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"She seems to have an ague." Agatha fussed over her niece, lifting the covers to her chin. Lilac had fallen into a troubled sleep.
"What is that?"
"I'm afraid she is ill, my boy."
"I am too much for her," Rejar sadly said.
Agatha had a coughing fit.
Rejar lightly tapped her on the back. "Are you all right. Lady Agatha?"
"Yes, of course I am all right!" Impatiently, she waved his hand away. "This has nothing to do with you, my dear boy! Lilac has a disease of some kind."
He did not understand. "What is disease?"
Lady Whumples looked at him rather strangely. "It is a sickness which is contracted in some unknown fashion."
He thought about this a minute, suddenly going pale. "This is like the pox Jackie warned me about? He said that women called doxies-"
"Young man." She reached over and smartly boxed Rejar's ears.
"Ow!"
"I will not have that kind of talk in this house! This is nothing of the kind!"
Rejar rubbed at his stinging ears. "Lady Agatha, I do not understand."
"Lilac has a fever. We do not know what causes these sicknesses of the body. There are those who liken it to a poison in the blood."
"Is there nothing we can do? Can we not get a healer for her?"
"You mean a doctor? I must tell you, your Highness, that I am not one to subscribe to those quacks; it is my opinion that they cause more harm than good. My advice is to let Lilac try to rally on her own. We will do our best to make her comfortable, of course."
"I will take your advice, Lady Agatha."
But Lilac did not seem to rally.
Over the next several days her condition steadily worsened. Her fever rose, she went in and out of lucidity, and an ominous rattle sounded from her chest while she struggled for each breath she took.
Concerned over this strange malady which had suddenly afflicted his mate, Rejar did not leave her side.
Distraught, he sat by her, trying to get her to drink some water, to swallow some broth. He bathed her forehead with cool cloths, covered her with more and more blankets to stop her chills, and paced and paced and paced.
None of it was helping.
"You must rest or you will be no good to her." Traed rose from his chair on the other side of the bed. He had stayed close to Rejar for the past several days, his calm presence offering immeasurable support.
"I cannot." Rejar ran a weary hand through his long hair.
Agatha watched him from the corner of the room. If she had ever had any doubt as to the depth of his feelings for her niece, his behavior these past days would have laid those doubts to rest.
However, Agatha had never had that uncertainty with Prince Azov.
She, who trusted few and liked even less, had taken to this man immediately. His brother she regarded just as highly. She had always had very good intuition when it came to people. If only that same intuition could be applied to help her niece. Agatha sighed mournfully; Lilac was not doing well.
"Nickolai... Nickolai..." Lilac called to her husband, her voice sounding weak and thready.
Rejar abruptly stopped his pacing to go to her. "I am here. Lilac." He smoothed back a few strands of hair which had fallen over her forehead. The skin there was dry and very, very hot.
She did not seem to hear him.
She just kept calling his name in a voice growing fainter and fainter.
He could not take anymore. "Send Emmy for a healer," he said to Agatha.
"Your Highness-"
"Do it!"
Against her will, Agatha went to the landing, telling Emmy to go quickly and get a doctor.
Within the half-hour the doctor arrived. He was filthy and stank of death. Under normal circ.u.mstances, Rejar would not have even let the man into his home, but he was desperate. He did not believe Lilac would last the night.
"Can you help her?" he asked him.
The doctor walked around the bed as if looking at the patient from differing angles would help him a.s.sess what was wrong with her. Then he bent over the bed, lifting her eyelid to peer into her eye.
Rejar could barely stand the sight of that filthy hand touching her. "Well?" He was losing his patience.
"Yes, I believe I can help her; although there is no guarantee."
Rejar breathed a sigh of relief.
"You must leave me alone with the patient for several hours."
Rejar hesitated. "Why?"
"The procedure can be upsetting to those of the family, I insist-"
"Ask him what he intends to do, your Highness!"
"Lady Agatha is right. I am afraid what you ask is not possible. I would never leave my wife alone in a situation such as this; she is depending on me to watch out for her."
The man drew himself up. "If you insist, that is your right. I must warn you it is not for the faint of heart. These illnesses must be tackled with vigor else they will not be driven from the body."
"I understand."
Agatha began sobbing into her handkerchief. Using the Prince's name for the first time, she implored him, "I beg you, Nickolai! Don't do this. If my niece is to die, let her go in peace."
Rejar rubbed his eyes, fatigue, sorrow, and worry claiming him equally. "What is the procedure?" he asked, resigned.
"Well, first we must bleed her, then-"
Rejar's eyes snapped open. "What do mean you 'bleed' her?"
"It is how the disease is removed from the body, through the blood. I must open a vein with this lancet," he removed a dirty knife from a case in his pocket. "Leeches"-he held up a jar of disgusting, squirming creatures-"are applied to the spot to further aid in the procedure."
Rejar staggered back, collapsing into a chair.
