Sam's telepathy was still dimmed in this world of clay. Academically, it would be interesting to figure out why. Was it because she was made of clay at the moment, and thus some
biological distinction component of her mutation wasn't functioning properly? Was it because there were so many voices of Wills in this cauldron that it blew out her telepathy, like trying to hear a single voice in a crowded stadium? Or did the gallons and gallons of Will around her head serve as a sort of buffer, like a malleable version of Magneto's helmet? The actual mechanics of it didn't matter so much at the moment, but it was good to keep in mind.
That being said, there's more than one way to skin a cat. It is an
established fact that when Will merges together with something else with a mind, that there's a
link connected between them. It turns out, when telepathy is short on the ground, just smashing your brain into someone else's brain is fine.
Sam has some war, conquest and glory in her recent past. Heaven knows, she has just ridden atop a car in a chase scene on a highway, plummeting off of the overpass and shattering through a skylight which is one of the most metal things you can do in life. She's dived into the muck of time and brought a vampire back to life through sheer force of energy. Oh, and she's also the incarnation of the goddess of war and fate, so, you know, she has her credentials in order.
Wyll the Ogre, on the other hand...did
not have a resume or a track record. Technically, Wyll the Ogre had never
existed -- never coming out of the cauldron, never living and breathing and
fighting as a completely unique identity. She talked a big talk and had home court advantage, but ultimately, she was just a form and role that the Wyldclay had taken, once in the past -- a large, smelly, muscular suit that had been used to terrify children. Those memories poured down the link at Sam -- flashes of a medieval hamlet on fire, snapping a pitchfork in twain with her jaws, a kid in a burlap sack thrown over her shoulder. But it was just a one-off, so long ago; a flickering candle to the raging fire that was the Morrigan.