Oh, they still quarreled. David thought Gray a self-righteous prig and Mac a besotted fool, but he’d lay down his life for either one of them. It was as simple as that.

Mac closed the study door behind them. “You can collapse now if you like. There’s none to witness it.”

David’s legs gave out as if his strings had been cut. Only Mac’s quick shove of a chair in his direction kept him from falling to the floor in a heap. He closed his eyes, a shudder running through him as he fought the teeth-chattering cold that overcame him all at once. Even breathing was almost too much effort, but he managed to squeeze out, “Kineally’s dead.”

David heard Mac take a seat at his desk. He could picture the spark of tamped fury in his pale green eyes and the battle tension tightening his shoulders. Mac might have sold his commission, shedding his scarlet tunic and gold braid for more sober attire, but he would always be pure soldier. Never happier than with a weapon in his hand and an enemy in his sights. Always had been. Only now, his was a war of secret meetings and quiet conspiracies. What he needed was a good, solid, face-to-face, till-the-death, fight-to-the-finish brawl.

“He was a good man,” Mac said quietly. “He’ll be mourned.”

David snorted his cynicism. “By who? Not his family or his clan. To them, his treason placed him lower than the lowest dung bug.”

“He chose to join our cause, David. He wasn’t forced. You see now how great the Ossines’ power has grown. They send enforcers into the heart of London to seek us out. They’re no longer merely defenders of the clans. They bring the battle to us.”

David forced his eyelids open to meet Mac’s sober gaze. “Who says this was initiated by the Ossine without the Gather elders’ approval? Perhaps the Duke of Morieux has given the enterprise his personal stamp of approval.”

While each of the five scattered Imnada clans as well as the Ossine shaman had a seat at the Gather council, the Duke, as hereditary ruler, remained the final arbiter of clan law. Gray’s grandfather had always been a thoughtful if somewhat cautious leader. A man who wielded his position lightly, though none had ever been in doubt that he was in charge. That had changed with his son’s untimely death, and after Gray’s disgrace and exile, the old duke had grown increasingly frail, his hold on the Gather progressively more ineffectual.

Mac gave a sad shake of his head. “The Duke is near death. Few but Sir Dromon Pryor have even seen him recently. The Arch Ossine controls all access to His Grace. He’s the real authority these days.”

“What of the N’thuil? Pryor may be head of the Ossine but, bound to Jai Idrish, old Tidwell must have some say in clan matters.”

They called the faceted crystal sphere the Imnada’s heart, but Jai Idrish might be more correctly called the shapechangers’ soul. It had come with Idrin the Traveler when the Imnada first arrived on this world. Some said the sphere had guided them here, laying a path through the Gateway from their old dead world to this new one burgeoning with life and hope. Some said when the time was right, it would show them the way back. David didn’t know if that was true, but the power contained within Jai Idrish was supposed to be as vast as the universe the Imnada once navigated. All of it contained and focused by one person, the N’thuil, the voice and vessel of Jai Idrish.

It was said that the N’thuil’s body was flesh and bone, but his heart was pure crystal. In Muncy Tidwell’s case, it was more like mountains of blubber surrounding a heart soft as his fat head.

“Tidwell does as he’s told,” Mac explained. “Besides, Jai Idrish hasn’t made itself felt for centuries. Not even the oldest clan members remember a time when it spoke its will. The position of N’thuil is barely more than one of figurehead these days, and that’s just how Tidwell prefers it.” He made a useless gesture with his hands. “No, David. Pryor’s unchallenged in his bid for control of the clans. And as long as Gray remains in exile, leaving no obvious heir to the Duke, the Arch Ossine’s grip on power will remain unbreakable. Any hope for a reconciliation with the Fey-bloods will be impossible.”

“You’re awfully conversant with internal Imnada politics these days.”

“We have to be.”

David struggled to sit up. His chills were being overtaken by a feverish heat that damped his already clammy skin. “Damn it, I don’t care about the Duke or the N’thuil or who’s fucking in charge of the Ossine. Because of you, Beskin believes I’m in league with your rebels and that I’m carrying some blasted book. He wants it back and he’s determined to add my head to his trophy wall to gain hold of it.”

Mac didn’t flinch. Hell, he didn’t even bat an eye. “I’d think you’d be used to pursuit by those with murder in their hearts. How many outraged husbands and scorned mistresses have queued up to put a bullet through you? There must be scores by now.”

“Flannery . . .” David said with an impatient growl.

