The Royal Hunter (36 page)

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Authors: Donna Kauffman

BOOK: The Royal Hunter
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“The baby is almost there,” she gasped. “Catriona is dying.” She gulped at the air. She was so cold, so cold. Sleep. It pulled at her, begging her to give in to it and leave the pain behind. “I tried to save him, save her. Take the pain. I don’t know.”

“Talia,” Baleweg said gently. “Talia.” He took her shoulders and very gently moved her into a sitting position.

Shaking. She couldn’t stop it. Couldn’t control anything. God, she was so cold. “Talia.”

She managed to turn her head, to focus on him. Her hands were numb, her lips numb. She nodded. “You did it. You connected.”

No, she hadn’t done it. She hadn’t maintained the connection long enough to ensure that Catriona and the baby had made it. She tried to tell him, but she couldn’t manage it. Her teeth were chattering now.

Baleweg’s expression changed, smoothed. “We need to connect again.”

Her body instinctively recoiled. She shook her head, wildly, back and forth. To willingly go into that nightmare once more … no, no, she couldn’t do it again. But she already knew she had to try, to make sure she got Catriona through. She might not be a healer, but if she could just relieve the pain long enough … Panic began to crawl through her, the sense of failure she’d fought for so many years clawing at her again.

Baleweg took her face into his hands and gently forced her to look at him. “You must do this if we’re to save them. The pain Catriona is in is too intense for me to sort it all through. You can’t connect with her. It must be someone else. This time I want you to open up to your own heart, search there, then reach out.”

Talia couldn’t seem to stop shaking. “I—I don’t … un … understand. She … n n-n-needs m-me—” Her teeth were rattling they chattered so hard.

“If you connect with Catriona again … you might not make it. The toll on you is just as immense and yet made more so by the stress of the mental connection. We need the time more than she needs you to take on her pain. You’ve given her a great deal, and perhaps it’s been enough. But if you try and lose, then we will never find them.”

“Don’t care,” she managed. “I must—”

“She needs more than this to survive.” He gently stroked her cheeks. “Love, Talia. Reach out for that. It is stronger than pain, stronger even than death. You have that connection within you, but you must be willing to surrender to it, and then risk giving it away.”

Talia didn’t understand. She cared for Catriona and Archer, and the baby. She already knew that. What did he mean, surrender her heart? She was willing to give her life. Wasn’t that a greater risk?

“Talia.”

“Y-yes. I don’t—” She shook her head, frustrated by her inability to speak coherently. She tried hard to find some center of calm, even a tiny piece, that would let her gain some control back. But she was exhausted.

He wrapped his hand around hers. “You must believe. This time the journey is into your own heart. What you find there will allow you to reach out and connect. Trust yourself.”

He stood behind her as she worked at breathing in and out normally. As her heart gradually slowed, the trembling and shaking finally stopped. Her fingers hurt and her legs were still numb, but her teeth stopped chattering. Her entire torso felt as if it had been run over by a truck. “Okay,” she said as calmly as she could. “I’m ready.”

Once again she focused on the pond, on the water. Always she had been afraid of the fear and pain she felt when she connected with a dying animal. Her experience just now had only confirmed what she’d always known. To put herself through that even once more would almost certainly destroy her. Baleweg was right; she had to shift her focus if she was going to finish helping them.

What she hadn’t counted on was how much more terrifying it was to reach out and connect with someone’s heart. Because in order to connect with it, she had to be willing to put her own heart on the line.

Trust your heart
.

She understood now what Baleweg had been telling her, just as she realized that this was the
greater risk. There was no physical pain strong enough to equal the devastation of reaching out for a heart with one’s own, only to encounter nothingness. Death would be kinder.

Calm, peaceful. Smooth surfaces, deep, tranquil depths
.

