Also by Irene Radford The Dragon Nimbus THE GLASS DRAGON THE PERFECT PRINCESS THE LONELIEST MAGICIAN THE WIZARD'S TREASURE The Dragon Nimbus History THE DRAGON'S TOUCHSTONE THli LAST BATTLEMAGE THE RENEGADE DRAGON The Star Gods THE HIDDEN DRAGON THE DRAGON CIRCLE* Merlin's Descendants GUARDIAN OF THE BALANCE GUARDIAN OF THE TRUST GUARDIAN OF THE VISION GUARDIAN OF THE PROMISE GUARDIAN OF THE FREEDOM* *Coming soon from DAW Books IRENL RAPFoRP GUARDIAN Ifc oFTflE. ROAMSE lerlin's Descendants: Volume Four DAW BOOKS, INC. DONALD A. WOLLHEIM, FOUNDER 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014 ELIZABETH R. WOLLHEIM SHEILA E. GILBERT PUBLISHERS www.dawbooks.com Copyright © 2003 by Phyllis Irene Radford Karr. All Rights Reserved. Cover art by Gordon Crabb. Map by Pat Tobin. DAW Book Collectors No. 11251. DAW Books are distributed by the Penguin Group (USA) '. Book designed by Stanley S. Drate/Folio Graphics Co., In separate him from Donovan's son. A/v the Douglas clan in a border raid. Her mind never heals, she finds peace only in the seclusion of the Hermitage near i lie faery circle at Huntington. I'eregrine and Gaspar: b. 1551? Illegitimate children that may have been sired by either Donovan or his deceased twin brother Griffin the Elder. Accepted into the family at l>irth and raised at Kirkenwood. Mary Elizabeth Kirkwood (Betsy): b. 1558. Donovan's eldest legitimate child by his first wife Katherine. driffin and Henry (Hal) Kirkwood: b. March 1561. Donovan's twin sons by second wife Martha. Griffin inherits the estates as the eldest, Henry becomes candidate to the Pen-ilragon because he has magic. Deirdre: b. September 1561. Daughter of deceased Pen-dragon Griffin the Elder (1535-1563) and demon possessed Roanna (1537-1563). Raised in seclusion by Meg until her ather's death. Dame of Melmerby and Cross Fell. xiii xiv Cast of Characters Margaret Roanna Griffin (Maggie Rose): b. 1581. Dau| of Deirdre and Michael Maelstrom. Baruckey: b. 1581. Son of Yassimine and Hal. Their Familiars: Newynog (Hungry): Familiar to Griffin the Elder. F Coffa (Remembrance): Unclaimed pup of Griffin the El der's familiar Newynog. Goes to Deirdre. ^ib Ilelwriaeth (Mighty Hunter): Male familiar given to Henry k (Hal) from Coffa's first litter. Brenin (King): Male familiar given to Betsy from Coffa's first litter. Descendants of Henry Tudor—King Henry VII of England: *Henry VII: 1457-1509. First Tudor King, grandfather of Elizabeth I and great grandfather of Mary Queen of Scots. *Henry VIII: 1491-1547. King who implemented religious reform in England. Elizabeth's father. * Edward VI: 1537-1553. Only legitimate son of Henry VIII by third wife Jane Seymour. Minor king 1547-1553 with several regents. "Mary Tudor: 1516-1558. Henry VIII's eldest daughter by first wife Katherine of Aragon. Ruled 1554-1558. *King Philip of Spain: b? Mary's husband, brought the inquisition to England. Suitor to Elizabeth and sponsor of the Spanish Armada. *FMzabeth Tudor: 1533-1603. Henry VIII's middle legitimate child by his second wife Anne Boleyn. Queen of England 1558-1603. Cast of Characters n v (Jueen of Scots: 1542-1587. Crowned^ueen<§TS& ii alter her birth. Raised in France. First husband *Fran-Diuiphin of France. Second husband *Henry Stewart, • •ill Darnley. Third husband, *James Hepburn, Earl of Mulhwell. Exiled to England in 1568. J Hnhln: Illegitimate son of Elizabeth and Dudley, adopted Ity Donovan Kirkwood. 'Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley: 1545-1567. Grandson of I Irnry VII by Margaret Tudor's second marriage. Second lnmhand of Mary Queen of Scots. I la- House of Valois—Rulers of France: *( atherine de Medici: 1519-1589. Daughter of the Floren- II in- family of bankers, married to *Henri Valois—Henri II. Mother of three kings of France, none of whom produced heirs. As Dowager Queen, she ruled as regent for all three of her minor sons. ?//run II: 1519-1559. Due d'Orleans. Married Catherine de Medici 1533. King 1547-1559. S-December 6, 1560. Raised with Mary Queen of Scots //: b? Probably around 1542. King of France, July . .... _ member 6, 1560. Raised wi * " ~--------- f c~~^ liom age of Ave and married her. *Charles IX: 1550-1574. King upon Francis' death in 1560. ()n the throne at the time of the St. Bartholomew's Day live massacre. "Henry III: b? Due d'Alencon. Youngest son of Catherine ile Medici. Ascended throne of France May 30, 1574. *Henri Bourbon: b. 1553. King of Navarre, Huguenot. His marriage to a Valois princess precipitated the St. Bartholomew's Day Eve massacre. Became king of France in 1584. xvi Cast of Characters The Stuarts of Scotland: *Mary Queen of Scots: see above *James Stuart: d. 1570. Earl of Moray. Illegitimate *James V of Scotland, premier lord of the land. Lat| gent for *James VI. *James Stuart: b. June 19, 1566. James VI of Scotlani I of England; Son of *Mary Queen of Scots and *£ Lord Darnley. Crowned King of Scots July 24, 15671 missed all regents in 1578 at age of twelve after murq his Regent the *Earl of Morton. Others: El Lobison: The Master of Werewolves. Yassimine: b. 1559. Slave of El Lobison. Born in the steppes east of the Ottoman Empire. *Earl of Morton: Replaced Earl Mar as regent for James VI in 1572. Strong enemy of exiled Mary Queen of Scots, the child king's mother. Deposed and murdered by Scottish Lords 1578, *Duc Henri de Guise: d. December 23,1588. Cousin to *Mary Queen of Scots and Captain General of the Holy League. *Mathew Parker: d. 1575. Archbishop of Canterbury. *Dr. John Dee: 1527-1608. Preeminent English mystic, scholar, alchemist (scientist) of his day. *Rohert Dudley: 1533-1588. The love of Queen Elizabeth' life. Master of the Horse, later elevated to the peerage a Baron of Denbigh and Earl of Leicester. i * Douglas Howard: (pronounced Dooglass). b? Countess of Sheffield, Dudley's first wife. Marriage kept a secret and later renounced by both parties. One son born to them, ?Sir Robert Dudley 1574-1649. Cast of Characters I- "K •/ rtlice Knollys: 1541-1634. Dowager Countess of Essex. Mnlher of Robert Devereaux, 2 nd Earl of Essex. Second will- of Robert Dudley. One son born to them, *Robert, Union Denbigh 1579-1584. * Ambassador Fenelon: Representative of France to England in 1574. *lh»i Bernardino de Mendoza: Ambassador from Spain to I',upland after the Treaty of Bristol in 1574. *i,dward de Vere: d? Earl of Oxford. Secret Catholic. Declared his faith in 1580, seduced one of Elizabeth's niiiids in 1580, as well. An eccentric and free spirit. Married *Anne Cecil, Lord Burghley's daughter (she was fifteen). * Henry Hastings: 1536-1595. 3rd Earl Huntington. Descended from Edward III. Had a claim to the throne, but not ambitious enough to pursue it. Married to *Katherine I )udley, sister of Robert Dudley. *Katherine Dudley: d. 1620. Lady Hastings. Lady-in-waiting to Elizabeth I. "Mary Dudley: d. 1586. Lady Sidney. A favorite lady-in-waiting to Elizabeth I. *Thomas* Howard: d. 1572. 4 th Duke of Norfolk. Open Catholic who conspired with Mary Queen of Scots to depose Elizabeth I by assassination. Executed for treason. *William Cecil: d? Lord Burleigh. Elizabeth's Secretary of State and chief advisor. Malcolm the Steward: 1525-1572. Steward of Kirkenwood killed by werewolves. Thorn Steward- 1530-? Steward of Kirkenwood, Malcolm's brother. xviii Cast of Characters B *Bess Hardwick: Countess of Shrewsbury and mistress of Chatsworth Manor. Her husband was Guardian of Mary Queen of Scots for many years. Bess controlled who visited the queen. Married her daughter to *Charles Stuart— second son of Earl of Lennox and younger brother of ?Lord Darnley, Mary's second husband. Granddaughter ? Arabella Stuart became a pawn in the marriage market because she was a cousin of Elizabeth I. *Sir Francis Walsingham: Diplomat and spymaster for Elizabeth. Nicknamed her "Moor." Sir Michael Maelstrom: b. 1554. Spy for Walsingham. Baron of Bobbington and Six Ashes. Zella: b. 1564. Hedge witch with one blue eye and one brown eye. *Edmund Campion: Jesuit priest, largely responsible for success of the Jesuit mission to England and the upsurge of Catholic resistance. *Robert Parsons: Radical Jesuit priest, paired with Campion in Jesuit mission to England. *Gilbert Gifford: Sympathizer with Mary Queen of Scots, blackmailed by Walsingham to act as agent in final plot against Mary. *Sir Amyas Paulet: Puritan, final goaler of Mary Que of Scots. *Thomas Phelippes: Code breaker for Walsingham. *Francis Throckmorton: Secret Catholic caught and el cuted in a plot with French Embassy to free Mary Queen of Scots. *Sir Nicholas Throckmorton: Uncle of Francis, friend of Leicester. Cast of Characters xix * Master Burton: Brewer who delivers beer to Chartly Manor. Nnl privy to the final plot to implicate Mary Queen of Scots. *Anthony Babington ofDethick: b. 1561(?)-1586. Conspirator with Mary Queen of Scots in a plot to assassinate Elizabeth I. guardian Promise Merlin's Descendants: Volume Four t Prologue ^K/ June, 1572. The fourteenth year in the reign of Her May vflesty, Gloriana Regina, Elizabeth Tudor. The Kirk in the Woods, near Kirkenwood Manor, the North of England. THE sun crept to the peek above the horizon, way to the north of due east. I sat on the lake verge watching the light grow and the shadows shrink. Faeries buzzed around my head, giggling as they tugged at my unruly hair. I laughed with them. The innocent laughter of the young. 'Twas the time betwixt and between, neither day nor night, here or there, real or unreal. As I was betwixt a child and a woman. Gently, I twined a wreath of magic around the flowers scattered at my feet. They wove into a living crown. I transported the garland to my head with a gesture of my finger. The faeries tilted the bright halo so that it canted over my left eye. We all giggled hilariously. My aging wolfhound, Coffa, drowsed at my feet along with her unnamed pup. I could not remember a time before (offa came to me as a familiar. My three cousins and I were the only children of our generation of Kirkwoods to possess magic and familiars. We played with magic as toys with no idea of how to use ii lor any but our own pleasure. The lake rippled. A disturbance at the center spread outward. I sensed a presence beneath the water. Who would (inhabit the watery depths? Could it be the legendary Lady of the Lake? I daydreamed a few moments that she rose from her mysterious I home to give me the great sword Excalibur. I would travel 1 1 Irene Radford the world, wielding the sword for justice, righting wrongs, and defending the weak as my ancestor King Arthur had done. Would you not rather be the Merlin? A tiny voice like the chiming of silver bells asked. The faery voice spoke with the resonance of an entire flight of creatures. The Mer* lin carries history and news to the common folk, listens td their woes, and befriends them. I sighed. Of course I'd rather be the Merlin. As my father had been. In all things I wanted to be like my father, a man who was fast becoming more legend than memory. Way off on the other side of the lake, the church bell tolled Matins. A raven launched himself from the rooftree with a noisy flap of wings. The dreams faded. I was just a little girl. The Lady would certainly never deem me worthy of the sword. I guessed she rose merely to play with the faeries on this warm summer dawn. "Deirdre!" a voice called from the direction of the church. "Dee, where are you?" The faeries popped out of this reality in surprise, then popped back in, giggling all the while at their own shyness. " 'Tis merely my cousin Hal," I explained to them. "He's very protective of me and doesn't like it when I go off on my own." As much as I loved my cousin, sometimes I needed to explore these woods by myself. The faeries only came when I was alone. Hal was too impatient to let me study plants and flowers and insects to learn their secrets. "Dee!" Hal's call echoed across the lake. He sounded urgent, worried. I ignored him. My friends, the faeries and the Lady of the Lake, were much more important. A cloud darkened the growing light. A chill breeze ruffled the lake water. The waves grew higher. The wind whispered with anxiety as it shifted in the tree tops. Run, the faeries urged me. A bright green one nipped my ear. Flee, the Lady added from beneath the lake waters. "What?" I asked. I rose to my knees and got tangled in my skirts. Linen petticoats tore as I tugged them from beneath my feet. A thrumming sound vibrated through the ground. I ripped I he layers of fabric to free my feet. The moment I B Guardian of the Promise 3 regained my balance the faeries left me for their own refuge. The Lady sank deeper into the protection of the water. Coffa jumped up, snarling, teeth bared, ears flat. Her pup ibwled, too, but remained at my side. HA wolf as large as a man slunk out of the woods. Drool Hitened on his yellow teeth. ¦Ilis eyes glowed red with Otherworldly malice. Dee, we come!" Uncle Donovan, my guardian, yelled. I le stood beside Hal on the church steps. His illegitimate (ins, Gaspar and Peregrine, joined them, long swords still Icathed. Malcolm, the Steward of Kirkenwood, carried a Dssbow and a quiver of arrows. They all ran around the Itc Hal leaped over rough ground. Gaspar slashed at low mging branches that impeded him. Peregrine dove into e lake. He swam with long even strokes. The wolf growled. None of them could reach me in time. Coffa lunged at it. The pup tugged on my skirts, urging me away. Snap. Snarl. Yelp. Coffa and the wolf tangled, jaws hmped upon each other's throats. Clumps of fur flew. Magic, Dee. Try some magic, Hal called to my mind. Magic? What kind of magic could keep the wolf at bay. My heart cringed. My magic had attracted these beasts i c ira Y- , , ^ .. c T. « '„_~a ;n na in braids The lead wolf's fur caught the fire. It screamed in pain, Coffa whimpered once more and died. 'Lopped, and rolled. The fire kept^burning.Stubby paws The pup threw herself at my magical barrier an I'ansformed into human hands that beat at the flames. 1 hey pup bounced back. kept burning. I gathered her into my arms, sobbing. "No. She can't die >ire engulfed the wolf. From one eye bUnk to thenext She can't. She's all I have of my da!" I wailed. i man appeared beneath the fur. Skin blackened. An inhu- c ian i. one s an i nave 01 my ua! i wanea. •¦ "¦"" » FF *.— w---------- - ,. , „„ „,rithprl The weight of my wolfhound pup drew me to my knee man scream erupted from tortured limbs. He writnea. I gathered more strength from the earth. I tried to replao my grief with anger. I wanted to tear the wolves apart wit my bare hands. Malcolm Steward aimed his arrow at the closest wolf am shot. Arrow sped. Wolf yelped and paused. It licked at th arrow protruding from its flank. Then with its teeth i ripped the arrow from its flesh. It came away bloody, drip ping with gore. The wolf barely paused to lick it clean. It sped to Mai colm and took him down. One bite ripped out Malcolm'' throat. I gagged in horror. "Malcolm!" I choked. As close a family, I'd known him all my life, trusted him as a belovei uncle. "Malcolm," I sobbed rhen stilled. The fire ate at his skin until only bones remained. A horrible stench flooded my senses. I gagged. A second wolf caught fire and ran howling into the woods. The remaining two backed off, slinking, snarling, uluctant to continue, reluctant to leave their prey. "Retirada!" a command came from deep within the line <>l trees. "Retirada!" An accent tinged the deep guttural voice. I had not the time to decipher it. I did not even realize the man had spoken in Spanish talher than English. The wolves turned and ran as one. Through the mist of my barrier I glimpsed a short, wiry man clad all jn black and silver. He loped away at the head of the pack. Something was wrong with his left arm. He At last Peregrine climbed out of the lake, drawing hi -sword even as his feet touched solid ground. He met the cradled 1 it close against his chest. steel. They bit at his blade art "Dee!" Hal tore at my barrier. "Open the wall, Dee, you b safe now." I took a deep breath and then another. My mind unwove the willow fronds. One by one they parted. The magic col-litpsed. It slithered around me, becoming a tight envelope »l mist, and then it disappeared inside me. The earth (Hooted the magic through my feet and gratefully accepted it back. The spell grounded successfully. I collapsed into Hal's arms. Uncle Donovan rushed to mlold us both in a deep hug. "Werewolves. How could werewolves attack you this close to dawn!" four wolves with cold steel. They danced away, stung by its edge. The wolf that had killed Wc safe now. Malcolm joined them. A raven swooped down and pecked at the lead wolf; nose. The beast turned and bit at the bird. It flew awa) with a sarcastic croak. Peregrine lunged with his blade. I watched each slash in wolf fur close and knit within a few heartbeats. Malcolm's murderer had already healed. "What creatures of evil are these?" I gasped. The pup struggled to be free of my grasp. Irene Radford ^IPr T^j^ Guardian of the Promise Magic. They sought my magic," I stammered. I trem liimiliar. You are not guaranteed the heritage of the Pen-bled all over. My knees wanted to collapse. I could noidragon, and therefore your use of magic must be circum-lakc my eyes away from the still form of Malcolm. Onlyxpcct and carefully controlled." Hal's embrace and the pup pressed to my side kept me "Yes, Uncle," I replied meekly. My face flushed with upright. Kuilt. I'd never live up to my father's legacy. "Powerful men know of the Pendragon. They search this region for signs of magic in hopes of finding, perhaps killing, the Pendragon," Peregrine reminded us all. He had no magic himself, but he'd lived around magicians all his life, "What kind of spell did you weave to attract werewolves?" Uncle Donovan leaned away from me and looked me sternly in the eye. "I have forbidden you to work any magic without my supervision." His attention strayed to the^ blackened form that had once been a man. "I know," I replied meekly. Suddenly I could look! where but the grass at my feet. " Twas just a silly spell entertain the faeries." And because of it, Malcolm, a gf and honorable man, had died. And another had paid the price for that death, horribly. "A very silly spell indeed. 'Twas stupid. Dangerous!" f last, Uncle Donovan looked at the horror that had once' been Malcolm's face and neck. He gulped and bowed his head a moment. "I shall have to think on your punishment for disobedience, young lady." Uncle Donovan dropped hij arms from my shoulders. I suddenly felt cold and alone. Hal tightened his grip on me in reassurance. "They killed Coffa." I let a tear trickle down my cheel I could not think on the man who was also dead. "She was old for a wolfhound." Uncle Donovan sounde<| sad. "She was beyond breeding again. She left you another! familiar. The pup will also be Coffa, Remembrance, so thai you remember why a trusted retainer and your familiaif died." He turned on his heel and marched back toward the church and Malcolm. He shed his doublet and placed il reverently over the face of the corpse. "Gaspar, Peregrine, fetch Father Peter. We need to burn the body to sanctify his unclean death." We all gulped back sobs. Then my guardian returned his ullciiiion to me. "Kcmember, Deirdre, you are not the only one "" ji Chapter 1 * ¦ ugust, Eve of St. Bartholomew's Day, 1572. Fourth year n the reign of James VI of Scotland. Fourth year of imprisonment of Mary Queen of Scots by Gloriana of England, I lizabeth Regina in her fourteenth year of reign. Edin-1'iirgh, Scotland. ARE you sure we should be doing this?" I asked. I Hiithed for Coffa. She butted her head beneath my hand, ¦ nucr for attention. "Don't be a 'fraidy cat," Cousin Betsy scoffed. She looked down her nose at me in disdain. At the great age 'if thirteen, her body had matured into womanhood. This, i if course, gave her elevated stature in the hierarchy among Mir children of the household. She assumed that this status hUo nave her increased wisdom. Her dog, Brenin, or King, lounged at the foot of the '¦ i nil ease below the narrow landing where we stood. He was • ulinly chewing, the decorative molding at the base of the ilitii rail. Hal charged forward, ever ready to meet any challenge forth by his older sister. He bent to peer through the 1 hole into Uncle Donovan's private solar. His dog Hel- ielh, "Mighty Hunter," stood halfway up the staircase ling at the baseboard for traces of a mouse we had n earlier. I he tall, narrow house in the heart of Scotland's capital 1 ied little privacy. But it gave my uncle convenient ac-. to Holyrood Palace where he attended court as a diplo-Hiiil for Queen Elizabeth of England. "What do you see, Hal?" Betsy hissed in a sharp "vhiNper. 9 10 Irene Radford Guardian of the Promise 11 "Da, at his scrying bowl. He's using an ugly crocke, "Not again." I sighed, releasing all of the pent-up tension bowl and an unpolished agate. He must be truly serious itn my shoulders. ,. revert to common tools of the Earth," he replied. "Why can't he ever scry for my mother/ ^al poutea.^ "Let me see." Betsy pushed him aside. "Because Martha died. Father can t scry for the: dead Hal stumbled against the banister. When he righted, I Hctsy said haughtily, as if she could part the veils between rubbed his back. Betsy's blow had bruised him. ¦ lenth and life. _„¦ „t I sensed a cloud of magic rising like a mist around h, Uncle Donovan pressed the base of his palm J^jji"^ and nearly panicked. Betsy flung her talent about as lih forehead. I almost felt the sharp pain that stabbed him magic had no limits and no dangers. Since the attack of ti between the eyes. werewolves last June, I hesitated to use any magic outsit He leaned his head back and removed himself trom me the lessons set for me by my uncle. "Pell. . ,. „„*.,;„« Hal walked a wary path between us. He had witnessc The images would vanish. They had shown hun nothing the attack. Indeed, his fireballs had killed one of the hi of the fate of Mary Queen of Scots. They neve ' ™?-™ eous creatures and driven another away. much as he loved the exiled queen his talent, not rtscov- As much as we wanted to forget that werewolves existe .'fed until after the advanced age of twenty-live, comanot we could not. overcome the distance. Or perhaps he could not overcome I spun around so my back was to them and made tli Ihc coldness of her heart „f ,Million sign of the cross. Uncle Donovan's household was n, ('a tholicMary had fled Scotland on the heelsof rebeUum known for great piety. But my father, Uncle Donovan hy her Protestant lords She presented a unique problem deceased twin, had been a Catholic priest. Part of me dun 10 Queen Elizabeth. She kept her cousin in ever closer to the idea that his intense faith offered me a morsel ( •¦nnlinement. English Catholics tried to assas sinatefcJiza-protection. Mb and put Mary on the throne. Parliament screamed for Hal jostled Betsy away from the keyhole. She slammc Mnry's execution. The English queen could nobring; her-against the wall, knocking her head. Surely Uncle Donova «rlf to fall into her father's habit of beheading jque ens must hear us! * llrnry VIII had rid himself of two of his six wive that I wanted to know what occurred on the other side of th w«V. including Elizabeth's mother. Elizabeth hadI settled tor locked door. But I chose a less violent method of findin .'U-cuting Thomas Howard, Duke of Norfolk, the cmei con-out than Betsy and Hal had. Hesitantly, I touched Hal "tplralor in Mary's last major plot. shoulder. I fell into instant rapport with him. Our heari Confused and betrayed at the collapse of the plot tor beat to the same rhythm, we breathed in unison, and ou iwp»l troops and European backers to invade ^ngiana thoughts aligned. I saw what he saw. Uuy had wept copious tears and finally written to Uncle I could not perform this trick with anyone else. Bets Donovan asking for counsel and solace, could not do it all. Jm > u ______ ail II he had gone to her, he had managed to keep it secret Silently we watched as Lord Donovan Kirkwood, twentj hum everyone, "^ m8J£;.Hejdid no^have^perrnisswn seventh Baron of Kirkenwood, took three deep, even breatf "' * ' ~ »«"«' to clear his mind and his heart. As he opened his eyes, li dropped an agate into his scrying bowl. "What does the bowl reveal?" Betsy asked. She clenchi her fists as if preparing to knock Hal aside once more. Hal hushed her with a wave of his hand. "Mary. Show me how my cherished Mary fares," Unci Donovan invoked. Ik mi Elizabeth or from King James of Scotland's regent, i lif Harl of Mar to depart Edinburgh. Did he think his ¦iicspondence with Mary a secret? Not much remained < nl from Betsy for long. And what she knew, Hal and I "in learned. A terrible sense of wrongness possessed me. We'd eaves-li upped on Uncle Donovan's scant privacy. I think Hal felt H Iho. He reared back from the keyhole, rubbing his neck. 14 Irene Radford Guardian of the Promise "But you saw something different this time, Da?" I "Betsy, no!" Uncle Donovan protested He tried-to grab cut to the root of the problem as he always did. I Ik- agate from her. She yanked it out ol his reacn. "Something very different and very frightening," Unulo not know what dark forces you unieasn • • • Donovan replied. He shifted me off his lap. I stood clc "Pish tosh, Da. I'm only making the spell sranger so we by his left shoulder, cuddling into the curve of his am-im penetrate whatever barriers prevent your bpci Betsy dominated his right. Hal moved around the table i niching its target." face us. "Betsy, I know ..." ,. M „ The dogs plunked down where they could find rooi "Your talent is weak, Da. I command this spell, easy in each other's company. One of them passed gas ami you breathe." „ -ii all three set to sniffing out this marvelous event. Not f She captured each of our gazes with her own. w the first time, I wished our family had bred the ancient w became ours. We breathed again in unison un.w i dogs for smaller animals rather than these prized beasulcnt count, Betsy dropped thejigate into ™ w*"jV . that when fully grown stood taller than me at the shouldt «hc touched Hal's and her father s shoulders, closing "First you need more light." Betsy snapped her fingei t irele once more. A tiny flamelet appeared at the end of her index fingt Ilie water rippled outward trom tne She touched it to the oil lamp beside the scrying bowl. Tl < louds roiled and obscured the painted scent of smoked fish combined with the miasma of odo nicasy smoke. , twaT j en _ already filling the room. Then she placed her hand upo The images in the bowl of water streamed ouiwfu, ^ her father's shoulder. "But the light must be balanced." Hal lifted with 15 agate's passage, rose. Clouds of nulling me. Mobs of men with cudgels, women with pitch-h lurks, children with knives and stones ran through streets mind a second lamp from a shelf above the chair in tl willi foreign looking buildings. The mob ™^^™™?~ ;a d „i ,-hensible words. Blood spattered the cobbles, the people, corner. When it rested firmly on the desk, he blew a stead flame upon the wick—like a dragon of old. The Pendragoi When his task was completed, he grasped the larj crockery bowl in both hands and stared into it. I began circle of protection with one hand on Uncle Donovan shoulder, the other on Hal's. Betsy fished the agate out of the bowl. She closed hi eyes and passed her hand over the rumpled water surfao It calmed immediately. The flower design in the bottom of the crockery looke fuzzy. I had to squint to decide what kind of flower, i rose? Mary loved roses. Her rival, Queen Elizabeth, hate them. This symbol should reach out to the woman Unci Donovan loved. "Breathe deeply," Betsy commanded. All four of us tool three long breaths, counting the inhalation to match th exhalation. Then she fished Uncle Donovan's pen knid from the well of writing tools on the desk. She pricked he finger until it bled. Three drops of bright red landed on th agate before she stuck her finger in her mouth and sucko the wound closed. I In- corpses that littered the streets. France, a faded memory whispered to me. I Incle Donovan informing us. Did he relive tl that had cost so many lives ten years ago? He had not Or was it Did he relive the religious Win inai nau tu»i m uuu; ...______, _.. w witnessed the atrocities. But his twin brother, my father, liml. My father, had worked very hard to end the wars. And failed. Betsy's blood had brought us vision of the violence and 1 watched in horror, as a woman hacked at a child with ii butcher knife. "Huguenot chien!" she screamed in French. "Protestant dog." 1 .ach knife thrust stabbed into our group mind. Our eyes, puis, and hearts burned. I gasped for breath, trying to pull awuy from the obscene images. I could not. I reached out with mv mind and melded with the child as he burbled my Illlliu aim uiwiuvw ..---- ---- nwny his life, blood frothing at his mouth. He could not be more than ten years of age—the same age as me. Dead. Dead! "Oo not follow him, Dee!" Uncle Donovan shouted. He 12 Irene Radford Guardian of the Promise 13 Before Betsy could dive into place to watch Uncle Donovan through the keyhole, I reached for the latch. The lock opened for me with a thought; no lock could detain a Kirk-wood for long. 