"But what about Gabriel?" Kaitlyn said. It was the first thing she could think of.
"He can stay, too."
"Without going in the house?"
Before Mereniang could answer, Rob spoke. "Look, nobody's deciding to stay right now. This is something we've got to think over - "
"It's the only place you'll be safe," Mereniang said. "We've had a lot of visitors over the years, but we've asked very few to stay with us. We do it when they have no choice - no other safety."
"Are there any here now?" Kait asked, looking at the Fellowship behind Mereniang.
"The last died a long time ago. But he lived longer than he would have in the outside world - and so will you. You are part of our race, and the crystal will help sustain you."
Lewis was twisting his baseball cap. "What do you mean, 'part of your race'?"
Timon spread his hands. "All psychics are descendants of the old race. Somewhere among your ancestors was one of the people of the crystal. The old blood has awakened in you." He looked at each of them earnestly. "My children, you belong here."
Kait didn't know what to say. She'd never felt so confused and disoriented in her life. The Fellowship was nothing that she had expected, and the discovery left her numb, in shock. Meanwhile, the web was a jumble of conflicting emotions that made it impossible for her to tell what any particular one of the others was thinking.
It was Rob who saved them, speaking steadily. "We're proud that you think we're good enough to join you, sir," he said to Timon. He'd regained his natural courtesy. "And we'd like to thank you. But this is something we're going to have to talk over a bit. You understand that." It was a statement, but Rob scanned the faces of the Fellowship questioningly.
Mereniang looked vaguely annoyed, but Timon said, "Of course. Of course. You're all tired, and you'll find it easier to think tomorrow. There's no hurry."
Kaitlyn still felt like arguing with somebody - but Timon was right. She was swaying on her feet.
Tomorrow they'd all be fresh, and less emotional.
"We'll talk to them again about Mr. Zetes then," Rob whispered to her under cover of the meeting breaking up.
Kaitlyn nodded and glanced around for Gabriel. He was talking to Lydia, but he stopped when he saw her looking.
"Are you going to be all right?" she asked him.
His eyes were opaque - as if they'd filmed over with gray spiderweb. "Sure," he said. "They've got a little cot for me in the toolshed."
"Oh, Gabriel... Maybe we should all stay there with you. Do you want me to ask Meren - "
" No," Gabriel said vehemently. Then he added more smoothly, "Don't worry about me. I'll be fine. Get your sleep."
Walls, walls, walls. Kaitlyn sighed.
Then, oddly, he said: "Good night, Kait."
Kaitlyn blinked. Had he ever said good night to her before? "I - good night, Gabriel."
Then Mereniang gathered them up and took them into the house, leaving Gabriel with a couple of the men.
It was as they were entering the house that Kaitlyn remembered a question she'd forgotten to ask.
"Meren, do you know about the inuk shuk on Whiffen Spit?"
"Timon knows the most about them."
"Well, I was just wondering why they were there. And if they meant anything."
Timon was smiling reminiscently. "Ancient peoples started the tradition. They came down as traders from the north and left some of their stone language here. They called this a place of good magic, and they built their friendship signs on the spit that points to it."
Timon was still smiling, lost in thought. "That was a very long time ago," he said. "We've watched the world change all around us - but we have remained unchanged."
There was a note of pride in his voice, and a tinge of arrogance in Mereniang's face.
Kait looked at Timon. "Don't you think change is sometimes good?"
Timon came out of his reverie, looking startled. But no one answered her.
Kaitlyn's bedroom was very plain, with a bed built into the wall, a chair, and a washbasin under a mirror.
It was the first time she'd slept alone - without the others - in a week. She didn't like it, but she was so tired she fell asleep quickly anyway.
Alone in the tool shed, Gabriel was awake.
So Mereniang had "looked into their hearts," had she? He smiled wryly. What the Fellowship didn't seem to realize was that hearts could change. He had changed since he'd come here.
It was a change that had started last night. Last night on the wharf when he'd discovered his feelings for Kaitlyn - and Kaitlyn had made her choice.
