Part 3 (1/2)

Collins remembered. The half-dragon twins of an ancient princess, embittered by their lot, had cursed all but select members of the royal family to spend part of their lives in animal form. Or, in the case of the dragons, in human form. In revenge, the dragons had slain the boys, only to find themselves hunted to extinction. Only Prinivere remained, still bearing the scars of wounds the hunters had believed mortal and the missing tail that had won them their bounty.

*The crystal is powerful, but my magic and vigor have dwindled too far. Zylas tells me there are two other dragons. Young ones.* Prinivere's sending contained a desperate hopefulness directed at Collins. He had told Zylas about the dragons, having learned of their existence from Carrie Quinton. One was surely Zylas' daughter. The other was a Random claimed by the king, as was his right, for execution as a dangerous carnivore. Apparently, it was male, as Quinton had talked excitedly of breeding them.

Collins shrugged. ”I didn't see them with my own eyes, but I believe the person who told me about them.”

”Carriequinton,” Zylas supplied, Falima s.h.i.+fted restlessly from foot to foot, then dug at the cave floor with a heel. At length, she looked up and, noticing all eyes upon her, added, ”She doesn't care much for you, Ben.”

Collins pursed his lips. ”Not surprising.” He dodged Falima's gaze, hoping she did not know he had slept with Quinton. At the time, it had seemed natural, given how much they had in common and how he planned to get them both permanently back to their world having lived an intense experience that no one seemed likely to believe. ”How badly did I hurt her?”

”Her face,” Zylas squeaked, hiding his whiskery nose behind a paw. ”Let's just say she's not beautiful any more.”

Falima added, ”It's a woman thing, but I think you hurt her heart, too. And not just from the pain of losing her looks. She seems to think you... betrayed her.”

Collins sucked his lips all the way into his mouth. Quinton had grown up in a series of foster homes, bitter about her drug-addicted mother, which seemed to have warped her sense of emotional attachment.After just their one time in bed, she had imagined an entire life for them together. ”She really hates me.”

No one denied or confirmed the words, the ultimate affirmation.

Aisa squawked, and Collins jumped, wondering if he could ever get used to her doing that. Not that I need to, but the others do.

Zylas seized on the interruption. ”In any case, we've searched the whole world for those dragons, without success. There seems to be only one place left to look.” He lifted his head to Collins, who figured it out with ease.

”The royal quarters.” It made sense that, if they needed Collins again, it would be to enter the areas of the kingdom warded against switchers.

”Right,” Aisa corroborated in her parrot voice, apparently following at least part of the conversation.

Collins doubted the king would keep dragons in his bedchambers. ”Maybe there aren't any dragons.

Maybe Carrie gave me wrong information.”

Falima perched delicately on the opposite edge of the chest. ”No. There are dragons. We started searching as soon as you told us about them and, early on, found some dragon signs deep in the castle dungeons.”

”We?” Collins pressed.

”Spies,” Zylas detailed. ”Including myself. I definitely smelled my daughter's scent, though none of us ever saw her. The king must have moved them soon after our raid, and no one managed to follow their trail, now long cold. It's almost as if-she disappeared.” Mist covered his beady eyes, and Collins read pain there. Zylas would not beg or deceive this time. He clearly had taken Collins' anger to heart and trusted Collins' previous claim that, if he had only known the facts, he still would have helped and would have proved better at it.

Such consideration seemed worth rewarding. It pleased Collins that someone had listened so intently to his words and followed them to the letter. Zylas is a real friend. He wondered if he had ever truly known another. The rat/man clearly had practice at treating others well, never leading from the rear but placing himself in the same, or worse, danger as his followers. ”So,” Collins said, ”all I have to do is look through the royal bedchambers again.”

Apparently missing the sarcasm, Falima said brightly, ”That's it.”

And Zylas continued in the same upbeat vein. ”If you find them, we'll figure out a way to rescue them when you get hack.”

”Oh,” Collins said, glancing between his companions to see if they completely missed the obvious or were just better than he was at nonchalantly stating the impossible. ”So I don't actually have to retrieve these dragons. Just look for them.”