'Twas merely a trick, not true magic, I reassured myself. "Uncle Donovan, what occupies you so that you cannot come riding with us?" I bounced into the room, followed immediately by young Coffa. My familiar was still an ungainly pup, but she never strayed far from me no matter what temptation she sniffed. Hal's Helwriaeth, and Betsy's Brenin, were much bolder and not so firmly attached to my cousins as Coffa was to me. They were also much bigger. Uncle Donovan ruffled Coffa's ears as he drew me onto his lap. I ran my fingers through Uncle Donovan's dark auburn hair. Threads of silver showed brightly in the candlelight. I did not know my guardian's age, only that he was adult and therefore old. My father would have looked like him.] I traced the lines of his face, once more memorizing them^ 1 pretending that my own father still lived. |. Hal had the same dark hair glinting with hints of red^ Betsy was blonde. All three of them had piercing bluerU than-blue eyes. Mine were only a pale misty gray and mjrj hair was brighter, redder. Every time I looked in the mir|; ror, the differences between me and my relatives remindef me that my mother had been a demon-possessed witch whf did not belong to this family. But we all had the same determined thrust to our chini I'd overheard the servants call us stubborn beyond belief. I sighed wistfully. I so wanted to be like this family, wanted to be one of them rather than the orphaned, and illegitimate cousin. I always felt separate from them, an intruder. Betsy and Hal crowded into the room with their dogs. The tiny chamber became redolent with the scent of three big dogs, growing teenage bodies, melting candle wax, and burning coal on the brazier. The room grew warm with all our bodies pressed so close. "We have to help Da find what he needs in the scrying bowl," Hal announced. "And where is your twin, Griffin, Hal?" Uncle Dono-v .m asked. "Sleeping off his exertions on the training field. He takes I I his knighthood business far too seriously, Da." Hal sulked, I tin listing out his lower lip and dropping his gaze to his feet. • "lie and Robin have no need of me in their jousts." He iilcrred to Robin Kirkwood, the young man Uncle Dono- viin had adopted about the same time I came into the household. "Griffin is older than you, Hal, by only an hour, I know, lie will inherit Kirkenwood eventually, so he must learn I he ancient skills of knighthood to protect our household I mm Scottish raiders. You, though, should inherit a far i ililer and more important heritage. With your magical tal-iiil, you may become the next Pendragon of England." "If I do not win the title first," Betsy insisted. Her chin i nine up and out so that she looked as if she peered down upon us all from a lofty height. Both Hal and his brother 3 ] lupped her by several inches. She still looked taller when mIh- assumed that pose. "I might win the title, too," I said meekly. Coffa laid her Hii'al head on my lap as if agreeing with me. "Maybe, maybe not," Uncle Donovan reminded us all. "My Grandmother Raven promised me that my son will he the Pendragon . . . one day. She was never wrong in Iut prophesies, even if the dogs have become confused in rhoosing her successor." The current dominant female wolfhound always bestowed a female pup from her last litter on the current or Ij next Pendragon. No other wolfhounds had the intelligence of a familiar. I had received my first Coffa, a female, from my father's familiar Newynog. She, in turn, had given male l>ups to Hal and Betsy at the same time young Coffa came io me from her last litter. I was still her first choice, but i it her of my cousins could also become the Pendragon, nwigical Guardian of Britain and adviser to monarchs. "Now, Da, what is it you were trying to scry?" Betsy look command of the session. She never liked anyone to i|iiestion her superiority. "What he always looks for: Mary," I replied. I tried to '.inooth the sadness away from his eyes with my fingertips. 14 Irene Radford "But you saw something different this time, Da?" cut to the root of the problem as he always did. "Something very different and very frightening," Un Donovan replied. He shifted me off his lap. I stood close by his left shoulder, cuddling into the curve of his arm. Betsy dominated his right. Hal moved around the table to face us. The dogs plunked down where they could find room, easy in each other's company. One of them passed gas and all three set to sniffing out this marvelous event. Not for the first time, I wished our family had bred the ancient war dogs for smaller animals rather than these prized beasts that when fully grown stood taller than me at the shoulder. "First you need more light." Betsy snapped her fingers. A tiny flamelet appeared at the end of her index finger. She touched it to the oil lamp beside the scrying bowl. The scent of smoked fish combined with the miasma of odors already filling the room. Then she placed her hand upon her father's shoulder. "But the light must be balanced." Hal lifted with his mind a second lamp from a shelf above the chair in the corner. When it rested firmly on the desk, he blew a steady flame upon the wick—like a dragon of old. The Pendragon. When his task was completed, he grasped the large crockery bowl in both hands and stared into it. I began a circle of protection with one hand on Uncle Donovan's shoulder, the other on Hal's. Betsy fished the agate out of the bowl. She closed her eyes and passed her hand over the rumpled water surface. It calmed immediately. y The flower design in the bottom of the crockery looked fuzzy. I had to squint to decide what kind of flower. A rose? Mary loved roses. Her rival, Queen Elizabeth, hated them. This symbol should reach out to the woman Uncle Donovan loved. "Breathe deeply," Betsy commanded. All four of us took three long breaths, counting the inhalation to match the exhalation. Then she fished Uncle Donovan's pen knife from the well of writing tools on the desk. She pricked her finger until it bled. Three drops of bright red landed on the agate before she stuck her finger in her mouth and sucked the wound closed. Guardian of the Promise 15 "Betsy, no!" Uncle Donovan protested. He tried to grab the agate from her. She yanked it out of his reach. "You do not know what dark forces you unleash . . ." "Pish tosh, Da. I'm only making the spell stronger so we can penetrate whatever barriers prevent your spell from reaching its target." "Betsy, I know . . ." "Your talent is weak, Da. I command this spell. Now all of you breathe." She captured each of our gazes with her own. Her will became ours. We breathed again in unison. On the third silent count, Betsy dropped the agate into the water. Then she touched Hal's and her father's shoulders, closing the circle once more. The water rippled outward from the agate's passage. Clouds roiled and obscured the painted rose. Clouds of greasy smoke. The images in the bowl of water streamed outward, engulfing me. Mobs of men with cudgels, women with pitchforks, children with knives and stones ran through streets with foreign looking buildings. The mob screeched incomprehensible words. Blood spattered the cobbles, the people, the corpses that littered the streets. France, a faded memory whispered to me. Or was it Uncle Donovan informing us. Did he relive the religious war that had cost so many lives ten years ago? He had not witnessed the atrocities. But his twin brother, my father, had. My father had worked very hard to end the wars. And failed. Betsy's blood had brought us vision of the violence and death. I watched in horror, as a woman hacked at a child with a butcher knife. "Huguenot chien!" she screamed in French. "Protestant dog." Each knife thrust stabbed into our group mind. Our eyes, ars, and hearts burned. I gasped for breath, trying to pull way from the obscene images. I could not. I reached out th my mind and melded with the child as he burbled way his life, blood frothing at his mouth. He could not be ore than ten years of age—the same age as me. Dead. Dead! "Do not follow him, Dee!" Uncle Donovan shouted. He 16 Irene Radford j turned his head to the side and broke contact with the spell. "Do not give any bit of yourself to death." He shook my shoulders. "Every time you guide a soul onward, a tiny bit of you passes with the reluctant soul." "Betsy, why did your blood guide us to this vision?" Hal asked through gritted teeth. "Dee's father brought the wars to a close more than ten years ago." Fresh blood stained the waters as it stained the streets of Paris. Innocent blood. Not Betsy's. My blood? Every part of me wanted to jerk away from the hideous images of dead bodies strewn about as so much straw in the wind. Blood filled the streets. Stray dogs lapped it up. Rats feasted on the dead and staring eyes of a man cradling his young child in his arms. The babe whimpered for its mother, beyond squalling in fright. The living dashed about seeking more victims, so crazed by their bloodlust, they cared not who became their next victim, friend or foe alike. Part of me remained locked inside the images we had watched. "This is all wrong," Uncle Donovan choked. With great clarity, I knew that we watched events in Paris as they happened, this day, this hour. With or without Betsy's blood, we were meant to see this for a reason. "This is supposed to be a day of joy and celebration," Uncle Donovan gasped. "Catholic King Charles' sister marries Huguenot Henri de Navarre this day. 'Tis supposed to bring a peace between the Catholics and Huguenots, not this . . . this slaughter." And then the images wavered, distorted, became shadows of wolves. Their eyes glowed red with the fires from hell. Behind them stood a slim, swarthy man dressed in black and silver who wore a hook to replace his left hand. "Werewolves," I whispered. Betsy's face turned pale. She swallowed heavily and repeatedly as if choking back bile. "I did not do this!" she cried. Hal's chin trembled and his eyes became huge. He breathed in short painful pants, never getting enough air. He, too, shared the deaths of those he saw in distant Paris, as Uncle Donovan had. And so had I. "Werewolves," I said again. "The Catholics fear that all Huguenots are werewolves. The full moon approaches and Guardian of the Promise 17 it is a blue moon! The second full moon within a calendar month makes werewolves more powerful than usual. Parisians slaughter to protect themselves." Uncle Donovan swept the bowl of water from the table with one long cast of his arm. The crockery shattered as it hit the floor. Water splashed. The dogs yelped and lunged to protect and support their chosen ones. Coffa nipped at my arm, trying desperately to break the thrall that held me in the scenes I had witnessed. I felt a bone break in my wrist. Blood flowed from bite marks, and still I saw the wolves coming for me. "Run for your lives. They will kill us all!" I screamed and fell to the mercy of black nothingness. Chapter 2 19 June, 1574. Sixteenth year of the reign of Gloriana of England, Elizabeth Regina. Sixth year of Mary Queen of Scots' imprisonment. Kirkenwood, near Hadrian's Wall, England. I SORTED through all the fine gowns Uncle Donovan had given me. I kept looking over my shoulder to make sure Betsy and the others continued sleeping. None of the lovely silks and brocades I wore to the court of James of Scotland suited my purpose. I sighed my frustration. Perhaps the wools reserved for the coldest days of winter? I tiptoed past Betsy's bed toward the laundry basket. Two days back at Kirkenwood after months in Edinburgh and we had just finished sorting out the clothes that needed cleaning before storing for the summer. I paused by the narrow window. Below me stood the village of Kirkenwood. Sixty massive standing stones ringed the cluster of houses. Forty more stones had fallen over the centuries. Some remained where they had crashed to the ground and became a wall of a cottage. Other stones had broken up and become field walls or foundations. A few had found their way into the walls of Kirkenwood Castle. Atop the center stone, taller than all the rest, was a lumpy shape that did not belong. Even as I watched, it stirred, flapped and resettled its wings, and became a familiar raven. A solitary, and very cranky bird, had always guarded Kirkenwood. No one knew if it was the same immortal bird, or if another replaced him in secret when he died. Usually he perched on the well, pecking any who dared disturb him. Why had he suddenly shifted his perch to the top of the standing stone as if he watched me? I shuddered slightly and turned away from the silhouette 18 I Guardian of the Promise 19 of the broken circle. Each stone supposedly captured a face within its granite grain. The faces of my ancestors. King Arthur, his mistress Wren, her father the Merlin, my great grandmother Raven who still haunted the halls of the castle. Each of them scowled at me in disapproval. I did not belong here. Their blood coursed through my veins, but my mother had been a foreign witch. She had harbored a demon and wreaked havoc in her wake, including her own death and that of my father. How securely had Uncle Donovan sealed that demon behind his portal to the netherworld? I'd be well rid of those faces in the stones and they of me. Coffa nudged me from behind. I nearly yelped in surprise. I'd told her to watch the gallery for signs of any sleepless wanderers, not hover nearby with her disapproving sighs. She did not like my purpose. She grabbed my wrist and tried to tug me back to bed. That same wrist had healed from the time she broke it in Edinburgh. I was wary of the pain she could cause me. Yet I knew that if I returned to the massive straw mattress I shared with Betsy, Coffa would sprawl atop me to keep me there. I could not allow that. I eased my arm free of her teeth and returned to my search. My fingers found a familiar weave. I pulled it free of the tangle of other clothing, careful not to tip the basket or make any undue noise. Betsy slept lightly, ever conscious of her responsibility as the eldest to keep me and three other orphaned girls of noble birth from running wilder than we already did when at home. Coffa lifted her magnificent head and whined a question. I shushed her with a gesture. She turned three circles and lay down beside me, head up, ears cocked, and disapproval written all over her face. Finally, she laid her head on her paws, one eye closed, the other watching me warily. We'll be gone soon enough, love, I promised my familiar. Within the hour, you and I will be running across the moors toward the sea. She sighed on a snort as if she did not believe I'd really do it. Brenin, Betsy's dog, snored lightly. He never stirred from his position, draped across Betsy's feet. If he awoke, then 20 Irene Radford Betsy would, too. As long as Coffa did not alarm him, >I should be safe. I donned the woolen gown along with thick stockings. Here in the north of England, where the constant wind whistled coldly around the castle ramparts, the heavy weave warmed me nicely. In the sunny countryside around Paris, its weight, warmth, and elegant cut would mark me as out of place. No noblewoman would travel alone and on foot. What else could I wear? In the deepest recesses of my clothes press I found a faded russet gown. Not the green I favored, but eminently suitable for my quest. Simple. Serviceable. And only slightly too large. In another year, when I finished growing and my breasts filled out, it would fit admirably. The extra length I could tuck up at the waist. Where had the dress come from? I did not remember seeing it before. It smelled ... of rosemary and lavender and Aunt Meg. The only mother I had ever known. Mad Meg, Uncle Donovan's sister. Her mind wandered between reality and her own nightmares. She resorted to nursery rhymes and songs to cover her confusion. She also appeared and disappeared at will. No one knew for certain where she wandered in between. No matter. I needed the gown she had left. I discarded the forest-green gown and stuffed it into the bottom of my pack. The russet I threw on over my shift along with a sturdy leathern bodice that would serve as a corset—not that I really needed one yet. But Aunt Fiona, Uncle Donovan's other sister, widowed and needing someone to manage, insisted I learn to be a lady. She seemed determined to stamp out all memory of my mother's peasant heritage. But my mother, Roanna Douglas, had another heritage that no one spoke of. Once and once only, Uncle Donovan had told me the terrible truth of how Tryblith, the Demon of Chaos, had dominated my mother her entire adult life. She had seduced my father—a Catholic priest and avowed celibate. She had finally regretted her alliance with the demon and crept off to Aunt Meg's hermitage in a faery circle. Mad Meg had woven magical protection around the circle that kept the demon at bay during my birth. As soon as my mother could, she crept away from Meg's protection Guardian of the Promise 21 and rejoined her demon. She loved me enough to leave me with Aunt Meg rather than risk exposing me to the demon. Still, Uncle Donovan feared that I had been tainted by the demon during the months my mother carried me in" her womb. I feared it, too; often wondered if the demon in me had attracted the werewolves that killed Malcolm. I had given up wandering the woods around the lake and the kirk for fear the werewolves would come again to claim me. But I could not allow that fear to stop me now. I had a mission to accomplish. 'Twas my responsibility. I shuddered once more, suddenly chilled, and dismissed the memory. I had more important things to do. Satisfied that I had packed all that I would need on my journey and could safely carry, including my father's rosary tucked deep in the bottom of the pack because it was illegal to possess such a thing in England these days, I donned a simple kerchief wimple and sturdy clogs for my feet and hoisted the bag to my back. At the doorway I hesitated long enough to look back, making certain that Betsy and Brenin slept soundly. I didn't need to check on Coffa. I knew she followed closely. Her !>resence was as constant as my own heartbeat and my ungs drawing breath. Somehow she managed to keep her claws from clicking on the stone flooring. Satisfied, I eased the door closed, using both hands until I could drop the latch in place with my mind. A ghostly hand rested lightly on my shoulder. I jumped and gasped. My heart beat double time. "Da?" The preternatural touch became real. Not the ghostly presence of my father. "Going somewhere?" Hal asked from right behind me. And right behind him stood Helwriaeth, a full hand taller at the shoulder than my Coffa and more massive across those shoulders. Coffa, the traitor, wagged her tail happily at her litter-mate. She should have warned me that my cousin approached on silent feet. "Wherever you are going, cousin, I go with you," Hal announced. He kept his voice down rather than invite Betsy's wild temper and viper tongue. 22 Irene Radford At thirteen, his voice sometimes cracked and deepened to adult tones. In the throes of excitement, however, he'd still break into a boy's soprano. "No," I said, drawing Hal away from the doorway toward the gallery. The central keep of Kirkenwood still resembled a medieval hall, one huge dining chamber rising two full stories. The musicians' gallery overhung the back half of the hall. The lord's chamber and the girls' bedroom led off the gallery. The gallery above the hall led other places than just the two primary bedrooms. I knew the secret of the hidden passages. Unfortunately, so did Hal. "I have to do this alone, Hal," I insisted. "No, you do not. We're cousins. We both have magic." He didn't say that we both had a claim to the title of Pen-dragon. But we would have to earn it first. "This is my responsibility." I truly wanted Hal's company on this frightening journey. Of all of the family, he alone made me feel a part of the whole. But I could not expose him to the risks. "You are only twelve, Dee. You cannot do this alone." "Do what?" I stopped short of the hidden door, crossing my arms beneath the buds of my breasts. My women's courses had not yet started, but my body was changing! getting ready. I was an adult in body, mind, and spirit, f I could manage this task on my own. f: So why did my knees and hands tremble in fear? I "You are running away to correct something your mothe| left undone." Hal's tone became fierce with anger or frus^ tration, I could not tell the difference at the moment. I should have been able to. I Rather than crane my neck to look him in the eye—he'd be as tall as his da 'ere long—I stared at his throat apple? just above the top of my head. ; "No, Hal, I'm running to Paris to correct something Roanna Douglas made very wrong." He stared me down, knowing I could not withstand that midnight gaze as he probed deep into my soul. "I have read some of my father's journal," I said quietly. Not that I had understood much of what I read. "Da would never give you permission ..." Guardian of the Promise 23 "I do not need permission. I found them and read my father's thoughts and recountings as is my right! I am the daughter of the last Merlin of Britain. I need to know everything that happened to him, everything that led to his death. Including my mother's . . . Roanna's descent into madness and her congress with the demon." "She didn't cause the St. Bartholomew's Eve massacre two years ago," Hal said gently. He had leaped ahead of my explanation. The rapport between us was strong. "She was nearly nine years dead when that happened." "But she and her demon sowed the seeds of religious conflict so that they could reap chaos and more chaos. I think she left behind werewolves to perpetuate that chaos." I spoke the last sentence with both my voice and mind, the better to penetrate his stubborn head. "The Due de Guise is dead. Assassinated. Without him stirring up animosity, the Huguenot leaders came to accord with Queen Regent Catherine de Medici." "Roanna's lover, the Due de Guise, is dead. His son is even more rabid in his persecution of the Huguenots. And the new king of France is firmly under de Guise's control. Henri III returns to Paris from Poland any day now— probably with a pack of werewolves. He will end his mother's regency and her policy of tolerance. He will unleash another slaughter. I have to stop it." "How?" How indeed? I sighed to cover my frantic searching for ideas. "I must get close to Henri III. Then I shall weave a protective barrier around him so that he sees and hears only the truth. De Guise will not be able to influence him anymore." I made up my plans as I spoke. "Then I shall work no more magic. You and Betsy must determine between you who is truly the next Pendragon." "You can't do it alone." "I won't risk you or anyone else. This is my responsibility." "What sea captain will take a young maid alone across the Channel? What hostler will sell or rent a horse or carriage to a young maid alone? What bandit will allow a young maid alone to traverse France unmolested?" He 24 Irene Radford lifted one eyebrow in imitation of his father. When Uncle Donovan faced me with that expression, he made me search my heart for the truth. If I did that now, I would not follow through with my responsibility. "Get out of my way!" I thrust him aside and lunged foif the panel with the hidden latch. • Hal stumbled over Coffa's formidable body. As he righted himself, arms flailing and making a great deal of noise, I latched and locked the portal behind me. He'd not follow through this passage without waking the entire household and destroying much of the wainscoting. But I did not count upon his ingenuity, or his willingness to enlist aid. Chapter 3 "WAKE up, Griff." Hal shook his twin's shoulder. Urgency made him rougher than he intended. In one smooth movement, Griffin grabbed a knife from beneath his bolster and pressed it against Hal's throat. Then he woke up. "Sorry, Hal," he mumbled, ready to go back to sleep. "Stay awake, Griff." Hal shook him again. "I need your help." Griffin opened one eye. "Unusual. You needing my help." He pushed himself up, resting his back against the bolster. He stretched his arms wide, straining his shirt, an old one, across his chest and shoulders. All of his hours of practice in the tilt yard had built more muscle than Hal had. Griff's beard was also coming in darker and coarser than Hal's. He knew a swift pang of jealousy. Unfair that his twin matured more rapidly than he. "Can't you just wiggle your fingers and mumble some magic, spell?" Griff yawned. "Not this time." Hal fumbled lighting a candle. The flint and steel would not spark properly. After three tries he gave up, and snapped his fingers. A flamelet stood on the end of his finger. He touched it to the wick. It flared high. The only problem was he'd have to extinguish it with magic. The flame would be impervious to mundane smothering. He held the light up to make the shadows retreat to the far corners. "It's Dee. She's running away. We have to make her take me with her." "Easier to stop her." Fully awake now, Griffin rolled off the wide bed and pulled on sturdy riding breeches. "We need Betsy." 25 26 Irene Radford "Do you want to wake Betsy up out of a sound sleep? Hal shuddered. His sister might turn him into a rat or I raven or a worm for such an affront. I "I'd rather fight off two dozen raiders of the Kerr claft by myself. Without a sword." Griff shuddered, too. "Bui there's no help for it. If we are going to deter Dee fron| whatever she has set her mind to, we need Betsy." s, "Together, then. You hold her hands, I'll stun her wit|i, some kind of magic." Hal shrugged, wishing he had a betjf ter plan. «. "Never confront your sister with only half a plan," GriiJ warned him. "Right. I'll hold a ball of cold fire beneath her nose. It she tries anything, she gets burned. The threat of scarp should deter her." ^ "That's the only thing that might deter Mary Elizabetl Kirkwood." v Together, Hal and his twin crept from their room at thf back of the Hall, up the broad staircase to the gallery. T( gether, as they had always been. "If you go with Dee, I go, too," Griff whispered. Hal eased a bit in the shoulders, relieved that he and hi| twin would not be separated. But they already had begi to drift apart. Hal spent more time studying his magic. Gril nearly lived in the tilt yard or studying the Steward's led| gers. Griff showed evidence of maturing physically. H could not seem to grow beyond his skinny chest and ha less face. "What if it doesn't work out that way?" Hal asked, afraicj of the answer. "Then you and I will find other ways to keep our mind: in contact. You do it to me all the time, showing me m; opponent's next move, sharing your latest discovery fro deep in the woods, finding me when I'm out riding." Hal grabbed his brother in a quick embrace, opening his mind to communication. As long as they both lived, nei of them would be alone. "This isn't finding Dee," Betsy said from the doorway t the girls' bedchamber. Fully dressed, she looked as if sh had arisen and groomed herself after a full night's sleep. Her wolfhound, Brenin, still blinked sleepily, tail droop ing. He rocked back, bottom up, head down, stretching hi sithel Guardian of the Promise 27 forelegs. At the apex of the movement he yawned, showing his sharp teeth to one and all. Then he shifted his weight forward, stretching his hind legs, followed by another yawn. A brief shake all over and he looked as fit and ready as his mistress. "How do we get past the guards?" Griff asked as the three trooped down the stairs. He sidestepped over the center of the third riser that always squeaked. Hal climbed onto the banister and slid downward to avoid the fifth step that groaned. Betsy glided down the far side, hugging the wall. The dogs, of course, bounced down, letting their claws click against the wood. That was a normal sound. The dogs took turns prowling the castle at night, guarding against intruders. "Haven't you boys figured out how to master the geas Father put on the guards and the gates?" Betsy returned once they were all safe back in the Hall. Hal and Griffin shrugged in unison. "You have not tried hard enough. Or thought deep enough. Go ready the horses. I'll tend to the guards." Betsy tossed her head in disdain. "How?" Hal asked. He watched her eagerly for signs of the spell she must prepare for the onerous task of breaking through their father's magic. Betsy smiled enigmatically in the gloom. Then she fished her eating knife out of her scrip, bared her arm, and sliced deeply along the underside of her forearm. "Easy," she replied. Hal crossed himself hastily. "Da has forbidden you to use dark magic," he breathed. "Da is not here," she spat back. "Now do you want to rescue our cousin or not?" With my palm against the wall to guide me, I traversed the first quarter of my journey from memory. Coffa knew the way as well as I, and she trotted ahead of me, comfortable in the dark, but uncomfortable with the nature of my mis- 28 Irene Radford 'i sion. I thought a ghostly hand guided me. At the fork in I the tunnel, the hand urged me to the left. So did Coffa. \ Neither my familiar nor my da wanted me to go to France. I had to do this. I could not live with myself if the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre repeated itself at Henri Ill's coronation. I called a ball of cold flame to my palm. It sputtered to life reluctantly, not liking the stale air this deep beneath the surface. But Pridd—Earth—was my element. With my feet firmly grounded I brought forth the element opposite to my own. Tanio—Fire—gave me only a weak and flickering light, enough to keep me from tripping over the rough passage that led through the natural cave system beneath the castle tor. "Good-bye, Da," I sighed. "I have to do this." The presence faded into the stone walls. I turned right and began the long descent down slippery stairs to the caves beneath the castle. Coffa protested. She wanted to continue on the familiar route to the lair, the family archives of arcane history and alchemy. I insisted and grabbed the thick ruff of her neck. She sat on her haunches and stubbornly refused to consider my route. I tugged again with both mind and hands. Reluctantly, she allowed me to drag her into the side tunnel. If she had truly resisted, I'd never budge her bulk. Uncle Donovan rarely, if ever, used the tunnels anymore. The dampness in the stone walls bothered an old wound in his left thigh. But Betsy, Hal, and I found infinite inspiration in exploring and believing we eluded our elders. Hal's twin, Griffin, probably knew of the ancient escape route. The laird of the castle must know these things. And Hal could keep few secrets from him. But Griffin had no magic and thus had little use for the hidden rooms with their collections. At last the ground leveled out. I caught glimpses of stalagmites and stalactites, some grown into thick columns. I wended my way carefully around the puddles and debris from old rockfalls. Coffa splashed deliberately into the center of each depression, making certain I shared the water with her. Frequently, she planted her huge body between me and Guardian of the Promise 29 my destination—often filling the only clear path between obstacles. She truly did not like this plan. Each time, I had to force her to move with a sharp probe from my mind to hers. Each time she cooperated with less ease. Then I reached the tombs. A huge cavern off to my right provided a last resting place for many of my ancestors. Hal and Betsy avoided this place. I had a unique affinity for it. Since Earth was my element, did I commune more easily with the deceased spirits that rested within in it? Without hesitation, I took the extra moment to pause beside the large sarcophagus in the center. It dominated all the others in size and importance. Centuries of cave drip had coated the carved figure atop the stone lid with a smooth coating as shiny as marble. But to me, the square and determined features of Arturo Rex stood out bold and clear. I kissed my fingertips and placed them upon the mouth of the carved effigy. Then I repeated the gesture on the simple stone box beside him. His beloved Wren lay at peace to his right, his counselor and lover in death as she had been in life. But a small dark chasm separated them still. My ancestress had never been wife to the love of her life. Silently I wept for their ancient tragedy, so close to the story of my own parents. Or so I liked to think. I slept more easily thinking that Roanna and Griffin truly loved each other despite his church and her demon that kept them separate. Like Arthur and Wren, they lay together in death where they could not in life. But not here. Someday I would journey to Aunt Meg's hermitage and the faery circle where Uncle Donovan had buried them. Actually, he had buried my father and left Roanna to rot. Meg had brought my mother to her final resting place. Coffa licked the stone face of Arthur and the tiny etching of a wren on the companion stone coffin, making her own reverence to my ancestors and one of her own, rumored to rest at Wren's feet. I bowed my head a moment in silent prayer for courage. A sense of peace flooded through me. Ghostly light rose up around me. A huge cauldron floated in the chill air. Tendrils of colored life flowed out of its foaming depths. 