“Do you recognize anything?” asked Nika from the passenger’s seat of the van. She’d asked that same question every few minutes since they’d left, but Madoc refused to lose his patience with her.
“No. Any luck on your end?”
“Not really. Every once in a while I think I’m getting close, like she’s weakening, but then it’s gone and I can’t sense her anymore.”
Madoc had been keeping tabs on the clock each time he felt Nika’s excitement flutter through their link. After watching the interval between them decrease slowly, he was convinced that Tori’s mental defenses went down every time she had a contraction. They were about six minutes apart now, by his calculation.
He shot a look into the back of the van, where Tynan hid from the sun. He met the Sanguinar’s icy gaze. “Do you have a plan for when we find her?”
“None of us know what to expect,” said Tynan, “but this certainly won’t be the first pregnant woman I’ve tended. I’ll do what I must to keep her alive.”
There was no mention of the offspring, and Madoc guessed it was intentional.
“There she is again,” said Nika, her voice high with excitement. “I can almost—”
Her words cut off with a cry of pain. She bent forward in the seat so fast the seat belt caught and held her.
Madoc looked at the clock. Only five minutes had passed. They were running out of time.
He laid a comforting hand on Nika’s shoulder and stepped on the gas. He hated seeing her suffer like this, but there was only one acceptable way to end it now: find Tori.
Nika panted through the pain and he felt an increase in the flow of power between them. Their connection had strengthened at an amazing rate over the past few hours, as though Nika knew just how to make it happen. Of course, the fact that the colors in the luceria had settled to a bright, snowy white might have had something to do with that.
They were stuck with each other now—at least for as long as Madoc lived. The only way he would be able to let her go to a man more deserving of her now was through his death.
“Not going to happen,” said Nika through clenched teeth. “I’m keeping you. Just you.”
As much as he liked hearing that, he wasn’t sure how she’d feel if he failed to save Tori. Anger and resentment were ugly things and could grow faster than cancer. He’d seen it happen before.
“Just drive. We’ll fight about this later,” she told him.
Madoc smiled at that. He liked it that she automatically assumed they’d have later. She wasn’t pushing him away yet.
Maybe she never would. The thought was enough to make him daydream like a little girl, but there wasn’t time for that now. He had a sister to rescue.
“Any word from Paul or Andra?” he asked loudly enough for Nicholas to hear him in the back.
“Not yet. I’ve left them ten thousand messages, so I’m sure they’ll call when they’re back in cell phone range. I did get a report from Briant, though. He interrogated Ricky and found signs of Synestryn taint in the boy’s mind. The kid has no idea where Tori is. All he knew was that he was ordered to take Nika to a shopping center, where someone would pick her up.”
Madoc glanced into the rearview mirror to say something to Nicholas, but the words fell out of his head. Behind him, the lay of the land, the slope of the hillside they’d just climbed, matched perfectly with one of Tori’s memories.
He slowed the van, careful to not cause a wreck with the other vehicles behind him. The road here was undivided and relatively empty.
“You see something, don’t you?” asked Nika.
“Yeah. Hold on.” He maneuvered the van, making a U-turn. Behind him, the rest of the caravan followed.
He drove back the way they’d come, turning off onto a gravel drive leading into private land. The drive was bumpy, but he was able to keep sight of the land he recognized and follow it.
The gravel path ended near a barn so old it was falling down, and there was no way this vehicle would make it over the rocky ground.
“Nicholas, let everyone know we’re close, but we’re going to have to go in on foot.”
They parked and piled out of their vehicles. Gearing up was quick and efficient. Madoc helped Nika slide on an armored leather trench coat and face shield, just in case. He wasn’t planning to let her get close enough to combat to need either, but he wasn’t taking any chances.
Her blue eyes flared a moment before she doubled over in pain. Madoc caught her against him and held her while the spasm passed.
“She’s close,” said Nika, breathing hard. Sweat had beaded up along her forehead and all color bled from her skin. “She knows we’re here.”
That meant the bad guys might, too. “Time to move,” he shouted. He took a strong hold on Nika’s waist and helped her over the rocky ground.
As they got farther, he got more matches between the terrain and Tori’s memories. It had been dark when they’d brought her here, but there were enough similarities that Madoc had no trouble spotting the way she’d come. A few hundred yards later, the vegetation began to show patterns of wear where lots of feet had trampled it down. Those thin trails began to converge until they dropped off over the edge of a rocky outcropping.
Madoc had to jump down about six feet, but as soon as he did, he saw the mouth of the cave. It looked unchanged from the image Tori had given him, and accompanying that image was a primal burst of fear. She hadn’t wanted to be taken in there. Even as a child, she’d known to fear that darkness.
“Here,” he called up to the rest of the group.
He reached up for Nika, easing her down beside him. He waited until the whole group was ready, their swords drawn, before he stepped inside.
Darkness engulfed him, along with the strong smell of animal and decay. This was definitely the kind of place Synestryn loved to hide.
Madoc pulled enough power from the air around him to fuel his night vision, silently showing Nika how to do the same through their connection. He felt the subtle tug of power leave him and knew she’d caught on without trouble.