It wasn't her fault. Strangely enough, it wasn't Kessler's, either. They belonged together, both honest, both good.
But that didn't mean Gabriel had to stick around and watch it.
And now, tonight, his last hope had disappeared. The people of the crystal couldn't free him. They didn't even want to. And he'd seen the disgust and condemnation in their eyes.
Live here? In their outbuildings? Face that condemnation every day? And watch Kessler and Kait romancing each other?
Gabriel's lips drew back from his teeth in a fierce smile. He didn't think so.
I should be grateful to the Fellowship, he thought.
They've shown me what I really am, simply in contrast to what they are. Back in the old days I'd have joined the Dark Lodge and hunted these gutless wimps out of existence.
It was a fairly simple equation. He didn't belong with the good guys, the white hats. Therefore, he must belong with the other side.
Not a new revelation, but a rediscovery. Kait had almost made him forget what he really was. She'd almost convinced him that he could live on the light side, that he wasn't a killer by nature. Well, tomorrow she'd see how wrong she'd been.
Gabriel stepped back a little to look at the body on the toolshed floor.
The man's name had been Theo. The Fellowship had sent him to spend the night out here - whether as companion or guard Gabriel didn't know. Now he was in a coma. Not quite dead, but getting there.
Gabriel had mind-linked with him to take knowledge from his brain. Including the knowledge of a secret trail through the otherwise impassable forest.
The extra energy had been nice, too.
Now the only thing Gabriel was waiting for was Lydia. He'd whispered a few words to her in the rose garden, asking her to come tonight and meet him. He was fairly certain she'd show up.
And then Gabriel would ask her if she really wanted to spend the next seventy years with a commune of doddering old hippies. Or if life might not be better back in sunny California, where Gabriel had the feeling that Mr. Zetes was setting up a little Dark Lodge of his own.
Lydia was weak. He thought he could persuade her.
And if he couldn't - well, she could join Theo on the floor. Lewis would be unhappy, but what did Lewis matter?
For just an instant an image flashed through his mind of what would happen if he could persuade her.
What would happen here, to the Fellowship, once he gave Mr. Zetes the information needed to home in on the white house. It wouldn't be a pretty picture. And Kait would be in the middle of it...
Gabriel shook the thought off and bared his teeth again.
He had to at least have the courage of his convictions. If he was going to be evil, he'd be evil, all the way. From now on there were no half measures.
And besides, Kessler would be here. He'd just have to take care of Kaitlyn himself.
A footstep sounded outside the shed. Gabriel turned to meet Lydia, smiling.
Someone was shouting.
Kaitlyn could hear it even in her sleep, as she slowly drifted toward consciousness. By the time she was fully awake, it was more than one person, and the web was singing with alarm.
She ran out, pulling on her clothes. Broadcasting What's happening? to anyone that could hear.
I don't know, Rob sent back. Everyone's upset. Something's happened...
People were running in the hallways of the white house. Kaitlyn spotted Tamsin and swooped on her.
"What's going on?"
"Your friends," Tamsin said. She had olive-dark eyes, contrasting strangely with her golden hair. "The boy outside and the small girl..."
"Gabriel and Lydia? What?"
"They're gone," Mereniang said, appearing from a recessed room. "And the man we had guarding Gabriel is nearly dead."
Kaitlyn's heart plummeted. Endlessly, it seemed. She couldn't move or breathe.
It couldn't be true. It couldn't. Gabriel wouldn't have done a thing like that...
But then she remembered how he'd looked last night. His gray eyes so opaque, his walls so high. As if he'd lost all hope.
And she certainly couldn't sense him anywhere in the web. She could feel only Rob and Lewis and Anna, who were coming to join her now in the hallway.
Rob put an arm around her to support her. Kaitlyn needed it; she thought her knees might give out.
Lewis was looking wretched and unbelieving. "Lydia went, too?" he asked pathetically. Mereniang just nodded.
"But they can't have gone far," Kait whispered, finding her voice. "They can't get through the forest."