She felt nothing at all through the telepathic web. It was like being connected to a glacier.
"Go on," Mr. Zetes said.
Gabriel glanced at Kaitlyn, then at the white-haired man.
"I'd rather kill you," he said conversationally, to Mr. Zetes.
Kaitlyn didn't get it at first. She thought he might just be stating a preference, rather than refusing.
Mr. Zetes, though, looked unamused. Forbidding. He put one hand behind him.
"If you're not for me, you're against me, Gabriel," he said. "If you won't cooperate, I'll have to treat you as an enemy yourself."
"I don't think you'll have time," Gabriel said, and took a step toward him.
Kaitlyn grabbed at the metal mesh of her cage. Her numbed brain was finally getting things together. She wanted to laugh hysterically-but it didn't seem right.
Don't kill him, she thought wildly to Gabriel. Don't really kill him-he's crazy, don't you see? And we've got to do things-police, an institution-but we can't actually kill people.
Gabriel tossed her the briefest of glances. "You're the one who's crazy," he said. "If anybody ever deserved it, it's him. Not that your idea didn't have its points," he added to Mr. Zetes. "Especially in the rewards department."
Mr. Zetes's eyes shifted from Kaitlyn to Gabriel during this exchange. They narrowed, and he nodded slightly.
Kaitlyn was waiting for some sign of fear. It didn't come. Mr. Zetes seemed calm, even resigned. "You won't change your mind?" he asked Gabriel.
Gabriel took another step toward him. "Good night," he said.
Mr. Zetes brought his hand from behind his back, and Kaitlyn saw that he was holding a dark and very modern, very nasty-looking gun.
"Baron, Prince-guard," he said. And then he added, "If you make a move now, these dogs will jump up and tear out your throat. And then there's the gun-I've always been a very good shot. Do you think you can dispose of all three of us with a knife before we can kill you?"
Gabriel laughed-a very disquieting sound. Although his back was to Kaitlyn now, she knew that he was giving Mr. Zetes his most dazzling, disturbing smile. "I don't need a knife," he said.
Mr. Zetes shook his head, gently and disparagingly. "There's something I'm afraid you haven't realized.
Joyce hasn't tested you since you formed this ... unfortunate linkage, has she?"
"So what?"
"If she had, you would have discovered by now that it's quite difficult for a telepath who is already in a stable link to reach outside that link. Nearly impossible, I believe. In other words, young man, except for communications within your group of five, you've lost your power."
Kait could feel the disbelief surging in Gabriel. His walls were lowered now, his attention was focused elsewhere. Then she felt something like the drawing back of the ocean just before a tsunami-a sort of gathering in Gabriel's mind. She braced herself-and felt him unleash it.
Or try to. The wave, instead of crashing down on Mr. Zetes, seemed to crash around her and Gabriel instead.
It was true. He couldn't link with anyone else. Not to communicate with them-and not to harm them.
"And now, if you'll sit down in that chair," Mr. Zetes said.
Kaitlyn's eyes shifted to the chair. She'd barely noticed it before. It stood on the opposite side of the room from the door, and it looked frighteningly high-tech. It was made of metal.
With the gun in front of him and a dog on either side, Gabriel backed up to the chair. He sat.
Mr. Zetes went over and made some quick movements, stooping once. When he stood, Kaitlyn realized that Gabriel was now restrained in the chair by metal cuffs at his wrists and ankles.
Then Mr. Zetes stepped behind the chair. Two winglike devices swung forward. In another instant, Gabriel's head was held motionless by a device that looked as if it were meant for brain surgery.
"The crystal can do more than just amplify power," Mr. Zetes said. "It can cause excruciating pain-even madness. Of course, that was what happened with the pilot study." He stepped back. "Are you quite comfortable?" he asked.
Kaitlyn was remembering the pain that had resulted from being in contact with a tiny shard of the crystal, a piece the size of her fingernail.
