossed to him, smiling serenely. She patted his
cheek, stood on tiptoe and brushed a kiss on his lips. "I'll do
better next time you drag me to one of these, darling. Did you buy
me something wonderful?"
"Yes. It will be delivered tomorrow." His gaze fastened on
Marian. "I think I want to speak with Marian Harasta. I've been
trying to figure out where her path might have crossed with Alexa
Fitzwalter's."
Juliet linked her fingers with Trenton's, tugged. He didn't
move.
Marian smiled slightly. "Colorado Shakespeare Festival in
Boulder?" After all, Alexa had quoted Macbeth correctly, she
must like the Bard.
Trenton's eyes narrowed.
Pulling at his hand, Juliet said, "I think you want to go home
for some fun."
He jerked his stare from Marian to settle it on Juliet, and
grinned. "You believe you can distract me with fabulous and
inventive sex?"
"Oh yes." She raised their joined hands and kissed his knuckles
and walked away.
He followed, chuckling. "You are so right."
Marian was left aching for Jaquar and the tender affection
they'd known far too briefly. And wondering what she could, what
she would do...
She waited until everyone had left the fund-raiser, until her
mother had overseen the departure of the catering staff and the
efforts of the cleaning crew. Nothing but perfection for
Candace.
When Candace sent her husband for the car, Marian joined her in
the middle of the elegant, empty ballroom.
Candace sent her a brilliant smile, all teeth. "It was good of
you to finally show up, Marian."
Ignoring the emotional slap, Marian pressed on. "Mother, have
you seen a doctor?"
"Why do you say that?" Her eyes sharpened.
"You look a little.. .tired."
Candace waved the comment away. "The ball was quite challenging
this year, but I outdid myself." Her expression turned smug. "I
doubled donations this year."
Marian cleared her throat, tried again. "Now that the event is a
success, you might want to slow down a little."
Straightening her bony shoulders, Candace said, "Nonsense, you
know nothing about my life."
"I suppose not, but I think you should see a doctor."
Candace's lip curled. "Quacks, the lot of them. They haven't got
a clue."
Marian's heart thudded. "You've been to see some! What did they
say?"
"A lot of balderdash." She took off on a final inspection of the
room. "I'm not listening to them."
She hardly ever listened to anyone. Marian caught up with her
and grabbed her arm. It was nothing but skin and bone under her
fingers. Her fear spiraled higher. "Mother!"
"How many times must I tell you to call me Candace! You
don't listen. You don't remember."
"Mo- Candace, do you realize you're ill?" Marian couldn't give
up.
"Oh, is that some of your New Age wisdom? I suppose you'll
prescribe some nice herbal tea for me."
Marian didn't want her mother sick. Didn't want Andrew sick.
Didn't want anyone she loved to die. "Let me review the doctor's
reports and we can..."
Candace made a disgusted noise. "No. I'll live my life as I see
fit."
"You're ill."
"I'm not."
"Let me help!" Marian cried, twisted inside.
Whirling, Candace glared at her. "You've never been a help to
me. You barely arrived tonight on time, and did so only because of
the money."
"No. Not entirely-" Marian's breath hitched.
With a nod of satisfaction at the room, Candace went to the
light bank and flipped all but one switch off, then strode to the
double doors to the lobby. She and Marian went through at the same
time.
"Candace, I need to talk to you."
"I don't want to talk with you. Not now, and not later."
"A luncheon appointment." Marian caught her hand, fragile as a
bird's.
Candace wrenched her fingers away. "No." She didn't meet
Marian's gaze.
Candace's jaw firmed and Marian could barely see the scars of
her last face-lift. Blue eyes the same color as her own scanned the
lobby, then finally locked with Marian's.
"We simply don't have anything to say to each other, Marian. We
are too different." Candace unlocked a closet, slipped on her fur
coat and stroked it. Her hand trembled. Then she straightened her
spine and headed to the front door. "Go away, Marian. I'll let you
know when you might be of use to me. Go back to your pitiful,
lonely little life. You may know book learning, but you don't
understand anything about the real world or men."
"I- What about John? What does he think of the doctors'
reports?"
Candace lifted her chin. "John supports me in all I do. As for
you, I'll transfer the last of your college fund Monday. Then we'll
be done with each other."
The words were like a blow. Harder than she'd ever heard from
her mother. Impossible to bear without a cry of pain. "Why are you
being so hateful?"
Candace swept out of the lobby into the night; Marian keeping
pace. "I'm not being hateful, I'm being honest. You want to drag me
around to doctors, as if you know best and they can fix my life. My
life is excellent. Your life is the one that needs fixing.
By the way, that streak in your hair ages you." She turned and
locked the doors behind them.
"Mother, I'm moving away."
Candace waved for her car parked a block down the street to pick
her up. "Is that so? Out to California with Andrew, I suppose.
Well, from what I understand the Californians are even more fitness
conscious than Coloradans. You'll have a hard time finding a man
there."
More words she had to ignore. One last try. "I don't know when
I'll be back. If ever."
"Don't be so dramatic," she said. As if already forgetting her
cruel words, she air-kissed Marian's cheek as the chauffeur came
around to open your door. "Bye-bye, Marian." She slid into the back
seat of the car.
Just before the door closed, Marian saw the mask drop from
Candace's face. It sagged with fatigue and sickness. Candace didn't
know this might be the last time she'd see Marian. Candace really
didn't care.
Hurt washed over Marian as the taillights of the car blurred in
her vision. She stumbled to a bench flanking the doors to the hall.
For a moment she just sat, absorbing the verbal slaps her mother
had dealt her. Her shoulders slumped. There would be no
rationalizing the words away, pretending they didn't happen,
pretending Candace didn't mean them. With the closing of her car
door, Candace had snapped the mother-daughter bond.
It was so fragile it had disintegrated into dust, and any
remnants would be blown away by the time Marian reached
Boulder.
The next day Marian awoke with a screaming headache and burning
muscles. Daylight stabbed pain into her eyes. She stumbled from bed
a couple of times to take aspirin, splash her face with cooling
water, then return to sleep. Once, as she passed Tuck's cage, she
tested the theory that everything had been a fever dream and opened
the plastic lid to find him.
He was gone.
A glance at the taped pentacle in the living room showed that
her PDA was gone, too.
She retreated to bed and slept the day and the night away.
Sunday morning she awoke ravenous. Once again she checked what
she could to see again if her time in Lladrana had been a
dream.
No Tuck.
No PDA.
And a beautiful purple velvet gown hung in her closet, with a
container of jerir, a yellow stone and a crumpled piece of paper in
the pocket.
As she ate breakfast, she studied the parchment. It was
parchment, made from some finely scraped animal skin. The ink had
dried bright and vivid, unlike most standard Earth inks, more like
the ink of illuminated manuscripts that were specially made-of
ground semiprecious stones, weren't they?
The second thing she did was log onto the Internet and searched
for "Lladrana," "jerir," "Circlet," and any other unique words that
might indicate other travelers.
Nothing.
No scientific data on Dimensional Corridors.
She walked to campus and around it, enjoying the late-spring
day, the comfortably familiar sounds and sights of other students.
She stopped and stared at her department building and thought of
her future there.
After she made sure she was unobserved, she Sang a tiny wind
into being. It swirled over a few grass blades, then died. The
effort to call the wind was about triple what she would need to do
the same on Amee. It left her hungry and with tendrils of a
headache throbbing in the back of her skull.
She'd been avoiding weighty concepts, disturbed emotions, trying
to be steady and stable all day long. But she'd have to decide what
to do soon. Tomorrow was Monday. She couldn't see herself going in
to work at the Engineering Department.
She had time, a little voice inside her whispered as she walked
back to her apartment. She had nearly three weeks.
During lunch, she studied the timeline again and saw a day
circled in brilliant blue, with a notation in Bossgond's hand.
"Summon Marian and Andrew back to Lladrana."
Invisible ink, of course. She didn't know why she was surprised.
Everything fell into place. Bossgond had seen her through his
dimensional binoculars on Earth when she'd been in Lladrana.
Naturally he'd correctly deduced what had happened, but had said
nothing to her in case he might change what was or what might
be.
Still, it made her shudder.
That afternoon, she went over her finances. They were in good
shape and if she received the last of her college fund tomorrow
she'd have plenty to live on before she was Summoned to
Lladrana.
If she went. The day had been delightful. She'd steeped
herself in the rich and sustaining essence of Earth, of her life as
it had been.
The choice before her was just too gigantic for her to act
hastily. She decided to quit her work-study job. Spring semester
had just ended, and though she'd planned on registering for summer
classes if she received her college fund, she could delay a
while.
So she tidied her apartment and late in the evening began a
tentative list of what she'd like to take to Lladrana, if she
decided to return. When it was finished, she figured it would take
a moving van to transport. Probably the most she could carry was a
backpack, and Andrew, too.
Her sleep that night was peaceful and she awoke refreshed. Her
first order of business was quitting her work-study job. She'd
finished a big project and summer school would be light. Though the
Dean was naturally grumpy about replacing her, he didn't seem too
concerned.
Again she walked around the campus, strolled along downtown
Boulder, enjoyed herself and considered her two lives. Everything
seemed so clear in Lladrana.
She could have magic here. But could she integrate it into the
life she'd planned? Not easily. Marian suspected that her trials in
the Dark's maw was only the overture for a long opera. If she was
to play her proper role in Lladrana, she'd be integrally involved
in defeating the Dark. She already felt like she might have a
bull's-eye painted on her.
And there was Jaquar. She didn't want to much think about him,
either, but great quests would entail many other
"greats"-sacrifices, betrayals, triumphs. She'd never had a man
like him before and didn't think there was one walking the streets
of Boulder who could compare.
She sat at her kitchen table and made a list-pros and cons for
returning to Lladrana or staying on Earth.
Lladrana won.
With trembling fingers, she opened the Lorebook of
Knot-Weapons. The volume was well organized, with simple knots
first. It showed a picture of the knot, the description of its use
including effects and damage, then gave visual instructions on how
to tie the knot step by step. When Marian touched those pictures, a
faint haze appeared as if a holographic picture should be
projected. Not enough Power on Earth-though if Marian sent her own
Power through her fingertips, she could see the "movie"-hands
slowly tying the knots.
