Not only was Marian able to pull Richard through one wall to the next room, she also managed to get him to the room beyond that. Whoa. That was way past the limits suggested by Great-Aunt Eunice. Maybe she was more powerful than her aunt. Or maybe her cautious aunt hadn’t wanted to teach her anything that was remotely dangerous.
She let go of Richard the second they were through the last wall and stumbled, catching her breath.
“I thought doing that was too dangerous,” Richard said.
“Yeah, so did I.” Huh. Maybe being so angry had focused her, given her an edge.
She blinked and looked around. To all appearances, this room was unoccupied. She rushed to the bathroom and closet to check for signs of occupancy.
Nothing. The soaps were still wrapped, no suitcases or clothes in the closet or chest of drawers.
“We should be safe here for a few minutes,” she said. “Maybe longer if we’re quiet and they don’t hear us.”
“Clever,” he whispered.
“Yeah, I’m human like that.”
“So am I.”
“I doubt it.”
She turned her back to him and pulled the note from Rasputin out of her pants pocket. “I’ll go to this meeting with you. But only if we go to rescue Daz. Otherwise, you’re on your own.”
“I can tell when you’re lying. You’d come anyway, in phantom form, to rescue Daz, whether I agree or not.”
“Damn straight.”
“You realize if I rescue Daz, I might be condemning everyone else I care about?” Richard said.
“You realize by condemning Daz, you’re destroying everything good in yourself? There has to be another way. You left the Court because it compromised what you believed. Find a new way to handle this.”
She tossed the note on the empty bed. “I could grab Rasputin and turn him ghost. We could take him captive. And then we rescue Daz and save your Queen and court.”
“Even if I could take Rasputin, how would I force him to heal my Queen against his will?”
Argh. “I don’t know.” She sat on the bed. “There’s Beth Nakamora, the telepath at the Phoenix Institute. Maybe she could help? Daz said he wanted to bring Alec in on this. We need that kind of firepower.”
“They’re not my allies.”
“You don’t know that. You either take a chance and trust people or Rasputin wins.” She paused. “Trust me. Richard, trust me.”
Richard turned away. She closed her eyes and tried to understand his point of view. What was his mind like after six hundred years? For all she knew, he’d faced this choice a thousand times and sacrificed normal humans a thousand times. What the hell made her think she could get through to him?
It didn’t matter. She could still rescue Daz herself. And then Daz would be able to call in help in deal with Rasputin.
Yes, that was right. Her own path.
“You could be killed if we attempt to rescue Daz,” he finally said.
“Don’t you fucking dare use me as an excuse, Richard.”
He turned and grabbed her shoulders, his eyes wild, his voice a raspy whisper. “I can’t risk you.”
No. Enough of people pulling guilt trips on her. Enough of people deciding for her. “Sorry, but apparently running away isn’t my style, unlike some people.”
He let her go. “And it’s mine?”
“Only you can answer that.”
He held out his hands before him, pleading. He’d never looked less like an immortal prince and so much like a human.
“Would that we could run away together, Angel.”
Oh, God. She nodded, her voice caught in her throat. “I know. But if Daz can’t run, neither can we.”
The tenderness faded. His shoulders straightened and he drew himself to full height.
“So be it. This is where I make my stand, and God help any who stand in the way.”
“I could explore the church tonight, in the dark, find out where they’re hiding Daz. I could rescue him when they’re not expecting it.”
“You just said we needed to face this together. And we will.”
“How?”
“They don’t know about you. That will provide the edge.”
“How?”
“Give me time to ponder tactics.”
“Meantime, they could be torturing Daz.”
“You said I ran away. That’s an old insult to me, Angel. We won’t run. But neither will we enter the field without a plan. If you don’t trust me, go.”
She hugged herself, cold. “I’m good at being sneaky,” she offered in a small voice.
“We need to be sneaky in an unexpected way.” He looked away from her, not to shut her out, but thinking. “Rasputin must want allies badly. He’s convinced that the fire demon will kill him. That’s his weakness. He could have attacked Daz and myself and done some damage, maybe killed us. Instead he kept us alive. He wants something. That’s our edge.”
“Why is he so convinced Alec Farley is his enemy?”
“Rasputin was known, among other things, as a prophet who could predict the future. He told me that he’s seen this future and must prevent it.”
“Is that a real psychic ability or part of Rasputin’s madness?”
“Foreknowledge is a real psychic ability. It’s like seeing through time. There was a foreseer with our court, long ago. She warned us to move out of Europe before we were discovered. But the ability is unreliable and difficult for the one who possesses it. She died young.”
