A Promise Kept
Mallery Malone
Copyright © 2013 Mallery Malone
Cover Artist: Nicola M Cameron
Editor: Jennifer Miller
First electronic publication, 2013
Samhain Publishing Ltd.
Second electronic publication, 2020
Serendipity Publishing, LLC
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Chapter Thirty-Four
Epilogue
Author’s Note
About the Author
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Chapter One
Ireland, 1016
Conor mac Ferghal welcomed death.
He pushed a dying raider from the point of his sword, moving closer to the thick of the fighting that centered on two giants on a mist-shrouded hill. Their dress and the wicked-looking battle-axes they wielded bespoke their Viking heritage. Even in the heat of battle, Conor admired the way the fair-haired warriors worked together, standing back to back and holding their own despite the odds against them.
And the odds were against them, Conor knew. His admiration of their skill would not stop him from vanquishing them. He would have vengeance, and he would give no quarter. He wasn’t known as the Devil of Dunlough because of his charity.
A shout cut through the screams and groans of the wounded and dying. “The Angel of Death! The Angel of Death comes!”
Everyone, friend and foe alike, seemed to halt as a form materialized from the cloying mist. A pale horse broke through, bearing a rider wrapped head to toe in bleached garments that seemed to make rider and horse more apparition than reality. The conical iron helmet and sword gleamed in the weak afternoon sunlight as the pale warrior drove the horse up the hill to the Northmen.
“Stand your ground, men,” the Devil called, crashing the hilt of his sword into a raider’s face. “Remember what befell our village. Leave the supposed Angel of Death to the Devil of Dunlough!”
The pale warrior now stood beside his companions, wielding the shimmering sword in graceful, deadly arcs. As he drew ever closer, Conor noticed how the taller two men protected the smaller. Their leader, perhaps? The Viking’s conical iron helmet, with nose and eye guards, concealed from Conor all but a pair of startling lavender eyes that blazed with hatred and a chin devoid of even the slightest beard.
Very few of the Northmen went without beards. A youth, then. Conor refused to feel compassion for him. Becoming a warrior meant preparing to fight and preparing to die. He had seen younger ones than this meet their end in battle, mere boys who did not deserve death. This one did. Pushing to the forefront of his men, the Devil engaged the enemy.
The young Viking moved with a lethal ease that belied his years, parrying the blow Conor dealt him. He smiled as the familiar bloodlust coursed through his veins. It was always thus, when he found an opponent worth his skill and concentration. The darkness would come later, after the blood had dried.
The two combatants matched each other blow for blow, neither uncovering a weakness in the other. This one would not go down easily. The thought had no more than crossed Conor’s mind when one of the Viking’s companions stumbled. The youth buckled, thrown off balance as the other Northman fell at their feet. When the young Viking turned to the fallen man, Conor seized the opportunity, slashing his adversary deep in the thigh.
The resulting cry of pain was so feminine that Conor checked the killing blow that would have bit deeply into the leather tunic and cleaved the man in two. It was a futile effort. The tip of his sword pierced the pale leather and embedded itself in the Viking’s side. He gave Conor a look of utter disbelief before slumping to the ground, his hand stretched toward his fallen companion.
Conor took a deep breath, seeking the freshness of the early spring breeze over the smell of blood and death as he scanned the field. His opponent had been the last to fall. Even now his men availed themselves of whatever riches they could glean from the fallen among their enemies, a curious mixture of Irish and Northmen. Satisfied that all was secure, he knelt beside his fallen enemy. With a sense of foreboding, he removed the iron helmet. What he saw stole his breath.
The Viking was not the untried youth he’d thought, but a woman, the most striking woman he had ever seen. The helmet had obscured a heart-shaped face with high, sharp cheekbones and near translucent skin. Hair so pale it was almost silver was pulled into a plait as thick as his wrist. Her brows were gossamer wings, as were the sooty lashes that fluttered against her cheeks. A blade-thin nose perched above full, pouty lips and a defiant chin that reduced her features from ethereal to fascinating. The skin was pulled taut across her cheekbones and throat, an indication of the unkind life a bandit led. Even in unconsciousness there was a guarded demeanor to her expression that gave her an air of otherworld mystery.
“A woman!”
Conor glanced up. Ardan, his second, stood beside him, protecting him as always. Ardan was a hardened warrior with a ruddy, weathered face and red hair sprinkled with gray. He had the unswerving loyalty of one whose life had been saved many times by the man he gave allegiance to. A man of few words but great wisdom, Ardan had been Conor’s friend since the younger man’s days in fosterage, and one of the few people he trusted without question.
The surprise on Ardan’s face matched his own. “Yes, it is a woman.”
Ardan spat down the hill. “You’ve strange luck with women trying to kill you.”
“True.” Conor let the comment pass. If any other than Ardan had said the same to him, that man would not get home under his own power. “At least this one had the decency to meet me face to face on the field of battle, unlike my dear-departed wife.”
