He would doubly enjoy the moment he took the cretin’s life.
A shaking Morwyn obeyed Aeron’s command and placed the bowl, with Druantia’s blood, back on the heathen stone altar. Aeron relieved Carys of the gem-encrusted daggers at her waist before thrusting her aside with such force she lay gasping on the ground.
“A fitting sacrifice.” Aeron indicated the barbaric display on the stone with a wave of his hand. “Blood of a Roman to rid my land of your plague, and blood of the last direct descendant of a redundant goddess to wipe out the cursed matriarchy.”
Maximus tore one of the flaming torches from its mortise, and satisfaction flared at the surge of anger that flashed across Aeron’s features.
“You don’t have my blood, Druid.”
Aeron snatched up another torch and poised it over the bowl in the center. “I do have your blood, Roman. Caught from the clasp of your cursed brooch.”
His missing fibula. A chill slithered along his spine, but he allowed no emotion to show on his face. “A mere drop. It means nothing.”
“How do you think you found your way through the sacred spiral, Roman? You can’t see it, you can’t feel it, and yet you weren’t deterred from the area as all but Druids are.”
Another chill attacked his marrow as comprehension dawned. The spiral was the powerful magic that distorted the forest and confused his cartographers. The spiral was the reason the Druids had been able to conceal their presence from their conquerors, despite being under their very noses.
“Aeron.” Carys staggered to her feet, her face scratched and bleeding from where she’d fallen against broken stones. “No.”
Maximus didn’t know what she was talking about, but whatever it was appeared to terrify her.
Aeron lowered the torch toward the bowl. “Tell your lover to replace the sacred flame, Carys. You know what will happen if he doesn’t.”
“The fuck I’ll replace it.” He wiped the sweat from his eyes with his biceps. Gods, it was hot. Was this part of the heathen ceremony this madman planned?
Aeron dipped the torch lower, and Carys flung herself to her knees, clinging to his naked calf. “Please stop, Aeron.”
Rage pumped through Maximus, a sweltering counterpoint to his scorching flesh. “Get up, Carys.” It was an order. How dare she beg anything from this Druid?
The torch hovered inside the rim of the bowl. Where the fuck was all the air? He could scarcely draw enough breath to fill his lungs.
“Are you begging me, Carys?” The words were soft. Infuriated, Maximus lunged forward, and yet only managed to sway on his feet as acrid smoke filled his chest.
But there was no fire. Sweat dripped into his eyes, drenched his body, but still he couldn’t move, could scarcely think, yet all the while his skin burned as if jabbed with a thousand candles.
“Yes.” Her voice was strong, sure. “I’ll replace the torch for you, if you replace yours.”
Aeron gave a short laugh. “You must learn your new place, Carys. Slaves don’t make bargains with their masters. If you want to save this Roman from frying, then you must show due respect.”
Carys shot him an agonized glance before returning her attention to Aeron. “I do respect you.” She didn’t sound convincing.
Maximus expelled a breath that seared his lungs and rasped his throat. Jupiter, he felt as if he was being roasted alive.
A dread suspicion surfaced. He shot a glance to the torch dipping inside the bowl, and his guts roiled. The Druid possessed his blood. And was using his heathen magic to burn him alive.
“Let me see how much you want to save this Roman.” Aeron waved the gladius beneath Carys’ chin. “Strip naked and beg me for mercy.”
“Wh-what?”
Maximus staggered forward, lurched against the stone altar. “Don’t do it, Carys.” Every word seared flesh from his throat.
Aeron’s gaze fixed on Carys’ upturned face. “Remove your gown.” Lust dripped from every syllable. “Unbind your hair. Grovel at my feet, you worthless bitch. Or watch him burn.”
Chapter 35
Maximus concentrated all his energy on moving forward, while he focused on the mad Druid whose attention was still fixed on Carys.
She wouldn’t subjugate herself so, but he had no intention of letting this farce continue. He’d crush Aeron, not only for what he was but for what he was doing to Carys.