Mr. Zetes went over to the towering thing with the jagged growths in the center of the room. For the first time, Kaitlyn realized that the metal stand that supported it was mobile. The entire structure, though obviously heavy, could be moved.
Very carefully and delicately, Mr. Zetes was bringing the crystal to Gabriel. Tipping it slightly. Adjusting it. Until one of the jagged terminals, one of the growths, was resting against Gabriel's forehead.
In direct contact with the third eye.
"It will take a while for it to build. Now I'm going to leave the room," Mr. Zetes said. "In an hour or so I'll come back-and by then I think you might have changed your mind."
He walked out. The dogs went with him.
Kaitlyn was alone with Gabriel-but there was absolutely nothing she could do.
She looked wildly at the door of the metal cage, pulled at it with the strength of desperation. She only succeeded in cutting her fingers. It took her about two minutes to discover that there was no way she could affect it, with fists or feet or the weight of her body.
"Don't bother," Gabriel said. The strain in his voice frightened her into going over to look at him.
He was completely immobile, his face white as paper. And now that Kaitlyn was still, she could feel his pain through the web.
He was trying to hold it back, to close himself-and the pain-off from her. But even what little got through to her was terrible.
The pressure behind the forehead-like what she had experienced with the crystal Joyce had used, but indescribably worse. As if something alive were swelling there, trying to get out. And the heat-like a blowtorch directed against that spot. And the sheer black agony-Kaitlyn's knees gave out. She found herself half lying on the floor of the cage.
Then she pulled herself up to a sitting position.
Oh, Gabriel. . .
Leave me alone.
"I'm sorry," she whispered, saying it and sending it at once. I'm so sorry.. . .
Just leave me alone! I don 'I need you. . . .
Kaitlyn couldn't leave him alone. She was locked into it with him, sharing the waves of agony that kept building. She could feel them break over her, spread out infinitely around her. Spreading, swelling ... to include all of them. All five who shared the web.
Kaitlyn! a distant voice shouted.
The connection was shaky, tenuous. But Kaitlyn recognized Rob.
It wasn't just pain. It was power. The crystal was feeding Gabriel power.
Rob-can you hear me? Lewis, Anna-can you hear me?
Kaitlyn, what's happening? Where are you?
It's them, Gabriel! We've got them! It's them! For a minute, despite the screaming of her nerves, Kaitlyn was simply delirious with joy.
We might lose them any second, Gabriel said. But Kaitlyn could feel what he felt-there were no walls between them now. The crystal had annihilated those. And his relief and joy were as strong as hers.
Rob, we're in Mr. Zetes's house. You've got to find out somehow where that is-and fast. Kaitlyn told them about the study, and the panel. It might be closed again, but Lewis can open it. But you have to hurry, Rob-come quick.
If you want to find us alive, Gabriel added. Kaitlyn was amazed that he was even speaking coherently.
She knew that he was taking the worst of the pain himself. She felt a surge of admiration for him.
Keep it to yourself, witch, he told her.
It was an endearment, she realized. Witch. She supposed she'd better learn to like it.
You could have told Mr. Zetes you'd think about killing me. You could have bought yourself time, she said.
I don't bargain with people like him.
Kaitlyn, through the waves of pain that were starting to be tinged with crimson and carmine, felt an intense pride and triumph. You see? she thought to Rob. Mr. Zetes was wrong about all of us. You see how wrong?
But Rob wasn't there anymore. The connection had been too fragile-or now the pain was wiping everything out.
She leaned against the metal cage, dimly feeling its coolness. Hang on, she thought. Hang on. Hang on.
He's coming.
She didn't know if she was saying it to Gabriel or to herself, but he answered. You believe that?
It roused her a little. Of course, she said. I know he is. And so do you.
It's dangerous. He's risking his own neck by coming here, Gabriel said.
You know he's coming, Kaitlyn said, able to say it with perfect assurance because she could feel it, directly.
"Rob the Virtuous," Gabriel said, aloud. He made a contemptuous sound like a snort-which was marred because he almost immediately gasped in pain.