Reborn

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by Nancy Corrigan


  “The church.” She motioned toward the door a few feet down from them that Trevor had used as a child. “You said it’s abandoned.”

  “Yeah, the redcap would probably get a sick enjoyment out of using a former sanctified building as its hiding place.” He cracked his knuckles. “Come on. I’ll lead the way. You keep yourself open to the Hunt. You might not feel the taint of the redcap or its sluaghs, but you might smell or hear something.”

  “Yes. My senses are better with the power of the Hunt flaring within me.” Of course, so were her darkest emotions. It wasn’t healthy to live with them twenty-four seven. Succumbing completely to the rage was a fate all Huntsmen were susceptible to.

  “Then let’s hunt.” He pushed up the leg of his jeans and yanked his blade from the holder built into the specialty combat boots he wore.

  Part of her wanted to shove him behind her and face the threat alone, but she’d meant her words to him. He was strong and capable of holding his own against evil.

  And as long as she was with him, he wouldn’t die. She had faith in her strength.

  Chapter Eighteen

  The moment Trevor wrapped his fingers around the hilt of his dagger, he knew the shit was about to hit the fan. Tingles skipped along his arm and centered in his chest. The sensation wasn’t one he felt often, but he understood what it meant.

  “There are sluaghs close.” Redcaps made his skin crawl and left a sick feeling in his gut.

  He moved toward the back door of the old church. They were inside. Somewhere.

  Rowan grabbed his forearm. “How can you tell? I don’t sense them.”

  Trevor glanced at the dagger he held and cursed at his stupidity.

  “The blade. It was forged with Harley’s blood. She can sense those redcaps and sluaghs who are tied to her.” But Calan, her mate, couldn’t. By mating Calan, Harley had been accepted into the Teulu by default, and the power of the Wild Hunt didn’t see its own members as a threat. They were exempt from its wrath. Unfortunately, that meant the redcaps and sluaghs tied to her were spared too.

  Working as a team, however, Harley and Calan were the only ones who’d been repeatedly locating and eliminating the sluaghs who belonged to Craig and his brothers.

  “And you can sense those creatures tied to Harley because you’re not a Huntsman yet.”

  “And until Craig and his brothers are taken out, I won’t be joining the Huntsmen.” He would not lose the advantage the blade offered. Other than Harley, he was the only one who could sense her redcaps or the sluaghs tied to them.

  He moved in a crouch toward the door.

  Rowan stepped into his path and pressed against his shoulders, stopping him. “We don’t know how long that’ll take. Humans get sick. You can contract some kind of disease and die on me before you can accept the mark.”

  “If I get sick, I won’t die immediately. You can give me the mark before I do.”

  “It’s painful. It might be too much and—”

  “Stop, baby. This isn’t the right time or place to have this conversation. There are sluaghs in that church, and their souls need to be given peace before the sun rises.” Because once it did, the sluaghs would fade into the fairy realm until sunset. Their bodies could only be animated by their redcap leader under the blanket of darkness.

  She nodded quickly, but the worry in her eyes squeezed his chest. He pulled her close, wrapping her in his embrace. “You need to trust in this connection between us. It’s spanned the centuries and brought us back together. Whether or not I remember our first time together doesn’t make a difference. My soul does. That’s what this soul mate thing means, right? My soul remembers loving you.”

  “Yes. That’s it exactly.”

  “Then, we’ll win. I’m not going to lose this chance with you.”

  She squeezed him tight, then dropped her arms. “We’ll talk more about it later.”

  His answer would be the same then, but he nodded. He didn’t want to fight with Rowan. They had a job to do.

  He turned the doorknob. Locked. Of course it wouldn’t be that easy. He hadn’t thought to bring a lockpick kit either. He knew how to use one and had even taught a class on lockpicking to his newer employees. It was a good skill to have.

  “Do you have a bobby pin?” Rowan’s hair hung loose around her shoulders tonight, but it didn’t hurt to ask.

  “No. Afraid not.” She pushed against his shoulder. “Let me get it.”

