Dragon's Met
Part Eight
by peregrin anna
c. 2001
(Disclaimers and notes may be found on the
introductory page
.)
Chapter 51
What is to give light must endure burning.
~ Victor Frankl
Chuck woke to find himself sitting up in bed, his head screaming protest
at the shock of violent movement. It wasn't long before his stomach
started in as well, and the effort to keep the bile down where it belonged
was all-consuming. He forgot the reason he'd been shocked awake until
he heard it again: a hoarse, inarticulate cry that stabbed the air with panic
and fear.
"M'rissa?" His lips felt like Silly Putty, his tongue like lead,
but Marissa wasn't going to hear him anyway, because she was the one making
the noise. Something was wrong, some overly rational bit of his brain
that wasn't suffering from alcohol poisoning realized, and he had to do something
about it. But it would be better for all concerned, he was almost
entirely sure, if he played the hero very, very...slowly.
It was still early morning, and the light outside his window was no more
than a faint smudge across the sky. It washed the room in a grey haze,
and it was enough to show him that he'd slept in his clothes again.
At this rate he'd cut his dry cleaning bill in half. He swung his legs
off the side of the bed, put one hand on the mattress and one on the night
stand, and eased himself to a standing position, gingerly testing his balance
before taking one step, then another. For a few minutes, the world
narrowed to what was directly in front of him. Each step sent his stomach
careening from one side of his rib cage to the other, his vision swimming,
and his head pounding. Chuck had never been a wimp when it came to
drinking, but last night he really must have gone over the limit. Last
night...and Crumb--hands out to the side, Chuck stopped just before
the open door of the guest room to take a deep breath and push all that away.
He had a job to do here. Marissa hadn't kicked him out or scolded him,
she'd understood, and now she needed him--
Her next outburst, words that he couldn't make out, scraped down his spine
like rusty nails over cement, and he had to clamp his hands to his ears to
keep his head from splitting open. The world twisted in on itself,
and when he opened his eyes, he was sitting half in, half out of the doorway,
legs splayed in front of him on the hardwood floor. Some hero.
Someone, probably Crumb, had left the hall light on, and it was shining too
brightly in his eyes. Also, he couldn't help but notice, a large tongue
attached to a very large head was licking one of his hands. Rather
than growling at Chuck, as he usually did, Spike was watching him with pleading
eyes, a soft whine deep in his throat.
"I know, boy," Chuck managed. "'M comin'." This time he used
the wall and Spike's broad, steady back to push himself up, thinking he might
save time and a great deal of dizziness, if not his dignity and pride, if
he just crawled the rest of the way to Marissa's room. Four lurching
steps down the hall, and he caught himself on the door frame as he lunged
into her room, the light finally, blessedly, behind him. It was enough
to illuminate the room, and Chuck had no desire to turn on any more lamps.
Blinking through the sharp, pounding pain, he had to take another few
seconds to be sure he was in the right place. He'd often teased Marissa
about being a neat freak, even though he knew, as she always explained with
affected patience, that she couldn't afford to be messy--it took her too
much time to retrieve things when she lost them. By anyone else's
standards, the books and papers scattered over the floor would have been
a bit of clutter, and not the royal mess that they seemed to be in this
room, in this house. Spike waded through Braille printouts that looked
to have fanned out as a stack was dropped, or kicked, off the bed.
Books lay open on the floor, upside down, right side up--it was hard for
Chuck to tell. Marissa shifted among more piles on the bed itself,
kicking and struggling against something in her dream. Even as Chuck
watched, she lashed out with her foot and sent another book crashing to the
floor. Both her hands were out of sight, hidden by a bunched-up twist
of blanket. Spike placed his head on the mattress and nuzzled Marissa's
shoulder, but it didn't have any effect. He turned a puppyish gaze
back to Chuck, as if to say, "Do something."
Chuck gulped. This was not his territory. Rescuing
damsels had always been Gary's zip code, and Marissa would clobber him for
thinking of her like that. Sucking in a deep breath that grated on
every nerve in his body, he picked his way, oh-so-carefully, across the
hardwood floor, over the books and papers, until he was standing next to
the bed, looking down at his friend in the half-light. All the distress
she'd tried to hide over the past couple of days was written in the tight
lines around her mouth and eyes, and Chuck knew that the squirming in his
gut was due as much to guilt and empathy as it was to alcohol. As unsure
of the etiquette involved here as he was of the best way to help, he knelt
on the floor, gritting his teeth when the spiral binding of a Braille book
cut into his knee. He reached out a hand to touch Marissa's...hmmm...shoulder,
he decided, that was the safest thing.
"Marissa?" He whispered her name, as much because he couldn't take
the way his voice banged around in his own skull as because he didn't want
to startle her. "Wake up, it's just a dream," Chuck added as he shook
her shoulder.
"Nuhh...sal--" Biting her lip, Marissa shifted under the blanket.
She was still holding something that Chuck couldn't see, and he wondered
briefly if it was a teddy bear.
He clamped down tighter on her shoulder. "Come on, Maris--"
"No!" She twisted away, jerking her shoulder out from under Chuck's
hand so abruptly that he fell back on his butt and sent the book beneath
his knee skittering under the bed. Marissa rolled to the other side
of the bed, pulling the blanket with her. The crystal ball rolled out
from under the covers and bounced on Chuck's arm before landing on the floor
next to him. He stared at it for a moment, then heaved his protesting
body off the floor. Curled on her side with her back to him, Marissa
was still muttering, lost in her nightmare. Spike trotted over to that
side of the bed and started licking her hand, but she yanked it away with
a faint cry of alarm. Chuck sat on the edge of the bed and reached over
to her shoulder again. At least she was wearing long-sleeved pajamas,
and not something with shoulder straps. He never could have managed
that.
"Marissa." He forced himself to make his voice louder this time,
even though it rattled his teeth and set off kettle drums in his ears.
"Marissa, it's just a dream. You have to wake up--so I can get some
sleep," he added. Under his hand, Marissa's shoulder hitched as she
caught her breath. Tucking one leg under the other, Chuck was able
to peek over her shoulder and get a look at her face. Eyes scrunched
up, lower lip quivering, she almost seemed to be...well, crying, and he wondered
if he was in over his pounding head on this one. "Please don't do this,"
he muttered, then, louder, "Marissa! Come on, it's time to wake up;
it'll be over if you just open your eyes, or...uh..." He trailed off,
not sure what blind people did to wake up. "Marissa?"
Her breath caught in a louder gasp this time, and her eyes flew open.
She sat up faster than Chuck would have thought possible, dislodging his
hand with a sharp shrug of her shoulders. He lost his balance again,
but managed not to fall off the bed.
"Who's there?" As Chuck steadied himself, Marissa pulled into the
far corner of the bed, sitting up against the headboard and drawing her
knees to her chest. "Who--what--"
"It's me, Chuck; it's okay, it was just a dream, Marissa--"
She turned her head from one side to the other with sharp, feral movements.
"What's burning?"
He'd been scooting closer, reaching for her shoulder and hoping to reassure
her, but now Chuck froze. "Nothing--nothing's burning. What are
you talking about?"
"I can smell it, something's burning, it smells like wood and--and--oh,
my God--" One hand flew up to her mouth, and for a moment Chuck suspected
he wasn't the only one in danger of losing the contents of his stomach.
Maybe she was still asleep; it was hard to tell.
"Marissa, are you awake? Look at--I mean, talk--talk to me, okay?
It's me, it's Chuck, and nothing's burning." She turned her head in
his direction, and he continued, "Remember when you moved in here,
and your mom made me and Gary put up smoke detectors in every single room,
even the pantry, remember?" Glancing at the detector that he'd put up
over the door to this room, Chuck searched for the right words, for any words,
that would bring his friend back from her nightmare. Normal, everyday
blabbering was all he could come up with. "Took us hours, it seemed
like, and then she showed up with more--with heat and carbon monoxide detectors,
and she wanted to sponge paint them or something, so they wouldn't look so
ugly hanging all over the place. Believe me, if something here was
on fire, we would have heard about it a long time ago." He paused, waiting
for the room to stop spinning--used up too much oxygen on that little speech.
But maybe it had been worth it. Marissa lifted her hand from her mouth,
swiped at her eyes, and he thought he caught the tiny curve of a smile.
After a deep breath, she sniffed at the air, and some of the tension went
out of her shoulders, though she did wrinkle her nose once in Chuck's direction.
"You okay?" he asked.
"It was the dream--I thought--Chuck, I had the most horrible, confusing
dream--"
"Yeah, I know. You were broadcasting it in stereo surround."
"Oh--" She buried her face in her arms. "I woke you up, didn't
I? I didn't mean to--"
"No, no, it's okay. Five AM isn't so bad." Chuck finally let
his hand complete the distance to her shoulder, rubbing it awkwardly.
The wry note dropped out of his voice, though, when he asked, "It was about
Gary, wasn't it?"
"Yes." Lifting her head, Marissa rubbed the palm of one hand with
the fingers of the other, for all the world as if she were reading Braille
dots on her own hand. Chuck noticed, in the pale light, that there
was an imprint on her palm, lines and criss-crosses that looked familiar
somehow. Marissa swallowed twice before continuing. "I was trying
to find Gary, and then I was so lost I was trying to find anyone, anyone
at all that I knew. It was a cold, hard place--it sounded like a cave
or a basement--and then there were hands, hands everywhere, grabbing at me,
and angry voices, and I could hear the fire, Chuck, I could smell it; it
was so real--and I tried and I tried, but I couldn't find Gary in all the
fire." The rapid blinking to hold back tears, the way her chin dimpled
with the effort, were so unlike Marissa that Chuck froze up again.
He didn't know what to say, and he didn't like what he'd heard.
"It meant something," Marissa whispered, half-choking.
"It was just a dream," Chuck insisted. "Gary's not--he's not in--he's
not burning up somewhere."
"No." Marissa shifted and crossed her legs Indian style while Spike
nosed at her elbow. She rubbed his head with one hand, running the
other over her eyes again. "That's not what I meant."
Chuck watched her closely, willing her not to cry. That he was sure
he couldn't deal with. The ice around these parts was getting dangerously
thin. "What did you mean, then?"
"Something's wrong, something's--Gary's--"
"Marissa," he began, and felt like a heel when her name came out in a
sigh, which she probably, from the way her expression hardened and closed
over, took as a sign of exasperation.
"Where's the scrying glass?" Her free hand patted the blankets around
her.
Chuck blinked. "The what?"
The hand on Spike's head squeezed a handful of loose skin and fur, and
her voice rose, took on a note of panic. "The crystal ball, Chuck,
where did it go?"
"Don't get your knickers in a knot, it's right here." Chuck had
to bend over the side of the bed to retrieve it from the floor, and when
he sat back up again he couldn't suppress the grunt at the fireworks of pain
that burst against his suddenly-blackened vision. "Oh, man," he muttered
as he handed it to Marissa. She cradled it in her hands, and Chuck
realized that was where the imprint in her palm had come from, from the bands
of metal that formed the base.
"It doesn't look any different, does it?" she asked in a faint voice,
rubbing a thumb over the smooth glass ball.
"Uh, no," Chuck told her, but when her shoulders slumped he added, "But
you know, I'm not the best judge right now. It's kinda hard for me
to see straight." Rubbing his temples, he shut his eyes and thought
just how simple it would be to keel over and fall asleep right here, amidst
the papers and blankets and Spike and Marissa.
"Tough night, huh?" she asked, and the smile she flashed at him was kind,
understanding--like Marissa at last, rather than some badly-shaken ghost
of his friend.
Chuck started to nod in agreement, but ground his teeth at the stabs the
simple movement produced. "You ain't kidding sister."
Clutching the glass ball to her with one hand, Marissa reached out with
the other. "And I had to go wake you up--Chuck, I'm sorry."
"Yeah, we've got to stop meeting at oh-god-thirty in the morning."
Chuck stared at her hand for a moment, suddenly aware of how strange this,
all this was, and how little anyone who knew the two of them--Gary, for example--would
believe of what had gone on in the past few days. "But really, it's
not a problem."
Marissa dropped her hand to the coverlet, but still left it stretched
in Chuck's direction. "It's embarrassing, though."
"Well, I'm sure I more than outdid you in that department last night,"
Chuck told her with a snort. He traced the raised waffle pattern
of the blanket under his hand. "Did I--uh--how bad was it?"
"Not bad at all." Marissa was still smiling that half-smile, and
Chuck started to breathe a sigh of relief, until she added, "Though you did
call Crumb by his first name."
"I'm a dead man," he groaned.
That earned him a chuckle. Marissa opened her mouth, shut it again
with a sigh, and then said, "Why don't you get some more sleep?"
It sounded like a good--no, a tremendous--idea, but Chuck hesitated.
"You--you gonna be okay?"
"Yes." Her voice was definite, but the way she clutched that crystal
ball to herself made him wonder. Chuck spared a glance at Spike, who
wagged his tail happily. At least one of them was content. "Thank
you, Chuck," Marissa added in a whisper.
He shrugged, even though she couldn't see it. Before he thought
about what he was doing, he brushed his fingers over her outstretched hand.
"What are friends for?"
"Exactly this." Marissa squeezed his hand for a moment, then released
it with a little wave. "I can hear how tired you are. Go sleep
a while longer. We can talk later."
"Yeah," Chuck agreed through the sharp-edged blows hammering in his head.
He gritted his teeth against movement and stood, walked carefully to the
door. He looked back once, and Marissa was still holding the ball thing--what
had she called it?--a strange, lost expression on her face. Chuck shook
off the small part of him that was urging him to stay, and went into the
spare room, downing four aspirin and the entire glass of water that he found
on the night stand before collapsing onto the bed and easing his aching head
onto the pillow. Something wasn't finished, he thought as his breathing
calmed. What, really, had been left to say?
Well, he'd wanted to ask Marissa more about Gary, about what she thought
had really happened. He'd wanted to tell her about Cat. But that
could wait for the morning, and a clearer head, and a stronger stomach.
Chapter 52
I have hands like my grandma, rough and wide
Smile like my father, kinda crooked at one side
And the thread of our union
Pulls through the years
Through the burdens and rejoicing
Through the courage and the fear
~ Carrie Newcomer
Marissa waited until she heard the bed springs creak across the hall,
then let the smile drop from her face. Stretching her legs out, she
reached for a pillow and hugged it tight against her chest, trying to still
the shaking in her hands. She had a pretty good idea what Chuck thought,
but in his condition it hadn't been worth the effort to make him understand
what all this meant. She never dreamt like this--never woke up shouting
from nightmares. But in this dream--somehow connected to the ball resting
in her lap--she had come close to Gary, to finding him, she was sure of it.
She was also sure that something was wrong, horribly wrong; that Gary needed
help now more than ever. Maybe she'd put on a halfway decent show
for Chuck, but she was still upset and, if she was honest with herself,
frightened out of her wits.
And her mouth still held the taste of ashes.
A few steadying breaths gave her the strength she needed to unclench her
hold on the pillow, pick up the scrying glass, and swing her unsteady feet
to the floor. The boards were cold, but they felt good under her feet--
solid, the stuff of reality, like Spike's paws clicking beside her and the
soft flannel folds of the robe she drew around herself. The metal and
glass that she clutched was something else, something other, but she wasn't
about to let go of that, either.
Down in the living room, she made her way to the front bay and lifted
the padded window seat to get to the storage area underneath. A wave
of cedar filled the air, chasing some of the phantom, acrid smoke from Marissa's
nostrils. The quilt she wanted was on top, and she pulled it out with
her free hand, using her shoulder to prop the seat open until the blanket
was free. Moving more surely now, she made her way to the sofa and
curled up in one corner, spreading the quilt over her lap and fingering the
patchwork top her grandmother had pieced years ago.
How old had Marissa been? Not even seven, not even in first grade,
but she had dutifully learned to match the textures with their funny names--seersucker,
dotted swiss, muslin, velveteen. And the shapes--kites that made dodecagons,
squares and triangles that made stars. She'd traced them with her fingers
over and over again, until she could not only name them, but cut reasonable
facsimiles out of scrap fabric and lay them in patterns like these while
she sat on the floor and listened to the soft whir of the sewing machine,
the snip of scissors, and the hiss of the steam iron. Grandmother's
fingers had often been shaky with arthritis, but when she was sewing, they'd
been sure and strong as the voice that told Marissa family stories and taught
her songs.
The quilt was worn these days, the fabric fraying as some of the seams
pulled apart, but she wasn't willing to let someone else replace the stitches
now that her grandmother was gone. So she stored it carefully, taking
it out only when she needed it most--times like now, when she wished with
all her heart that she could climb the stairs to Grandmother's room and find
the faith that had radiated from the old woman like a beacon. If anyone
in the world could have understood Marissa's present troubles, could have
given her advice, it would have been Grandmother--she shivered as the images
from her nightmare flooded her mind again, and pulled the quilt up to her
chin, trusting its tattered grace, inhaling its fragrance--not just cedar,
but the faint traces, maybe imagined, maybe not, of lilac cologne and oatmeal
cookies and candle wax. They were comfort and hope, a contrast to
the cold glass that pressed against her breastbone just above the
v-neck of her pajama top and the scent of smoke that hovered at the edge
of her consciousness.