“Aeron.” Morwyn touched his arm, then flinched back as if the contact repelled. “Even if you escape the wrath of our people, you’ll never be able to hide from the retribution of the gods.”
“Hide?” For a fleeting moment he glanced at Morwyn before returning his silver gaze back to Carys. “This is my destiny. Why should I hide from gods whose power fades beside the one true force of Annwyn?”
“But the Universal Life Force is part of us all.” Carys no longer clung to Aeron’s leg. She appeared to be stealthily retreating. “It’s not more powerful than our gods. It’s a part of them.”
“Which shows how ignorant you are.” Aeron pointed the gladius at Carys’ face and she froze in her retreat. “While trapped in that childhood vision, before Gwydion plucked me from the flames, I caught a glimpse of the source.” For a brief moment, genuine reverence threaded his words. “I’ve learned the secrets of Annwyn, and to control its power is to control the gods.” He gave a mocking laugh. “How do you really think I invoked this spiral? From our weak, splintered deities?”
The bloodied tip of the gladius grazed Carys’ forehead, and Maximus’ heart slammed against his ribs as scalding fear flooded his being. The Druid was insane. There was nothing to stop him from thrusting the gladius through Carys’ brain. Mars, hear my prayer.
And still the Druid ranted. “I allowed them to believe they were instrumental, but their combined contribution is negligible. It derives directly from Annwyn itself. I have the power to obliterate all the minor gods, and tonight I will.”
“You can’t.” Morwyn sounded horrified.
“I can do whatever I wish.” Aeron gave another of his icy smiles. “Gwydion showed me all that could be mine if I became his.” He bent toward Carys, the gladius scarring her cheek with a trail of Druantia’s blood, and the torch left the bowl. Instantly, Maximus sucked in a great, cleansing breath, and strength seeped through his trembling muscles. “But I’m no longer his,” Aeron hissed into Carys’ face. “And after tonight, when I no longer need him, he will no longer exist.”
Another few paces and he’d be in striking range. Mars, keep the Druid focused on Carys so he wouldn’t realize Maximus had regained the use of his limbs.
“And now you may strip for my pleasure.”
“Aeron, I’m begging you. Please let the Roman live.”
Why was she begging that piece of shit for his life? He could save his own skin. And by Mars, he’d save hers too.
“You’re in no position to make bargains. See how his flesh blisters.”
But the torch hovered above the bowl, and the scorching heat was bearable. He eased forward another step.
“I’ll do anything. Anything you command.” Desperation shivered through every word, and a shudder crawled along his spine. Carys didn’t beg. Carys obeyed no man’s command.
But she was doing both in the deluded hope this Druid would allow him to walk free.
As her shaking fingers pulled at the ties of her bodice, his stomach churned with revulsion, and with a primordial roar he swung his torch at the bowl, sending it crashing onto the stone plinth, severing the magic and scattering the sacrificial artifacts.
Before Aeron had a chance to draw breath, Maximus thrust the torch into his face, grinding it into flesh and bone, and as the Druid fell back, gladius flailing, the blade sliced open Maximus’ arm.
Carys scrambled back as Aeron and Maximus crashed to the ground, blood thundering, pulses hammering, at the horrific screams that rent the summer eve. Sweet Cerridwen, not from Maximus. She couldn’t bear to think of him so terribly injured as to emit such bone-s
hattering howls.
The torches fell to the ground, and the scent of roasted flesh polluted the air. As if she was captured in a bloodthirsty vision, she saw Maximus plunge his dagger through Aeron’s right hand, pinning him into the earth, before he snatched up his gladius and raised it to the gold-streaked sky.
Druids rushed from the forest, weapons to hand, but froze at the horrific scene. Panting with fear, Carys crawled to Maximus, where he knelt over Aeron, and covered his back with her body, protecting him in the only way she could.
But already her kin had recovered their senses; already they were screaming their war cries, advancing toward her, and all she could do was cling to his neck, and weep useless tears for the raw burns scarring his blackened skin.
“Wait.” Morwyn was standing by their side, arms outstretched. “Aeron murdered our queen. He intended to kill our princess, but the Roman saved her.”
