“I won’t give up hope,” Kristine said. “I won’t stop believing that there’s a way out of here, a way to break the curse.”
He smiled down at her, but his eyes were filled with sadness.
“Don’t give up, Erik! Think about the baby. You want to see her, don’t you? We can’t let Charmion win. We can’t!”
“But I’ve already won.” Charmion materialized out of the shadows. She stared at Erik, a smug smile on her face. “Haven’t I?” She glanced at Kristine. “Even if you could escape, even if you kill me, there’s nothing you can do to save him.” Head cocked to one side, she nodded slowly as she studied Erik. “I should say the final transformation and the child will arrive within days of each other.”
Erik forced himself to endure the witch’s scrutiny without turning away, though it was humiliating to stand there, without so much as a scrap of cloth to hide his nakedness. Hatred boiled up inside him, filling him, until he thought he would choke on it.
“It grows more difficult each day, does it not?” Charmion mused. “More difficult to maintain your humanity. Well,” she said brightly, “soon you won’t have to worry about it at all. You shall make a delightful pet. No doubt I shall have to keep you tightly muzzled at first, but you will soon learn your place, and if you don’t, why, then I shall destroy you. A wolf skin would look well in front of my hearth, don’t you think?”
Kristine backed away from the cell, sickened by the image conjured up by the witch’s words, by the evil laughter that filled the dungeon like thick oily smoke.
A growl rose in Erik’s throat, a horrible, inhuman sound filled with impotent rage.
The witch cackled with delight as he lunged forward, his left arm reaching through the bars, claws straining to reach her.
Horrified, Kristine watched Charmion taunt him, watched him throw himself against the bars in a vain attempt to reach the witch. Kristine looked away, unable to watch, found herself reaching for a heavy gilt-edged mirror. Before she was fully aware of what she was doing, she lifted the mirror and struck Charmion over the head with all the force at her command.
The witch gasped in pain, then crumpled to the ground amid a shower of broken glass.
“Erik, what have I done?” Kristine stared at him, a look of horror on her face. “Is she dead?”
Dropping to his knees, he reached through the bars to check the witch’s pulse. There was none. For all their power, witches were frail creatures. He quickly searched her pockets, looking for the key to the lock, but it wasn’t there.
“Kristine. Kristine!”
“She’s dead, isn’t she? I didn’t mean to kill her.”
“Kristine, listen to me. You’ve got to find the key or something we can use to break the lock.”
She nodded. Then, with a glance at the fallen witch, she turned and hurried down the corridor.
Erik stared after her, then blew out a sigh. Charmion was dead, and all hope of breaking the curse had died with her.
He swore softly as he ran his hand over the lock. If Charmion had cast a spell over it, he would never get out.
Minutes later he heard the sound of Kristine’s footsteps on the stones, and then she was there. She held up a large brass key. “I found it!”
Erik nodded. “Hurry, love.” He held his breath as Kristine slid the key into the lock. An eternity seemed to pass as he waited for her to turn the key.
His breath whooshed out in a sigh of relief as the lock opened. A moment later, he was out of the cell, holding Kristine in his arms.
“Let’s go,” she said. “Please, Erik, let’s get out of here. Now.”
He nodded, as eager as she to put this place far behind them. Hand in hand, they left the dungeon.
“Find me something to wear and pack us some food,” Erik said when they reached the top of the stairs. “I’ll go saddle the horses.”
“Hurry.”
“I will.” He walked through the silent house toward the front door, the hair along the back of his neck prickling. He could feel Charmion’s dark magic all around him. He paused in the hallway, his gaze drawn to a life-sized portrait of Dominique.
He stared at the painting, wondering how she had grown up in this place of evil witchcraft and still remained so pure and sweet. He knew there were witches who practiced white magic, just as there were others, like Charmion, who delighted in evil. Dominique had been born to be a witch, but she had refused to acknowledge the magic she possessed. He had never truly realized until now how difficult it must have been for her.
With a sigh, he touched a finger to her painted cheek. “Forgive me,” he murmured. “I never meant you any harm.”