She sighed. “From what I understand, yes. I’ve no active role in the research. It was Myra’s ...” Her throat closed on the name.
“And if the magic matches, the enhancement is stronger?”
She drew her brows together. “The blood has to match to avoid what you went through, theoretically. The magic ... yes. Silas’s serum would do nothing for me, because he has no soothsaying ability, unless I had something latent in my bloodline that matched with his. Which I do not.”
“But Merritt believes magic is tied to spirit first and blood second.”
She searched Owein’s pale face, his hard gray eyes. “Why, Owein? What are you thinking?”
He took a step away from the door. “I have an idea that will help us. That won’t hurt anyone else.”
Hulda balled her hands into fists. “You are not going back to Ohio.”
But he shook his head. “No, I want to make my own serum. Something that will give me an edge over Silas, when he comes back.”
Whenhe comes back, notif. Shivers coursed up Hulda’s spine. Exasperated, she asked, “How, Owein? We can’t very well draw it from your soul and amplify it.”
“We won’t need to. We’re going to make it from my body. From my first body,” he clarified. “I want to go back to Blaugdone Island and dig up my grave.”
Chapter 21
July 9, 1851, Boston, Massachusetts
Hulda tripped over her tongue, which produced a string of nonsensical syllables in a poor facsimile of actual words. “I ... I don’t know that it will work, Owein—”
“I presume you’re going to tell me that Oliver Whittock and Owein Mansel likely have different blood types.” Owein leaned against the wall, glanced at Ellis, then at the cracks of light coming through the pillow-stuffed windows. “I’ve considered that. But even if the blood is not the same, the magic is. It’s identical, as is the spirit. A perfect match.”
Hulda sank onto the edge of the bed, careful not to disturb her babe. “That’s true.” She adjusted her glasses, then took them off and wiped them with the fabric of her skirt, trying to order her thoughts. “But it’s no guarantee, Owein. You might hurt yourself again. If your body reacted badly, it could be worse than—”
“I am done playing games with him, Hulda.” He spoke lowly, and for the first time since she’d met him as a defiant house, she heard the age in his voice.
She sighed. Slid her glasses over her ears. Took time to consider. Owein waited with surprising patience, as always. “Myra—” Huldacleared her throat. “Myra would have jumped at this opportunity for the sake of science. Legally, I have to get it approved by the board—”
“I’ll take full responsibility.”
Hulda chewed on her tongue. “Ido... agree. I don’t wish to, Owein, but I do agree that this needs to end. I am so, so very tired of being afraid.” She hated how her pitch rose as her throat squeezed around the words. She blinked rapidly. Owein crossed the room and sat beside her, taking her hands in his, which only made her want to weep more. Lord knew she’d wept more since meeting these people than in the rest of her life combined, but so many of those tears were joyous ones, and therefore could not be fairly counted against them. “I don’t know how to do it myself.But,” she pressed when she saw Owein’s lips part, “I can reach out to Lisbeth. She works at the laboratory. She understands the science. But she’d have to come to Blaugdone Island.”
Owein searched her face. “Silas left the bay.”
“For now.” She steeled herself with a deep breath. “We do not know how long until he evades the Queen’s League and breaks past their guard. Because he will, one way or another.” She shifted uncomfortably. “On a day brimming with fog.”
Owein nodded. “Then now is the safest time for us to act.”
Hulda nodded. She would send a coded telegram. The facility in Ohio had no telegraph, for the sake of secrecy, but she would contact Waynesville. Someone checked for messages daily. She would have to relay news of Myra as well. As for the children ...
Twisting around, Hulda reached out and ran the tips of her fingers over little Ellis’s foot. So small, so innocent, so breakable. She thought of Danielle, her parents, the Babineauxs ... but none seemed safe enough. A tear dropped from her eye and trailed down her cheek, then another.
Owein wrapped his arms around her. Permission enough to crumble, again. At least Hulda wept quietly, with an iota of dignity.
After, leaving the house guarded, she went to the post office. Her first telegram went to Waynesville, as promised. Her second, however, went to Mrs. Thornton, BIKER’s lead housekeeper. She was very near retirement and currently stationed in New York.
I am asking a personal favor, for which you will be compensated. I have three children who need immediate care out-of-state, one who will require a wet nurse. They will arrive with funds. Please take them elsewhere. Do not tell me, nor anyone, where, until I contact you again. Thank you.
Hulda managed not to cry at the post office, at least. But the moment she stepped out onto the public street, she sobbed.
Ash and Aster came bounding up the path as soon as the little skiff docked at Blaugdone Island. Owein knelt down to pet them, letting them dance over his legs and lick his face. He didn’t love being licked, but he knew the dogs needed it, and he tried not to limit their need to express themselves. The ride home had felt long, the boat too empty without Mabol, Hattie, and Ellis. Hulda and Merritt had been eerily silent, Fallon pensive. Owein ... he was everything. Sad and angry and hopeful. Hulda had received a swift response from Lisbeth; it would be a few days before she arrived, but Owein could prepare in the meantime.
The day had grown old, the sun nearing its set. Owein left his bag of things at the dock and walked toward his family’s graves while Ash and Aster greeted Fallon in a similar fashion. Owein noted that Whimbrel House stood still, undamaged but empty, though two men in blue uniform guarded the Babineaux house—Lion, a blond alteration wizard who kept to himself, and another man he didn’t recognize. That’swhere William Blightree was recuperating, then. Owein should visit. The old necromancer had watched over him when he was in similar straits; the least Owein could do was return the favor.