A Virgin Night performed with malevolent skill could strip her of her power while leaving the rest intact. But, since her inner web was so deep in the abyss, she might be able to withdraw far enough to withstand the physical violation—unless the male was able to descend deep enough into the abyss to threaten her even there.
Wasthere a male strong enough, dark enough, vicious enough?
There was . . . one.
Saetan closed his eyes. He could send for Marjong, let the Executioner do what was needed. No, not yet. Not to that one. Not until there was a reason. "Saetan?"
He reluctantly opened his eyes and watched, at first stupidly and then with a growing sense of shock, as she pushed up her sleeve and offered her wrist to him.
"There's no need for a blood price," he snapped. She didn't drop her wrist. "It will make you better."
Those ancient eyes seared him, stripped him of his flesh until he shivered, naked before her. He tried to refuse, but the words wouldn't come. He could smell the fresh blood in her, the life force pumping through her veins in counter-rhythm to his own pounding heart.
"Not that way," he said huskily, drawing her to him. "Not with me." With a lover's gentleness, he unbuttoned her dress and nicked the silky skin of her throat with his nail. The blood flowed, hot and sweet. He closed his mouth over the wound.
Her power rose beneath him, a slow, black tidal wave skillfully controlled, a tidal wave that washed over him, cleansed him, healed him even as his mind shuddered to find itself engulfed by a mind so powerful and yet so gentle. He counted her heartbeats. When he reached five, he raised his head. She didn't look shocked or frightened, the usual emotions the living felt when required to give blood directly from the vein.
She brushed a trembling finger against his lips. "If you had more, would it make you completely well?"
Saetan called in a bowl of warm water and washed the blood off her throat with a square of clean linen. He wasn't about to explain to a child what those two mouthfuls of blood were already doing to him. He ignored the question, hoping she wouldn't press for an answer, and concentrated on the Craft needed to heal the wound.
"Would it?" she asked as soon as he vanished the linen and bowl.
Saetan hesitated. He'd given his word he wouldn't lie. "It would be better for the healing to take place a little at a time." That, at least, was true enough. "Another lesson tomorrow?"
Jaenelle quickly looked away.
Saetan tensed.Had she been frightened by what he'd done?
"I . . . I already promised Morghann I'd see her tomorrow and Gabrielle the day after that."
Relief made him giddy. "In three days, then?"
She studied his face. "You don't mind? You're not angry?"
Yes, he minded, but that was a Warlord Prince's instinctive possessiveness talking. Besides, he had a lot to do before he saw her next. "I don't think your friends would care much for your new mentor if he took up all your time, do you?"
She grinned. "Probably not." The grin vanished. The bruised look was back in her eyes. "I have to go."
Yes, he had a great deal to do before he saw her next.
She opened the door and stopped. "Do you believe in unicorns?"
Saetan smiled. "I knew them once, a long time ago."
The smile she gave him before disappearing down the corridor lit the room, lit the darkest corners of his heart.
"Hell's fire! What happened, SaDiablo?"
Saetan waggled Jaenelle's abandoned shoe at Andulvar and smiled dryly. "A Craft lesson."
"What?"
"I met the butterfly maker."
Andulvar stared at the mess. "She did this? Why?"
"It wasn't intentional, just uncontrolled. She isn'tcildru dyathe either. She's a living child, a Queen, and she's Witch."
Andulvar's jaw dropped. "Witch? Like Cassandra was Witch?"
Saetan choked back a snarl. "Not like Cassandra but, yes, Witch."
"Hell's fire! Witch." Andulvar shook his head and smiled.
Saetan stared at the shoe. "Andulvar, my friend, I hope you've still got all that brass under your belt that you used to brag about because we're in deep trouble."
"Why?" Andulvar asked suspiciously.
"Because you're going to help me train a seven-year-old Witch who's got the raw power right now to turn us both into dust and yet"—he dropped the shoe onto the chair—"is abysmal at basic Craft."
Mephis knocked briskly and entered the study, tripping on a pile of books. "A demon just told me the strangest thing."
Saetan adjusted the folds of his cape and reached for his cane. "Be brief, Mephis. I'm going to an appointment that's long overdue."
"He said he saw the Hall shift a couple of inches. The whole thing. And a moment later, it shifted back." Saetan stood very still. "Did anyone else see this?"
"I don't think so, but—"
"Then tell him to hold his tongue if he doesn't want to lose it."
Saetan swept past Mephis, leaving the study that had been his home for the past decade, leaving his worried demon-dead son behind.
CHAPTER TWO
1—Terreille
In the autumn twilight, Saetan studied the Sanctuary, a forgotten place of crumbling stone, alive with small vermin and memories. Yet within this broken place was a Dark Altar, one of the thirteen Gates that linked the Realms of Terreille, Kaeleer, and Hell.
Cassandra's Altar.
Cloaked in a sight shield and a Black psychic shield, Saetan limped through the barren outer rooms, skirting pools of water left by an afternoon storm. A mouse, searching for food among the fallen stones, never sensed his presence as he passed by. The Witch living in this labyrinth of rooms wouldn't sense him either. Even though they both wore the Black Jewels, his strength was just a little darker, just a little deeper than hers.
Saetan paused at a bedroom door. The covers on the bed looked fairly new. So did the heavy curtains pulled across the window. She would need those when she rested during the daylight hours.
At the beginning of the half-life, Guardians' bodies retained most of the abilities of the living. They ate food like the living, drank blood like the demon-dead, and could walk in the daylight, though they preferred the twilight and the night. As centuries passed, the need for sustenance diminished until only yarbarah, the blood wine, was required. Preference for darkness became necessity as daylight produced strength-draining, physical pain.
He found her in the kitchen, humming off-key as she took a wineglass out of the cupboard. Her shapeless, mud-colored gown was streaked with dirt. Her long braided hair, faded now to a dusty red, was veiled with cobwebs. When she turned toward the door, still unaware of his presence, the firelight smoothed most of the lines from her face, lines he knew were there because they, were in the portrait that hung in his private study, the portrait he knew so well. She had aged since the death that wasn't a death.