191
Loyalty, Duty
Devon watched the mounted scout come up the hill, glancing regularly back to the faint wet streak below. They’d had light showers the night before, and a heavier one in the morning, and though now the sun was out, not a cloud in sight, he was concerned. Rationally, he knew that with the ground as dry as it had been, the water could sit on the surface because it couldn’t soak in yet; emotionally, he feared they’d have to unpack his mud wheels for the wagons, slowing them down – and this was the first of several such dips in the terrain.
“Basically firm, sir”, was the report. “A few places, we sank maybe the thickness of a saddle blanket, but no more. Two spots, the water was disappearing.”
To Devon the sinking spots sounded like sod softened by the rain. “Then we go on. Tell the plank crew to be alert, just in case.” Again he wished for the manpower having Conal’s command join him would have given, but he understood that Conal’s mission required speed. As the column began moving, Devon imagined what the place might look like with a railroad winding on a shallow grade, trestles spanning low spots.
Kevin MacNeil stared. “Why would the longboat be gone?”
“I don’t know, sir. I thought you should know before I go looking.”
“Do that – and get us a boat!”
They ended at the rail, meeting Captain Heath, some time later. Midshipman Keith stood with him. The captain nodded to the junior officer.
“Lady Lumina took the boat, my lord”, Keith said to MacNeil. “She told Midshipman Donnel it was Lord MacNeil’s wish.”
“My... what?” Kevin asked, surprised. “I haven’t spoken to either of them!”
“Why would the Healer misrepresent thin– Oh!” Elizabeth exclaimed. “Kevin, she meant your father.” Her voice was gentle.
“But he hasn’t– he couldn’t– how...?”
“Does he not wish to be strong again?” Elizabeth asked softly. Rita nodded, having reached the same conclusion; Kevin nodded in assent. “Then it would be his wish for a Healer, did he know there was one.”
“And I’ve spoken of how badly he fares. So when she knew we were here....” He gazed toward Dennisport. “But that’s a long row!”
“It is”, Heath agreed. “And so we are getting under sail. She is a foreigner, prohibited from setting foot on our soil.” With a curt nod, he turned and began issuing orders.
“That’s the end of a leisurely boat excursion”, Rita said, with a frown at Rigel for his evident relief. He plainly delighted in the work of the ship, but being “trapped” in a row boat made him claustrophobic, or so he claimed – and while he’d have enjoyed Elizabeth’s company, he’d now enjoy it much more in much less cramped space.
Heath was furious. “The anchor chain is jammed!” He swore profusely, to Elizabeth’s and Rita’s amusement; he was usually very proper around the British Lady. “That is no accident! She has corrupted my officers!”
“Hardly all of them, captain”, MacNeil remarked. “But I think we may yet catch her – a boat is ready, rigged with jib and driver. If I might take Midshipman Keith and the men he has selected....?”
Heath’s gaze didn’t leave the dot that was the receding longboat. “Take them”, he growled. “Catch that witch.”
Rita had to jab Rigel with an elbow to stifle his protest. Seeing that, Elizabeth understood, and pulled them aside. “The captain does not believe the Lady Lumina is a witch”, she admonished softly. “He is angry, and uses the word as is done commonly, for a woman who has pulled others under her influence. As she has”, the queen added firmly.
Lumina smiled as she hopped up on the stone steps on the side of the quay. She hadn’t asked anyone to sabotage any pursuit, but worshipful and enthusiastic hands had done so. Not far away – but too far to be in time – the longboat pursuing them was tangled in its own mast and rigging, a mess that would take at least ten minutes to straighten out. By then she would be beyond being stopped.
Kevin waited, frustrated, until Father Jonathon finished the prayers and gave the benediction. Past the priest, he could just make out his father’s face – a face that for the first time in years held no sign of pain. Near the face was a nun’s habit... of sorts; Lumina’s robes didn’t quite match a nun’s raiment. Close enough to pass from a distance, from within speaking distance it was plainly wrong. He wondered how Father Jonathon had been roped in – later, when he asked, the priest merely said, “I was here, and your father asked for the Sacrament. What priest would turn away?” And so under the guise of the holy Eucharist, the Healer had done her work.
“Kevin”, his father called softly. As he came forward, he saw no note of triumph in Lumina’s face; rather, the Healer seemed to be in pain. Indeed, as he neared the bed, she grasped at his arm and gasped.