Firetorn, her dream had whispered. Salve nos.
Save us.
Chuck was right--nothing here was burning. But something, somewhere,
was--or maybe, she finally admitted to herself with another shiver into the
quilt, maybe it was someone. Like the tessellating shapes that were
joined in her quilt, there was a pattern to this somehow, and what she'd
dreamed was part of it. Now, more than ever, she was sure that the
scrying glass was the key to finding Gary, but its secrets were unraveling
far too slowly for her, and certainly for the people around her--they'd all
given up already.
Maybe her own patience with this mystery was foolish. But that dream
had been too real to be anything but a message, a warning. Gary was
still alive. He was in trouble, serious trouble, somewhere beyond their
reach, and there had to be something they could do to help.
She traced a dotted swiss star, fingering the edges that had escaped Grandmother's
tight seams, fraying like her own nerves under the friction of too much time.
"There's a pattern; there's a reason," she said softly to Spike, and she
heard a deep doggie sigh from the floor. Snuggling down on the couch,
using the overstuffed armrest for a pillow, Marissa prayed that she could
untangle the mystery of Gary's disappearance before she unraveled at the
seams.
Chapter 53
Come not between the dragon and his wrath.
~ King Lear, I.
i.
Gary awoke with a mouthful of foul saliva and a head full of the Hickory
High School Marching Band's Percussion Section.
Ba-DUM-da-da-DUM-da-da-da-da-DUM-BA-DUM-da-da...
They obviously hadn't practiced since Gary's graduation. They were
horrible, out of rhythm, and ghastly loud.
And they were inside his head. Had to have been, because it was
so heavy he couldn't lift it from the--what was that pressing into his cheek,
anyway? Wood. He was lying on a bench somewhere, with the ghost
of high school past weighing down his head. The percussion section
had never been particularly svelte. Joey Sims was as big around as the
bass drum he played, which he was currently jumping on in Gary's skull.
He had no idea where he was, or how the band had got there, and his eyelids
were too heavy to lift. Groaning softly, Gary moved one hand--hand,
he had a hand, though it weighed as much as a Sousaphone--up to the bench,
and managed to brace himself and push his head a couple of inches off the
thick-grained wood before gravity won the battle.
Clank! The cymbals clattered to the bottom of his skull.
"Oh, shi..." Air escaped his lungs in a soft moan.
Damn it, where was he, what was going on? He'd never felt so awful
in the morning, not even the day after Chuck's graduation party...
Chuck. There was a familiar snoring coming from somewhere nearby,
Gary realized as other sounds began to filter through the band's warm-up.
But it couldn't be Chuck; Chuck was in California, and Gary was--
Gary was--
Oh, God.
With a Herculean effort, he blinked open the eye that wasn't squashed
up against the bench. He shut it again as soon as the images registered,
but couldn't wipe them from his mind.
Stone floor, strewn with revelers who appeared to have dropped wherever
they felt the need; empty wine goblets lying sideways everywhere, the dogs
curled up with the leftover bones of roast beast...
Gary's stomach heaved and he swallowed, licking his dry, cracking lips.
Don't think about food.
People, the people were all wrong. They were dressed in clothes
from a Shakespeare play or--
--or the Middle Ages. It all came back to him in an unwelcome rush.
He could see it now, the look on Marissa's face when she asked him why
he'd been gone, and he told her he'd been busy tying one on with the cast
of _The Princess Bride_. That would go over well, wouldn't it?
Especially since she was already pissed at him for ducking out last night--
No, that wasn't Marissa. Morgelyn. Gary rolled onto his back
and covered his eyes with that one heavy hand, shielding his face against
the first rays of light streaming into the great hall. Oh, Morgelyn
was gonna kill him.
It would be a mercy, at this point.
Anything to stop his head from pounding; anything to stop his eyes from
aching; anything to make the darkness stop spinning, anything to stop--
Plop.
"Meow!"
Gary stopped breathing. It hadn't been a real plop, not a Sun-Times
plop. More like a "plip". But the second sound was unmistakable,
as was the fur rubbing itself against his other, still-dangling arm.
Gary grabbed a handful of it and hauled the cat up level with his drum-filled
head.
"Now? You gotta be kidding me." His voice was cracked, rusty.
"Meow..."
"All this time it goes AWOL--now?"
Now. It had to be important, it had been days since he'd seen--Gary
sat up in one panicked jerk, and had to drop the cat and put his head between
his knees. Bad move, Hobson, he thought, cradling his head and its
collection of tumbling drummers. Bad, bad move...
"Meow!"
Head still hanging, Gary pulled his eyes open by sheer force of will.
Cat sat at his feet, pawing at--some kind of book, loosely stitched with
twine...
Morgelyn‘s book. Her grandmother's...how did it get here?
Carefully turning his head from one side to the other, Gary scanned what
he could see of the main hall, but he didn’t see Morgelyn. Not a creature
was stirring, except for the cat.
"MEOW!"
He picked up the book and opened it, turning through pictures of leaves
and flowers and a handwritten scrawl that was completely indecipherable
to him. Then, at the end of the book, something changed--more lettering,
tightly packed, and no more plants, but in the dim light the letters he
could make out were in combinations that meant as much to him as Chinese
would.
"What am I supposed to do with this?" he asked Cat through a clenched
jaw. "I can't even read it!"
A man sleeping on the next bench over muttered in his sleep. Gary
needed to get the hell out of there. Clutching the small book, he
scooped up the cat, wobbled to his feet, waited for the room to stop spinning,
and finally located Fergus's snoring form near the closest fireplace.
Curled around his harp, the would-be bard was as oblivious as anyone else
in the hall. Gary picked his way over silk dresses, brocade breeches,
and jewel-studded goblets. He couldn't bend down and shake the guy awake--that
was asking far too much in his unbalanced, heavy-headed state--so he toed
at Fergus's ribs, trying to ignore Cat's plaintive mews and the way it kept
pawing at the book in his hand.
"Ummpphhh!" Fergus rolled over, curling into a tighter ball.
Gritting his teeth, Gary bent at the knees, carefully lowering himself
until he was close enough to hiss, "Fergus, wake up, damn it! We gotta
get out of here!"
"Worry not, love; your husband won't be back for another fortni--"
"Fergus!"
The bard blinked awake, staring at Gary. "I know I did not drink
that much last night--"
"Damn it, get your stuff and get up. We gotta get out of here, now."
"Gary?" Fergus struggled to sit upright, his harp twanging as it
hit the stone floor. "What--what are you doing with that cat?"
"Meet me outside," Gary growled. There were too many people in here, unconscious
or not, and he wanted to leave unseen. Luckily, he didn't see Nessa
anywhere.
Out in the courtyard, he sat down heavily on one of the stone benches.
Morning fog clung to the corners of the walled garden, and though the sunlight
was filtered through clouds, it created a glare that deepened the ache between
his eyes. Though the marching band had subsided, they were still on
the field practicing. At least their rhythm was getting better.
Gary fumbled through the pages, trying to find something to which he could
attach his rising sense of panic. "Couldn't deliver plain old English,
could ya?" he muttered to Cat, who sat perched on the bench next to him,
regarding him solemnly.
The writing at the end was formal, elaborate, hard as hell to read.
Not the grandmother's, and because it was so very different, Gary didn't
think it was Morgelyn's either. That made him more uneasy than ever.
If it had come with the cat, it must be news, and if someone else was writing
news in this book, then what had happened to Morgelyn? Or rather, what
was going to happen--it couldn't have happened already, it had to have shown
up here so he could stop it, whatever it was.
Finally, at the bottom of the last page, he found something that looked
vaguely familiar--Latin, Gary realized as he squinted, like the mottos on
some of the monuments and buildings he knew.
"In Memorium--Dormiunt in lux perpetua veritas."
He only could figure out the first two words, but they were enough to
send the marching band from his head down into his heart, where they threatened
to push the overworked muscle right out of his rib cage. When Fergus
spoke from just behind him, Gary nearly jumped out of his skin.
"Why in the name of Our Lady did you do that to me?"
Gary spun around as Fergus continued, "Waking me out of a sound sleep
after a night like the last one is criminal. I do not understand--"
"It came." Gary thrust the book at his perplexed friend.
"Morgelyn's book? How did you get hold of that?"
"Cat brought it."
Fergus's frown went so deep his eyebrows met. "How could the cat
have brought that book all the way from the cottage?"
"It didn't."
"But you said--"
"It just appeared here, like my paper does. With the cat.
And there's something weird with the book, it's changed, it's like it's
the paper--tomorrow's--or some day's--news, the news, Fergus, I think this
is what's gonna happen--" But it couldn't, it couldn't happen, not
if it was what he thought. It would help if he could just think straight,
if he knew what it was that was supposed to happen. "I can't read it,
Fergus, you have to help me out."
Eyes round as cymbals, Fergus set down his pack and took the book from
Gary. While he read, Gary paced, two steps to the bench, turn, two
steps back, turn...he got dizzy and had to stop. "Tell me it doesn't
say what I think it says."
Fergus's face went pale. His hair whipped from side to side as he
shook his head. "No. No, I told her this would happen.
Why did she not listen to me?"
The ringing in Gary's ears wasn't from the triangle section. "Damn
it, what's going to happen?"
"It says they came for her the morning after the Midsummer's festival--today--how?"
Frustrated beyond belief, Gary grabbed Fergus by the shoulders.
"Who, Fergus? Who came? What did they do to her?"
"Mark Styles is dead--last night--" Fergus winced at his own words.
"They believe Morgelyn--they will--"
"What?"
The two men locked eyes for a moment, and Gary felt a fresh wave of nausea.
"It says she is dead," Fergus whispered. "They went to her house
and they killed her this morning because they believe she is a witch."
"No." Gary released Fergus's shoulders and headed for the gate.
"Not yet, it hasn't happened yet."
"Why would someone write this if it is not true? And who
wrote it, Gary?"
"That doesn't matter. It's going to be true if we don't stop it,
Fergus, let's go." Gary watched Cat run for the main gate.
"We gotta go now."
"But that would be magic, if your cat managed to write the story, and--"
Fergus gulped down the rest of that protest when Gary turned an angry glare
on him, and held out a placating hand. "Even if it has not yet happened,
you are talking about us against dozens of people, with clubs and rocks and--"
He shook his head again. "We cannot possibly stop them alone.
We need help."
Clubs? They were going to--oh, no. Nonono. "Fine then,
go get help," Gary called over his shoulder as he strode through the gate,
angry but out of time to argue. "Me, I'm gonna keep them from--"
He couldn't even say it.
To his surprise, Fergus caught up with him, nodding. "I know, I--very
well," he said suddenly. "If this has not yet happened, then we must
do everything we can to stop it. What if Mark Styles is not yet dead?"
Gary frowned. He hadn't thought about that. But every instinct
he had was screaming at him to get to Morgelyn. "What if he is?"
"I will go to the village and see. You find Morgelyn, and if you
can get her away before it--before they--do what you must, head up the coast
and I will find you later. I will find someone to help, someone who
will--" He broke off, his expression one of blank panic. "Who?"
"Father Ezekiel."
Fergus shook his head, which made Gary dizzy. "No, no--he may believe
that she is--"
"Then you make him believe that she isn't! Try, Fergus, you
try. Who else are we gonna get to help? He might have doubts,
but I don't think he'd let them kill her, not without some kind of trial
or something."
"No, not a trial, she would be--"
"It'll buy us time--look, I gotta go. This doesn't say when anything's
going to happen, just says morning, and I don't even have my watch any more."
"You know the way from here?"
Gary glanced down at Cat, pawing the ground impatiently. "I don't
think that'll be a problem."
The two men looked at each other. "Hurry," they said at the same
time, and took off in different directions.
Neither saw the figure that emerged from the shadow of the yew hedges,
a slow, cruel smile curving onto an otherwise beautiful face.
Chapter 54
There was a wave over the house
There was fear choked in my mouth...
There comes a time we all know
There's a place that we must go
Into the soul into the heart
Into the dark
~ Melissa Etheridge
The marching band helped. It pushed adrenaline through Gary's veins,
urged him forward across the damp moor and into the forest--not fast enough,
but faster than he would normally have been able to go with a two-ton anvil
of a hangover. He didn't pay attention to paths or landmarks, just
followed Cat, who streaked ahead of him like a cheetah.
Little bits of what Fergus had told him filtered through the drumbeats,
joined the meter of his pounding feet and exploding head. "They came
for her this morning..."
No.
"Mark Styles is dead...they believe she is a witch..."
No.
"They killed her..."
No.
They came upon the cottage, Gary and Cat, from the woods behind.
When he reached the clearing where Fergus had chopped wood, he could smell
smoke and see the first flames licking at the thatched roof of the cottage.
Over the faint, malicious crackle he could hear voices, angry voices, shouting
accusations in a cacophony that chilled him all the way through the sweat
he'd worked up running. Too late, he thought. The villagers were
already there. Every pounding footstep brought him closer, turned up
the volume, but he couldn't make out the one voice he needed to hear. He
threaded his way through the last of the trees and could see, in the front
garden, a rough circle of men, intent on whatever was in the middle of their
group.
"Make her watch it!" one of them shouted. "Let her see it burn."
Hatred had its own manic sound, its own smell. Gary couldn't define
it, but he knew it, sharp and terrifying, and he'd never been overpowered
by it before now. Fergus was right, they would kill her, if they hadn't
already. Completely out of breath, ankle-deep in flowers, he nearly
went down on his knees. There were too many of them..."We need help,"
he said to Cat, but it didn't leave, just sat there in the garden staring
at Gary. The world blurred around him until one frightened, angry voice
rose above the others.
"You cannot do this--you have no right! Take your hands off me!"
That propelled Gary across the garden and into the crowd. Morgelyn
was still alive, and he had to get to her. He yanked villagers out
of his way, calling her name, but he could barely hear himself. He could
smell drink and see the clubs and knives the men held when he bumped into
them, grabbing their shoulders to haul them out of his path. But what
scared him the most was what he saw in their eyes: fire and righteousness,
grim determination and a fierce glee. Pushing his way between two men
holding torches, he finally made it to the center of the vicious group, and
the pounding in his head reached a deafening crescendo.
Two men held Morgelyn, one clenching each arm. Her feet were suspended
just above the ground, kicking ineffectually. She was still wearing
the red dress from last night, but the skirt was torn; her braids had come
loose, swinging wildly from side to side as she struggled. One of the
men shook the arm he held and Morgelyn opened her mouth, but then she saw
Gary, recognizing him before any of the others even seemed to know he was
there. Their eyes met for one frozen, terrible second that cleared
his head better than any hangover remedy could have.
Morgelyn recovered first. "Gary--the house, the books! The
trunk, Gary!"
Understanding was instantaneous. The trunk, his clothes, the
Sun-Times , the Dragon's Eye, his only way home. Gary spun on
his heel and started back through the crowd, but then he heard one sound
above, or maybe through, the voices and the crackling fire. It was
a thuck of something hard against something soft, something human--and then
a cat's yowl of indignation. When Gary whirled back, the villagers
dancing through his spinning vision, he couldn't see Morgelyn.
Oh, God, what had they done, why had he left her--
He pushed his way back, fighting harder now, matching his own panicked
desperation against the wild anger of the men who turned to stare at him.
They seemed to realize, finally, that someone wasn't going along with the
program, and they tried to shove him back--out of their circle, away from
Morgelyn, who was no longer screaming or yelling and he couldn't see her,
couldn't hear her, what had they done--
"Stop it, damn it! Leave her alone!" Gary swung his elbows
and fists wildly, hit someone in the face, shoved right back at those who
would have kept him away, and used his shoulder as a wedge to get through.
It was like swimming up a waterfall, but he finally broke through the circle
again. Morgelyn lay curled on her front path, arms clenched around
her abdomen, eyes squeezed tight as one of the men lifted a heavy wooden club
for another blow.
This one was aimed at her head.
Gary launched himself forward; he landed on top of Morgelyn and took the
brunt of the blow in his shoulder. The sharp pain that exploded across
his shoulders, down his back, and into his already-abused head didn't even
matter. He was on his feet before he understood what had happened,
his thoughts a step behind his body, except for one: he couldn't let this
happen.
The man with the club was Simon Elders; Gary recognized the red hair and
slack face in the split second glimpse he had before he plowed into him,
pushing him back into the arms of the other villagers. A hoarse voice
shouted, "Go home, stranger!", but Gary ignored it. He spun back to
check on Morgelyn, who was sitting up, eyes squeezed shut, still clutching
her stomach. She reached out blindly, unaware of the rock being aimed
at her by someone else across the circle. Gary grabbed her hand, hauling
her up and out of the way. The rock sailed past them and hit Simon in
the knee.