Dread tightening her muscles, Marian continued to turn the
pages. Her knot was the third from the end, "City Destroyer." Her
mouth dried and she edged away from the book, setting her fisted
hands on her lap. There was a long "Warning" section, describing
how to encase the user of the weapon in a Powerful shield before
its use. The shield chant looked complex and demanded perfect
pitch. Which Marian didn't have.
Mouth dry, Marian scraped her chair back and went to the kitchen
for a glass of filtered water, trying not to imagine what would
have happened if she'd untied the knot.
It would have destroyed the maw-at the cost of her life.
The whole matter smacked of fate.
She'd have to use the book in the future, hopefully when she was
very, very Powerful and had found someone to shield her. With
friends, maybe-though she didn't think Alexa had perfect pitch,
either.
Of course Andrew was her priority. She was sure she could
convince him to return with her, but she'd have to ensure he
believed her first. Could she connect with him in the Lladranan
way? Let him feel her experiences?
She was happy and excited, until she called and spoke with
Andrew's doctor.
"I'm glad you phoned," Dr. Chan said. "Since Andrew authorized
me to tell you everything, I'll be blunt. His health is poor. He's
underweight and vulnerable to infection. He has fallen several
times the past few months and has been lucky not to break a bone.
The intervals of time between attacks are shortening and the
flare-ups are more intense and longer."
Marian clutched the phone. She hadn't known. It didn't sound
good. If Andrew believed his mind was failing... She shuddered.
34
Marian forced herself to wait before going to California. Time
had to elapse so she wouldn't see herself in Bossgond's binoculars.
She kept herself busy changing her life.
She readied herself, poring over the Ritual chant Bossgond had
written, retrieved the hard-copy notes of the Ritual she'd written
for herself and refined it to dovetail with the Lladranans', and
prepared the pentagram.
And she practiced. By the time the Marshalls and Sorcerers and
others would Summon her and Andrew, she would be letter-perfect in
her own Ritual.
Echoes of Lladrana reverberated in her days. One morning she
found herself tense and nervous, then felt giddy with relief. When
she looked at the timeline, she saw she'd Tested for Scholar that
morning on Lladrana. So she bought a huge calendar and filled in
the blocks with what she recalled of each day there, so she could
"listen" for the echoes, feel the resonance of the emotions
affecting her in Lladrana.
Finally, she took a flight to Andrew's ranch home in San Mateo,
California.
As she went into his office, she noted the additional equipment
for his deteriorating health. Canes and walkers stood in every
room, his computer had a voice-recognition system for when his
fingers lost mobility and an ergonomic keyboard for when his voice
slurred. The sight of these made her eyes sting. No one should have
to live this way, fall before an encroaching disease.
Marian called the retreat. When a counselor answered, Marian
left a message that she had an emergency and needed Andrew, then
gave his phone number as a contact.
He called a couple of hours later, sounding worried. "What's up,
sis?"
"I need you, Andrew."
He swore. "I knew there was something going on that you weren't
telling me about."
"I'm not the only one who's been hiding things," she said. "I
spoke with Dr. Chan."
There was silence.
"I love you, Andrew, and I need to talk to you-about some life
changes I am considering."
"You!"
"Yes. I've quit my work-study job and dropped out of school.
I've been out of the country and have another...vocational offer,
but whether I pursue that or just transfer to a California
university is up to you. I want to get your opinion."
"Huh," Andrew said. "This can't wait until after my
retreat?"
"I'm afraid not. The timing is difficult." She took a
breath.
"And I spoke to people where I was about you and received a
herbal medicine that might help."
"You're kidding, right?"
"No."
Again there was a long silence. It scraped Marian's nerves until
she burst out, "Andrew, so much has happened. Such incredible
events. I can't.. .I can't discuss this on the phone." To her
horror tears clogged her throat.
"Shh, sis. I'll come home. You're at-my house, right?"
"Yes." She sniffled.
"You want to make the arrangements for a plane and car, or do
you want me to?"
"I've got all the details ready."
"Of course, give 'em to me. I have a pencil and paper."
So she did.
"Looks good," Andrew said, then paused. "Thanks, Marian."
"What do you mean?"
"Thanks for saying you need me, for calling me with your news
and making me feel.. .strong."
"You are strong, Andrew."
He snorted. "Not many people treat me like that, though. I love
you-see you later."
"I love you, too."
As soon as she hung up, a tide of exhaustion overwhelmed her and
she slipped into the guest bed and slept. And dreamed of Jaquar
playing with her in a storm...
Marian woke to a commotion at the front door as Andrew paid off
his driver and disengaged the alarm system. She dressed in her
purple robe and hurried into the living room.
Andrew closed the door behind him and locked it, then took the
walker standing by the door and leaned heavily on it as he stared
at Marian. "My God, you look different."
She ran to him, trying not to show her shock at his thinness and
infirmity. "I'm so glad to see you!" She hugged him gingerly, then
returned to his comment. "Different how?"
Slowly he shook his head. "There's the hair, of course. That
silver streak is very striking. Natural?"
"Yes."
"Too bad. Guess you really did have weird stuff going on."
Marian raised her eyebrows. "You thought I lied about it?"
"Fibbed." He smiled slightly. "Thought you were worried about me
and spinning a tale to come live with me or something." He shook
his head again. "You look...trimmer. In shape." He flushed.
"That's okay. Any more comments about my appearance?"
He narrowed his eyes. "You look more yourself. But
more... You glow. You aren't pregnant or anything, are you? If you
are and the guy dumped you, I'll kill him!" His expression grew
fierce.
Marian took a step back in surprise. "No. Not pregnant."
"But there was a guy, I can tell."
Andrew took a couple of clumping steps toward her, and she
realized he was very tired.
She wanted to rush to him and help, but instead indicated his
recliner and took the one on the other side of the table.
He stumped to the recliner and lowered himself into it, still
keeping his eyes on her face. "Did the jerk dump you?"
Clearing her throat, she shook her head. She had cut the bond
between herself and Jaquar. "No, I dumped him."
"Wanna talk about it?" Andrew relaxed back into the recliner and
shut his eyes.
"Not particularly."
"All right."
"Do you want me to-" But he was asleep.
For a time she watched him sleep. So beloved, this brother of
hers. He'd been the only loving and stable person in her life. But
she was deeply afraid for his health.
He was so much worse than she'd known. Or perhaps she was just
looking at him with new eyes. Her mouth firmed. There wasn't much
here that could help him, but maybe on Lladrana... She'd try
anything to cure him. Dipping in, or perhaps even drinking
the magical jerir. Paying the Marshalls any price to do a group
Healing. The same with the Circlets. And the Friends of the Singer.
Perhaps the Singer herself had Powers, could channel the Power of
the Song to help Andrew.
Her options and methods might have changed, but her priority
remained the same.
Since he was sleeping and she needed to do something, she went
into the kitchen and took out a frozen casserole. It could warm
until he awoke.
She picked up his duffel and unpacked it, set his medications on
the table by his elbow with a glass of water and put the dirty
laundry in the washer. She was transferring his clothes to the
dryer when he called her name. She finished her task and walked to
the living room.
"So, I didn't dream you," he said.
Leaning against the arch that separated the living room from the
kitchen, Marian smiled at him. "No."
He rubbed his face, moved the recliner upright and drank some of
the water. Serious gaze fixed on her, he said, "Sit down. Tell me
what changed you and what you want to do about it. What you want
me to do about it." A corner of his mouth lifted as if in
pride that she'd asked for his help.
She didn't want to hurt him with the bond, would try to keep it
light and easy at first and watch Andrew for any discomfort.
Walking over to him, she stretched and then curled her fingers,
limbering them.
"What are you doing?"
Warmth crept up her cheeks. "I, uh-when I was away, I learned
this technique for.. .connecting with people on an... emotional
level."
He just stared at her, then he laughed, and it was so good to
hear and see him this way that she drank in the sight and smiled
herself.
After his last chuckle, he said, "All those New Age classes of
yours-and where did you go, Tibet?"
"Not exactly."
He stretched out his hands. "Okay, lay it on me."
Instead of clasping hands, she bent and hugged him. A Song rose
between them. Since Andrew stiffened, she sensed he heard it,
too-the Song of the children of Candace. Closing her eyes, she felt
tears well behind her lids. She was so glad to hold him.
Without thought or will, her experiences on Lladrana flickered
through their bond-fast and sketchy, but undeniably real.
His arms tightened around her. Then he shivered and withdrew.
His face had paled, but his eyes blazed with wonder and excitement.
"I can't believe it." Then he lifted a hand. "No, I do
believe it, but it's fantastic all the same. Magic works and you
have an affinity for fire."
He glanced over to the fireplace. "Care to light it?"
She sent him a withering glance. "It's gas."
"So?"
"So you have to turn the gas on. That's moving a lever,
not lighting logs."
"Huh. Could you use some air to press down the switch?"
"Maybe I should draw down lightning on your thick skull."
He snorted. "Don't think you could do it." A wistful expression
crossed his face. "I thought I got something about a hole in the
skull and that special liquid-jerir?"
Marian licked her lips. "Yes."
"Didja bring the stuff with you and can I see it?"
"Yes." Marian went to the guest bedroom and returned with the
bottle of jerir, which she handed to Andrew.
He took the solid proof of her trip to Lladrana in his hands,
tilted the container back and forth, studied it under the light.
The sparkles were harder to see under a lightbulb, but Marian
spotted a couple.
"Real magic." He set the bottle on the table with his medicines.
"You want to return, don't you?"
She met his eyes, let her fear show in her own. "I'm torn. It's
a dangerous situation and it doesn't look like it's going to get
any better soon." Taking a deep breath, she let it out slowly. "I'd
have great Power and with great Power comes great
responsibility."
"I'm glad that you feel that way."
A smile played on her lips, then faded. "I have to feel that
way-otherwise I might succumb to pure greed or hubris or
something."
But Andrew was shaking his head. "I don't think so. You've seen
too much of what can happen, with great riches and status in Denver
society."
"Many of those people are caring, service-oriented
individuals."
"But not Candace. What of Candace? You came back for me, and I
thank you for that and am considering my new options. But I can't
see you telling Candace about Lladrana, or convincing her to go
there. Not her kind of place at all. You've always wanted a good
relationship with Mother."
Marian braced herself. "I saw Candace Friday night. She's..
.dying." She swallowed hard. "I think she knows it. Cancer,
probably. She won't do anything about it. Doesn't accept the
prognosis. I got this through our bond-before she cut it."