“Oh! Contractions!” The Healer looked briefly bewildered. “My babies are coming!”
Father Jonathon reacted swiftly. “Midwife!” he called into the hall, with a voice that could make itself heard over a singing congregation. A servant, whoever was nearest, went running.
Elizabeth was in the room immediately, at Lumina’s side. “We will speak of violation of law -- and trust -- later, Lady Lumina”, she chided. “For now – come!”
Reginald MacNeil’s eyes went wide; Kevin covered quickly. “Father, you remember Lady Meriel? We have been traveling together.”
“Meriel?” the elder MacNeil mouthed, watching his Queen. Then a smile tugged at his face. “Ah, yes. A most interesting hour for a visit, is it not, Meriel?” he asked.
Aware that no one was looking but him and Kevin – Lumina’s eyes were closed hard – Elizabeth stuck her tongue out at him. The laugh that came to the head of House MacNeil died in a spasm of pain.
Lumina’s eyes snapped open, fiery. “You must not breathe hard! You are not yet whole!” she snapped. “Lie in – oh!” Hands flew involuntarily to her abdomen. “Meriel, help me – quickly!”
“Two babes, a wee lad and a wee lass”, the midwife announced less than half an hour later to a waiting Kevin MacNeil and his Queen. “And she’s not through, yet, she isn’t. M’ lady”, she chastised Elizabeth, “y’ought not stand while y’wait.” With that, she zipped back into the birthing room as quickly as she’d popped out.
“Kevin, we can’t leave Rigel and Rita on
Resolute”, Elizabeth said, as she heeded the midwife’s words and dropped to a seat. “Justice trumps the law.”
“If you say so, your Majesty”, MacNeil responded. The final pair of words came softly, almost silently, and with a rise of his eyebrows:
Is that a royal decision?
She glowered. “Blast you, I can’t do that! Not now! Not after all this!”
Kevin chuckled. “Ah – you wish my father to continue an unknowing violation of the law?”
“For the sake of the kingdom, yes. You can say it was an error, due to his illness.”
“And you standing right here?”
She smirked. “Who, Lady Meriel? What importance has she? The Queen, as everyone knows, is on retreat.” She patted the curls falling on her shoulders. In a mannerism picked up from their outland visitors, Kevin marked a point in the air with a finger.
Captain Heath himself opened the gate in the railing. First, though, he spoke. “Lord Rigel, Lady Rita, Master Anaph, Squire Austin, Bard Landon: you know you are violating Kingdom law by going. Lord MacNeil, the elder, in his illness may not – but you know.”
Rigel nodded. “We’ll straighten that out later – so long as you don’t keep us.”
Resolute’s master shook his head. “I lie within the Duke’s anchorage; I bow to his wishes for those not members of my crew. Yet I wish you to know: there will be trouble.”
“Not here, I think”, Rita questioned.
“No, not here – the MacNeils are good lords, and loved. But later.”
Rita grinned. “We’ll worry about ‘later’ when it arrives. Right now, we have a friend in need.”
Heath’s visage softened. “Such loyalty, I cannot fault.” He opened the gate.
“We will find that this was meant to be, I judge”, Anaph commented on his way by. “This is no simple visit.” Leaving a puzzled look on Heath’s face, he swept by, down the long plank slope to the stone wharf.
Landon cheerfully met the puzzled look. “It’s a return”, the Bard asserted. “She had no choice.” Cheerful major chords changed to mysterious, incomplete minors as he strummed his way down behind Anaph.
It was an odd meal, in an long-unused small dining room near the family’s private quarters in the castle. Reginald MacNeil lay in a fresh bed that stood across the head of the table, propped up with pillows, breathing carefully and wincing occasionally, but presiding over a meal for the first time in years. Alfred, tears in his eyes, stood proudly in attendance on his primary master, now rejuvenated as he himself had been – only more so.
Kevin MacNeil couldn’t keep his eyes off his father, to Rita’s amusement and annoyance: seated beside him, she frequently had to catch his wine glass when he bumped it or landed it badly, or scoop up bites of food that tumbled from his fork. Meriel, sitting with Rigel, understood Rita’s amusement, but knew also that their guests just didn’t understand. She leaned close. “Rigel, he has been on death’s door for two year’s, on the stoop for two before that. He hasn’t walked in years. To you he seems a man held in bed by infirmity; Kevin – and all of us – see a miracle.”