  She could embrace her alternate form and rip the door off its hinges if she wanted. He shook his head. “Let’s try not to alert the sluaghs to our presence unless there’s no other way. I’ll try first.”

  He wiggled the blade’s tip between the doorjamb and the lock plate, then pushed while he turned the knob back and forth. After a few tries, he was able to slide the bolt back. The door swung open, creaking softly. He waited a moment, but no sounds reached him, and Rowan didn’t rush forward, sensing something he couldn’t.

  He entered the entryway to the back of the church. A wide counter where he’d once stood with his grandmother offered a view into the kitchen. The appliances were gone and so were the ornate drawer pulls on the tall, wooden cabinets that lined the kitchen’s workspace. The place didn’t resemble the bright and airy room he’d remembered. Dust covered everything. The linoleum had buckled, and hunks of the horsehair plaster were missing.

  Nothing appeared disturbed, however. There wasn’t even a footprint on the dusty black-and-white checkered floor.

  He glanced at the vinyl tiles in the hallway that led to the gathering room. Drops of blood marked a path down the hall, probably from the same dog whose blood was smeared on the Dumpster.

  “It’s not human blood.” Rowan confirmed his guess.

  “What has Craig been doing?”

  “I could probably guess, but we might as well see for ourselves.” She pointed down the hall. “I smell a lot more blood, all animal blood.”

  That was where the sluaghs were. The tingling in his arm had intensified.

  Rowan kicked off her shoes and yanked the belt from the loose dress she’d chosen for the night. Claws slid from the ends of her fingers, and color leached from her skin.

  She faced him. Her green eyes glowed, marking her as a demigod, but it was the physical changes distorting her features that identified her as a daughter of Hell. Her jaw had elongated into a short snout. Razor-sharp teeth filled her mouth. And blood collected in the corners of her familiar eyes.

  She was deadly and hauntingly beautiful. He cupped her face before he could stop himself. “I love you, Rowan.”

  It wasn’t the right time to tell her, but he wouldn’t have been able to stop the words if he tried.

  She grinned, twisting her features even more, and covered his hands with her clawed ones. “And I love you, Trevor. More than I thought possible.”

  The guttural edge to her voice didn’t detract from the feeling behind her words. The soft caress of her thumb along the inside of his wrist told him.

  “Disable the sluaghs, but don’t kill them. I must take their heads to free their souls. Remember, no matter what they have been forced to do, they’re puppets. They didn’t choose this fate.” She dropped her hands and jogged down the hallway.

  The gathering hall was vacant, except for a few boxes of Christmas decorations and old bikes stacked in one corner. The trail of blood and shuffling footprints led toward the entrance to the basement.

  Rowan stopped walking after a few feet and bared her teeth in a silent snarl. She waved her arm in front of her, then curled her fingers as if pulling on something unseen. A blast of cold wind hit him, and the faintest whiff of sulfur permeated the air. He didn’t notice anything else unusual, but after a couple of heartbeats, several hounds emerged from nowhere, stepping through some wall he couldn’t see.

  In unison, almost a dozen pairs of red eyes glanced from him to the basement door. The hounds bared their fangs, and saliva dripped from their mouths. They appeared ready to attack,
but they wouldn’t move until Rowan gave them the command to do so.

  The reason she held them at bay became apparent a moment later. Her horse trotted from the portal she’d opened. The mare looked sickly with its translucent skin and raw wounds covering its flank. The impressions of its rib cage showed, and its stomach was sunken. All in all, the thing looked as if it should be dead, but the horse was immortal and stronger than any mere mare could be.

  “Grief.” Rowan greeted the animal with a tender caress along its neck. “Stay here until I call for you.”

  Because if her horse were injured too greatly, it would have to return to the Underworld to heal, and she needed it to collect the sluaghs’ souls. He’d learned that from asking her brothers questions about being a Huntsman. He’d wanted to know everything he could beforehand so when the time came to ride, he wouldn’t flounder with the unknown the way Ian had.

