Magic Study Page 96
Dax intercepted me. His usual jovial face was taut with worry, and the dark smudges under his eyes made it look as if he hadn’t slept in a while.
“Have you seen Gelsi?” he asked.
“Not since the New Beginnings feast.” So much had happened since that night. The semester had not gone as I had imagined. Nothing since coming to Sitia had gone as I had imagined. “Wasn’t she working on some special project for Master Bloodgood?”
“Yes. She was experimenting with the Bellwood plant. But I haven’t seen her in days and I can’t find her anywhere.”
His words struck me like Alea’s knife. I gasped.
“What?” His green eyes widened in alarm.
“Plant? Where? With who?” The questions tumbled from my mouth.
“I already checked the greenhouses many times. She worked with one of the gardeners. Maybe we could ask him?”
Him. My heart twisted. I knew who Gelsi was with.
Chapter Thirty-Two
“Me? But I’ve never linked with Gelsi.” Dax’s drawn face took on a wild fearful expression.
I had taken Dax back to my rooms. We sat together on the couch. “Don’t worry. I’ve only worked with her once, but you’ve known her for a year. I’ll find her through you.” I hoped. “Relax,” I instructed. I took his hand in mine. “Think of her.” Finding a thread of magic, I reached toward his mind.
A horrible vision of Gelsi, bloody and terrified, filled my mind. “Dax, don’t imagine where she might be. Think of her at the New Beginnings feast.”
The image transformed into a smiling young lady wearing a soft green gown. I felt Dax’s thrill when he held her hand and guided her while they danced. I sent my magic to Gelsi, trying to see Dax from her mind.
She gazed up at him. They had always danced together at the feast, but this time felt different. Her skin tingled where he had touched her, and a warmth pulsed in her chest.
Gelsi, I called, pulling her into the memory.
What a lovely evening, she thought. How things have changed. Dax seemed distant after thatnight. Preoccupied.
Gelsi, where are you? I asked.
Shame flared. I’ve been a fool. No one must know. Please tell no one. Fear trembled through her mind.
You were deceived by a cunning sorcerer. No one will hold that against you. Where are you?
He will punish me.
She tried to pull away. I showed her Dax’s concern for her. His hunt through the Keep. Don’t let yourcaptor win, I pleaded.
Gelsi showed me a bare room. She was na**d and tied to metal spikes that had been driven into the wooden floor. Strange symbols had been painted on the floor and walls. Pain throbbed from between her legs and the multiple cuts along her arms and legs burned. He hadn’t needed to drug her with Curare.
I loved him, she said. I gave myself to him.
Instead of the wonderful loving experience she had expected, Ferde tied her down, beat her and raped her. Then he bled her, collecting the blood in an earthen bowl.
Show me where you are, I instructed.
Beyond the room was the living area and outside I could see a courtyard with a white jade sculpture of fifteen horses.
Have faith, I said. We’ll be there.
He’ll know. He has surrounded the neighborhood with a magical shield, he knows when someonepasses through and if he feels threatened, he’ll complete the ritual.
Doesn’t he need to wait until the full moon tonight?
No.
The note left by Alea had originally set the exchange for the full moon so everyone had not only assumed Ferde sent the note, but that the phase of the moon was critical for the ritual.
He had to move many times, Gelsi said. I had thought it exciting. I didn’t know he was the one the Masters were searching for. He led me to believe he was on a secret mission for the MasterMagicians.
We’ll find a way, I promised.
Hurry.
I withdrew my awareness and sat back. Dax stared at me in horror, he had been able to see and hear our conversation.
“She will need you when this is over,” I told him.
“We need to tell the Masters—”
“No.” My mind raced through options.
“But he’s strong. You heard Gelsi. He has a shield,” Dax said.
“All the more reason to go alone. They have been searching for him and he knows them. I think I can get through undetected.”
“How?”
“There’s no time to explain. But Gelsi will need you close by. Can you meet me in the market in an hour?”
“Of course.”
I jumped up and started gathering supplies.
Dax hesitated at the door. “Yelena?”
I looked at him.
“What happens if you don’t stop him?” Fear shone in his green eyes.
“Then we find Valek. Otherwise, Sitia will be Ferde’s.”
Dax swallowed his fright and nodded before leaving. I packed my equipment and changed my clothes. Dressed in a plain brown tunic and pants I would blend in with the regular citizens of the Citadel. Covering my disguise with my cloak, I stopped at my parent’s suite on the way out.
Leif sat with them in the living room. I ignored him. “Father, do you have those extra pills?” I asked, hoping he knew I wanted the Theobroma.
He nodded in understanding and went to retrieve them. While I waited, Mother remembered her little invention she had told me about. She handed me a strange device made of tubes and rubber and explained how to work it.
“Just in case,” she said.