"Stop it, I said stop it! Just STOP!" Gary shouted over Simon's
howl. He pulled Morgelyn in close, one arm wrapped around her shoulders.
Shaking, she clutched at his tunic. "Do you even realize what you're
doing?" Gary yelled, and his voice echoed like thunder in his head.
The men around him fell silent, though none of the hostility eased.
It only grew, like the flames that were now leaping from the roof of the
cottage.
"We are ridding our village of a filthy whore of a witch," snarled a voice.
"No." Gary had to fight dizziness, and he wasn't sure, between himself
and Morgelyn, who was leaning against whom. They were encircled, surrounded,
he thought wildly--nowhere to go. If Fergus was coming with help, he'd
better be there soon. "No, she's not a witch." He looked down
at his friend, who was staring at the flames leaping off her rooftop with
horror in her eyes. How could anyone think--
"Mark Styles is dead, d'ye know that?" Simon Elders brandished
his club in their direction, and Gary pulled Morgelyn behind him. "His
child lived because he broke that witch's curse, but then she cursed the
man himself for cutting her, and now he grows cold in his bed!"
"It's not her fault--she wouldn't--"
"It is! She is a murderer and a witch!" Nods and grunts backed
up Simon's accusation.
"I did not kill Mark." Her words were shaky and she kept a death
grip on Gary's arm, but Morgelyn stepped out from behind him to face Simon.
"He was sick and he didn't come to me for help, and all he drank last night
no doubt killed him sooner--"
"This had nothing to do with ale, witch." Simon literally
spat the words in their direction; Gary flinched and started to pull Morgelyn
with him as he backed up, but there was only room for half a step before he
could feel the breath of the men behind him on the back of his neck.
"If he had asked me for help I could have--"
"You would have killed him that much sooner!"
Morgelyn's "No!" was half-shout, half-sob.
"She didn't kill anybody! How many of your lives has she already
saved, when you were sick or hurt?"
"Stranger," Simon said, staring down Gary with insane malice, "we have
no quarrel with you--yet. Get out of the way and let us be about our
business, or I promise you, you will get the same as her." Shouts and
jeers rose from all around them. Gary shook his head in an emphatic
"no" and wrapped his arm around Morgelyn's shoulders again. He caught
a flash of orange fur out of the corner of his eye, headed for the garden
gate, but he didn't know if Cat was deserting him or going for help.
They needed help to stop this unbelievable nightmare--a whole mob
intent on murdering one woman--it just didn't make any sense.
"You can't do this!" Gary knew he should try to reason with them,
but he was too angry to calm his voice. Holding out one hand, palm
forward, he tried to find the words to stop the men who were closing in,
making the circle tighter, making it harder for them to breathe. Time,
he had to buy time, it was the only thing that would save them. "Look,
if you--if you think Morgelyn did something, then don't you have to have
a--a trial? Shouldn't there be a judge or something? You can't
just accuse someone and kill them without proof!"
Several of the men paused at that, looking uncomfortably at each other,
at the burning house. But the glare on Simon Elders's face didn't
ease one bit.
"That is true." Morgelyn's voice was quiet, but it had an air of
command about it. "If you believe I could have done this, if you truly
believe me capable of--of murder--" She lifted her chin. "Then
you have to call upon the king's sheriff."
"Why delay justice?" shouted a man behind them. "The sheriff will
say the same as the Good Book. All witches must die!"
"No--" But this time Gary's protest wasn't loud enough to rise above
the nightmare chorus of shouts that engulfed them. He turned Morgelyn
toward him, grabbed her hand, and mouthed, "Run." She nodded.
"Now!" Gary shouted, and pulled her toward the weakest part of the circle,
only two men deep. But he wasn't fast enough, wasn't strong enough.
Men came at them from every direction, screaming curses--they were pulled
apart, and when Gary turned back for Morgelyn there were men in between them,
shovels and coarse cloth and scraggly beards, hatred and ignorance, and
fear as great as his own.
"No, leave me alone! Let me go!" All the command and
poise was gone from Morgelyn's shouts; there was only desperation.
Gary reached out to her, tried to save her from all the hands pulling her
away, pushing her down onto the ground. Someone brought the handle
of a tool down on his forearm, and as he bent over, breathless with pain,
the marching band started up again, only this time in the rhythm of horses'
hooves, pounding under Morgelyn's cries. "Gary! Gary, please--"
He heard it again, the soft thuck of wood, or maybe stone, against skin,
and, pushing blindly through the men around him, redoubled his efforts to
get to Morgelyn. The horses were closer now. Please, he prayed
to whoever might be listening, please let them be real. Please let
it be help.
Gary pushed one man away, then another, only to be grabbed from behind,
pulled away, losing ground...
He had to reach her. He had to, but there was no way he could, they
kept pushing him back. He could hear them swearing; could see flashes
of a red dress; could hear Simon shouting, "Finish her off before she curses
us all!"
And then the hoof beats clattered to a halt behind him.
"Stop in the name of God and the Church!" bellowed an unfamiliar voice.
Gary spun around, hoping to see Fergus and Father Ezekiel--but the three
men on black horses were wearing armor and an insignia he'd seen before--at
the manor house. These were Nessa's guards, he thought with desperate,
sinking disappointment. They weren't the help Fergus had promised.
The villagers fell silent, gaping at the new arrivals; his gut told Gary
the farmers and craftsmen weren't the worst danger, not any more. In
that moment, when everyone else was frozen by surprise, he turned back, knocked
over a pitchfork-wielding farmer, and jumped for Morgelyn. His fingers
brushed hers, but before he could grasp her outstretched hand, something
cracked across his skull. The bass drum exploded, and just before the
world blinked out he saw Simon Elder's darkly satisfied face, and heard Morgelyn
screaming his name.
Chapter 55
You can wear life like well worn gloves
Embrace it like your truest love
You can hold onto something strong like that
Fending off every trouble standing back to back to back
~ Carrie
Newcomer
The next time Chuck woke up, there was rain tapping at the windows--not
a serious downpour, but enough to be a nuisance. Another lovely day
in Chicago. Maybe it was the cloudy sky that had kept him in bed so
long, he thought, squinting at his watch. It was past ten-thirty,
nearly eleven o'clock. Or maybe, he realized when his head started
throbbing the minute he sat-up--maybe it was more than that.
He swallowed more aspirin from the bottle on the night stand, then went
to the bathroom for water, assiduously avoiding looking at his own face
in the mirror. At least this time he was able to walk without getting
impossibly dizzy. Chuck risked a glance at Marissa's room as he passed
and found the bed made, the piles of books and papers neatly stacked on a
dresser. Rubbing at the stubble on his face, he thought about going
back and taking a shower before heading downstairs, but decided against it.
Simply negotiating the steps was going to be hard enough. He needed
coffee, and it wasn't as if Marissa was going to care about what she couldn't
see.
As it turned out, however, it wasn't Marissa he needed to worry about.
He picked his way through the quiet living room and into the kitchen,
lured by the scent of coffee, but nearly turned around when he heard Crumb's
amused chortle.
"Whoa-ho! I've seen some sad cases in my day, Fishman, but you look
positively pathetic."
Settling for a stiff shrug and a glare, Chuck headed for the cupboard
where he thought Marissa kept her mugs. Crumb's hand came over his
shoulder and held the door closed.
"You don't want to deal with me until I've had at least half that pot."
Chuck pointed at the coffeemaker on the other end of the counter, but didn't
turn around.
"Don't be an idiot, Fishman. I got something better that'll perk
you right up."
Chuck swallowed hard and rested his forehead on the cupboard. "Aw,
no..." He hadn't been gone long enough to forget Crumb's stories about
his legendary hangover cure, made from a list of ingredients that painted
all but the most hardened of McGinty's patrons green at the gills.
"Perfected in the Navy!"
Jumping at Crumb's voice right behind him, Chuck muttered, "Show a little
respect for the dead." He still hadn't turned around, and Crumb plopped
a large glass on the counter, right under his nose. "This stuff always
got my boys up and going, even after the wildest shore leaves."
Chuck risked a glance down, then quickly shut his eyes. "Is that
a--a raw egg?"
Crumb clapped him on the shoulder as he passed, filling his own mug with
coffee. "Nothin' like it to cure what ails ya. Don't think, just
drink. You gotta lie down for about fifteen minutes after, and then
we've got work to do."
"Wha-what work?" Turning his back to the counter, Chuck stared around
the cheerful kitchen and thought maybe he'd just sit in here all day.
His head was still throbbing, even though it wasn't nearly as bad as it had
been earlier this morning when he'd--wait a minute--"Where's Marissa?"
She was a compassionate person. Marissa would save him from this fate,
he was sure of it.
Crumb pursed his lips, then poured coffee into his own mug. "Drink
the damn stuff and then we'll talk."
Chuck watched, envious, as Crumb swallowed huge gulps of coffee.
Nice, normal caffeine. Then he made a face at the glass next to his
hand. "It smells like poison!"
"You didn't have any trouble with the poison you were downing last night.
C'mon, I am not sitting around in the danger zone until you get your stomach
settled and your head screwed on straight." Crumb's mug rattled when
he set in the sink, and Chuck winced against the noise. Clamping one
hand on Chuck's shoulder, Crumb thrust the glass under his nose. "Drink."
"You think this is going to settle my stomach?"
"Either that or clean it out." There was a hint of manic glee under
Crumb's matter-of-fact declaration.
Chuck thought about staring the older man down, but he *really* needed
to sit, and Crumb was between him and the table. He took a deep breath,
then another, held it against the sharp pungency of the concoction, and brought
the glass to his lips. "I don't know about this--"
But Crumb's hand was on the glass. "Bottom's up, Fishman."
He tilted the glass, and Chuck opened his mouth to keep the stuff out of
his nose and off his face. Milk, whiskey, Tabasco sauce, flat beer,
and, yes, an egg slid down his throat in succession. Chuck swallowed
just to get it all out of his mouth, and in a few seconds it was down.
"Gah...ack...oh...I...Crumb, I really need to just--" Chuck would
have slid down to lie on the cool linoleum floor right where he was, but
Crumb was bigger. He forced Chuck and his wobbly legs through the doorway
and into the living room. Chuck barely noticed when Crumb pushed him
down on the sofa--he had his eyes closed, his entire being focused on *not*
thinking about the horrifying mess sloshing around in his stomach.
"That's it, lie down, and fergawdsake, keep it down."
Chuck squinted through his lashes and saw Crumb perch on the edge of the
armchair, his sweatshirted bulk incongruous against the pale green chintz.
"Dunno if I can," he whispered.
"You gonna mess up Marissa's place? Explain to her that you weren't
man enough to handle your liquor?" The armchair's springs creaked as
Crumb settled in. Chuck shut his eyes and forced the contents of his
rebellious stomach back down with a determined swallow. One breath,
then two...think of something else...like how hard his head was still pounding,
when would the aspirin kick in--could they kick in, through all that
mess?
Think of something else..."Where's Marissa?"
"She had to walk her dog, said she'd meet us at the bar later," Crumb
muttered. From behind the hand he'd flung over his face, Chuck heard
the television click on.
"Cloudy with a few showers today, chilly for this time of year...our special
fall clearance sale...Next on Montel: mothers who marry their daughters'
boyfriends...Elmo's world, Elmo's world..."
"Could you at least turn it down?"
"Oh, Brett, Derek can never know of our love!...because I only want to
serve my family the best imitation potatoes...Elmo loves dancing--lalalalalala..."
"Crumb!" Chuck pleaded. The Muppet's voice was scraping around inside
his skull.
Mercifully, the sound was reduced. "Where the hell is ESPN on this
thing?"
"She doesn't have cable."
"I thought everybody had cable."
"Think again." Chuck swallowed, and the aftertaste wasn't as bad
this time.
"Huh." The television clicked off, and for a few minutes there was
only the faint sound of random raindrops.
"She look okay to you?" he asked Crumb.
"What?"
"Marissa." Chuck rubbed at his cheeks, shivering at the memory of
the fear on his friend's face the last time he'd seen her. "This morning,
did she--she seem okay?"
"I guess." Crumb's sigh was heavy. "Tired, but she looked
a hell of a lot better than you do. Why?"
Chuck wasn't sure if it was his place to say anything, but there didn't
seem to be any need for secrets among the three of them now. "She
had a dream last night, a--a nightmare." Blinking his eyes open, he
found that the dim light wasn't nearly as annoying as it had been.
Cautiously he pulled himself up so that his head was propped on the armrest
of the couch. His stomach sloshed a little, but he didn't feel like
emptying it. No way could Crumb's remedy actually work--or at least
there was no way Chuck was ready to admit that it could. Head cocked,
the ex-cop was frowning at him through narrowed eyes, waiting for more explanation.
"She just--I dunno, I think she just got freaked out by everything."
Chuck fingered a fraying piece of pink fabric on the quilt draped over the
back of the couch. Most of Marissa's stuff was fairly stylish, or at
least sedate--but this looked like something she must have had as a kid.
"You know how she thinks--Gary--" Covering his eyes again, Chuck barely
shook his head. "She thought there was something burning; thought she
smelled fire."
"A fire? Did you check it out?"
"There was nothing to check out."
"Nothin'--" Crumb's voice rose and he leaned forward in the chair,
as if he was ready to go fight imaginary flames. "Fishman, you idiot,
this place could have burned down around your ears!"
Chuck struggled to sit up. "No, no way. She was just dreaming.
She's just...over the edge."
"Not like you, huh?" Crumb grunted, sitting back again, and Chuck sighed.
"You think she's right? Not about the fire, I mean--about Gary?"
"Well--" Crumb hesitated, shrugged. "The way I see it, either
she's crazy or we are, and at this point, I'm not putting any money on us--well,
not on you, anyway."
Chuck sat forward, hands clasped and dangling between his knees.
"God, Crumb, I just wish this thing was over, one way or another."
But do you, really? whispered the little voice in his head. Are
you really ready to let Gary go? What if she's right?
"Yeah, me too, Fishman." But Crumb sounded as unsure about that
as Chuck felt. "You feelin' any better?"
"Uh..." Surprised, Chuck found he was able to move his head, to
look up at Crumb, without feeling the least bit queasy. "Actually,
yeah."
Clearly having expected no other answer, Crumb nodded and waved toward
the entryway and the steps. "Clean yourself up, why don't ya, and we'll
go get your car--if there's anything left of it."
"Then what?"
Crumb got up, headed back to the kitchen; Chuck hoped he was going to
make more coffee. "Whatever comes next," the bartender told him.
It had to have been the aspirin that was curing him, Chuck told himself
as he mounted the stairs--the aspirin, and all the sleep he'd had, interrupted
though it may have been. It could not possibly have been that toxic
waste Crumb had forced into him. Well, whatever it was, he was grateful,
and he was equally thankful for the rush of steam that greeted him when he
turned on the shower and stepped in. He wished, now, that he could
do something for Marissa, something that would make her feel better, too--because
she'd been so understanding last night, and because he knew Gary would have
expected it of him.
Not that it didn't hurt like hell to think about Gary; it stung like the
water between his shoulder blades. Marissa, he told himself firmly.
Focus on Marissa--what did she need? Maybe some kind of comfort; maybe
that's what that kiddy quilt downstairs had been all about. Well, Chuck
knew his own strengths, and broad shoulders really weren't among them.
Who, then...?
The idea hit him when he was rinsing out the shampoo, and he grinned,
relieved in spite of everything. Maybe it wouldn't be such at bad
day after all.
Chapter 56
When such people say they only wish to cure the sick,
one should cry out, "To the flames! To the flames!"
~ Friar Bernadino
of Sienna
The screaming was gone when Gary opened his eyes. There was no sound
but his own breathing, and he was instantly aware of two things: he
was indoors, and instead of the soft dirt of Morgelyn's garden, he was lying--alone--on
stone and a layer of dank straw. Sitting up with a grunt, he
tried to reach up and brush the straw off his face--
--and couldn't move his hands. They were tied behind his back and
his head felt like someone had used it for a wrecking ball and the smells
of smoke and horses rose from his clothes and where was--
Oh, no--oh shit. Where was Morgelyn; what had they done to
her? Was she already--the book had said--but he'd changed it by being
there, bought time and the guards had come and--and tossed him in here.
Fighting back rising panic, Gary twisted his wrists against the rough
ropes until they stretched enough that, greased by his own sweat, his hands
could slide though. He flung the ropes away with a disgusted flap of his
wrist, flexing his stiff, protesting limbs while his eyes adjusted to the
gloom.
He was in a high-ceilinged room about the size of McGinty's kitchen.
A small, narrow window was set high in the wall, just under the ceiling.