30 Irene Radford The threads tangled and wrapped around each other. At the same time they reached out to embrace every living thing, plant, animal, tree, or lowly weed. Bright points of light popped into view. They flew wild circles around the cauldron of life, the graal of my ancestors, the Grail of legend. "Faeries?" I breathed to Coffa. I had not seen my friends since that day two years ago when the werewolves had attacked us. My dog danced about, trying to nip the creatures as they flitted about the tomb. The faeries tugged at her whiskers and sat on her nose. I spun a circle in delight at the wondrous display. Behind me stood a glowing image of a man in regal armor from a long forgotten century. He held up a magnificent sword. Red runes of power coursed down the blade. "Arthur?" I gasped. For answer, he dipped the tip of the sword, tapping each of my shoulders lightly. I reached up to touch the points of honor he had bestowed upon me. A slight tingle coursed up my fingers. My mind filled with a glowing peace. Then he smiled. I saw in that spectral expression traces of every man in my family. "I pray that I have the courage to complete this quest with honor and dignity," I whispered. He looked briefly at Wren's tomb, beside his own. So like her. Godspeed, little one. With those few words he vanished. So did the faeries and the cauldron of life. I heaved a sigh of regret that he did not accompany me. I would have to make do with the memory of this wondrous moment. "We have his blessing on this quest," I whispered to Coffa, too awed to speak aloud. She still did not agree with me and tried to go back the way we had come. "I can't," I told her. A few sharp yanks on her neck ruff ¦nd she followed me with dragging feet. From the tomb I hurried back into the main passage and into .in anteroom. My witchlight faltered and died in my Guardian of the Promise 31 hand. I had to go slowly here, painfully stubbing my toes on the uneven ground. Here, so close to my goal of escape, I wanted to hurry. But Coffa stood in my way once more. She enclosed my wrist in her huge mouth, urging me back the way we had come. I sighed and carefully separated my flesh from her teeth before she became insistent and clamped down on me with the massive jaws meant to crush bones and tear the throats out of wolves. "No, Coffa. We have to do this," I reminded her in hushed tones. I do not know why I didn't want my voice echoing around the cavern. She shifted her grip to my sleeve. I yanked it free and stood my ground. She whined and dropped her head. I had won this confrontation, but I could envision others when I would not. With as much determination as I could muster in the face of my dog's supposed wisdom, I gathered her neck ruff in my hand and proceeded. At least Hal should not have caught up with me yet. The main gate of Kirkenwood was heavily guarded, and the men had orders from Lord Donovan himself not to allow any of the children exit past sunset, no matter what coercion we provided. My uncle had placed a magical compulsion or geas on the men so that they were immune to childish magical persuasion. Hal and I had tried and failed too many times to count to escape through the main gate. At last, I smelled the fresh green of the bushes that obscured the narrow exit from the cavern. Hal and Griffin could no longer squeeze through the tiny crack. Betsy also had grown too much to use this route. They were condemned to pass through the crypt to an iron gate and exit through the church that stood at the base of the castle crag beside the lake. Father Peter spent too many midnight hours on his knees in the church for me to risk passage past him. Sharp stones scratched my back and threatened to trap my shoulders. But Earth was my element. I persuaded the bones of the Earth to let me pass with a minimum of damage. In another year, when my breasts filled out, I doubted I'd be able to manage this escape. 32 Irene Radford Coffa made it through the crack because she was one of the smallest females the family wolfhounds had ever whelped. And because I worked with Earth to help her through. They were waiting for me. All three of them, Betsy, Hal, and Griffin, with the two wolfhounds, Helwriaeth and Brenin. Four horses dozed, hipshot, nearby. "How did you get out the gates?" I heaved a sigh. Then I saw the gash on Betsy's forearm. She had used blood to break Uncle Donovan's geas on the guards. Chapter 4< DONOVAN opened his eyes abruptly. Something, some noise, some presence, had awakened him. He lay immobile while he extended his senses. "Martha?" Sometimes the ghost of his second wife visited him, usually to reprimand him for something. But she always forgave him afterward. He smiled in memory at how well she used to forgive him in bed. But that was before her untimely death. "Ah, Martha, if you'd only shown a little patience and not gone off to London where the plague could get you." The sound came again. Not Martha's imperious sniff. Did he hear a raven cawing in the distance? Whatever had disturbed his restless sleep eluded him. Perhaps he woke from worry over Elizabeth's latest missive. A straightforward summons written by a secretary and signed with Elizabeth's broad strokes. Below that, written in a coded and crabbed hand, Elizabeth had said Donovan must come to London immediately to help her deal with "five men/wolves who waited at her door." Werewolves. The same ones that had attacked Dee two years ago? He tried counting the children's different heartbeats. Betsy he found easily. Her heart had always been slow, calm, and strong. Griffin and Hal had faster rhythms, difficult to separate them from each other. They were too much alike. He had to listen carefully to make sure he heard two separate boys and not one. But tonight he heard only one. Which one was missing? A quick scan for Dee proved her missing as well. Damn. If Dee was out prowling, then Hal was her companion. 33 34 Irene Radford He rolled to the side of the bed and grabbed his aching head in both hands. Too much wine last night. Wine to help him sleep when his thoughts looped obsessively around plans to break through Elizabeth's guards to see Mary. He sighed, as deeply and expressively as Deirdre did, and threw off the counterpane. Rubbing his gritty eyes, he swung his legs over the side of his very large, very empty bed. Since the death of his second wife, Martha, twelve years ago, he'd shared this particular bed with no woman. Something about its massiveness kept reminding him that this was the laird's bed and belonged only to the laird of Kir-kenwood and his lady. Martha reminded him of that with each ghostly visit. He'd warmed other beds with other women, but only one woman drew his heart these days. Mary. He couldn't find her in any scrying bowl and Elizabeth refused him permission time and again to visit Mary's latest prison. Had Elizabeth done something to hurt Mary? He had to know. The miscast love spell had died with Roanna, Deir-dre's unlamented mother, but Donovan had discovered that his love for the exiled queen went deeper than the spell. Mary occupied all of his waking and most of his sleeping thoughts now. He sought refuge in wine to dull his mind. He should check on the children. He rubbed his temples. The thought fled almost as quickly as it came. Perhaps if he scried one more time he'd find solace in a glimpse of Mary. The water in the pitcher beside his washbasin was stale, the basin dirty. The good crockery bowls were all in the lair deep within the gatehouse foundations. Not a place he liked to trek to this late at night. He found an old doublet and trunk hose, stuffing his long shirt into them awkwardly. No matter that the tail hung out. He was only going to the well and back. In the dark hours after midnight no one should be about. Except perhaps the cranky old raven. He considered lighting a candle. He did not need one. The night sky never turned truly dark this far north in J Guardian of the Promise 35 Twas a night twixt spring and summer, the time twixt midnight and dawn. The time when ghosts caught twixt this life and heaven walked the halls of Kirkenwood. Donovan shuddered and opened the door from his c'hamber. You promised to guard her! A voice hissed at Donovan. "Raven?" he whispered. He had feared his grandmother in life. He feared her more since her death. Silence so heavy he could barely breathe. "What must I do, Raven?" he whispered to his long dead grandmother. Guard her! "Which her?" His sister, Mad Meg, came first to his mind. But Meg required solitude to live with the hurts indicted upon her during one of those horrible Scottish raids of their youth. She had retired to the hermitage below a crag where she could tend a very special faery circle and a tomb. "Betsy?" Donovan asked his grandmother's ghost. The heavy darkness of the gallery grew thicker yet. Like a soaking mist upon the moors. More like the miasma of a vision induced dream. "Deirdre," he sighed. He should have guessed that troubled child first. Ever since he'd told her about her mother and the demon Tryblith, she had grown more defiant of his authority and more stubborn about discovering the truth about her parents. Some things a maid of twelve should not know. The darkness lightened. "What is she up to this time?" Then he remembered that he could not find Dee's heartbeat, nor Hal's among the children. How could he forget such a thing? Too much wine, and too deep a loneliness for Martha. Or Mary. Or some warm and loving woman. He called a bit of light to his palm. He'd best check the chamber next to his own, just to make sure he had not dreamed her absence from his magical count of his charges. An almost physical yank pulled him away from the doorway of the girls' bedchamber. The little ball of cold light burned brighter, hotter. Donovan shook it free of his hand before his skin blistered. The ball bounced through the air. 36 Irene Radford Shadows faded before it. Dust motes gathered behind it, taking on the vague outline of a woman with intense blu* eyes that snapped at him in impatience. "Raven." He retreated slightly before the manifestation of his grandmother. She pointed at the crack in the dark wainscoting that wai the only indication more than stone walls lay beyond. A tiny tuft of brindled gray dog hair fluttered slightly hi the preternatural breeze that followed Raven's movements. Donovan sucked air through his teeth. "Tell me, Raven, that she has merely gone to the lair in search of her father's journals." He'd hidden them time and again and she always seemed to find them. She has already read the scribblings of your twin, but she does not understand them. "Then perhaps she wishes to experiment with herbal! or alchemy." You know she has not. "Then where will she go?" He knew she'd easily traverse the tunnels to the crypt behind the church—the Kirk in the Woods that gave the barony its name. All of the children explored the tunnels. Just as Donovan had with his twin Griffin and their sister Meg. But he always made certain he knew when his children and his wards had sneaked a for their games and when they returned. Twice he'd to rescue young Griffin and Hal from climbing danger* chimneys within the caverns. The passage had narrow^ abruptly and the boys had become trapped before they jfcH alized their predicament. He himself had got stuck in one at the age of nine. Raven and his brother had freed hint, You know in your heart where her conscience will h her. ?f Donovan didn't bother to reply as he raced back into bis chamber for his boots and coat. "I pray I'm in time rtO stop her." *"¦ i-. &¦¦•'¦ Guardian of the Promise 37 "If you must go to Paris, Dee, we are going with you," r&lj insisted. He did not like this one little bit. And neither did 1 Helwriaeth. The chill midnight air raised goose bumps on his arms. The dog clung tight by his heels and whined. This close to the family cemetery, inside and outside the caves, he envisioned all kinds of spectral interference. He wished this midnight confrontation with only a sliver of moon showing could take place anywhere but near the cemeteries. "If you all go with me, then Uncle Donovan will be forced to come after us," Deirdre said quietly. "Queen Elizabeth will throw him into the Tower for ignoring his summons to court and leaving the country without her passport. He is supposed to leave for London at dawn. He can't be allowed to follow us to Paris." None of them could argue with her logic—though Hal wanted to. He could not allow her to be right this time. Just because Uncle Griffin the Elder's wolfhound had chosen her to be the next Pendragon by bestowing a favored female pup upon her just before dying did not make Deirdre the only candidate for the position. Nor did it I make her wiser than the rest of them put together. "Deirdre is correct," Betsy confirmed. Hal glared at her. "One of us must go with her and two must stay," Betsy ||inished, completely ignoring Hal. "I am the warrior. I shall protect her," Griffin announced. jjHe partially drew his short sword. "You are the heir, the one Da must retrieve if you disappear," Hal corrected his twin. "My magic will protect her [better than your sword. What chance have you of holding [off a dozen brigands with only a single sword?" Griffin bristled with indignation. He looked just like one [of the dogs when cornered. "I am a more suitable chaperone," Betsy said. She rolled [her eyes, as if all of the children in the household were a f tremendous burden upon her. Betsy tucked a stray blonde [curl back into her netted caul as if it were one of the of-f fending children. Even at this midnight hour she appeared [neat and meticulously groomed. "You, Betsy, are also the most tempting target for brig-lands to ravish," Griffin said firmly. He faced his older sister, hands on hips, eyebrow raised in imitation of their father's sternness. w w$ 38 Irene Radford Hal had to hold back a giggle. A quick look at Dee and he realized that the heir to Kirkenwood was already a match for both Betsy and their father in stubbornness. "If only Aunt Meg were still here. She'd go with me,*' Dee sighed. She edged deeper into the shadow. Hal caught a glimmer of the enticement she spun into the mind of one of the horses. In the same instant he recognized her plan to escape while her cousins argued. He could not allow that. "I'm going with you," he announced. He aimed a bit of compulsion in Dee's direction. Her head reared back and her eyes widened. Coffa growled and raised her neck ruff. "Don't you ever try to compel me again," she snarled. "I'll do what I have to, to keep you safe. Nothing else is important," Hal confessed lowering his eyes. "He's right," Griffin said quietly. "He is the logical one to go with you. Betsy and I will keep Da here and misdirect any agent he sends in your wake." "Just do what you have to do and return to England quickly," Betsy added. "I do not like the feel of this. It's .., it's as if someone ... no something awaits you with bated breath, licking its chops." "Werewolves," Dee breathed. She turned paler in the thin light. A chill breeze smelling slightly of sulfur and blood turned Hal's skin to gooseflesh. LOO! Chapter 5 A NEW scent overlaid the damp earth, horse, dog, and four teenage bodies. My sense of urgency increased. "He's coming." I vaulted onto the nearest horse, not caring that I appropriated Griffin's blood-bay gelding. My own dun mare was not so fleet or strong of heart. I drew the scent of sweet hay and warm bran mash from the earth and reminded the horse of how good a gentle currying felt. He settled easily under my firm hands. Griffin babbled a protest. No one but Griffin, not even the stable hands, dared ride the headstrong beast. They did not know how to touch the animal's mind. But I did. Hal grinned hugely as he mounted his own golden bay gelding. His was equally headstrong but not nearly so mean. Without further explanation or farewell, I rammed my heels into the horse's sides and touched his mind with my own sense of urgency. He leaped forward, as eager for the run as I. "Hal and I need to be beyond pursuit by the time Uncle Donovan reaches you," I threw over my shoulder to Betsy and Griff. Griffin continued to stare after us, mouth opening and closing in astonishment, like a puppet during the May Day festival shows. A raven lifted from the rooftree of the church porch. It followed us a short way into the woods, then veered off to return to the castle well where it normally roosted. Betsy assumed command, as she did so well. Within a few heartbeats, she had shoved Griffin atop my mare and mounted her own. Once seated in the saddle, Griffin regained his senses. They galloped around the lake heading 39 40 Irene Radford south, Brenin leading the way. Hal and I rode due eafct toward the sunrise and the port at Tynemouth. "I hope you remembered to bring some money for pap-sage," Hal grumbled. He whipped his horse with his reinll, leaning low over the saddle in an effort to keep up with mp. "Some," I replied. The wind caught in my throat, robbir|| me of breath as well as words. - "Enough?" he asked, drawing alongside. He showed his teeth in feral glee at the competition to pull ahead of niy horse. , I knew he and Griff raced wildly across the moors, yt knew the horses were evenly matched. But I could not risk a headlong race. There was too much at stake this night, too many miles, and too many challenges ahead of us. i "My father had the gift of visions," I said, reining in the horse a little. He did not want to curb his natural desire ijo stay ahead of his stable mate. I insisted with my mind 4s well as a shift of balance and tighter reins. ¦" With a snort of disgust, the beast slowed a little. •, Hal kept his own mount close beside me. "Complete trie thought, little cousin," he said, a bit breathless from the wild gallop. u "I have had no vision, but I sense terrible danger ahea«|, Hal. I do not like that you will be at risk because of rrfy quest." C "And I do not like that you will put yourself at risk. But I cannot stop you, so I will stay with you and protect you as I can." "Noble thoughts, cousin. But will they hold when you face fire, pain, and terrible loss of self?" The words spilled out of my mouth unbidden. To my own ears they sounded as if uttered by an alien throat. The sense that some other spirit used me as a vessel to impart a message made me shudder uncontrollably. Magic opened wondrous possibilities. It also tempted the wielderg with power and made them vulnerable to other magical creatures—such as werewolves. >; . I sighed, knowing that in the days and weeks to come j would face dangers I could not imagine and power wouljl tempt me sorely. Guardian of the Promise 41 "Where have they gone?" Donovan asked his daughter and son. He had to clench his back teeth to keep from shouting. They would only see his loss of control as a weakness they could exploit. He had no illusions that he could overcome any spell Betsy cast. She'd been a stronger magician than he ever would be by the time she was three. Once she had moved through the torment of puberty, her talent had blossomed as well as her beauty. He almost pitied the man she married. That choice would have to be hers. Any man he picked for wealth, status, or alliance of titles and lands, would end up on his butt in the midden. Betsy would marry only of her own choice at the time of her choosing. If Martha had lived, she might have curbed Betsy's aggression. Though a mundane, without a scrap of magic, Martha had a way of maintaining control of one and all in her circle. But alas, Martha had left him and then died. "Answer me, Griffin," Donovan stared at his eldest legitimate son. This boy had no magic. So unless Betsy had already tampered with his will, Donovan could still intimidate and dominate him. The boy gulped. His throat apple bobbed, too large for his skinny neck. He'd grow into it eventually. Soon. "Where have Hal and Dee gone?" He wound a thread of compulsion into his words. His magical vision saw the tendril of blue energy spiral down into the boy's eye. Then it snapped abruptly. Donovan jerked his head away as the magic backlashed into his own eye. He had to shake his head and close his eyes a moment to regain his composure. When the world righted again, Betsy smiled back at him sweetly. "I ought to turn you over my knee and thrash you for that, young lady." Donovan clenched and released his fists repeatedly, knowing he'd never hit her, or any of the children entrusted to him. Other disciplines worked better than blows. 42 Irene Radford Betsy maintained her slightly jeering, knowing expression. "Instead, I shall send you to your Aunt Meg." "But . . ." Betsy gasped. "A few months living off the bounty of the land, releasing the ancient rituals, tending your uncle's grave, and wi|h no company other than your slightly mad aunt will rnafe you think about the consequences of your actions." b "But . . ." $>¦¦ "Think about the danger Hal and Dee face. Think abofert the possibility that they will die while on this wild escapade. Think, child." | He gave them a moment for those thoughts to sink in| "Now, where have they gone?" He turned his attention back to Griffin. He should react most strongly to the posit* bility of losing his twin, his other half, his other self. ; As Donovan had lost his own twin, to long separation over a petty quarrel and then to death. The perpetual hole in his emotional gut gaped open. / am here. A spectral hand seemed to touch his shoulder. The pain lessened a little. r I've had enough ghosts this night, Donovan whispered to his brother. Go haunt your daughter and counsel her away from this insane quest. h "F . . . France," Griffin stammered staring at his boofp. "Dee feels responsible for the last massacre of Huguenofk She must prevent another from occurring at Henri Ill's coronation." * "Fool!" Donovan exploded with rage once more, rfe paced wide circles around the children. His left thigh ach|d in the perpetual damp and from the strain of tonight's upsets. But he could not remain still, nursing the old injury. He paced and trod uneven circles and loops, visiting each corner of the Hall as well as all the empty places between. "How does she think she can do that? And what makes her think the first mob reacted to her?" r "Her mother's demon sowed the seeds of Chaos," Betsy replied. "Dee must counter the effects of that Chaos to keep it from invading her as well." r• Did she sound smug? Or did she merely recite facts? » Donovan hadn't really expected an answer. Now that Be had one, it made sense. Betsy's refusal to meet his gaze did Guardian of the Promise 43 not make sense. She knew something more. Or a different truth. "You," he pointed to Griffin, "saddle my horse. You," he pointed at Betsy, "summon my secretary while I pack." He stomped toward the stairs to the gallery. Griffin scuttled out. "Da, stop and think, as you commanded us to do," Betsy pleaded. Donovan halted, one foot raised to mount the first tread. He put it back down on the floor and turned slowly toward his daughter. All the while his mind worked furiously, planning his route, trying to outthink wild and precocious Deirdre. "Da, Elizabeth will throw you into the Tower for leaving England without her passport. For ignoring her latest summons to London. You will lose what little chance you have of gaining Elizabeth's permission to visit Mary." The last stopped him. He did not fear the Tower. Elizabeth needed him to spy for her in Edinburgh. She would not allow him to linger long within the fortress prison. But Mary . . . Donovan drew a deep breath and returned his wandering attention to the current problem. He had to stop his son and niece from falling into another tragedy compounded by innocent error. "Send Robin, your secretary, after Hal and Dee. Do not go yourself," Betsy pleaded. She reached up on tiptoe and hung a golden chain about his neck. The weight of a heart-shaped locket suspended from it. Betsy applied a lingering kiss to his cheek. "Wear this in London. It contains a lock of my hair. Touch it and you will be in contact with me. I will keep you informed of what Dee and Hal do in France." "Thank you, Betsy," Donovan said. "I shall send Thorn Steward. He has more love and patience for those two than Robin." As useful, precise, and meticulous as Robin might be with documents and diplomatic details, he was a solitary young man, little older than Betsy. Nor did Donovan dare risk the well-being of the boy that Elizabeth Regina doted upon but could never acknowledge as her own. Robin's parentage remained Donovan's secret now that his twin had died. "But Robin has noble bearing and speech," Betsy pro- 44 Irene Radford tested. "He'd have much better luck . . ." She reached to press her fingertips against the locket. Donovan backed away, unsure why. "Do you wish Robin's absence more than the return of your brother and cousin?" he asked arching one eyebrow at his headstrong daughter. "Mayhap, dear Betsy, you are jealous that Robin's affections belong to the daughter of a glassworker. I believe you desire his absence merely to separate him from Faith." Betsy buried her face in her hands and fled. Her shoulders shook with her sobs as she went. "The course of true love never did run smooth, sweeting," he whispered in her wake. "I believe the time comes soon when I must send you to court as my spy upon Elizabeth. Time among the glittering popinjays will turn your head away from the one man I dare not allow you to wed." He went in search of his steward, wishing he had the courage to pursue the errant children himself. "Best Gaspar and Peregrine go, too." His lumbering bastard sons doted on Deirdre. They would protect the girl with their lives. ;, He shuddered with cold premonition. "Watch over them all, dear brother, Martha, Raven," he whispered to the ghosts that never left him. "Keep Dee safe. I love this little one almost more than my own children." He heard Martha's distinct sniff of disapproval. She had given him sons. His concern should be for the twins. r Chapter 6 19 June, 1574. The cellars beneath the Spanish embassy, Paris, France. "COME, la lobuna," the guard growled in Spanish. Yassimine cringed. She did not understand everything spoken to her in this strange language. But that phrase needed no translation. Grinding her resentment and anger deep into a corner of her heart, Yassimine calmly placed her sharp tambour hook and thimble aside. She rubbed her eyes free of the grit from peering at the fine work with only a single smoking oil lamp for light. Then she rotated her shoulders, relieving them of the hunched posture required for this needlework. She hated leaving the fine embroidery in the middle of a section. She had learned early that life was perilous. Any task left unfinished might never reach completion. But completion and relief of boredom were all she sought from the work. Christian women hungered for needlework. They had nothing else to lighten their lives. "Vamos," the guard snarled, impatient with her hesitation. Yassimine rose slowly from her stool, careful to keep grace in each motion as her mother had taught her from an early age. Move like water, smoothly, so that one drop blends with the next. Here and there are the same to the eye. She heard her long dead mother's voice in the back of her mind. That little bit of love was the only thing that had kept her sane since her capture five years ago. That and her anger. 