Alekseyevich looked tired when the guard escorted the Healer
into his presence. “Breeding a new generation of blockers for me?”
he sneered as he took a steaming mug from one of the servitors who
waited by his chair.
Renaud nearly blanched at the thought as he sat down on the
stool across the table from his master. Keeping control of his
reaction, he replied, “Not if you continue to give Elise merasha.”
“Ah, I thought that would be a challenge for you to deal with.
Besides your refusal to assist Valentin with the shape change could
have caused all my plans to fail. You deserved to be punished for it.
Further refusals will bring even worse upon you through your wife; as
I think my demonstration has proved. Now eat and regain some of your
strength. There’s someone who wants to meet you. Since we’ll be
travelling by portal, you will need it.”
Even as Renaud reluctantly took a portion of cold capon, left
over from the previous night’s evening meal, a knock came on the door
of the chamber.
“Enter!” Alekseyevich commanded irritably.
One of the guards from the cell level bowed as he approached
the renegade Deryni. “My lord, the duchess is demanding the healer.
She won’t be quiet. She’s insisting the girl is sick.” He bobbed his
head. “The girl doesn’t look good, sir. She’s all sweating and
moaning.”
Alekseyevich slammed his tankard down on the table. “By all
that’s holy! I need her to be healthy at least until the end of the
week. Get down there, Renaud, and see what you can do.”
Moving unhurriedly, the Healer suppressed his excitement as he
was escorted from the room and down the multitude of stairs to the
prison level, with a detour to the chamber where he usually slept
under guard and where his medicine sachel was stored.
Carrying the battered leather bag, he followed the guard to
Richenda’s cell. “You might want to stay out here,” he advised the
hulking figure, “just in case there’s some sort of contagion.”
The soldier immediately shot back the bolt and backed away
from the door. “Close it once, you’re in,” he said, fingering the
short sword that hung from his belt nervously. He slammed the bolt
home once more as Renaud did so, closing off direct observation of the
cell.
Richenda sat on the pallet, holding a shivering Briony in her
lap, closely wrapped in the furlined cloak, even though the cell was
warm from the subteranean hot springs that underlay the complex. She
eyed the Healer with distrust as he sat down his sachel and crouched
down to look at the sick child.
“Don’t you dare blind her.”
“Madam, if I had had any kind of alternative I wouldn’t have
done it to you. But another would pay the price had I refused to do
it.” He kept his voice low. “If you want your powers back, I’ll need
your help to make a certain event happen that will free us all.” He
touched Briony’s perspiration slick forehead and undid the alteration
he’d performed in the night, resetting her internal temperature.
“This--illness--was an excuse to get in here and talk to you, but I
won’t have much time.” He ran his hands down the length of Briony’s
body, as if he were scanning her with his powers, but instead he
focused on the residual energies in the medallion and chain that were
tucked in an interior pocket.of the cloak. He paused his hand
directly over the medal. “You can’t call for help or set a beacon for
others to find you, but I can.” He met her eyes directly and
projected his intent into her unshielded mind. “I’ll have to blur
this memory for our safety, but if I can have your link with the Duke,
I can find a way to bring him here to rescue you.”
“Why can’t you just get us out of here?” she demanded quietly,
following his lead.
“Because, my lady, I have absolutely no idea of where this
complex is. I go nowhere inside without a guard or escort, and the
only times I was taken out of here to do work for Alekseyevich
elsewhere, I was drugged just as you were to keep this place secret.”
He paused, “And if I were to escape, my wife would suffer greatly
until, and probably after, I was brought back.”
“He’s good at using people’s loves to control them, isn’t he?”
Richenda replied bitterly. She stared into his eyes, wishing that she
could truthread him. Then she slipped her hand inside the cloak where
a secret pocket had been built into the furred lining. The medal was
cool in his palm as she handed it surreptitiously to the healer.
Renaud got to his feet. “I’ll mix up something to bring down
the fever. I think it was caused by all that traveling through the
cold weather,” he said in a louder voice, one that would carry through
the doorway should the guard be eavesdropping. Taking a vial of a
harmless herb from the sachel, he shook a minute amount into a cup he
filled with water from the clay pitcher that rested on a tray with two
bowls of uneaten porridge. He took one of the horn spoons that lay
with the bowls and stirred it quickly. Before putting the
vial back, he dropped the medal into it, chain and all. Thus far, no
one had ever searched his medicine bag save for Alekseyevich, and he
had only scanned it briefly, taking the small velvet pouch of ward
cubes and the blue bottle of merasha. Hopefully the token would be
safe until he had the opportunity to investigate the link and call for
assistance from the Duke.