“No miracle”, she heard Anaph say, though he wasn’t near her. From the expressions on faces, she guessed only she and Rigel could hear. “Unless you call the gift itself a miracle.” She assumed only the Druid would hear a reply, but wasn’t going to risk it; later, though, she’d admonish him to refrain from tricks hard to explain in her kingdom.
“Son, stop staring at me like some museum exhibit or sideshow rarity”, Reginald said clearly, then breathing deliberately slowly afterward. “The good Lord sent His servant, and I am stronger!’ The elder MacNeil managed to grin while breathing methodically. “And when she’s done with me, Parliament beware!” Alfred had to help him raising his glass, but he managed the toast. “Damned fools”, he muttered after drinking, then paid for it with an attack of pain from his lungs.
“She’s got a ways to go”, Landon stated, regarding the Duke intently. “Frustrating for her, trapped between childbirths.”
“For her? For me!” Reginald answered. “I could use a tad less of these knives in my lungs!”
“I can ease the pain”, Anaph offered. “It will not be healing, but it will be less like knives.”
Reginald regarded him for a long moment. “Pain restrains us from harmful things. “Will I be harmed, if this restraint is lessened?”
“No”, Landon answered, at the same moment Anaph said, “Barely.” Bard and Druid regarded each other.
“Switch the pathway”, Landon said. “Instead of pain, give something else – a tickle, perhaps. It will be more comfortable, and if he’s really harming himself, he’ll know to take it easy.”
Anaph looked distant. “Switch....”, he mused. “Landon, how do you see these things, and I don’t?”
“Probably because all I can do is see”, the Bard replied, only a little bitterness creeping into his tone. “Anaph, if you can tell the air to stay warmed on one side of a line you pick, you can do this!”
“I wish you could show me”, Anaph responded softly. “But... give me your hand.” Landon’s hand in his, the Druid poked at the back of it with a fingernail. To everyone in the room, he was staring intently – just with his eyes closed. Reginald MacNeil turned his gaze away; the Snatched watched, accustomed to it. “Okay, there’s a line... now if I–“
“Ow!” Landon yelped. “Harmony, Anaph – wrong path.” He tickled his own hand. “Try that.” It was a dozen seconds later that his face lit up. “You got it – a poke feels like a tickle. Now you just have to find the pain pathways in his lordship’s lungs and tell his brain ‘tickle’ instead.”
“Yeah, make it sound easy.” It was the young Anaph, first learning his way as a Druid, that his friends heard. “Well, I know I can do it.” Chief Druid again from head to toe, he walked to the bed at the head of the table, and took Lord MacNeil’s right hand.
Moments later, the lord of St. Denis island grinned, then grimaced. “Saints, that’s irritating!” he declared, taking a deep breath sharply. “Brother Anaph, thank you for the relief – and brother Bard, for the suggestion.” He shuddered. “Tickling in my chest... a warning I cannot ignore, indeed. Yet what, exactly, is the danger point?”
“Mere tickling tells of no real harm”, Landon advised. “But if it’s tickling, and you do something then that would bring a tickle, that could do damage for which the Healer would scold you.”
“So no tickles upon tickles. I can abide that.” He started to sit up, then dropped back. “Healing or no, I am still weak.”
“In time”, Rita assured him, “all in good time. Lady Lumina won’t leave you only partly healed.”
“Then she ought to be done with birthing bairns!”
Elizabeth laughed. “‘Bairns’, is it now? I’d expect to hear that on the Isle of Bruce!”
“There’s Scottish and Norse blood in all of us, lass, and I’ll borrow words as I please!” Reginald fired back with a grin. “To the side o’ which, it enriches our speech.”
Rita cleared her throat. “Lord MacNeil, I suspect Lady Lumina would rather be done with the birthing, herself. As the midwife said, ‘It’s not normal, it’s not! Poppin’ out two wee ones, then falling to sleep with more waitin’ in the oven!’ She’s quite right, too.” She gave him a sharp look. “And besides, the Healing she did took a lot of energy – she’d wait a day before doing more, even without the births.”
“Weird, how she was in control so long, and got caught by surprise”, Austin ventured. “She didn’t ask for it, my lord.”
