because we were sure Brude would find a way to leak it.” Vayl’s voice had loosened in his relief, become fuller as if every revelation released a strangler from his throat.
“Oh. So. Where are they?”
“They are on foot, just as we wished it.” He paused. Grimaced so deeply the sides of his lips actually turned down. “We should have been here sooner to chase them into the ambush we had set up, but the news about Pete…” He paused. We both drew a breath before he went on. “Ruvin’s chatter leads us to believe we should still be able to turn events to our advantage.”
“What ambush are you talking about? And how are you hearing Ruvin but I’m not?” Vayl chose to answer the second question. “Ruvin is carrying a bug, so we can listen in on his conversation.”
“On another frequency,” I said bitterly.
Vayl said, “Tap your earpiece three times.”
I followed his instructions, realizing I was aping the move Cole had made when we’d arrived back at the house after the failed kangaroo petting mission, when he’d been so eager to talk to Cassandra. Suddenly I could hear Ruvin, panting, saying, “Are you sure I can’t talk you out of this? Aw!” And the sound of his feet scrabbling to keep himself upright after an obvious shove.
Vayl said, “You must understand, our misdirections have only been because of Brude. Because we could not work out how to fool him without excluding you as well. And…”
“What?”
“You are not going to like this.”
“So say it fast.”
“Come, let us walk while we talk.” We started up the hill to the west of the car. In a low voice so as not to spook those we pursued Vayl said, “We have proof that the Ufranites are not acting alone. They are, in fact, being funded by a group who wants to keep the moon free from human interference. At first it bewildered us how such vastly different
“I like that,” said Cassandra. “It makes me sound like the kind of pirate who would never hurt anyone.” I stuck my finger in my ear. “Cassandra! Are you okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“But you didn’t just hunker down like I told you to.”
“How could I? When you handed me the drawing from the dead guard, I Saw that some of the gnomes were disgusted with the shaman and I knew that could be our route to discrediting him. After Cole translated ‘
That the shaman is a female, born without a tail or a blue nose.”
“Do you know who she is?”
“Not yet. They’re taking me to her quarters now. As soon as I touch her belongings, I’ll know.”
“What about this partnership?”
“That was what I’d sensed earlier with Ethan Mreck’s death. Werewolves. The Ufranites are working with the Valencian Weres, who will come out of this deal wielding vast powers among all moon-changers if they can prevent humans from further exploring, or worse, settling on their most sacred site.”
“I don’t get where Brude fits in though. Or how the Ufranites and the Weres partnered up to start with.”
“I think he might be the middleman. The guards say the shaman took a pilgrimage that catalyzed her rise to power, because that’s where she heard the voice of Ufran. Guess where she went?”
“Dunno.”
“Scotland. Just south of Inverness, to be exact.”
“No way.”
I could almost hear Cassandra’s head bobbing. “According to the shaman, Ufran wears his hair in long black braids. And his chest is covered with tattoos.”
“Oh. Shit.”
* * *
Vayl and I didn’t have time to hash everything out. But he’d probably already reached the conclusions I was rapidly catching up to. If Brude had cooked up this deal years ago, then his infiltration of my psyche had a lot more to do with my current mission than my future afterlife. The bastard must’ve been shaping this scheme for ages. He’d just been waiting for the perfect patsy to ride to the finish line. And boy was I ever ideal. I wanted to put my hands to my head and shake it till his teeth rattled.
Ruvin’s voice interrupted my internal bitchfest. “Here’s the trail I told you about.” He was panting.
Fearful. On the edge of tears. He must’ve thought our no-show meant we’d deserted him.
He said, “Watch your step; it’s curvy. But it’ll lead us to that