She was rather rudely disabused of that notion as soon as they opened the door to their suite.
Moonlight poured down through one of the windows in the right-hand wall of the outer room, making a silver puddle on a square of the pale marble floor. As Tarma closed the door and locked it, she caught movement in that moonlight out of the corner of her eye. She jerked her head around and pulled a dagger with the hand not still on the latch in the automatically defensive reaction to seeing motion where none should be. The moonlight shivered and wavered, sending erratic reflections across the room, and acting altogether unlike natural light.
Tarma snatched her other hand away from the latch, and whirled away from the door she had just locked. Her entire body tingled, from the crown of her head to the soles of her feetâwith an energy she was intimately familiar with.
The
only
time she ever felt like this was when her teachers were about to manifest physically, for over the years she had grown as sensitive to the energies of the Star-Eyed as Kethry was to mage-energies. But the spirit-Kalâenedral, her teachers,
never
came to her when she was within four wallsâand doubly never when she was in walls that were as alien to them as this palace was.
She sheathed her bladeâlittle good it would do against magic and spiritsâset sweating palms against the cool wood of the door. She stared dumbfounded at the evidence of all she'd been told being violatedâthe shadow and moonlight was hardening into a man-shaped figure; flowing before her eyes into the form of a Shinâa'in garbed and armed in black, and veiled. Only the Kalâenedral wore black and
only
the spirit-Kal'enedral went veiledâand here, where no one knew that, it was wildly unlikely that this could be an illusion, even if there were such a thing as a mage skilled enough to counterfeit the Warrior's powers well enough to fool a living Kalâenedral.
And there was another checkâher partner, who had, over the years, seen Tarma's teachers manifesting at least a score of times. Beside her, Kethry stared and smothered a gasp with the back of her hand. Tarma didn't think it likely that any illusion could deceive the mage for long.
To top it all, this was not just any Shinâa'in, not just any spirit-Kalâenedral; for as the features became recognizable (what could be seen above his veil) Tarma knew him to be no less than the chief of all her teachers!
He seemed to be fighting against something; his form wavered in and out of visibility as he held out frantic, empty hands to her, and he seemed to be laboring to speak.
Kethry stared at the spirit-Kalâenedral in absolute shock. Thisâthis
could not
be happening!
But it was, and there was no mistaking the flavor of the energy the spirit brought with him. This was a true
leshyaâe Kal'enedral
, and he was violating every precept to manifest here and now, within sight of non-Shinâa'in. Which could only mean that he was sent directly by Tarma's own aspect of the four-faced Goddess, the Warrior.
Then she saw with mage-sight the veil of sickly white power that was encasing him like a filthy web, keeping him from full manifestation.
“ThereâsâGoddess, there's a counterspellâ” Kethry started out of her entrancement. “It's preventing
any
magic from entering this room! He can't manifest! IâI have to break it, orâ”
“Donât!”
Tarma hissed, catching her hands as she brought them up. “You break a counterspell and they'll
know
one of us is a mage!”
Kethry turned her head away, unable to bear the sight of the Kalâenedral struggling vainly against the evil power containing him. Tarma turned back to her teacher to see that he had given up the effort to speakâand she saw that his hands were moving, in the same Shin'aâin hand-signs she had taught Kethry and her scouts.
“Kethâhis handsâ”
As Kethry's eyes were again drawn to the
leshyaâe's
figure, Tarma read his message.
Death-danger
, she read, and
Assassins. Wise one
.
“Warrior! It's Jadrekâhe's going to be killed!” She reached behind her for the door, certain that they were never going to make it to Judrek's rooms in time.
But Warrl had been watching her thoughts, probably alerted through the bond they shared to her agitation.
:Mindmate,
I go!: rang through her head.
At the same moment, as if he had heard the kyree's reply the
leshyaâe
Kal'enedral made a motion of triumph, and dissolved back into moonlight and shadow.
While Kethry was still staring at the place where the spirit had stood, Tarma was clawing the door open, all thought of subterfuge gone.
She headed down the corridor at a dead run, and she could hear Kethry right behind her; this time there would be no attempt at concealment.
Warrl's “voice” was sharp in her mind; angry, and tasting of battle-hunger.
Mindmate
â
one
comes.
He smells of seeking death.:
Keep him away from Jadrek!
There was no answer to that, as she put on a burst of speed down the corridorâat least not an answer in words. But there was a surge of great anger, a rage such as she had seldom sensed in the
kyree
, even under battle-fire.
Then Tarma had evidence of her own of how strong the mindmate bonding between herself and the
kyree
had becomeâbecause she began to get image-flashes carried on that rage. A man, or armed man, with a long, wicked dagger in his hand, standing outside Jadrek's door. The man turning to face Warrl even as Jadrek opened the door. Jadrek stepping back a pace with fear stark across his features, then turning and stumbling back into his room. The man ignoring him, meeting the threat of Warrl, unsheathing a sword to match the knife he carried.
Tarma felt the growl the
kyree
vented rumbling in her own throat as she ran. Felt him leapâ
Now they were in the older sectionârunning down Jadrek's corridor. Kethry was scarcely a step behind her as they skidded to a halt at Jadrek's open door.
There was blood everywhereâspilling out over the doorsill, splashed on the wall of the corridor. The
kyree
stood over a body sprawled half-in, half-out of the room, growling under his breath, his eyes literally glowing with rage. Warrl had taken care of the intruder less than seconds before their arrival, for the body at his feet was still twitching, and the
kyree's
mind was seething with aggression and the aftermath of the kill. His hackles were up, but he was unmarked; of the blood splashed so liberally everywhere, none of it seemed to be Warrl's.