She stared at the water and imagined herself skimming smoothly over the smooth, glassy surface. But something was pulling at her, sucking her down.
No! Not this again. No
. But there was no pain in this cold embrace. It was worse.
Isolation. Such complete isolation. No feelings. Nothing. Shut off. Nothing gets in
. She slid deeper down, and deeper still.
Protection. Safe
. Her heart began to pound.
Deeper, past the protection. No safety here
. She began to shake.
Dark, so dark, almost black. Untouched. Unexplored depths
. Her teeth chattered.
So cold, so lost, so alone
. She couldn’t go further, it would suck her in and she’d never find her way back. The pressure grew, in her chest, constricting her, making it hard to breathe.
Deeper, must go deeper. No safety. Risk. Keep going
. But the pressure only grew worse. Tears leaked from her eyes and her chest burned. God, it burned so badly. She wanted to gasp for air, rush to the surface, away from that black nothingness.

Nothingness
.

And then she felt the fear. She began to pull back, away from the bottomless darkness, back to the safety of isolation.
No. Fight it! Trust. Trust her heart
. She plunged further, certain she was going to be crushed by the pressure.
So alone. So dark
.

The pressure increased until she screamed with the agony of it. She pushed, crying freely now.
Want
. She wanted so badly. Like she’d never wanted before.
Terror
. She’d never been so terrified. Trusting that want, fighting for that want. She’d gone so far now that she had no hope of a safe return. If she wanted, she couldn’t be safe. Her heart pounded. Heart.
Her heart
.

It wasn’t about just wanting. It was about giving. That was the risk.

And then she knew what she must do if she wanted to connect with Devin. She had to give her heart away.

Pushing downward, feeling claws of ice piercing her, reaching for her heart. She fought through them, forcing images of her heart, whole and strong, beating, beating.
Red. Burning, burning. Huge. Pulsing, full of life
. Impervious to cold, to ice, repelling the claws. Reaching out, so warm, so full, so strong. Offering … wide open.

I am opening my heart to you. To you, Devin Archer. Only to you
.

And it hit her like a wall of flame, the heat of it searing her. Blasting the ice out of her soul, releasing the pressure on her lungs so she could breathe. Heat infused her, all of her, and the rush of pleasure that followed was so complete the blackness in front of her exploded into a shower of tiny, brilliant shards, dissolving into a glittering cloud.

She loved
. She’d trusted her heart to the nothingness. And survived. It didn’t matter whether the gift was returned or accepted, only that she’d trusted her heart enough to give it away. And it was the strength of that trust that had made the connection.

“Talia.” A gentle hand to her shoulder. But she didn’t want to come back. Never had she been in such a wonderful place. She never wanted to leave. So tired, she just wanted to stay here, floating.

“Talia.” The gentle hand again. “You must wake.”

She shook her head, stubbornly refusing. Too hard. Too tired. She’d never been this tired. And then it was too late. The pleasure was receding, leaving only fatigue so bone deep that she wept with the need to find refuge from it.

“You must open your eyes and listen to me.”

She shook her head, but opened her eyes all the same. “Where—” The word came out with a hoarse rasp. Her throat was raw and her voice was gone. She looked around her, remembering, slowly, that she’d been on Baleweg’s rooftop.

She was no longer by the pond, or outdoors. “Where—” Again she was forced to stop.

Baleweg swam into view, then a glass was pressed to her lips. “Sip. Take a sip. It will help.”

She did. The liquid, cool and sweet, felt so good, but it was not enough. She felt … hollowed out.

Baleweg mopped her brow with a damp cloth. “You’ve been through an ordeal, Talia, one that would have killed anyone with less heart than you.” He stroked her cheek. “Your mother would be proud of you. You’ve used your gift for its intended purpose. But it will take some time for you to recover from it.”

Then she remembered, all of it, what she’d been trying to do. The intense pleasure she felt when she finally surrendered her heart, trusting in her own love enough to give it away. Then her eyes shot wide in alarm as the rest came rushing back. “The baby—!”

Baleweg pushed her back to the bed. She was in a bed.

“You made the connection, Talia. I know where they are. I must travel quickly.”

“Are they …?” She couldn’t put it into words.

“I will do my best.”

She tried again to sit. “I’m going.” Her throat was so raw that it was excruciating to speak. Her head immediately reeled, forcing her back to the pillow even before Baleweg could do it for her.

“You can’t. You are far too weak.”

Tears of frustration leaked from her eyes.

