He felt his skin grow cold, then hot; his throat choked, and his stomach knotted. As he struggled to control himself, astonishment turned to something darker, in the blink of an eye.
He flushed again, hotter this time. From “how could they,” the thought turned to another.
How dare they!
His hands knotted into fists; his stomach cramped. He clenched his jaw so hard he thought his teeth would shatter. He choked back an exclamation of pain and outrage.
Firesong continued to flirt, without a single glance at him.
His heart pounded until he shook with the rhythm and blood roared in his ears. His jaw ached as he clenched it tight. Firesong leaned closer to Darkwind and murmured something that made the other Adept laugh aloud, throwing his head back and showing a fine set of white teeth. Firesong laid one elegant hand on Darkwind’s shoulder.
Rage flared, fed by jealousy, into an all-consuming conflagration which left room for only one thought.
I’ll—I’ll eviscerate him!
Though which “him,” he couldn’t at that moment say. He struggled with his numb, impotent anger, fought with the feelings that threatened to bind him where he stood.
Something dark uncoiled like a newly-awakened snake, deep inside him. It oozed through his veins and tingled along his nerves.
For a brief moment, his rage lacked a target, torn as it was between Firesong and Darkwind equally. But then, as Darkwind made to snatch at a feather from his bondbird’s tail to give to Firesong, it all turned against the interloper.
How dare he!
And suddenly, as soon as he
had
the target, his anger was no longer impotent.
The darkness filled him, burned his fingers, longing to be unleashed. He felt power rising in him, rushing to his summons eagerly, flowing into him, all too familiar from the anger-fueled mage-attacks of Momelithe Falconsbane; power that was poised to tear the guts right out of Darkwind’s treacherous body and fling them back in the bastard’s face—
—tear the guts from—
—tear—
Realization froze him in place, just before he let the power loose to turn the interloper inside out.
What am I doing?
He stopped himself, appalled, before the power got away from him; hauled it back and quashed it; dispersed it, let it drain out of him in a rush that left him trembling, this time not with anger, but with horror.
I nearly killed him—
—
nearly
—
—
oh, gods—
Rage turned inward and ate itself, and with a strangled sob of terror, he whirled and fled the garden.
He dashed up the stairs to the second story, blinded with panic, with fear, and with tears of shame. There was only one thought in his mind.
I could have killed him. I could have. I almost did.
Panic gave his stumbling feet the strength his body lacked. He had to get away, away from everyone else, before something worse happened. What was he? What had he become?
Worse
yet—what was he still?
A monster. I’m a monster. I’m the Beast....
Falconsbane was alive and well, and living inside
him.
Waiting for a chance to get out, or better still, looking for a way to make An’desha into the kind of sadistic, perverted. twisted horror he had been.
He heard the running footsteps of someone following him, and turned at the top of the stairs, intending to send whoever it was away, far away from him—away from one irrevocably contaminated with the lurking shadow of Mornelithe Falconsbane. He wasn’t thinking any more clearly than that; he only knew that no one should be near him.
But he didn’t get a chance to say anything, for it was Elspeth who had followed him, hard on his heels. He had been misled by the soft sound of her bare feet into thinking she was farther behind him. She didn’t stop when he did; she ran up the last three stairs and caught him up in her arms and in an impulsive embrace as soon as he turned and faced her, ignoring the fact that she was dripping wet and so was the brief tunic she wore. That simple embrace undid him completely.
Oh, gods....
He collapsed against her without a thought and began to weep, hopelessly; she held him against her damp shoulder, and stroked his hair as if he had been a very small child caught up in a nightmare. In a moment, it didn’t matter that her tunic was wet; tears of pain and panic burned their way down his face and into the sodden cloth, and his throat ached with the effort of holding his hysterical sobs back. He simply clung to her, a shelter, a sure refuge, and she supported him.
“An’desha, it’s all right,” she said quietly, over his strangled sobbing. “Dearheart, it wasn’t what you thought it was! Darkwind and I are bonded and Firesong knows it, and Darkwind knows how Firesong feels about
you!