“Goddessâ” Tarma caught at the edge of the doorframe, and panted, her knees weak with relief that the
kyree
had gotten there in time.
“Jadrek!” Kethry snapped out of shock first; she slid past the slowly calming
kyree
into the room beyond. Tarma was right behind her, expecting to find the Archivist in a dead faint, or worse; hurt, or collapsed with shock.
She was amazed to find him still on his feet.
He had his back to the wall, standing next to the fireplace behind his chair, a dagger in one hand, a fireplace poker in the other. He was pale, and looked as if he was likely to be sick at any moment. But he also looked as if he was quite ready to protect himself as best he could, and was anything but immobilized with fear or shock.
For one moment he didn't seem to recognize them; then he shook his head a little, put the poker carefully down, sheathed the dagger at his belt, then groped for the back of his chair and pulled it toward himself, the legs grating on the stone. He all but fell into it.
“Jadrekâare you all right?” Tarma would have gone to his side, but Kethry was there before her.
Jadrek was trembling in every nerve and muscle as he collapsed into his chair.
Gods
â
one breath more
â
too close. Too close
.
Kethry took his wrist before he could wave her away and felt for his pulse.
He stared at her anxious face, so close to his own, and felt his heart skip for a reason other than fear.
Dammit, you fool, she's just worried that you're going to die on her before you can help her with the information they need!
Then he thought, feeling a chill creep down his back;
GodsâI might. If Char has been a watcher on me all this time, it means he's suspected me of warning Stefan. And if that watcher chose to strike tonight only because I spoke to a pair of strangersâArchivist, your hours are numbered.
Kethry checked Jadrek's heartbeat, fearing to find it fluttering erratically. To her intense relief, it was strong, though understandably racing.
“Iâgods aboveâI think I will be all right,” he managed, pressing his free hand to his forehead. “But I would be dead if not for your
kyree
.”
“Who was that?” Kethry asked urgently. “Whoâ”
“That ... was a member of the King's personal guard,” he replied thickly. “Brightest GoddessâI knew I was under suspicion, but I never guessed it went this far! They must have had someone watching me.”
“Watching to see who you talked to, no doubt,” Tarma said grimly, her lips compressed into a thin line. “And the King must have left orders what was to happen to you if you talked to strangers. Hellfire and corruption!”
“Now I'm a liability, so far as Raschar is concerned.” He was pale, and with more than shock, but there was determination in the set of his jaw as he looked to Tarma. “âChar has only one way of dealing with liabilities ... as you've seen. Lord and Lady help me, I'm under a death sentence, without trial or hearing! IâI haven't got a chance unless I can escape. Woman, you've got to help me! If you want any more help with finding Idra, you've
got
â”
Kethry had angry words on her tongue, annoyed that he should think them such cowards, but Tarma beat her to them.
“What kind of gutless boobs do you think we are?” Tarma snapped.
“Of course
we'll help you! Dammit man, it was us coming to you that triggered this attack in the first place! Keth, clean up the mess. Go ahead and use magic, we're blown now, anyway.”
Kethry nodded. “After the visitor, I should say soâeven if there wasn't anyone âwatching,' he'll have left residue in the trap-spell.”
“Did you pick up any âeyes'?”
She let her mage-senses extend. “No ... no. Not then, and not now. Evidently they haven't guessed
our
identity.”
“Small piece of Warrior's fortune. Well, I'm getting rid of the body before somebody falls over it; it's likely this bastard was the only watcher, Archivist, or you'd have been caught out before this.” She paused to think. “If I hide him, they may wait to check things out until
after
he was due to report. Hell, if they can't find him, they may wait a bit longer to see if he's gone following after one of Jadrek's visitors; that should buy us a couple more hours Jadrek, are there any empty rooms along here?”
“Most of them are empty,” he said dully, holding his hands up before his eyes and watching them shake with a kind of morbid fascination “Nobody is quartered along here who isn't in disgrace; this is the oldest wing of the palace, and it's been poorly maintained and repaired but little.”
“Gods, no wonder nobody came piling out to see what the ruckus was.” Tarma's lip curled in disgust. “Bastard really gives you respect, doesn't he? Well, that's another piece of good luck we've had tonight.”
And Tarma turned back to deal with the corpse as Kethry began mustering her energies for “clean-up.”
Tarma bundled the body into its own cloak, giving Warrl mental congratulations over the relatively clean kill; the
kyree
had only torn the man's throat out. The man had been relatively small; she figured she could handle the corpse alone. She heaved the bundle over her shoulder with a grunt of effort, trusting to the thick cloak to absorb whatever blood remained to be spilled, and went out into the corridor, picking a room at random. The first one she chose didn't have its own fireplace, so she left that oneâbut the second did. It was a matter of moments and a good bit of joint-straining effort to stuff the carcass up the chimney; by the time she returned, a little judicious use of magic had cleaned up every trace of a struggle around Jadrek's quarters, and Kethry and the Archivist were in the little bedroom that lay beyond the closed door in his sitting room. The mage was helping Jadrek to make a pack of his belongings, and Jadrek was far calmer now than Tarma had dared to hope. Warrl was stretched across the doorway, still growling under his breath. He gave her a gentle warn-off as she sent him a thought; his blood-lust was up, and he didn't want her in his mind until he had quieted himself.