Maximus’ body shuddered beneath her, as if he gave a silent laugh. “You lose, Druid. Your whole life has been for nothing.”
Bile gurgled as Carys saw the ruined mess of Aeron’s once coldly beautiful face. Only his eyes remained the same, silver, eerie. Inhuman.
And glowing with malice.
“You lose too, Roman.” His voice rasped, snakelike. “She’ll never be yours. She has no future.”
“Her future is with me.”
Aeron’s lips, what remained of them, stretched into a mirthless smile, a black abyss filled with blood and decay. “You have no future. It’s too late. The spiral turns upon itself, spewing death to all who oppose, death to all outside, death to Rome—”
As Maximus plunged his gladius down, Carys squeezed her eyes shut, but still felt his muscles bunch, felt the blade sear through flesh and bone as he impaled his gladius through Aeron’s throat.
“It’s over.” He turned, took her in his blood-soaked arms, and she buried herself into his strength, his warmth, his charred, battered body. He pulled his gladius free and she looked toward the Druids, all prepared for the ceremony, all armed, all twisted with confusion and doubt and grief.
The sun dipped on the far horizon. Its last dying ray glowed with sudden purpose, and arrowed between the capstone roof and the top of the sacred altar, flooded the mouth of the holy mound and penetrated the entire length of the passage into the central chamber itself.
She couldn’t see it, but she knew, because as the sun set on this day, the longest day, it was the only moment such phenomena occurred.
But it didn’t matter. Aeron was no longer in the mortal realm. He hadn’t completed the Renewal, hadn’t claimed his sacrifice.
Druantia.
A dry sob escaped. He had taken their queen, but the spiral was not renewed. It would die; their world would crumble; Rome would triumph.
A mighty roar, as if from the Earth herself, thundered from the mound, followed by a fierce wind that gusted from the mouth, ripping plants and grass and tossing stones and debris.
“What’s happening?” Maximus gripped her shoulders. “The Druid’s dead. Who’s controlling this?”
She didn’t know who or what was controlling it. She didn’t even know what was happening. But as the earth shifted beneath her knees, as the wind whipped into an unnatural frenzy, and as the forest surrounding the holy hill began to shiver with the rage of deceived gods, understanding flooded through her.
“This is what he planned all along.” She had to shout to make herself heard above the horrific roar. “The spiral’s collapsing.” Her eyes widened as she remembered the rest of Aeron’s words. “It’s going to kill everyone outside, Maximus. We have to warn them.”
He pulled her to her feet, seemingly unhindered by the extent of his injuries. Bushes and saplings, uprooted, catapulted through the air, birds took to the skies in screeching alarm and Druids struggled to remain upright as the earth undulated beneath their feet.
Clinging to his hand, she led him through the forest, and although night had now fallen, fires blazed at irregular intervals, lighting their way. The air pulsed, like a giant lung, as if the spiral readied itself to Renew under its own terms, its own unknown conditions.
As they emerged into the clearing, a mighty thunderclap rocked the forest, an explosion so intense it might have existed only in her own mind, her own ears, except within a heartbeat the aftershock radiated outward, hurling them forward unimaginable distance.
Gasping from the impact onto the hard ground, she turned to Maximus, who still had her hand in a bone-crushing grip. Waves of malignant power rushed over them, through them, yet ultimately left them undisturbed.
“We’re not going to make it.” She could barely speak, her chest ached so.
“We have to try.” Without letting go of her hand, he helped her up. “It’s all we can do, Carys.”
Within a couple of steps, she stumbled over a small furry body. A sudden blaze in the distance shed an eerie glow and she sucked in a shocked breath.
“Maximus.”
All around, creatures of the forest and birds of the air lay on the ground, slain as they fled the devastating fury.
His jaw tightened and their eyes locked. But neither spoke, as if uttering the words, vocalizing the horror, would turn possibility into reality.
Even if that possibility was already the reality.
Still the belligerent waves pulsed outward, yet around them, as if they weren’t there. As if she wasn’t there. And she tightened her hold on his hand and drew close to his side, calling on Cerridwen to protect Maximus as she protected her.