Mac shoved himself to his feet and walked around to lean against the desk, a sly smile creeping over his face. “Where does the woman come into it?”

“Her name is Callista Hawthorne.”

“No wonder Beskin believes you guilty of treason. She reeks of Other magic, or hadn’t you noticed?”

“Of course I bloody well noticed,” David growled. “If I’d known what she was at the time, you can be sure I’d have run the other way as fast as four legs could carry me.”

“At the time?” Mac’s face cleared to one of dawning comprehension. “You played your avenger act again in some slimy back alley, didn’t you? What happened? Did you save her from a tragic fate worse than death, only to find yourself stuck with her?”

“You’ve got the stuck bit right.” David slumped farther into his seat. “But the humiliating truth is . . . she saved me. Twice.”

* * *

“Here’s a nightgown, Miss Hawthorne. It should be about the right size. I wore it pre-belly,” Bianca Flannery said with a grimace and a pat of her rotund mid-section, though she looked anything but unhappy at her growing bump.

Callista had seen the famous actress once before, back when she was still Bianca Parrino and London theater’s darling. She could never in a million years have imagined one day she’d be standing in the woman’s guest bedchamber borrowing nightclothes. But why had David brought her here? It was obvious he knew Captain Flannery and his wife. But did that mean . . . could it be that the captain was one of these Imnada as well? Could both husband and wife be shapechangers? Or was it just the opposite and Mrs. Flannery had no inkling of her husband’s powers?

“I’ll have Molly bring you some supper. You look completely done in.”

A minor understatement. Callista would gladly have crawled between the covers of the bed behind her, turned her back on the plague of unanswered questions, and slept for a month.

“I’ve some cold chicken and biscuits and there may even be a bit of cake left.”

Callista’s stomach gave an embarrassing growl.

“Yes, definitely supper,” Bianca Flannery affirmed. “And two slices of cake.”

“It’s not what you think,” Callista blurted “That is, David . . . I mean, Mr. St. Leger and myself aren’t what you think . . .” Her words trailed off into an embarrassed silence and her face grew hot, almost unbearably so. Mrs. Flannery looked up from turning back the bedcovers to regard her with a mix of compassion and kindness; two emotions all but unknown in Branston’s household.

“That is to say”—Callista scrambled to fill the silence—“we’re merely traveling in company. Not as a couple . . . or . . . anything scandalous.”

Though it was scandalous, disastrously so. It didn’t matter if they never did more than spend time in a closed carriage together. Just the fact that she was an unmarried female in the company of an unmarried male was enough to ruin her. Would it be enough for Mr. Corey to break off the engagement? Perhaps if she was very lucky. But would it also be enough to keep Aunt Deirdre from taking her in?

In Callista’s haste to escape, she’d not thought that part through. Or if she had, she’d pushed it to the side as a future problem she’d sort out once the more immediate problems had been dealt with. It had been enough just to escape Branston. She had the entire length of the country to worry over minor technicalities like David’s awkward presence.

Perhaps she could pass him off as a footman or a . . . a cousin on her father’s side. Someone harmless and innocent and free of nefarious motivations.

Right. The man was about as harmless and innocent-looking as the wild beasts in Exeter Exchange.

Seeming to understand the welter of emotions chasing their way through Callista’s brain, Bianca guided her down onto the edge of the bed with a comforting pat. “There’s no need to say any more, Miss Hawthorne. Not to me,” she said reassuringly.

Such a small gesture, but Callista hadn’t had anyone offer the small gestures since her mother’s death. A strange lump caught in her throat and her eyes stung, which is probably why she couldn’t read the expression on her hostess’s face, though she definitely felt her tremble when she touched her arm.

“You’ve been very kind,” Callista said, blinking the mist from her eyes.

Bianca’s gaze softened. “It’s obvious something has happened to throw you and David into the sauce together. I’m more than familiar with the sort of impossible tangles one can find oneself in, but I’m certain there’s nothing unseemly between you.”

“You are?”

“Of course. Call it woman’s intuition, or perhaps just knowing David like I do. He has a penchant for leaping in and out of scrapes and loving every minute of it. But if it were that kind of trouble following you, I doubt he’d have brought you here to us. He’s far more surreptitious about his light o’ loves.” She smiled another one of those disarming sisterly smiles that made Callista want to cry or throw herself in her arms or confess the whole horrid story. Maybe all three. It had been so long since she’d had anyone to confide in.