They were only teasing each other, dear, truly, and they would never, ever have done that if they had any idea how hurt you were just now. We just all thought you were tired and wanted to be left alone, and Firesong’s had mischief in him all day.”
“But you—” he got out, through the tears. “You—”
How she knew he was trying to ask why she had followed him, he had no idea—but she knew, or guessed right, and gave him the answer.
“I was the only one close enough to see your face,
ke’chara.
It was only play, and now they’re teasing Kero. You were so quiet that we all assumed you’d join in after you revived a little. No one else knows you ran off. You mustn’t let things like this bother you so much!” She held him very tightly for a moment, and he felt the warmth of her concern flowing over him. He
wanted
it to help; he wanted to feel comforted.
It did nothing to thaw the frozen center of his fear.
Worse, she only thought he’d fled, like some stupid jilted lover, like an idiot in a ballad. She hadn’t a clue why he was falling apart like this.
He had to tell her. She had to know. It might be her life he threatened next.
Would
be, if Falconsbane got loose.
“That’s not—” He fought the tears back as they threatened to choke him into incoherence. “Els-peth, it wasn’t
that—didn’t
you feel it? I was angry, and power just—took over and I almost struck Darkwind! I almost killed him!” He pulled away from her, afraid that he would somehow contaminate her as well. “It’s Falconsbane!” he choked out. “He’s still—here, he
must
be, he’s still controlling me and I—I—”
He began to shake, trembling with absolute terror. How could he have done that? How could it not have been the Beast within?
Yet she did not draw away from him as he was certain she must, and when she pulled him back against her shoulder he did not resist.
“Is there somewhere up here we can go to sit for a while?” she asked quietly, as the tears began again. He waved vaguely to the right, and she supported him as she steered him away from the staircase and into the sitting room with its view from among the tree branches. She helped him down onto a cushion and sat beside him, still holding him, until his shaking stopped.
“Let’s start over,” she said quietly as the sun set somewhere beyond the trees, and thick, blue dusk gathered about them. “You were obviously tired, out-of-sorts, and we thoughtlessly came trampling in to destroy what little peace and quiet you had. That put you further out-of-sorts, right?”
He nodded, his stomach churning, only half of his mind on what she was saying. How could any of this matter now?
“Then, already unhappy and angry with us, you
thought
that Firesong was trying to seduce Darkwind. What you really saw was just Firesong teasing someone who is a good enough friend to tease back.” He heard a definite tone of wry amusement in her voice. “I was told by a-a Shin’a’in friend that Hawkbrother teasing usually involves a lot of innuendo and flirtation. She told me that I might as well get used to it, since it’s as stupid to get upset over something they grow up with as it would be to become upset because birds fly. So—I got used to it, and I’ve been known to give as good as I get.”
“S-s-so I’ve got no choice but to get used to it, too?” he said, with a touch of anger getting past the tears, momentarily distracted from his deeper and weightier fears.
He felt her shrug. “If you don‘t, you’re only setting yourself up for more pain,” she replied logically. “An’desha, I don’t know if you’ve ever felt strongly about anyone before, but there is one thing you had better get into your head right now. You
don’t
go into a pairing intending to try and change someone to suit you. They were themselves long before you came along. You do go into a pairing ready to compromise.”
He shook his head numbly, his entire soul rebelling at the idea that she thought his troubles were no more serious than simple hurt feelings, and once again she divined what he meant though he could not say it.
“Huh ... it’s not that?”
He nodded, then shook his head helplessly.
“It’s not that, and it’s more than that?”
He sniffed, and nodded.