Andrew swore, looked away. A moment later, he said, "It's hard,
isn't it, knowing there's not a thing we can say that will make her
take care of herself? I tried, now and then." His eyes turned sad.
"I would have said that I didn't care. I do, of course. She is our
mother."
"I don't think she has long-less than a year, perhaps."
Closing his eyes, Andrew sighed. "This is difficult for you." He
shifted in his seat. "Maybe it's best that we do leave now. She
wouldn't want us to be there at the end."
"You're sure of that? We couldn't give her comfort?"
"When did we ever give her comfort?"
"What if she changes her mind, her ways, wants us at the
end?"
He opened his eyes, stared back at Marian. "Do you really
believe you should forgo life on Lladrana because of a remote
possibility that our mother will change her ways on her deathbed?
If so, then I think you really don't want to return to Lladrana and
the challenges there, but just prefer your steady, tidy life
here."
Shock rippled through her at his harsh words. She staggered back
to sit in the opposite recliner and frown at him.
His smile was humorless. "You wanted me here, needed me
here to help you think about this radical change in lifestyle.
Well, that's what I'm doing."
Marian rubbed her temples. "Not pulling any punches, are
you."
"Since you'll be walking into circumstances that might get you
killed, you'd better really be committed to that course."
She nodded, looked away, put his words in the back of her mind
to simmer. She'd consider them later. Taking an unsteady breath,
she put a hand on her churning stomach. "You're talking like you'll
come with me."
Nodding, Andrew said, "I'll give it good consideration. I know
there's some time constraints. When would we leave?"
Marian dipped her hand in her pocket and withdrew the paper
Bossgond had given her. Andrew examined it, turning it over and
looking at both sides. He rubbed his thumb over it, scratched with
his nail, even lifted it up and sniffed. Again he half smiled.
"Doesn't smell like Earth, but it does smell a little like
you."
She hadn't quite accepted that she had a scent others noticed.
"Huh."
Andrew chuckled, then glanced at the paper and read the English
words at the bottom of the timeline. "I guess this big blue circle
is when the return Summoning will be done?"
"Yes."
He nodded. "All right, about ten days." Carefully setting the
paper aside on the table, he said, "That's enough heavy talk for
now. Let's eat, watch some tube and get to sleep."
That evening, Marian lay in bed and waited-tonight had been the
night in Lladrana when she and Jaquar had danced, when the first
level of their connection had developed. She let the soft
reflection of what was now occurring on Lladrana filter through
her. Afterward, she felt a small but definite bond between her and
Jaquar again-Jaquar-of-the-past and herself. She sat straight up in
bed. Did Past-Jaquar now feel the bond with Earth-Marian as well as
Lladrana-Marian? She thought he must, so the "Marian effect" upon
him would be more than his effect on Lladrana-Marian or
Earth-Marian. Not quite a double whammy, but still, it was
something to consider when she thought of him-which was often.
Being on Earth gave her time and distance to reflect on her
affair with Jaquar. She missed him, missed the companionship above
all, and, of course, the sex. And she welcomed the renewed
connection; this seemed to reverberate from the future, too, for
just prior to the Snap, she'd linked with him again. A link through
time. The thought made her shiver.
What would happen to that bond if Andrew decided against
Lladrana?
She woke late, and by the time she dressed, Andrew was moving
around the kitchen with only one cane and looking rested.
"Want me to make omelettes?" she asked.
He grinned and settled into a chair at the table. "Sure."
She got the ingredients together and began preparing.
A few minutes passed in silence. "I've decided," he said
quietly.
Marian tensed as she folded the egg mixture over in the frying
pan, then glanced at him.
"Yes?" Her voice was equally soft.
"I want to go with you."
She slid his omelette onto a plate and placed it before him,
then went to work on hers, she was focused more on Andrew.
"Why?"
He shrugged. "I think it's evident that my time and future here
is limited." Then he gave a lopsided smile that tore her heart.
"I'll take my chances on Lladrana."
She could barely breathe. "Really?" It came out in a
high-pitched squeak that would have done Tuck proud.
Andrew picked up his fork and took a tiny bite. "I don't have
much appetite." He continued to eat mechanically.
But when she finished making her own omelette and sat across
from him, his gaze was as intense as a laser.
"Some people are born to do certain things. You are born to
be the Exotique Circlet Sorceress of Lladrana." His face
hardened. "I don't ever want you walking away from that destiny.
Promise me."
It wasn't often he demanded things of her.
She put down her fork, couldn't eat.
"Promise me, now. Nothing will stop you from returning."
She choked. He meant his sickness, his death.
"I want this for you, Marian. All your life you've been looking
for something, searching for that one skill that was completely
natural for the genius inside you. You had it and knew it
subconsciously." He waved a hand. "Most sensitive people could tell
that. Now you've found it. I will not let you squander your
talent. Promise me now."
"I promise." The words were barely a breath, but he heard them
and nodded.
"Good." He closed his eyes again, a smile hovered on his mouth.
"Always searching, all those classes..." He sighed.
Marian stared down at her omelette, too excited to eat. What had
she done? She'd promised to go back to Lladrana and battle the
Dark.
She might have been born to this work, but unlike her first week
on Lladrana, the months to come wouldn't be fun and games and
learning. Her future-their future, hopefully- could be brutal and
short.
"Eat," Andrew said, "and I'll tell you how this will work."
Marian smiled, was able to pick up her fork again and eat. The
omelette should have been tasty, but it was much like the ones
she'd eaten with Bossgond. Still, like Andrew, she ate
automatically, for fuel.
Andrew said, "I'll get ready to travel. I think we should leave
from your apartment again." He looked around. "This house should
sell pretty quickly, especially if I keep the price reasonable.
I'll pull out money from my account and convert it to-what do the
Lladranans use as currency?" He grinned. "No use going there a
pauper if I can help it."
"You're sure you want to do this?"
"Of course." He chuckled. "I'm the risk-taker, remember? You're
the cautious one, trying to get things perfect before you make a
move."
"I'm doing better at that," she mumbled.
He tilted his head. "I think you are. Those Lladranans taught
you more than magic, didn't they?"
She managed a smile. "I had a lot of challenging
experiences."
"You'll have to tell me the whole story, from beginning to
end-or at least the middle. We haven't reached the end yet."
"You'll really return with me." She searched his face and found
his eyes steady.
"You're the one with the destiny. I'm the one with no future. .
.here. We're family. Where you go, I go."
Tears rolled down her face. She reached for the paper towel she
had used for a napkin and wiped her eyes, blew her nose.
He began eating again. "And you'll have to tell me about the
man, too."
Her chest tightened. "The man."
"I felt him. But that can wait, it's all about me first. I'm not
going over poor, and there is definitely other stuff I want to take
with me. What do they use as currency, gold?" He winked.
"Uh, I don't know. I dealt mostly in trade." She frowned, trying
to remember Alexa's experiences. "Jewels, Alexa had a ruby-no, a
red spine."
"Even better." Andrew rose and took his plate to the sink,
washed it and his fork, frowning. "I didn't get that stuff about
Alexa. Who is she?"
Marian finished the last bit of omelette, then walked up and
gently jostled Andrew away from the sink so she could wash and put
away her own dishes. She looked up at him with a twinkle in her
eye. "Alexa was the first Exotique."
His goggle-eyed look was satisfying.
35
The following days Marian spent with Andrew were some of the
most satisfying in her life. His symptoms eased and he became the
vital, intelligent man he was when in remission. He delighted in
Marian's small displays of magic, forged ahead in settling his
affairs, closing his business and selling the house. In that, they
worked well together. Andrew liquidated his holdings and bought
gold and gems while Marian dealt with the paperwork of their
disappearance.
They flew back to Denver by private jet a couple of days before
they were to be Summoned.
On the night Marian's other self was thrown into the Dark's
nest, Andrew took her to an expensive restaurant and kept her mind
occupied by making her tell him stories of Lladrana. But her
underlying fears remained and her body betrayed her by twitching
until Andrew grabbed her and held her close.
The morning of the Summoning, Marian moved the two cots she and
Andrew had slept on to the building's storage unit and left them.
She returned to a clean apartment, bare except for the items they
would need for the Summoning. Andrew had placed his night gear in
his pack, put on the music. He stood outside the scarlet-taped star
and circle looking thoughtful. Their packs lay in the middle of the
star.
"You know, this is going to look awfully strange to the property
manager when he walks in."
"This is Boulder," Marian said tensely, reviewing her notes.
Anxiety that her mind would go blank bit deep. "Besides, I'm going
to leave the door unlocked. Maybe they'll think someone else laid
the tape. I'm sure the brass incense burner and the mini music
system will be stolen by the time someone in authority gets
here."
Andrew patted her shoulder and shook his head. "I think they'll
know you did it. Everyone knows you've always been weird, Marian,"
he teased.
Marian chuckled weakly, scanned his face, rubbed her throat.
"Ready? You're sure you want to go?" They'd taped the pentacle
together. Andrew had practiced the chant, too.
"Like the other ten billion times you've asked me-yes, I want to
go. This is a real adventure." He adjusted his hat to a rakish
angle. He wore a full leather suit of pants, vest, heavy jacket and
an Indiana Jones-style hat. The hat reminded Marian of the hideous
hat that Jaquar wore and she felt her heart pump faster at the
knowledge she'd soon see him. For him, it would be a mere two days
since she left, but for her it had been weeks.
He'd know that and factor it in when he pressed for a renewal of
their relationship.
Marian wore her underwear and her purple robe. She'd packed a
silk pantsuit and several pairs of jeans. She had some in Alexa's
size, too, and was bringing a package of Tuck's favorite hamster
treats. She had new electronic "nuts" for him-encyclopedias, books
and music.
She set her shoulders. "Let's do it." She glanced down at her
notes, shoved them into the center to consult.
"Easy," Andrew said as he caught her left hand in his right
one.
His fingers didn't have tension running through them, his body
was relaxed, Marian noted with envy. His right hand held the
tiger's eye full of energy that Jaquar had given her.
She looked at her watch. "We're running a little ahead of
schedule."
"All to the good. Let's start."
"I don't know..."
"You must believe we can do it," Andrew said.
"What if it's not right?"
He just chuckled. "I can't think that magic spells are so
precise that there is no room for mistakes, can you?"
She didn't know, but it couldn't hurt to be as perfect as
possible.
So they began the Ritual tailored to Earth Song and magic that
Marian had crafted. They lit the incense together, closed the
Circle, began the chant. Andrew's voice was low, deeper than Marian
had ever heard, fervent-sounding.
