Spellbinder (Moonshadow #2)

“I’m not crazy,” Warrick snapped. “I know what I smelled.”


“I believe you,” the other man replied with a shrug. “But Morgan has also wandered this castle for centuries. Like so many others, his scent must be imbedded in the stones. To be sure, we need to do another circuit around the castle and the town. That’s going to be the only real test of accuracy. He couldn’t have left a fresh scent in here without leaving one out there, right?”

A shiver went down her spine as she listened. Morgan had been alive—had been a slave—for centuries? She could hardly fathom what it must be like to live for so long. What he had witnessed and experienced.

“I don’t want to wait to gather the other Hounds together,” Warrick told the other man. “You and I should head out right away.”

As the two men strode down the other hallway, Sid slowly straightened. Fear tightened her stomach. If they had chosen to go down the hallway that led to her room, they might have scented Morgan had been in there.

If only there was some way she could warn Morgan… but there wasn’t. She had to trust he was smarter and wilier than the other Hounds and he could remain hidden from their searching.

In the meantime, she needed to get the cleaning supplies from the chatelaine and thoroughly clean her room.

By the time she had finished, her room was filled with the robust scents of cedar and lemon. To be on the safe side, she mopped down the hallway in both directions. Working quickly was as decent a workout as a three-mile jog.

After she put away the cleaning supplies, she went begging for a breakfast she could take with her to the music hall. Triddick gave her a strip of bread that had been wrapped around cheese and meat and then baked. Her empty stomach rumbled at the appetizing scent.

“Thank you.” She gave him a smile.

He nodded to her. “I hear your audience will be held in the great hall. I look forward to your performance.”

Really? Why had he heard that before she had? Angling her jaw out, she felt ready to bite someone’s head off again, but it wasn’t fair to take out her bad temper on him. Pivoting on her heel, she strode to the music hall.

Once the door closed behind her, the privacy of the long, empty room was like a soothing balm, and her angry energy faded. She had come to think of this hall as “hers,” and she would miss giving up the private sanctuary when Isabeau’s music master returned.

Sitting at the table, she ate part of her breakfast to ease the empty ache in her middle. Then she shoved the rest to one side and buried her head in her hands.

Her body ached all over with remembered pleasure. She thought of the things she and Morgan had done to each other throughout the heated night, and need pulsed through her again.

This obsession with him was the height of insanity.

But she had never been successful at controlling her obsessions…

Tiredness hit, and she slumped. She longed to curl up on the couch to take a nap, but today, of all days, was going to be unpredictable. Kallah or someone else might come in at any time to announce she would be playing in the great hall.

She could never afford to forget her behavior was being watched.

That feeling of being watched—it was in her bones, a prickle at the nape of her neck…

A sudden conviction struck. Suddenly, she was sure someone was watching her, even though she was supposedly alone.

There was no magic to it, just good old human intuition.

Pushing to her feet, she turned in a circle and studied the seemingly empty room. The huge, intricate tapestries did not reveal any bulge. Instead, they lay flat against the walls, just as they should.

The bookcases stood flush against the wall, so no one could hide behind those. The stands holding the instruments were artistically crafted, but not solid pieces. Rather, they were constructions made with strips of carved wood, almost like an artist’s easel. There was the furniture arranged near the fireplace, the couches and the chairs, but as she walked slowly toward the area, the shadows behind the furniture appeared empty.

There was no other place she could see for a body of any size to hide.

But what if it was a body that was not of any substantial size?

Not one of the castle dogs. They were too big.

But a rat, for instance, could hide very well in a room such as this. Or a cat.

He might not even be in this room, but somewhere close by. Reaching for the mental image of her kidnapper, with that thin, strange face, she said telepathically, Robin?

She felt nothing, no sense of whether she had connected to someone or was talking to dead air.

Then one of the dark shadows behind the couch detached from the others. It was a black cat, and it stalked toward her with smooth, sinuous grace. Between one step and the next, it transformed into a thin, upright figure.

The figure almost looked like a human teenage boy. Almost… except for those wild, ancient eyes.

Robin said, “Hello, Sidonie.”





Chapter Sixteen





A sudden blast of fury hit her like a tornado.

The maelstrom whited out all caution or common sense, and it impelled her to leap forward. She had the sensation of leaving her body.

“You!” she snarled.

She slapped him so hard his head jerked back. Then she slapped him again.

And again.

The next thing she knew, she was pummeling him with both fists and feet, while tears of rage ran down her cheeks.

He made no move to stop her or to try to protect himself. Raining him with blows, she drove him backward until his shoulders hit the edge of a bookcase. Bracing himself against it, he stood stoically under her onslaught.

“She broke my hands, you son of a bitch!”

He did not look surprised. He merely nodded and tilted his chin up, turning into her punch. “She cut out my tongue, once. It took years to grow back.”

That statement cut through her mindless rage. She hesitated a moment too long, absorbing the strangeness and barbarity of it. When she reached again for her former fury, the firestorm had already subsided into glowing coals. Not gone, not by any means, but not out of control either.

When he made as if to straighten from his leaning stance, she shoved him again and said between her teeth, “I hate you so passionately.”

His strange gaze met hers steadily. “I deserve every ounce of it.”

“I can’t believe you have the audacity to look me in the eyes, let alone creep around the castle. Morgan thought not even you would be that crazy.” She glanced over her shoulder at the closed doors. “Why are you here?!”

“I’ve come to bear witness to the consequences of my handiwork,” he told her. “Evil deeds should never go unpunished.”

Whose evil deeds was he talking about, Isabeau’s? Or his?

Bitterly, she told him, “You can never make amends for the pain and the fear you put me through.”