Karla let the murmurs of opinion and conversation become a wash of sound as she sank deeper into her own thoughts.
What did they really know about Daemon Sadi?
He was a Black-Jeweled Warlord Prince and a natural Black Widow-an explosively dangerous, beautiful- looking man.
He was the High Lord’s mirror, but not a perfect reflection.
He was a man who, for most of his life, had been chained in one way or another to Dorothea SaDiablo, Kaeleer’s enemy.
He was a man who understood women. Unable to stand the pity in the servants’ eyes when they had helped her into the bath the first few days after the healing, she had insisted that she didn’t need help. Using Craft, she was able to undress and get herself into the tub but wasn’t able to wash herself well enough, especially because the reaction to the poisons was causing her skin to slough off at a grotesque rate. One evening, Daemon had shown up to assist her. She had snapped at him, had told him to go away. His answer, spoken in such a pleasant voice it had taken her a few seconds to comprehend the words, was so creatively obscene she was in the tub being gently, but thoroughly, washed before she could think again. His touch hadn’t been impersonal, nor had it been sexual, but by the time he’d started massaging her scalp, she’d been awash in sensual pleasure like she’d never experienced before.
So she understood why the others were worried. A woman could easily become addicted to that touch, would be willing to do a great many things in order to prevent it from being withdrawn. And Jaenelle
There was one other thing she knew about Daemon Sadi, something she had seen in the tangled web that had warned her about her own death: he was the friend who would become an enemy in order to remain a friend.
”What is it about Daemon that scares the shit out of Lucivar?” Andulvar asked as soon as the four men entered a small sitting room in the Keep.
”I don’t know,” Saetan replied, avoiding their stares by warming a glass of yarbarah over a tongue of witchfire.
He
What was it about that smile of Daemon’s that could shake Lucivar so badly? What was it about the Sadist that could make a man as aggressive as Lucivar back down? And what might Daemon’s presence in the Keep mean to the rest of them?
”High Lord!” Prothvar jerked Saetan’s hand away from the tongue of witchfire just before the yarbarah began to boil.
Saetan put the glass down. The yarbarah wouldn’t be drinkable.
”SaDiablo,” Andulvar said quietly, ”should we be watching our backs?”
It didn’t occur to him to offer a reassuring lie. ”I don’t know.”
Ladvarian wearily trotted toward Halaway, responding to a gentle but insistent summons. Every so often, he snarled to vent his frustration and growing anger.
How could a place as big as the Hall not have what he needed? Oh, he’d found plenty of things that were
The kindred had waited so long for this living myth to come.
No. It
As soon as the Weaver of Dreams told them what to do, they would act.
When he reached the neat cottage in Halaway, he went to the back door and barked once, politely.
Tersa opened an upstairs window. ”Come inside, little Brother.”
Using Craft, he floated upward to the window and went in. Most of the kindred referred to Tersa as ”the Strange One.” They meant no disrespect. They recognized that she was a Black Widow who wandered roads most of the Blood would never see. She was special. She had that in common with the Lady.
Even knowing all that didn’t prevent his hackles from rising when he stepped into the room.
A low, narrow bed-
”It has all been cleansed,” Tersa said calmly. ”There are no psychic scents to interfere with the weaving of dreams.”
The weaving of dreams? Ladvarian said cautiously.
”That trunk will provide storage and can be used as a bedside table as well. Remember to bring clothing for warm weather as well as clothing for the spring. Favorite things. Clothes that will be strong with her scent, even if they’ve been cleaned.”
Ladvarian backed away. Why should I bring clothing?
Tersa smiled and said gently, ”Because Witch does not have fur.” Her eyes looked into an inner distance, became unfocused and farseeing. ”It is almost time for the debts to be paid. Those who survive will serve, but few will survive. The howling… Full of joy and pain, rage and celebration. She is coming.” Her eyes focused on him again. ”And the kindred will anchor the dream in flesh.”
Yes, Lady, Ladvarian said respectfully.
Tersa picked up a cobalt-blue bowl from a nearby dresser. Using Craft, she rested the bowl on the air. ”When you next see the Weaver of Dreams, tell her this is how to get the ’more’ she needs.”
Ladvarian shifted his weight restlessly from one paw to the other. The Arachnian Queen had not mentioned Tersa. Why did Tersa know so much about the Arachnian Queen?
Tersa dipped one finger into the bowl. As she raised her hand, a drop of water clung to her finger. Instead of falling, the drop began to expand, like a little bubble of blown glass, a pearl of water. Using her thumbnail, Tersa jabbed a finger on her other hand. A drop of blood welled up on the finger. ”And the Blood shall sing to the Blood.”
Ladvarian felt the power flowing into that drop of blood.
”Let blood be memory’s river.” Turning her hand, she brushed the drop of blood against the drop of water. The blood flowed through the water bubble until it was contained inside it.
After placing a protective shield around it, Tersa tucked the water bubble into a small padded box and extended it toward Ladvarian. ”Look.”
He opened his mind, sent out a tentative psychic probe.
Images, memories flowed past him. Memories of a young girl leading an exhausted woman out of the Twisted Kingdom. Memories of Jaenelle, older, promising to find Daemon. Memories of conversations, laughter, delight in the world. Tersa’s memories.
”You will tell the Weaver?” Tersa asked.
Ladvarian vanished the box. I will tell her.
”One other thing, little Brother. Don’t refuse Lorn’s gift. The Weaver will need that, too.”