“So Rasputin won’t, um, foresee what will happen at the meeting tomorrow?”
“No. Even if his ability is real, it’s unreliable. A better question is how he knew so much of my court.”
“You’ve got a mole.”
“Obviously.” He closed his eyes. “Leave off. Let me think a moment. But I know this. Our victory depends on you.”
After that, Richard remained still, sleeping or thinking, she didn’t know.
Marian also didn’t know if she’d reached him or if he was snowing her to get her to cooperate.
I hate not trusting him.
She put her ear to the door, listening for sounds in the hallway. Nothing. She walked through the wall into the next room. All quiet. She went to the opposite wall and put her ear to that, listening to see if the police were done in their room yet.
No noise.
She stuck her face through the wall so she could see. No one apparently there. She rushed through the wall, grabbed her laptop and her phone, and back out again.
Once in the empty room between their own and the one Richard had taken refuge in, she went solid and stopped to think for a moment. The police had left her laptop. Did that mean they didn’t suspect her and Richard? Or did it mean something more ominous?
If the authorities were under Rasputin’s influence, the crazed monk might have told them to leave Richard alone, at least until this meeting tomorrow.
She hoped that getting to their car tomorrow morning to drive to the meeting wouldn’t be a problem.
When she returned to the empty room where she’d left Richard, he was talking on his cell phone, in a low voice in French but it was a French she didn’t understand. Ancient French?
All she caught was “do your part”, “my way”, and the name “Marshal”.
He looked over at her and smiled.
Could he be selling her and Daz out?
That only made what she did next more important. She went to work on her laptop. Sure, she could walk through walls. But she was also a damned good snoop, or else little Tantor would’ve remained buried in the ruins of that ancient Grecian mansion.
After a few hours, she closed her laptop, got up and collapsed facedown on the bed. So damn tired. But she had what she needed.
“When do we have to meet Rasputin?” It was more of a question to herself than to Richard. She’d lost track of time.
Hands gripped her shoulder. She tensed, ready to disappear out of Richard’s hold if needed. One of them had to be free to save Daz.
“We meet Rasputin and his people at midmorning tomorrow.” A pause as he kneaded the knots out of her shoulder. She exhaled, so glad not to have to flee. “That feels great.”
“What did you discover?”
“What did you?”
He leaned over, his breath now against her neck. “Still doubt me?”
“Yes.”
“I’ll prove you wrong, Angel. You’re right. We do it your way. We save Daz. Now, what did you discover?”
“You’re admitting you’re wrong? Immortal Prince Richard is wrong?” She rolled over to face him. “Just like that?”
“Not just like that. A lifetime’s worth of pondering, nicely summarized by your tirade at me. I’ve needed that push to go over the edge for a long time. You gave it to me.”
He kissed her lips, gently, and stared at her. She felt as immaterial as when she went phantom. She swallowed hard. “I didn’t find anything definitive about that farmhouse. But I did uncover a lot about the local mines and tunnels from years past. I bet that house sits on top of one of the forgotten tunnels.”
He nodded. “You’d win that bet. Rasputin obviously has most of his organization in the hidden spaces of this country.” He took her hand. “And likely some hidden in my court too.”
“Have you figured out who it is and what they want?”
“They must want the Court powerless. That’s why they went after the Queen, though I’m not sure how they did it yet. Marshal is looking into it. He was thrilled to be able to do something to help her. He has a mission now. I almost feel sorry for his quarry. Almost.” He took her face in her hands and kissed her again. This time, she kissed him back.
She broke it first. “First, we need to rescue Daz.”
He brushed her curls with his fingers. “You doubt me.”
“Yes.”
He jaw clenched. “I don’t blame you.”
“I’m working on it. So, what’s the plan? Do I go after Daz tonight?”
“We need to do this together and in a way it draws Rasputin into the open. That means the meeting tomorrow where we can be sure Daz will be present or at least close by.”
“I have an idea, then,” she said. “I know how to come to that meeting with you, unseen.”
“How?”
“It’s extremely dangerous but not to me. To you. Because if I screw this use of my power up, you’ll be dead instantly.”
He raised an eyebrow. “You could kill me in an instant? Beyond what I could heal?”
“Absolutely.” She could kill anyone in an instant. The worst part of her ability. “This trick will take all my concentration, but if it works, it can save all three of us. But you have to trust me. Hell, I have to trust me.”
“So you’re not certain you can succeed?”
“No, but I have to try.”
He smiled, looking again like the surfer dude.
“Stellar,” he said.