Landon shook his head. “It isn’t weird.” He glanced at Anaph, who shrugged. “She was meant to give birth here, on loyal British soil. It wasn’t her choice. I’m not even sure it was really her choice to come ashore. Anaph, you know what I mean.”
The Druid sighed and nodded. “It’s possible. I don’t like it, but it’s possible. In fact I think it’s scary.”
“Elizabeth Kennessee”, Rita ventured. “You think she... planned this.”
Landon frowned. “‘Planned’ isn’t the word I’d use – ‘arranged’ is better. You know it wasn’t any normal conception, don’t you?”
Rita gave a bit of a sour smile. “I’d guessed. But she hasn’t really said much.”
“She hasn’t been happy about it – Wise Woman, she’s been a tool. No one likes to talk about that.”
The Duke took a turn at clearing his throat. “If you expect dessert, I expect you’ll explain all this”, he pronounced.
In the birthing room, Lumina lay silent and still. The pause had been a respite, a welcome rest at first, but then she’d reviewed what had passed, and was now furious.
You used me! she accused silently.
I am not a tool!
We are all tools, a voice replied, faint but firm.
There is a task to be done.
Make mine like yours! Lumina demanded.
You have no right–
Who I am gives me the right!
Bullshit, Lumina retorted.
You think power gives you right. Well, let me say something about Power: I can ask Anaph to silence you in the Stone. And I can let these two babes be stillborn, and take the first two as my own!
Silence fell in her mind. Lumina felt the wisp of Elizabeth Kennessee weighing, measuring. Finally there came a rueful chuckle.
The curse of the Healer, the reply came,
powerful because when angered, we bind ourselves with our oaths. You have not learned enough – but you have learned too much.
So be it: have the first babes brought back, and bring forth the other pair. The sentence didn’t seem complete.
Ah.
You wove it all into them while they grew, Lumina realized.
But for my two – it will have to be set on them, and they will grow into it. So be it.
Kennessee’s tone was mildly bitter.
So my two shall be stronger at the start, for the knowledge is a gift, but....
My two will be stronger in the end, because they will have to grow into it. Lumina understood the bitterness.
Elizabeth, I am not your enemy. I will aid your plan – but this is my age, not yours: you must let go.
After the births....
Rita looked around at her friends. The other Snatched understood; she was asking if they approved her being the spokesperson. “Speak wisely”, Rigel quipped. The two shared a grin; for a moment, the world seemed wrong to Rigel, because it was just the two of them, not five. Rita reached over and squeezed his shoulder.
“I must require something of you, or say no more”, said Rita firmly. “Nothing of this may be shared beyond this room.”
“And what penalty have you, Wise Woman?” Reginald inquired. “Or do you trust our word?”
“Penalty?” Anaph asked. He concentrated a moment. “I could fill your harbor with the hill, and the watchtower on it.”
Kevin MacNeil closed his eyes and muttered a prayer. “Father, he can do it – believe me.” The Duke looked to Meriel, who nodded.
“For my part, I trust your word”, Rita cut in. “The character of the son attests to the character of the father.”
Reginald chuckled, then scratched at his chest – and frowned. “Bloody”, he muttered. “Wise Lady, do you advance that as a universal proposition? And you, Gray Brother – if you can topple land into my harbor, can you topple silt out?” Austin laughed.
“I can look”, Anaph answered. “Rita?”
“If you’re like this in Parliament....”, Rita mused. “No, advance it as generally true, and specifically in this instance.” The Duke looked disappointed. “We can speak of the range of application sometime, if you wish.” He brightened. “Now – I repeat: nothing I say, in fact very little of this meal’s discussion, may go beyond this room.”
“I presume you mean beyond the persons in this room”, Alfred ventured, a hand on his Duke’s chest.
Rita grinned. “Always on target, Alfred”, she replied. “Do I have everyone’s agreement?” Nods, as she caught sets of eyes pair by pair, gave assent.
“In a valley to the north, there is a Stone”, she began.
Devon cursed. “Another shower! We should have done this a month ago!”
“But we didn’t”, Chen responded. “You’re the engineer – find a solution.” He was tired of mud, which wasn’t helping his attitude.
“Smart-ass. What would you do?” Devon swore silently as the wagon slipped again on the slope, despite its wide mud-planks.
Chen thought. “Oran talked about spikes on running shoes, for mud.” He frowned, having never seen any, and wondering how to apply that to wagons.
