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  He was picking up these modernisms at a shameful pace. Soon he would even talk like one of these boys.

  That might be fun.

  He imagined himself hurrying home to a woman after a hard day’s work. What would Ashe Carver be like stripped of all her weaponry? There was something of the pirate queen in her fierceness. Would she be soft and womanly between the sheets? Or just as much an Amazon as she had been tonight? He let that question melt on his tongue, savoring all the possible answers and loving the fact she was so different from any woman he’d ever met.

  Evidently, even a brief exposure to the outside world had affected him. Or maybe some of that was just the woman herself. Either way, his imagination was going places he’d all but forgotten.

  Mac finally finished writing. “There. I’ve taken you off the next watch.”

  Reynard wrenched his mind back to his cold, stone reality. “Why?”

  “Someone let that rabbit beastie out of its habitat. I want to go look at the gate again. Come with me.”

  “Are you looking for something specific?” Reynard unhooked the clasp of the leather cartridge box slung across his left shoulder, taking out ball and cartridge and reloading the musket in a drill he’d performed thousands of times. Cartridge. Prime. Load. Ram. If they were walking into the depths of the Castle, he was going to be ready.

  “Specific?” Mac mused. “Maybe. Or maybe just a general vibe. I want to know who opened that gate, and why. You know the residents of this place far better than I do. You might see a clue that I would miss.”

  Reynard slid the ramrod back into its holder beside the barrel of the musket. “Perhaps it was sabotage. By a strange coincidence, there was a vampire hunting Ashe Carver at the exact second we were there chasing the creature. That led us on a merry little dance.”

  Mac was checking his own piece, a SIG Sauer automatic. His eyebrows shot up. “What? Full report, soldier.”

  “She was not harmed.”

  “Of course not. You were there.”

  Reynard allowed himself a small smile. “She would have skewered her vampire with or without me. I was merely a convenient accessory.”

  Mac gave a dry laugh and set off down the hallway, gesturing for Reynard to follow. “That’s Ashe, all right.”

  “I’m serious. I might have stayed home with my feet up. Most cutting to a man’s sense of self-worth. It’s not as if I haven’t killed my fair share of men and monsters.” In fact, considering his duels, battles, and years in the Castle, he’d simply lost count.

  “Just think of the pleasant conversation you’d have missed.”

  “Are you referring to the part where she threatened to blow my head off, or when she insulted my Brown Bess? There was no time for pleasantries. She didn’t even refer to the battle for the Castle, or that we had met before.” Or that she had nursed me in my hour of need, saved my life, kept me from bleeding to death. Such pathos, utterly wasted on the woman.

  Mac shot him an amused look. “Disappointed?”

  Yes, bitterly, but he hid it. “Perplexed. It’s true we were busy, but anyone else would have at least asked after my health.”

  “Dude, she’s a killer.”

  “Some of the most pleasant people I know are flesh-eating werejackals. There is no excuse for bad manners. Did you know she has a daughter?”

  “Sure. Her name’s Eden. Cute kid. Calls me Uncle Mac.”

  “Ashe is a widow, is she not?”

  “Yup.”

  “Hm.” Reynard stopped there, refusing to indulge his curiosity about the woman any further. It wasn’t as if he could put any of the information to good use. Opportunities for seduction were long lost to him.

  Mac sighed. “Let’s just focus on the hell bunny. Tell me what happened. From the beginning. What was Ashe doing there, anyway?”

  Reynard fell into step beside him. The conversation, however much it was about the task at hand, lightened his mood. They passed a pair of guardsmen returning from patrol, the torchlight throwing strange shadows across their weary faces. They paused and exchanged a few words. Brief, efficient, factual, but friendly—the way Reynard liked it. Morale was important but hard to maintain.

  They moved on. Reynard told Mac what had happened in the gardens that night, step by step. They passed another group of guardsmen, but this time Mac just waved a greeting. Reynard had reached the part where they’d killed the vamp.

  “What the hell?” Mac grumbled. “This was no coincidence. Who would be working inside and outside the Castle? Who would know that Ashe would get the call to go investigate?”