  A sword with tendrils of smoke snaking around its blade appeared in her hand. The weapon only a Huntsman could conjure or wield would be the means she used to free the sluaghs from their enslavement to their redcap master.

  With a flick of her hand, she motioned for the hounds to follow her. All but three responded to her command. Those dogs left behind turned their unblinking gazes to him. Apparently, they’d be guarding him. He ignored the small part of him that wanted to be annoyed by Rowan’s order to the hounds. The rest of him understood she loved him and didn’t want to lose him. He wouldn’t fault her for her concern or ruin the emotion behind it by being an ass. If he wanted to be the only tough one in a relationship, falling in love with Arawn’s daughter was not the way to go.

  He skimmed his free hand over the dogs’ backs as he ran forward. The first guttural roar reached his ears before he made it to the door. The sound cut off, but another sluagh’s enraged scream replaced the cry of the sluagh Rowan had no doubt killed.

  The stench of rotting corpses drifted from the basement. He kicked the heavy padlock lying twisted and broken on the floor out of his way, then flicked the light switch before rushing down the stairs. In her Huntsman’s form, Rowan wouldn’t need the light, but he did. The moment he skidded into the open basement, he regretted the ability to see, even if it were necessary.

  Animal carcasses littered the floor, and close to two dozen sluaghs converged on Rowan, while her hounds held another couple dozen cornered in the back of the room. The undead creatures approaching Rowan moved with sluggish, jerking movements. The lumbering approach was probably all they were capable of. They looked in worse condition than Rowan’s horse, with sections of bones showing.

  Four sluaghs tackled Rowan from behind, knocking her to the ground. She shoved them off her, but the moment of distraction allowed another three to attack her with their own deadly claws.

  The gashes of blood on her pale skin enraged Trevor. He ran toward her, swiping at the sluaghs in his way with his blade or toppling them with a hard push of his free hand. It didn’t matter if she were immortal and couldn’t die. Nobody was allowed to hurt her.

  He grabbed the long hair of a female sluagh who was gnawing on Rowan’s shoulder and flung the creature away from her. Then, he slammed his dagger into the back of another sluagh, tearing a shriek from its throat.

  Rowan turned, yanked the sluagh from Trevor’s hands, and severed the sluagh’s head with a swipe from her sword. Its body turned to ash before hitting the floor.

  They worked their way through the creatures—him disabling the ones trying to attack her from behind and her taking their heads.

  Finally, the last one crumbled, breaking apart before his very eyes.

  He wiped the blade on his shirt and slid it back into the sheath in his boot. He’d have to start carrying it against his calf the way he had for years before he switched to the holder in his boot. The hilt, at the very least, had to touch his skin for the warning the blade offered to work. Tonight was a lesson learned, and one that would help them in their fight.

  He scanned the room, looking for the entrance to the fairy realm, which had to be close. In the far corner, a section of the concrete floor had been dug up, allowing enough space for the circular ring of magical mushrooms to grow. Artificial lights were hung from the beams in the ceiling, providing the sunlight necessary for the fairy ring.

  The redcaps were getting smarter. With a setup such as the one here, they’d be able to hide their portals to the fairy realm almost anywhere.

  Movement caught his eye before he could give in to the string of curses hovering on his tongue.

  Grief moved in a soundless gallop inches above the ground until it stood in the middle of the ashes covering the floor. The mare lifted its head, and flashes of light brightened its face. Trevor had seen the same thing when Calan’s horse, Death, had collected the souls of the sluaghs in a previous battle where Trevor had stood on the sidelines.

  The horse lowered its head, and Rowan wrapped her arms around its neck. Trevor hadn’t even noticed her transformation back into her human body. She whispered something in the animal’s ear, then stepped back. The horse and the hounds she’d called forth disappeared as they had appeared, seemingly out of thin air.

  She faced him, confusion pinching her brows. “Those sluaghs were locked in here and fed only animals.”

  “So they didn’t kill anyone. Craig and his brothers want to earn redemption. That’s why Raul stole Harley’s blood, so they wouldn’t be tied to Dar.” Jen had been right in her assessment of the redcaps’ behavior.

