The Harrowing of Gwynedd

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The Harrowing of Gwynedd Page 12

by Katherine Kurtz


  Ansel withdrew briefly, horrified, suddenly aware that Tavis had gone into the other room to deal with his half-siblings—which was absolutely essential now, after what Ansel had just learned. Quickly he returned to Elinor’s mind, erasing all memory of his visit and what they had done, substituting harmless memories of what little Deryni ability Elinor had had. In that, at least, they had been in time, for neither Elinor and Jamie nor their children had warranted any special attention from captive Deryni since their return to court.

  But was Ansel in time to save the MacLean girls? As he completed the necessary adjustments in his mother’s mind and withdrew for good, Tavis was gliding back into the room, a satisfied smile lighting his face for just an instant as he nodded to Ansel.

  They’ll remember nothing, he sent. They didn’t even stir. Shall we move on next door?

  Ansel conveyed his worries about the MacLean sisters to Tavis as the two of them moved through the anteroom and toward the door to the corridor, but they had to wait there as heavy footsteps tramped past—one of the inevitable guard patrols they had not encountered earlier. Ears pressed against the door, Deryni senses tensed to their limits, they heard a door open and close, farther down the corridor, and then more feet continuing on out of hearing. When nothing else occurred to jar their caution for several minutes, Ansel cautiously eased the door open a crack. The corridor was deserted.

  Let’s go, he ordered.

  The door relocked behind them as easily as the next door yielded to their magic. They slipped inside without mishap, Ansel remaining to keep watch while Tavis glided deeper inside to locate their quarry. Near the window, a rushlight burned feebly on a coffer between two narrow beds mounded with sleeping furs. Tavis bent briefly over the bed on the left, doing what needed to be done, then moved on to the one on the right—and went rigid with shock.

  Ansel, come here!

  The summons did not brook delay or even question. Instantly Ansel was dashing across the room, to look on in horror as Tavis drew back the edge of sleeping fur that covered the silent, unmoving form of a young girl just entering puberty, the soft curves of her child’s face barely beginning to streamline to the stronger planes of young womanhood.

  Except that little Giesele MacLean would never become a woman now, for she was quite dead.

  “My God, what happened?” Ansel breathed, dropping to his knees, not daring to touch her.

  “I didn’t do a thing,” Tavis replied, pressing his fingers hard along her throat in vain search for some thread of pulse. “I haven’t a clue what caused it. She’s just dead—and only quite recently, too.”

  “Recently enough to revive her?” Ansel dared to ask, knowing that Healers sometimes could bring a patient back from the brink of death, if damage was not too severe.

  Tavis slipped his hand along the side of her head, resting his thumb against her temple, and pressed his stump against the right side of her neck. After a few seconds, he shook his head.

  “Can’t bring her back. But this soon, I should be able to read something of how it happened. Niallan has taught me several interesting techniques in the past few months.”

  “To hell with Niallan!” Ansel muttered under his breath, though he did not interfere as Tavis closed his eyes and set to work.

  The Healer bowed his head over the dead girl as he drew a long, slow breath to trigger the very deep trance he must achieve to work a Death-Reading. He could feel the faint flutter in the pit of his stomach that confirmed his readiness to proceed, and he breathed a silent prayer that little Giesele’s suffering had not been too great. His teachers had taught him well, for very quickly he was in the memories of her last few seconds of life—and suddenly reliving them!

  She had been dreaming about her father at first—happy, carefree memories from her earlier childhood, before death carried off Lord Geoffrey MacLean in a hunting accident. Giesele had been just six.

  But then the dream had shifted to nightmare—a vividly imagined scenario of her cousin Adrian’s death by torture, spun from the graphic and triumphant reports that swept through the court when the perpetrators returned, and embellished in terrifying detail by a frightened twelve-year-old.

  The horror of it had jarred her from sleep, but only to plunge her into far more immediate terror. Already trembling and gasping for breath, she opened her eyes to a hazy, sleep-blurred glimpse of someone towering over her narrow bed. But she never had time to scream—only to catch a final impression of a hard, bearded face and a vast, leather-covered chest, just before gauntleted arms pressed something soft and suffocating hard against her face.