  Reynard hated the fact that she’d been tricked. He would, come what may, teach that unknown villain courtesy to a lady. “Someone who knows she is in Fairview, obviously.”

  “More than that. Someone who knows her family. The police wouldn’t call her directly. They’d call her brother-in-law first.”

  “Then why did he not come instead?”

  “There’s a new baby in the house.”

  “Of course.” A witch and a vampire had produced a baby girl—a miracle by anyone’s standards. Even the Castle guards had heard that snippet of gossip. Odd how even the most seasoned warrior could be moved by word of a birth. Soldiers were surprisingly sentimental.

  Mac and Reynard had walked beyond the guards’ quarters and were crossing through a long cavern that sloped gently downward. The atmosphere changed, growing almost cavelike. The ceiling was the height of several men, but at least half of that space was black with shadow. Whispering echoes sighed like the breath of some nightmarish sleeper.

  Dry, dead, gravelike . . . but not quite.

  Once, the Castle had been a living universe, green and pleasant, until one of its creators had stolen the life force from it. After a long, slow decline, the Castle had become nothing but hewn stone, a true dungeon. It had been that way as long as Reynard could remember. Then, last autumn, there was a battle. Reynard had nearly died and Mac had sacrificed the last of his humanity, but the life force that had once made the Castle a living world had been restored. The effect was gradual. The rebirth that stirred deep in the Castle had not reached this far. Still, Reynard could feel it like the intimation of mist against his skin.

  A hint of something. A spark. For the first time Reynard could recall, the breeze that swept the dust from the bare floor carried the sharp scent of mud and moss. Here and there, freshwater springs bubbled out of the earth and trickled over the stones, murmuring of a future.

  It made Reynard restless, like a stallion catching the first whiff of spring meadows.

  It made the darkness seem heavier.

  They’d reached the gate of the enclosure. It was a huge, arching thing of wrought iron. Each post was thick as Reynard’s forearm and crusted with a layer of dead moss. Beyond was the corpse of a forest, a skeletal wasteland of bare branches festooned with luminous fungi. The place smelled fetid, like a rotting woodpile where something furry had died.

  Mac shifted uneasily, red demon fire glinting in his eyes. Reynard understood. Strange creatures lived in the depths of the wasteland—most with names long lost to mankind. This was where the demons too dangerous to mingle with the other monsters were kept. God’s teeth, even the trolls feared to venture past the rusty padlock that held the two halves of the gate together. So who had wrenched the lock open, leaving it a mangled bit of scrap on the ground?

  The tension between Reynard’s shoulder blades bit deep enough to crack his spine. They peered between the bars of the gate. Its massive height made Reynard feel no bigger than a schoolboy. Someone had secured the gates with a thick chain and a shiny new lock. The lock looked blindly optimistic.

  “Charming place,” Mac said dryly. “Great site for a romantic getaway.”

  “Only if you wanted it to be your last. If a monster didn’t finish you, I’m certain Constance would.”

  Mac chuckled at the mention of his woman. “Yeah, too Gothic even for a vampire.”

  “Especially one so fond
of shopping.” Reynard stepped back from the gate and looked around uneasily. “Not a boutique in sight.”

  There wasn’t much to see, period. A few more dead trees. Some boulders. Dust. It was no wonder the rabbit beast had bolted for freedom. Reynard gave a helpless gesture. “I see no clues. There’s nothing to suggest who broke the lock.”

  Reynard could feel the heat radiating off Mac, a sure sign of a fire demon on the edge of losing his temper.

  Mac swore. “I want an arrest for this.”

  “I want someone’s head on a pike. I haven’t had a piked head for ages.”

  “I’ve heard about English cooking.” Mac sat down on one of the boulders. “Crap.”

  “Indeed.”

  The demon heaved a frustrated sigh. “It’s a crime scene. I could print the broken lock, but no one from here’s going to be in a fingerprint database.”

  They were silent for a moment, and then Mac spoke again. “You know, I’ve tried to loosen security up a bit. Make the administration approachable. I’ve always figured that if you treat people like you expect them to behave, well, they usually do. But here in the Castle, I’m not so sure that’s working.”