45 46 Irene Radford The guard who had spoken entered Yassimine's ceB holding a whip in one hand and a torch in the other. She backed away from the implied menace in the weapons and in his eyes. A second guard entered the room holding a chain made of silver links. The guards always worked in pairs with a second pair watching from the narrow passage outside the iron door. One of their tonsured priests also stood guard, carrying one of their hideous crosses showing their god dying most horribly upon it. She ignored the man and his talisman. They could not harm her unless she believed they could. The Chain Man crossed himself, closed his eyes, and took a deep breath before snapping the silver links to the leather collar studded with iron around her neck. She bared her teeth and growled at him. He jumped back, crossing himself repeatedly. Very briefly, she enjoyed his fear. Then the whip slashed at her arm, tearing the heavy black gown The Master insisted she wear. She flinched away, still snarling. The Chain Man yanked her metal leash. She hoped his fear had made him soil his netherwear. With heavy steps, she followed where they led her. She fought to hide her elation. Removal from the windowless cell deep underground could only mean one thing: The Master needed her skills. Dozens of torches lit the passage, turning the darkness into day. Yassimine blinked rapidly, waiting for her eyes to adjust to the absence of shadow. The guards hated what their imagination put into those shadows. Yassimine held her head high. Her mouth salivated at the scent of their fear. The steep stairs to the ground level strained Yassimine's legs. Too used to sitting or pacing the confines of her cell, the unwanted exercise made her long to bend forward and use her arms to help lift her legs up each rise. The guards kept her leash too short. She bit her lip until it bled rather than cry out with the pains in her thighs. The men granted her a short reprieve at the landing while they checked to. ensure the absence of the servants on the back stairway to the next level. Surreptitiously, Yassimine rubbed the coarse wool of her Guardian of the Promise 47 gown against her legs. The scratchy material brought her blood to the surface of the skin, easing some of the ache. Heightening her anticipation of what was to come. She breathed deeply of the air that did not smell of her own body, fishy lamp oil, and moldy earth. She tasted life in that breath. Seven lives. Seven people inhabited the chambers surrounding the stairs. Servants , probably, men and women who worked hard for their scant ;pay, but appreciated the luxury of a bed with blankets and enough food to keep their bellies happy. She, too, could appreciate those things. But she was not free to move about, to converse with others of her kind, to breathe fresh air. Her own fears made her realize she did not truly trust the freedom others took for granted. There was always a silver chain to pull her back into confinement. , Another painful flight left her breathing heavily. She resisted the urge to let her tongue loll. Panting would not cool her heated blood. Shedding this hideous gown and wimple might. "What day is this?" she asked the guards in broken Spanish. She dug in her heels and refused to move forward until they answered her question, no matter how much pressure Chain Man put upon her leash and collar. The heavy silver links would separate before they defeated her strength of will. "Nineteen June," Chain Man grumbled. The words meant nothing to Yassimine. "How near the Summer Solstice?" She narrowed her search for information. She had been confined too long, her sense of season, and the movement of moon and stars across the skies had diminished. Once, she would have known precisely where and when she was without thinking. "Three days." Numbers, days, and weeks were words she had come to learn. Three days, less than one quarter of the moon phase. "And the phase of the moon?" "Dark tonight," Chain Man admitted on a grin, as if he new her dependence upon the moon. He hauled once ore on the chain. This time she followed more willingly, understanding now the weakness in her muscles. A bit of her heart light- 48 Irene Radford f: !f ened. The Master must have wondrous tasks for her if i| brought her forth from her sensory deprivation at the dam of the moon near the day of the shortest hours of darkness Still holding the cross as a kind of barrier between Yas-simine and himself, the priest knocked upon an ornate double door inlaid with paler woods, mother-of-pearl, and bits of gold leaf. Such a portal should adorn the palace of a sultan. Yassimine had learned that The Master wielded as much power over his subjects as a vizier, though he bore a different title and different responsibilities. He reported to a king and a high priest, but mostly he acted upon his owp authority, for his own purpose. |; A muffled voice from within summoned the priest fi throw open the portal. The guards thrust Yassimine pap the opening and slammed the doors shut once more. Sip heard their sighs of relief through the massive panels. Sh© almost rejoiced out loud at their fears. But The Master did not want to see her tiny triumph. "Come into the light where I might see thee," a disembodied voice commanded roughly in her birth language. Yassimine glided toward the blazing fire in the hearth. Each step barely bent the nap in the thick carpet. She longed to cast off the tight leather shoes with their thick soles and allow the soft texture to caress her feet. The Master snapped his fingers, ending her reverie. Yassimine stepped into the garish light of the fire. Heavy curtains blocked the natural daylight. She could feel the allure of the sun through her heavy clothing. All of her being needed to dash to the window embrasure and throw open the draperies. It had been so long since she had felt the sun's caress on her face, smelled the sharp wind as it blew across the steppe unimpeded. At times she could scent every life, every blade of grass, every tree, and stream the wind had touched. Now all she smelled was the reek of an unwashed male body, stale wine, and air too long enclosed. Not much better than her cellar prison. ^ "Yes, Master." She knelt before the massive chair thap faced the fire, keeping her eyes lowered. fa "I have a task for you, my demon." The man lisped i$L his highborn accent. •* Yassimine risked a glance through her lowered lashes at Guardian of the Promise 49 his sallow face—pale, thin, and unhealthy. As always, his servants had perfectly groomed his pointed beard and mustache. A few strands of silver had crept into his hair and beard since last she had been summoned to his presence. His heavy-lidded eyes and pursed lips, painted to achieve the color of ripe strawberries, gave him the look of a weasel ready to burrow into her soul, leaving a trail of filth on its route. He reached out with the hook that should have been his left hand and lifted her chin. Inwardly she smiled at the loss of that limb. He deserved the disability. She forced any glee out of her expression and posture, concentrating instead upon the heavily jeweled cross he wore about his neck. The fire cast reddish tints upon the precious metal and brought the stones to life. "How may I serve you?" she asked in her imitation of Spanish, his tongue. She thought she could speak it as well—if not quite so fluently—as he could. But if she ever dared hope for a future, that was one secret she must not reveal to him. "The Holy League awaits the return of the new French king, near the night of the full moon." A frisson of excitement and alarm coursed through her blood. "You will, of course, be granted the freedom of the city for three nights, to honor the event." He smiled with half his mouth, the right side. The other half remained almost frozen. That side of his face rarely showed emotion. That side of his body rarely moved without a great deal of effort. Still smiling, The Master rose and walked stiffly over to a brazier full of glowing coals. He opened a golden casket nearby and withdrew a large chunk of red meat. Yassimine's mouth watered. Many moons had passed since she'd last tasted meat. The Master knew that meat sharpened all of her appetites and shattered the careful control he imposed upon her. Withholding meat and light, and dousing her with special numbing herbs allowed him to suppress her nature. Or so he thought. The meat sizzled on the brazier. The scent made her nostrils flare and her blood run hot. She opened her mouth, the better to taste the air. "Ah, I see that you long for this food as you long for i-- 50 Irene Radford f, freedom. And so you shall have it. After I have tamdjj you." % "Anything, Master," Yassimine panted, not caring aboit the indignities he would require of her, just so she could taste the meat. 'f.. "Cast off your robes." £ Yassimine made to stand, the better to shed the heafy wool that chafed her skin and constantly reminded her thjtt she was this man's slave in all things. She endured it all fkt the rare taste of meat. s "No need to rise, my demon pet." His smile did not reach his eyes. Still on her knees, Yassimine slowly unwound the wimple from her hair, freeing the heavy black locks that fell to h»r waist. Forcing herself to take her time, she began working on the ties at wrist and shoulder that bound the ugly gown to her form. She knew what this man liked, a slow and tempting revelation of the merchandise he had purchasad at so dear a cost. The heady scent of the meat made her fingers clumsy, i But at last the voluminous folds fell away. Then she freea j her feet from the heavy shoes. She no longer cared that ! The Master's eyes feasted upon her naked breasts, the smooth skin of her belly, and the luxuriant dark mound below. Silver chains burned slightly where they pierced her nipples and navel. Exposure to light and air increased the discomfort. The small pains unleashed a wave of desire. Heat and moisture sprang from her body in anticipation. She twisted slightly, making the chains dangle and swag, enticing The Master's eyes to follow their movement. As always, the master's gaze fixed upon the bespelled links that bound her to him, body and soul. "Bend over," he commanded her, licking his lips arid swallowing hard. She obeyed willingly. The meat, so close and yet so far, weakened her knees as well as her resolve. Just let hint finish with her quickly so that she could eat the meat before the fire seared all of the blood and life from its juices. ; He ran the tip of his hook the length of her spine. , Arrows of pain shot throughout her body as he broke the surface skin and droplets of blood sprang free. She snarled Guardian of the Promise 51 at him, ready to attack her attacker with teeth and nails. He laughed at her protest. Then he was inside her, thrusting deep and long. She forgot her resolve to feign indifference. A scream of pleasure erupted from her throat. Fire filled her loins and her breasts. Pleasure coursed up and down her spine replacing the sting of his hook. Intoxicated by the scent of fresh meat and the sensuality of her physical and magical chains, she abandoned plans to kill this man today. IOI Chapter 7 | 1 July, 1574. An inn on the road to London. * DONOVAN flung himself from his side onto his back. He stared into the darkness above him and tried to force his mind into blankness. Every time he flopped into a new position, he seemed to hear a raven croak a question, as if his movements disturbed its sleep. He'd left the raven at Kirkenwood, more than a week ago. He should make plans to deal with the bleak barley harvest. Worry about Hal and Dee kept him from thinking clearly. Worry would not help them. He had other children and responsibilities that required his attention. "Oh, Martha, you always helped me keep my priorities^ straight. You made it easier to sleep at night," he whis-i pered. 'y. He fingered the locket Betsy had given him just before? he left. Her eyes had been red from tears and sleeplessness.* Still he held firm to his decision. She must go to Mad Meg.t The locket contained a single lock of her golden-blonde hair. The same color as her mother's. Slowly he allowed his fingers to make loving circles around the heart-shaped piece. He did not aim his thoughts in Betsy's direction. She knew nothing more than he did about Dee and Hal. Or so she had told him through the scrying bowl each morning since he had left home. A rough edge near the catch of the locket scratched his fingers. He cursed and sucked on the offended finger. He tasted blood. The wound healed quickly. *f An image of Mary came to him, as she had been the one* 52 Guardian of the Promise 53 night they'd slept together. He banished the memory. Both of them had aged and changed since then. Their relationship must change as well. He breathed deeply and concentrated upon his responsibilities. The things he could act upon. Did he have enough grain in storage to see his people through the next year? Did he have enough gold stashed away to buy grain from richer farms to the south? He should write letters of credit and recommendation on the morrow and send them with Thom Steward to the grain markets. . . . No, he could not do that. Thom Steward, along with Donovan's illegitimate sons Gaspar and Peregrine, had followed Hal and Dee to France. He endured many anxious moments worrying about them all. Nothing he could do about that now. Who could he send in search of winter stores? Robin? His secretary had an authoritative manner—much like Robin's royal mother. But he had not yet the maturity in face or emotions to bargain hard and long for the best prices. Donovan might have to go himself. But he was needed in London. And what of his routine mission to Edinburgh? He needed to consult with the French ambassador to the court of King James. The Protestant lords who ruled Scotland in the young king's name anxiously awaited news as to whether Henri III would uphold his mother's policies of religious tolerance or side with the powerful de Guise faction and the Holy League. The de Guise family had all but ruled France for the past three generations. Mary Queen of Scots was a de Guise on her mother's side. . . . Mary. He fingered the locket again, wishing it contained a lock of the exiled queen's red-gold hair. He had no keepsake from her. Nothing but memories. "Oh, Mary, do you lie sleepless within your gilded prison this night?" he asked aloud. "Do you think of me? Do you even remember?" His mind drifted back to the early days of his mission in Edinburgh. Mary had kept him close by her side as adviser and friend. She had even proposed to him at one point. He had to refuse because of his marriage to Martha, the mother of 54 Irene Radford Griffin and Hal. His frankness and honesty had prompted an intimacy unusual between a royal and courtier. Then Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, had entered Mary's life. From the moment he had ridden up to Holyrood Palace, Mary had been besotted by Darnley's golden beauty and words of adoration. Despite advice to the contrary, the young queen had taken Darnley as her husband on 29 July, 1565. As soon as Mary had spoken her marriage vows, Darnley had shown his true face. A face of cruelty, ambition, and extreme vanity. Donovan flipped onto his belly. His neck ached. The sheets were hot, his back itched. The stone walls of this inn seemed to press closer. His heart ached. He kicked off the covers and rolled to his other side. Ghosts and memories pressed against his eyelids. At last he drifted into a half-waking, half-sleeping state where his dreams became reality. Memories took over his dreams.... Near midnight, 25 September, 1565. Edinburgh. Nine years before. Donovan downed a full goblet of wine in one gulp. It did not cool his anger or his fevered thoughts. Once again, Mary Queen of Scots had blundered in council. They considered the illegitimate son of James V to be the true ruler of Scotland. Mary's Privy Council nearly ignored her at every turn. This afternoon she had dismissed them in a temper and flounced out. "I tried to warn you, Mary," he muttered. Too restless to sleep, he paced the confines of his narrow town house. He longed to ride through the hills on a fast horse with the wind in his hair and the stars shining brightly above him. 'Twas a rare clear night this eve. Perhaps then he could relieve the prickles that ran up and down his spine. If only he had thought to bring the children with him. His adopted son, Robin, had reached his ninth birthday. Perhaps 'twas time to start teaching him the fine art of diplomacy . . . Betsy, the twins, and Deirdre were alL too young to leave their nurse. He missed them terril Guardian of the Promise 55 But the city was not safe by day or night for himself or the children. He dared not walk the short distance to the stable at the White Horse Inn for a mount without several weapons and more guards. Seemingly, the criminals of Edinburgh had as little respect for Mary's laws and authority as did her Privy Council. He downed another goblet of wine. Finally, reality became a little fuzzy around the edges. "Martha, you would have eased my doubts and set me to making logical plans," he sighed, wishing his wife's ghost would help him now. The house remained free of haunts. Casting caution to the wind, he threw a short cloak over his doublet and strapped on his favorite sword. He clumped down the stairs to the nearest exit still buckling the sword belt about his hips. The door flew open at a touch from his fingers. He stepped back, drawing his weapon in one movement. "Stay your hand, milord," a husky voice commanded. A feminine voice deepened and made rough by tears. "Mary?" He peered cautiously into the gloom. "Your Grace." He bowed to the woman who was Queen of the Scots by the Grace of God. She stretched out her hand. Her long fingers gripped his wrist. They looked skeletal in the flickering light of an oil lamp. Under the pressure of her grip he let the sword slide back into the sheath. "What brings you here, Your Grace?" Donovan drew her into the dim entry lit only by a single oil lamp. He checked the street outside his door for signs of an escort or clandestine observer. Empty. "Why did you come alone?" "I. . ." She gulped and straightened her spine. "We have no place else to seek advice and .. . and solace." She meant the royal "we," of course. "Come." Donovan took her hand and led her up three flights of stairs to his private solar. Without asking, he poured her a goblet of wine. He handed it to her and waited for her to finish it all before speaking. The queen took several small sips. All the while she kept her eyes open and her gaze fixed upon Donovan. "You are safe here," he whispered. "He follows me everywhere." Donovan did not need to ask who. Darnley shadowed 56 Irene Radford her movements throughout the day, jealous of any whibi might influence her, diminishing his control and thus his illusion of power. P, "You can command ..." f* "I command nothing. He punishes me if I do not follo# his instructions." She nearly spat the words. |« "Punish? How?" Donovan swallowed his disgust. "Onl|r! a coward uses a woman so ill." P "Coward, yes. That describes my husband." She shranfe back within the folds of her cloak. P "Your Grace, how may I help?" He reached for hep hand, grabbing it before she could pull away. Once their, had been close, on the brink of an illicit affair. r- But Martha had been alive then. He could not betra^ his wife. C The untied sleeve of her shift fell back from his grip. Bruises looked like dark smears of dirt all along heir inner arm. Donovan drew in a sharp breath through his clenchetf teeth. "Are there more?" Her silence answered better than words. {* "Put him aside before I challenge him to a duel!" B "Nay, milord. The bishops have warned me against em ing a marriage so newly made. Barely two months' tim< Elizabeth will but laugh. She forbade the marriage." "Elizabeth postured against the union knowing yoi would jump into it to defy her. She wanted you married t< a bully and a fool. She has thus divided your kingdom." I* "But the Church. Holy vows taken before God's altar .. .fc "Damn the Church!" Donovan slammed his fist into hilfc open palm. "What honor is there in a church that condones this?" He swept her cloak from her shoulders. Through thM fine lawn of her high-necked shift, another bruise showed!/ The man had left his handprints about her throat. "What* right does the Church have to allow the man to nearl# choke you to death?" He could not help caressing the ugl« marks on her throat. ft She leaned her cheek into his caress. "Mon cher, I should have married you." "You still can, Mary. Annul the marriage or have it dissolved. Divorce Darnley if you have to. Do whatever you have to do. Then we can marry." ii Guardian of the Promise 57 "The bishops, the Pope, the sin of divorce ..." "Let the princes of your church object. Divorce is no sin if it saves your life." Donovan gathered her close and kissed her to stop her objections. She melted into him. His blood flared and his heart swelled. He deepened the kiss. Pressure built in his groin. Her lips parted under his urging. She tasted of rosewater and wine. "This is no true marriage, Mary. The Church of Scotland will give you the divorce," he whispered when they finally came up for air. "The Church of Scotland is no true Church. An annulment must come from Rome." She ducked her face away from his probing. "Then begin the negotiations." He lifted her chin with a gentle finger. "Put Darnley aside before he kills you." "He would not. He has no power, no authority without me." She almost sounded as if she believed her words. "Mary, Darnley is descended from your great grandmother, Margaret Tudor. He has royal blood in his veins. With you dead and Moray in exile in England, he will seize control." "He has English royal blood, not Scots!" "Darnley will oust the Privy Council and replace them with his catamites." "The Scots will not allow it; I will not allow . . ." "You will be dead. What could you do?" "He will kill me?" He watched the truth dawn in her eyes. They stood eye to eye, nose to nose for many long moments. "I do not wish to die," she said barely above a whisper. "I do not wish you to die." He kissed her again. Quickly. Gently. Fire ignited his loins. But this was no whore to be rushed and forgotten. He wrapped his arms around her to calm her shudders and just held her. So sweet. He savored the scent of her hair, the warmth of her body, the way she fit so neatly against him. After many long silent moments he dared move his hands, running them the length of her spine. She winced and drew back. He gentled her again. Irene Radford 58 "Let me ease your hurts, Mary. Divorce Darnley and marry me. I love you. I have always loved you. I will never hurt you." Warm moisture touched his hand where he had caressed her. He swallowed deeply and closed his eyes a moment before he dared look. Blood stained the back of her gown. "God's wounds, I will kill the man myself." "Non, mon cher." She touched his lips with gentle fingers to silence his words. "I will not have the sin of murder on your head." She kissed him to silence his protest. Tears glistened in her eyes. "Did I hurt you?" Donovan touched her back gently. "Not you. Never you." This time her kiss was deep and passionate. "Let me dress the wound. I have a healing ointment. 'Twill keep scars from forming." "Please." Carefully he loosened the laces on the back of her gown. She winced and cringed several times. But she did not cry out. The gown peeled away easily. But her shift stuck to the drying blood. His own skin felt flayed in empathic union. "He did this tonight," Donovan said flatly. "He had one of his catamites with him in my bed. I screamed at him." Her voice shook with tears. "Lay you upon my bed. I must bathe these wounds and dress them carefully." He pushed her into the bedchamber behind the solar. He gathered up the ointment and a small lamp to warm the stuff. He found her stretched out, facedown upon the feather tick with her back bared, the shift bunched about her hips. She rested her forehead against her crossed arms above her head. Her long, golden-red hair she had swept over her shoulder. The long length of her back and a brief glimpse of the sides of her breasts excited him. He clamped down on his desire. Not tonight. She needed care and tenderness tonight, not passion. "Oh, Mary, how could any man do this to you!" He eased a dripping cloth over the broken flesh. "What did he use? A walking stick?" "He is no man. Not like you." She turned her head to face him. Guardian of the Promise 59 An invitation glittered in her gaze. He ignored it, turning his attention to warming the salve. As he smoothed it into her wounds, his hands strayed to massage her entire back. Taut muscles released under his practiced touch. "Love me, Donovan. Love me as a true man loves a woman," she whispered. "Mary, beloved. Are you certain you want this tonight?" "I need you to obliterate the memory of Darnley's touch. I need you to love me." He needed no further invitation to gather her into his arms. She fumbled with the ties of his doublet. He kissed her nose and removed the garment himself. His shirt remained a great barrier between them. He discarded it gladly. He cupped her pert breasts, relishing the creamy white skin. "If you only knew how long I have wished for this moment." He kissed the rosy tip until it puckered. "I, too, have longed for you to touch me thus." She fumbled with the ties of his breeches. "Easy, my love. Do not hasten our union," he chuckled at her eagerness. He guided her hands to his chest. A quick student, she played with the line of hair that marched down his belly to disappear beneath his belt. An agony of pleasure. Slowly he rained kisses all over her body, warming her, preparing her. Somehow, he divested himself of his breeches and hose. He tugged her shift free of her body and threw it elsewhere. Impatient now, he snugged her tight against him, letting her get used to the pressure of his erection against her belly. Her hands found him. The hesitant touch nearly brought explosive heat. Not much longer. He promised himself. A few more moments. With hands and tongue he opened her, moistened her. When she lay back panting for release he finally brought her atop him. Just the tip of him entered. She contracted, drawing him upward, inward. His hands found her full breasts and kneaded. She caressed his beard with a gentle, wet fingertip. He drew it into his mouth and suckled. She gasped with pleasure. Unable to hold back longer he plunged and withdrew, finding her rhythm. Surge and recede. Pressure/pain/joy/ 00 Irene Radford release, love built within him. He became her, she became him. His magic reached out and twined around their minds, bonding them forever and a day. "Mary, my love!" he cried as the tides took him and he spilled his seed deep within her. When he awoke before dawn, she had already left him. A year and a half later, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, consort to Mary Queen of Scots, died violently. His house on the outskirts of Edinburgh exploded. His naked body was found strangled at the edge of the garden. Chapter 8 3 July, 1574. The outskirts of Paris, France. I STOPPED in my tracks, too weary to take another step. Beside me, Coffa lowered her head to match her drooping tail. The days and nights, the weeks on the road had become a blur of barns to hide in, meals begged or sharing what the dogs hunted, and cemeteries to sleep in. We sought the quiet resting places of the dead to avoid detection. Few sane people sought out a cemetery after dark. Hal had rarely slept in the burial grounds, shivering and starting at every sound. Once, he and I had stopped at an isolated farm and worked for our keep for a sennight to give Coffa a chance to rest a badly bruised front paw. He had slept then. I had never worked so hard in my life and hoped to never again. The true meaning of money was a hard lesson for two spoiled children raised in noble luxury. "I have to sit." I sighed so heavily I wasn't sure there was any air left in me—or strength to draw the next breath. My knees wobbled and plunked me down on a boulder beside our path. The rock had no convenient smooth spots on which to place my bottom. No matter. It glistened with moisture from the perpetual mist. No matter. At least the mist was warm and caressed my skin lovingly rather than trying to tear holes in my face like the rains back home. Coffa sprawled at my feet. Helwriaeth plunked down where he stood next to Hal. For one hundred heartbeats I did nothing, moved nothing, thought nothing. Then the pains in my feet won over 61 Irene Radford 62 the bone-aching weariness. Listlessly, I tugged at my boots. They were overfull of feet and my hands slipped on the mist-slick leather. "Let me help," Hal said. He trudged over from where he had ceased walking a few paces ahead of me. Collected moisture dripped from his forelock into his eyes. His hands slipped just as mine had. We needed his strength combined with a lot of wiggling on my part to free my feet from their leather coverings. At last the light breeze and gentle mist cooled the sweat and eased some of the pain dragging my limbs down. I wiggled' my toes and leaned back, lifting my face to the mist. The dogs showed a little interest in sniffing my discarded boots. They did not rouse enough to tussle over them. When Hal and I had started the venture, I thought my affinity