Alaric Morgan could hardly believe what he was hearing from the
stranger. He was grateful for the support of Kelson, Duncan, and Dhugal
in the link; without them, he feared his surprise would cause him to
rebound out of the long-distance rapport.
**There isn't much time, Your Grace,** Renaud sent. Images of
Alekseyevich and Mahael, along with hints of the threat they posed to
the young Healer, flashed along with the words. **As you can see, I am
as much a prisoner as your lady wife and daughter. Please, read what
you will of me. I wish only to help, as much as I can.**
As Alaric and his companions "watched" incredulously, Renaud opened
himself almost completely to them, inviting them to Read his memories
and use the information he had to offer. Alaric paused on the edge of
that highly trained mind, hesitant. Behind him, Duncan and then Kelson
urged him to move forward, reassuring him with their trust. Their
unintentional recollections of Richenda cost him a pang, and he delved
into Renaud's memories.
Almost before he knew it, Renaud had taken his leave of the group in
Gwynedd, expressing his apologies as he withdrew before his casting was
sensed by his captors. Alaric stayed in rapport with Kelson, Duncan,
and Dhugal for a few more moments, the four of them sifting over the
wealth of information Renaud had given them.
Alaric shivered as he opened his eyes and gazed across the table at his
cousin, trying to bury the memory of Richenda's fear at the loss of her
powers. Duncan caught his movement.
"I don't know what to think about a Healer who can block powers," began
the bishop, softly. It certainly puts a whole new spin on things."
"Aye, and what about this shape-changing spell?" Kelson shot back at
him, grey eyes disturbed, but trying to keep Alaric's mind off of his
beloved's helplessness. "Thank God Nigel doesn't know about this. He
never suspected that Rory wasn't Rory."
"Rory!" exclaimed Dhugal, standing so quickly that his chair clattered
to the ground behind him. He whirled to face the corner of the room
where the young man they'd thought was Rory had been waiting, silent as
a ghost.
He might as well have been a ghost, for "Rory" was gone.
****
"Rebecca!"
Rebecca turned from the basin where she scrubbed away at sweat-encrusted
practice leathers, a harsh reprimand on her tongue for the voice which
called her. Valentin had to know how difficult it had been for her to
get herself included in the servants accompanying the Haldane army.
Before she could admonish him, however, she stopped short, the words
swallowed. She'd never seen such an expression on Valentin's
shape-changed face—and Saw with Deryni senses the strain his spell was
under right now.
Dropping the tunic she held back into the basin of soapy water, she
wordlessly took his elbow and steered him deeper into the hotel's
basement washroom, ducking a sheet that hung from the ceiling. When
they were behind the sheet and shielded from outside eyes, Valentin
relievedly let the Haldane prince's visage slip from his face. Rebecca
was hard put to keep herself from gasping at the strain she saw there.
"They've found out," Valentin murmured, his voice ragged.
At that, Rebecca _did_ gasp, knowing by the tone in his voice exactly
what he meant. "Oh, my God," she breathed. "How?"
Valentin slumped against the wall. "I . . . they got in contact with
someone. Not the Duchess of Corwyn; I think it was someone who "works"
for Alekseyevich. Morgan's not as well-trained as he could be, and
neither are McLain, MacArdry, or the Haldane; I caught some of what they
were discussing."
Rebecca's mind was racing, sorting through contingency plans made at the
start of this venture. Some of those plans neither Alekseyevich nor the
Master knew anything about. She tried to bury her fear deep down. She
still wasn't quite sure what the Master had done to her son when they
had been separated. She and Valentin were walking a dangerous tightrope
right now. She looked up at him.
"So what do we do now?"
****
Crispal huddled in his cell, his imagination frightening him once
again. He wished he knew where his parents were, what they were doing.
He refused to let himself wonder if they were still alive. Most of all,
he wished he knew why he was here. And held prisoner with, of all
people, a Prince of Gwynedd.
For the hundredth time he cast his mind back several weeks. His mother
had woken him in the middle of the night and hurried him out of his cozy
bed. It was urgent that they leave Eistenfalla immediately. He'd been
too sleepy to really pay attention to the strange men that had waited
for them by the door of their cottage, and the ones who had accompanied
them out of the sleeping, snow-encrusted city. He'd only managed to
stay awake until Nordhaven, and then had nodded off again, huddled in
his mother's arms atop her horse. Mother hadn't _acted_ as if there
were anything amiss . . . had she? Of course, leaving home in the
middle of the night certainly indicated something amiss. Why hadn't he
thought so at the time?
He couldn't remember anything else before awaking in this cell.
Nothing, that is, beyond the dreams. He shivered as ice shot up his
spine. The cold, the blackness of a deep room and a smoky fire . . .
and the pair of chilling golden eyes watching him, staring at him,
seeing through to his very soul. He couldn't help seeing those piercing
eyes every time he closed his own.
Crispal shivered again, wishing those eyes would leave him alone so he
could get some sleep. He'd gone almost totally without sleep for days
now, but even his heavy fatigue wouldn't let him forget. Those eyes . .
. they haunted him. The power they held frightened him, and he didn't
know why. When he tried to remember, the memories slipped out of reach,
almost like dark, cold shadows flitting across his mind.
Shaking with weariness, Crispal gazed over the sleeping form of Prince
Rory. If only he could remember. He knew there was a way to get out of
here. He knew that somewhere buried in his mind was information that he
needed, information that would help him find his mother. Information
that would help him remember what had been done to him.