He wanted to do this. The knowledge should have relaxed her, but
it didn't. She was strung tight as a piano wire.
Mother Earth's Song rose from the ground through her feet,
surged through Marian like a benediction. Andrew's fingers clamped
over hers.
They chanted the final note.
A sizzling firebolt hit between their feet.
Andrew jerked. Marian gasped.
They shot into the Dimensional Corridor even as Marian was
thinking that the property manager wasn't going to like the singed
carpet and it was good she'd reconciled herself to not getting her
deposit back.
"Marian?" Andrew shouted over the winds roaring around him.
His eyes stared as if he didn't see what she did-a shining,
nearly translucent portal across the hall from them. Through it she
could see a huge Circle of Marshalls, Circlets, Scholars,
Chevaliers.... But it wasn't the Temple at the Marshalls'
Castle!
The incised pentacle was the one at Parteger Island-a place she
never cared to see again.
"Marian!" Andrew shivered as if the winds buffeted him.
No breeze stirred the bottom of Marian's robe. She was in
control here.
With a slight tug on Andrew's hand, she led him to the portal,
and through it.
They dropped about four feet to the gray stone. Marian steadied
Andrew as the breath jarred from him on landing.
Amee's Song flooded her, held her transfixed. Earth's Song
diminished, left with a farewell of distant thunder, the image of a
gray sky over the Boulder Flatirons, and the scent of ozone after a
storm. Marian blinked back tears to see Andrew gawking around them,
swaying.
Power sizzled through her-from the midmorning sunlight, the hot
stone beneath her feet, the triumphant cry of Amee at the arrival
of another warrior. Wind whirled around her like a thousand
blessings, stroking her with love, from Amee-and from Jaquar?
His dark sapphire gaze fixed on hers, he stood linked between
Alexa and another Marshall. Determination and promises flowed to
her from him, through the emotional link that widened as their
gazes locked. He nodded, then turned his head to look at Andrew.
His eyes softened, a smile close to pity curved his lips.
Marian scowled. How dare he pity her brother!
"First question," Alexa called in English as soon as the last
word of the Summoning chant ended. "Did you bring potatoes? You
know they don't have fries here."
Marian laughed and Andrew grinned.
Lady Knight Swordmarshall Thealia Germaine cut the Ritual Circle
by withdrawing her hands from those on each side of her and humming
an atonal note.
Alexa strolled toward them, smiling at Andrew. "Hi, you must be
Andrew. I'm Alexa."
Andrew took a step, wavered. Marian reached to brace him, but he
shrugged her hand away and paced forward steadily, holding out his
hand. "Andrew Reston."
Marian and Andrew had just stepped from the center pentagram to
between the star-points when a screaming whoosh sounded
behind them.
The shriek came from a thin, weedy young Circlet who yelled,
"The maw opened. Danger. Danger! I saw it. An immense pulse of
Darkness straight here-carrying horrors." He crumpled.
Wing beats and cries came from above. Volarans had risen to
scream challenge to a dreeth, diving at it, clamping teeth on the
fragile wings.
Marian whirled to see monsters pouring into the confined circle
of the stands, trapping the Lladranans and her and Andrew-hulking
renders, slayers ruffling their spines, the soul-suckers with
twisting tentacles. Five black splotches of manlike sangviles
glided toward them. She stood petrified.
But Lladranans fought in three dimensions.
Alexa whirled and ran to Bastien. He shrilled a whistle and a
mighty volaran dipped near to the ground. Bastien threw Alexa onto
the steed, then jumped on behind her. An egg-shaped force field
snapped around them. They whipped out their batons and Bastien
yelled a war cry as they flew straight for the dreeths distended
belly.
Their Chevaliers, Pascal and Urvey, Koz and Perlee and others
called their volarans and followed.
The Marshalls coalesced into Pairs, then into a team, stripped
their robes from their armor and waded into the fight, faces grim.
A Powerful Song of destruction vibrated from them in low tones.
Most of the Circlets and Scholars stood as frozen as Marian.
Bossgond wielded a staff that sent invisible energy, frying a
slayer.
Sinafin in hawk-form flew over Marian and dropped a brithenwood
branchlet on her head, screaming, Fight.' That jolted Marian from
immobility. She caught the branch before it fell to the ground,
held on hard. To her surprise, the twigs melded into the main stem,
the forks came together, and she had a strong, beautiful wand that
Sang of life.
Others were dying. Marian saw a male Chevalier Pair fall beneath
five renders, ripping them apart.
Fight. It was a whisper inside her that had to grow fast,
that had to stir her body into action. It didn't matter that she
didn't know how. She had to try.
Jaquar ran to them, his telescoping staff the size of a wand.
His lips were pulled back in a grin. He'd torched a sangvile and
yelled in triumph.
Behind him followed a soul-sucker, and another speeding
sangvile. "Watch out-" She'd meant to warn him, but he caught
Andrew in a football tackle and draped him over his shoulder,
running for the dubious safety of the deserted Tower.
Cold fingers encircled her ankle. Power stilled in her, began to
drain. She looked down in horror to see a sangvile move its head to
her calf, lips protruding.
Fight.' Fire! Fire killed these things. She was the Mistress of
Lightning. Fight before she died!
The Massster sssends his greetingsss, the evil thing
hissed in her mind-violation enough to enrage Marian.
She pointed her new wand at it and shouted, "Fire!" Summoning
Power from the anger of Amee in the ground beneath her. She allowed
it to sear through her to free her wits, roll down her arm and
charged from the wand to strike the sangvile and shrivel it to
ash.
Her first kill.
She felt no remorse, only dedication to the cause of freeing
this planet from the Dark that sought to claim it. She wouldn't
stand aside. She'd learn to fight. This was her home now, these
people her family as much as Andrew. She would defend them to her
death.
Shuddering, she took a few seconds to scan the battleground.
Most of the Scholars had fled after Jaquar, who was organizing
them. Several Circlets stood ready before him.
To her surprise, Chalmon and Venetria had joined Bossgond. A
ragged Song rose from the three as they struggled to work as a
unit, fighting a dreeth. Venetria used her staff to coat the
creature's wings with ice, and it crashed. Bossgond and Chalmon
shot a thick sizzling stream into it, firing it.
Chevaliers fought on foot or volaran-back. Some had fallen, but
their bravery and skill in facing the monsters and dispatching them
impressed Marian.
The Marshalls were awesome to see-targeting a dreeth or a
specific group of horrors, swooping down, and dispatching them. Not
one Marshall-Sword or Shield-appeared to have a scratch.
Marian limped to the Tower where Jaquar was forming the Scholars
and Circlets into a defensive semicircle. She couldn't see Andrew
but sensed he was behind the line.
As she walked, she swung her wand like a weapon, shooting fire
at the horrors-cutting two soul-suckers in half, setting a render
afire. She learned not to shut her eyes as the fire hit, not to
flinch as death claimed a beast. Her left foot that the sangvile
had leeched onto was numb and dragging behind her, slowing her.
A scream of pain split the air above her. Marian looked up to
see a small dreeth flame a rider and volaran. The rider fell and
hit the ground two feet from Marian with a sickening thud.
Marian pivoted, struggled to keep her balance.
It was Perlee.
"Nooo!" an anguished man shouted in her ear. Koz jumped from his
own volaran, flung himself at Perlee, lifted her.
She was dead.
"No," he whispered, rocking her. "It can't be. This can't be
right. This isn't fair."
Even Marian knew that life was rarely fair, and war never was,
and this was her first battle. She swallowed hard, averted her gaze
from the burned and broken Perlee. Setting a hand on Koz's large,
trembling shoulder, she cried, "Come."
So many monsters. How could they all have appeared? A black
death ray straight from the maw to here.
She shivered, pulled on Koz's arm. "Come! We aren't safe
here."
He lifted a pale face, blind eyes staring. "She's my Pairling,
we're bonded. She can't die. Not without me. She can't go away
without me. She can't abandon me." It was a chant of his own. A
chant rejecting death. A futile Song.
Thudding footfalls approached. Pascal, the head of Alexa's
Chevaliers, stopped near them. "Perlee's gone, Koz. We have a fight
to finish." His words were harsher than his tone. "Come along."
Koz did nothing.
Pascal stooped and pulled Perlee's sword from her loose fingers.
To Marian's horror, he yanked Perlee from Koz's grasp, lifted her
sword and plunged it into her body, through it, into the ground.
Marian choked.
Perlee's body sank into the ground until all that showed was a
depression of darker green grass, and her sword stood upright like
a gravestone.
Koz roared in despair and swung at Pascal, who ducked, grabbed
the man's arm and snapped, "Let's go. Horrors are advancing.
Protect the Exotique!"
Looking down at her with dull eyes, Koz moved between her and a
group of monsters rampaging toward them.
Adrenaline shooting through her, Marian ran haltingly toward the
Tower, the men at her back. She plunged through the defensive line
a moment before the horrors caught up with them.
The men joined the ranks and turned and fought. Jaquar stepped
up with them as the beasts hit the line.
The battle had come to the Tower.
Jaquar, Pascal and Koz cut down the first wave of six-three
renders, a soul-sucker and two slayers.
As a slayer died, it flung its spines into the defenders. A
female scholar fell.
So did Andrew.
Marian screamed, her cry resounding off the black stones of the
Tower. She rushed to his side, found the yellow spine sticking out
of his shoulder. Without thought she grabbed it-acid seared her
palm. Pain scoured her. She kept her gaze locked on Andrew.
His face was pale, beaded with sweat. He tried to smile.
"Guess.. .I've.. .had.. .it. Not much of an.. .adventure."
"Nooo!" she moaned.
Jaquar was there. "The jerir, do you have it?"
Marian stared at him.
"The jerir!" he repeated.
She fumbled in her pocket where she'd put the bottle, dug it
out. He ripped it from her hand, unstoppered it and poured it into
Andrew's wound, then found the energy stone in Andrew's pocket and
set it atop the injury.
Andrew jerked in her arms. She thought she saw his soul rise
from his body. "No!" she cried. "Stay, stay with me."
With her own strong Song, Powered by physical and emotional
pain, she encased him, drew him close. Held him. His soul hovered,
then slipped halfway back into him.
Jaquar grabbed her hurt hand, took a vial from his pocket and
upended fiery liquid over her palm and fingers. Her vision
darkened. She fought it back.