with Pridd, the Earth, would invigorate me as long as I walked. What little strength I gained from my element faded soon after we crossed the Channel on a leaking fishing boat. Hal had been sick the entire voyage. I managed to keep my stomach from turning inside out—just. Neither of us had regained full strength after that. "I used to think riding a horse all day was tiring," I said on a sigh. "Walking is much harder." "Walking is for peasants," Hal snorted. "The Merlin always walked the length and breadth of Britain on his missions," I reminded him loftily. I could be just as much a snob as he, but in my own way. "If you hope to become the next Pendragon, you have to learn to walk." I wilted. "But walking would be much easier with a staff. My father had a marvelous staff topped by a black crystal as big as his fist." y "Da buried the staff with his brother." J "As was fitting. He was the last Merlin. The real Pen-Bb'iigon. I just hope I can live up to his legacy." I "If I don't claim the heritage before you." Hal eased Bilui ill down onto the wet ground heedless of the grass H up. Ins backside. He moved as if his back ached more Ui In* Irei. I Ic'd shouldered a goodly portion of my bur-111 14 will as his own. Considering the miles we had trail <• lominded of that youthful passion just looking at Robin. jjj Uohin "humphed" loudly. But he couldn't hide his grin. )lc knew how to charm any lady, from the pretty glass-j blower's daughter up to the queen herself. And Betsy in veen. He'd broken more than one heart in his short ^tr. But his heart belonged only to Faith, the glass-ver's daughter and his dearest friend since infancy, konovan and Robin rode another hour in comfortable flee. The shadows grew deeper around them, enclosing in a bubble of their own limited visibility. Donovan kted the urge to bring a ball of cold light to his hand. |n the moon rose, full and bright. The shapes and shad-i on the lace of the Queen of Heaven stood out in stark krast to the clear sky. Dew glistened on the verge grasses Ee tears on a maiden's cheeks. By this silvery light Dono-I van could see the road ahead well enough to guide them | another quarter hour. He recognized a gnarled oak at a minor crossroad. One j more hill and depression to cross. Deep forest crowded the road at the bottom of the hill. i Branches from trees on either side interlaced, blocking out most of the moonlight. A perfect haven for bandits, Gypsies, and vagabonds. Donovan loosened his sword in its scabbard. Robin followed suit. They had both traveled this way before. The evening breeze intensified. A new chill ran through Donovan's blood. Presentiment, not a change in the temperature. He slowed his horse. Robin reined in beside him. He withdrew his sword fully from its utilitarian sheath. "I'm not certain cold steel will deter what waits for us," Donovan whispered. "Creatures of the Otherworld fear iron. Steel is born of iron." Robin leveled his blade at a peculiar rustling in the underbrush. "Not all denizens of the Otherworld fear iron. Some shy from silver, some from Holy Water." Robin crossed himself. Guardian of the Promise 71 Donovan heaved a heavy sigh. Holy Water only worked if the caster truly believed. Robin did. Donovan didn't know what he believed in. Most of his scattered faith had died with his twin brother, Griffin the Elder. He had steel in his sword and dagger. He had silver in his coins and buttons. They would have to do, no matter what they faced, mortal or eldritch. "Ready, Robin?" He took three deep breaths, triggering heightened awareness in all of his senses. Donovan might not have Hal's easy access to flames, or Dee's ability to shift the earth under an enemy's feet, or Betsy's affinity with storms to confuse and misdirect an attack, but he knew how to fight man to man. "Aye, sir. I've only mundane senses and the strength of my arm. Should be enough to guard your back and send any lurkers retreating with their tails between their legs." "Make your noble ancestors proud, son." Together they nudged their horses forward with a touch from their heels. Shadows took form; moved into the center of the rutted road. Hulking forms with indistinct edges. Roughly the form of men, but . . . Silver chains encircled their necks and pierced their ears. "Wolves, sir," Robin whispered through his teeth. "More than wolves. Less than men." "How do we fight them?" The strange creatures were upon them before Donovan could think. He slashed at grasping paws, jabbed at lunging forms, kicked snapping jaws away from his horse. His steed reared, rolling its eyes. Donovan clung to its back with his knees, wielding his weapons without interruption. Beside him, Robin employed the same tactics. He nearly fell twice, but kept his seat. The lead attacker howled at the moon. His eerie call made Donovan's horse prance and plunge in terror. More shadowy forms gathered in the trees. Donovan slashed at the howler. Its ear, studded with silver buttons and short chains, landed on the road. A deep gash in its neck spurted blood. A man collapsed in the road, clutching his wounds and moaning in pain. All traces of the wolf vanished. Clearly a man, naked except for his silver adornment. He scrabbled desperately seeking the wolf's ear that lay beside him. 72 Irene Radford • The other five howling attackers fell back, content |o wait for easier prey. Three bled heavily. Pale skin sho|p through patches of dark fur. The rough lupine outlili shifted, became more upright. A man stared back at hi|h with glowing red eyes, filled with pain and . . . despair. *•* Donovan gulped and prayed for strength to whatevi* God or Goddess listened. f! "Werewolves," he hissed. "Solitary creatures hunting In unnatural packs. First at Kirkenwood, then on the outskiift of London. Now here. The same pack or different ones?" As of one mind, Donovan and Robin jabbed their he^b into their horses' flanks and pelted through the dark reach** of the road. ^ "Sweet Jesu! I saw them shift," Robin said quietly. He might not have spoken at all. Still, Donovan heajWi his fear and shaking faith. f" "Aye. We must report this." "Only a priest can deal with this abomination," Robhl agreed. "I wish Dr. Dee were still in this country. He'd kncjw what to do." The foremost magician and alchemist in Ej$-rope surely had a spell or a potion to defeat or cure tae horrible creatures. "Fire, silver, and Holy Water. The copse must be burned and the wolves rooted from their foul nest." Robin crossed himself again. "Mayhap Her Majesty will dispatch a bishoj) to do the job." ?- "Whatever is done must be finished by tomorrow nigfct, or they will transform into ordinary humans until the next full moon." Had they truly lain in wait specifically for him? All the tales he had read indicated that werewolves were solitary beings, outcast by both wolves and mankind. They protected their territories fiercely. To find more than one in a district was unusual, to say the least. To find five, possibly more, spoke of great evil. t Which of his and England's enemies had the power h control were creatures' base instincts and make th hunt together? He prayed that none of the forces of chaos surroundi Mary directed such powerful beings tainted by the Oth world. Spanish, French, Protestant, or Catholic, who woi dare? Who was so desperate? Guardian of the Promise 73 "Surely their wounds will betray them," Robin suggested. "The local priest need only seek out those who bleed from knife and sword wounds on the morrow." "The moon is still full. They will all heal by dawn, without scars. The lost ear will knit back into place. We must act tonight." And he must postpone his visit with Mary. An extra day for news of his presence to filter south to London and the ears of the queen. He did not look forward to feeling the lash of her tongue, or possibly a trip to the Tower for the transgression of visiting the exiled queen. "You ride to London and the queen at dawn," Donovan ordered. "Tell her what we encountered. She will draw her own conclusions. But she must have this news." "I need not reveal to her why we ride through this district, milord." Robin grinned in conspiracy. His fine teeth gleamed in the moonlight. "Intelligent lad. I value your discretion." "The queen values yours." Late evening, 4 July, 1574. The Convent of Montmatre north of Paris. Hal jerked his head slightly toward the Lady Chapel as Deirdre passed him. He knelt in the back of the convent church in an attitude of prayer waiting for the Compline bell to ring. Dee nodded ever so slightly to indicate she understood the need for secrecy. A nun clutched Dee's elbow quite firmly as she escorted the girl to the choir. Clearly the archaic fear of males still lingered in this cloister. Protestants firmly believed in marriage for all, including priests and other clerics. Since that time, men and women had become easier in each other's presence. Cloisters and celibacy had no place. Except in countries still dominated by the Church in Rome. The Mass seemed to go on for hours. Hal's knees protested the extended time upon the cold stone floor. But he 74 Irene Radford dared not wiggle about too much, or rise even slightly le|t. the sisters decide to throw him out for disrespect, or worse. He just could not understand why religious folk required a body to willingly endure so much discomfort to demon* strate his faith. Back home, Father Peter and Da had formed a haprjy blend of the old pagan rituals with enough Christian gloss on top to satisfy the busybodies who thought they alorte professed the correct religion. Hal had little hope that anyone outside Kirkenwood would adopt a similar attitude arty time soon. So he ignored the ache in his knees and lower back, and. the restrictions imposed upon him and his cousin. For t&- night. For the seeming safety of stout stone walls between them and the outside world and whatever stalked the city on the night of the full moon. •- But he could not, would not, be separated from Dee, or the dogs tonight. Danger waited for them just beyond those walls. He'd heard too many rumors to feel safe. At last the sisters filed out of the church toward their solitary cells. Hal waited impatiently for the last of them to troop past him before he made his rounds with Hel-wriaeth and Coffa at his heels. Unbidden, he checked all of the latches on all of the gates, reinforcing even the stoutest bars with a magical thread. The doors must remain closed until sunrise when he, and only he, lifted the wards. The rain continued pounding into the many puddles. No trace of the moon glowed to light his silent progress around the walled grounds. The hair on his arms, his back, and his nape stood on end in anticipation. Someone, something awaited him bej the protection of the convent. Chapter 10 3 July, 1574. Nether Pedly, England. LIGHT, song, and beer fumes poured out of the public room of the inn. Donovan dismounted and threw his reins to the reluctant stable boy who shuffled out to greet them. Robin slid off his own mount stiffly. The creak of saddle leather might have been his joints. He bent double massaging his knees and thighs. As he gradually righted, his hands kneaded his butt and back and finally he shrugged and | twisted his shoulders. "Feel better?" Donovan asked as his secretary sighed at | the end of his ritual. "Actually, yes, I do." Robin pasted a smile on his long | face and preceded Donovan into the pub. "Your parents would be proud of your fortitude if not I your ability to control your horse," Donovan chuckled as | he hoisted his bags to his shoulder and followed. "You have never told me about my parents. Not even I their names." Robin turned in the doorway, challenging | Donovan to evade the issue once more. "You are my son now. Adopted legally. And I am proud lof you." Donovan pushed past him into the doorway. He I had to stop thinking about his monthly reports to Elizabeth Ion Robin's health and well-being as evidence that the queen | still had a claim on Robin. Donovan paused in the entry a moment to let his eyes ladjust to the smoky torchlight. His nose itched at the smell |of warm, unwashed bodies, spilled ale, and rancid meat. Two dozen men singing off-key. Robin winced as a barmaid's voice soared above the cacophony and cracked on an impossible note. "Mayhap I 75 i; 76 Irene Radford can teach these people true music while we reside here,," he groaned. He had his mother's delicate ear and voice fqn a tune. Donovan remembered the hours of Robin's youth while the boy taught himself to play lute and timbrel. He'4 also pestered Donovan endlessly until he bought a virginal for him to play as well. They'd both whiled away many an hour at court in Edinburgh with music of their own making. "Doubtful we can teach these yokels anything. They only want to join in the crowd, not make music." Donovan allowed his bag to slip to the floor with a thump. "Besides, you leave for London at dawn." Robin looked as if he might protest. Donovan waved away his objections before they were voiced. The music, if you could call it that, continued unabated^ but the landlord noticed them and ambled over, proffering; frothy mugs of the local brew. Donovan accepted the tankard gratefully. He downed half of it before speaking. "Where can we find the local constable, mine host?" he asked at last. "Why?" The landlord lost most of his jovial expression. Not once had he shown any deference to the richly clothed lords who stood before him. "We were set upon by scoundrels just north of here," Robin supplied. "In the dark patch of woods that crowds the road at the bottom of the last hill," Donovan added. The hair on his nape bristled. Something was wrong, and not just with the landlord's attitude. "Ah, milords, just some of the lads with a bit too much of the drink in them." The landlord laughed shallowly. His smile did not reach his cheeks, let alone his eyes. "Think nothing of it. I can see they harmed you not. Come. I've rooms to let and a fine supper laid. Ye'll not go to bed' hungry." " 'Twasn't some of the lads," Donovan insisted. His voice took on an edge that promised consequences with all th$S weight of his title and wealth to back him. Robin crossed himself. "In the name of the queen, I raise the hue and cry for the five men dressed as wolves who attacked me on the road," Donovan announced. Guardian of the Promise 77 The room suddenly grew still. Each of the raucous songsters halted in mid note. "You do not truly want to do this, milord," the innkeeper said quietly. "And why would I not seek to bring disruptive forces to justice for violating the queen's peace and jeopardizing innocent travelers?" Donovan turned icy calm around a roiling mass of magic that begged him for release. "Withdraw your demands, milord. Please. 'Tis not wise." The landlord leaned forward. The garlic and beer on his breath nearly sent Donovan reeling. Donovan stood his ground. In a fight he was taller with a longer reach than the landlord. And he was armed. Robin edged closer, guarding his back against the mass of men who watched the confrontation with rapt attention. Donovan resisted the urge to draw steel and be done with the affair. Sword and dagger did not close arguments. They tended to open them wider and cause more trouble. He pulled on every diplomatic skill he'd learned in his years at court: Elizabeth's, Mary's, and then James'. Calm resolve replaced the anger. But the magic still itched just beneath his skin. "Think you, if we could rid those woods of the menace that stalks us, would we not have done so?" the landlord hissed. "Think you, this one small village could stand against the forces that gather there?" "Why do they gather?" Donovan finally asked the question that had plagued him ever since he realized who—or rather what—had attacked him. "Power attracts them." "A magician lurks nearby," Donovan muttered. He should have sniffed out the presence of one who had been touched by the Netherworld. "Nay, 'tis greater power than some woods witch or alchemist," the landlord sneered. " 'Tis the plots and turmoil over t' Chatsworth Hall that draws them. The Catholic devils seek to use demons and creatures of the night to free Mary." He spat into the floor rushes. "No," Donovan gasped. "Mary would never . . ." "Bah, the Catholic witch sits like a spider in her lair, spinning plots instead of webs." The landlord finally took his attention off Donovan and surveyed the room. With a 78 Irene Radford - wave of his hand the singing resumed, somewhat subdfc|fed compared to the joyous riot of sound from before. * ; "Why do they sing so loudly?" Robin asked. His lfftg face grew longer with his puzzled frown. iL "Easier to forget what waits outside on the nightspS&f the full moon. Now do ye want the rooms or no? Supfc" at least." ffc "Yes, we'll sup in our room and be on our way in p|e morning," Donovan agreed. * His heart sank. Once again, outside forces sought|jpo manipulate Mary, sully her good name with their 0%n schemes to grab power. Who? The Spanish? The Pope? Or discontented Englishmen who resented Elizabeth's peace and prosperity simply because it came not from their own making? 3 July, 1574. Near midnight, Paris and environs. % r-Yassimine ignored the magical tug on her senses. The siltfcr rings in her nipples burned slightly more than usual. &- But a scent, a heartbeat, a presence demanded her attention. She had to find out what—or who—was so much stronger than The Master that its magic overrode his. Was this her opportunity for freedom and power of her own? Or her doom? For good or ill, she had to know. For half a moon, The Master had carefully stripped away her controls, withdrawing the drugs of suppression, clothing her in sensuous silk, bringing her body alive with sex, and sumptuous meals consisting only of barely cooked meat. But he'd given her a new piercing. A most humiliating ring burned her pubis. He'd waited until she was swollen from his sexual assault upon her. Then while she sprawled naked and relaxed, gnawing on a succulent bone, he had swooped down upon her with a white hot needle. She had screamed and fought. His control of the silver was faster. fe- Guardian of the Promise 79 She wished she'd eaten his remaining hand in revenge. Just thinking of the sweet taste of his flesh made the silver burn deeper. She ignored the pains. Running naked through the streets alleys of the city on the nights of the full moon, she could rejoice in releasing her true self. She exulted in the freedom and the assault on her senses. But you and your kind are not welcome here. You are not worshiped as gods, a tiny voice in her head reminded her of the dangers that came with her freedom. Tonight she would live her destiny, despite the fears of ignorant Christians. The muddy waters of the River Seine presented no problem to her. She swam them easily. The women of her clan had taught her early how to survive in water, how to escape marauders by using the water to mask her scent and provide her with secret hiding places. Now she entered the river without a splash. The current was stronger than she expected. The water deeper. The streams that crisscrossed the broad steppes of her home did not often grow to these proportions. She could not let the surprise overwhelm her. She lengthened her strokes, using arms and legs equally. The fretful moon tried to slip free of its cloud cover and failed. Still, it commanded her senses. Pockets of mist enveloped her, then evaporated, as did the silvery light. Barely chilled, she climbed the opposite embankment easily and shook all over, shedding extra water. Her chains chimed delicately with the movement. Once hot and demanding, the water had cooled the silver links as well as her body. Curiosity cooled her never-ending appetite for meat, hot and bloody. She set off at an easy lope, casting about for some clue to her destination. Due north. Beyond the city. She ran lightly, barely touching the ground, leaving few prints. She stopped short, digging in her heels. The chains grew hot where they pierced her skin. The collar about her neck tightened. The Master was not pleased. "I am stronger than this," she growled to herself and continued her search. Her steps dragged now. Her chains burned wherever they touched her. Still she could not stop. 80 Irene Radford A scent came to her strongly, four sources of magic blended into two, then to one. The magic nearly matched her own. One of her own! Home and freedom called to her. She loped on, oblivious to the angry welts growing on her nipples, navel, and pubis. She slowed to climb the heights above the city. A stone fortress loomed atop the hill before her. Moort-light glittered on flecks within the stone walls. The one who called to her sheltered there. No mundane could keep her out with a full moon giving her power beyond her ken. She dashed across the open space to the front gate. It resisted her touch. She leaned against it with all her weight and strength. A slight shift of the wooden panels rattled the crossbar. Another shove. The gate remained impermeable. 3 July, 1574. Approaching midnight, the Convent Montmatre. With the convent as secure as he could make it, Hal tiptoed into the Lady Chapel behind the high altar of the convent church to warn Dee. "Did you hear?" Dee asked in French the moment Hal poked his head into the tiny chapel filled with lit prayer candles. She knelt before the little altar as if keeping an extended prayer vigil. Coffa sprawled in the shadows by the north wall. Helwriaeth joined his littermate. The smell of burning candle wax and incense made him sneeze. He held his breath lest the explosion of air waked someone in the dorter and they came to investigate. Hal decided he'd best kneel beside Deirdre in case some prowling warden came looking for them, no matter how much his knees ached. He had to adjust his thinking for a moment before the French words came to him. "About the murders?" Hal whispered back as he crossed himself and bowed before Guardian of the Promise 81 the altar, all the while keeping his senses extended for any sign of intruders. "Yes. Last night when the moon was full and the night before. Probably again tonight if the pattern holds true." "What pattern?" Suddenly Hal wished he'd made the effort to study as much as Dee did. He'd spent too many hours sparring with his twin, in the practice yard and not enough of them reading. Still, a Pendragon needed strength in his body as well as his mind. "Supernatural predators," she hissed back impatiently. "Those who use the full moon to hunt are active on the night before and the night after as well." "Then why didn't we sense anything last night? We were camped barely ten miles from the city." "This beast seems confined to the old city on the Isle de la Cite and within the neighborhoods, the quarters, in close proximity to it." Something about Dee's sUence at the end of that statement said more than her words. "I take it supernatural predators do not usually confine their hunting to one small area?" "Peut-Stre it finds the hunting too good in the crowded confines of the cite and the Latin Quarter." More silence. Hal used the time to cast about with his hearing and sense of smell augmented by his contact with Helwriaeth. The dog remained alert but easy in the shadows. He sensed that all others within the convent slept. Deeply. Too deeply. With a thought, Hal commanded Helwriaeth to patrol. The dog lumbered to his feet, resentful that he must perform this chore alone. "What?" Dee asked, alarmed by Helwriaeth's departure and the sudden lifting of Coffa's ears. " 'Tis passing strange that none of the nuns, the lay sisters, the lay workers, or the guests so much as stir. Not for a drink of water or a trip to the privy. Not even shifting position because they dream. Helwriaeth does not believe they dream." Dee lifted her head and sniffed the air, much as Coffa would. Her eyes narrowed as she concentrated on the aug- I 82 Irene Radford mented senses that bombarded her. Hal knew what shft experienced, knew the incredible bond with a familiar. Suddenly he had to join Helwriaeth. He couldn't be without the dog for one more moment. ,>. Then he heard it. A rattling at the front gate of thp courtyard. Someone . . . Something wanted to gain entrance to the convent. Chapter 11 FRUSTRATED, Yassimine circled the entire fortress twice, pounding on every gate. All of them resisted her. She slammed her fists against the main gate whimpering her disappointment. Why did one of her own call to her so strongly and then reject her? She tried again, putting all of her strength, her magic, and her will into the blows. At last she howled her frustration, crying real tears for the first time in five years. "Did you hear that?" I stopped Hal from leaving my side in the Lady Chapel with a trembling hand upon his arm. My other hand tangled in Coffa's ruff. Her guard hairs bristled, and a low growl rumbled through her throat. "What is that unearthly howl?" Hal asked. He broke free of my restraint and ran to the low postern door behind the altar of the Lady Chapel. I stayed close upon his heels. A slight shiver ran through him as he peeked out the door to survey the convent grounds. He wrapped his arms about himself as if suddenly chilled. Helwriaeth loped back to him, pressing his considerable bulk against Hal. "An unholy predator of the night," I breathed. The phrase echoed with the resonance of an ancient scroll. Which one? What had I read about such creatures? Fear put a lock on my memories. I could only react. 83 J84 Irene Radford E Coffa wanted to retreat to the safely of the church. So didj I. But if I was to be the Pendragon, I had to face this^ creature and divert or destroy it. i I could do this. I was an adult. At least I felt like one sometimes. ' "We have to do something," Hal reminded me. "What?" Something about silver tickled my mind. "Doesn't silver control it?" "Silver wounds some nether creatures." I remembered a small book, heavy in religious philosophy denouncing such creatures with little useful information about defeating them. Except for one fact. "Ordinary iron or steel wounds and causes pain, but the creatures heal quickly. Sometimes the wound only lasts a few minutes. Then the creature bounds back stronger than ever. We saw it happen . . . that other time." That was why Malcolm's arrow had only slowed the attacking werewolf. That was why Malcolm had died under the savage jaws of the ravening beast. "A silver cross?" Hal asked. Barely pausing to think, we both reached for the rosary I kept in my scrip. "Gold," I said, disappointed at the wealth represented by the gold cross and decade beads. The rest of the chain was yellowed ivory beads. All of them needed replacing. Only the cross with the circled arms remained from the original. I'd seen its ghostly reflection upon Arthur's breast. Memory of his blessing did not bolster my courage or improve my thinking. "I don't know what to do, Hal." Defeat dragged at my shoulders. All the sleep I had missed in the last weeks piled heavy weights on my feet and hands. How could I expect to follow in my father's footsteps if I could not think beyond the mournful howl outside the gates? "Stop, please!" I held my hands over my ears, trying to block out the eerie call of the beast. The noise ran through me like tiny knives had entered my blood. My skin wanted to burst to be free of the sound. I needed to join it, run in circles, chase my own tail. "We retreat," Hal replied sadly. He grabbed wriaeth's ruff and tugged the dog away from the gate Guardian of the Promise 85 could only tug and hopefully guide. A wolfhound with the scent of prey or danger in its nose made its own decisions. Helwriaeth decided to stay and challenge the monster awaiting entry. Coffa ignored my suggestions to return to the cell assigned to me. She stood stalwartly between me and it. A deep growl rumbled in her throat and her fur stood up all along her spine. Her bushy tail grew to twice its normal size. "Can that thing break through your wards?" I asked. He shrugged. "The gates won't open." The pounding on the outside grew more, fierce and demanding. "But that thing could break them to pieces." He turned wide and frightened eyes to me. "Why did that thing venture outside the cite tonight?" I edged back toward the church. Once before, werewolves had roamed outside their normal range to find me, attracted by the magic I wove for the faeries. I had not worked any magic today. Not consciously. Did I ooze magic from my pores as sweat? I did not want this responsibility, or to carry on my heritage. I only wanted to be safe, at home, with Uncle Donovan protecting me. My lower lip trembled, and moisture burned my eyes. If I used my magic to keep the creature out of the Convent of Montmatre, would it then kill more innocents closer to Paris? If I did nothing, it would certainly kill me, and Hal, our dogs, and the good sisters. "What would your father have done?" Hal asked. Several moments passed before his words penetrated my loop of self-doubt and misery. "Think, Dee." Hal shook my shoulders. His voice took on a desperate note. The gates had begun to buckle. "What would your father have done? You've read his journals. You know him almost as well as if he'd raised you." But I did not know my father. The script within the journals was encrypted. Gibberish to my untrained eye. I knew a few of the stories, however, passed from the Gypsies, through Aunt Meg, to me. My father had faced Otherworldly creatures and survived. He'd also saved an } 86 Irene Radford entire camp of Gypsies from the enchantment of an Elfltt Wild Hunt. That story was a favorite around the fire dm cold winter evenings. I almost felt my da and King Arthur and all of my ancefci tors who had been Pendragons make the decision for me. "Circle. We need to draw a circle." My da had used his staff to draw his circle all the way around the camp. I had no staff, no tools, nothing but myself and my dog. I:". I moved out into the courtyard of the convent. A modeit open space stood between the imperiled main gate and trie stone buildings of church, dorter, guesthouse, stables, arid cloister. •¦! "You go right, deasil, I'll go left, widdershins. Cover trie entire courtyard so that the beast has no space outside trie circle to get to any of the buildings. Use your heel to draw the circle, and keep a hand on Helwriaeth the whole time" I instructed him. V Hal nodded once, grabbed his dog, and began the task* starting at the center of the gate. I followed, going in the opposite direction with Coffa firmly in hand. Exhausting work. The magic flowed out of me into the line I drew by dragging my heel. I dared not think about how tired I would be at the end. I dared not think what would happen if either of us faltered. Half a spell was worse than none at all. Instead of creating a barrier between us and that thing, a broken circle would invitSe it in. A gate panel splintered. I'd worked only a quarter way around the cloister. I couldn't protect the entire convent; with all the outbuildings and gardens it covered acres. Hal and I met in front of the church. We crossed our circles and continued on. Coffa whined. She wanted to dash out and sink her teeth into the throat of the enemy. I needed her beside me, giving me strength, guiding my patfe so that I did not falter. One board on the gate broke in two. Pieces flew acroal the line of the circle. The circle was not yet complete. A hairy fist (paw?) followed the broken wood into tbl£ cloister. I shuddered, paused, swallowed hard. How could I coif^ tinue? My nearly thirteen years might be enough for m^ body to believe itself an adult, but inside, I was just a Guardian of the Promise 87 I child. I could not challenge that thing physically or magically. "Keep going, Dee," Hal insisted. I gathered the shreds of my strength and my resolve and continued on. Past the stable, past the gatehouse. Blindly I continued to draw a circle. Step. Drag. Step. Drag. Sweat poured into my eyes and down my back. Coffa leaned heavily against me. Her whines turned solicitous. Something solid bumped into me. I screamed. A hand clamped over my mouth. "Easy, Dee. We're done. Easy," Hal whispered. Then I looked down at the line we had drawn. Our heels met. "Not quite done. We need to cross the path." The words came out on a choking cough. One last push of strength. One more step. A shimmering wall of power snapped into place and rose up and over us in a perfect dome. I sank to the ground, too tired to even think about moving. Hal plopped down beside me. The dogs nosed the edge of the double circle around its full circumference. "They're inspecting the work for imperfection," Hal told me. I didn't care. We huddled together for hours, listening, waiting. Praying. The moon set. The pounding on the gate ceased. The creature loosed a mighty howl of despair. I almost felt its very human heart break. 