  “But Raul is now incarcerated in Hell. His brothers will join him once we find them.”

  “And your father offers redemption to sinners. I’m not saying it’ll work, but that’s Jen’s theory.” Trevor swept his gaze over the room that looked as if it were decorated for a horror movie. “And after seeing this, I’d have to agree with her.”

  “I can almost guarantee it won’t work, and I’m sure Raul and his brothers know that. For some sins, there is no redemption.”

  “Then maybe they think suffering in Hell is better than being tied to Dar. Who knows what they’re thinking.” He shrugged. “But we need to get back. I want Allie to start carrying Ian’s old blade so she has a warning system if the Unseelie creatures are close.”

  She fingered his bloody and torn shirt. “You’d better call and ask Ian and Tegan to pick us up. We’ll get arrested if we walk back to the parking lot looking like this.”

  “Good idea.”

  “I’m full of them.” The warm, contagious smile that had shattered him the first time he saw it brightened her face.

  He trailed his fingers down her arm. “We make a great team.”

  “Yes, we do. In all things.” Her smile faded. She stepped closer and rested her hand on his chest. “Don’t be mad, but when we get back, I will need to go to the Underworld.”

  He tensed and fought his anger at the thought of her exposing herself once again to danger without him. “Why?”

  “I have to escort Grief to the resting fields.”

  “No. Your horse knows the way. I’m sure it can do that by itself.”

  “It’s an honor to the innocent souls we’ve collected. My siblings and I have always shown this respect to them. It’s a way to let them know they are welcome in our private retreat for as long as they wish to remain.”

  He slipped his arm around her waist, pulling her against his chest, and rested his chin on the top of her head. “You’re taking one of your brothers with you, right? You promised.”

  “I won’t be leaving our sanctuary. I’ll be safe.”

  He didn’t like the idea of her going but couldn’t deny her reason. He’d have to suck it up. “Come right back to me.”

  “I’ll always return to you. Promise.”

  A promise from an immortal could’ve been a vow written in blood. They wouldn’t break it for fear of damning themselves. That was why Arawn was so upset with Minerva. Rowan had clued him in to that on the drive into the city. Minerva had vowed to remain faithful to Arawn for eter
nity, but she’d broken that promise when she’d slept with Lucas.

  “I know you will, baby, and I’ll be waiting for you. Always. Promise.”

  Chapter Nineteen

  The Huntsmen’s home in the Underworld was vacant when Rowan arrived, but the evidence of Arawn’s recent occupation was scattered over the desk in the parlor. An empty decanter of vodka and a shot glass that still reeked of ambrosia sat next to a stack of sinners’ reports. All were stamped—rejected.

  She picked the top folder and scanned the details. The male resided in the top level of Hell—the last stop before being released to the angels—and had made excellent progress in terms of redeeming his soul. Had this file landed on Arawn’s desk a few months ago, her father likely would’ve granted the release. The red stamp of disapproval over the cover sheet reflected the hardening of Arawn’s soul without Minerva. Rowan had feared such a thing occurring. There wasn’t a whole lot more she could do about it. Ultimately, Arawn and Minerva had to work out their issues.

  Rowan dropped the folder and turned toward the stairs. There was one last thing she had to do before she returned to Trevor—retrieve the present she’d planned to give Kai on the night of their mating. She’d give it to Trevor when she returned to him. It was fitting. Tonight was the anniversary of her greatest mistake.

  At the top of the stairs, a long hallway offered access to the bedrooms of her siblings. The seventh on the left had been hers. She pushed open the door and stared at the small space. The simple stuffed feather mattress with its thick quilt and a single pillow was pushed into the corner of the room. A large chest took up much of the remaining space. Piles of clothes had been tossed carelessly on top of its surface, as well as on the bed, and a pair of soft, animal-skin boots lay discarded near a small writing table. The wooden stool in front of it offered the only place to sit other than the bed. She’d rarely used either.

 

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