Battle cries and roars came from the line. She turned her head
to the protective rank of Circlets fighting. She saw
Marshalls-Alexa and Bastien-zooming down on the monsters from
behind.
Two Circlets fell. Then a render's powerful swipe hit Koz, swept
him off balance, and his head hit the stone wall.
As Marian watched, the battle moved to the Tower, with all the
monsters attacking, then the Marshalls and Chevaliers cut the
horrors to shreds.
A shout of triumph rose. Soon all the survivors entered the
Tower, which had become a hospital zone.
Marian stayed with Andrew, who struggled for life, laboring to
breathe. She didn't let go of his Song, kept re-weaving the bond
between them.
The two Castle Medicas who had helped Summon Andrew and Marian
arranged the wounded around them, used their Power to heal. The
Marshalls had consulted with the Medicas regarding Andrew, and
Marian hated that he'd heard their whispered conclusion. He was an
Exotique, too unknown and frail to be healed by a Marshalls'
Circle. They could not help.
Would not help.
The Marshalls Healing Circle dealt only with the worst Chevalier
casualties, slowly and steadily. They fought death and won.
Nor would the Marshalls help Koz. The Medicas frowned over the
Chevalier. "He has a concussion. We have healed it, yet he does not
respond." They shook their heads over him, then went on to other
wounded.
The Scholars and Circlets had set up a Healing Circle, too,
under Chalmon's direction, with Bossgond a part of it. Marian could
sense from where she sat that the Circle wasn't as strong or as
steady as the Marshalls'. Not as well practiced.
Something she'd definitely remedy in the future...
She didn't want to think of a future without Andrew. Had never
wanted to imagine a life without her brother. She wasn't ready for
his death so soon after the triumph of arriving in Lladrana.
Jaquar stayed with her, sitting beside her but not touching,
keeping a low Song of comfort running between them. Now and then he
would leave to join the Healing Circle. She missed him, then. He
was only across the floor from her, but she missed him.
She prayed. The day crept by with agonizing slowness.
Finally Andrew's breath rattled in his chest. His eyes opened
and his gaze fixed on hers.
Marian, he whispered in her mind.
She jerked, her fingers tightening on his hand.
Andrew. She infused her mental voice with all the love
she felt for him. I'm sorry-
No! I'm not. He managed a smile. An adventure. Live,
Marian. Live large.
Andrew-
No, listen to me. A hoarse sound that might have been the
beginning of a chuckle escaped his lips. Look, I have learned
something new today. To mind-speak. Listen to me.
He rolled his eyes toward Koz, who moaned. Medicas gathered
around him. I want his body.
36
She flinched in shock. No!
Andrew projected mentally, I learned something else
today, too. I can see souls. His is leaving. He doesn't want his
body. He is abandoning it, following his lady into death.
No!
Yes. He is not fighting to survive, to live like we
have. Like I am.
Andrew was right. She and Andrew had always struggled- against
their mother-to live as individuals. Andrew had fought to live with
his condition, sometimes from moment to moment, as he fought to
live now.
Koz surrendered to death. His mind did not want to overcome the
shock of his head injury because he was devastated by the loss of
his Pairling. Even now, as life drained from his eyes, his etheric
self, his soul, began to rise and separate from his body.
It is a big, strong, virile body, and 1 want it.
"No." But she whispered.
Yes. Come on, sis. You and 1 have read enough science
fiction and fantasy, enough philosophy, watched enough flicks to
know it can be done!
A bubble of sheer incredulity caught in her throat. I
can't-
You can! You have great Power here. You have friends
and allies and people bonded and indebted to you who will help.
This is no time to lack faith in yourself!
But deep inside something gibbered insidiously, I
can't.
You must! Look, his spirit is leaving, and you have
me. You'll get all of me. Put me inside his body!
She had no time to prepare, no knowledge of how to do this
thing. If it could be done. She wanted to deny that she
could help. But Koz and Andrew were both in the arms of death. With
luck she could save one. Andrew.
Linking Andrew's limp hand with Koz's, she put her hands around
the men's joined fingers, felt the last pulsing energy of them
both. She sensed how Koz was bound to the tiny echo of Perlee's
Song and yearned to follow. Sensed how Andrew craved to live. As
she balanced the rhythmic Songs of them, sweat slid down her face,
her back, and her own true melody wavered.
Someone's hands curved over her shoulders. Jaquar. She should
not be able to bear it, but he sent her strength and she used it. A
gray form lifted from Koz, sped to where another
shade-Perlee?-hovered. They merged and vanished. Pain speared
Marian's head, her vision narrowed to Andrew's face. She gulped
breaths but found no air.
Jaquar's grip dug into her shoulders. He was a rock she leaned
on.
The Medicas drew back from Koz's body.
"No! Stay!" Marian commanded. She forced her hand to drop
Andrew's limp fingers. "I have my brother and he wants to live. He
will take this body. Keep it alive!"
They stared at her. One rubbed his forehead. "I have never seen
a soul transfer. I don't know how it's done."
Marian didn't, either. She lifted her chin, kept Andrew close,
wrapped tight in her love. With a thick tongue, she said, "I am a
Sorceress, a Circlet of the Fifth Degree, I will do this."
Enthralled, the three Medicas stared at her. The leader nodded
decisively. "We will keep the body alive."
She glanced at Andrew. The minute thread of life connecting his
soul broke. There was a snap, an inner snap of Andrew
separating from his body. The full weight of him, his will, his
soul, his character, his personality fell on her and they spun into
blackness, unconsciousness threatened. She gritted her teeth, but
barely felt the action. Shoulders hunched, she fell forward.
Send me in, Marian, please, please, please, begged
Andrew, like the child he'd been once.
She couldn't deny him then, and couldn't deny him now.
Wearily, lifting Andrew's being like a weight too heavy to be
borne, she fumbled for Koz's hand, sensed the emptiness of his
shell, knew the shape of all the crannies and caverns of him.
Someone moaned-was it her? Straining, she poured Andrew's
essence into the body, tucked him in as if into a bed. The body
jerked, ripping Andrew and Koz's hand from her slippery grasp. She
grabbed, but missed him.
Bossgond was there, his hand linked to her right. Jaquar was on
her other side, his fingers encompassing her left hand. And they
were connected to all the Circlets on the field. Chalmon and
Venetria poured energy into her. Everyone gave her support.
Power trickled into her from unrecognized sources.
She reached with all her heart and mind and soul and recaptured
Andrew, his whole being, and held him close, matched his whimpers
with her own, turned them into hums of comfort.
Here is the body before you, Bossgond said. The
heart, the mind, the soul cavity. Do! We will help.
Marian was afraid. What if-
You cannot doubt yourself! Bossgond snapped. You must
have faith that you can do this.
Marian strengthened her will, let Andrew flow from her keeping,
guided him into the body, holding him safe-for another stretch of
seconds before her doubts ambushed her again. She fought them with
the love she felt for Andrew, with the affection she felt from
Bossgond, with the Powerful support she felt from Jaquar, but the
transfer slowed.
Inside her head, Bossgond insinuated thoughts opposing the voice
of her self-doubt. Why do you think that you must achieve
perfection or you will fail?
Because 1 have always failed and it must be because I am not
perfect. But with the admission, her heart felt lighter and
more of Andrew sparkled into the body. Bossgond was distracting
that part of her mind that doubted and letting her magic and Power
do what needed to be done!
What have you failed at? Bossgond asked mildly.
Having my mother love me. Keeping Andrew safe. The
failures rose huge in her mind.
Bossgond seemed to consider that. Perfection cannot be
achieved. You can only do your best with the resources that you
have. You did not fail with your mother. Your mother was the one
who could not give you what you needed. It was a lack in
her.
I wanted too much.
Take the love 1 feel for you as a father, Bossgond said,
and it poured into her. Love from the man, his pride in her, in her
accomplishments filled her. She saw with awe that he thought she
was beautiful, mind and body.
You did not fail Andrew. Jaquar's deep voice echoed in
her mind. He is here. He was not originally Summoned, but he
came. You gave him new life. How can you think you failed
him?
Put that way, she couldn't. She let droplets of Andrew slide
from her holding, sparkle into the mind-space, throb into the
heart-space-that great heart of his-swirl into the soul-space. She
released him with joy.
An arm clasped her around the waist and Power inundated her from
Alexa. All the Marshalls linked with her. Marian went blind at the
shock, the realization that through her the Power of all the
Marshalls, all the Circlets, merged and cycled. Powerful people
all, they provided Marian with all the magic she could need.
Through her, they learned of one another, accepted each
other. Distrust diminished with the intimate connection; trust and
faith grew.
Take my love as a sister-friend, Alexa said, and that
love filled Marian, banishing darkness and uncertainty. Alexa saw
her as beautiful, too-as a strong woman of fascinating Power, full
of love for Andrew, full of curiosity about life. In Alexa's image,
Marian was laughing.
Marian smiled, relaxed.
Take my love as a mate, Jaquar said. The breath-stealing
hugeness of his love roared through her like a river. She was a
gorgeous woman. A woman who matched him in mind and heart. A woman
who gave him joy as she learned, explored things. A woman who made
him think and laugh and yearn.
How could she doubt herself? She couldn't. Her uncertainties
vanished, defeated for now, as she gave her beloved brother new
life.
She shrugged, settling the last of him into her Power stream,
ready to transfer him with care. From Bossgond and the Medicas, she
saw how to weave his mind into the brain, how to help him connect
and spark the electrical impulses that werethought and memory and
knowledge. From Jaquar and Alexa she expanded the heart-space where
Andrew's emotions would live, sent them flowing there. And through
Luthan the Chevalier Representative of the Singer, she received
delicate touches from that elder woman, which mended Andrew's
spirit, settled his soul.
Finally it was done.
Every little iridescent iota of Andrew gone from her keeping and
into his new physical shell. What lingered and connected them both
was the love they had for each other.
She slumped, black exhaustion descending, then fell into
Jaquar's strong arms.
You are a Great Sorceress of Faith, he said, and his
words comforted as darkness overwhelmed her.
Marian didn't think she'd been unconscious for more than a
moment or two, because when she awoke, she was kneeling on the
Tower floor next to Koz-Andrew. Afternoon light filtered through
the windows, and circles of people surrounded her in a spiral,
their hands beginning to unlink.
"Surely this was the greatest Power Circle ever created," a
melodious male voice said near her.