Thick bars, closely spaced, blocked the opening, but at least some light
got in, cloudy and grey--evidently it was still daytime. Except for
that tiny window, his world was enclosed by stone walls, with dirt crumbling
out from between the rocks. To his right a set of six or seven wide
steps led up to a wooden door with a window about the size of Gary's hand,
also barred, as if anyone could fit through it. The stone floor upon
which he sat was covered in straw that smelled of mildew and a bunch of other
stuff that Gary didn't want to think about. On the other side of the staircase,
hidden in a corner of shadow and darkness, was a bundle of cloth or rags.
Gary wasn't feeling brave enough to find out what it hid.
Reaching up gingerly to explore the knot at the back of his skull, he
winced against the stabbing pain that even that small movement sent from
one temple to the other. Between the aftereffects of the mead--let's
be honest, Hobson, and call it a hangover, he thought grimly--and the crack
to his head, he was lucky he still knew his own name.
Obviously, this was some kind of prison or--they called them dungeons,
didn't they? But at least he was in one piece. What about Morgelyn?
Closing his eyes, he still could see the angry faces that had encircled them
both, and the absolute terror in his friend's eyes. He had to get
out of here--had to find her. Fighting skin-crawling fear and a wave
of nausea, Gary wrapped his arms around his stomach and inched his way up
the wall until he was standing. Maybe the bars in that window were
loose.
The room only spun a little bit when he left the security of the wall
and took a few tentative steps toward the rectangle of faint, gloomy light
that slanted in from the window. He was just gritting his teeth and
reaching up for a bar when he heard a soft rustle. Gary turned in
time to see the bundle of rags in the far corner move.
Stumbling back against the wall, he told himself that it was rats, only
rats--but rats carried plague-infected fleas and where the hell was Cat
and how had a nice guy like Gary ended up here in the first place and what
if it wasn't rats at all? What if it was something worse?
The bundle shifted again, stretched, elongated. In a sky Gary couldn't
see the sun broke from behind the clouds, casting a clearer light into the
tiny cell, enough for him to catch a color--dark red--and, improbably, a
bare foot, also dark, and not just from dirt.
Oh, God--"Morgelyn?" It took six steps to reach her, and Gary knelt
by her crumpled form. She was lying face down; he found her shoulder
under a tangled fall of hair and shook it gently. "Hey, Morgelyn."
He wasn't sure why he was whispering. He really didn't care whether
the people who had put them here, wherever here was, heard him or not.
"You okay? Huh? Wake up."
His first aid training kicked in; he found her pulse, put a hand on her
back until he was sure she was breathing. Relieved to know that much,
he went to work on the rough twine that bound her hands. It was looped
five or six times around her wrists, pulled so tightly that the rope was
cutting into her skin. Increasingly alarmed when she failed to respond
to his calls, Gary fumbled with the tight knots, working at them for what
seemed like hours. He thought he heard a small, mumbled something as
he finally freed her hands and rubbed them a little, hoping to help with the
circulation.
"Morgelyn?" Nothing, no response at all.
"Okay, I'm just gonna turn you over." He did it as carefully as
he could, hoping he wasn't making things worse. Dirt, straw, and soot
clung to her face, and a filthy rag hung loose around her throat. A
dark, ugly bruise stained her left cheekbone, and her sleeve had been torn--or
cut, he realized when he saw dried blood underneath.
Propping up her head, holding her right hand in his own, Gary tried to
be gentle, to keep the escalating panic and fear out of his voice as he called
her name over and over, determined to get a response.
"Morgelyn, c'mon, you gotta wake up. Listen to me, it's okay, it's
just me, it's Gary. Morgelyn? Hey, Morgelyn, c'mon..."
Her eyes flew open and she sat up so quickly that Gary lost his balance
and fell back. Morgelyn bolted to her feet, stumbling backward, arms
spread wide. Her breath came in rapid, audible gasps.
"It's okay," Gary tried to reassure her through the fear that radiated
from her, keeping him at a distance. He got up slowly, one hand out,
palm up in what he hoped was a calming gesture. "It's all right, it's
just me."
Framed in the square of light, she closed her eyes, breathing heavily
as she slumped back against the wall. "Those men--and then the guards--"
She brought one hand up to brush at the gunk on her face, found the rag around
her throat, and fumbled with it. "I cannot--why do my hands not work?"
Gary moved closer. "Here, I got it." He undid the knot while
Morgelyn tried to flex her fingers, her frown deepening as she touched the
cuts and indentations on her wrists. "They had you tied up pretty tight
there," he said softly. The rag undone, he tossed it into the corner,
and would have stepped back, but Morgelyn grabbed his hand, her fingers
stiff against his.
"I thought they had--" Swallowing hard, she finally met Gary's eyes
in the dim light of the prison. "Are you all right?"
He nodded, and points of light did a firefly dance in his vision.
"Yeah. Just feel like I've been run over by a monster truck."
Gary backed up and sat down on the second step. "What happened?
Do you know where we are?"
"I am not sure. I am not sure of anything." Her voice was
as wavery as Gary's vision. "Last night--I waited for you, but finally
I was so tired--I just dropped into bed." She brushed at her face,
pushed her hair back over her shoulders, while Gary let his guilt over the
previous evening settle somewhere in the vicinity of his gut. If he'd
come back; if he hadn't gotten stinking drunk at Nessa's and...
Nessa. There was something he was supposed to remember, something
he didn't want to, but...but Morgelyn was speaking again.
"This morning they came before I woke--they were in my house, all of them."
Wrapping both arms around her stomach, she squeezed her eyes shut for a brief
moment before continuing. "They dragged me out and threw torches on
the roof and I tried to stop them but there were so many of them--so many--so
many hands. But you came--you came and--"
Gary couldn't look her in the eye. This was his fault. He
should have been there sooner, should have stopped them. Elbows on
his knees, he buried his face in his hands.
"Are you very badly hurt?" Morgelyn's soft touch on his shoulder
startled him. When Gary shook his head, she clucked her tongue, then
sat next to him on the wide stair. "When Simon hit you with his club,
you just dropped like a stone." She touched the bruise on her cheek,
and Gary winced. "Then it all was quiet, so quiet. You were lying
there, and the soldiers got down off their horses, and one of them said--I
do not remember what he said, I--I cannot--"
"It's okay," he offered, feeble reassurance.
Morgelyn drew in a deep breath. "Something about the church, and
trying heretics. Gary, they think we are--they think I have done--everything
Fergus feared is coming true..."
A draft came through the window, tendrils of cold air. One or the
other of them must have leaned in, because suddenly their shoulders were
touching. Together they stared into the faint grey at the bottom of
the stairs. Gary didn't know about Morgelyn, but all he saw were those
distorted faces, blinded from the truth by their rage and fear. If
he wasn't careful, he knew he'd look the same way if he ever saw any of them
again.
"I tried to get to you, but--it was Simon again." She touched tentative
fingers t o the welts on her wrists, and her voice grew hard. "He pushed
me down, face down in the violets. I was choking on them. I
do not know if I can ever--I have never felt so--so--"
"Helpless?" Gary supplied. It sure as hell described the way
he was feeling right now.
Morgelyn nodded. "He had his boot on my back, he pulled so hard
on my arms--I understand that Mark was his friend, but Simon was never as
cruel as this before--before--" She drew in a deep breath. "I
helped Grandmother bring his two oldest into the world. And the baby,
little Stephen, he was the last child my grandmother delivered, before she--they
are beautiful children." Her voice cracked, and Gary reached for her
hand and squeezed it. He didn't know what else to do. "He has
Lara, and three beautiful children, and I have never seen such hatred on
a man's face, such ugliness. I do not remember much after that.
I do not know where we are. I just remember his face, all their faces,
and they were so hateful."
Gary wanted to kick the door down. He wanted to find these men,
this Simon guy in particular, and let them have it, hurt them the way they'd
hurt her. "I'm sorry. I should have been there--"
"You were there--"
"--sooner."
Morgelyn shook her head. "You came just in time. The villagers--Simon,
all of them--they would have killed me then and there." Her hand shook,
both their hands were shaking, and Gary didn't know how to tell her how right
she was, and how much he wished he'd done a better job of changing things.
"How did you know?" Her voice steadier now, Morgelyn shifted on the
stair so they were face to face. "I know about Nessa's parties.
Fergus usually staggers home at noon the next day. How did you know?"
Gary opened his mouth, the lie nearly automatic, but then he realized
that here, he had nothing to hide. "Your Grandmother's book showed
up with Cat at--at Nessa's this morning. I dropped last night, too,
only I did it on a bench in her manor. And then this morning Cat was
there, with the book. In the back of it there was some other writing,
and Fergus was able to read it. That's how we knew."
Wide-eyed, Morgelyn opened her mouth, but nothing came out at first.
"Grandmother?" she finally whispered.
"I--I don't think so. The writing was really different. I
think it was in Latin. I think--whoever wrote it, after--after you
would have been--" He swallowed hard and had to look away, then he
got up and paced over to the window, working out a crazy scenario in his
head--maybe this had really happened, once, and then someone had written
about it, and that's why he'd been sent back, to fix it, like he'd fixed
things for Jesse and Eleanor, and so whatever was in charge of his early
edition had drop-kicked the little book out of the time continuum, just
like it had drop-kicked him six hundred fifty years into the past.
That was absolutely nuts. But it made about as much sense as anything
else.
When he turned away from the window, Morgelyn was standing next to him,
still looking a little dumbfounded by the whole thing. "But I do not
understand how--"
"Don't feel bad. I never understand it either." Crossing his
arms over his chest, Gary leaned back against the wall. He didn't mention
his theory to Morgelyn. The last thing he wanted to do was confuse
her even more.
After a moment, she nodded. "Where is the book now?"
"Fergus has it. He went off to get help--but I guess he didn't find
any."
Morgelyn glanced out the window, then turned back to Gary with all the
stubborn insistence he'd gotten used to seeing in her face over the past
few days--and years. "What did it say when you came to my house this
morning?"
"That doesn't matter--"
"It does to me."
Pushing away from the wall with a sigh, Gary, too, took a look out the
tiny window. All the pictures--those he'd imagined on his mad tear
over the moor and through the forest, and the real ones, what had actually
happened--churned through his head. "It--you--please don't make me
say it."
"You came back this morning because I was going to die." Morgelyn's
tone was numb, her expression unreadable.
"I--" Swallowing hard, he managed a nod. "Yeah."
"But now you do not know what will happen, not to me, not to you, no to
any of us, and if you had not come you would not be hurt, or trapped here,
and what worse is to come to you will be because--because of me."
Trying to reassure Morgelyn somehow gave Gary more strength than he'd
felt since he'd woken up here. He put a steady hand on her shoulder.
"There's always a way to change things--even now. Marissa says everything
happens for a reason, and in this case, I know she's right. We're both
here, and we're going to figure a way out."
"You are right. We are both alive, and where there is life--"
Morgelyn turned around in a circle, surveying the cold walls. "There
is supposed to be hope."
"There is. We just have to figure out how to get out of here."
Gary tried to sound reassuring, though he wasn't sure he did a very good
job of it. One more scan of the room, and he had a thought--just in
case, he went to the top step and peered through the tiny window. He
could barely make out a stairway on the other side of the door; when he craned
his neck, he saw that two flat iron bars, each the size of a man's arm, barred
the door. Trapped, they were--damn! He pounded against the door
with his shoulder, releasing all his frustration in two crashing collisions.
The door didn't budge, but the room did. It tilted and slid, first
to the right, then the left, as Gary sank down on the landing, cradling his
head in his hands. He was worse than helpless--he was useless.
"That was not wise." Morgelyn stood over him, shaking her head,
her tone rueful.
"I had to try," Gary muttered, rubbing his shoulder.
"You hurt yourself, Gary--again. If only we were home, I could..."
Morgelyn's voice trailed off and she stared off at some point beyond his
shoulder. She looked so lost, so bereft, that Gary wanted to shake her
and call the real Morgelyn back to herself. Where was the hope, where
was faith she'd always--that Marissa had--but this wasn't Marissa, he reminded
himself. "I have no home," she said in a hoarse whisper.
Still clutching his shoulder, Gary got to his feet and went down the stairs.
He circled the small room, feeling the walls for--something, he didn't know
what. A trapdoor, maybe. "There has to be some way out of here."
"It does not appear to be this window."
They both started at the voice.
"Fergus!" Morgelyn broke into a smile at the sight of her friend,
peering down at them between the window bars. Despite everything,
Gary felt the corners of his mouth quirk into a grin; he'd never been so
relieved to see that particular face.
"How do you fare? A ridiculous question, I know," he amended at
the look Gary gave him. "But when I heard--God's breath, Morgelyn,
what happened to you?" Fergus's eyes had grown wide, and he stared
at her in alarm.
"Half the village happened to her," Gary growled. "What the hell
is wrong with these people?"
"I am well, truly..." Morgelyn glanced from Gary to Fergus, then
ducked her head and tucked a couple loose strands of hair behind her ear.
"Nothing is wrong with me that will not heal."
"You were right," Fergus told Gary, but he didn't take his eyes off his
friend. "I should have come with you."
"'Tis well you did not, or you would be in this--this place, too."
Morgelyn shivered as she threw a look around the room.
"We need to get out of here," Gary said, stepping closer to the window
and to Fergus, whose face was nearly squashed between the bars. "We
need to get out of here now. Did you get help, like you said
you were going to?"
Shaking his head, Fergus glanced back over his shoulder and shifted on
his knees in the grass. "I tried, truly I did, but I cannot find Father
Ezekiel in the village."
Morgelyn gasped. "Of course, Father Ezekiel will help us.
He will not let this happen." She looked to Gary for reassurance,
but he wasn't sure he could give it to her. Fergus was chewing on his
lip, suddenly uneasy. There was something, Gary knew, that the bard
wasn't saying. He could read it in his eyes, there was something the
guy knew that--
"The book, Fergus." Though he had to stand on tiptoe to do it, Gary
grabbed one of the window bars, thrust his other hand at Fergus, who pulled
back. "What does it say?"
Clamping his lips shut, Fergus shook his head.
Gary's words came out in a frustrated growl. "I can't fix this if
I don't know what's going to happen!"
"It has not changed," Fergus whispered, watching Morgelyn. "Except
for the--the method. And you--" He turned back to Gary, and didn't
need to finish.
"I'm there, too."
Fergus nodded grimly.
Gary sighed. "Out of the frying pan, into the fire." When
he saw the way Fergus winced, Gary's stomach gave a lurch. That meant--oh,
great.
"No, no--it cannot be." Morgelyn pushed her way in front of Gary,
and she, too, reached out an open hand. It shook as she demanded,
"Give it to me, Fergus. You must have read it wrong."
"You really are a pair of fools," Fergus said wearily, and his head drooped.
"The book is hidden away. If I were found to have such a thing, we
would all be doomed. 'Tis bad enough that they took--" He stopped,
and from the guilty look on his face, Gary knew he regretted whatever he'd
been about to say.
"Took what?" Morgelyn demanded, her voice tight with more than
exasperation.
Fergus sighed. "When I couldn't find Father Ezekiel, I went to your
house. Morgelyn..."
She turned just a little, hiding her face from both of them. "I
know. I no longer have a house."
Shaking his head, Fergus scooted closer, reaching through the bars.
"It rained earlier--did you not know? The fire was out by the time
I got there. You require a new roof, but the rest of the cottage still
stands. I was relieved beyond all telling that I did not find you in
it. I hoped you both had escaped--" He flashed a sympathetic
grimace at Gary, and completely missed the look of hope that flashed across
Morgelyn's face.
Gary saw it, though, as she spun back around and placed one hand on his
arm. They were both thinking the same thing. "Did you--did you
find--" She swallowed. "Gary's things were in the trunk; was
it--"
"Empty." Fergus's eyes went round again. "Everyone else was
gone by the time I got there; I do not know what happened to any of it."
That news shouldn't have made things seem any worse than they were, but
it sent ice water down Gary's back. "Who has it?" Morgelyn whispered,
but neither man answered. Her hand dropped away from Gary's arm while
he tried not to imagine what the person--or people--who did have the stuff
were going to make of his clothes, his watch, and especially his newspaper.
"How'd you find us?" he asked thickly.
"I made my way back to the village--I, I did not know where you were,
either of you, and I wanted to find out--" Fergus's expression turned
dark. "There was a group of them celebrating in the tavern,
as if they had not had enough to drink already--they were stumbling home
by the time I got there--and by the way, my friend, Simon Elders has the
blackest eye I've ever seen." Fergus raised an eyebrow at Gary, who
shook his head. They both turned to Morgelyn. "You?" Fergus's
question was surprised and impressed.
"It was an accident. My elbow..." She waved the issue away
with a quick gesture, but Gary thought it was more discomfort than impatience.
Not that there was any need; he nearly high-fived her, but figured he didn't
want explain that now
Fergus flashed her a grin, but it barely lasted a second. "I knew
they would not speak to me, but Declan followed them, and heard them say
that Nessa's soldiers had brought you both here."
"Nessa? What does she have to do with this?" Morgelyn turned
to Gary.