He fingered the scar that ran down the left side of his face, a gift from his late wife. “This land will fall into the sea before I let a woman put an end to me.”
Seeking a pulse, Conor touched the fallen woman’s neck, wondering at the frisson of awareness that coursed along his fingertips. He found her life-beat. It was there, but weak.
As he brought his hand away, his fingers brushed a neck-chain. He pulled it free of her tunic to discover an exquisite crafted cross hanging on a braided silver chain with a gilded Hammer of Thor. He grinned in spite of himself. ’Twas obvious the woman meant to be well prepared when she left this world.
Tucking the pendant back into the woman’s tunic, he lingered over the satiny feel of her skin. So delicate to be so deadly. He shook his head to clear it of such inane poetic thoughts and rose to his feet.
“Is she?” Ardan asked.
“Dead? No. The Angel of Death? I believe so.”
Ardan cursed under his breath,
a long and colorful sentence that would have stunned Conor with its length in other circumstances. He felt the urge to curse himself.
The Angel of Death.
Conor had dismissed the stories as colorful tales spun by bards at the royal court. The idea of a woman, Viking or Irish, garbed completely in white and riding into battle was impossible to believe. Yet the proof lay before him.
Ardan regained his composure. “Why would herself attack our village?”
“A good question.” Conor’s voice was flat. “The village has naught to offer but cottages of fishermen and the tenants who raise tribal cattle. Even the Irish riding with her and her Northmen should know that our treasures, such as they are, are kept close to the dun.”
He looked down at the unconscious woman. “The stories call the Angel a defender of the defenseless. Perhaps the stories are false. Unless someone sent her.”
If Ardan was surprised by Conor’s statement, he did not show it. And why should he, Conor thought. After all, someone was always after the Devil of Dunlough.
Ardan prodded one of the mail-clad Vikings with his foot. “Her man could be one of these two.”
For an inexplicable reason, the idea that the legendary Angel had followed her lover into battle made Conor’s jaw clench. He forced himself to calm. “You could be right, Ardan. They were defending each other.”
“This one lives yet.”
The Devil wiped his blade on the second Viking’s breeches, then sheathed it. “Bring them,” he ordered, calling for his horse. With an ease that belied his size, he swung astride. “Send for the priest to bless the dead and dying. If the Angel and her companion survive the journey, I will have Gwynna tend to their wounds.”
“You won’t execute them then?”
He shook his head, steadying his mount with a quiet word. “Someone sent the Angel of Death to slay me. I would have answers from her before she dies.”
Ardan issued orders, then swung aside his own mount as the famed warrior and her still-living companion were thrown over a horse without ceremony. “Where do you think she’s from?”
“I don’t know,” Conor replied. “There are Viking strongholds aplenty here. Sitric Silk-beard holds Dubh Linn, and more Northmen control Waterford, Wexford, Limerick and even Dun na Ghall to the north. She could be from any of those.”
A frown shaded Ardan’s features. “If she was, we would have heard of her before Clontarf.”
Clontarf. The word caused a chill deep in Conor’s soul, even two years later. Clontarf, where the tenuous peace that the High King Brian Boruma had forged through decades of warfare had been shattered with his death. Where Irish and Viking fought against Irish and Viking for the ultimate control of the island.
Where Conor had lost his soul and gained a kingdom.
“Have a care with our war-prizes,” he told a thin, red-haired youth as he secured the Vikings to the mount. He turned his own mount towards home and away from the mesmerizing figure. “We’ve a way to go, and more war bands could be about.”
Ardan drew alongside him. “Think you she was sent by Ulster?”
“It is probable,” Conor answered. “There’s little love lost between us, though you’d think with the other three kingdoms as well as Connacht fighting old Máel Sechnaill for the High Kingship, they’d have more sense than to send their men to sure death against us.”
“Who said that Ulstermen had sense?”
The men around them laughed at the joke, and Conor let them have their mirth. They’d had little to laugh at over the last two years that he’d been ruler of the tuath and chieftain of the tribe. He knew he was a prize worth catching for his many enemies. Near six and a half feet tall, he towered over his men. With his penchant for wearing black while his men wore the saffron yellow warrior’s leine, his dark brown hair that was almost black, and the ever-present scar, many thought him more demon than Irishman.
It did not bother him, the moniker that he’d acquired. Devil he was, through and through. And despite the name, despite the scar, men of the tribe flocked to Dunlough for the honor of serving the mac Ferghal. Flocked to fight beside the man who threw them into battle again and again, a man who made himself a target, the center of many battles. It was his duty, he told himself. He fought because he had to, and he fought with a zeal that went beyond the typical Gaelic zest for life.
No one knew what that zeal cost him.