  “Change is a slow process,” Reynard offered. “You are taking a place ruled by brute force for thousands of years and trying to bring it enlightenment. That may take decades to accomplish, and you’ve been here six months.”

  “If folks think they can get away with this bullshit,” Mac said, kicking the broken lock, “I’m rethinking my approach.”

  Something tugged at Reynard’s senses, making him look over his shoulder. A figure was ambling toward them, as unhurried as a sightseer out for an afternoon stroll. In a place where every rock was a hiding place for fanged death, that casual air reeked of trouble. Reynard raised his musket.

  Mac got to his feet. “Who is it?”

  Reynard sighted down the barrel, using the moment to study the set of the figure’s head and shoulders. What he saw made every fiber of his body go still and quiet as a hunted bird.

  Though it was a prison, there were few cells in the Castle. With some exceptions, thousands of inmates roamed free to form alliances and enemies, kingdoms and armies. Power and territory were in constant dispute. Thugs became warlords; warlords became petty kings.

  Guardsmen kept the peace, but a handful of dangerous troublemakers always flouted the rules. The figure strolling toward them was at the top of that list, underlined twice.

  The figure drew closer, his steps unhurried. He was tall, but not overly so, strongly muscled without an excess of bulk. He looked to be in his late thirties, but had probably seen King Arthur pull Excalibur from its stone.

  Reynard doubted their visitor would have been on Arthur’s side.

  “Prince Miru-kai,” Mac said neutrally.

  The prince stopped a dozen paces away and bowed.

  “Your Highness,” said Reynard, polite despite the musket aimed at the center of Miru-kai’s skull.

  The prince straightened. He was dark, hawk nosed, and black eyed with long, fierce mustaches. A circlet of gold sat on his brow. Black hair fell in a braid down his back, bound in casings of beaten gold and silver. His robes were red silk stitched with a design of running stags. A curved sword hung at his hip, the scarlet tassels on the sheath shivering as he moved. If he had been human, one might have mistaken him for a Turk or a Magyar or any of the wandering tribes that warred in the lands where Christendom met the East in ancient days.

  But he wasn’t human. He was dark fey—dangerous and unpredictable.

  Reynard kept the musket steady.

  “Demon lord,” the prince said, “I greet you. And you also, Captain.”

  His voice was smooth, polite, educated. One might never have known he was the most dangerous warlord in the Castle. He was not just ruthless, but a master of warcraft and sorcery.

  “You are unattended,” Reynard observed. “I believe this is the first time I have seen you alone.” Perhaps I could even kill you.

  “My attendants can sometimes be excitable. That is of no help to me today. I ask for parley.”

  Parley had to be honored. Frustration ached in Reynard’s bones as he lowered his musket. “Don’t make me regret observing fair play.”

  “But, Captain, you are the byword for gentlemanly conduct. Fair play is what lightens your grim nature.”

  Reynard narrowed his eyes. “To borrow the modern phrase, sometimes fair play sucks.”

  Miru-kai laughed, a slash of white teeth in his dark face. “I never tire of you, old fox.”

  “What do you want?” Mac demanded before Reynard could change his mind and put a musket ball in the prince’s sarcasm.

  Miru-kai inclined his head. “I heard the gates had been breached and that one of the creatures escaped.”

  “We caught it and put it back,” Mac replied, folding his arms. “So?”

  “That is good. The phouka are dangerous.”

  “Ya think?”

  “They are beasts from the fey kingdoms. They don’t belong in this world. It is not their fault humans taste sweet to them. They should have been returned long ago to their proper homes.”

  “And why weren’t they?” Mac demanded.

  Miru-kai gave a smile that revealed nothing. “If you find a map leading to that door, let me know. We of the fey have strained our eyes for a glimpse of the Summerland since the dawn of human rule.”

  “You are dark fey,” Reynard replied.

  “That does not make me any less homesick.” Miru-kai shrugged. “But that is not what we are here to discuss. I have smelled life in the wind. I have seen moss beside the water and know someday soon there will be grass under the soles of my feet. The Castle wakes. The warp and weave of the universe changes.”