"A lot, but I can tell you about that in a minute," he said. "We
have more important things to worry about. We gotta get out of here--where
is here?" he asked Fergus, who was checking over his shoulder again.
"The old manor house," he told them when he looked back through the bars.
"The lights--we saw lights up here the other night," Gary told Morgelyn.
"Somebody must have been getting this place ready."
"There is no prison in the village." Morgelyn looked around the
dark room again and shivered. "No doubt it was either this, or shut
us up in the rectory. But how could anyone have known that Mark would
die?"
"I think they were just waiting for an excuse," Gary said, and wished
he had seen that a lot more clearly a day ago.
"Considering what is to come, I believe they wanted to be away from the
village." Once more, Fergus looked dark, glowering, with the shadows
from the light outside falling across his face.
"What do you mean, what is to come? Why will you not tell us?"
Morgelyn's face held the same look it had two days ago when Fergus had first
frightened her with his stories about France. Gary knew he didn't want
to hear, he didn't need to hear, what was to come.
"Lady Nessa had her guards stop the men who were trying to--" Fergus
cleared his throat. "'Twas her guards who stopped them, and the villagers
let it be stopped, because she has offered her help. She has hired--a
witchfinder, a man from the continent, who specializes in--in--"
Fergus broke off, leaving the thought unfinished. Morgelyn stepped
back and slipped her hand into Gary's.
The guest, Gary thought, squeezing her hand tight. Nessa's guest,
the one he'd heard during his blundered spying mission the night before.
"But how did she know when it was going to happen?" He believed Nessa
was capable of a lot of--of logistics--but it was hard to believe she'd orchestrated
Mark Styles's death, or the timing of the villagers' reaction.
"I do not know. Perhaps she had spies in the village, or perhaps
someone overheard us in the garden this morning." Fergus turned to
Morgelyn. "I am sorry, my friend."
"Don't be sorry, just get us out of here!" Gary demanded.
"I cannot get in--there are guards here, and I am in danger of being found
as it is."
"There has to be some other way." Gary waved his hand, impatient,
tracing possibilities. "Father Ezekiel--or--or--"
"Robert," Morgelyn whispered.
"What?" both men asked.
She swallowed, and Gary felt her fingers tighten against his. He
knew she was trying to banish the same thoughts he was--warnings about fire,
and how it could burn. "Robert told me that when he was young, he used
to play in these ruins with his friends. He may know some other way,
some secret passage."
Fergus shook his head. "But Robert is blind now."
"Being blind isn't the same as being stupid," Gary snapped at Fergus.
"Or helpless."
"I merely meant--"
Morgelyn's eyes widened. "Shhh!" she hissed, and then Gary heard
them, too; heavy footsteps clomping outside the door to their room, growing
louder. The grass behind them rustled, and when Gary glanced back,
Fergus was gone. The footsteps halted, metal rasped against wood as
one iron bar, then the other, was lifted. Morgelyn's hand shifted in
Gary's, but her grip didn't loosen. They both jumped when the door flew
open.
There were two shapes, human but huge, framed in the doorway. Gary
could see flickering torchlight behind the looming figures of the guards;
the light that made it through the window behind him wasn't enough to illuminate
their faces. The gruff, imperious voice, however, was perfectly clear.
"Come."
Gary and Morgelyn exchanged sidelong, wide-eyed looks. Neither one
moved.
"The prisoners will come forward!" The barking command echoed off
the walls. One of the guards thudded down the steps and across the
floor; he snapped his long-handled spear so that its sharp tip hovered less
than an inch from Morgelyn's forehead. "You will obey, witch, or we
will use force."
Gary batted the spear away. "She's not--"
"Silence!" The spear came up again, but this time the point rested
on Gary's neck, touching the skin. Hard, dark eyes and a satisfied
smile glinted at him, and he clamped his jaw shut, knowing that this guy was
just waiting for an excuse to hurt someone.
"No," Morgelyn whispered. She dropped Gary's hand and stepped forward.
"I will go with you." Gary didn't dare open his mouth, but he wanted
to tell her just how huge a mistake this was.
"You will both come," the guard snarled. His partner seized Morgelyn
roughly by the arm, pulling her toward the stairs, and though she kept twisting
back to watch Gary, her feet kept up with the guard. The spear was
pulled back and snapped upright, and gloved hands clenched Gary's arm, forcing
him toward the door as well. He swallowed hard against the urge to tell
the guy not to worry. There was no way Gary would have stayed down
there now.
Chapter 57
There are storm winds who bow down to nothing....
The keepers of wisdom testify a heap of ashes
means whatever was there went out burning.
~ Carl Sandburg
Beyond the door of their cell, a narrow stairway led up to a bigger room.
The room's back wall was gone, as if a giant had taken a huge bite out of
it, roof, walls, and all. Fresh air slammed into Gary's lungs and the
brighter light make him dizzy, the inrush too much for his overtaxed nerves.
He couldn't think straight. Fragments of escape plans--run, twist
away, head for the green grass, grab Morgelyn--jangled around in his head,
crashing against insignificant details. The guard who gripped his
arm was missing his pinky finger and smelled like smoke: the room they were
walking through was empty but for two huge fireplaces and some shelves hanging
crooked by single brackets from the walls--Gary guessed it had been a kitchen.
Up ahead, when Morgelyn tried to turn her head back to look at him, the
other guard wrapped a hand around her neck, gloved fingers digging in so
deeply that she flinched.
"None of yer spelling, witch. It cannot save you now."
"Don't--" For a split second, Gary forgot the fact that he, too,
was a prisoner, and tried to jump to the pair ahead. His own guard
held firm; Gary stubbed a toe against the uneven paving stones of the floor
and stumbled. One knee hit the floor. The guard dropped his spear
with an exasperated grunt and grabbed the back of Gary's tunic; in the same
moment, the other man turned to see what was going on, pulling Morgelyn
around with him. She was clutching a handful of skirt that she'd lifted
out of the way to get up the stairs; still kneeling, Gary could see her
bare feet peeking out underneath. The guard followed Gary's gaze, grinned
a feral grin, and slammed his thick-soled boot on her foot. Morgelyn
gasped, then pressed her lips together until they disappeared into a pale
line.
"Leave her alone, you--"
"I wouldn't, mate," said the gruff voice in his ear. "That's hardly
the worst that will happen."
Morgelyn blinked hard at the open sky as her guard yanked her around and
dragged her forward. Jaw clenched, Gary let the man haul him to his
feet.
They were led through the kitchen, through an arched doorway to another
short hall. Here they turned and started down a longer hall.
The fresh air and bright sunlight disappeared abruptly. This part of
the old house was still intact, and a row of metal sconces hung from the
walls. Two of them held lit torches. The place was as gloomy
as the old black-and-white Dracula movie that Gary and Chuck had watched
as kids, just to prove how brave they were. It had given Gary nightmares
for weeks afterward, but he'd never thought he'd actually live one.
Eerier than the shadowy gloom was the silence that oozed from every stone,
like guilt, like ghosts, like accusations. Here, the guards made no
threats, barked no commands, just forced Gary and Morgelyn along the hallway.
Silence pressed down upon them all, muffling the snap of boots, the shuffling
of Gary's soft-soled shoes, the faint slap of Morgelyn's bare feet and the
swishing hem of her dress.
Gary counted eight closed doors, four on each side of the hallway, before
the hands on his arm and at his back jerked him to a halt. The ninth
door stood at the end of the hall, a little wider than the others, and the
guard who'd brought Morgelyn rapped once before swinging it open and pushing
her through. The door's unoiled hinges fractured the silent air of
the hall. When the back of his tunic was released, Gary wrenched his
arm free and hurried in on his own two feet, so intent on making sure Morgelyn
was unhurt that at first he didn't see who else was in the room.
She pulled away from the guard when he tried to grab her again, and jumped
when Gary touched her elbow. He opened his mouth to ask her if she
was okay, but stopped when he saw that her jaw had gone slack. Morgelyn
stared in shock at the man who sat in one of two sumptuously upholstered
chairs on the opposite side of a huge, ornately carved table. Long fingers
laced on the table top, a gaunt-faced priest regarded them solemnly with
his hooded, unreadable eyes.
"Father Malcolm?" Morgelyn's whisper twisted through the air.
"Why are you here?"
He cleared his throat, a tight, nervous sound. "I am here as the
Church's representative," he said in his reedy voice. "In cases of
heresy--"
"Heresy?" Morgelyn sagged backward, and Gary gripped her elbow tightly,
partly to hold her up, partly to remind her that he was there. Knowing
about impending doom because of an early edition and being there when it
actually happened were two entirely different matters.
Still searching for a way out, Gary took in the rest of the room--another
chair, its arms and back straight, its seat unpadded, stood on their side
of the table. On either side of the table, two thick white candles
with triple wicks did a better job of lighting the room than the pair of narrow
windows off on the left wall. There was also a fireplace, where new
flames were just beginning to lick pine logs. An assortment of books
and a small chest took up one end of the table. With the guards between
them and the only door, there was no chance of escape.
"You are to be offered a chance to confess your sins before you are--"
Malcolm's gaze slid away from the dumbfounded woman before him, to a pile
of books and a small wooden chest that sat at the end of the table.
"--questioned," he finished.
Gary gulped in the air, scented heavily with wood smoke and candle wax.
He knew what was supposed to happen at the end of this. He hoped that,
with Fergus's help, they could escape fate. But what would happen in
between? The paper hadn't said, and now, remembering how Fergus told
Morgelyn she'd deny her own grandmother just to avoid this kind of questioning,
he could feel fear rising in a tide around their feet, their ankles...what
else was going to happen before this was over?
"Why do you have my books?" Morgelyn asked, the faintest crack in her
quiet question, and Gary felt the shudder that ran through her.
"They are evidence now."
This time it was Gary's mouth that fell open. "Evidence of what?"
"Witchcraft," Malcolm said with a long, slow blink. "Consorting
with the evil one. Heresy."
"Because she read a book?"
"Because she read these books."
Morgelyn shook her head. "No, Father Malcolm, you know better.
You know I have always had these books--my grandmother--" She choked
off the end of the sentence.
Gary looked the pile over, but didn't see his own paper or the Dragon's
Eye. But his relief was only momentary. There were too many
other things going wrong, and if Father Malcolm thought these innocuous
books were evidence of evil deeds, it wasn't going to matter if they never
found the real magical stuff.
Once more Malcolm cleared his throat, then unlaced his fingers and pushed
himself to his feet. "It is true," he said, "I have known you since
you were small--I baptized you from your mother's arms. A mother I
could not bury on consecrated ground," he added pointedly. It was bait,
but Morgelyn didn't take it. Probably too shocked, Gary thought.
"Of course," Father Malcolm continued after a moment, "that was not your
fault. But since then I have watched your growth with some apprehension.
You are a strong young woman. Perhaps too strong--perhaps your will
has overcome your better nature. I can tell you, however, that you
are not strong enough for what is to come." He moved around the table,
stopped in front of it, and looked down at Morgelyn, ignoring Gary.
But Gary wasn't about to give ground--he scooted closer to his friend, slipping
his hand from her elbow to the small of her back.
"End this," Malcolm said, and his voice was pleading and stern...and a
little bit eager, Gary thought, though that might have been his own imagination.
"You need but admit your guilt and give your soul over to God."
Gary could feel the shaky breath that Morgelyn drew in, but her voice
didn't waver. "I have nothing to confess." Some of her hair
fell from its tangles and brushed his hand as she shook her head for emphasis.
"Perhaps you could persuade her." Malcolm fixed Gary with his hooded
stare, and Gary saw thinly-veiled fear.
"No," Gary said through gritted teeth, and felt Morgelyn's back relax,
just a fraction, under his hand. "She hasn't done anything wrong.
You ought to be talking to the men who tried to burn her house down, the ones
who nearly killed her."
His gaze passing over Gary once again before flicking back to Morgelyn,
the priest pursed his lips tightly. "Give up this chance, and there is nothing
I can do to help you."
Bullshit, Gary wanted to say. Malcolm could do whatever he wanted;
he could let them go, he could talk to the villagers, or to Nessa...the man
had some kind of power here, didn't he?
But in the next instant, he found out he was wrong. The door creaked
open behind them, and Gary turned as another man, someone he'd never seen
before, stepped in. As tall as Gary, he wore the same robes as the
priests except that they were tan instead of black or dark brown. Gary
couldn't tell if the man was prematurely grey, or older than his smooth, sallow
skin and round blue eyes would suggest. Despite the medieval getup,
he walked into the room like a CEO taking over his boardroom, all business,
no greetings, brushing past the guards as if they were furniture, not deigning
to notice the way Malcolm scurried back behind the table. From the
blank, wondering look on Morgelyn's face, Gary assumed she'd never seen the
guy before either.
Carefully placing a sheaf of papers, a quill pen, and a bottle of ink
on the table, the newcomer moved to stand next to Father Malcolm.
Finally, he spared a look at the guard who stood behind Gary. "You
did not bind her hands?" It sounded like a casual question, but the
displeasure on his face was clear. Gary thought of the knots he'd had
to untie, saw the way Morgelyn's fingers brushed gingerly over the welts
on her wrists, and fixed the man with a glare of his own.
"They--they were bound, sir." The voice that had barked commands
in the basement was only a shadow of itself here.
"Obviously they are not any longer, and there is nothing to stop her mouth."
The man raised a mild eyebrow. "Do you not fear her curses?"
"No, that's just the point," Gary cut in. "She wouldn't--she couldn't--we
shouldn't be here. I don't know who you are, but this is all a huge
mistake."
The man stared at Gary, radiating flint-edged strength, and Gary flashed
back to something Marissa had said once about herself: "Stone--it breaks,
but it doesn't bend." Dismissing the interruption without a word, the
man turned to Morgelyn, and Gary flinched at the thought of flint on stone.
"Sit down." He pointed a smooth, manicured finger at the chair on
their side of the table.
Morgelyn shook her head, but her voice, too quiet, betrayed her fear.
"I would rather--"
"Sit."
After a moment's hesitation, Morgelyn stepped away from Gary's hand and
sank to a tentative perch on the edge of the seat. Gary would have
followed to stand as close as possible, but the man's hand flicked once in
the direction of the closest guard, who grabbed Gary with a firm, warning
grip around his bicep.
"You know why you are here." The newcomer's statement was addressed
to Morgelyn. A faint breeze stirred the papers on the table, and he
rested his hand on them while he waited for a response. Gary squinted,
trying to remember where he'd heard that voice before, that pudding-smooth
confidence. There weren't a lot of possibilities...of course.
Nessa's party--her special guest, the one he'd heard from the hallway.
This guy was...
Her guest. His stomach clenching, Gary flicked a look at the guard
who stood behind Morgelyn's chair, just to confirm that he did, indeed, wear
the insignia of the golden hawk. Nessa's guards. Nessa's guest.
"I know that any accusations against me are false." A quick toss
of her head, and Morgelyn fixed Father Malcolm with an accusing glare.
"What I do not know is why anyone would believe them."
"And yet, the men in your garden this morning believed them enough to
want to kill you. You have been charged with crimes of heresy--witchcraft
and consorting with the devil--both formally," he said, nodding at the papers
under his hand, "and, from what I have heard about this morning's events,
informally. You were fortunate that Lady Nessa heard of your predicament
and sent her soldiers."
"Fortunate? Are you nuts?" Gary asked incredulously. His arm
muscles bunched, tensing against the hand that held him.
"Who are you?" Morgelyn's eyes were round with fear. "What
right do you have to hold us here?"
"My name," the man said, smoothing the grey hair back from his temple,
"is Brother John Banning. I am here to determine your guilt in this
matter. Considering the evidence, I think you would be wise to take
your priest's advice and confess immediately."
Gary still couldn't figure out what it was they wanted her to admit to.
These weren't ignorant villagers. Surely they didn't believe that Morgelyn
could have killed Mark Styles, not with poison, and certainly not with mere
words. He spoke louder, determined to stop this before it went any
further. "She doesn't have to confess; she hasn't done anything.
And you still haven't answered the rest of her question--why are we here?
What's going on?"
Banning fixed Gary with an arched eyebrow. "What is happening, sir,
is that I have been brought here because of my considerable skills, so that
I may discern whether or not the people of Gwenyllan have been brought under
the influence of Satan's evil by this woman and her use of witchcraft."
"And your way of finding out is to burn her out of her home and beat her
up?" Gary's voice had risen far beyond the reasonable tone everyone
else had adopted. This went way beyond reason, about as far beyond
reason as Chicago was from Cornwall. "That's real helpful; that'll get
you the facts."
Banning's lips curled upward, transforming his smooth features into a
horrible mockery of a smile. "Those were villagers who committed those...unfortunate
acts."
"Unfortunate?" Gary's disbelieving voice echoed off the stone walls,
and it didn't help the pounding of his head at all. "They were gonna
kill her!"
"They nearly did kill Gary," Morgelyn added.