4 July, 1574. Past midnight, the Convent of Montmatre outside Paris. " 'Tis gone," Hal breathed. "Are you sure?" Dee asked. He traced the dark circles shadowing her eyes with a gentle finger. She needed sleep and food. They had both expended a lot of magic this night, she more than him. 88 Irene Radford "I am sure. Tis gone." Hal stirred, hoping to find enough!:, strength to rise and break the circle of protection before! stumbling to his bed. "How do you know?" Dee made it to her knees, then slumped. ¦ Hal knew how she felt. "I just know. Something here.". He touched his empty belly with a clenched fist. Chills began to rack his body. Helwriaeth ambled over, offering his shoulder for Hal to\ lean against. He did so, grateful for the dog's massive; strength and loyalty. A sloppy tongue across his face helped restore him a little. "Me, too," Dee replied. "I feel it, too. A terrible empti-|<; ness that wants to shatter me. But I did not know if I could'' trust it." "We are both too tired to think. Go to bed, Dee." For the first time since leaving home, they would sleep sepa-? rately. She wouldn't wrap him in her arms to ease the night-;: mares that tore at his sanity when they slept in cemeteries—the only place safe from prowlers and watchmen. The convent graveyard was too close to the guesthouse for comfort. He knew the ghosts of the dead" would find him tonight. He knew they'd remind him of all the things he should have done, needed to do, the responsibilities he shrugged off, the dangers that awaited him and he postponed. "Help me break the circle," she said listlessly. Coffa offered a shoulder as a brace to help Dee rise. "We created it together. We have to break it together," Hal echoed her. "Do we have to do it at the starting point?" He looked across the courtyard, not certain he could walk as far as the gate. It looked a mile away and getting farther by the minute. "I don't think so." She swayed on her feet. Her eyes locked onto the gate. "It was human once," she whispered. "Part of it still is. It's more lost than we are. My mother ..." "Nonsense. You're just too tired to think it through." Hal shivered at her words. He didn't dare believe them. If e did, then he might understand too much of tonight's dventure. All he wanted was to sleep long and hard. When c woke, he would attend Mass, eat a hearty breakfast, and Guardian of the Promise 89 then he would lead Dee into the city where she would complete her quest. Determinedly, he smudged the marks of the circle he had drawn. Only the outside line dissipated. The shimmering dome of power faded to half its original light. Dee's imprint remained as firm as the dome. "Dee?" he reminded her of her task. She continued staring at the broken gate as she stumbled to the edge of the circle. A halfhearted swipe of her foot banished the magic that protected them and kept them confined. He stepped to the other side. Dee didn't move. He reached back to grab her arm and shake her out of her reverie. Coffa growled and shifted closer to her mistress. Helwriaeth responded with a deeper warning and a nip to Coffa's ear. What was happening? The dogs always got along. "Dee?" Hal sent a tendril of magic into his cousin's eye to reinforce his question. It cost him dearly. He swayed with dizziness. Finally, she shook herself free of her thoughts with a visible effort. "Go to bed, Dee. We'll talk more about this tomorrow." "Yes," she promised. Without looking at him she trudged toward the dormitory, Coffa at her heels. Three times she stopped and cast her gaze back to the gate. He thought he saw her mouth the word "mother." Then she shook her head and plodded on, only to stop again after a few steps. "What is the matter, Dee? We banished that thing," Hal challenged her. "No, we didn't. We only stalled it. We will meet it again. Soon. I do not think any of us will come through the confrontation whole or unchanged." A chill of presentiment ran up Hal's spine. He knew he would not sleep this night. Or any other night soon to come. "Was it a werewolf?" he asked finally. He'd seen werewolves before. Two years ago. Magical fire had banished them. But they looked like oversized wolves. Except for their red eyes. The creature that hunted them tonight had used its paw like a human fist. "What was it?" VO Irene Radford Dee raised her shoulders in a shrug. Her chin tremble^ and a tear slid down her cheek. "I don't know what it was. I don't know how to fight it or protect us from it." "Neither do I," Hal muttered. He kissed the top of hef-head and pushed her toward the dormitory and sleep. "¦¦ Slowly, dragging every step, he began a prowl of th» entire convent. Better to walk in agony than sleep tonight and dream of that thing. Chapter 12 4 July, 1574. The Convent of Montmatre. ) THE nuns fussed and cooed over me the next morning. ' Sister Marie Hope stuffed extra bread into my pack and totally ignored Hal and the dogs. "Now remember, little one, you may return to us any night you cannot find safe lodging in the cite." Reverend Mother chewed her lip, then spoke again, patting my head. "Peut-etre you should return to us each night. The cite is not safe for a maid." "The dogs and I will protect her," Hal insisted. He scowled with his fiercest expression. I was too tired to say anything or cringe away from Sister Marie Celeste and her violent prejudice against "nonbeliev-ers." In her way, she was as dangerous to me as the monster who'd tried to break into the convent last night. Long after I had retired to my bed, I had lain awake, fearing to dream of the beast Hal and I had barely held at bay. If the beast was the instrument of the Protestant faction and preyed only upon Catholics, then why had it come for Hal and me last night? Neither of us professed the Catholic faith. Neither of us professed much of any faith at all. I suddenly felt empty. Bereft. Faith had sustained my father through many trials and tribulations. I would need faith of some kind in the days to come. I knew it deep in my bones. If only I could read and understand his journals I might catch a glimpse of true faith. Papa, help me! I prayed to the only source of comfort I knew. 91 Irene Radford A ghostly hand rested upon my shoulder in support. I smiled my thanks to the sisters. Coffa led the way through l lie gate, more eager for the next adventure than I. Hal followed me. Strangely enough, Helwriaeth trailed reluctantly behind, tail between his legs. He knew something . . . something terrible but important. What? By daylight, no one questioned our entrance into the cite, though many people shied away from the dogs. We listened to the whispers in market square after market square. Speculation about the monster who terrorized the city passed from merchant to housewife to servant to tavernkeeper in hushed tones accompanied by wards against the evil eye and frightened peeks over the shoulder. Out loud, the Parisians spoke excitedly of the festivities" when Henri III returned from Poland. They wanted pageants and masques, processions and tourneys. The coronation itself was for the nobility alone inside the cathedral^ though. We skulked and eavesdropped until well after noon waiting for someone to say something that might reveal strong 4 prejudice for or against the Huguenots. "I'm hungry, Dee," Hal announced as he tore a baguettd in half and handed me the slightly smaller portion. Both, dogs sat prettily, begging for their share of the bread. "You ate last night," I admonished Coffa. She stared back at me all hungry innocence. I broke off a small portioif of the soft bread and proffered it on my palm. My doj| nibbled it gently from my hand, her teeth never touching my skin. "Sacre bleu!" a woman gasped, holding her hands ove| her heart. "It did not savage you!" Then she fanned herself with her apron. "The dogs are pets," I replied, keeping my eyes ca$ down. On my travels I'd learned that adults responded beti^ ter to shy children than to bold ones. ^ "Noble pets. Too noble for one dressed in threadbar^ clothes and dirty bare feet." The woman moved closef,' peering at me intently. « Hal tugged on my sleeve. I sensed his anxiety to avo' confrontation, to be gone from this overly curious woma "Mayhap you be a Huguenot sorciere and the beast yo familiar. Many have been savaged, killed, dismembered Guardian of the Promise 93 such a beast!" She grabbed my sleeve before I could dart away. Coffa growled. The woman clung tighter. "Nay, Madame," I protested, turning my eyes up to her. I put all the innocence and horror I could muster into my gaze. "I but came to the cite this day in search of my noble father!" A crowd began to gather. Their murmurs rose ever higher, approaching shouts. "Death to all Protestant dogs," a voice rang out from the back of the crowd. It tolled through the increasing noise like a bell calling the faithful to Mass. Coffa pressed tighter to me. Her sides rumbled with her protests. Helwriaeth joined her, adding his deep bass tones to the rising turmoil. Run, Hal commanded me with his mind. We've got to get out of here. Where? Where can we go that is safe? Panic sent my mind in circles. I could see no farther than the hate and the fear in the eyes of the woman who held me. My father had never run from a fight in his life. His faith had sustained him. I believed in nothing. "Papa help me!" "Show your rosary," Hal commanded loudly as he grabbed my other arm. The dogs wiggled in front of me, pushing the woman away. She let go of my sleeve to cross herself. Her movements gave me enough time and space to fish the chain of gold and ivory beads from my sleeve. "Protestant witch, how dare you brandish holy relics!" The woman grabbed for the golden cross. Greed now lit her eyes rather than fear. Instinctively I moved my hand to grasp the cross, protect it from those who did not know its true significance. King Arthur of legend had owned this circled cross. The rosary beads came later. The woman's hands claimed the beads and yanked. I tugged back. The chain broke, beads spilled over the cobbles. Several people dropped to their knees to claim the precious gold and ivory for themselves. I ran. Hal led the way. Coffa made a path for us. Helwriaeth 94 Irene Radford guarded our rear. The crowd fell away from the dogs' drip* ping teeth and angry snarls. Their brindled fur stodft straight up the full length of their spines and tails, making them seem even larger than they were. * Sobbing in fear and bewilderment, I stumbled in theif wake. Tears blurred my vision and made me clumsier thai before. The third time I fell, or was it the fifth, Hal haulei(t me to my feet and kept his arm around me. "A few mows steps, Dee. Just a little way to go," he murmured encouragement to me. I looked around. We passed beneath Le Chdtelet, and onto Le Pont Notre Dame. Shops lined either side of the bridge. Vendors called out their wares and prices. Shoppers raised their voices to bargain. Scholars gave lectures HQ robed students. The cacophony grew. The dogs dropped their ears in confusion. They lifted their noses and whined, unable to detect our enemies among the mass of people. "Where?" I asked, looking around, as confused as the dogs. "Church." Peace descended upon my rampant emotions. Of course. The sanctuary of the church, still held sacred in this Catholic country. Only one remained in England, the old freedom of Whitefriars where my father had taken shelter among the glassblowers. But it was abandoned now to pigeons, ah occasional vagabond, a few madmen, and ghosts. We could shelter in any church in France, free from persecution, until a new plan came to mind. * Church. The place my father always sought when troubled. The thought of a dim nave, made mysterious and glorious with stained glass and candles, soft music, and a gentle God straightened my spine and firmed my steps. With my newfound assurance I spared the time to listen for signs oC pursuit. We stepped onto the Isle de la Cite just as the mob pursuing us took possession of the bridge. Stones hit the cobbles around us with force. Angry voices grew closer. The crowds on the bridge parted. I sensed massive numbers of people joining the original throng. The irate people of the market square had raised the hue and cry. Part of me wondered if that was the proper term for the mob that followed us. Did French law define the duty of a Guardian of the Promise 95 neighborhood to pursue criminals en masse? I did not know. I hastened my pace up the steps of the massive stone edifice before us. Hal kept his arm about me, urging me to greater haste. A stone hit Helwriaeth's haunch. He yipped in pain even as he turned to face his attackers. Somehow Hal ushered me up the stairs and marshaled the dogs into the narthex of the cathedral. Somehow we stayed ahead of the mob. A shadowy black form loomed ahead of us, blocking access to the nave. With my heart in my throat and footsteps ringing loud and close in my ears I choked out the one word that would save us. "Sanctuaire!" "For people, not for beasts," the shadow growled in tones akin to the dogs he condemned. "Try keeping them out," Hal muttered. He shoved aside the shadow that proved to be nothing more than a black-robed and cowled man. The mob pelted up the steps in our wake, unheeding of the sanctuary. My memory of the vision of the St. Bartholomew's Eve Massacre two years ago flashed across my mind's eye. Once their bloodlust was up, these people would stop at nothing. "The crypt," I ordered Hal. He did not hear me. Or did not heed me. He and Helwri-aeth aimed straight for the high altar—the traditional place of sanctuary. "Hal!" I insisted in tones that mimicked Aunt Fiona. I did not need magic to command attention. "We need to go to the crypt. It's the only safe place." He followed me then. I closed the gate at the top of the stairs just as the first of our attackers came through the narthex into the nave. The cowled man had disappeared. I didn't know where and didn't care as long as he did not interfere. The mob aimed for one of the side doors, convinced we had escaped them by that means. Their noise dissipated and quiet reigned. I did not trust the quiet. Coffa kept sniffing at the closed gate. Someone awaited us there. Carefully, I made my way down steep staircases set into 96 Irene Radford stone, through damp passages and finally to the place I had only read about in arcane documents about the pilgrimage: route of the mystery cults. But I remembered as clearly as if I had been there. A small chapel opened up at the end of a long tunnel, hewn out of solid rock, cramped and drip- ; ping. Only one small vigil light, encased in red glass, burned above the altar to light our way. Hal sank down to the floor, eyes closed. Helwriaeth stood over him, fur still bristling. "Are we safe here?" he I asked. He sounded exhausted. His eyes darted back and forth seeking the ghosts he always feared near cemeteries. I lit a votive with a spark from the flint and steel left by the previous worshiper. I would not use magic in this sacred place. A place made sacred by the spring that still kept it cool and damp. People in need of spiritual guidance had come here in respect and awe with offerings to their goddess or gods long before Romans had brought their church to this place. "We are safe here. Here is the beginning and the end of |time. Here is where I will find some answers." Some answers. Not all. Never all, my father's voice whispered to me from across the grave. Goose bumps climbed my spine. But they were the good kind, the welcome-home kind, not the beware-danger-lurks kind. wt July, 1574. The village of Nether Pedley, near Ash-Mbourne, England. Dawn came bright and early for Donovan. He'd sat up most of the night listening to the late night rain drip from the eaves of the inn. He remembered nights when he and Martha had stayed awake listening to the rain, talking quietly, loving each other. The locket on his breast seemed to burn. He clutched it and his memories eased to the night he had spent with Mary. One night of loving. All he wanted was a lifetime of loving the exiled queen. Guardian of the Promise 97 Water droplets glistened on the ends of maple leaves and turned spiderwebs silver. He was amazed at the perfection of the gossamer creations, as beautiful as his love for Mary. But all of the beauty of the morning did not lighten his heart. Two of his children were missing. Mary had involved herself in—or been manipulated into—another plot to grab power from Elizabeth. The likelihood of charming his way past Bess, Countess of Shrewsbury, for an interview with Mary seemed unlikely. He fingered Betsy's locket and drew comfort from it. The beginnings of a plan tickled his brain. "I have ordered breakfast and the horses, Father," Robin said quietly from the doorway. He alone of all his children used the formal form of address to Donovan—though Betsy resorted to it when she wished to show her disapproval of her father. The others used the familiar "Da." Donovan wished Robin would remove that barrier of formality. "Will you have eggs with your beer and cheese or perhaps kidney pie?" Robin refused to look him in the eye. "Neither," Donovan wanted to say. He had no appetite. But the day would be long and hard. "Eggs," he said aloud. "And ale, not beer." Robin raised his brows at that. Since the importation of Flemish hops a generation ago that allowed the fermentation of beer, Englishmen, by and large, had nearly forsaken the traditional ale. They could not get enough of the stuff and complained bitterly if the brews were late, too new, too old, or flat. Beer seemed to have become a right more than a beverage. "I ride alone to the manor," Donovan added, stretching up from his seat by the window. "You must hie to London with reports of the wolves we encountered." "Lord Shrewsbury is more likely to respect your request for an interview with his . . . ah . . . guest if you arrive in a state worthy of your title and position at court," Robin reminded him. " 'Tis Lady Shrewsbury who rules that household!" Donovan spat on half a laugh. Strong men trembled in their boots when Bess confronted them for perceived minor offenses. Even Elizabeth Regina walked warily around that lady's goodwill. 98 Irene Radford Elizabeth could not have contrived a surer guardian f(jft Mary. m Robin put on his winsome smile, the one he usually reserved for Faith the glassblower's daughter, his belovefl. His entire visage changed from sober clerk to handsomer lover. >vi "Perhaps you had best ride with me." Donovan change^ his mind. "I rely on your charm and your youthful fap: visage to win Bess' favor." He clapped his ward on trp shoulder. The boy's long face, sallow skin, and dark hajs would remind Bess of someone. She might not make thp connection of his parentage right away. But the puzzle would intrigue her. p Bess loved nothing more than secrets. Secrets gave h$§ power over the powerful. She treasured them, hoardep them, and wielded them prudently. She would love Robigf and the secrets he represented. { Would she be intrigued enough to allow Donovan a fetil moments alone with Mary? | Before the dew had dried on the grass, they headed eas|| Donovan liked riding cross-country, allowing his horse tp pick its way while he sorted his thoughts and settled hfc emotions. On horseback he could find the inner stillne* necessary to working magic. t- Today that stillness deserted him. Even touching Betsyfjf locket did not soothe him. He could think of nothing bi|§ Mary. |? Something else nagged the back of his mind. He needed to be doing something else, worrying, planning . . . whatf; Visions of Mary banished all else from his mind. H|| excitement rose with each passing mile. He'd see Mar^ again, even if he had to climb up the outside of her tow^jf prison. His imagination ran rampant with his gallant actiorii and a dramatic rescue of his love. .. Robin left him in peace to daydream. ji And then the sprawling manor of Chatsworth Hall rosi before them. Not a formidable prison after all. Just a mag>* nificent home designed to keep a family and its guest* comfortable. t "Only one more dragon to vanquish," he muttered. ^i "Did you say something, Father?" Robin peered at huj| queerly. g,f Guardian of the Promise 99 Had Donovan been talking to himself the entire ride? If , the boy must doubt his sanity. Donovan must doubt his wn sanity. What had he forgotten? "Bess will be like a dragon guarding the castle gates," onovan explained. "Yes. Quite." Robin pursed his lips. Donovan shook his head. How could he have raised a child who preferred literal and precise words rather than mystical metaphors? The life of Kirkenwood Castle and all of the Kirkwoods revolved around Otherworldly concepts and symbolism. Queen Elizabeth, beneath her literary allusions and fondness for masques and plays was a logical, determined (stubborn), practical thinker. Who else would think to pay off England's debts by revamping the coinage and changing the sumptuary laws, encouraging people to spend money and generate trade rather than strict economies and frugal living? She would love this young man if Donovan ever gave her the opportunity to know her natural son. If he ever told Robin the truth of his parentage. Polite and efficient grooms took their horses at the main entrance to Chatsworth. An officious steward announced them. Bess received them in a small solar that caught the morning light. She did not stand to greet them or put aside her needlework. (Donovan noted that her stitches were not as fine or even as Mary's work.) "Lady Shrewsbury," Donovan gave his best imitation of a courtly bow. But the old injury in his left thigh chose that moment to lock his knee. Robin had to haul him upright again by grabbing his elbow and pushing on his waist. "Haven't had that happen in a while," he muttered his apology. "I know all about your gimpy leg, Milord of Kirkenwood," Bess replied harshly. Her sandy blonde hair had grayed considerably since Donovan had seen her last. She had put on weight, too. But the added roundness to her round face did not soften her expression or enhance her fading beauty—if she'd ever had any. Donovan had loved one strong and determined woman. His second wife, Martha, had an inner core of steel that she had earned through many years of making hard decisions in 100 Irene Radford a world that did not respect a woman's right to decide hi fate. She had learned to work with men. Most of the tin Donovan shied away from women with wills of their ov Too often they had adopted the manners of their que4 without the strength of personality to back them up. Thoj women tended to bludgeon a man with their willfulness, f He preferred women more willing to defer to him. Worn! who needed his protection and advice. They were easier figure out. Bess would not be easy to read or to work with if s| took a dislike to him or his request. "My secretary and I journey to London to make report to our queen. We wished to pay our respects to you and your noble husband as we passed," Donovan explained. God's teeth, couldn't she offer a man a place to sit? His leg throbbed and threatened his balance. Robin hovered too close, trying to protect him when he least wanted protecting. He wanted to get through this interview quickly he could see Mary. "Chatsworth is too far off the main roads for casual viJ tors and acquaintances. You have come with a purpog State it." Bess didn't need her steel corset to keep h| back straight and stiff. She had her determination to be unpleasant as possible. "Then I shall be as blunt as you, milady. I have acquaij tance with your guest from my years at court in Edinburg I wish to pay my respects to her. I have news of her so King James of Scotland." "No. You may not pay your respects to my guest." iff- Chapter 13 4 July, 1574. Chatsworth Manor. DONOVAN seethed, seeking a scathing retort to Bess' dictate. "My Lady Shrewsbury, I heard riders approach. Oh!" a soft voice with a lilting French accent said from the doorway. Donovan turned as quickly as his painful leg would allow. His heart lodged in his throat, making it difficult to breathe. It pounded so loudly in his ears he could hear nothing else. "Your Grace." He bowed from the waist, not trusting either knee to support him in anything more elaborate. "Your Grace." Robin managed a sweeping courtesy worthy of the courtier he was born to be. "I told you to keep to your rooms when visitors come," Bess said, a harsh edge in her voice. No polite titles or courtesies. She must hate the exiled queen Elizabeth had put in her charge—or rather in her husband's charge, as if Bess herself were not a worthy guardian of the diplomatic nightmare named Mary Queen of Scots. Mary seemingly did not hear her hostess' rudeness. Her gaze and attention belonged only to Donovan. "My Lord of Kirkenwood," she said breathlessly. "Your unexpected visit brings joy to my heart." "I have waited long and long to gaze upon your lovely countenance once more, Your Grace," he replied. He could look nowhere else but at her. She remained tall and graceful. Gone was the laughing girl who loved to dance and delighted in her gardens, hunting, and the gossip of court. A mature woman who had known hardship, buried two husbands, married a third under 101 102 Irene Radford duress, fought a war of rebellion and lost, and given up her son as well as her kingdom stood before him. She'd put an a little weight, enough to fill out the sharp edges of her face and figure. Her slightly out-of-date cream-coloied gown embroidered with blood-red roses emphasized hit dignified height and regal posture. But her once red-gdM hair had faded, and her eyes looked puffy as she strairjed to see beyond the end of her nose. "Still the most beautiful woman in the world," Donovan thought out loud. f "Best my cousin not hear you whisper such sweet compliments to another woman," Mary laughed. \: Light bells rang in the back of Donovan's mind, like fa||-ies giggling on the wind. ff' "Good Queen Bess is as blindingly beautiful as sunlight on water, sparkling and awesome. You, though, sweet lady, are the elusive moonlight glistening on faerie wings, flittiag through the woods. Never captured, only glimpsed, and ever more beautiful because of it." The pretty words offji courtier tripped from his tongue. He'd heard players s£Jr much the same in some whimsical theatrical. But he meapt the words, every one of them, with all of his heart. "Walk with me, milord. The roses are most lovely trap year." Mary held out her hand in invitation. "I did not give you permission to walk out of doofcl today," Bess protested. "Be sure to report my infraction of the rules to yofjr husband, mistress. And to your queen. I am certain th^y will devise some punishment, though how much more they can contrive to curtail my freedom, I do not know." Mafy tossed her head in disdain. Donovan offered his arm. She placed her white har|a with its almost preternaturally long fingers upon it acp smiled at him. They stood nearly eye to eye, nose to nosei lip to lip. No. They must not indulge in such intimacies while Bei and Robin observed. Behind them, Donovan heard Robin ask something inane and polite of Bess. She replied. More words that drifted past his ear like so much moondust. He cared not. He wjfe with Mary. In a moment they would be alone. He askei Guardian of the Promise 103 othing more of life or the gods at this moment. If all they ad was this moment, then this moment must be made onderful. "The morning light brings wonderful highlights to the olors of this rose," Mary gushed over a deep red blossom. ewdrops kissed the petals. f Donovan wanted only to kiss her. "Mary, we must talk," he sighed. Daydreams of recapturing the rapture of their one night together must wait. "How fares my son? Our son," she asked, still bent over the rose. "Young James, King of Scots, is growing up as determined as you. He has a prudent head on his shoulders. I foresee a time in the not-too-distant-future when he will dismiss his regents and rule on his own." One piece of firm evidence lived to confirm that Mary had come to his bed one night. James. The son they had conceived in a few moments of wild passion never to be repeated. "But he is so young!" She straightened up to make her protest the stronger. "Old enough to listen and know that his counselors all have hidden motives and goals that do not necessarily coincide with the best interests of the kingdom. He will rule with care when the time comes." "I can only pray that he has listened to the priests and tutors I have sent to him. Scotland cannot prosper until She returns to the proper faith." Donovan made no comment on that. James' regents and counselors had outlawed Mary's Catholic faith and turned back at the border or the harbor every priest no matter who sent them. Mary would not listen to the truth if she did not want to hear it. "Mary, beloved, I have come to warn you that evil forces gather round you once more. Men who lust after power but want none of the responsibility of ruling fairly or justly, seek to use your name to further their own ends." Images of the werewolves who hunted as a pack sent a frisson of warning up his spine once more. He had to hasten to London and consult with Elizabeth. Together they should be able to devise a plan. There was something else he needed to . . . 