  She had tried to escape, flailing wildly underneath her sleeping furs at first; but the man set a knee across her chest to hold her, relentlessly crushing out the breath she had managed to catch before the pillow began pressing her closer and closer to the darkness. Consciousness seeped away fitfully, even as the slender body twitched and gradually was still, the terror eventually giving way to a resigned peacefulness, until even that was gone.

  Tavis was never sure exactly when she slipped away; only that, at last, Giesele MacLean was no longer there. As he drew another deep breath and opened his eyes, blinking back tears, he thought her body underneath his hand was already cooler than it had been when he began. As he bent to press his lips to her forehead in final farewell, he brushed at his tears with his stump.

  “What happened?” Ansel whispered.

  Tavis sighed, drained. “They had her killed. Smothered. To look as if she died in her bed. Children do sometimes, you know.”

  “But—”

  Shaking his head, Tavis reached out and took up one of Ansel’s hands, sending his reading across the bond of flesh before Ansel had time to do more than draw a startled breath.

  “Dear Jesu,” Ansel started to breathe, as the full horror hit him.

  But Tavis could not allow him time to think about it here.

  “This has all been carefully orchestrated, don’t you see?” he whispered. “It has to be the reason that all the regents are conveniently away tonight—and especially all the MacInnises. If foul play is even suspected, they all have an alibi.”

  “But, why?” Ansel asked. “What did a twelve-year-old girl ever do to deserve—”

  “She was alive, Ansel! Think about it. Now that she’s dead, her older sister is sole heiress of Kierney—a very valuable marriage prize for young Master Iver MacInnis! I’d wondered how they planned to work that out, with co-heiresses, but it never occurred to me that they’d murder a child.”

  Impulsively Ansel glanced at the still-sleeping Richeldis.

  “Let’s steal Richeldis, then,” he said. “At least we can foil that part of their plan.”

  “Don’t be stupid,” Tavis snapped. “If we did that, she’d be attainted, the same way you were, and all the Kierney lands would escheat to the Crown on Iain MacLean’s death—which you can be sure would come quickly, or his attainder—and Iver MacInnis would still get Kierney. We’ve lost this one, Ansel. Let’s get out of here, before we lose us, too.”

  “But—”

  In less than a heartbeat, Tavis surged his mind across the bond of flesh again and touched the triggerpoint in Ansel’s mind, at once blocking all his Deryni abilities and setting irresistible compulsions to obey.

  Sorry, Ansel, but we’re leaving, he ordered. I haven’t time to argue with you. Now, move!

  Disobedience was not possible, even though Tavis removed the block to Ansel’s powers as soon as his compulsions were in place. Ansel moved, his body guiding him to the door with smooth, silent precision, even as his mind raged at Tavis for what he had done—for the Healer had left him with all memory of the event. In unshakable physical harmony, the two eased open the door and slipped back down the corridor, making their way stealthily toward the King’s Tower and its haven of the Portal. So they might have continued without incident, had they not rounded the last bend but one and nearly ran into the arms of two surprised guards.

  All four m
en froze for just an instant. Tavis managed to avert his face before either of their adversaries could get a good look at him, thrusting his handless wrist behind him and dashing in to grasp the nearer of the guards by the neck. The man crumpled before his sword could even clear its scabbard.

  But Ansel was not so fortunate. Armed with only a dagger, his offense quickly became a frantic parry as the other guard made a wild slash in his direction with one of the biggest swords Tavis had ever seen. Ansel managed to deflect the first blow, the steel ringing against stone in a tocsin that surely must have roused the entire Valoret garrison, but the second connected with the sickeningly solid thud of a butcher’s cleaver in flesh, opening a broad gash in Ansel’s left thigh that cut clear to the bone.

  Ansel could not even cry out. The very force of the blow left him breathless, though the first, numbing shock changed immediately to fire as the leg buckled under his weight and blood fountained from his thigh. As he clutched at a wound almost too wide to span with both his hands, blood-slick dagger falling forgotten as the hot blood spurted between his fingers, it hardly mattered that in that instant Tavis had managed to dart in and put Ansel’s opponent out of commission with more Deryni magic.