"Then it was lucky my guards came along when they did." Banning
nodded at the men behind Gary.
His guards? Gary's earlier assumption must have been right.
He must be Nessa's guest, and her plan--the fragments he could still remember
from the night before--Gary's vision went swimmy again as he realized how
carefully this had all been orchestrated. He saw Morgelyn staring at
him from just a few feet away, but it might as well have been an ocean between
them for all he'd done to help so far. They were in over their heads,
way over their heads, fathoms deep, but he had to keep trying. "Look,
those people this morning, what they did was--"
"Understandable, though unwise. They believe that they have been
cursed, their families and friends sickened--" Banning turned to Morgelyn.
"--through your deeds."
Morgelyn gripped the arms of her chair so tightly that Gary saw her knuckles
redden, then pale. "That is ridiculous--they are wrong--"
"Are they?" Banning regarded her for a few tense, silent seconds,
daring her to answer.
"Yes, of course they are, I--"
His eyes narrowed, and Morgelyn faltered. Gary swallowed, trying
to think of something, anything, that would stop this charade. "Not
everyone believes that," he said, thinking of Anna, of Nia and her brother,
of Declan, and--"What about Father Ezekiel? You need to talk to him--he'll
tell you this is all a mistake."
"Perhaps he will." The thin, ghastly smile appeared again, then
was gone. "He will be here shortly to give his testimony."
"Testimony?" Morgelyn breathed. "Against me?"
No, that was wrong, it had to be. Gary refused to believe it.
"He overheard you telling Mark Styles that he would die unless he did
as you wished," Father Malcolm said coldly. "In light of the funeral
Mass I will be saying tomorrow, I consider such an outburst strong evidence
indeed."
"That isn't evidence!" Impossibly, the guard who'd been holding
Gary tightened his grip as Gary's free arm waved through the air.
"She was trying to get him to take some medicine that would help him.
It wasn't a threat, or a curse, or anything but--but trying to save his
life."
Banning pressed his long lips together in a wry, too-red line. "That
might be true, if the death of Mark Styles was the only matter we were given
to judge. There are others, though that is perhaps the most...illustrative."
"Judge?" Gary asked. "If you're the judge, who's the jury?"
The curious looks they all gave him reminded Gary that he wasn't in an American
courtroom, that America didn't even exist.
"I am merely here to collect the evidence and advise the village leaders.
They will conduct your trial and punishment based on my recommendations."
Punishment? Gary's heart pounded in his ears. If he'd had
the Dragon's Eye, he would have found a way to use it then and there to
take Morgelyn with him to the Twentieth Century, consequences be damned.
"My experience in tracking down witches is considerable," Banning went
on, "but I have no power to convict anyone. That will be up to the
leaders of Gwenyllan, including Father Malcolm, once I have finished questioning
you both. Now, if we may resume..." He lifted his hand, indicating
the pile of leather-bound books at the end of the table. "These books,
they are yours?"
"Yes, they are mine," Morgelyn said, her voice taking on an exasperated
edge. "I use them to help people, to make poultices and draughts that
will heal injuries and cure illnesses."
"You can read these?"
"Of course I can!"
Banning lifted an eyebrow at that. "And you admit they contain spells
and charms for--as you would have it--healing? Could they not also
be used for causing illness?"
"There are no spells in there." Morgelyn's voice was stronger than
it had been, rising to the challenge. "Have you read them?
They are written--many of them by monks--to teach people to use God's gifts,
God's own creation, to heal His people. The devil did not create rosemary
and lavender and tansy; God did. And I am using what He created to
do what Our Lord asks us to do in the scriptures, to heal and to comfort the
sick."
"But some of these plants could be used to bring harm, could they not?"
"Of course they could, but I would never do that!"
"Both Mark Styles and his daughter are dead, and his son has been ill
as well. How did you cause these events?"
"She didn't. That boy is alive because of her," Gary insisted.
"The Styles family is not the only one affected. Others lie ill
in the village today," Father Malcolm said. "At least three adults
and one child have been taken with this illness, though no more cases have
been brought to our attention since your arrest."
Distress seemed to widen Morgelyn's features; she looked wildly from the
inquisitor to Gary and back. "If people are sick, you have to set me
free. They need help--let me go to them, I know what to do."
Banning struck with the alacrity of a rattlesnake. "No doubt because
you caused the trouble in the first place."
"No, I--" Morgelyn was all the way forward, on the edge of her chair.
"Who is it, who is ill?"
Banning tilted his head, and a shaft of light from the window hit the
side of his face, illuminating the sharp cheekbones and jawline. "That
is a matter which no longer concerns you. If you did not wish them
to fall ill, you should not have cursed them in the first place."
"I spoke no curse!"
"In addition to these events, you were seen last night with a cat, which
I assume is your familiar."
No, Gary thought, no, Cat was there to help them, to protect her--"It's
not her cat, it's mine. You can't think just because--it's my cat,"
he insisted. Banning's shrug was barely visible, and Gary's heart
sank even farther at his next words.
"We will locate that animal soon enough, and determine the extent of its
evil. Furthermore," he said, turning back to Morgelyn, "you have spoken
ill of a man whose garden died the next week; you have infected the minds
of children with ridiculous, unholy stories..."
"The same stories you no doubt heard from your own mother." Morgelyn's
voice rose, higher than it had climbed when she was sparring with Fergus.
"How does telling stories to children make me evil?"
Though he understood Morgelyn's desperate determination to make them see
the truth, Gary wanted to tell her that it was hopeless trying to talk to
this guy. He had the same intractable expression that Gary had seen
on bigots, on fanatics--on those suburban kids who'd wanted to beat each
other up because of the same kinds of differences that the villagers, and
now these far more powerful men, had used to blame Morgelyn.
"If you are found to have practiced witchcraft," Banning said in a voice
that said he had no doubt she had, "we must do what Our Lord requires.
Father Malcolm?"
"The Book of Exodus commands, 'Thou shalt not suffer a witch to live,'"
Malcolm finished promptly, coldly. But he didn't look at Morgelyn
when he said it.
Morgelyn briefly closed her eyes, and Gary couldn't tell if she was trying
to pray, or to escape in the only way she could. They needed help from
outside, and they needed it now--now that Banning was reaching for the small
chest on the table and opening it. Gary held his breath while the
examiner pulled out what looked like a pair of tongs, or pinchers--something
made of iron, and made to grip. Other tools, unidentifiable but menacing,
glinted from the interior of the chest. Banning walked methodically
over to the fireplace and placed the tool's handle on the stone hearth, the
business end just in the growing flames. When he turned back to them,
it seemed that some of the light from the fire had been caught and held in
his eyes. He looked alive, really alive, for the first time. The
guard by the door grinned, Malcolm blanched, and Banning asked Morgelyn, in
a soft, vivid tone, "When did you fall? When did you first give your
heart over to the evil one?"
Her whispered answer, stiff with shock, took Gary's breath with it.
"Never."
Banning took a step closer. "Was it when you survived the pestilence
that killed your neighbors?"
Morgelyn slid back in the seat, her shoulders coming up in self-defense.
"I am not the only one who survived." Her voice was still hushed.
Gary knew the inquisitor had hit on a weak spot, her uncertainty as to why
she'd lived through the plague, and he realized that the light in Banning's
eyes was one of triumph--he was sure he'd won.
"Father Malcolm says you are the only one in this village who had the
illness and lived."
Malcolm spoke up quickly, watching Morgelyn, but also checking Banning's
reaction from the corner of his eye. "Your grandmother loved you very
much, unnaturally so. She would have done anything to save you.
I have long wondered if perhaps she promised her own life, and your own soul,
when your natural course was run, to the dark powers in exchange for your
survival."
"No," Morgelyn said with desperate conviction. "She would never,
never do that!"
For some reason, Gary's gaze landed on Morgelyn's hands. They were
trembling, and as he watched, she pulled them into her lap and clasped them
together, staring straight ahead through teary eyes. It was, in his
mind, Marissa's gesture, it fell in that catalog, and it nearly split him
in two. Gary took a step toward his friend--but he didn't make it.
A yank on his shoulder spun him around; a fist to his solar plexus doubled
him over.
"Gary!" When he looked up, clutching his stomach and trying to catch
his breath, Morgelyn was on her feet, eyes wide with alarm. He opened
his mouth to tell her not to worry, but nothing would come out. Instead,
he concentrated on breathing for a few seconds, in and out, past the hurt.
"He did nothing! How can you accuse me of hurting people while your--your
henchmen do this?" Morgelyn's voice rang off the walls, and she stepped
closer, reaching out toward Gary. Still bent over, hands on his knees,
his head pounding once again, he saw, but couldn't stop, the second guard,
who left his post and pushed her roughly back toward the chair. She
caught herself on the armrest as she staggered back.
"Now, now, child, sit down," Father Malcolm said, hurrying from his place
behind the table. "There is no need for anyone to be hurt."
Gary's eyes met Morgelyn's when he straightened up; he could tell that
she, too, was fighting the manic urge to laugh at that comment. The
guard closest to her wrapped an arm around a rip in her sleeve and pushed
her to the front of the chair.
"Sit." Banning stood less than two feet from Morgelyn, once more
glaring down at her from his height advantage. Her jaw tightened, and
for a minute Gary thought she'd defy him then and there. Gary braced
himself, checking the guards' positions, knowing a fight was hopeless, but
knowing, too, that a time was quickly approaching when choosing his battles
would be a moot point. They were already being chosen for him, narrowed
down to a precious few opportunities to change destiny.
Father Malcolm cleared his throat. Breaking eye contact with Banning,
Morgelyn looked over at her priest, whose lips twitched as he looked from
Morgelyn to the fire and back. After another breathless moment, the
guard released her arm and she sat down slowly, like a balloon with a slow
leak. The hopeless resignation in her shoulders left Gary feeling as
though he was sinking in quicksand. Damn it. Where was Fergus;
where was Ezekiel? Why hadn't the paper suggested some way out?
"As for you," Banning said to Gary, his cold glance barely taking
him in before sliding away again, "you will be silent, or you will be removed."
He reached behind him and produced a piece of parchment from the bottom of
his pile, and held it out to Morgelyn. "Understand that I am here to
save your soul, as much as the lives of the villagers."
Morgelyn took the paper. Gary craned his neck, but he couldn't make
out the words, just the way his friend's face greyed over. "What is
this?"
"You can save us all a great deal of trouble if you admit your wrongdoing--your
heresy. Sign the confession, lass, and at least your soul will be purified.
You can make your peace with God and be shriven."
Make peace with God...that sounded too damn final. "No, wait--"
Gary began, but Morgelyn cut him off, shaking her head.
Her voice quavered, but she met Banning's gaze with an eerie calm.
"I will not betray my soul to eternal damnation with a lie to save myself
earthly torment." She let the papers fall to the floor.
Brave--but totally naive. Gary knew it as soon as he saw the light
that flashed in Banning's eyes, the slow, small, utterly satisfied curve
of his lips, more sneer than smile, at Morgelyn's defiance. Whatever
was coming next, this guy was going to enjoy it. Gary tried to get closer,
but the guard wrenched his arm behind his back.
It was Malcolm who spoke. "My dear, it would be best if you confess
now. Look into your heart. You know there is evil there, for
it lies in the heart of every woman."
Morgelyn sounded as hurt and betrayed as if he'd slapped her. "No,
I do not believe that--"
"--and whether it is through your own free confession, or more--indirect--methods,
it is our moral duty to extract it."
"Extract it?" Gary asked, dumbfounded. He pulled the guard
a few inches forward as he tried to get closer. "What the hell does
that mean?"
Banning glanced over at him with triumph shining even more fiercely in
his eyes. "Hold your tongue. Interrupting this process--"
His breath whistled slightly through a gap in his front teeth, and he nodded
to the guard, who twisted Gary's arm even tighter. "--can be very painful."
Gary's next words were spat through gritted teeth. "I don't care
what you do to me; it doesn't change the fact that your process is a crock
of--"
"Not for you." Banning's gaze flickered across the room to where
Morgelyn, on her feet again, watched with one hand over her mouth.
"Not just yet."
Behind his back, Gary's hand clenched into a fist despite the guard's
grip. There had to be something he could say or do that would stop
this. The whole room was cold with fear, with...evil. But the
source sure as hell wasn't Morgelyn.
Most of Gary's day to day run-ins with disaster were due to sheer accidents--bad
timing, carelessness, plain old bad luck. Most of the criminals were
driven to their choices by circumstance, and though Gary couldn't condone
their bad choices, he could understand the misplaced desperation that drove
them. Only rarely, very rarely, had he seen the kind of terrible joy,
the sheer cruelty, that radiated from Banning as he turned, slowly, until
his attention was focused solely on Morgelyn. The move was calculated
to instill fear--no, terror--and Gary felt it sweep through the room like
a tidal wave. Even the guard loosened his grip, and Malcolm made a
tiny noise deep in his throat. Despair, cold and numbing, threatened
to engulf them all.
"Your priest was right, my dear," Banning finally said. He moved
stealthily, confident as a panther, until Morgelyn had to crane her neck
to hold her defiant stance. "Every heart holds some evil. If yours
is not written in this document, then by all means, tell us what it is, and
how you have sinned against God to bring such devastation upon the good people
of Gwenyllan." He emphasized "good", automatically excluding Morgelyn,
and Gary supposed himself, from that category. Banning was building
walls between people, dividing them--this was the heart of Nessa's plan.
All her talk about breaking chains and snapping links was about this--dividing
the village in order to conquer it.
"I have never wished them ill, never wanted evil to visit us."
Gripping the armrest behind her, Morgelyn leaned back, away from Banning.
"It comes often enough without our wishing."
"Never?" Banning asked. Another step, and he was able to reach out
a hand and touch her cheek, her hair. Gary felt the blood leave his
face. "Not even when they pointed out your differences? Taunted
you?" Finally, Banning's fingers traced the rip in her sleeve.
"Not even when they wished you ill in return?"
Morgelyn winced; her mouth opened and closed twice before any words came
out. "They--they never did, until--until now." She reached up,
and Gary thought she meant to brush his hand away, but Banning grabbed it,
squeezing her fingers.
"And what," he asked, his voice hardening to a razor's edge, "did you
wish on them this morning?"
"I was praying that they would stop."
"Do you call yourself blameless?" Banning squeezed until his own
knuckles went white, and Gary was afraid he was going to break her fingers.
He lowered his face until it nearly touched Morgelyn's. "Choose your
words with caution, woman, for blasphemy is also a sin."
Morgelyn tried to pull back, but she didn't have anywhere else to go,
and Banning was crushing her fingers. "It is not blasphemy if it is
true! I have never cursed anyone!"
For an unbearable moment, Banning's stony gaze seemed to petrify the entire
room. "A vengeful temper," he murmured. "Someone with that much
fire inside--a woman of unseemly passions and anger--can easily be led down
the wrong path." Finally he released Morgelyn's hand, then wiped his
own on the rough cloth of his robe as he took a step back. "Especially
if she is already halfway there by way of her ancestry," he murmured, staring
at Morgelyn's hands, one cradled in the other. He lifted his gaze to
the priest. "Is that not true, Father Malcolm?"
The priest nodded. "Search your heart, child. This is no time
for false displays of bravado. Our Lord is willing to take you to Himself
if you only tell us the truth--all of the truth." There was more of
an edge, less fear in his voice now, as if watching Banning terrorize an
innocent woman had leant him strength.
Half-ill from their implications, Gary fumed. Who didn't
have regrets; who hadn't made mistakes? These men weren't going
to stop until they had something, anything that they could hand the villagers
as justification for murder. "You can't do this," he insisted.
At least he could try to keep this guy's attention off his friend for as
long as possible. "She's telling you the truth!"
His outburst was rewarded--Banning wheeled on him. "I have to ask
myself, what kind of man would defend such a woman?" he said. "No
one seems to know who you are, Master Hobson, or where you came from.
But I am sure your friend can help us understand." Shifting his attention
back to Morgelyn, he made a careless, offhand gesture in Gary's direction.
"Do you deny that he is here at your behest? That he did, in fact,
come not through a shipwreck, but at your summons?"
Lie, Gary thought. For the love of God, Morgelyn,
lie.
"I--" she began, and stopped, transfixed by Banning's stare. He
looked like he wanted to take a can opener to her head and just yank it
all out. And if they weren't careful, he could. Gary's heart
twisted in his chest. Morgelyn did look guilty. She still thought
his presence here was her responsibility, her doing, and in her determined
honesty, she would condemn herself the moment she tried to explain.
"My being here has nothing to do with her," Gary said, too loudly, trying
to draw their fire back upon himself. "I was just lost, and she took
me in because she's kind." That much was true, and Gary let it show
in his face, hoping that Father Malcolm, at least, would be convinced.
But as he finished the statement, Banning snapped his fingers at the guards,
his eyes gone to flint. "This will never work. Take her consort
away."
"My what?" Morgelyn yelped.
"No, no, you got it all wrong." This whole thing was all wrong.