104 Irene Radford "If these men will help me regain my throne . . ." W" "The Protestant barons of Scotland will not have y4H back as their queen, ever." ?"»• "But the people of Scotland, my Highland clans ..." "The clans of the north do not command enough troops to conquer the rest of Scotland." Nor could they put asije clan rivalries long enough to work together for a commam good. He took her hands and forced her to look him in tile eye and know the truth. "The clans are poor in land arid in spirit, though many cling to the old faith. The rich low* lands that feed all of Scotland are almost completely Protestant. The barons like ruling Scotland without interferendft from a monarch. They will not have you back even to try you for the murder of your husband Lord Darnley." I' Protests died on her lips. Tears welled up in her eyeiL She gulped a moment and closed her eyes. When she r«^ opened them she had regained control over herself. "Thea I will have my other throne—the throne of England, denied me by my illegitimate, heretical cousin Elizabeth." l "By English law, Elizabeth is neither illegitimate nor heretic. To call her either is considered treason." Donova* allowed that message to sink in. "Mary, please reconsider. Elizabeth is prepared to hold you prisoner for the rest of-your life. Thomas, Duke of Norfolk, and many others have already died trying to remove her from power in your name. Will you be the cause of more useless deaths?" Her chin remained firm and stubborn. "Your only hope to escape the bonds of Elizabeth and her dragon Bess is to publicly renounce your claim to England, as you abdicated Scotland." • " Twas not a true abdication, forced from me upon the threat of my life. Pope Pius V and now Pope Gregory XIII have declared it invalid." > "Your only hope is to accept it as valid, along with youif resignation of England for yourself and your future-' children." f "And what of my existing husband, Bothwell? Do you' think the Danes will release him from prison if I remove myself from Elizabeth's list of heirs?" ;: "You were prepared to annul your marriage to James j Guardian of the Promise 105 epburn, Earl of Bothwell in order to marry Norfolk. Nei- her Pope Gregory, nor the Archbishop of Canterbury, nor the Presbyters of Scotland will force you to remain married to the man who kidnapped and ravished you if you truly choose to be rid of him." "And why should I do that, Donovan Kirkwood, Baron of Kirkenwood?" "To marry me. You would be free to return to any of my homes, or we could settle in France. You could help me raise a passel of motherless children, perhaps bear more bairns of our own." "I must give up everything I hold dear to follow my heart. I am a queen, milord. Queens do not have the luxury of marriage for love. Elizabeth will not allow me my freedom, no matter what, unless I turn Protestant as well. The price is too high, Donovan." She turned from him, hanging her head. "Think on these matters, Mary. Please." He let go of her hands reluctantly. "I hold you in my heart, Donovan. Along with our son James. My memories must be enough. I could give up my crowns if I thought either Scotland or England would benefit from my actions. But I cannot give up my faith, and I cannot believe that either country is safe from evil until they return to the true Church of Rome." Holding her head high, she strode purposefully toward the manor house. "Beware, beloved. You refuse to see that peace under any faith is preferable to war and persecution under yours. Unscrupulous men already gather with plans to use your blindness. I fear you will be victim rather than victor." Darkness crowded his vision. His inner sight sparkled with the conviction of the truth of his prophecy. "Gods forgive us both." He hastened after her. "Mary, wait, please." He caught up with her under the little overhang of the postern door. "At least grant me one kiss. I cannot bear it if we part with bitter words. One last kiss is all I ask." "Oh, Donovan," she sighed and melted into his arms. He met her warm and soft lips with the heated demands of his mouth. His arms wrapped around her lush body, drawing her closer, and closer yet. His hunger for her rose. 106 Irene Radford IP After a moment of listless compliance, she returned his embrace with fiery passion. Thus had they come together once before. Needing each other, drowning in each othefc "Would that we had more privacy," he panted when he finally allowed his lips to leave hers. "Would that you could creep into my bedchamber tonight," she sighed, resting her head on his shoulder. "You have but to point to the proper window and no walls will keep me out." He kissed her temple gently. The fierceness had not left him yet. He dared not unleash it with Bess and her bevy of servants and retainers likely to come looking for them any moment. "Must I truly give up everything I value to be with yoa night and day?" she asked wistfully. "I fear 'tis true, sweet Mary. Ours is a love not meant to be." As his brother's love for Roanna was not meant to be in their lifetime. Griffin the Elder and Roanna the High*-land Rose could only be together in death. Donovan prayed to every saint and god that might listen that such was not the case between him and Mary. "I cannot do it, Donovan. My loyal and trustworthy knight. I must stand for my rights, my church, my lawful inheritance." "You sound like my brother," he said bitterly. Just once^ he wished he could believe in something bigger and might* ier than himself. You believe in the family. Is the leap to belief in God so much longer? His brother's voice, overlaid with Grandmother Raven's voice, with Martha's voice, with all the voices of the ancestors back to King Arthur's Merlin haunted him. With effort, Donovan closed his ears and his mind to the ghosts. "If I sound like the twin you lost and still mourn, then you must understand why I cannot renounce my claims or my faith, even for a love as great as ours." Mary turned away from him and reached to open the postern door. Her . hand lingered in his, fingers twining. Donovan pulled her back for one last embrace, regretful, bittersweet. "My head understands, but never my heart." The sound of horses' hooves treading on the graveled drive tore them apart. Two plodding animals, large, well- F Guardian of the Promise 107 shod, and placid, Donovan decided from the loud, slow crunch approaching from the other side of the rose garden's defining hedge. "We found you at last!" came the bright giggles of his daughter Betsy. "Robin, do help me dismount." "Curse it. Must that girl defy me at every turn? She refuses to see why I must keep them apart." "As we must ever be apart," Mary reminded him. "Politics be damned. I'll not be kept from you forever." Donovan stole one more kiss before heading toward his errant daughter. Chapter 14 u 4 July, 1574. Paris, France. The crypt of Notre Dame. ^ I AWOKE with a start in the cold and damp crypt of th« cathedral. Coffa warmed my back, snoring lightly and kicking in her dream of chasing rabbits. My chest and face weue cold. Had I dreamed of Hal's feather-light kiss upon my brow? I almost remembered words accompanying that kisft. What had he said? Even if the memory was only a dream, I needed to paw attention to it. In my family the gift of portent through dreams ran strong. My father had it. Upon occasion I had glimpses of it, too. Hal kissing me good-bye. I sat up, eyes darting about in alarm. The vigil light beside the altar cast more shadovw than it banished. Coffa roused, ears cocked, nose working, wary but not overly concerned. I trusted her to know if anyone or anything threatened me. "Hal?" I whispered into the darkness. ' Only my personal ghosts and fears answered me wit^t silence. Drawing upon the Earth beneath me for strength, I brought a ball of cold witchlight to my hand. The shadow* retreated. I was truly alone. '" Where had Hal gone? I searched the memory/dream inj-ages for clues. Something about information and food. ] My stomach growled to let me know my body agreeB with his mission even if my mind and heart did not. The chill of the crypt and my own fears set the hairs ofa my arms and my nape on end. I had to find Hal. I needel his physical strength as well as his constancy (bullheacf 108 '¦ Guardian of the Promise 109 edness I often called it) to keep me from abandoning my quest when fear and difficulty assailed me. "Coffa, come." I rose stiffly and made my way back the long passage to the steep spiral staircase. Years of accumulated damp made the metal treads and railing slick. Coffa did not like the idea of climbing, though she'd trotted down them willingly enough with a dangerous mob on her tail. The dangerous mob. Gone elsewhere for now. Simmering and seething. Waiting for a single spark. Paris was ready to explode with hatred, fear, and blood. Just as it had two years ago. I did not believe that the mob of its own volition had slaughtered ten thousand people in three days simply because their princess married Protestant Henri de Navarre. Someone had provoked the violence for his own evil purposes. I had to stop it from happening again. The new king, Henri III, was the key. If he vowed religious tolerance as the law of the land at his coronation, then the de Guise faction, the Holy League, Rome, must bow to his will, even if they disagreed. Before I could intervene with Henri III—and I did not yet know how I would gain his presence—I needed information and food. Hal had gone for both. Should I wait for him or go in search? Curiosity, stubbornness, and a need to be out and doing something propelled me upward. My dog was left to follow me as best she could. I knew she would come after me. She always did. Her sense of duty to me was stronger than my own sense of caution. At least I had enough sense to stop and listen with all of my senses extended to the far reaches of the cathedral before stepping into the nave. A few lay servers bustled about preparing for Matins. They barely acknowledged my passage through a side chapel and out into the drizzle-wet streets. Only normal traffic outside the cathedral. The mob had not gathered to wait for me. The underlying violence remained in the air, heavier than air, almost tangible. I had to hurry and complete my quest. I hoped the mob had not cornered Hal somewhere without me to help him. Briefly, I cast about for a sense of my cousin's presence. Coffa and I could not see, hear, or smell him on the wind. My dog tried following their scent trail. 110 Irene Radford gift We headed for Le Pont St. Michel, across the Seine to the south. At the beginning of the bridge the tramp of many people obliterated the trail. I had to resort to magic though my stomach protested ia hunger and a pain behind my eyes made it difficult. Our enemies might find us by tracking my magic. I had nfci choice. I had to find Hal. Carefully, I sent threads of magic out in every direction. All but one withered and died before they found their tar? get. The last one, traveling south and west, beyond the Latin Quarter toward St. Germain met a wall. I'd never known Hal to erect such a strong shield before. Usually, he left at least one tiny chink for me to penetrated Betsy could break down any barrier he erected if she added blood to her casting. I doubted even Betsy could find a way around or through this wall. 'p. But it was more than a wall against penetration by magic. This wall was also a core of malevolence, fear, and lust. It radiated uneasiness. Everyone in Paris was susceptible, i A very powerful magician manipulated the mob from tt power source nearby. "Oh, Hal, stay away from there. You can't handle it alone." I stopped thinking a moment, only trying to feel where Hal might be. But the irritation built into that magical wall got under my skin. "I'm not sure I can handle this magician alone. I'm not certain the two of us combined can do more than protect ourselves from him. We need your da, and Betsy, and my da, too!" : 4 July, 1574. Spanish Embassy, Paris. Yassimine heard the whip snap. Almost simultaneously burning pain erupted across her bare back. It stung. She felt a welt rising, red and raw. The lash had not broken her skin. Even though she had not fed last night, she had gorged herself, as instructed, the two nights before. Her body wajS strong and resistant. fe ¥ <¦¦¦ Guardian of the Promise 111 She jerked and moaned anyway. The Master expected it. The Master enjoyed it when she writhed in pain. The sooner he perceived her as humiliated and penitent, the sooner he would send her back to her subterranean cell. Only there in the dark solitude would she have the clarity of mind to think hard about the presence of the other. She had to know if she could use this new power to defeat The Master and form her own pack. A meneur des loups, the French called this new presence. One who tamed the wolves that were not true wolves. The Spanish called The Master El Lobison. She liked the French phrase better, and intended to claim it for her own. The whip snapped again. This time the leather snaked around her neck. Yassimine held her breath against the burn of the lash. The Master tightened it, just a bit, just enough to let her know he could choke her if he chose. She rattled the chains that bound her wrists. The manacles slid slightly on the single hook set into the wall. Neither the hook nor the chains would last long if she exerted her full strength. Ordinary iron. She could break them if she chose. But that would alert The Master that she used him as much as he used her. She arched her back and moaned again. Her plans for escape were not yet complete. She had to endure him a little longer. "Pay attention to your lesson, Yassimine!" The Master commanded. His voice sounded very like the whip—his favorite toy next to the hook that replaced his left hand. She savored the memory of the taste of that hand. She'd savaged him the first full moon after he bought her at a slave auction. But his magic was stronger than she. He had beaten her senseless while still bleeding. Then he had staunched the wound and raped her again. Eventually, he would pay. "I must obey," Yassimine recited the litany he had screamed at her since moonset. Another crack of the whip. This one was not so fierce. Yassimine rotated her hips as much as her back. The scent of The Master's arousal came to her, sharp and urgent. He'd finish with her soon. 112 Irene Radford "I must not stray so far from you that the silver chair* burn. I must not stray beyond the limits of the city," sh(T continued reciting the words. » His scent came closer. She heard The Master coiling thB whip. '' "You will remember your instructions from now on?*' The Master whispered harshly in her ear. He ran thp butt of the whip handle down her spine to rest jugfc above her bottom. There he traced a delicate circular design. | She swayed in rhythm with his ministrations. "I will remember," she said on a long exhale. "I do not wish to force another chain upon you, Yassimine." The whip clattered to the floor. He grabbed her hair and yanked her head back. His tongue mimicked the circular pattern below her left ear. He buried his face in her hair as his hook snaked around to lift her breast. Yassimine leaned back against him. Her nipples puckered in anticipation of the savage joining to come. •. "You are mine, Yassimine. Mine to command. I paid a fl| great deal of gold for you. You must obey me." He spun her to face him. The chains of her manacles twisted upon the hook, straining her arms above her head. Her breasts thrust outward. His teeth captured one nipple, not quite biting, more intense than a suckle. "Yes, Master." The scent of her own moist need com- ^ bined with his. -- "Why did you disobey me last night? You knew I must punish you." He panted the words as he fumbled with his codpiece. She breathed in sharply, not wanting to answer him-quite yet. '- "Answer me!" He slipped the tip of his hook into th* silver ring that pierced her pubis. Gently, at first, he tugged. Pain. Pleasure. Excitement shot sharply upward and outward. Her veins filled with anxious heat. "Answer me." He tugged again. Harder. "Why did you ; disobey me?" He twisted the hook in the ring so that if pressed against her opening. Another sharp singe of pleasurable pain rammi core of her femininity. She gasped. Guardian of the Promise 113 Then he thrust his swollen cock deep inside her, strong and hard. She rode the waves of heat that coursed up her spine. He filled her. Her power over him grew. He needed her. His breath mingled with hers, spicy, sweet. She sucked him in, deeper and deeper until he exploded. And then she bit him. A taste of his blood flowed over her tongue. Just a little nip to the side of the neck. Enough to warn him of the dangerous path he trod. Enough to gain a little control over him. He bit her back, harder. She, too, courted danger. But his teeth did not break her skin. She half smiled at his human weakness. Then he sagged against her, spent and gasping for air. She answered his question. "There are others, like me in Paris. Wolves and yet not wolves. Two, I think. I sensed them. And then I smelled them." The Master reared his head away from her. His cock popped out of her. He fumbled to control and conceal his organ, and his lack of control, once more. "That is impossible. All of your get are elsewhere. I control them. Better than I control you." He righted his clothing, his posture, and his dignity. "There are no other lobunos. Werewolves. You are too strong. Your scent permeates the city. No other would dare trespass on your territory." The absence of his hot body pressed against her left her chilled. Her nipples puckered more tightly. His eyes narrowed their focus upon her. Desire flared once more. "This other is not one of my get. I did not bring about the change in him. He ... he is other." She feigned a loss of words, letting him question her intention before he could recover and engage in another bout of sex. "Where did he come from? How did he get past my barriers around the city?" "I do not know, Master. I know only that he is here." "Where are they?" She shrugged. The movement lifted her breasts. The chain between them swayed. The Master grabbed her, lifting, pushing. He rubbed his rising cock against her once more. 114 Irene Radford "Where are they?" he repeated baring his teeth. He heli| his hook at her opening, ready to tear her apart. if "One of the others is female," Yassimine gaspecfe Excitement sent a flood of moisture over the tip of hi| hook. i He began to rub her with the blunt curve. "What is thjf significance of that, my pet?" He licked the side of hef neck. |; She moistened her lips, ready to bite him once more. "Fefit male is unusual. Les loups-garous," she used the Frencfl term for one of her kind, "are solitary hunters. Even during mating season. We do not travel together unless controlled by you. And we respect another's territory. Either one of these others is formidable. Together their power is . . £ great. Greater, perhaps, than yours." ? "Impossible!" The Master spluttered. His erection fal§> tered. "No magician is stronger than I. I control all of thfc werewolves. All of them!" "Not these. These are so powerful I can smell the wolf in them even now in broad daylight. And the moon is not longer full. I should not be able to smell them at all unlesf they are within arm's reach. My need to protect my terrife tory flares. La lobuna in me refuses to fade with the mooni in response to their smell." To emphasize her point, shf pulled on her manacles. The hook pulled out of the woocf paneling. With another quick twist and tug she broke th£ wrist shackles as well. The Master took one step back, away from her. I "Only a mage as powerful as I can force your kind tcj hunt together. I must protect my territory, as well as yoursf I will have to kill these others. That will weaken the mage who controls them. Then I will hunt him down and destrojl him as well. My plans have come forward too far to allovtf a rival to destroy them now." f "Only I can kill the others. They will not succumb tc|' magic or mundane weapons. Especially when they are tol gether, combining their powers. Only one of their own caif kill them." r The Master had to give her the freedom of the city agairi tonight. If she could find the others, they must help heit break the magical chains that bound her to The Master! Then she would gather together all those lobunos she ha j Guardian of the Promise 115 helped create. Five in England. Seven around Rome. Three in the Germanys. No power, political, spiritual, or physical would resist her then. She would rule the world and, once more, people would bow down and worship the wolf within her. SQi Chapter 15 4 July, 1574. Chatsworth Manor, England. "YOU should arrange their betrothal," Mary Queen of Scots said quietly to Donovan. They strolled toward the main drive where Betsy continued to gush news of her ad- 1 ventures with her Aunt Meg to Donovan's secretary. "The girl is besotted and the boy is obviously from a noble family. An advantageous match." Mary's hand brushed Donovan's. A signal of her own affection that must remain secret. "Elizabeth will never allow them to marry," Donovan returned. Martha would not have approved either. She would have pointed out how unsuited were their personalis ties, their expectations, their place in society. But then his second wife had never approved of anything about Betsy^ the product of Donovan's first marriage. Warm tingles ran up his arm from Mary's touch. Her presence seemed to remove the guards on his tongue. "Elizabeth? Why should she object? None of you are of royal blood." Mary eyed him sharply. Donovan clamped his mouth shut on the obvious retort. Robin, when just an infant, had been the object of Norfolk's plots to assassinate Elizabeth and set himself up as Robin's regent. The Kirkwood family could not allow the boy to become an innocent pawn in another scheme to* wrest power from Elizabeth. \- Elizabeth ruled England with an iron fist, cloaked in aj velvet glove. She held England united, stable, peaceful, andl prosperous. Could Mary do the job half as well? I 116 Guardian of the Promise 117 Mary continued to look to Donovan for an explanation. She narrowed her eyes in speculation. The longer he kept quiet, the more she must probe the secrets surrounding Robin's birth. "Elizabeth has plans for my family," Donovan finally stammered. "The border march guarded by Kirkenwood is very valuable. Our heritage is more valuable. She wishes to control our breeding as she controls everything that touches her or her realm." "Does she know . . . ?" Another secret that must be guarded. "No. Elizabeth does not know that you and I... that James VI of Scotland might be ... is my son. James does not know either." Of all his extended family and political contacts, only Mad Meg had guessed the truth. She spoke in such convoluted riddles, however, that no one took her prattling seriously. Bess approached them, obviously curious about the newest visitors to her palatial home. Donovan said no more. Too many secrets. Too many hearts broken by politics and religious differences and fate. A gifted playwright could make a compelling drama of this. Donovan took a deep breath and prepared to face his daughter and his sister. Only something of dire importance would drag Meg out of her seclusion near Huntingdon and away from the shrine of their brother's grave. He dared not speculate on the nature of the latest disaster. As the groups converged, Meg stepped away from her niece directly into Mary's path. The queen either had to stop or step around a very determined obstacle. Robin opened his mouth to reprimand Meg for this serious breach of royal protocol. Donovan gestured for quiet. Meg always had a purpose. Once set in her mind nothing deterred her, not common sense or manners, or incredible distance. Years ago, she had left Kirkenwood alone, traveled all the way to London on her own, merely to set her brother, Griffin the Elder, on the quest to rescue Robin from the machinations of the Duke of Norfolk. At the time, the duke had been the most powerful noble in the land. London had been hundreds of miles to the south, and she had no guarantee 118 Irene Radford except her own inner visions that she would find Griffin at all. Donovan smiled. Meg might be mad, but she always got results. Blonde curls dangled messily over her deep blue eyefk Kirkwood eyes. Her simple kirtle and skirt were threadbare and patched. As usual, she wore no shoes or kerchief. < Betsy, though dressed simply, maintained her impeccable grooming and sense of fashion. Neither probably thouglpt about their own safety long enough to even consider an escort of armed men. But then, both had weapons few men could match. "He's quite mad, you know," Meg said without preamble or introduction. She took the queen's hand and pressep some crumbled leaves into it. "He doesn't remember yoifc or your love. He'll die soon, alone and forgotten by aft but you." ji "Rosemary," Mary whispered, raising the little sachet to her nose. "Rosemary for remembrance." | "Who?" Betsy breathed the question on everyone's mind| "Get away from her, you filthy peasant!" Bess tried tj| shoo Meg back toward the horses. Meg stood firm, nevejjf taking her eyes off of Mary. I- "Madam, control your servant!" Bess ordered Betsy, i Betsy had the grace to blush. So did Robin. |> "You must excuse my sister, Lady Shrewsbury," Donqi* van apologized to his hostess. "Her mind does not work along conventional patterns." He took Meg's arm and trief: to turn her back to Betsy. \ Meg planted her feet and refused to budge. "Best yo% remember his fate. You can still change yours, but not his.f She continued speaking to Mary. \ "What is she talking about, Lord Kirkenwood?" MarJ asked Donovan. i "I think you know, Your Grace. Meg always makes ce tain at least a portion of her messages are understood." "Bothwell," Meg and Mary whispered together. Jame Hepburn, Lord Bothwell, was Mary's third husband. H had fled to Denmark during the last war of rebellio against Mary in Scotland. Instead of allies he had foun a prison. Mary gasped and fell silent. Guardian of the Promise 119 "Your sister?" Bess humphed and flounced back to her salon in a flurry of skirts and fluttering lace handkerchief. "Green does not suit her," Meg giggled, looking pointedly at Bess Hardwick's expensive brocade gown. "Ah, but green suits Queen Elizabeth, and yon Bess wishes to make herself another sort of queen," Donovan replied around a smile. "Green suits you," Meg looked at Mary. "But you refuse to wear it because it is your rival's color. Best you stick to gold, or mayhap a blue if it is deep enough in hue." She cocked her head prettily as if she had nothing more important to do than discuss fashion. "What brings you to Chatsworth?" Donovan asked his daughter. He made no move to escort her into the manor or find hospitality for her. "I did not give you permission to leave the hermitage." He tried to look stern. How could he with Betsy looking so hopelessly at Robin? He could almost hear her heart breaking as the young man turned his attention to the exiled queen, offering to escort her inside the manor. Donovan fingered the locket with a lock of Betsy's hair in it. She should have given it to Robin. Once more the rough catch pricked his finger. A drop of blood smeared upon the silver. Betsy smiled. She took her father's finger and sucked on the wound as would a lover. "There, Papa, all better." "Why have you come?" Donovan's attention kept wandering back to Mary. He had to concentrate hard to question