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"So?" I couldn't figure out why Caelan was telling me this. If he wanted Thane to stay, what business was it of mine? Caelan hadn't consulted me on anything so far, why start now?
Caelan leaned into me a little closer, his hand tightening on my arm. "You have defeated Asha. You are leader until she or another challenges you successfully."
I turned my head to stare at him. "You're kidding." He shook his head, a tiny side-to-side motion. Then he tilted his head toward Thane who, when I looked back, seemed increasingly uncomfortable with the submission position and angry at me for keeping him in it, albeit unintentionally.
"Yeah, sure. You can stay," I said hastily. Thane raised his eyes and jerked his head in a sharp acknowledgement nod, then he backed away from me into the 115
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lounge again.
I turned to Caelan. "Leader?" I would have laughed in disbelief, but I had a hunch it would hurt too much. He nodded. "In the beginning we established Asha as leader because none of us alone could defeat her."
"So the strongest doesn't always mean the wisest." I shifted more of my weight to my right foot trying to alleviate some of the pressure on my left side.
"Challenges are not exercises of strength alone but of strategy as well. Asha was undefeated in both." Until today. He didn't even have to say the words.
"I can't be your leader. I don't even know what I did to beat her," I said.
But Caelan wasn't listening. He'd turned his head to watch something behind me. I turned too, looking to see what had captured his attention. It didn't take much to figure it out. Thane and Namere had started climbing the stairs, and behind them, Asha floated on an incline, like she lay in an invisible stretcher. Obviously Thane or Namere was gifted with the ability to move objects, or people in this case, telekinetically because no one was touching Asha. As they went up the stairs, I got my first good look at the damage done. At the damage I'd done, supposedly.
The right side of her face had been destroyed, the bones flattened by impact with the wall. Her right arm hung down by her side, motionless, nearly dragging the stairs, but even from where I stood, I could see that it bent where it shouldn't, between her wrist and elbow. Her hand flopped at that new joint, moving up and down as her fingers trailed the carpeted steps. And blood trickled out of her ear to the floor.
Before I could turn away, my gag reflex caught me. I retched, and pain burned through my chest, sending little spots of white light dancing in front of my eyes. What had I gotten myself into? I wondered, just before my stomach muscles contracted again, and the agony spun me into darkness.
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Chapter 11
Hands moved beneath me. Voices whispered. The cool touch of air on my bare skin. The dull heated throbbing of my chest and the bitter taste in my mouth. I became aware of all these little things, each of them pulling me closer to the surface of consciousness.
I opened my eyes, squinting in the bright light, to see a silverhaired female bending over me, blocking out everything else of my surroundings. Just like my dream. Panic immediately swallowed me whole, and my breath caught in my throat. I pushed away from her, my arms and legs making ineffective scrambling motions on the soft surface beneath me.
"Zara, stop, stop." Caelan's voice in my ear. Warm hands on my shoulders. My bare shoulders. I looked down to find my shirt and bra gone, and white tape bound around my chest, starting from just below my breasts to about two inches above my bellybutton. Heat flared in my face, and I immediately searched for something to cover myself with. The bed was devoid of covers, just an empty striped mattress beneath me. And I couldn't look around too far, or else I'd end up meeting Caelan's eyes, something I refused to do in my current state of undress. A moment later, he reached around and pressed a bundle of cloth into my hands. My shirt. I wrapped it around myself, holding in place under my arms.
"You are safe." Caelan now sat on the opposite side of the bed where he'd moved to keep me from getting away. Namere spoke to Caelan, in an odd rolling tongue that sounded familiar, sort of like Latin from all those years ago in Mass.