And Gary wouldn't, couldn't leave Morgelyn with these people. "I'm
not going anywhere." He planted his feet on stone, even as the guard
readjusted his grip and tried to pull him toward the door.
"You have no choice. Please, do not make this difficult."
The word was loaded with meaning; Banning stroked Morgelyn's arm.
"For any of us."
Morgelyn's hand came up to brush Banning away again, but she met his eyes
and froze. Everyone in the room froze. Gary's thoughts churned
in a horrible circle--they would hurt her if he tried to stay; they would
hurt her if he left. How the hell was he going to stop this?
Why was he here, if he couldn't?
"Gary."
He wrenched his glare from Banning to Morgelyn, who turned to him, pleading
through fearful brown eyes.
"It is...I will be..." But she couldn't say she would be okay, he
couldn't let her say it, because that would be a lie, wouldn't it?
Panic flooded Gary's mind; every cell in his body was screaming at him to
get Morgelyn and get out of this steel trap, now, and without any
planning he wrenched his arm free of the guard and reached for her.
It all happened in an instant, but Gary's brain registered every detail--it
would replay them for a long time to come. There was movement in the
periphery of his vision, a blur speeding toward his outstretched arm, but
Banning raised a hand, flicked a finger, and it swerved at the last instant.
Gary's fingers brushed Morgelyn's, but before he could reach her hand the
blur came down on her arm and there was a hard thunk. Gary was yanked
back by the neck of his tunic and Morgelyn doubled over, clutching her arm
to her stomach with a sharp cry of pain. The shorter guard, the one
who wasn't holding him, let the club he'd used swing back and forth from
his hand, a smug smile on his face.
"No, stop this!" Gary yelled, as much to whatever deity might be
listening and willing to intervene as at their captors. He tried to
take another step toward Morgelyn, but he next thing he knew he was on his
knees, his hands shooting out to stop himself from landing face down on
the floor. There was snickering behind him from the guard who had
driven his cudgel into the back of his legs.
"Leave him alone!" Morgelyn tried to get to Gary; a swirl of red
skirt brushed his face as he tried to push himself up off the floor, but
Banning grabbed her from behind and spoke into her ear, whispering something
that Gary couldn't hear between the ringing in his ears and the half-sobs
Morgelyn was choking back. Rough hands hauled Gary to his feet and
out the door. The last thing he saw was Morgelyn, standing with her
eyes squeezed shut against whatever Banning was saying to her while his long
fingers dug into her upper arms. The guards turned Gary around despite
his protest, the door creaked closed, and he felt stone under his heels as
they dragged him away.
Chapter 58
It is only by risking our persons from one hour to another that we
live at all.
~ William James
The pace at which the guards pulled him down the hall was too much for
Gary; his legs were too bruised to work properly. But the indignity
of being half-dragged through the echoing silence was nothing compared to
his panic over what was going to happen to Morgelyn back there alone.
None of the threats, spoken or not, had been idle, and Gary knew that he
hadn't simply imagined the fierce delight blossoming over Banning's features
as he'd pushed Morgelyn deeper and deeper into her worst fears. And
he'd wanted Gary out of the room because--because--
His legs gave out on him entirely, and he would have dropped to his knees
if not for the guards' grip on his upper arms. The taller of the two
snarled a curse as they stopped to pull Gary upright again--and Gary took
the chance, slipping free, spinning and stumbling back down the hall.
"Damn!" He heard the curse behind him, too close; knew that they
wouldn't let him get back in, but he had to try, he had to--
He was so intent on reaching the end of the hall that he fell backward
when one of the side doors flew open in front of him, and out stepped Father
Ezekiel. His cragged face swam in Gary's vision like a disapproving
ghost.
"Sorry, Father," one of the guards muttered. He started to drag
Gary away, but the priest held up a hand.
"Wait."
"Cru--Zeke, Father Ezekiel--you have to go, you have to stop them, M-Morgelyn,
she's here, they're--" Gary struggled to stand on his own two feet,
one hand outstretched in entreaty.
Implacable, the older man turned his attention to the guards. "I
wish to speak to this man. Bring him in this room."
"But--" Gary began, pointing down the hall. A crack of light spilled
into the hallway; the door at the end wasn't completely closed. Gary
snatched at that tiny bit of hope as if it were a life preserver; if he could
get down there, he could get in. He fought anew to get free, but now
both guards had their hands on him.
"Sir, Brother Banning said we were to take him to the cell."
"I have the authority to collect evidence in this case. It will
take only a short time to question him, and then you can return him to the
cell." Ezekiel spun on his heel and left the others to follow him.
Gary, his feet finally under his stiff knees, was prodded through the open
door. Father Ezekiel waited with one hand on the door and asked the
guards to wait outside. Gary experienced another too-brief moment
of hope--then realized that the room's window was simply a narrow slat,
wider inside than out, and the only door was the one the guards would be
monitoring. And he couldn't leave Morgelyn, he thought wildly--surely
that was where hope lay, surely this man wouldn't let what was about to
happen--what could already be--
"We can't stay here!" Breathless, Gary made a grab for the priest's
robes, but he backed away, staring at him as if he was a lunatic. "She's--they're--please--"
"Sir, this man is dangerous." The taller guard still hesitated in
the doorway. "He has been accused in crimes of witchcraft and--"
"You will wait outside," Ezekiel said, his granite voice brooking no argument,
and he closed the door in their faces.
Rubbing his arms to dislodge phantom fingers, it only took Gary a moment
to absorb the details of the room--the same grey stone, the same cold air,
same smell of decay as in the one he'd just left. A ruined bird's nest
spilled from the unused fireplace, and a small bundle wrapped in coarse fabric
sat on the floor in front of the hearth. The table in this room was
small and lopsided, and there were no candles. The only light came
from the narrow window, which must have faced south; sunlight streamed in
and cast Father Ezekiel's face in sharp relief. He studied Gary in
a way that took him back to Christmas, two years ago, and the way Crumb had
looked at him when he thought Gary was a serial bomber. This time, Gary
didn't squirm. He'd had enough of interrogator's tricks. Stiff
and as tall as he could make himself on his battered legs, he waited for
the other man to break the silence.
Finally, Father Ezekiel drew in a quick breath and moved past Gary to
stand near the fireplace, his strides short but purposeful. He toed
the bundle thoughtfully for a moment, then raised his head and pinned Gary
with a piercing stare.
"It is you, is it not?" he asked in a quiet voice that was hard as steel.
"Somehow, it is you."
"Wha--What's me?" Taken aback, Gary lost his tenuous grip on his
composure.
"She is not the witch." Ezekiel's eyes had gone hard as slate.
"You are. And you are letting her take the blame."
The accusation sucked all the air from Gary's chest, and for a moment
he couldn't find breath to answer. "I-I wouldn't. I would never--"
No, wait, maybe he should let them think exactly that. Banning's
face as he'd closed in on Morgelyn flashed in Gary's mind, and he took a
step backward, swaying, but there was no support, nothing he could lean on.
"If you really believe that, why aren't you in there stopping them?"
"Because I know things, but I do not understand--and I am not sure I believe--what
I do know. Because I want to see what kind of man would bring a woman,
a woman like her, down to hell with him." Mouth agape, Gary shook his
head, but Ezekiel bent down, fending off the unvoiced protest with a wave
of his hand. He picked up the bundle and hefted it onto the table,
steadying its rocking motion with a calm hand. "Father Malcolm told
me last night that Lady Nessa was going to bring that--that--" He nearly
spat the word. "--that witchfinder--into town, but neither of us thought
it would happen so soon. I planned to warn Morgelyn this morning--but
I suppose Styles's death took away that advantage."
"Look, whatever you think about me, if you don't want her hurt, then you
have to get in there right now--that man, Father, he's--"
"I know the type," Ezekiel said simply, and the weight of years seemed
to pull down his features. His sigh was heavy as well.
"You knew? Then how could you let it get this far?
I thought you cared about her!"
Ezekiel looked at Gary curiously, then gave a small shrug, as if it did
not matter to him what Gary knew now. What the heck was this guy up
to?
"Declan stumbled into the rectory at first light, just as Lady Nessa's
messenger arrived with a private summons for Father Malcolm. My esteemed
nephew had just ended his revels, and he heard Anna Styles screaming for
help when she found her husband dead on her doorstep. He told me he
had seen Robin Elders and his friends start off for Morgelyn's cottage, and
he had heard what they intended to do. By the time I caught up with
them, Nessa's guards had taken you both away." A flash of something--it
might have been regret--crossed his face, and was quickly replaced with a
wry, bitter smile. "I spoke to the men, calmed and dispersed them, made
sure the fire was put out by the rain. Then I went inside. I
thought that perhaps I could find the books Morgelyn put so much stock in
and thereby show Malcolm--and the others, once they'd calmed down--that they
were harmless."
"So she has a few books!" Gary exploded, angry at the thought of even
that small betrayal, the handing over of Morgelyn's precious books to a
man like Malcolm. "That doesn't mean she's a witch!"
"Of course it does not."
"Then go in there and tell them." Gary stabbed a finger at the door.
"They'll believe you."
Ezekiel's jaw worked for a moment, and he cast his gaze out the window.
"They would no doubt be quite happy to believe what I can tell them now--which
is why I do not wish to tell them anything at all. Some of the books
that I found contained spells, magical legends, rubbish about druids and
dragons--that infernal peddler ought to be the one confined here for bringing
such nonsense into our midst."
"That doesn't mean--"
"Of course it means--or it will to them." Ezekiel's jaw was hard
and square. "Which is why those particular books are hidden now.
I gave the others, the herbals, to Malcolm to show to--that man."
For a moment, Gary could relax, let his shoulders sag with relief.
It hadn't been a betrayal after all. He really did want to help.
"Thank you."
Ezekiel held up a hand. "It is not the books that worry me."
Nodding at the bundle, he added, "They are nothing at all to this."
Hope fled as Gary ventured a step forward, his heart sinking. He
knew, with leaden certainty, what was in the bundle. He knew now what
had happened to the contents of Morgelyn's trunk. Untying the rough
twine that held the bundle closed, the priest reached into the makeshift
sack and pulled out the Dragon's Eye.
The primal, survival-focused sector of Gary's brain screamed, "Home,"
and quicker than thought, he reached for it. It awoke the moment he
touched it, colors springing to life and dancing before their eyes.
Ezekiel's startled, wordless exclamation barely registered over the panic
this induced in Gary.
"Marissa? Oh my God--no--" Gary stumbled forward as Ezekiel
pulled the globe out of his reach. Only a hand on the rickety table
kept Gary from going down. Grasping the edge until splinters stabbed
his palm, he fought the rising tide of fear all over again. Suddenly,
every horrible thing seemed possible, and his earlier fear that Marissa
had tried to call him back because she was in trouble sprang to the surface.
Or maybe it was somebody else, maybe it was Morgelyn, of course it was,
of course she needed him--he could barely hear Father Ezekiel over the ringing
in his ears.
"That is an interesting trick." Eyes narrowed, Ezekiel shifted his
gaze from Gary to the crystal ball.
His mouth dry, his thoughts a maelstrom, Gary assessed his options--tell
the man an unbelievable truth, or try to make him believe a lie that Gary
knew he couldn't pass off, not in this state. He couldn't even
believe the shipwreck story, let alone convince this man to do so.
There was only one thing to say. "It's the Dragon's Eye," he whispered
hoarsely. "From--from the story last night, it's real."
One bushy grey eyebrow lifted. "Of course it is," he said in a voice
that clearly implied he believed no such thing. "And what does that
make you?"
"I don't know, and it doesn't matter." Gary pointed at the Dragon's
Eye. "That's--I admit it, that thing is how I got here, and I think
it's my only way home, but I--I'm not--I just want to help, like you, I know
you do, and Morgelyn, she's--she hasn't done anything wrong."
"I believed that, not long ago. And then you came." Lips pursed,
he set the Dragon's Eye on the table, then reached into the bundle and pulled
out Gary's jeans and sweater. "Not like any clothes I have ever seen,"
he remarked, holding them at arm's length. "Obviously a man's, and
too large to belong to Fergus MacEwan. Too new to have been her father's."
Gary swallowed, half-surprised that he couldn't taste quicksand in his
mouth, he was sinking that fast. "They're mine," he admitted.
"But they're just clothes. Just because they're different, you can't
start saying that I--that Morgelyn's some kind of witch."
"Perhaps. Still, they are passing strange." Letting them fall
to the floor, Ezekiel reached into the bag once more, producing the crinkled,
water-warped and fire-dried issue of the Chicago Sun-Times.
Gary closed his eyes for a moment, trying to wish this all away. "As
is this--very strange indeed. No human wrote these words." He
dropped it on the table next to the ball, as if afraid it would somehow sting
him. "This tells me there is more than just a shipwreck going on."
With a steely glare, he stepped closer and growled, "Where did you come from,
what have you done to her, and who in the name of our Lord are you?"
For every time Gary had heard Crumb say, "I don't want to know," he was
suddenly enormously grateful, and desperate to hear it just one more time.
He knew now what it meant; he finally understood just how much trust that
not asking had implied. He would have given anything for that trust
now. But if Father Ezekiel wasn't Gary's Crumb, Gary wasn't Father
Ezekiel's anything. The guy had no frame of reference for this, nothing
but the same warped theology that had prompted Malcolm and Banning to act
as they did, and his faith in Morgelyn, badly shaken in the past couple of
days. If Gary wanted the man's trust, he was going to have to earn
it, and it started by trusting first.
"I'm not from this place or time," he said, one hand out, his eyes wide
and earnest.
Ezekiel's eyes narrowed to mere slits. "Not from this time?
What does that mean?"
"I--I can't explain much more than that. There is something strange
going on here, you're right about that, and you--you probably won't believe
the rest, but Morgelyn hasn't done anything evil, and neither have I.
If you want to use those things against me, I know I can't stop you.
But this is not what you believe it is."
"Give me one good reason why I shouldn't march in there right now, show
them all this, and tell them what you just told me."
Gary had it ready. "Morgelyn."
The priest raised an eyebrow. Gary took a deep breath, tried to
steady his frayed nerves. "You condemn me, and she'll die too.
If you thought that wasn't true, you'd have thrown me to them already."
He gestured at the table. "Believe me, if I thought it would save
her, I'd go in there and show them that stuff myself! Look, where
I come from doesn't matter. It's why I'm here that's important, and
I'm here to stop this, and I need your help." His head throbbed, his
legs ached, his shoulder complained, but a surge of adrenaline, of hope,
at the way Ezekiel listened to him without interrupting or protesting kept
Gary on his feet. "And it's not just Morgelyn who's in trouble here.
If she dies, it'll only be the beginning. People are going to be running
scared, trying to point the finger at their neighbors before their neighbors
can point at them. Is that what you want for this place?"
Running a hand through his hair, Gary waited for an answer that didn't
seem to be coming. He heaved a sigh and pointed at the door, indicating
everything that was happening around them. "Lady Nessa does, that's
exactly what she wants; she told me as much last night. She'll make
sure that you all turn on each other, she'll keep playing up the fear until
these people are convinced that the only safety lies with her. They'll
give up everything just to feel secure, and they'll disappear into her little
fiefdom forever."
Ezekiel finally spoke. "Why should I believe you?"
Gary fought the urge to pace, to shout, to do anything but keep a steady
stream of what he hoped was a convincing speech trained on the man before
him. "Because of what I found out last night, because of what you need
to know is true. Banning is her man--her guest--he even admits she's
paying him. She wants land, she wants laborers, and to get that she
thinks she needs a scapegoat. A woman alone, a black woman--Morgelyn's
an easy target, and she doesn't make anything easier when she gets all riled
up, I know. But you have to believe me--Morgelyn is not the threat."
Gary's legs were going to give out soon--maybe he should be on his knees
begging anyway. Father Ezekiel's expression was as unfathomable as Cat's.
Seconds ticked by, and Gary finally added, his voice low, "If you know this,
and you let it happen, you might as well light the fire yourself."
Ezekiel's forehead furrowed into a deep scowl. "Do you think I knew
about this before this morning? Do you think I would have let this
happen?"
Gary shook his head. "That's just it. I know you wouldn't
have. You have more guts than that, I know you do. Morgelyn
told me you stuck around during the plague, that you were the one who visited
the sick and buried most of the dead. You weren't afraid then--you
can't be afraid of the truth now."
"This is not a matter of fear and courage. It is a matter of saving
the soul of a young woman I care for like--like a daughter. If she
has been corrupted by these strange objects, by magical happenings, then she
will go to hell without absolution, an eternity of--" He broke off,
staring at the bird's nest, and Gary realized that he really believed what
he was saying; he wasn't just parroting church doctrine. Their roles
had shifted, if not reversed, for the moment, and it was Ezekiel who was
pleading with him to understand. Gary went for the jugular.
"Burning her at the stake isn't going to save her soul."