“No tears.” He leaned in and took her hands in
his. “You were everything you could have been. Everything you’ve always known you could be. Now it is time for you to heal. You must go easy on yourself.”

“Can I … stay here?”

Baleweg smiled. “You are here.” He motioned to the room and only then did she realize she was home, in her own bed. In Connecticut.

“No!”

He calmed her. “I cannot leave you alone in my time. There is no one to care for you and you are too unfamiliar with everything to care for yourself. Here you have help.”

“But Emrys—”

“Will have to deal with me. You will be as safe here as anywhere. You are far too weak to travel with me.”

She wanted to argue, but she knew he was right. Damn, but she hated this.
Archer
. How could she just sit back and not fight for him?

As if he understood her thoughts, Baleweg took her hand in his. “You’ve fought for them as valiantly as any soldier gone to war. You’ve done your part.” His expression tightened, his eyes steely. “Now I must do mine. When it is done, I will make certain that you know.”

“But Emrys … how will you—?”

“I can only promise that I will do whatever I must to finish this.” He looked beyond her. “One way or the other.”

She immediately thought of Archer, of never seeing him again, and the resulting pain was so swift it took her breath away. But she’d given her heart, taken the risk, and she didn’t regret it. “You’ll come back,” she whispered. “Promise me, Baleweg. You have to promise me.”

“All your questions will be answered in time. I must go now.” He pressed her hand to her heart.
“Trust this. Do not forget.” He straightened and closed his eyes. The triangle opened behind him. There was a flash of something as he stepped through, but her eyes were swimming and she couldn’t make it out.

“Good-bye, Baleweg.”

He nodded to her as the triangle slowly shrank, swallowing him up on the other side. And then it blinked away. And she was alone. In her own bedroom, staring at her own ceiling.

“I’m back in Kansas, Auntie Em,” she whispered. Then she rolled into her pillow and sobbed.

Chapter 25

A
rcher felt Catriona’s hand go limp in his. “No, dammit! Stay with us. You’ve got a family to fight for now.” Sweat ran from his brow even as his heart pounded in a primal thump of joy at the sound of the new prince testing out his remarkable lungs. He’d never witnessed anything so miraculous in his life.

But he had little time for awe. Right now their focus was on the baby’s mother. He and Niall thought they’d lost her earlier when the contractions had moved so close together she seemed to be almost wrenched from her own body. And then there had been a sudden calm and she’d gained steady ground right up until the baby had pushed its way, squalling, into the world.

“And what a world it is, mate,” he murmured as he watched Niall do his best to clean the babe with his shirt. Archer had cut the cord with, of all things, Beatrice’s old fishing knife. He’d gotten used to carrying it concealed on his body and almost forgotten that he still had it on him. The sight of it had wrenched at his heart as he thought of Talia, but the knowledge that she was, hopefully, safe at home with Baleweg allowed him to focus on the more serious problem at hand. The babe appeared healthy
enough, but Catriona’s pulse was thready and Archer feared she’d lost consciousness.

“Cat!” Niall cradled his son and tapped at her cheek, kissed her lips, then her hands. “There’s work left to do, Cat. I know you want to hold your son. Come on, love.”

Archer had never felt so helpless. The miracle of birth was quickly overshadowed by the specter of death. He pushed to a stand and once again searched their cramped prison cell for any means of escape. Although he feared it was too late now. Too late for Catriona, and her son if they found no way to feed him.

The Dark One had traveled them back in time, very far back, not forward as Niall had hoped. They were still in the castle, only it was hardly more than a tumble of stones, an unoccupied ruin. The lower dungeon held them fast with no chance of escape. He thought of Talia again, terrified at the thought that Emrys had left them here to seek her out.

He swore under his breath at the memory of Emrys’s delighted recitation of his grand game. Even now Chamberlain was implementing a worldwide manhunt for the queen and her kidnappers. However, he would be the one to return with her body, and now her son’s … as well of those of her killers, all of whom were slain in the rescue. The murderers being Niall, the father of her bastard child, and Archer, the man who’d do anything for a price. All he had to do was wait for them to die and Emrys to deliver their corpses to him. The Dark One found the whole charade vastly amusing.

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