He responded to her in the same language, then turned back to me. "Namere offered her help with your injury. She has done 117
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extensive study on the human body and the healing methods required for it, so different from our own. She believes the bones are cracked, but in no danger of harming you further." I stared up at Namere, who was still watching me with great intensity. With the front of her tunic still stained with blood and the roll of white bandage tape in her hands, she looked like some kind of mad alien scientist. "Great. But if she tries to use me for spare parts, I'm out of here," I muttered. Immediately, the mood shifted. Namere backed away from the bed, her gaze dropping to the floor. Then she spoke again in that language I couldn't quite recognize. I certainly hoped she didn't expect me to respond it.
But instead, Caelan answered again, speaking that tongue as easily as he spoke English. I watched the two of them, wide-eyed. Namere bobbed her head in response to whatever Caelan had said and lifted her eyes to mine again. "If you require further assistance, human, I await your word."
And with that she backed out of the room–we were in one of the guest rooms upstairs, it seemed–and closed the door behind her.
"Okay, what is her deal?" I asked, once I was pretty sure she couldn't hear me anymore.
"She risks much, coming to you and helping this way. To her, there is a strong possibility Asha may regain control and then she will be punished severely for aiding you."
"So why–" I started to ask.
"Because she believes now."
I turned to face him, shaking my head. "Look, you don't understand."
"But you must be careful," he said with gentle admonishment.
"She has not spent time among your kind as I have. She believed your words to indicate distrust."
"Duh."
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Caelan sighed, a sound of impatience. "True, but you do not wish her to be abandoned, forced to live away from the rest of us, do you?"
I remembered the way she'd looked down when she thought I was dismissing her. And the tape job around my ribs actually seemed to be doing the trick. No, I wasn't ready to get up and do the limbo or anything, but I could sit here and breathe without inordinate amounts of pain. "No, I don't want her dumped," I muttered, fidgeting a little.
"Then you must be careful of what you say." His words stung a bit. I hadn't signed up for any of this, and he was giving me lectures about it. "As leader–"
"Yeah, let's talk about that for a minute." I turned away from him and yanked my shirt over my head, wincing when I had to reach up to shove my left arm into the sleeve. Tape or no, bones were still broken. But I felt less vulnerable with my breasts covered. I'd feel a lot less vulnerable if I were hidden from view entirely, but that didn't seem to be an option or I'd have gone for it a long time ago.
I slid off the bed and turned to face him. "What are you trying to pull?" It wasn't exactly the most diplomatic wording, but my feelings none the less. "I came here for answers and to get Nevan off my back, not to help you overthrow your dictator."
"Positioning you as leader was not my intention," he said. I stared at him for a second. "Yeah, but you knew Asha would never go for this plan. You knew because she told you no from the start."
"I'd hoped she would be convinced after a demonstration of your unique telepathic abilities." His eyes dropped to mine. "I did not know you were capable of ...the other. I would have warned you, truly."
My anger softened a little, and I did my best to bolster it. "I believe you," I said. "Because if you'd known, I'm sure you would 119
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have used it as part of your little dog and pony show." He arched an eyebrow.
"It means a big, elaborate display of something," I said with a sigh.
"I understand from your thoughts, if not your words."
"Yeah, I know."
"But you are correct. Had I known this aspect of your gift, I would have used it to prove my beliefs." I started to throw my hands up in exasperation, then stopped before the twinge in my side turned into full-fledged pain again. Silence held between us for several long seconds. Then he said, "I understand that you are angry–"
"You think?"
"But you must consider the true source of your feeling." He tilted his head to one side, giving me that look that seemed to see right into the darkest corners of my mind.
"Oh, I think that's pretty clear. I'm mad at you," I said.
"Yes, but why?"
"Because you've lied to me, tricked me, nearly let me get killed, and you used me. That good enough for you?"
"I would argue some of those points, but I fear that it will do neither of us good."
"Very true."
"So instead, I ask you to consider this." He walked around the edge of the bed to stand in front of me. "You are frightened because I bring the truth about you. And you do not wish to hear it. Fear makes you angry, Zara, not me."
"Bullshit," I said, but my voice half-caught in my throat. I wasn't afraid of the truth. I was afraid Caelan was telling it.