She paused for a moment, and thought, her brows creased. “All right. I’ll start with what’s simplest. Now, listen to me and
believe
me. Darkwind and I are lovers, partners, and friends; there isn’t much that is going to come between us, and Firesong knows that. He also knows that I am not Tayledras, and that I would be very, very hurt if what you saw and heard was anything other than friendly teasing. So does Darkwind. That’s one of the compromises
we’ve
made.” Then she laughed dryly. “More than that, he knows that there is a very real possibility that
he
would be very, very hurt as well—physically! I have quite a few faults, An’desha, and I have a very bad temper. I do
not
care to share Darkwind with anyone, and I will
not
be humiliated, especially in front of others. If I thought that was going to happen, well, someone would need a bandage or splint.”
“Oh,” was all he could say.
“So—for the answer to the situation that made you angry in the first place and triggered all this, if I don’t have a reason to feel jealous or humiliated, and I’m the most jealous wench in Valdemar, certainly
you
don’t!”
Uncertainly, he rubbed at his burning eyes with the back of his hand and coughed. A certain Shin’a’in proverb sprang immediately to mind. Not a flattering one, either. “But they say that the—”
“The lady is always the last to know.” She snorted, a most unladylike sound. “Yes, but ‘they’ don’t reckon on bondbirds and Companions, both of whom would tell tales, I promise you. Vree doesn’t much care for Firesong’s bird Aya, and he likes me and Gwena both; he’d babble like a scarlet jay either to me or to her if Darkwind got up to something with Firesong that I didn’t know about.”
An’desha wiped his eyes again. It certainly sounded logical. “But—”
“But that’s giving Firesong no credit whatsoever for any kind of feelings, honor, or decency; that’s assuming that he is as shallow and light-minded as he would like us to think. That is not fair to him, and you know better. For that matter, so do I.” She took his chin in two fingers, and angled his face towards hers so that he had to look into her eyes.
“Ke’chara,
he is a Healing
Adept.
Don’t you realize what that means? Of all people, you should. For all that he seems light-minded on the outside, he
cares,
more than anyone I have ever seen. He cares for
you,
and I think he has surprised himself by how much he cares for you. He has put a great deal of himself into the Healing of you, and he will literally empty himself for you if you let him, right down to the dregs. He is as decent and honorable as any Herald I know, and that is the greatest compliment I could give anyone.”
An’desha swallowed slowly past the great lump in his throat. “I—”
“He has his faults, plenty of them, but failing to care about you and what happens to you is not one of them. He and I are rather alike when it comes to matters of the heart. Maybe it’s the blood we share, I don’t know.” She looked very stem, and he was forcefully reminded of Need. “Give the man some credit. He has the capacity for great love, and he’s not going to risk great love for something trivial. It was nothing more than a game. He would never, ever jeopardize anything having to do with you.”
He had to believe her. She knew; she knew people, and she knew Firesong and Darkwind. He blinked, his eyes feeling gritty and sore, and nodded. Then his fear rose in him again, worse than before, when he realized what he could have done
for no cause.
Somehow that made it all worse.
“But Fal—” he began, with a wail of despair.
She cut him off with a look and a finger placed against his lips. “Falconsbane had nothing to do with the way you reacted. Being far too ready to think yourself hurt did, but not Falconsbane. He is gone, and good riddance.”
“No,” he replied, with heat. “This time you don’t understand! Even if he’s gone, he’s still a part of me, he’s corrupted me, he’s gotten into the way I think and react and—”
“Hell, no,” she said firmly. “Horseturds. For one thing, I doubt that Mornelithe Falconsbane ever cared enough about anything or anyone to
ever
feel jealousy! In order to become jealous, you have to care for and value something besides yourself, you know.”
That took him aback; it was something that had never even entered his mind. He had to nod cautiously. Falconsbane had certainly never cared for anyone—only valued them as prizes.
She smiled grimly. “As for your own reaction and how strong and irrational it was—perfectly ordinary people have moments of jealousy as terrible as anything you just experienced. It happens all the time.” Her smile turned into a grimace of pain. “Unfortunately, Heralds see the aftermath of that kind of jealousy all the time, too.”
“I’m
not
ordinary,” he began.