“When she wakes up, have her drink this. But it the fever
recurs, have them get me.”
Richenda stared up at him. “If you betray us, somehow, I will
make you pay.”
“Milady, I’m already paying for a poor choice. This is my one
chance to atone.” She put her hand in his and he adjusted her memory
of the past minutes to protect the key to his plan. He picked up his
sachel and pounded on the door, calling out, “I’m done!”
Right before the bolt opened, he heard the sound of clinking
chain through the small window into the next cell and an idea
blossomed. To the guard who was rapidly closing the door as soon as
he got in the corridor, Renaud said, “I’d better dose the other two,
just in case the fever’s humors spread through that window,”
indicating the door to the neighboring cell.
Willing to avoid the risk of contracting the illness himself,
the guard admitted the Healer into the cell that housed Prince Rory
Haldane and the little Deryni boy, Crispal. Renaud raised a finger to
his lips to keep them silent until the door had closed completely.
Rory eyed him suspiciously. “I saw you when I got captured.
You were with the leader of the party that attacked us.”
“Not by choice, your highness.” He smiled at Crispal and
brushed his fingers through the boy’s golden red curls. “How are you
feeling, young sir?” It wasn’t a rhetorical question, for he couldn’t
penetrate past the child’s shields into his his mind. The strength of
them was astounding for a Deryni of his age.
“Scared.”
“Me too, child. Me too.” He turned his attention back to
Rory. “I refused to assist the imposter in the shapechange. My wife
has suffered badly for it.” He suddenly realized from the expression
on Rory’s face that the prince had no idea that another person had
taken his place. “I don’t know what his mission was, only that he
took on your voice and form. But--” he glanced at the door, half
expecting the guard to interrupt him, “The Duchess has given me means
to make contact with her husband. There’s still a hope of freedom for
us all. I’ve got the guards believing the Lady Briony is ill with a
contagious fever... if I can use this to get you moved to less secure
quarters, I will.” He glanced down at the fetter on Rory’s ankle and
crouched down to touch the abraded flesh. His hand warmed and seconds
later, the sores were gone. “Unfortunately, I’m no good a picking
locks, but with good fortune and God’s grace, you’ll be free of this
soon.”
Rory gave a short laugh. “And if wishes were winged horses,
we could fly back to Rhemuth.”
“I’d be happy just to be able to walk back home, your
highness.” Renaud quickly mixed up another cup of the herbal potion
using Rory’s cup and water pitcher. “This will help prevent any
fever,” he said louder, as his quick ears heard the bolt to the door
shoot back again. “Each of you drink half of the cup.” As his
fingers brushed with Rory’s in handing the cup over, he blurred the
memories of confiding the plan to him, until such time as would be
safe to restore them. After the prince tossed back his share of the
contents, Renaud passed it to Crispal who sniffed at it before sipping
it cautiously. There was no way to adjust the boy’s memories, but the
Healer doubted that Alekseyevich would be able to get past the lad’s
adamantine shields either. “Come on, child, it doesn’t taste that
bad,” he cajolled him as the guard stuck his head in the door.
“Hurry up, Healer.”
Renaud picked up his sachel and left the cell, after a last
reminder to tell the guards if they felt feverish at all, eliciting a
shudder from the soldier. He was privately amused all the way back up
to the threshold of the room where Alekseyevich was finishing his
breakfast.
“Well, is the child in any danger?” After Renaud explained
that he’d given her a fever-reducing potion and that he was fairly
sure it was just from the cold weather and not a contagion, the noble
brigand waved at the trencher at Renaud’s place. “Take your meal to
your chamber and stay there until I summon you. Behave well today and
I may even allow your wife to sleep in your bed tonight.”
The Healer didn’t respond to the sneering jibe, but took the
trencher and returned to his room. He didn’t even care that the door
was locked, imprisoning him within. He sat cross-legged on the draped
bed and retrieved the medallion from its hiding place. For the first
time he got a good look at it and his jaw dropped. “Sanctus Camberus
Ora pro nobis,” he quietly recited the inscription around the edge of
the medal.
He closed his eyes and let his senses open to the tingling
energy that lay barely dormant in the cast oval. An image began to
form behind his closed eyelids, of a round faced man with silver gilt
hair and benevolent eyes. A sense of approval came from the vision
then it changed to the features of another man with golden hair, and
gray eyes wearing the blazon of a green griffin on a black surcote.
Renaud absorbed a sense of the man’s identity, to be able to recognize
the Duke of Corwyn when he got the chance to safely seek for his
presence out beyond the hidden fortress that was his own prison.