Cerridwen.
“We must go to the Cauldron.” It was suddenly imperative, as if the answer awaited her there.
He didn’t answer, as though he knew an answer wasn’t necessary, that already it was too late to save anyone at the settlement or even beyond. Who could know how far or how viciously this distorted spiral might expand?
They crested the ridge that hid the Cauldron from the forest, and her heart slammed against her ribs, choking the breath in her lungs.
A column of white-blue flame raged directly next to the Cauldron. A flame that pulsed and throbbed with energy, which leaped up into the starlit sky, yet was rigidly contained within a perfect circle.
“What magic is this?” Maximus’ voice was hoarse, as he dragged her forward. “What’s your goddess doing, Carys?”
Violent wind whipped past them, and the pulsing spiral screamed at primal level as if infuriated at being diverted from its purpose. But still the great flame sucked in the wind, sucked in the spiral, sucked in the great, destructive power before it could encroach farther into Cymru.
He pulled her to the edge of the flame. It gave off little heat, and she stared, uncomprehending, at its root.
A small pile of pebbles was the only indication that shards of magic bluestone hid an illicit circle of distortion. The circle where she had intended to hide Maximus to keep him safe.
The circle that, by capturing within its compressed boundaries the devastating force that swept across the land, now protected her entire people, and the Roman Legion, from annihilation.
Chapter 36
“I created my own spiral.” It no longer mattered what she told Maximus. There was nothing left to hide from him. “I wanted to save my love.”
He stared at her, his face almost unrecognizable with the blackened skin and strange blue hue from the circular flame. And yet she would know him anywhere, however he looked, because she didn’t need her eyes to see him. All she needed was her heart.
“Cerridwen told you to do this?”
“I don’t know.” Had Cerridwen guided her hand? “This eve didn’t go the way I planned.”
She had intended to hide Maximus here, where he would have been protected from any battle. But there had been no battle. Had Aeron ever intended there would be one? Or had he expected to control the collapsed spiral, bend it to his will, use it to eradicate all those who stood against him?
But with his death, no longer enchained by Aeron’s dar
k incantations, the spiral of Annwyn had erupted with rage. This magical circle, far from shielding Maximus from harm, would have imprisoned him. And as it sucked in the destructive power of the gods, Maximus would have been slain.
Because of her own selfish actions.
He looked up the fiery column, then glanced around the eerily illuminated countryside. Still the spiral pumped from the forest, and still the white-blue flame captured its fury.
“The rest of Cambria is being spared.” Finally he turned his attention back to her. “Roman and Celt alike.”
Was this what Cerridwen had wanted all along? The flame glowed, unnatural and hypnotic, and ice trickled over her arms.
Do not let us be extinguished.
“The flame in the darkness.” The flickering, vulnerable light she’d tried to reach for in her vision. The tiny glow in the blackness of Rome.
Only the future. Cerridwen’s cryptic whisper, from when she’d been in Maximus’ old quarters, vibrated with shocking clarity through her brain.
Hating Maximus would never change the past. But if she had chosen to hate her enemy in the future, she would have ensured the devastating destruction of all she held dear, all she loved.
By loving Maximus, and defying her people, her gods and her fellow Druids she’d been driven to create this illicit spiral. And by attempting to save Maximus from the Druids rage, she had instead harnessed the immortals fury. Inadvertently, she had protected them all.
“The Legion will investigate.” Maximus’ fingers tightened around hers, and she let out a dry sob. The Legion would decimate her traumatized kin, no matter how brave their resistance.
“Carys, move.” His voice was harsh as he tugged her brutally toward the forest. “We don’t have much time. Your kin need to leave this area before the Legion arrives. Do you understand?”
She shot him a comprehending glance as they ran through the whipping grasses. “Yes.” Relief meshed with awe, and she shivered with fear. Maximus was going against his beloved Rome to repay the debt of life she’d given his Legion. Would he ever be able to forgive her?
The Druid Chronicles: Mystical Historical Romance Page 29