  “Jesu, we’ve got to get out of here!” Tavis gasped, taking a quick, disbelieving look at Ansel’s leg as he seized his arm and urged him to his feet. “Come on!” He brushed the wounded man’s forehead with his stump, blocking both Ansel’s powers and his pain. “Put the pain aside!” he ordered. “You have to walk, no matter what it costs. I’ll help you. Let’s go!”

  And the pain was gone, though crucial muscles were cut, and Ansel could not manage more than an awkward shuffle. How they made it down the turnpike stair of the King’s Tower, Ansel never knew; only that suddenly he was sitting in a growing puddle of his own blood at Tavis’ feet, on the stinking floor of the garderobe Portal, and Tavis was clasping his head between bloody hand and stump and willing him to surrender, to give over control—and Ansel gladly obeyed, no longer caring that his life’s blood was pooling around him, and his consciousness receding, even if Tavis’ controls had not been taking him … elsewhere.

  CHAPTER NINE

  They will lay lands on the sick, who will recover.

  —Mark 16:18

  “Somebody, fetch a Healer!” Tavis shouted, conjuring handfire even as he found his footing in the haven’s Portal chamber, staggering under Ansel’s dead weight. “Queron! Dom Rickart! Hey, help! Somebody, get another Healer in here, right now! I need more hands!”

  He heard the faraway buzz of alarmed voices and running feet approaching, but he pushed them to the back of awareness as he collapsed to his knees beside the fainting Ansel. He had kept his hand clamped to Ansel’s wound as best he could, while they made their escape, but an anguished glance beneath it confirmed that the wound was even more serious than he had feared. Tavis had to stop the bleeding, and soon—or at least slow it until help could arrive—or Ansel was a dead man. They already had left a terrible, bloody trail behind them in Valoret, and Ansel continued to pump out his life’s blood here on the Portal floor.

  Heartsick, Tavis jammed his stump hard against the femoral pressure point at Ansel’s groin and, at the same time, eased his fingers into the wound as far as he could. The bloody opening in Ansel’s legging hampered him physically, too small by half to let him really feel or see what he was doing; but with only one hand, there was little he could do about that until help arrived. Skipping the usual preliminaries, he plunged himself into Healer’s trance with dizzying speed and cast out with his powers, trying to begin assessing the worst of the damage.

  The wound was deep as well as wide. It had cut right to the bone, also damaged, but Tavis bypassed that for the moment, hunting for the major sources of bleeding. The vital femoral artery seemed to be intact—else Ansel would be dead by now—but some of its major branches surely must be badly damaged, judging by the amount of blood that continued to well up around Tavis’ hand, even with the pressure point.

  “Where’s another Healer?” he screamed again, really becoming alarmed as he was forced to divert some of his attention to Ansel’s suddenly erratic heartbeat.

  “Oh, no you don’t! Stay with me, Ansel!”

  All at once, others were crowding to assist him, several other pairs of hands reaching in to help shift Ansel into the antechamber outside the Portal itself and give Tavis room to work. He scuttled along with them, maintaining contact. To his intense relief, Evaine took over monitoring functions at Ansel’s head, even as they moved him.

  “He’s going into shock. Jesse, go get Queron!” Evaine ordered, cradling Ansel’s head in her lap as they straightened him out on the floor. “Gregory, tear that legging open wider, so Tavis can see what he’s doing, and then take the pressure point.”

  The blood-soaked fabric parted between Gregory’s already bloody hands with a soggy, ripping sound, and blood spurted again as he relieved Tavis, the heels of both hands applying pressure in the angle of Ansel’s groin. From Tavis’ left, another pair of hands smoothly eased into the wound to either side of Tavis’ one, the directing mind linking in with trained precision and urging them both to deeper levels, so that healing might be effected.

  “Easy,” the other murmured. “You’ve got your extra hands now. Sylvan’s my name.”

  The name was vaguely familiar to Tavis, but he did not know that mind. Without doubt, however, Sylvan was a Healer well accustomed to dealing with wounds of this kind. A battle surgeon?