Falima's smile seemed genuine, filled with joy at having Collins seriously consider the mission so soon after demanding to leave. ”Right.”

”In the king's warded bedchamber.”

”Right.”

Collins blinked. ”Okay. That all seems simple enough.” He hardened his tone to make it clear he believed they'd all gone mad. ”So long as you ignore the fact that I have to sneak onto the castle grounds, into the castle itself, and to the king's own bedchamber past a zillion guards and other royal employees all of whom... want to personally inflict on me the death of a thousand tortures. Or something worse.”

He threw up his hands in disgust. ”Are you crazy?”

Zylas' head swung toward Prinivere, who had obviously communicated with him alone. Then headdressed Collins. ”Did I forget to mention you'd be disguised?”

Collins continued to stare in disbelief. ”That was implied, but I don't think a little grease paint and a haircut are going to fool anyone this time.”

Prinivere finally gave a sending to Collins. *He means disguised by magic.*

At last, Collins began to understand. ”By magic?” It had nearly killed Prinivere to cast the spell that allowed Collins to understand their language, and Zylas had sworn not to let her risk herself like that again. ”The crystal?” he wondered aloud.

*The crystal* Prinivere confirmed. *I can make you look like one of the guards without harming myself. And another will go as your partner.*

The nonverbal sending allowed Collins to understand that, by ”your partner,” she meant that whoever went with him would go in the guise of the guard's partner as well. He wondered what other spells Prinivere could now do that she could not previously manage hut decided not to ask. It might violate some ethical protocol, which would greatly upset Zylas, who always insisted on proper etiquette and respect for the Lady. An instant later, he remembered that Prinivere could read his thoughts. She could choose to list her new abilities or to let him know if she would tolerate a direct questioning. ”Who would this partner actually be?”

Zylas piped in at once. ”Me.”

”You?” Collins' brows shot up. ”But you can't get into the royals' chambers.”

”Nor can anyone else. That's why we brought you.” The rat tilted his head into a pose probably supposed to appear brave, though it merely made him look quizzical. ”I can get you there and back safely.”

Falima wrung her hands. Clearly, she wanted to intervene, to keep Zylas out of harm's way.

However, to do so would mean putting a lesser value on Collins' life.

”Can you guarantee that?” Although he knew better, Collins dared to hope.

Zylas' head glided back to its usual position. ”Well, no, but... no one can ever...”

Collins forced a grin. ”I was kidding.”

”Oh. Well, then.” Zylas' checks pulled across his muzzle into a ratty grin. It was a strange image, like a computer-animated commercial. ”I'll do my best. I'm not going to run out on you.”

Collins wondered if Zylas had actually used slang or if the spell simply translated it that way. Spell or stone or both, he reminded himself, only then recalling that he still had not pressed Zylas on the details of a question that had occurred to him way back in his own world. ”So what happened to your translation stone?”

”I don't need it anymore.” Zylas raised his head proudly.

Collins doubted the rat/man had suddenly learned all the languages of both worlds, along with every animal tongue. The spell Prinivere had cast on Collins interpreted only human languages, and they had told him the crystal Zylas always carried was unique. Collins jerked his gaze past the crates to where Prinivere once again rested with her eyes closed.

Zylas antic.i.p.ated the question. ”No, she can't cast a spell that works like my stone did. But she was able to remove the magic from its container and place it directly into me.”

Collins saw the pros and cons of such a maneuver. It meant Zylas could never lose his precious artifact; but he also could not lend it out as he once had to Falima and Collins. And the magic died with him, an event that seemed inevitable given the power and reach of those who hunted him. Now in his forties, Zylas had given the royalty problems since his youth. On the other hand, the stone could nolonger be taken from Zylas or lost by him, and not having to carry it left his hands and mouth free. Zylas'

value to the cause became wholly clear to Collins for the first time: a wise, bold, honest, and determined man with near-perfect overlap and a means to communicate with anyone in any form. Falima's instincts were right. The renegades could not afford to lose Zylas. ”I'll do it,” he said, the words out of his mouth before he could consider them. ”But I can't take you as my partner.”

Zylas' mouth dropped open, revealing his little pink tongue, and his crimson eyes bulged with distress and affront. ”Why not?”