five senses. With each step, the tension increased a notch until his breath burned in his chest as he waited for her to lunge at him.

'I know you,' she intoned. That simple statement carried with it the weight of something terrifying.

Before Will could consider its implications, his vision swam. When it cleared, her unsettling appearance had shifted to take on an unearthly beauty. She was undoubtedly the same person, with that same hungry gaze, but now she radiated a deep, powerful sexuality that affected him despite himself.

She came to a halt before him. Presenting herself, he thought. Her posture accentuated every curve of her body, the swell of her breasts, her hard nipples protruding through the thin silk, her hips at an angle, crotch slightly pushed forwards. She challenged him to admire what he saw.

Knowing what lay beneath sickened him. As he looked away defiantly, he realised her sexuality was more than just physical. Slowly, she drew his gaze back to her, and however much he fought he could not resist. Sweat beaded his brow, and he shook from the strain of fighting her. The heat rose in his groin.

She leaned forwards until her luminous face was only inches from his, and he could smell the perfume of her skin, and her hair, and a muskier scent beneath it. 'You are mine now,' she whispered. Reaching down, she ran the tips of her fingers along his thigh.

'Your brother,' he said, pointedly ignoring her teasing, 'is Cavillex?'

She nodded slowly. 'My name is Malantha.'

He looked around for the guards, but they were alone.

Malantha appeared to sense what he was thinking, for she said, 'I do not need protection.'

'If I were free-'

'Not even then. Cavillex presents a fearsome face to the world, but I am worse. Much worse.'

'I imagine Philip finds your wiles invigorating,' he said.

'Personal weaknesses exist in all humans. You can hide them away, pretend they do not exist or that God and prayer have expunged them, but they remain.'

'Until you work them loose.'

Her gaze held him fast.

'I have many weaknesses,' he continued. 'I must be easy game for one such as you.'

'You pretend to many weaknesses,' she replied, 'but only one truly matters.'

'You see the weaknesses that clearly?'

'All people can see weaknesses if they open their eyes. But most of the time, you choose to ignore them, or you pretend, or you lie to yourself. But they are there. What is writ clearly in the heart is clear in the face.'

'You see them as weaknesses. But they can also be strengths, driving us on to achieve great things, to strive, to overcome pain and hardship.'

'Believe that if you wish,' she replied.

'Is your brother coming to oversee my torture again?' he asked.

'My brothers are engaged in important affairs that demand their attention. Not Just in Edinburgh, but in France, and Venice, Moscow, and the New World. We have been playing this game for a long time, by the way you measure it, and we move with the slow turn of the seasons, a slight push here, barely noticed, another shove there, unseen, guiding, steering, drawing strands across your entire world until everything is in place. And then you will see the true design of the plan we have wrought.

'Cavillex trusts me to ensure you pay the price for what you did. We have only contempt for England and we will destroy it piece by piece without emotion. But you have gained our attention. You slew one of us.' In the blaze of her eyes, he saw clearly the monster that lurked beneath the flirtatious surface. 'This is now a personal matter. Quid pro quo. And,' she added, 'by the end, you will wish it was my brother here.'

'True. His own brand of torture already failed.'

'Torture is not a fair word for what I do. There is something of creation about it, a skill that makes the heavens sing, a drawing together of subtle themes, of resonances, a slow build of contrasting emotions, desires, and agonies, until they fall into a glorious harmony, and then you will be crushed by the artfulness of it.' Her voice lost its honeyed tone and became gravelly. 'Your mind and soul will be destroyed long before your body falls apart.'

'And Philip sanctions that?'

'Philip will do whatever I tell him to. His only concern is that the Armada succeeds and England falls. Failure could wreak untold damage on the Spanish empire and his own reputation. And if I tell him a dangerous English spy is a threat to his Enterprise of England-however ridiculous that might seem-he will do whatever he deems necessary.'

'With a little push and shove from yourself, perhaps, when he is entranced by the comfort of your thighs.'

'Men are men. It is their nature, and easily manipulated by any woman who knows.'

'But Philip knows nothing of your true plans. How you will use the Silver Skull to achieve your sly aims.'

'You know nothing of our true plans. You think you know, but you have been wrong at every turn. We are too subtle ... too sly ... that is why we win. We are the wind that moves the oceans when all your power could not achieve more than a few ripples.'

'My ripples ended the life of the last Silver Skull. You will now be looking for another candidate, I assume?' She leaned close until he was lost in the dark, echoing depths of her eyes. His thoughts squirmed at the contact.

'A small victory, if such it was. Now we will find one we can truly control.' She made a dismissive gesture. 'But that was always our plan.'

'And so you will destroy all of England's peoples.'

'In part. But if that were all, 'twould be a sorry response to your crimes.'

'Our only crime is to defend ourselves. In your arrogance, you may think that is crime enough.' He tried to uncover hints of what she was scheming in her face, but it was a mask; she was too clever to reveal anything she did not want him to know. 'Then what else do you plan?' he pressed.

'A message, delivered with accuracy, that shows we will never be opposed again.'

'Something beyond the death of all Englishmen and Englishwomen?'

'That is a cudgel-blow. Our true message will be delivered with precision to amplify the pain and to underline that for every slight against us we will respond a hundredfold ... a thousandfold.' Her eyes narrowed hatefully. Will was left in no doubt as to the intensity of the threat.

'And how soon do you plan to ship the Silver Skull to my home?' he enquired blithely.

'Soon.'

'And where-?'

'Enough questions!' Her bony fingers scraped up his neck to his cheeks. 'It is time to prepare the way for your torment. You recall what my brother told you lay ahead?'

Will did not respond.

The doors at his back opened and someone walked slowly towards him. He strained to see, but the new arrival remained out of his frame of vision.

Malantha drank in every expression, every flicker of emotion, and when she was satisfied, she summoned the person to stand in front of Will.

It was Grace. She was unharmed, though pale.

Will struggled to disguise his relief. Over the days, terrible thoughts had forced their way into his mind of the suffering she was enduring at the hands of the Unseelie Court. It was more than he could have hoped to see her in such good health.

'You are well?' he said. His face revealed nothing that would give Malantha joy.

Grace responded with a pale smile. 'Yes. It is good to see you.'

'They will pay for what they have done to you,' he said emotionlessly, adding so quietly that Malantha could not hear, 'We will have you away from here in no time.'

Grace's brow furrowed. 'But ... I do not want to leave.'

Her words were like a slap across his face. 'What do you mean?'

'This is our great chance. These people ... your Enemies ... they know what happened to jenny. I see now why you do what you do. You knew they had knowledge of her disappearance.'

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