where Quinn ended and Kate began. That might have been disturbing, but it didn’t feel that way. It was like letting your arm go numb and suddenly regaining feeling in it. It felt natural, like they had always been this way.

“Seriously, do I need to leave the room?” Janus asked. “You two are making me blush.”

Kate pulled away and Quinn got a good look at her. She was dressed in makeshift clothes again, jeans and a t-shirt she had bought at the mall before they left for Bluemont. She looked like she hadn’t showered recently and her hair was frazzled. Still, Quinn thought he had never seen anything so beautiful in his life.

(Always the charmer) she thought.

(Sorry) he said. (I can’t help what I’m thinking)

(Don’t try) she said. (I don’t want to try either.)

(What have you found out about Sanheim?) he asked.

(Quite a bit, actually, and none of it’s particularly good. Let me show you.)

She was just starting to call up her memories to let Quinn have a look when Janus interrupted.

“What the fuck is going on?” he asked.

Quinn and Kate had forgotten he was even there. With effort, Quinn focused his attention on Janus. He found it extremely hard to do. It was like when Kate was around, he couldn’t concentrate on anything or anyone else. That would be a problem if he didn’t learn to control it.

“You guys are now officially freaky and disturbing,” Janus said. “You’re just staring at each other, but you are making faces at each other like you’re talking. What the fuck?”

“Sorry,” Kate said. “It’s just…”

(Should we tell him?) she asked.

(It will be hard not to) he responded.

“You are doing it again,” Janus nearly shouted. Behind him the TV continued to play security feed from Leesburg Hotel. “Seriously.”

(Tell us about Sanheim. Use words)

“Okay, Janus, just hold on,” Kate said. “I’ll explain what I know. I’ve been doing some research on the Prince of Sanheim.”

“I can’t imagine you found that much,” Janus said. “It was just a goofy legend. I don’t even know how many people heard it.”

“Under that name, I found very little,” she said. “But once you start looking for patterns… he’s everywhere.”

(It’s not a he, it’s a they. It takes a man and a woman. It’s like the song, ‘It takes two to make a thing go right. It takes two to make it out of sight.’)

Kate started laughing at that and Quinn smiled. Janus just looked confused.

“Okay, it’s a they,” she said.

Janus was looking at them both again.

“Dear fucking God,” he said. “You can read each other’s thoughts, can’t you?”

“Yes,” Quinn said. “Though I have to say you jumped to that conclusion relatively quickly.”

“I don’t know how you couldn’t jump to it, mate,” he said. “You two are smiling at the same jokes, yet you didn’t say a joke. You’re talking to each other without speaking.”

Quinn found Janus’ reaction fascinating. He seemed unnerved, nearly frightened.

(He is frightened) Kate thought. (Wouldn’t you be?)

“Don’t be scared,” Kate said. “We’re still the same two people.”

“That’s how you knew,” Janus said. “That’s how you knew about Christina. When you mentioned it the other day, I just assumed my man Quinn here had been blabbing, which would have been very unlike him. But he didn’t say a word, did he? You could read his thoughts.”

“And his memories, yes,” Kate said.

“How the fuck did this happen?”

“You wouldn’t believe me if I told you,” Quinn responded.

“Oh, at this stage, I’m willing to believe an awful lot,” Janus said.

“We’ll get to it,” Kate said. “Back to Sanheim for a moment.”

“How is that even related?” Janus asked.

“Give me a chance to talk to you and I’ll tell you,” Kate said. She was testy with him, the way Quinn often was after the two had been together for several hours. Not only was she absorbing Quinn’s memories, she appeared to be absorbing his attitude too.

“Oh my God this is freaky,” Janus said. “I’m talking to a chick that is incredibly hot and she sounds like my best friend over there, whom I’ve never found remotely attractive.”

“Stay with me here,” Kate said. “From what I can tell, the legend of Sanheim is very, very old. I’ve been doing some research on the Net and it seems it was the Romans who first brought up Sanheim, a God they viewed as the equivalent of Hades.”

“The Devil,” Janus said. “That’s the equivalent.”

“It’s related but not quite the same thing,” Kate said. “Anyway, they invaded Britain under Julius Caesar, but Caesar at some point stopped. Historians point to the political crisis back in Rome as to why he had to return, but not everyone thinks so. He had four legions go over there with him, took two back and left one to guard what he had conquered. That’s a whole legion of men unaccounted for. Official history doesn’t worry about it, could just be someone’s error.”

“But unofficially…”

“Unofficially, he ran into the ‘champion of Hades.’ That’s why you don’t find it under any reference to Sanheim at first. But it’s the same thing to the Romans. I’m not sure what happened, but apparently the two met on the battlefield. After that, Caesar headed home in a hurry.”

“He was scared? Does that guy get scared?” Janus asked.

“Maybe,” Kate said. “Or maybe they cut some kind of deal. Maybe he told him about political events back home. In any case, the Romans don’t invade any further until a couple centuries later.”

“So he’s a warrior?” Quinn asked.

“He’s everything,” Kate said. “He’s the leader, he’s the general, he’s the priest. And he keeps showing up in Celtic history. Not during every invasion, but he’s there. He’s referenced during the conquering of Wales.”

“Fat lot of good he must have done us,” Janus said.

“That’s just it,” Kate said. “He’s referenced as helping the English.”

“Fuck him,” Janus said. “What’s that about?”

“It’s not the same person,” she said. “Through history, different leaders are chosen and they each have their own agendas. Maybe this guy just didn’t like the Welsh.”

“Imagine that,” Quinn said.

“Well, fuck him,” Janus said.

“Does anyone mention Sanheim directly?”

“Yes,” Kate asked. “A guy named Robert Crowley.”

“That’s the guy I told you about,” Janus said. “He was the ‘Prince of Sanheim.’”

“Who was he?”

“Nominally, he was a bad poet of the Romantic era,” Kate said. “But he went crazy, even by Lord Byron’s standards. In 1873, he declared that his father was not Sir Richard Crowley, but a powerful Irish chieftain. He summoned followers to his home for what he promised would be the revelation of the ‘Prince of Sanheim.’”

“Sounds like a nutter.”

“Here’s what interesting,” she said. “He summoned women first. And just so you don’t think everyone was repressed in that day and age, many came.”

“He started an orgy?” Janus said.

“I think he was looking for someone,” Kate said, and she looked meaningfully at Quinn. “He was looking for the right woman.”

“The kind that would live out his fantasies?”

“The kind that would trigger the ‘Trial of the Cennad,’” Kate said.

“I was really hoping we were going to talk in more detail about the orgies,” Janus said.

“A man and a woman joining is the key, Janus,” Kate said. “There’s this weird Web site some group in

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