Wei Dao's face grew crimson and stormy. The princess was no fool and believed Tang no more than Ruha did;
the prince needed the witch's magic, but he coveted her womanhood.
"How witch love you more?" Wei Dao demanded. "You sssayyiang… not potent."
"Potent enough for now. When fresssh blossoms arrive, I
make better potion."
Ruha pointed her finger toward the wall behind her.
The wayward flame danced from its hiding place and began to skip across the floor.
"You are bad ssson! You risssk mother for-for-" Wei
Dao's sentence sputtered to a halt, and she flung her arm in Ruha's direction. "You risssk mother's life for barbar- ian concubine!"
There was that word again, concubine. Ruha ground her teeth into her gag, biting down until her jaws ached.
She did not leave the golden sands ofAnauroch to become a prince's bauble; if the Shou thought differently, she would show them barbarian.
"Not for concubine, for wu-jen." Tang's head started to turn in Ruha's direction, and she barely managed to guide her dancing flame beneath a brazier before his lecherous gaze fell on her face again. "And risk is mossst sssmall."
Wei Dao shook her head violently. "Already… over the wall!"
Whatever the princess said to the prince, it drew his attention away from Ruha. The witch gestured with her finger, and the lamp flame darted from its hiding place.
"What you think he tell… Hawklyn?" Wei Dao demanded. "What you think witch say ifssshe essscape, too?"
Ruha forgot about her dancing flame. Fowler had escaped! She doubted the half-ore could report anything useful to Vaerana, but at least the witch would not have to add his death to her already overburdened conscience.
She circled her finger, guiding the lamp flame, which had curled toward her captors, back toward her.
Prince Tang scowled at his wife. "Why do you not tell me sssooner?"
"You at work in lizard park, leaving me to chase ssspies!" Wei Dao countered. "Perhapsss wise prince ssshould…"
Whatever the princess said, it angered her husband greatly. Tang raised his fist; then, when Wei Dao did not
flinch, he turned away and swept a shelf clean of several porcelain jars. They shattered on the floor, releasing a cloud of fine, multihued powders. The prince let his chin drop and stared into the billowing dusts, his eyes focused someplace far beneath the bricks.
The lamp flame reached Ruha's side. She beckoned it around behind her, scorching her insteps as she guided it between her sandaled feet. Soon, the witch felt a tongue of fire licking at her fingers; then she caught a whiff of burning hemp. She began to move the flame back and forth, never allowing it to rest beneath her bindings for more than a second at a time. The syrupy perfume of minced ylang blossoms still hung in the air, but not so heavily that she dared let the acrid fumes of a rope fire spread through the chamber.
When Prince Tang finally raised his head, he had regained the characteristic composure of the Shou. "What can half-man tell Vaerana Hawklyn?"
Wei Dao lowered her eyes. "J(isss impossible to sssay.
Guards do not sssee him leave Cinnamon House during night, but neither do they sssee witch go-and we find her in apartment of Lady Feng."
"Then we assume most wretched prossspect." The prince took a copper beaker from a shelf and held it beneath the drainage spout of the oil press, then opened the valve. The sound of trickling fluid echoed through the vault, and the tangy smell of the ylang blossoms grew overwhelming in its cloying sweetness. "Perhapsss half- man report mother's abduction, but that isss crime of
Cypress, not Ginger Palace."
"Vaerana Hawklyn… woman," Wei Dao observed.
"She know we do anything to ransssom mother!"
"But she doesss not realize we must." Tang did not look up as he spoke. "It is no sssecret that Lady Feng hasss won favor ofYen-Wang-Yeh. Ssso, when Vaerana Hawk- lyn hear of worthy mother's abduction, what doesss she think?"
Wei Dao furrowed her carefully plucked eyebrows.
"That Cypress needsss Venerable Scholar of Eighteen
Hells to sssteal spirit ofYanseldara, ofcourssse."
Ruha nearly howled as the lamp flame scorched her knuckles, for she had been listening so intently to her captors' conversation that she had neglected the tiny fire.
Having deduced already that Lady Feng had been abducted for the purpose of stealing Yanseldara's spirit, the witch found it less surprising that the Shou would cooperate with the kidnappers than that they seemed to think Cypress remained in good health. She moved the lamp flame a safe distance behind her and resumed eavesdropping.
"… more." Prince Tang closed the drain valve and car- ried his copper beaker to a marble-topped table. "Vaer- ana Hawklyn hasss no reason to think Cypress requires more from usss to complete ssspell."
A sly smile crept across Wei Dao's painted lips. "Ssso she is looking wrong way at aussspicious time. Perhaps it is good… essscaped, wise husband." The princess cast a spiteful glare in Ruha's direction. "Now only witch threaten sssafe return of worthy mother."
"That sssoon change." Tang removed the stopper from a small earthenware flask and poured the contents into his copper beaker, then pricked his finger with a needle.
He dribbled several drops of blood into the mixture.
"When ssshe drinks thisss, her only wish isss to obey me."
Feeling herself flush with outrage at the prince's plan,
Ruha took several deep breaths. Her best chance to leam more about the theft of Yanseldara's spirit lay in exploit- ing Tang's base cravings, and the witch knew such a plan would fail if anger showed in her face. She tried to calm herself by thinking of the Alam'ra Wall, a beautiful oasis where the sweet waters poured from a cliff of white stone. At the same time, she beckoned the lamp flame closer and resumed the burning of her ropes. One way or another, she would need her hands free. Whether she succeeded in manipulating the prince or not, she had no intention of allowing him to pour his potion down her
throat. Besides, Ruha knew better than to think the princess would stand idly by while she tried to win
Tang's confidence. The witch had seen the antagonism between her father's wives often enough to know that
Wei Dao was jealous of her position and would do what- ever was necessary to keep her husband from taking a consort.
Prince Tang stirred his concoction with a long glass rod, then poured it into a pewter chalice. He motioned to
Wei Dao and started toward Ruha.
"Do not frighten wu-jen," he said. "For bessst effect, she mussst drink potion of her own accord."
The witch tested her bonds, found they still held, and lowered the knot into the lamp flame. Even she could not smell the hemp being scorched, so thickly did the cloying reek of ylang oil hang in the chamber. She continued to strain at the rope until her captors were almost upon her.