his daughter. "Meg had a vision," Betsy said succinctly. Her eyes turned in the direction Robin had taken. "Meg has visions nearly every day. What in this one brought you down a dangerous road alone? You have no protection, few supplies. Probably no money. How could you be so foolish, Betsy?" "Hal and Deirdre are in Paris. They need help. I will go to them," Betsy announced. "You will not stop me." She almost chanted the last words. "No, you will not go!" Donovan forced the words out. Why could he not concentrate on what he must do? All he could think about was Mary. 120 Irene Radford "What kind of help do they need, Meg?" Donovan's pro-* tective instincts leaped to the fore. Plans for the journey to> the foreign capital formed in his mind, even as he spoke. "You, Betsy, will remain in England under your aunt's pro* tection." He pointed his finger at his daughter. It shook with anger and anxiety. '~f Betsy looked down her nose at his hand in disdain. | He did not remove it. "Magical help. They face monsters," Meg replied. "Meti who are not truly men, animals that are not truly animals* magic that is not the magic we know. Enemies to peace* Enemies of life." * 4 July, 1574. Near sunset, Paris. f 1S S Hell Hal scrunched lower in the shadows where he and wriaeth watched and listened. A swarthy man wearing garish yellow-and-pink ballooij trousers that ended at his knobby knees, with a contrasting; doublet, paced in front of the gate to the Spanish Embassy ? His companion stood a little taller; also dark-haired bu . fairer of skin. He waited, patiently leaning against the wal to the forecourt. He, too, was dressed in the latest of fash -ion, but in more subtle and complementary shades o: i brown and rust. He either had well turned calves or paddec , his hose better than the flamboyant one. |~ Hal instantly labeled them as a Spaniard and his Frencl > compatriot. Both had plans that did not bode well for the peace of the city. \ "We cannot wait until the next full moon. The city ii ? ready to explode now. In another month fears will abate' and tempers will cool," Sefior Flamboyant spat in ar atrocious accent. Even Hal spoke better French than he (' did. "In another month, summer will be at its peak, wateiB will taste flat and barely quench the constant thirst. On! the poorest and most desperate will remain in the cite thenj Tempers will flare even without our prompting," Monsie Guardian of the Promise 121 Subtle replied. He inspected his fingernails idly rather than watch his companion's restlessness. "El Lobison informs me that his . . . ah . . . slave is still primed to work with us tonight." Who, or what was El Lobison? Hal wondered. Once more he wished he'd studied languages better. The word had no correlation to English that he could think of. "The slave? She works again tonight?" Monsieur Subtle stood up straighter, no longer needing the wall to hold him up. "But I thought . . ." "So did I. Apparently, our friend has worked his magic too well." Both men grinned evilly. Hal listened closer. He'd smelled no magic around this place. Helwriaeth had led him here, following a scent of his own, one that made him growl deep in his throat and keep his nose in the air working constantly. Any strong magic needs investigation, Hal told his familiar with his mind. Helwriaeth snorted and rotated his ears, seeking more information. His nose still bounced up and down, constantly seeking whatever had brought him here in the first place. "Are the men ready?" Sefior Flamboyant stopped his constant prowl for a moment. But his fists clenched and his toes tapped impatiently. He was not one to abide stillness long. "Mais oui," Monsieur Subtle replied. Hal did not like the way his eyes glittered. Greed or lust drove him now, not indifference. "I have gathered two hundred mercenaries. They are bored sitting in their camp all day, every day. They drink too much and whore too little. One word and they will begin the slaughter." "I have a list of targets." Sefior Flamboyant handed a folded and sealed parchment to the Frenchman. "They are to start in the Latin Quarter, then move north of the river to the warrens of streets and markets where the Huguenots infest. Let the slave slash the throats of a few loyal Catholics first. Then once our men begin retaliating against the Huguenots, the rest of the city will join the slaughter, as they did two years ago on St. Bartholomew's Eve." Hal fidgeted. He needed to get this information to Dee. Together they might come up with a plan. Together they Irene Radford 122 might be able to stop this atrocity. Then they would n|t need to risk forcing a foreign king to listen to two childreB But he also needed to neutralize the "slave." A femafi who slashed throats on command. What kind of hideofl creature could she be? It Then he knew. A creature of the night who had prowlAf the convent grounds by moonlight. A creature who wf| neither human nor beast, but both. Memory of the haiW paw smashing through the wooden gate turned his bloc|| cold. f% "Somehow we have to stop this beast, Helwriaeth," tie whispered. f* Helwriaeth liked the idea of killing the slave. He had * personal grudge against that one. fct But the emotions and sensory perceptions Helwriaeth fep to Hal were fuzzy, as if the dog were not quite certain when the grudge began—or would begin. \ Hal shuddered with premonition as well as indecisioi|i He weighed his options and didn't like any of them. ( "Follow Monsieur Subtle, Helwriaeth," Hal whispere^ with mind and voice. "I'll keep my mind open and find yoff later, with Dee." He ruffled Helwriaeth's ears. His familial leaned into him for a long moment of shared warmth anA love. Then, with a quick tongue across Hal's face, Hell wriaeth turned his attention back to Monsieur Subtle anil Sefior Flamboyant. I Hal crept away. He had to open his senses to Dee an(f at the same time keep part of his mind tuned to Helwriaeth|, Double images assailed his eyes. He saw what his dog saw on top of his own perceptions. A third point of view layered on top of that. The cobbled street seemed to shift ana heave. He stumbled over his own feet. "Slow and steady,'' he told himself. 5. A headache stabbed him in the back of the neck anc| deep within both his eyes. He squeezed them closed trying! to concentrate. J Then he caught a magical whiff of Dee. She was headedf in his direction. He sent her a brief image of a pub he'd passed earlier. They would meet there. Then he closed down his contact with her. One layer of perception lifted away from his eyes. He breathed a sigh of minor relief and listened more keenly to the two conspirators outside the Guardian of the Promise 123 gates to the Spanish Embassy. Their conversation came through garbled. Only a few stray words, meaningless, out of context. Unfortunately, Helwriaeth did not understand the conversation without Hal's mind to interpret for him. The two men embraced with a kiss of peace to each cheek. Monsieur Subtle departed toward the east and Sefior — lamboyant sauntered back into the embassy compound. Helwriaeth lumbered to his feet, stretching his back and is hind legs, then rocking back and stretching his chest nd forelegs. Hal shared the lurch and stretch of muscles. His spine seemed to settle into place. Only then did Helwriaeth amble in the wake of the conspirator. He kept a fair distance between them, letting the man's scent guide him. Then the man's body odor filled Hal, an exotic oil laced with spices. The perfume covered but did not hide rancid sweat, laden with garlic. The man had used the heavy perfume for many days rather than take the time to bathe. Both Hal and his dog wrinkled their noses in distaste. They shared a brief moment of humor at some half-thought joke. "What's so funny?" Dee asked. Hal almost stumbled over her. His vision fractured. A new layer of perceptions crowded out reality. He saw Dee as she would become: two inches taller, fuller breasts, tinier waist, a more slender face dominated by her big eyes, gray tinged with blue around the edges, more perceptive than ever. She looked into his heart and . . . And turned away. He shook his head to clear it. But the memory of how beautiful Dee would grow lingered. He needed to enfold her in his arms, protect her, share his life with her. The forbidden nature of his thoughts sent a shock of guilt through him. His head cleared and he saw the world as it was at this moment. Dee was his cousin, more like half sister. Their fathers had been identical twins. He and Dee had been raised together as brother and sister. He must admire her from afar. "Uh, is Coffa in heat?" he asked, still staring into her eyes. Dee looked at her dog. She tilted her head as if listening. "I don't think so," she murmured. Her inflection rose into a question. Irene Radford 124 "Just wondering. Helwriaeth has been acting strange Thought maybe . . ." How did he finish the thought? i "Where is Helwriaeth?" fc Then he told her what he had discovered. 6 She took a deep steadying breath and exhaled on one $ her expressive sighs. She had reached a conclusion she dift not like. * "Simple. We put the mercenaries to sleep with a spelU> Then we hunt this 'slave,' " she said with decision an|f began walking in the direction Coffa indicated Helwriaetli had gone. {i* "But how do we deal with this monster once we find it?** Dee shrugged. "We'll think of something. We always d<|* My head will be clearer once we eat." t "Are you sure we'll think of something?" U For the first time she hesitated. (* And he saw impending disaster hidden deep within he> eyes. ft, H Chapter 16 5 July, 1574. Spanish Embassy, Paris. YASSIMINE curled up on the pile of silk cushions The Master kept in a corner of his salon. Her eyes drifted closed for a much needed nap. Her knees twitched. She shifted to her back with her knees drawn up. Better. Now her lower back curved down into the crack between two cushions. Back onto her right side facing the room. That position twisted her neck. She rolled onto her left side with her back to The Master and one of his lieutenants—the one who dressed in the height of fashion but his colors clashed so violently they almost hurt her eyes. Ah, much better. Perhaps now she could sleep off her exertions of the past three nights and this morning. Her body still wanted to retract into her wolf form. The nearness of the other nagged at all of her senses. The Master's words drifted across her ears demanding she listen. Not now. She needed to sleep. Her eyes shot open. She could not sleep while an other prowled her city. "Unleash the men tonight," The Master said quietly. "El Lobison, the moon is no longer full. We agreed to wait another month. Henri will have returned by then. We will draw him more fully into our cause if he sees firsthand . . ." the lieutenant protested. "Tonight," The Master insisted. "Will she be able . . . ?" the lieutenant asked. Yassimine's back itched. They talked about her. She needed to know more. "She will transform tonight. There is another of her kind within the city. Possibly two others. Find them and kill them 125 126 Irene Radford before moonrise," The Master stated very calmly. As if othet creatures of the night happened upon them every day. ' f Yassimine could not allow The Master to kill the others* Only they could free her from the bonds of magic that chained her to The Master. She'd need more help than just removing the physical chains that dangled from her pierce! body. Until the chains were broken or removed, she would know no freedom, taste no true power. "How? How can one tell a werecreature from an ordi*-nary man except on the full moon?" the lieutenant asked^ "You know." The Master held up a silver medallion ut an ornate pattern. He turned the thing so that the red jewej in the center faced Yassimine. It began to glow and pulse^ The light faded and died when he pushed the talisman int<| the lieutenant's hand, the jewel facing the window now. The garish one shuddered. "I shall send out men to listetf in the marketplaces. Someone, somewhere, must suspect a neighbor of being infected." He kept his eyes lowered an<| his hands clasped. His knuckles turned white and his knee$ trembled beneath his padded breeches. Yassimine wondered how she could use his fear to hef own ends. If she could make him report to her rather tharf The Master, then perhaps she could slip out early and make contact with the others, have them free her before th4 change took over her reason and her need. If she con-> fronted them after the change, then they must kill each other. Nothing could stand between them and death. Unless ... 1 Was death preferable to endless years of slavery by_ The Master? * No. She must prevail. She had seniority of wolf form. Her people had worshiped her as a god. So, too, would these others. •¦ 5 July, 1574. A ruined chateau northeast of Paris. I draped one arm over the neck of each of the wolfhounds. Coffa gave me nearly complete pictures of the men camped ii Guardian of the Promise 127 inside the grounds of an ancient and nearly ruined castle a few miles east of the city. Helwriaeth supplied me with sounds ranging from belches and scratches to snores and quiet conversations. Between the two, I probably knew more about the two hundred mercenaries camped within the walls than their own commander. If anyone truly led this mob of greedy, drunken brigands. Boredom gnawed at them. Drink aggravated their uneasiness. When the order came for them to move into the city and begin murdering the populace, they would go willingly. The problem would be to direct their slaughter. My problem was to bleed off their restlessness and prevent them from going anywhere. "Can you do it, Dee?" Hal asked quietly. He stood behind me in the little copse at the foot of the chateau hill. Strangely, he did not touch his wolfhound. I'd never known him to stand separate from Helwriaeth if they could touch. Not since they had bonded on the day of the dog's birth, the same day my young Coffa came to me. "I think I can put them to sleep. But the spell will take time. The sun drops rapidly." Doubt bounced around my stomach. A night's sleep and a few hasty meals scavenged from street vendors was not enough to ferment ideas or brighten my confidence. The magic I intended to work would attract the power behind the wall of evil I had sensed earlier. There had to be another way to divert the mercenaries from their assigned job. If there was another way, I could not think of it. "What do you need?" Hal paced restlessly. Like his father always did. I was afraid the thrashing underbrush would alert the sentries to our presence. Hastily, I pawed through my scrip looking for packets of herbs Aunt Meg had taught me to carry. I devised and discarded a dozen combinations before I found the little bit of ghost weed reserved for emergencies. It was the best remedy when someone was in great pain or their internal humors were so unbalanced only a deep sleep would restore them. But the plant could only be used in minute amounts. 128 Irene Radford Uncle Donovan had added his warning to Aunt Meg's. His words held the weight of authority. Did he have firsthand experience of the drug? I had nothing else with me. But I need not take much of the drug myself. Sympathetic magic was the key to this spell. "Hal, go to the far side of the camp. Be careful no one sees you or hears you. When you are directly opposite me, build a small fire. I will signal you when to light it. At the precise same moment as me, you must drop this leaf into the fire." "It will work better if we have connecting fires at the North and South of your spell, as well as the East and West." His eyes lighted with hope. "We have no one to light those fires, or drop the leaves into them." "A progression. We both walk the full circuit and light each fire in turn, returning to the East to close the circle. Like we did last night with the—at the convent." He shied away from mentioning the beast. < I felt the same reluctance to confront the memory. "I have something else in mind, Hal. Please, I know more about ritual than you do. Just do as I ask." "I don't like being separated from you, Dee." His hands trembled as he spoke. "That did not stop you from leaving me in the crypt this afternoon." "You were safe there." "I shall be safe here. You are the one who courts danger. You will be moving around the camp." The world spun around me. Abruptly, I had to sit. Something was wrong. What? If I believed in something, someone greater than myself, I might have prayed. Believe in yourself. Believe in the family. They will lead you to God. Remember, that no matter what name you give to God, she is listening, my father's voice came to me as clearly as if he stood at my side directing the spell. S What will be, will, little one. Do what you must to stop the violence before it begins. * Hal trudged off, Helwriaeth pressed tightly against his side. Guardian of the Promise 129 Bit by bit, I stacked my own kindling and firewood. I named the construct "Tower." Then I drew a circle around the entire thing with a stem of the ghostweed plant. This I named "Wall." Little twigs scattered about became "Men." My concentration was absolute. I heard nothing, saw nothing but my work. When I lifted my head to seek Hal's progress, it was like coming awake after a long nap—the kind where I had slept too heavily and awoken too abruptly—that left me quivering inside. I wondered how much of me I had put into the ritual. Certainly, there was a big enough hole in my mid-region to account for that. Then Coffa's stomach growled. Mine answered. I understood the emptiness. "Soon," I promised myself and my dog. "Soon we will all sup and sleep. All four of us. Hal and Helwriaeth, you and me. Then we can go home." I breathed deeply as I pictured the weathered keep of Kirkenwood atop the massive tor, the village at its eastern base, surrounded by a circle of standing stones, the little kirk hidden in the woods by the lake at the southern base of the tor, Uncle Donovan, my cousins, the other fosterlings . . . A tear dripped from my cheek to my chin. Another hole opened in my middle. I needed to be home. Coffa lapped my face clean. I hugged her close. She wanted to go home as much as I. Hurry. Hal's mental voice intruded upon my misery. / hear someone coming. Dee, not all of the mercenaries are inside the camp. Hurry! I groped for flint and steel. Hastily, I struck them together. Fire, now, I nearly shouted to Hal. My first spark died, but the second caught the tinder. A delicate breath to the base of my kindling tower sent greedy Tanio, the element of Fire, reaching for more and more wood. "Ghostweed, now." As the last syllable dropped from my mind and voice, I let go the leaf and stem, into the heart of the fire. It floated listlessly. Awyr, the element of Air, akin to Tanio, caught the plant, played with it slightly. But then Pridd, my own element of Earth, grabbed the thing and drew it relentlessly into the heart of the fire. 130 Irene Radford % i At the first touch of flame to the dry stem, I recited th|» ....... ..... t f. r words that would bind them all together and project thii magic into the Real Tower, contained within the Real Wal| and affect only the Real Men. Tanio, Fire, bring light to darkened minds. L Awyr, Air, breathe life into my spell. ' Pridd, Earth, ground us all in your Goddess' love. i Dwfr, Water, blend my words with the Elements; i With the Symbols; t With life; k With Peace. | Then I chewed up the last little bit of the ghostweed| and spat it into the center of the flames and symbol of the Tower. fc Magic connected my fire to Hal's with a snapping sounji like a twig breaking. || A lopsided dome shimmered into place over the entirfc castle and grounds. P My mouth grew numb. p Smoke rose and swirled; formed an arrow and spe$ toward the Tower. i My mind followed the visible tendrils of my spell as thf smoke whipped through the castle ruins, permeating every nook and cranny, invading every mind within the walls. My mind drifted. I almost followed the smoke, almost became a part of the sleepy peace that brought every drunken mercenary to his knees and then dropped therft all into the waiting arms of Morpheus. *¦ The same peace descended upon my shoulders. My body grew as light as the smoke. My mind lost the drive to com*, plete the spell. I smiled and lifted my arms. : I drifted upward, uncaring for anything but to be homa If I peered very closely into the distance, I could see Ku» kenwood atop its tor. The village and standing stones. I could hear Uncle Donovan call to me. He needed me. I had to go to him. He held out a hand. I reached to grafc hold of it. ;'• "DEE," Hal called to me with mind and voice. Helf me! &¦ Guardian of the Promise 131 Helwriaeth added his mournful howls to Hal's plea. Kirkenwood's pull was stronger. Home. Family. My connections to the past and present. I forgot Hal and my mission. I even forgot dear Coffa. %'' !QSi Chapter 17 5 /«/y, 1574. A ruined chateau outside Paris. "HURRY, Dee." Hal cast about him with every sense available. Three men—no four—crept toward him. Two came from the south, one from the north, and the last from the east, behind him. Helwriaeth stood on guard, growling. Drool strung from his half-opened jaws. The guard hairs all along his spine stood up. His tail jutted out, long and straight and stili He'd allow no man to attack Hal while he lived. Fire, now, Dee commanded. Hal snapped the fingers of his left hand. Flame shot from the index finger into his kindling. Tendrils of smoke drifted upward. A tiny glow brightened, burst into flame. He breathed a brief sigh of relief. Helwriaeth's growls grew deeper, ended on half a bark; Hal hovered over the little fire, sprig of ghostweed in his hand. Waves of malice rolled before the approaching men. Hurry, he pleaded. Dee did not honor him with a response. He knew the spell could not be rushed. He knew tha£ only Dee had the strength, concentration, and familiarity with ritual to do this. But he needed to be gone from here. A string of whispered Spanish words came to him on the breeze. He needed to concentrate, puzzle out their meaning. "Look at the fire and the circle and the dog. This is the magician who challenges The Master's authority," said one of the two men approaching from the south. "We must capture him alive," a second voice replied. Hf 132 Guardian of the Promise 133 sounded very much like Senor Flamboyant. "The Master will wish to question him." "But he is only a boy," the first protested. How can he wield so much power as to challenge El Lobison?" "A great concentration of power in one so young does not bode well for The Master," Senor Flamboyant said. "Capture him alive!" he called across the woods. More thrashing in the bushes. Grunts and curses in Spanish and in French. "Now, Dee. Now. We have to finish this now!" Helwriaeth leaped. A man gargled and moaned. Hal smelled hot blood from the great vein in the neck. He felt Helwriaeth's triumph at felling an enemy. A shot rang out. "Yiikkkkkeeee!" Helwriaeth screamed. "How dare you hurt my dog!" Hal sprang in the direction of the gunfire. He landed upon the shooter before he could reload. They both fell to the ground. The shooter tried to bring his weapon around to club Hal behind the ear. Hal let fly with a fist to the man's jaw. His head rammed backward into a rock with a satisfying thud. Hard hands yanked Hal back onto his feet. He flailed. His elbow connected with a shoulder. Senor Flamboyant grunted. He did not relinquish his grip. His companion wrenched Hal's left hand around behind his ! back and pushed upward. His shoulder felt ready to dislocate. Hal still held the sprig of ghostweed, the key ingredient in the spell, in that hand. The spell had to work. "Ghostweed, now, Hal. Now!" The fire lay three paces behind Hal and to the left. "And now my young friend, who are you and what do ' you plan with that ritual fire?" Senor Flamboyant asked in French in his horrendous accent. "It isn't a very big fire," his companion commented. "Looks like . . ." His eyes opened wide and he bit his lip. ; "There is another fire and another magician." "Si," Senor Flamboyant snorted. "I thought him too young to have any effect upon a magician as powerful as The Master. Where is your Master?" The man holding Hal pushed harder upon his arm. Something tore in the joint. Hot pain dribbled down his arm. 134 Irene Radford NO! They couldn't go after Dee. Hal had to stall, haP to divert them until Dee finished. She couldn't finish ump he dropped the leaf into his own fire. \ Hal dug in his heels, flexed his knees and reared bacl|tr ward. His captors struggled for balance. He wrenched around, trying desperately to shake them off. If: Now, Hal. |t He dropped the sprig. He forced his thoughts to dire« it into the dying flames. The pain in his shoulder nearp made him pass out. The two men wrestled him away from the fire. Helwriaeth groaned and thrashed. Blood spurted frofi his side. |* Hal went limp. "Helwriaeth," he breathed in despair. 't "The other magician. Where is he?" Senor Flamboyant insisted. He drove his fist into Hal's gut to emphasize his wordjs, "There is no other magician," Hal gagged. He needed % double over, clutch his middle, contain the pain. He fouglft for breath and consciousness. *-. His captor maintained his rigid grip on Hal's arm, forcing him upright. K; "How can there be no other magician," the man behind Hal sneered. "You are but a beardless boy." Only one thing would keep them away from Dee. ['-', Forgive me, Da, for usurping Dee's heritage. >.-,¦ I need no other. I am the Pendragon of Britain!" » :.: "I have heard of one such as you." Senor Flamboyant gasped and backed away. His eyes flicked from the writhing form of the wolfhound and back to Hal. Hastily, he crossed himself. "You will pay for the injury to my familiar, Dago worm!" Hal cursed. He allowed his eyes to cross and he began mumbling nonsense words in Welsh. Anything to make the man believe. Run, Dee. Run away now. And never look back. They'll catch you. You must run back home and never set foot it France again. "The Master will be most interested in you and yoi|r dog." Senor Flamboyant smashed his fist into Hal's jaw. > Stars burst before his vision, then blackness. ' Run, Dee! Even if the spell did not work, you must ruri Guardian of the Promise 135 The ghostweed hallucination continued, more real than reality. Dimly, I heard commotion. I pushed it aside. Uncle Donovan was so sad. I had to reach out to him, comfort him. I needed to be home. And the ghostweed took my spirit there. Just as my fingertips brushed Uncle Donovan's, he faded into mist. The ever-present wind of northern England stirred his phantom image and dissipated it to the four cardinal directions. Kirkenwood suffered the same fate. Frightened, I looked down. I still thought I was flying. But the Earth rushed toward me at an alarming speed. I landed back in my body in a heap. Every joint in my body ached from the shock. I continued to jerk about when all I wanted was to still every muscle, still every thought, still this aching fear in my gut until I knew where I was. Who I was. Why I could not reach my beloved uncle. "Lady Deirdre," a man said urgently into my ear. "Deirdre." I rolled the name around my mouth with my tongue. It fit. Better than the acrid aftertaste from the ghostweed. "Yes, I am Deirdre. But I do not believe I am a lady." "That's our Dee," another man said with a chuckle. He sounded familiar. I forced my eyes open. Grit and a sticky film made them too heavy. Still, I concentrated on blinking them • open by stages. Eventually I could focus. The broad face of my cousin Gaspar, Uncle Donovan's illegitimate son, swam into view. Shorter and stockier than the rest of the ' men in the family, with a tangle of blond curls, Gaspar was by far the gentlest and calmest. He moved and thought at a slower pace than most of the Kirkwoods. But he under- ; stood people, took their emotions into himself, and made them his own. He could not lie and gladly protected all of the younger children with pride. I trusted him. 136 Irene Radford I reached up to cup his face with my hand. He did not dissolve. Nor did he shy away from my touch. "Gaspar." My voice sounded weak. And dry. I tried to-swallow. That much of my body worked. "What ails you, mistress?" the first man asked. "Is that you, Thorn Steward?" This time, my words sounded a little stronger. Who else would Uncle Donovaii send in search of two errant children but his trusted steward and the steadiest of his older sons? Then I remembered why I lay on the damp ground with an evening breeze chilling me to my bones. "The spell. Did we complete it? Where is Hal? Coffa!? I rolled over and onto my knees in one motion. My head threatened to remain on the ground. But eventually it caught up to me. Gaspar's restraining hand upon my shoulder kept me oa my knees. "Coffa!" I called, long and plaintively. "She took off, east, the moment she recognized us," Peregrine, Uncle Donovan's other illegitimate son, said from the edge of the copse. He seemed to be scanning the ruins of the castle with a small spyglass. Tall, dark-haired, with a long nose and sharp cheekbones, and restless, he looked and acted more like a Kirkwood than Gaspar did. Keenly intelligent, he could have been Uncle Donovan's heir except for his bastard birth and the fact that he had no magic in his soul. Not a scrap. And he resented the rest of us for it. "Where is the young master?" Thom Steward asked. He left his hand on my shoulder, anchoring me to the earth*. His touch was a terrible presumption of his class. • I leveled a withering gaze upon his restraint. \- He did not flinch away or offer apology. '? Gaspar chuckled. "He's more afraid of Father, if h# should lose you again, than he is of your witchcraft, Dee.f "Hal is at the other side of the castle. He watches $ secondary fire to complete the spell." The words tumble