for the right moment to kill him.

The second sneeze was accompanied by a raging curse.

'Goddamn this isle and all your obnoxious perfumes, Clare. There must be a field of mugwort nearby.'

'Release me, sir,' Clare commanded. 'You do not need me any longer.'

'Hush. Do not speak again. That damned Hellhound is no doubt following us.' Lucretius broke off to sneeze.

Gareth used the sound to guide himself closer to his quarry. He motioned Dalian to stay behind him.

They were very near the edge of the cliffs now. Gareth could hear the echo of the waves in the cove.

He heard Clare cry out softly as she stumbled over some object.

'The boat is hidden in the cave down below,' Lucretius muttered. 'You will go down the cliff path ahead of me. There is no place to run, so don't even think of doing so.

Go. I will be right behind you?'

The magician's words were cut off by a swift series of loud, convulsive sneezes. He swore again, violently. And sneezed again.

The sound of a brief scuffle ensued.

'Nay,' Clare said. 'I'll not go with you.'

'Come back here, you stupid wench. I will kill you with my magic if you do not return to me.' Another sneezing fit overcame Lucretius. 'What is this?' he gasped. 'What have you done to me? Damn you, 'tis the book.'

Something heavy fell to earth. Gareth knew that it was the leather pouch Lucretius had slung across his body. The magician had thrown it down onto the ground in rage.

'You have tried to poison me,' Lucretius screamed. 'I'll kill you for this, just as I killed your father.'

'Leave,' Clare cried. 'Flee while you still can, magician. If my husband finds you, he will surely destroy you.'

Gareth saw the flash of Clare's gown in the fog. A new fear seized him.

He realized that Clare could not see any more clearly than he could. If she chanced to lose her bearings, she might fall into the sea.

'Clare, this way,' he shouted. 'Do not run toward the cliffs. Run to me.'

Footsteps thudded softly in the moist ground. Clare appeared out of the mist. She ran blindly toward the sound of his voice. Then she saw him.

'Gareth.'

'Stay with Dalian.' Gareth raised his sword and went past her.

He nearly stumbled over the leather pouch that was lying on the ground.

The book had fallen out.

Dried flowers were scattered about. The familiar scent of mugwort was strong.

Another loud sneeze made Gareth whirl to the left. Lucretius stood in the swirling gray mist. His black cloak was thrown back behind his shoulders, revealing his mail hauberk.

'So you think that you are a more clever magician than I, Hellhound?'

Gareth did not answer. He paced toward Lucretius.

'Stay back.' Lucretius held his sword ready for battle with one hand.

With his other, he reached into the folds of his cape and withdrew an object the size of a cup. 'I can throw the contents of this vial farther than you can reach with a sword, Hellhound.'

Gareth glanced at the large vial. It was filled with a green-tinged potion that he did not recognize. 'Do you think I fear whatever you have in that jar?'

'You would do well to fear it.' Lucretius's smile was savage. 'Tis a corrosive elixir that burns whatever it touches, including skin and eyes, Hellhound.'

'He's right, my lord.' Dalian took a step forward. He stared at the vial in Lucretius's hand. 'Tis a mixture that he concocted when he tried to create gold from base metals. It burns like fire.'

Lucretius laughed softly. 'Listen to the boy, Hellhound. Or risk your eyes. What good is a blind hound?'

'Gareth, I believe that he speaks the truth,' Clare said. 'Do not get close to him.'

'He does speak the truth,' Dalian insisted. 'Have a care, my lord.'

Clare did not take her eyes off Lucretius. 'Why did you kill the recluse?'

Lucretius shrugged. 'The foolish old woman saw me. She believed me to be the ghost of Brother Bartholomew come to search for his lost Sister Maud. But for some reason she felt she had to prove the point.'

'She followed you to the convent library and you killed her,' Clare whispered.

'I wanted to see if you had stored your father's books in the convent library before I went to the trouble of trying to find it in your hall. It would have been so much simpler if you had handed it over to the nuns, Clare.'

'They were not interested in it,' Clare said. 'So I kept it.'

'Idiots.' Lucretius glanced at the book lying near the pouch. 'The greatest secrets of the ancients are in that volume. Your father found them in the Arabic treatises that he translated. Mayhap the very secret of immortality is in there.'

'Do you intend to leave the isle without your precious book, magician?'

Gareth prodded the volume with the toe of his boot.

'It appears that I shall be forced to leave it behind today, but you may be certain that I shall return for it.' Lucretius smiled his cold, dazzling smile once more. 'And you will never know when or where I shall next appear. The knowledge will no doubt keep you awake at night, eh, Hellhound?'

'I stopped you this time, did I not? I can do it again, if need be.'

'Bah! You were fortunate this time, that is all. Next time, things will be different.'

'Leave, then, if that is your intent. Take your foul elixir and get off this isle.'

'As you wish, Hellhound. But first I will leave you something by which you shall always remember me.' Lucretius hurled the vial, straight at Gareth's face.

'No,' Dalian yelled. He leaped to intercept the vial, reaching for it with his bare hands.

'Dalian,' Clare shouted.

Gareth did not even think about his reaction. It was instantaneous, the sort of quick, physical response that had saved his life on countless occasions.

With one hand he grabbed Dalian and yanked him out of the way. With the other he brought his sword up in a swift, short arc. He caught the vial on the flat of the blade.

Gareth used the momentum of the swing to propel the small jar off to the side. It struck a rock and shattered. There was a soft hissing sound.

'Dear God,' Clare breathed. 'It is eating away at the rock.'

'You have the devil's own luck, Hellhound.' Lucretius raced toward the cliff path. 'But it cannot last forever.'

'There is no boat waiting for you down in the cove, magician,' Gareth said softly. 'My men discovered it a short while ago.'

'Nay, that cannot be.' Lucretius's cloak whipped around him as he halted at the top of the cliff path. 'You He. I discovered those caves. No one knows about the cliff caves.'

Gareth smiled. 'You do not know much about young boys. They are insatiably curious. William found the caves long ago.'

'Damn you, Hellhound.' Lucretius lunged toward him, sword raised.

Gareth met the rush easily. Steel clashed against steel. Lucretius leaped back out of reach, feinted, and closed once more.

The magician was good, Gareth conceded privately as the two men circled each other. He was both fast and clever. Lucretius might make a show of disdaining the fighting arts in favor of magic, but it was obvious he had a talent for swordplay.

Conscious of the sheer drop at the edge of the cliff, Gareth maneuvered to ensure that it was Lucretius's back that was to the sea, not his own. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Clare drag Dalian out of harm's way.

Lucretius attempted another rushing charge. Gareth sidestepped it.

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