She glanced that way and found a Shieldmarshall smiling at her,
pleasure and Power in his gaze.
A Medica stroked Andrew-Koz's hair back from his head. "We will
wake him in about two hours," the Medica said, smiling grimly. She
swept a hand, indicating the room. "Combined wisdom says that the
new mind must have time to settle in, but cannot be unconscious for
too long or the inherent brain patterns of the past occupant will
begin to overcome the new entity."
"The new person, my brother Andrew."
Dipping her head, the Medica agreed. "Andrew."
The shell of the Andrew whom Marian had loved all her life lay
pitiful and deserted, green eyes wide and staring, face lax. Marian
trembled and looked away. She couldn't stay here.
"I need air," she said.
Jaquar helped her to her feet. The rest of the Marshalls and
Circlets were now participating in a single Healing Circle.
Marian gestured to the others. "Go help."
"I'd rather stay with you."
"I won't be a good companion." She needed to ponder events.
"You only have to be yourself. I'll just accompany you."
She linked her hands together, afraid the trembling in them
would move to her whole body. "So much has happened," she
whispered.
When she looked at Koz she saw only a large, virile Lladranan
man. She flinched.
Jaquar hugged her. "He's there."
Pulling away, Marian turned her back on the scene. "I can't see
him. I can only have faith that we accomplished the soul
transfer."
Jaquar drew beside her, lifted her fingertips and kissed them.
"You are the most amazing woman I know, and the most daring in your
faith."
She stared at him. "I'm not-"
"You trusted people in a different land. You learned from them.
Then you even returned to a world in great danger, a world that
will demand much from you. You trusted us with your Summoning and
with your brother. If Alexa can be called the Guardian of Honor,
you can be known as the Sorceress of Faith."
Marian didn't know what to say. It felt as if a ton of
responsibility was about to land on her shoulders. She didn't have
the energy for that.
Andrew's former shell was gone. She gulped. She'd known that
body as Andrew all her life. Would it sink into the ground like
Perlee's? Would she miss it, mourn it, when she might have the real
Andrew with her?
She shook the weird notions off.
Chants rose around them. Healing Power generated its own sweet
smell that mixed with the sweat of those working, and the lingering
stench of the monsters' bodily fluids.
"I want fresh air," she said.
He glanced at the open door of the Tower and the area beyond.
"It should be safe. The Song knows, the Marshalls don't leave a
scrap of the horrors around."
"I'm too tired to go far," she said.
"I'll be with you." He took her arm.
This time she didn't argue. She walked as steadily as she could
outside, and her left foot still dragged a bit-in all the commotion
she had forgotten to tell anyone about it.
"Why are you limping?" asked Jaquar.
"A sangvile-um-bite."
Jaquar swore and scooped her up. He whisked her back inside and
to the Marshalls' Healing Circle. Marian didn't like being the
center of attention again, but was pleased when she felt the
sparkling connection with the Marshalls. She'd have to ensure the
Tower Community bonded together better. Her wound was quickly
healed, though a Medica scolded her and told her that her ankle
would be weak for several days.
The atmosphere in the Tower was even more oppressive. Too many
Lladranans. There were only two Earth people, herself and
Alexa-even Andrew had a Lladranan body, and how much would that
change him? She had faith that he'd only become a better
person.
"My ankle is better enough to walk," she muttered to Jaquar, and
linked fingers with him.
He looked at her, smiling. "Thank you."
"For forgiving you?" she asked.
"You have?"
She kept silent until they left the Tower and emerged into the
strong late-afternoon sunlight. There she stopped to close her eyes
and soak it up. The light refreshed her, reminded her she was
alive. And so was Andrew.
When she opened her eyes, the first thing she saw was Perlee's
sword in the ground. Next to it was Koz's. As her gaze swept the
area, she saw about twenty other upright swords, some on the
flagstones between the stands. None in the series of pentacles.
"All my fault," she whispered.
"I don't think so," said a voice behind her.
It was Chalmon. He and Venetria stood, looking bedraggled and
exhausted, just outside the Tower door.
Jaquar stepped in front of her. "What do you want?"
"To apologize to Exotique Circlet of the Fifth Degree Marian
Harasta," said Chalmon.
"You can't apologize for something that you don't regret,"
Marian said, stepping up to join Jaquar. When she thought of what
this man and his cohorts had done, her anger spiked.
Chalmon eyed her warily. "That's true." He swallowed visibly.
"And I still think that the knowledge we received was incalculable
and the injury you did the nest saved many lives." He inhaled
deeply. "But we were wrong to use you so, without your knowledge,
and I apologize for that. 1 will always carry the burden of guilt
that I was a moral coward and took the easy way out to forestall
the consequences I feared."
From what she'd garnered through the link she had with Chalmon
and Venetria, Marian didn't think anything about Sending her to the
maw was easy for anyone. And Chalmon had been afraid the master and
the monsters would invade Venetria's island and destroy his lover.
Fear for a loved one made a person do strange things. Like die as
Koz did. Like transfer a beloved brother's soul and spirit and
heart into a different body.
Marian might understand why Chalmon had acted as he did, but she
wouldn't forgive him anytime soon. She'd never trust him.
Turning to Jaquar, Chalmon bowed deeply. "And I apologize to
you, Jaquar. I used your name to deceive Marian. I caused her to
believe you betrayed her. I damaged your relationship with
her."
Jaquar grunted. "Tell us why you don't think the attack was
specifically because of Marian."
"I'm sure the Dark wants the Exotiques...neutralized. But the
next was releasing sangviles," Chalmon said simply. "Those are
particularly dangerous to the Tower Community. It's reasonable
that the master had targeted this island as a stronghold for the
horrors all along. In the past it has been rarely used, but is
central to the current Towers." He shrugged. "I'd hate to think
that the Dark is resourceful enough to target this island in two
days. The timing may be due to Marian, but I believe everything had
been planned."
He glanced around, his gaze lingering on the upright swords.
"Parteger Island will never be the same. Nor should it be. I
believe Circlet Marian will lead us now."
"Lead!" Marian exclaimed.
Chalmon's lips curved in a smile-grimace. "Organize us, then. We
have been lax in cooperating, like spoiled children."
Marian was shaking her head, but Jaquar squeezed her fingers.
She was torn by the idea-pleased and proud. But the weight of that
responsibility pinned her heart.
"Excellent reasoning regarding today's attack, Chalmon," Jaquar
said. His smile was forced, all teeth. "Now go."
"I don't know if his logic is sound," Marian said. Her damn
self-doubt about her abilities was back.
"Then, know this," Chalmon said quietly. "Since you arrived, and
your brother, too, Amee's Song is stronger. For that I will always
thank you. And know also that I do not forget my debt to you. What
I cannot pay in zhiv, I will promise in favors. My life is yours
should you ever need it." He bowed and turned back to the Tower
door, hesitating as if bracing for more work with others who
disliked him. Then he squared his shoulders and went inside.
After Venetria watched him go, she gave Marian a strained smile.
"I apologize, too. I knew what we did was wrong. I have no excuses.
I don't think I'll ever forgive myself for my own actions." She
squeezed her eyes shut, then opened them. "My life is yours, too,
Marian. Just direct me in any way." She curtsied deeply and
followed Chalmon.
Jaquar heaved a sigh. "Well, that interrupted my romantic walk
with you."
Marian smiled, pressed his hand. "We were supposed to be on a
romantic walk?"
Bringing her closer, Jaquar pulled her hand through his arm and
began strolling again. "Yes, calming, uplifting, romantic."
"All that?"
His eyes were serious. "Everything I can give you, Marian."
He smiled. "Parteger Island is really very pretty. Quite
pastoral beyond the theater and Tower." He waved a hand. "Meadows
of flowers, orchards of fruit, groves of trees..."
"Your eloquence amazes me."
He chuckled with her. "So I'm trite." His tone turned serious.
"You often leave me without words, Marian."
They had reached the outermost large pentacle. Jaquar grasped
her other hand so that they stood facing each other. The heat from
the sun wrapped around them, warmed the air.
His face was more lined than when she first met him. His eyes
seemed bluer, his gaze definitely wiser. He'd suffered and
survived.
As she had.
As Andrew had.
They all lived.
Even the streaks in his hair looked slightly wider than they had
when he first stared down at her in the Marshalls' Temple.
"Our Song has revived, Marian," he whispered. "Listen to
it."
She dropped her gaze and let the music surge around her, through
her, cycle between them. It grew with every heartbeat, with every
breath, with every moment her hands touched his. A Song more
beautiful than she'd ever heard.
"Dance with me, beautiful Marian," he said, and led her into a
waltz.
She closed her eyes and listened to their Song, and as she did,
all the things he'd said and felt about her swirled through her
bringing balm. He'd sent all his love, all his strength to her in
her moment of need. He'd named her as mate-and Sorceress of
Faith.
The tenderness now, of his arms, his steps, his body leaning
into hers seemed like an unending caress.
The waltz ended too soon.
Marian met his eyes, saw his yearning.
"I love you," he said.
She closed her eyes. "I know. I care for you." She swallowed.
"Deeply."
He brushed a kiss across her mouth, and Marian's lips tingled,
heat bloomed within her.
Jaquar smiled. "We match, Fifth Degree Circlet Marian." We
should Pair-bond.
A corner of her mouth lifted. "After seeing what happened to Koz
and Perlee, I am doubtful."
He shook his head. "They were truly unlucky." He waved a hand at
a Chevalier pacing the opening of the theater, on guard. "But look
at Pascal. He is Paired with Marwey and neither would give that up.
And all the Marshalls-"
Marian put her fingers over his lips to stop his words. "I must
grow accustomed to my new life here first-"
"An excellent idea," Bossgond said. He tapped Jaquar on the
shoulder. "Our wounded and Medicas must stay for a while, and the
Marshalls would like you to restore the water lines."
They all walked back to the Tower, but when she reached the
looming building, Marian tugged at her hands and Jaquar
stopped.
She said, "The day is lovely. Peaceful. Let me consider my new
life. Please give me a few moments alone."
He frowned and reluctantly let her go.
Thinking to see some of the aspects of the island that Jaquar
had described, Marian circled the Tower. She breathed in the
fragrant air of Amee but soon wanted to be near Jaquar again.
She'd just decided to go back when she stumbled straight into
the arms of the cowled master.
37
She screamed, but it was too late.
The master raised a hand. The blow would kill her.