"If this does not work, we may try blistering. Along with purging her system, a caustic liquid is poured onto the skin in an effort to boil the illness away. As a matter of course I'm afraid her Highness will be hideously scarred."
"Get out," Rejar whispered.
"I'm sorry?"
"I believe my brother has told you to leave." Traed took the man by the collar and the seat of his pants and tossed him out the door.
"Have a spot o'this, yer Princeship." Dazed, Rejar felt Jackie tug at his sleeve. He took the gla.s.s the man gave him, gratefully swallowing the brandy.
"I could not bear it if you allowed him to continue," Agatha sniffed.
"Nor I." He pulled the chair up to the edge of the bed, preparing for a long vigil.
His gaze went to the bedside table spotting the books there. Picking one, he faced it on its side, reading the t.i.tle. Songs of Experience, he read, by William Blake. Lilac so loved to read.
Carefully, he opened the book of poems, remembering the many times she had comforted him by reading aloud. Maybe this time he could bring a small measure of comfort to her. He began to read haltingly, "Tyger, Tyger, burning bright In the forests of the night, What immortal hand or eye Could frame thy fearful symmetry?"
Rejar took a deep breath, his emotions on the verge of spilling over, then continued: "When the stars threw down their spears And watered heaven with their tears, Did he smile his work to see?
Did he who made the lamb make thee?"
Rejar threw the book aside and, placing his head on the bed, wept.
He wept for Lilac; he wept for the fear that prevented her from truly having known him; he wept for his onesided love, and he wept for all that would never be.
After a time he felt Traed's hand on his shoulder. "I am sorry for you both, brother." This kind of pain Traed knew well.
{What kind of a world is this Ree Gen Cee Ing Land, Traed? I vow I cannot understand it. Horror and beauty ... where a man can illuminate the soul with the gift of simple words yet an unknown illness can steal life away without warning.} "I know not," Traed said quietly. "Surely it is a poison."
Rejar looked up at his brother, his sensitive face tear-streaked. "Poison?" he whispered. Agatha had said the same; this thing called disease was likened to a poison.
He blinked, a recollection forming in his mind.
"Traed! When we were on Ryka Twelve, on our way to Zarrain to see you, Lorgin was poisoned by a xathu beast."
Traed had not heard this before. "Such a poison is deadly! How did he survive?"
"Yaniff had an idea. He believed that if I pa.s.sed through Lorgin in the midst of my transformation-while I was still in my energy state-I might take the poison with me."
Traed rubbed the back of his neck. "It was very risky; you could have been poisoned as well."
"Not as long as I was able to disperse the poison from myself before I imbodied."
"There was no danger to you?"
"No." Rejar did not quite meet Traed's eyes.
Nor did he tell his brother of Yaniff's prophecy to him. The wizard had warned him against it. At the time Rejar had scoffed at his words, saying he would never be tempted to do such a thing again. How little he understood.
"You wish to try this with Lilac?"
"Yes." He faced Lilac's aunt. "Lady Agatha ... Agatha. You are going to see something which might upset you; I hope you will find it in your heart to have understanding. What I am about to reveal to you, I do for Lilac's sake."
Then he began to metamorphose.
He started to glow from within. Streams of light flowed and arced around him. His form shimmered and started to melt into a gleaming phosph.o.r.escence.
"My word!" Agatha gasped.
"Blimey!" Jackie's eyes bulged as he chomped down on the stem of his pipe.
Traed stood by, an uneasy feeling settling in the pit of his stomach. Something Lorgin had said about Rejar's superior ability to defend himself teased at his mind. Suddenly, Yaniff's words came to him out of nowhere ... His kind heart will get him into trouble ...
Instantly, Traed realized this was where the real threat to Rejar was! Not Rotewick; it was never Rotewick. "Rejar, wait!"
It was too late.
The Familiar had already attained his energy state, a state no Familiar ever holds for more than a moment.
Traed watched transfixed as Rejar pa.s.sed through the body of his wife, pausing that extra fraction of time to make sure he cleansed the "poison" from her. That extra fraction of time that would cost him dearly.
With his pa.s.sing. Lilac was already breathing easier. She opened her eyes in time to see an amorphous frame of light hovering near the bed. She knew exactly what had occurred; she had felt him slide through her.
Traed observed the glowing configuration barely pulsing, getting weaker and weaker. It was obvious Rejar could not regain his corporeal form; he did know how to draw the energy to himself. Soon his strength would wither and his life would dissipate. He would die.
Unless ...
There was only one way to help him.
Traed would have to break a solemn oath he made to himself. An oath never to unleash the awesome power contained within him.
All his life he had seen the destruction that followed in the wake of such terrible power. His own father, Theardar, had destroyed so many lives, including his own, because he could not control the raging force in him.
It was the same power which flowed through his son, hidden all these years only by his strength of will.
The glow was very faint now; his brother was hanging on to his last shred of life.
Rejar.