Startled, Ezekiel shook his head, barely able to meet Gary's eyes.
He bent to pick up the clothes from the floor. "It will not come to
that."
Oh, great. If this guy wouldn't believe it until it happened, there
was no way he would intervene. "Yes, it will--it damn near already
has! Do you have any idea what's going on right down the hall--what's
in Banning's little chest full of goodies? Torture is not going to make
everything all right, it won't make anything right, and it's not going
to get you the truth, either!"
Pointing at Gary with the hand that still held his jeans, Ezekiel demanded,
"Then tell me the truth."
"I have, I am, I swear it--" Gary's voice cracked with desperate
sincerity and fading hope.
But the older man wagged his head again. "You haven't told me anything
remotely believable. You have yet to explain any of this--" He
waved his hand at the table's contents. "--to my satisfaction."
"What I told you is the truth, and that stuff doesn't even matter, not
if she--"
"Guards!" Stuffing the clothes, ball and newspaper into his bag,
the priest raised his voice over Gary's protests. "Guards! In
here!"
"No!" Gary stepped toward Ezekiel, reached for his arm, but the
older man pulled back as the door was thrown open.
"Take him back to the cell."
"Where are you going?" Gary demanded as gloved hands once again wrapped
around his biceps, pulling him back so that his feet only brushed the floor.
Ezekiel walked on ahead while the guards led Gary back toward the kitchen.
"Don't walk away from her! You can't let them do this, you can't,"
Gary pleaded to his back. One of the guards cuffed him on the back of
the head.
"Shut yer mouth. Do not be talking to the good Father."
But Gary ignored him, desperately grasping at this last lifeline.
"C'mon, I know you're not like these people, you know this isn't the way--you
know her, you know she's not--" He broke off, biting back an exclamation
of pain as his arm was twisted violently behind his back. Still they
propelled him forward, and the familiar head didn't turn around. Gary
took a deep breath. They were almost to the old kitchen, to the cellar;
he had only seconds to find the right thing to say, the words that would
convince this guy to start acting like the man Gary thought he was.
There had to be a reason he looked like Crumb; there had to be hope.
"Please, just listen to me, Morgelyn saved that little boy's life, you
know she did--"
Finally, the priest turned around. The guards stopped, and Gary
held his breath.
"My son," he said, sternly, softly, and what Gary saw in his eyes now
wasn't hard, it was weary and resigned. "I know you believe you are
helping. But knowing what I know, there is nothing I can say that
will help her cause. 'Twould be better if I left now and said nothing
at all. Banning and Father Malcolm are doing what is best, not just
for the village, but for her soul. It must be saved, whether she gave
it over to evil knowingly or not."
"Are you insane? You can't believe that, you can't--you
know her, Crumb--do you think she'd let the devil take her
soul?" Reverberating off the stone walls, Gary's words echoed back
at him, and he realized his mistake.
"Who is Crumb?" asked one of the guards. Ezekiel stared at Gary,
more than just weary resignation in his eyes--but what? He opened his
mouth to say something, but at that moment a scream rang through the hall.
All four men froze for a split second. Gary moved first, terror
lending him strength as he ducked and twisted almost free of the guards,
but they reacted when he moved, grabbing him again as another scream pieced
the air, this one ending in what sounded like a sob.
No, God, no--"Morgelyn!" Gary bellowed, fighting to free himself.
"Morgel--" but he couldn't get free, couldn't get to her, and they pushed
and kicked and dragged him around the corner and through the empty cold
kitchen. In the confusion, Gary didn't see Ezekiel again, but he called
to him nevertheless. "Father, stop them, you gotta stop them, they're
gonna--" What? What would they do? What had they done
already?
One of the guards got the door open, and they shoved him through.
Gary half-tumbled, half-staggered down the stairs as the door was slammed
shut and bolted behind him. He was back up the stairs in a heartbeat,
pounding on the thick oak and yelling through the tiny opening. "Stop
them, damn it, they'll kill her! Ezekiel!"
But only the guards' footsteps came back to him in weakening echoes, pounding
in counterpoint to his own rapidly-hoarsening voice.
Chapter 59
Yet she most faithfull Ladie all this while...
Through woods and wastnesse wide him daily sought;
Yet wished tydings none of him unto her brought.
~ Sir Edmund Spencer
Nothing worked.
Not her grandmother's quilt, not a decent breakfast, not walking Spike,
not even being...here.
Marissa didn't know what had called her to this park, this bench.
Certainly, she couldn't honestly say that it had been Gary. But when
she'd woken at about eight from the light, dreamless doze that she'd finally
settled into, there on the couch under the multi-textured quilt, she'd felt
the irresistible call of lake air, of morning calm. Of Gary's bench.
Crumb had shown up at her door just as she was leaving, and she'd told
him the truth--the fickle sprinkles of rain didn't bother her, and Spike
needed a walk. She'd taken her time getting here, letting Spike sniff
trees and hydrants, telling him with words and harness commands that there
was no rush, that he wasn't on duty here--not much, anyway. But their
progress to the bench had been as inexorable as the seasons that she could
feel changing under her feet in the occasional crunching leaf and in the
tang of the air around her. Even though she wore a sweater under her
raincoat, she shivered in the cool breeze that teased her hair and wrapped
itself around her ankles.
The wind made her feel restless, but Marissa took a few deep breaths and
tried to calm herself and sit back against the wooden slats of the park bench.
Everything had started here. It would be right if somehow, through
some act of incredible grace, it could end here as well--a sigh, a prayer,
a moment of pure faith, and then there would be Gary, as if nothing had happened,
as if the past few days had been a bad dream. There would be an explanation,
of course there would, but it wouldn't matter because everything would be
right again. There would be nothing to figure out, no strange
signs and talismans to decode, and most of all, no one she needed to convince.
No whispers of doubt to loosen her faint hold on what her heart was telling
her had to be true.
"The Bible tells us that a faith the size of a mustard seed can move a
mountain," Reverend Nicks had said once, "but that faith, no matter how small,
has to be pure--a faith of perfect trust." Clearly, Marissa thought,
her faith wasn't perfect or pure enough--if it was, wouldn't Gary be here?
Closing her eyes, clasping her hands together in her lap while raindrops
landed on the back of her neck, she prayed for better faith, that she wouldn't
be buffeted by the doubts that surrounded her--inside as well as out, she
had to admit. If she really believed, why was she so afraid?
Because the truth was, she was terrified, moreso now than she had been
even that first afternoon on the pier. It was because of her dream
and its unshakable aftereffects. Even now it wouldn't leave her alone.
Still her skin was goosebumpy and still her mind was filled with images that
wouldn't have been half so frightening if she hadn't been afraid that they
were true. Normally after such a vivid dream she would have given herself
a stern talking-to and got on with her business. But she knew that
smell, the one that still lingered in the corners of her awareness, and knew
that it was more than just smoke. It was Gary, the way he smelled
when he returned from a save smelling of fire. She hadn't known how
to tell Chuck, or even if she should, but she'd known right from the start
what it was. Her dream had been cold, but she'd smelled...fire.
Gary, surrounded by fire...
But Gary knew how to handle himself in a fire, she told herself firmly.
He'd done it many times over the past two years. The last time had
been the strangest...
Marissa let her mind follow that tack, hoping to escape her more recent
fears--or maybe even figure them out. It had happened not long before
Chuck had moved to California. According to Chuck, Gary hadn't been
anywhere near a fire that day. He'd been conked on the skull, as Chuck
so delicately put it, trying to stop a building collapse that would have
caused horrible fatalities. In answer to her worried questions, they
both assured her that everything was fine and disaster had been averted,
but Gary asked Marissa at least twice if she was all right, though
she hadn't been anywhere near the construction site. He disappeared
up to the loft while she was out in the kitchen; Chuck told her that Gary
left the office muttering about time and physics. Concerned that the
blow to Gary's head had done real damage, Marissa used the tea she'd made
as an excuse to go up and check on him.
He let her in, the smoke that she could have sworn she'd noticed earlier
nearly overwhelming her this time. Her guarded queries weren't answered;
instead, Gary let out a barrage of questions of his own, none of which she
understood. Was she related to Jesse Mayfield--or any Mayfield?
When had her family come to Chicago? What was her great-grandmother's
name, and did she know the words to "Danny Boy"?
"Did my great-grandmother know the words to 'Danny Boy'?" Still
holding the tea, standing just inside the open door, Marissa repeated Gary's
question to be sure she'd heard correctly.
"Yeah, or--maybe your great-great grandmother, or--or you. Do you
ever sing that song?" His voice, and the acrid smell of fire, came
at her in little waves as he paced the length of the loft, close to her,
then across the room, then close again.
"Gary--'Danny Boy'? What does that have to do with what happened
today?"
"Maybe everything." He started to mumble to himself as he moved
away again. Using her cane for guidance--because for once none was
forthcoming from her friend--Marissa found the end table and set the mug
of tea down.
"Please, Gary--" She felt his footsteps coming nearer, and reached
out to snag his arm as he passed. He stopped, but she could feel the
restless energy seething inside him. "I don't understand why you're
asking me these questions."
"I just--I think--you're gonna think I'm nuts. His voice was ragged
and hoarse, and he sounded so lost...
"Of course I won't. Just relax, and tell me what's going on."
He dropped to sit on the arm of the sofa. "I don't know, Marissa,
that's the whole point!"
"Well, here, drink the tea before it gets cold." Pointing at the
mug, Marissa waited until she heard Gary pick it up and swallow dutifully.
"Just tell me, whatever it is. What happened to you? You smell
like smoke, and you sound exhausted, as if you've lived a couple of days
in the past hour--"
At that, Gary had choked on his tea. And then he'd told her.
Even now, months afterward, Marissa still didn't know what to think about
the story Gary had related. Of course she trusted Gary; of course she
knew he hadn't made it up. But to think he had traveled through a
century, lived two days, and come back, all in a matter of minutes; to think
that she and Chuck had doubles in Nineteenth Century Chicago--it had taken
a lot of faith just to work that one through. And yet, as she'd finally
told Gary, if getting tomorrow's news today was possible, wasn't just about
anything?
Yes. Yes, anything was possible. "Anything," she said out
loud, and Spike's tags jingled as he lifted his head, sat up, and nudged
her knee with his nose. Scratching his head between his ever-alert
ears, she added, "Even this."
Marissa knew her resolution was fragile. So much time had passed
already; she'd tried everything she could think of, and nothing at all was
working. But Gary had dreamed of a ghost, once, and put an old wrong
to rights. And he'd been a part, somehow, of saving Jesse Mayfield's
ancestors during the Chicago Fire. She didn't doubt those things.
Why should she doubt that something like that was happening now?
Because neither one of those saves had taken Gary away from all of them
like this.
True, but he'd disappeared once before--he'd been gone for days.
But not right in front of her, not into the lake. And no one had
really believed--though they'd feared--what they all believed now.
All except for Marissa.
But Cat had come. Twice.
She'd had a dream about Gary, he'd been there, trying to reach out to
her--she was sure of it.
She had promised she wouldn't resign herself to this.
But for how long?
How long until faith became foolishness? How long until it all crumbled,
until even those who wanted to believe with her--Chuck, and maybe Crumb--decided
that she was just deluded? How many hours, days--how much time was
belief granted before it became insanity?
No. She had proof, if only someone would believe it with her.
Shifting on the bench, she gave Spike one final pat on the head before reaching
into her bag for the crystal ball.
The moment she touched it, the air around her changed, charged--the metal
was warm, like it had been the day before in the lab. She drew it out,
fingers trembling, her prayers now nothing more than wordless hope.
Gary...somehow...her thoughts wouldn't coalesce; they left her breathless
as she tried to chase them down and gather them in. Spike whined, but
he sounded so far away. She had to believe...believe that Gary was
still alive, still trying to come home. Marissa tried to focus, to
think, to feel, and for a moment it was clear, it was possible, anything was--but
the feeling winked out, like music suddenly silenced, and for a moment she
was back in that room of cold stone, back in her dream, smelling, but not
feeling, the fire as it advanced, burned more than wood--singed flesh...Gary,
Gary was there, he was--he was in trouble...where--when?
"When?"
Now. Right now, he was in trouble, so much so that it made
Marissa ill just to think about it, and breathless and shaky and--and he'd
been hurt, but more than that, he was afraid--Gary, who was supposed to
be the one who solved everybody else's problems, was afraid and lost and--and
someone was hurting him--
--she finally heard her own gasping breath when the feeling disappeared
as quickly as it had come, but like a wave, it left her drenched in fear,
shaking all over. She leaned forward, one hand over her mouth, the
other clutching the scrying glass to her stomach, trying to just hold herself
in, hold herself together...
...because if she was right about Gary being alive, then wasn't this also
right, this feeling that he was in grave danger? "Oh, God..."
He needed help, but how could they help him if they couldn't find
him?
"Miss? Miss, are you all right?" A young man's voice, concerned,
his words interspersed with runner's gasps, startled Marissa upright.
Spike, who always seemed to know whether new people meant to help or to harm,
pressed close against her leg, but didn't growl. Marissa dropped her
hand from her mouth to the dog's head.
"I--I'm fine--I just--"
Gary needed help...
"Are you sure? I have a cell phone, I could call--um, a doctor or
a cab or--someone--" The poor man sounded completely befuddled, and
his voice pulled her back to the present.
Her hands were still shaking. He must have thought she was a lunatic.
Forcing one deep breath at a time in and out, in and out, Marissa was finally
able to regain something like composure. "No. Really, I--just
felt a little strange there for a minute." Both hands on the crystal
ball that she held in her lap, Marissa managed a hint of a smile, ignoring
the whispers in her head that said she was a liar. "I didn't get much
sleep last night, and I--I think I have a touch of the flu or something."
Or something...but it was enough for her would-be rescuer.
"The weather's changing, it'll do that to you. But still, if you
want help getting somewhere, or--"
"No. No, thank you, really, I'm fine." Lifting her chin, she
nodded in Spike's direction. "He takes good care of me, don't you Spike?"
Spike woofed, tail wagging at the tone of voice she always used to praise
him, and that did the trick--the man chuckled. When in doubt, deflect
to the dog.
"Okay, then. You, uh--be careful--fluids and rest are best for the
flu."
Marissa thanked him again, the tension in her shoulders releasing just
a little bit when he left. Not too much, though--she couldn't break
down again, not here. She tried to turn her thoughts away from her
fear long enough to stand, to tuck the glass ball back in her bag, to pick
up Spike's harness and head back for the bus stop. It was good, she
told herself, to know that there were still people in the city who would stop
to aid a stranger--even if they didn't get tomorrow's news today--and at
least he'd helped, inadvertently, by sending her walls up again--but it wasn't
strangers she needed right now. It was friends.
One friend in particular--but that didn't seem to be about to happen.
Marissa reached into her bag and ran her fingers over cool glass and now-indifferent
metal, searching as she walked for some clue as to what had made that happen,
what had triggered the rush of sensation and emotion.
It was beyond physical reality. The glass was the same as it had
been before, the letters a little easier to find after Josh's cleaning, that
was all, but--
--but she knew, now, that something was truly, horribly wrong for Gary,
and she had to find some way to help him. She knew she needed help,
too--someone who'd listen. As much as he might not want the job, that
person was Chuck. There was no one else--no one else left. Gulping
back tears that suddenly clogged her throat, Marissa was halfway across
the street before she realized she'd passed the bus stop. She turned
around and followed Spike back onto the curb, the whoosh of a car right
behind her sending her raincoat flapping around her legs.
"Careful, hon," a female voice cautioned as Marissa stepped over to the
bus stop and touched the pole that held the CTA sign, just to make sure
she was in the right spot. At that moment she heard the whine of a
diesel engine approaching. "I don't think that guy even saw you.
Idiot drivers with cell phones--oh, here's the bus!"
The woman followed Marissa and Spike onto the bus, muttering dire proclamations
about the safety of Chicago's streets. Marissa hardly heard her; she
fished in her pocket for fare and followed Spike to the nearest empty seat,
but the tirade didn't stop.
"...and then last night, did you hear about the wreck on the Eisenhower?
The paper said it was a chain reaction caused by some guy who was picking
up his hamburger from the floor of his car while he was doing eighty on the
freeway! My husband saw it on his way home from work--he said there
were cars crumpled everywhere. Said there was no way anyone could
have come out of a couple of them alive. And all because of a hamburger!
I'd like to smack that guy up top of the head. All it would have taken
to save those lives would have been a little bit of common sense..."
Or Gary. Gary could have stopped it, if only...
Not here, not now. She couldn't think about...
Marissa bit her lip and reached down to scratch Spike's head again, concentrating
on his warmth and the shape of his head, on counting the stops to Illinois
Street, on nodding at what seemed like appropriate times while fiercely tuning
out the actual words the woman was saying. Her prayer now was simply
that she could hold herself together, at least until she was among friends,
and she willed the bus forward, faster, wishing the diesel fumes would drive
the scent of smoke from her consciousness.