"I cry a sorcerous duel, now!" Bossgond shouted as he and Jaquar
ran around the Tower corner.
Jaquar ran toward her. Bossgond tackled and sat on him.
The master, Mahlyar, stilled. His fetid breath whistled in her
face. The tentacles on his face squirmed.
People sprinted out of the Tower, stopped.
"Dark Power or no, you are bound to a duel, Mahlyar, especially
here on Parteger Island, the common gathering place of all the
Tower Community, which you once were part of. I cry duel!" Bossgond
yelled between panting breaths as he restrained Jaquar.
Not death at the master's hands, Marian thought.
Or at least, not right now. Apparently she had a chance, pitiful
though it might be.
Check your pockets, Jaquar advised. He'd stopped
struggling. You are the Sorceress of Faith. You can destroy
it.
Fight. Kill. Destroy. All the things she'd never wanted to do,
never practiced, shrank from. She had to do it now.
"Your pocket!" Jaquar reminded.
She remembered. She had the brithenwood wand. The wand! She
released a sigh of relief as she whipped it out.
The master laughed, clapped his hands. "Duel force field,
nothing in and nothing out."
Jaquar said, Remember your Power, your mastery over Weather
elements. Storm and-
A clear dome of rippling energy snapped over them and cut
Jaquar's instructions off. Her world narrowed to herself and
Mahlyar and the fight that would take place in a circle of fifteen
feet.
She stood panting, eyeing him like a rabbit eyes a mountain
lion, nearly petrified with fear. Fatalistically, she decided to do
her best, at least cripple him enough that when the forcefield was
raised, Alexa and the others could get him.
Even as she thought this, he waved a crooked, pus-laden finger
in the air and made a door. It cracked open and dark slanted into
the circle in beams. The dark death ray again...
She met its mad gaze. It was not human nor animal. It was not a
"he."
"I can escape home," it said, so softly she thought only she
could hear. "Or even better, I can bring others through after I've
sucked your Power and eaten your brain."
A shudder seized her. She had to stand. She had to fight.
She had to win.
"You are such a failure, Marian," Mahlyar said, and his voice
was all Candace-and others.
The words were thrown at her again and again, and with them
images of people throughout her life who'd found her wanting by
standards other than Marian's own. A teacher, a society debutante,
another grad student, Jack Wilse...
"Enough!" she screamed. Screaming felt good.
She advanced with her wand.
The whispers of failure circled her again, and this time the
visuals had solidified into three-dimensional people, all tall
enough to make her feel childlike, and flinging failure after
failure at her.
But this tactic wouldn't work. She had fought this battle
earlier. Hadn't Bossgond bolstered her confidence? Hadn't Jaquar
just named her the Sorceress of Faith? And besides that outside
validation, she had her own true self-esteem.
She was a success! She had succeeded in goals that she'd
set for herself. She had mastered her Power and become a Circlet.
She had found a man to love and share her life with. Most of all,
she had saved her brother.
And why was Mahlyar using these hateful puppets? To distract. He
didn't seem to be doing anything else, like firing up a
thunderbolt, he was just watching her. To test her? Perhaps. To
psych her out. Yes!
And because he was afraid of her.
The knowledge dazzled her.
She aimed her wand at him, sent fire spearing toward him.
Palm out, he deflected it.
"You are the failure!" She could play his game.
"You failed to raise your Tower." It didn't sound too awful
to her, but his features contorted. He shot a stream of
darkness.
She jerked her wand, countered the stream, sent it into the
ground at his feet. He snarled.
They circled. Anxious faces outside the dome-Pascal,
Swordmarshall Thealia, Alexa-watched. She couldn't let their fear
become her own.
He flung back his hood and howled, shocking her.
She jumped back. His face was patchy with color, bloodred,
Lladranan gold, dead gray. A large brow ridge overhung his deep-set
sockets. One eye showed small and red, the other hollow bone.
Four-inch tentacles sprouted from around his mouth, three at each
temple, thicker ones at the angle of his jaw.
Marian thought she'd go mad if one of those tentacles touched
her.
His bolt of dark light caught her in the chest with hideous
cold. Her heart slowed, her torso numbed. Her brain went foggy.
Then her left ankle gave. No! She hopped. Stomped her left foot,
both feet. Her soles tingled as energy from the ground whispered
through her. A tremor shivered through her. Not enough energy, not
enough Power. Still, she flicked her wand and fire spurted. He
waved it away, advanced with lips curled back showing sharp pointy
teeth.
Marian set her feet, settled into her balance, raised her wand
and summoned all the Power she had to shoot a flame.
With a finger-snap, Mahlyar built a shield to deflect her
fire.
She stared as he kept coming.
He yanked the wand from her hands, shrieked with pain and let it
fly. It hit the forcefield, then the ground.
So much for a wand as a weapon. Fear pooling inside her, she
stooped and picked up a rock, threw it at him.
It hit his shoulder and he grunted.
This wasn't good.
Sneering, he flexed his fingers. Claws flicked from the tips,
gleaming and murderous.
She ran for the wand. It was better than the rock, maybe still
had some Power. She'd thrown a brithenwood stick once to good
effect.
Scooping it up, she blessed adrenaline for her new strength.
This time she whistled a short spell-"Kill, kill, kill"-and dredged
up the last shred of anger and hate and destructive emotion from
her body. She whirled and flung the wand, mind directed.
It skewered his left hand, torched it.
He screamed, blew on his hand and encased it in ice.
With evil determination, he flicked a writhing thread of dark
energy at her. It caught her left ankle, twisted, twined.
Trapped.
With one jerk he had her feet out from under her, was dragging
her to him. He grinned, his black tongue licking over thick lips,
his facial tentacles pulsing bloodred in triumph.
Terror immobilized her. She flopped around. Caught.
Think!
A pointed rock bit into her bottom.
Use the pain!
Use your Power!
From the sun. She reached and it flowed into her,
energizing.
From the ground. Her nails clawed the ground and rich energy
poured into her.
Energy. Power. Use it!
How?
She was a Weather mage. Lightning!
Yes.
She couldn't Call it from outside the forcefield.
But she could call it from inside herself. She formed the bolt,
her whole body arcing as she sought to contain the energy. It ran
through her head to toes to head, a closed circuit, escalating in
Power, infusing every cell, sparking down every nerve. Suddenly her
Power was there.
She stared up at Mahlyar, and he bent slowly down, grinning,
tentacles curling, reaching, grasping.
She jammed her arms out, fingers stiff and spread.
Lightning!
Blue fire zapped him, flung him back to hit the forcefield. He
fell to the ground.
She stumbled to her feet and limped toward him. Her left ankle
hurt-she sent a streak of lightning energy to encircle it, halted
at the pain as her own Power burned away all traces of the
Dark.
Mahlyar staggered to his feet and swept his right arm out, claws
extended, gleaming and sharp. Sent a dark ray shooting.
With a thought, electrical Power rippled around her, shielding
her. Nothing could get through from outside.
The next blue bolt of fire from her fingertips tore open his
chest. She reached in and ripped out his blackened heart. It
shriveled as she closed her fist around it, nails digging in. He
screamed and the world shook.
The forcefield around them popped like a bubble and all the
energy that they had confined and not used swept into her. Powerful
energy, clean, sparkling, snapping energy, like a thunderstorm
rolling through her and leaving lightning. She staggered and fell
to her knees, dropped her head.
1 will take that, Sinafin said in a tuneful voice. A beak
pressed at her right fist, thrust through her fingers, snapped up
the small stone heart in her hand.
"My God," someone said in English. Female. Alexa. "Shit, Marian,
when you learn to fight you don't mess around." Her voice wobbled.
"Ripped out the heart. Shit. I think I need to sit down."
A presence joined Marian on the ground. She felt it to her
left.
She was full to bursting with Power, her skin stretched tight,
the inner flesh of her lips turned out. All her senses were...off.
She hoped they weren't fried, but suspected they were, along with
her brain synapses. All fried. Poor Marian. Too bad. Such
potential.
But she'd always known she'd come to this.
She heard whispering, then Bossgond said loudly, "She will never
have such Power again. It is the best time for her to raise her
Tower, I say!" He walked up to Marian and she saw him as a wavy
ripple of shades of yellow in the air. The gold tone was
particularly striking and she stared at it.
"Ahem." Bossgond cleared his throat. "Marian, it is time to
raise your Tower."
Raise her Tower! The stunning idea nearly jolted her from
the Power daze. She'd heard, read, thought a lot about that, but
she wasn't ready. Oh no. Hadn't she overcome enough challenges
today?
Someone took her elbows and lifted her to her feet. She didn't
want to be upright or to think. She'd just look at the pretty
gold-
"Marian," said Alexa. "You're staring at Bossgond's crotch."
Oops.
"Marian." Another male voice, reverberating across all the
chords of her being. Soft, tender, caressing her name. Jaquar, who
drew close.
She'd have thought Jaquar would be shades of red, like his
maroon robe, but he was blue. From the palest gray-blue, icy-white
blue to deep indigo. And the most beautiful blue was his eyes.
"Beautiful blue eyes," she said.
"Yes, yes," Bossgond snapped. "Let's get you to Alf Island. I
know the place there that called to you."
"Heart to heart, soul to soul. Cleave. Transfer. Go. Come..."
She wanted Jaquar's heart and soul to cleave to her own.
Cleave was a word used in the Christian marriage ceremony,
wasn't it?
"Take her other arm, Jaquar, and let's move before her
brain explodes with an overload of Power!"
Just escaped brain being eaten to face brain exploding... Some
days you couldn't win. Marian giggled.
Bossgond continued shouting orders. "Transfer to Alf Island
through the innermost pentacle. It has remnants of Power, too. We
need to get her there and started on her Tower raising fast,
so she can use this energy before it burns her out."
She stared at the yellow banner that was Bossgond. He flapped in
the breeze, agitated. She'd never seen him so disturbed, never
heard him emphasize his words in normal speech. Then came a time
that bent and twisted.
"This is something I don't want to miss," shouted Alexa. "We'll
follow on our volarans."
Wind and fire and water. The scent of wildflowers so perfect
that she wept and felt tears sizzle dry on her skin.
Her feet connected with the land and the rootedness shocked her
clear to her heart. This was her land. Her place,
forever.
The yellow waves of air approached, holding a large
peacock-colored pearl. Bossgond placed the lovely pearl on her
shoulder.
Hello, Marian, Tuck said, nuzzling her neck.