  That’s right, came the other’s brisk reply. Let’s see if we can get him stabilized now. You work on the bone damage, and I’ll try to stop the bleeding.

  It was a logical division of labor, with Sylvan’s two skilled hands to Tavis’ one, and Tavis bent to his task without question, though he had to rely solely on touch until someone sluiced warm water over the wound to clear their working field—Fiona MacLean, Tavis’ quick glance confirmed.

  Even then, and with Sylvan at last making headway with the bleeding, repairing the damaged bone was trickier than Tavis had expected. Though Ansel’s femur was not broken, the blow that had caused his wound had also pried up a chip of bone as the sword twisted in its wielder’s hand. Tavis managed to mend it without getting in Sylvan’s way too much, but he sensed his own fatigue and after-reactions to the night’s events beginning to set in as he finished, potentially affecting both skill and judgment. He pulled back gladly as another unfamiliar Healer joined in across from him—not Queron or Rickart, to his surprise, though the newcomer was Gabrilite, and known to Sylvan.

  Leaving further physical manipulation to them, he shifted his own dwindling energies to bolster Evaine—for Ansel’s vital signs had steadied, but they were still dangerously weak. For a while, he tried to maintain a secondary link, prepared to drive further power into their working if it should be needed, but he made no false protest of bravado when the other two finally eased him from the link entirely, as aware as he that he was nearly spent.

  When hands suddenly dropped onto his shoulders from behind, it was Queron’s mind that wrapped around his in compassion and offer of healing for the Healer, even as the hands drew him back, head tipping against Queron’s knees. Tavis caught a glimpse of the Healer looking down at him as his eyes rolled back under his lids, already responding to Queron’s command to let go, but he did not even think of resisting. Surrendering all thought of what he had just done and witnessed, he let Queron’s reviving spell work its miracle for those few seconds. He could feel new energy coursing through him as he opened his eyes, Queron’s support remaining with him in a light Healer’s link still open between them. And since Sylvan and the other Healer still were working and seemed not to need their help, Tavis allowed himself a quick scan of the rest of the room.

  He was not surprised to see Joram and Jesse, of course, watching quietly from the shadow of the Portal, where they would not be in the way; and Gregory still knelt at his right, Evaine cradling Ansel’s head beyond him.

&nbs
p; He remembered that he had noticed Fiona in the room, too. Just now, she was setting a steaming basin of water on the floor by Ansel’s feet, damp little tendrils of dark hair standing out around a face flushed from exertion.

  What he had not expected was the children—though, on second thought, perhaps that should come as no surprise. They lived here, after all, and hardly could have slept through his frantic cries for help. Beyond Fiona, a wide-eyed and trembling Rhysel Thuryn hugged an enormous stack of towels to her breast, her face almost as white as the folded linens. And a little to her right, pressed hard against the wall, the twelve-year-old Camlin MacLean crouched beside an agitated-looking Tieg Thuryn, both comforting and restraining the younger boy with arms around his shoulders from behind.

  Of course Tieg would have been drawn to the call for a Healer, even if the others had not. Tieg was a Healer’s son and already known to be a future Healer himself, though the Healing gifts generally did not begin to manifest until near puberty. At three-and-a-half, formal Deryni training of any kind must be negligible, but Tieg’s Healing potential was prodigious enough to have shown already, as Camlin certainly had cause to know full well. Though Evaine had been the one to direct that Healing, its source had been Tieg.

  “It’s all right, Tieg,” Tavis reassured the boy. “We’re nearly done. He’s going to be fine.”

  Indeed, the unknown Gabrilite Healer already had withdrawn physically, though he kept one hand resting lightly on the back of one of Sylvan’s to augment, as the battle surgeon finished up. Tavis could not see much of the Gabrilite’s face, for his head was bowed over the patient, but the hair pulled back in the sleek braid of his order was bright blond, untouched by grey. Quite possibly, he was not much older than Tavis. Somehow, he had managed not to get blood on his white habit, either—which amazed Tavis, because the rest of them looked as if they’d been working in a slaughterhouse.

 

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