  Mac raised his eyebrows, as if waiting for a punch line.

  The prince shifted impatiently. “You sacrificed much to bring the Castle back to life. For what you have done, I step forward to share what I know.”

  Mac was unimpressed. “You’re a warlord. Peace is gonna put you out of work.”

  “After the first few centuries, war is a dull occupation.”

  Does he take us for fools? “You are an old dog, Miru-kai,” said Reynard. “You cling to old tricks.”

  “You are a cynic, fox.”

  “Whoa.” Mac waved his hands to silence them. “Sorry to break up your mutual admiration, guys, but what does any of this have to do with the phouka?”

  “Who was trifling with the locks?” asked Reynard.

  Miru-kai held up a hand, as if to halt their hostility in midair. “Someone who freed a deadly beast in order to set a trap. Or perhaps create a diversion?”

  Mac unfolded his arms, drawing himself up. “Yeah? A diversion for what?”

  “Thievery!” Miru-kai exclaimed in an exasperated tone. “What else? Have you no idea of what riches are stored in this place? Collectors outside the Castle slaver like wolves. They cannot wait to plunder your treasure rooms.”

  “How do you know that?” Mac protested. “You’re stuck in here!”

  Miru-kai rolled his eyes with theatrical impatience. “How do you think I was trapped here, you buffoon? I broke in and never got back out! The fey cannot leave, not with any magic or trickery.”

  Mac shook his head. “Then what was stolen? Nothing’s missing. There’s nothing in the forest worth taking.”

  Miru-kai waved his hand in a flowery gesture. “You are brave to a fault, honorable, witty, but utter dolts. There is no sign above the door of the greatest treasure hoard.”

  “What are you talking about?” Reynard snapped.

  A silence fell. Deep in the dead forest, water dripped slowly. Miru- kai studied Reynard, dark gaze scanning back and forth, searching his face. What for? Reynard wondered. What does he see there that he hasn’t seen before?

  At last the prince spoke. The words came quickly, as if that was the only way they would come out at all.

  “Captain Reynard, while you were
out chasing a carnivorous rabbit, someone slipped into the Castle vault and stole your soul. If you don’t find it, you’re going to die.”

  Chapter 4

  Reynard’s mind was numb and reeling at once. Someone took my soul? Who? Why?

  He didn’t wonder how. He knew that: They called it the guardsman’s sacrifice—and those memories were enough to bury a man’s courage like a corpse under January snow. Not that Reynard let one shred of horror show on his face. That was private, both from friend and foe.

  He pushed aside those useless, tattered images from his first days in the Castle. That was so long ago, it was a wonder they hadn’t rotted from his brain. They had no right to still be vivid as a fresh wound.

  Miru-kai wheeled on one boot heel. “Follow me.”

  This time his voice wasn’t insinuating, smooth, or ohso-reasonable. He followed the command with an imperious glance over his shoulder. Mac looked at Reynard and shrugged, the look on his face clear. It might be a trap, but only fools would try to ambush a fire demon and the captain of the Castle guards.

  Still, Reynard kept his weapon ready. Fools were everywhere.

  They followed Miru-kai back the way they had come. The fey turned right down a narrow side passage. Like everywhere else in the prison, it was lit by undying torches. They flickered weakly, their light never quite bright enough to see by but still too persistent to allow the comfort of real darkness. Here, they were smaller, closer together, like the beat of a drum growing faster, a double-quick march to lead Reynard to the site of his doom.

  He knew what lay at the end of the narrow passage, even though he’d been there only once, centuries before. No guardsman went there of his own accord.

  It was a room with no name, just the guardsmen’s symbol, a six-pointed sun, painted in gold leaf above the arch of the door. The door itself was covered with another black iron gate strong enough to keep out an army of thieves—which was no doubt why it thoroughly interested Miru-kai.

  “I had no idea this was here,” said Mac. “What is it?”

  “One of the guardsmen’s many secrets,” Miru- kai responded, sweeping a hand before him like a showman revealing a three- headed calf. “Behold a treasure trove, my demon friend.”