Tuck! She was back. She was home.
"Raise your Tower, Fifth Degree Circlet Marian Dale Harasta!"
Bossgond thundered the command, brooking no denial.
Marian responded instinctively.
And it started. The first of her Power siphoned from her,
coalescing into a three-dimensional image of the perfect Towers for
her, and her mind cleared. She smiled. Who could have guessed?
They were square. She'd wanted square after all the round towers
she'd inhabited. They weren't simple, but a Victorian fancy of what
castle towers should look like. How fun. How amusing to plant this
here on Amee.
Power encased her. She could do anything. She could raise these
towers!
So she settled into her balance, digging her toes into the rich
dirt that was nothing like the soil of Colorado. Tuck dug in, too,
his claws into her shoulder.
She sorted the Power inside her. The stronger tune of Amee
herself wound through Marian's blood, and she felt the energy of
the land settle in her belly.
She swayed a little to catch the spray of the incoming surf on
her face, distilled the Power of Water: surging, ever flexible,
ever changing, yet strong enough to carve beaches and canyons. The
hidden, secret, infinitely unknowable depths of the oceans flooded
her with energy. She hunkered down to hold the Power. But it had
blinded her, so she raised her arms, tilted her face to the sun to
feel the warmth of it, of fire.
A solar flare licked her body, burned through her to mix with,
then separate from the water energy. From swollen, cracked lips she
said, "Wind! Air!" It whirled around her, buffeting her, and she
laughed, for she could feel only the touch of the air and what she
contained within herself, could not see, or hear or taste the spray
of the tide on her lips. For an instant the wind brought all the
dark, rich scents of Amee. Then that sense, too, vanished as a
whirlwind as it spun inside her.
She thought she shrieked with joy, with the incredible Power. It
tugged at her in four directions-a pleasure-pain tempting her to
succumb to the elements, be torn apart in ecstasy. She danced with
it, the streams of Power whirling around her in rainbow of colors,
surging through her in great chords of melody so beautiful she
thought she might splinter into iridescent shards.
A great tug of something else, some other Song, shuddered
through her. A quiet, strong melody of love and lust and yearning.
Jaquar. It was easier to remember his name than hers. Marian? Yes,
she was Marian. Once of Earth and now of Amee.
And by the Power she would raise her Tower.
She screamed with laughter at the simple rhyme, but it focused
her, made her concentrate, harnessing the Power-so hard, so
difficult when it raged wild-shaping it, harder still- did she
pant, sweat, turn bloodless with the effort? And fling it into the
shape of two connected towers-like Tower Bridge of London.
Too great an endeavor for both towers and the bridge and the
walkway. So the bridge shrank and Marian fell and felt the hard
ground of Amee cut into her knees. And still she strove to
build, to manifest in reality what she knew in her mind. No
bridge, but instead of arches for traffic to pass through, the
bottom stories were solid! She grunted with effort.
"Done!" someone shouted. "Let the Power go!"
What Power? It was all used up. Marian fell to her side, and the
tiny bit remaining of the four elemental Powers trickled from her
grasp into.. .Tuck? He'd hopped onto the ground and now bathed in
the last shining remnants of her Power.
Feeling came first. Jaquar cradled her in his arms, but the Song
of Amee linked her to the planet and the grass was cool against her
calves. She had Towers and a world and a man.
Then she noticed the exquisite mixed fragrance of sweet grass
and flowers and sea spray.
"Well now," Alexa said, and Marian could feel her hearing
sharpen. "That's a sight I never thought to see again." Alexa
chuckled.
As if Alexa's words were a spell-and they could be, couldn't
they? Alexa was as strong in Power as she, though trained in a
different discipline-Marian's blindness faded and overbright colors
and shapes replaced it. She blinked and blinked again, and found
herself staring at Alexa, who stood holding Marian's brithenwood
staff and her own Jade Baton. Alexa gazed at the two Towers of
Tower Bridge. They were connected with a little Victorian fancy of
a walkway on the fourth level.
Marian looked at them, delighted. She never would have thought
that her "perfect" image of a tower would be these fussy buildings.
What a fabulous house. And Ritual room. And study. What wondrous
things she could do in a place like that.
"Two," Jaquar said, and his chest rumbled against her. "Two. For
you and Bossgond? Or for you and Andrew?"
Marian tried to speak, but coughed. Her throat was dry. Had she
been screaming as she'd thought?
Bossgond squatted down near them, held a wineskin to her lips.
She drank gratefully, uncaring that some of the thick mead trickled
down her chin.
"I thought." She met Jaquar's eyes and saw anger there- and deep
hurt. That wasn't acceptable. She wanted his smile. Clearing her
throat again, she said, "I thought for me and Tuck."
Jaquar's hurt flashed out of existence. He laughed. "That
hamster is prancing.'"
Tuck scrabbled up the side of her leg, danced up her thigh to
her stomach. Her mouth dropped open. He was a rainbow-furred
hamster. He sat back on his haunches, something large in his right
cheek pouch. She had the suspicion that it was a shriveled stone
heart and didn't want to contemplate that.
Tuck said, "I am pleased. But I do not need a whole Tower."
He nuzzled her neck, then hopped off her to the ground and grew.
Marian goggled, then stared some more when he was joined by a
matching foot-long rainbow-colored hamster.
Sinafin.
"We will make a little turret and take turns living here and
with Alexa." Tuck came up and his tongue darted out to lick her
chin. "Thank you. I shall live long and have Powerful
offspring."
"Huh," she said, and tried to sit. It was beyond her strength,
but Jaquar moved so she was propped in a sitting position against
him. He held the wineskin now. Bossgond had risen and moved away to
join everyone else in surveying the Towers.
"Perhaps," Marian whispered, "you'd like to live with me in one
Tower and we could use the other for our studies?"
Jaquar shook his head.
Her stomach tightened and the mead turned sour in her mouth.
"They're square," he pointed out, "and silly looking. My
masculinity might be called into question."
Bastien, Alexa's Pairling, had wandered back and now snorted. "I
think they're fine Towers. If you don't want them, I bet I could
convince Alexa-"
Jaquar hugged Marian tight. His heart was thumping hard, but his
voice was cool. "1 want them, and Marian." He glanced up at
Bastien. "I'll use your worthless self as witness. I hereby
formally ask Marian to Pair-bond with me in a coeurdechain."
Bastien snorted again. "You Sorcerers, always so formal. Why
don't you just kiss her?"
So Jaquar did, and she felt the Song that rose between them
twine them together. His total self opened to her and she
responded. She tasted the true intensity and richness of life that
could be found in giving and sharing love with a partner.
She broke the kiss and touched his cheek, smiling. "I look
forward to exploring every aspect of our lives and our world with
you."
Then she studied the people around her. To her amazement
Andrew-Koz was there, swaying in the hold of a massive
Swordmarshall, eyelids heavy.
She jumped up and ran to hug him. His arms came around her, but
he didn't hug her back as he always had. Her heart flipped into her
throat. "Andrew?"
He blinked. When he answered, his words slurred. "I think you
should call me Koz." He was speaking Lladranan! Of course he knew
French, and Marian had tried to teach him rudiments of the language
on Earth. Did the brain have language patterns-? Her mouth
dried.
"Koz?" She stepped back, and his arms fell to his side.
"Yep," he said in English, and that reassured her a little. He
switched back to Lladranan. "And I think I'll live in Horseshoe
Hall at the Marshalls' Castle. I'm a Chevalier now." He puffed out
his chest, but it was a larger chest than he'd had and he
overbalanced.
The Swordmarshall steadied him. "Easy, lad."
Koz-Andrew glanced at the Towers, then to her. "Go, Marian," he
said, and the lilt when he said her name was the same, though the
voice was deeper. He smiled, and somehow that was the same,
too.
She grabbed his hands, which were not at all the same. "I'm your
sister and I love you. I want you to be happy." She didn't want him
fighting. But it was not her decision.
Marian swung her gaze to Alexa's. Koz had been a part of Alexa's
household. The other Exotique winked and nodded, and Marian
released a relieved breath. Alexa would watch out for him.
Koz was taller than Marian, so she stood on the balls of her
feet and brushed a kiss against his cheek. "I love you."
"I love you, too," Koz said. His eyes narrowed as he looked past
her to Jaquar, who came up to them and placed an arm around
Marian's shoulder. "Looks like you've got a man. Don't take any
crap from him."
She smiled. "I won't."
Bossgond announced, "I think I will establish a school centered
around my Tower." He stood, hands on hips.
"Wonderful!" Marian said. The old Circlet needed to be more
sociable. She looked at Bossgond, a grumpy old man who'd become the
father she'd never had. Alexa and Bastien gazed at her, smiling,
too. Sinafin and Tuck paraded around as peacocks and Marian caught
Tuck's chirp.
"I am the boy. I have the pretty feathers. You are the girl and
are a peahen."
Sinafin ignored him.
Everything Marian had ever wanted was here, even though she'd
never known it, could never have imagined this life. She'd been
right to return. Her heart and future lay here.
On Amee she'd learned to open herself to more people than
Andrew-to trust and love. Her adventure had forced her to become an
integral part of a vibrant community engaged in an awesome task,
instead of a distant, academic observer of life. Relationships with
people, particularly these people, would be fascinating and
ever-changing, expanding the knowledge of her heart and leading her
to wisdom instead of mere understanding.
"You're my friends," she said.
They cheered. She curtsied.
A breeze feathered against her skin. The last, blessed lesson of
the day floated over her, into her-the knowledge that she was
perfect in her own unique way.
She laughed. "I won against the Master Mahlyar. We won against
the Dark." Marian looked at her twin Towers and flung out her arms
and whirled in complete freedom. They were hers. Her new home and
school. But who knew what condition they might be in? Whether there
would be furnishings or food? She didn't care.
She said something she'd never said impulsively before, because
before it had needed to be planned, it had needed to be perfect and
right and tidy. But this moment was perfect in itself, as were all
moments. As she was. "Let's party at my place!"
Jaquar scooped her up and spun her around and they lifted off
the ground in a rush of air.
Another perfect moment. She'd live a lifetime of perfect
moments.
Shaking her head, she chuckled. That sounded very Zen. But she
was an Exotique Circlet, ready to add another melodic line to the
symphony that was Lladranan culture.
Marian slipped from Jaquar's arms and took his hand. She Sang
her Song as she ran to her Towers, and her lover and friends and
brother followed.
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