“Spikes”, Devon muttered. “Yeah – we have big nails, and drills, and wooden pins!” He grinned. “Good job, Scout!”
Chen flicked a good, palm-out, British style salute, but Devon was already gone. Well, it felt good to have helped, even if a world of races with special shoes was gone forever..
Rita was pleased; no one had interrupted her. Then an interruption – just as she was about to moved on to how Healer lore had gotten in the Stone – came from outside.
“Enter”, Alfred called, moving to the door.
“Sir, the Lady Lumina says she’ll be birthing again soon, if anyone would like to attend.” The servant looked a bit bewildered at the idea of anyone wishing to watch a birth. Alfred just turned, eyebrows raised in curiosity and question.
“I think she means we should be there”, Rita judged. “We can finish this later.”
Lumina grimaced. “Now”, she said faintly. The midwife looked disapproving, but held the first baby girl so Lumina could touch her. Contractions began, with no evident progress for over a minute – at which point Rita slid into the room, followed by a string of others. Suddenly Lumina knew it was done, as Elizabeth Kennessee’s faint touch faded. No longer overpowered by the experience of childbirth, she took control of her own body and moved things along quickly.
“Triplets. Oh!” It was a cry of pain, and got Lumina’s attention.
“My lord Duke, you should not be walking!” she scolded.
“It only hurts when I move, dear lady.” He winced, belying the claim.
“Come – oh, bother. Anaph, take my hand, and take his. Foolish patients”, she added, not quite under her breath. Duke Reginald grinned weakly and accepted Anaph’s grasp. “Just let my energy – oh, that helps!” Lumina exclaimed as a set of pathways, that Ocean might have described as channels in the surface of the Druid’s aura, opened for her. “Would have done this before, but you were supposed to rest!” she griped. Duke MacNeil’s eyes went wide as he suddenly stood more easily, pain in his joints fleeing... but not totally. “That’s a reminder”, Lumina informed him.
“Lumina – why touch the babe?” Anaph asked softly. “What’s happening?”
She sighed. “Water, please, someone.” The midwife waved to a servant girl. “Elizabeth Kennessee is a conniving bitch! First she plays games with Patrick’s and my child, making four” – she rolled her eyes – “and then she gives two of them a batch of skills and knowledge! That little girl” – she pointed to the firstborn – “will have all the skill and knowledge Elizabeth did, as fast as she learns to talk. And the boy will have everything she knew for being a Druid-protector.” She looked at Anaph. “Think warrior-Druid – she thought of protecting Healers, too.” A water glass arrived and she gulped it. “Wow – giving birth is thirsty work.
“Anyway, I made her fix it so my two will have the same – they’ll just have to grow into it. And – oops! Talk later; time to work. Midwife!” Scowling, at the intruders, at her patient, at the task of holding now the boy baby close for Lumina to touch, the midwife moved to her work.
Austin’s eyes went wide. “Rigel – draw your sword! Anaph, can you....?”
Anaph got the idea immediately. “It’s worth a try”, he agreed. He still held Lumina’s hand, and now reached to Rigel with his other. “Lay the blade across my palm”, he instructed. However much he concentrated on what Lumina was doing, he couldn’t make out details, only feel a sort of rhythm. Going by intuition, he melded his own rhythm with it. Rigel felt a sort of tug at his mind, and thought hard: yes. Again he rode the memories of Lord Jadriano Escobar.
“Five minutes to bear a son”, the Duke commented. “Remarkable. Now – what was that with your sword, friend Rigel?”
Rigel looked to his right, pointedly. The Duke nodded. “Perhaps we should leave the midwife and mother”, he said. Marveling at his renewed mobility, he led the way out and to his own room, where he dropped wearily on the bed. “Wholeness returns, but strength – that takes time”, he gasped, sinking back on pillows that Alfred made appear behind him. “And now...?”
Rigel drew his sword and looked at it. “It looks like a good sword”, he pointed out. “But it’s more than that. It was fashioned by Druids a long time ago, to hold all the skills and knowledge of a certain man – Lord Manuel Jadriano Ferdinado Escobar. He was the most loyal of the Conquistadors to the cause of fighting the Others – the Aliens – and the best, too.” The sword’s current owned shuddered a little at all the memories the blade held. “I’m not totally sure why it was made – maybe he wasn’t sure he’d survive the war, maybe he knew even if they won the Foe would still be around – but it served his purpose: I found it, and while I own it, it owns me. It killed a man who wanted it, but couldn’t make the commitment needed, that it demands.” That memory made him swallow hard; he didn’t understand the greed and grasping of people like Raoul Escobar, and still felt guilty sometimes over all the death. He snapped back to awareness at a touch on his arm.
