hands from the steering wheel, one at a time, and practiced my breathing. Then I said, “Could you check the map for the nearest train station? We’re going to be a little obvious if we keep driving this.”
Rhys shook his head, not in the negative so much as to clear out the debris. “I can. Where did you learn all that?”
“An old boyfriend of mine got special training—sort of a demolition defensive-driving course. Then he taught me. The bootleg turns, anyway. We only covered the theory of ramming.”
Lex had always been generous with the tricks he learned. We’d had a blast that week, taking turns pulling bootlegs and speeding in reverse around a big, empty QuestCo parking lot.
Funny, how all roads seemed to lead back to Lex Stuart.
“And he took it because…?”
“Because he got tired of having drivers and bodyguards. His family’s well off. It made him a pretty high abduction risk.”
“That’s lucky for us,” said Rhys, opening the glove box to pull out a map. I glanced at the stretch of his shoulder as he rummaged, suddenly longing for human touch. Any human touch. Rhys. Lex.
You’ve got to admit, the whole driving-lesson thing was ironic. I had only vague suspicions that Lex might be involved with the bad guys, here. But I had absolute proof that the lessons he’d given me had saved our butts. Maybe our lives.
Damn, my life was getting complicated.
Tai Chi is a moving meditation, a choreography of ancient circular motions done slowly and with purpose. Everything resolves into its opposite—expansion into contraction, inhaling into exhaling, tension into release—and back again. Yin and yang. Softness and strength. Mind and body.
I did a few basic forms in my hotel room in Poitiers, just to ground myself for bed. Though there are older, lesser-known combat techniques involved in Tai Chi, its main focus is on harmonizing your Chi, your life energy. After the previous two days, I figured my Chi could use all the help it could get.
It helped me sleep, anyway, despite some children yelling in Italian across the hall.
The next morning I compensated with a more intricate routine, not just to harmonize my Chi but to remind myself of those ancient combat techniques. As my sifu has explained, their seeming mildness gives them a special power. Few people look at Tai Chi and see beyond the synchronized patterns done the world over by senior citizens, children, people in wheelchairs…blatant noncombatants.
They mistakenly equate exclusivity with strength.
As I stepped into the beautiful Wind Blowing Lotus Leaves form, I could hear more Italian shouts. I smiled—easing a blocking arm slowly up, a fisted hand slowly down, feeling the Chi. Moving this deliberately was like swimming through water—and like my regular swims, it was strengthening. Even those children could probably do this.
I turned into a double kick, finished the turn on landing, and sank into a smooth lunge and elbow strike. Then I rose into the form called Fair Lady Works at Shuttles. That, too, had martial potential…but only if I wished it. The power to do injury carries with it the power to choose against doing injury.
By the time I’d finished, turning my palms toward the floor in the original start position, I felt…strong. Calm. Confident.
And not just because I heard the children across the hall being herded off toward the elevator. Because I didn’t have to sink to the level of whoever chased us last night…and because it was my choice to not sink to that level.
Choice. That’s the real power.
A knock sounded at the connecting door to Rhys’s room.
“Magdalene?” Rhys called softly, trying not to wake me if I were still asleep. We’d left the door cracked between us, in case there was further trouble. Only as I glanced up and saw him framed in the doorway did it occur to me that I was wearing nothing but what I’d slept in.
Yesterday’s T-shirt and panties.
“I could go get breakfast while you—” he offered, then stopped, most of him hesitating between the rooms and all of him staring at me with those blue, blue eyes.
I was suddenly, stupidly glad Aunt Bridge had insisted on us traveling together.
For a long moment I just stared back. I had no desire to cover myself—why should I? A T-shirt is hardly a Merry Widow, after all. High-cut blue panties do not a G-string make.
Rhys turned away first. “Why don’t I just do that?”
“A croissant would be great,” I said. “With fruit. And herbal tea, if they have it. I’ll shower while you’re out.”
“I’ll have it in here.” He pushed the door back to a crack.
I considered saying, “Be careful.” Or even protesting that he shouldn’t go anywhere without me. But it seemed overly paranoid, even after last night, and no small bit egotistical.
Instead I called, “Thanks.”
A shower. That was the ticket. Shower good.
Afterward I toweled my hair semidry and combed it, and changed into clean panties and my one clean replacement shirt, a mauve camisole. I gave my face the barest hint of blush and eyeliner, not being a big makeup person, and put on yesterday’s cargo pants and boots.
It’s the price you pay for traveling with just a backpack.
I went to the connecting door and knocked. “Are you—”
Before I could finish, the door swung farther open and I saw that not only was Rhys back from the café, but he was kneeling by the bed, apparently…praying. In soft Latin.
I reminded myself of what he’d said—that he was after the goddess grails only to find the Holy Grail. That put us on distinct points of the religious spectrum, whether we were both ecumenical in our beliefs or not. But…
It felt weird, noticing how well the man wore a pair of jeans while he was reciting the Ave Maria with practiced ease.
I was raised Catholic, Catholic-ish anyway. I know the Ave Maria when I hear it.
It felt weird, noticing how long his dark lashes looked against his pale cheeks as he prayed. It felt wrong.
Not just invasion-of-privacy wrong. Deeper than that.
I started to back out. But with a murmured “Amen,” he smiled toward me, almost in relief, crossed himself and stood. “The food’s on the table. Let’s come up with a plan of action.”
“A plan for finding the Melusine Chalice?” I asked, sitting at the little table by the window. Below us we could see part of the Futuroscope park—a strange contrast to how far into the past we meant to go. “Or for avoiding gun-toting bad guys?”
He lifted croissants out of a paper sack and handed me one. “It’s difficult to avoid people you cannot name.”
I took the roll but hesitated—and it takes pretty heavy thoughts to keep me from a freshly baked Poitevan croissant.
“Do you have a different theory?” guessed Rhys.
“Not a theory so much as a concern.”
He waited, handing me a paper cup of tea with a floral essence.
I said, “I’m worried that we’ve gotten involved with some kind of secret society.”
Rhys sat in the other chair, eyes widening. “If we were going after the Holy Grail, I’d think you were on to something. Ceremonial orders like the Illuminati or the Priory of Scion.”
I took an innocent bite of my croissant and chewed. It was still warm from the oven. Mmm! And he’d brought fruit, too—strawberries, oranges and grapes.
“You can’t mean it,” Rhy challenged, with a laugh. “An ancient order? For one thing,