"You should rest," he said. "Namere placed blankets and pillows here." He pointed to the old wingback chair in the corner of the room. I hadn't even noticed it there. "In the morning, I will take you to see the answers I have..." he paused, then added, 120
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"whether they comfort you or not." He started for the door. Another direct hit. Hurt and anger flared within me, and I opened my mouth before I could stop myself. "Tell me, do you always try to sleep with whoever's going to be in charge? You know, try to get in good with the management?" It was unfair, especially considering he'd tried to explain about Asha and himself earlier, and I'd cut him off. But I was sick and tired of being the only one tread upon.
He paused at the door, turning back to face me. "When you are interested in learning about my past, what there is of it, I will share it with you, as I have offered before. But for now, in answer to your question, no." He hesitated, then met my eyes, his own so somber and mostly dark with the light not reaching where he stood. "Though perhaps that might have been wiser criteria."
"I'm not what you think I am, who you want me to be," I shouted at him.
He stayed quiet for a moment then said, "You are the one who believes you are something other than what you are. But still, reality remains." Then he turned and walked out, closing the door behind him before I could argue.
I sat back down on the edge of the bed, all the fight gone out of me. Caelan was wrong. He had to be. This...this mess wasn't my life, wasn't part of me. It was just something I'd gotten sucked into. Wasn't it?
I got up and dragged the covers over to the bed and made a half-hearted attempt to straighten them into place. Not like I was going to sleep much tonight anyway. And I couldn't even count all the reasons why.
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Chapter 12
Blue and black shadows cloaked the room around me, like a bruise forming and spreading. Panic rose in my chest. A face, female and framed by long silvery white hair, loomed above me. Faint light from somewhere behind illuminated her features. Her hands closed on my shoulder and the top of my head, forcing me down into a bottomless darkness. And just before the shadows closed over my head, the light caught her face as she looked down at me. Her mouth didn't move, but I heard the words just the same. They had a rolling, almost singsong rhythm, pleasant just to listen to even without understanding. Except that I knew I should have understood. It all sounded so familiar. But then the blackness closed in over me, and the air went stale. I couldn't worry about anything more than breathing.
I woke up as I usually did, a scream in my throat and gasping for air. But this time, at least, I was still in bed. I reached for my inhaler in my jeans pocket, only to find it gone. I had a vague memory of taking it out and putting it on the bedside table, so I wouldn't roll over and break it. But based on how cold my nose felt, I couldn't bear the idea of reaching an arm out from under the covers. So, I pulled the covers over myself more securely and began counting between breaths, hoping to slow myself down enough to doze off again.
But as usual, my dream replayed itself in splendid detail on the back of my eyelids. Like a message threatening that this is what would happen if I dared to fall asleep again. I held on stubbornly, refusing to open my eyes until I had to sit up, gasping. I reached from my warm nest of blankets, fumbling across the top of the bedside table for my inhaler. I finally found it, along with what felt like the roll of bandage tape Namere had used, a cell 122
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phone, a glass of something, water probably, and a bottle of pills. Aspirin? I couldn't see the label clearly in the dim early morning light. The phone, pills and glass hadn't been there when I went to sleep. I reached for the inhaler and pulled it with me under the covers, shivering not only with the cold but at the idea of someone being so close while I slept unaware. It had been a thoughtful thing to do, but still. I shuddered, picturing Namere standing over me, those silver eyes trained on me while I lay there, completely and utterly vulnerable.
My mind snapped back to my nightmare then, recalling the mystery female looming over me and the odd language she'd used. As the dream replayed in my mind, I listened to the words and their rhythm again, only this time the little hairs on the back of my neck rose in a chill that had nothing to do with the cold. I'd heard the words and the language before, of course, in my dreams. But this time, I knew I'd heard it somewhere else, somewhere more tangible than that bizarre, dream-reality that had haunted me for so long. I'd heard it right here in this room, last night.
Caelan and Namere. They'd stood here in front of me and used it without hesitation.