“It wasn’t your fault, Rigel”, Rita admonished. “Now pay attention.” He realized that Austin was giving an account of that battle – and doing it well, too.
When his squire finished, he nodded. “That memory’s in here, too – sometimes I wonder what I could have done differently, and the sword just brings it all back, the whole thing, every last blade and bullet and bit of blood. The fight took... forever; the sword does it in three seconds.” He grinned weakly. “It remembers all the lessons Lord Escobar could give about fighting the Foe, every memory of every maneuver or battle or planning session – and almost nothing else. But it remembers anything I think is important.
“Anyway – Anaph, you took the knowledge from the sword, and passed it along to the kid, right?”
His Druid nodded. “It’s like the knowledge I got from the Stone: it’s all there, complete, along with whatever Lumina passed on about being a Druid-Protector. When he’s old enough to start learning to use a sword, that boy will – well, give him three years, and no one will be able to beat him.”
Rigel looked at the blade. “Maybe I should hand this over”, he suggested.
Rita laughed. “You won’t get out of it that easy!”
Reginald was looking serious; he raised a hand rather than speak loudly. “Friends, you are plainly foreigners. I fear I shall have to make amends to my Queen for this, but... you have the freedom of the Duchy, as my guests. No one will bother you for being here, unless Her Majesty hears of it and sends her own guards. Now, I must do as the Healer says – rest.”
Elizabeth wanted to kick the old man – “Unless Her Majesty hears of it”, indeed! While she glared inwardly, Kevin spoke up. “Father, I suspect Her Majesty will forgive a great deal, just for having you sound – and back in Parliament.”
“They called you ‘Her Majesty’s lion’”, Elizabeth reminded the Duke. “Sometimes it seemed you were her only friend. I suspect Kevin may be right.”
Reginald MacNeil grunted. “Fine, then. Lady Meriel, if these guests grow tired of the isle, perhaps you could give them the freedom of New Eire.” That would make her masquerade interesting, he thought. Now, why is she playing this game? He fell asleep while working through it.
Lumina slept an entire day after giving birth. The Duke did much the same, except every few hours he awoke to his body demanding to purge itself. His sweat was foul, and he drank water – and occasionally ale – by the flagon. Kevin kept the Snatched busy, touring the ancestral home in ever-expanding arcs. Rita especially fell in love with a cliff overlook, while she wondered if Anaph and Landon were paying attention at all, the way they were always talking together.
Lumina and Reginald MacNeil had dinner together the second day. Both were ravenous. “M’lord, your body had been flushing out diseased and damaged parts”, she said around a slab of turkey breast. “You’ve lost two or four kilos, and your body wants it back.” Healer reached over and touched Duke on the elbow. “But it will come back healthy – strong, and healthy.”
“I should exercise”, he mumbled through some baked seaweed dish.
“No, you should sleep. Your new muscle will be strong, if they have rest – they’ll grow that way.”
He felt the persuasion of the Healer voice, but it didn’t compel him. “Rest to become strong – a wonder if there ever was one!”
Lumina belched, then chuckled. “But first, you have to nearly die, and spend five years in the doing”, she pointed out. “Hardly a bargain, m’lord”.
Reginald stared, then snorted. “I do no believe you cannae do so wi’out the disease.”
Lumina wagged a finger at him. “There’s a difference ‘tween what a Healer
can do, and what she
will do, laddie!”
The Duke guffawed. “No one has called me ‘laddie’ in many years! But as ye’ve given me back years, I’ll let it pass.” Lumina did a table bow, and pondered whether she ought to give him added years.
After dinner, the Duke returned to bed, greeted on the way by servants and retainers who hadn’t seen him walk in clear memory. Lumina went is search of her friends.
“I learned something, in my little contest with Elizabeth Kennessee”, she announced when they’d gathered in the sitting room of the quarters the men were sharing. She looked around to make sure she had everyone’s attention. “If she’d made it to the battle at the Stone, history would have been totally different. If I’m right, she had a way to kill all the Others not just within the boundary of the stones and valley, but even ten kilometers away.”