He wrenched his thoughts back to the present as the dun came into view. Bards often said Dunlough was cradled in the bosom of Eire, and he agreed. Hidden in the northwest of Connacht, bounded by rugged, rocky hills to the north, crystal lakes and streams to the south, the mountain Slieve Torc to the east, and the ocean to the west, Dunlough was as wild and glorious as its people. The dun itself sat on a verdant hill surrounded by earthen walls. A stream ran around the base of the wall and cascaded down the hill where it joined a larger river on its way to the dark lough that gave the dun its name.
Oh, people had laughed when his father’s father and his father before him started adding stone to the timber and thatch. They stopped soon enough when they came to seek solace from raids by Vikings and Ulstermen alike.
The dun had grown to a considerable size over the last two centuries. Its solid construction ensured that the people of Dunlough were well protected. Indeed, the remoteness of the northern part of the kingdom protected it from the brunt of the trials and tribulations that encompassed the rest of the island.
Of late, the warriors of Dunlough were riding out to challenge raiders, not armies. Rumors spoke of the Gaill-Gaedhel, the “foreign Irish”, riding again. Mercenaries descended from the mixing of Irish and Viking blood, their ferociousness had caused them to be called “the sons of death”. They cared little for who they attacked as long as plunder was to be had.
That thought had Conor drawing sharp on his reins. Sons of death and the Angel of Death. Were they related? His village had been attacked. The Angel of Death was nearby.
Coincidences were not something that Conor had much faith in. If the woman was truly the notorious Angel of Death, why was she in Connacht? Why attack his poor village? Why look at him with such hatred in her eyes?
He would have been well within his rights had he slain the Angel in battle. But the Viking female had captured his curiosity. No, she would not die soon.
The Devil was a patient man. He would find the answers he sought. When he did, all the angels in heaven and hell would not keep this angel safe.
Chapter Two
“How many dead?”
Abbott Brochadh folded his hands. “Four. Two more may die before sunrise. One lost an arm, one an eye and two are lame.”
Conor’s hand clenched around his tankard as the priest recited the names. Each man’s face floated before his eyes, settling into his memory. Dunlough’s warriors were a fierce and proud group, unafraid to face death in defense of their homes. Conor’s people would celebrate their fallen heroes tonight. He would not participate, nor did his people expect him to. The bhean sidhe would be wailing on Slieve Torc tonight, and there Conor would be.
Repressing his guilt with thoughts of retribution, he thanked the priest. When the holy man took his leave, he turned to Ardan. “Has my sister seen to our fair-haired guests?”
Ardan took a deep swallow of his ale before replying. “Lady Gwynna and Old Aine are with the white witch now. The brother could still die.”
“Brother?” Conor sat forward, his tankard crashing against the table. “Why claim you such a thing?”
“Old Aine is certain.”
If the old healer believed it to be so, it was enough. Rising to his feet, he moved to the hearth, digesting the news. A brother. That would certainly explain the horrified look on the Valkyrie’s face when the man slammed into her during the battle. ’Twas apparent she cared for him. That care could be a weakness, one that Conor would exploit most ruthless to acquire the answers he sought.
Ardan turned on the bench to face him. “Are yo
u certain we have captured the Angel of Death?”
“’Tis certain she fits the rumors we’ve heard for the last several months. Know you another female warrior riding about our land?”
“You should have beheaded her when you had the chance.”
Conor raised an eyebrow. “In her condition? It would not have been fair.”
“There was no need to be fair. The accursed witch wanted to kill you!”
“True, but there must be more here than we see. Besides, if the Viking female is the Angel of Death, she is worth much more to us alive than dead.”
“And if not?”
“Then she will pay, in one manner or another, for what she did to our village.”
He gestured for Ardan to follow him as he turned to the door. They walked down a short stone corridor to a thick wooden door. Clasping the braided cord around his neck, Conor pulled out a key, fit it to the lock and threw open the door. “Come, Ardan, and tell me what you think of these weapons.”
The older man followed Conor into the room, a small, circular chamber lit by two well-placed torches. The only piece of furniture was a narrow wooden table that occupied the center of the room. But it wasn’t the table that drew the eye.
It was the weapons.
They hung everywhere, these instruments of death. Great battle-axes, broadswords, short-swords, spears. Bows and arrows and shields. By any standard it was an impressive collection. What made it extraordinary, Ardan knew, was that every last weapon had once belonged to one of Conor’s enemies.
Only four swords, grouped alone near the door, had not belonged to adversaries. They belonged to Conor’s elder brother and three nephews, all lost in the great battle two years prior.
Ardan approached the table. It held a striking array of weapons: a broadsword, two short-swords, two great axes, and a rune-etched leather quiver full of arrows. A leather sheath with a long knife and leather scabbards and baldrics for the swords. A chainmail shirt and helmet with mail attached at the neck were at the bottom of the pile. All were covered with dried blood.
“Fine craftsmanship,” Ardan said in approval, fingering the runes on the scabbard. “More than a mercenary raiding fishing villages could afford. Unless they were stolen?”
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