What am I doing? She blinked and focused on Finn’s face. His eyes were wide and his mouth pinched, but he had not drawn away or attempted to evade her. She pulled her power into herself and made to step back, but he brought his own hands up to capture hers against his chest.
“They really will be all right, acushla. Do you think I would have left them as I did if there was a chance we would not see them again?” His hands were warm around hers. Her fingers curled in and dug against his chest.
“No,” she said. “No, I do not believe you would leave them to die. But…”
“Goddess, this is a small group of fae who have come together just this morning—and most of them do not work well with others. To throw them into a battle at this point is the height of foolishness.” A lock of red-gold hair fell over his forehead as he bowed his head toward her. “Plus, there are those who the enemy has been very diligent in searching for, for the last couple of days—and the harp. I could not allow us to stay there, if there was even a chance that something could happen to you, the harp, or the human. There is a much larger battle ahead of us, and we cannot afford to lose the war due to a mishap during such a small battle.”
Bat understood what he was saying—his words echoed her own earlier thoughts. At the same time, he was also telling her to leave Dub and Shar behind to fight those… things.
“Give them twenty minutes. If we don’t hear from them in that time, I will take the banshees and go. But, please trust me, goddess. I would not insist upon this if it was not necessary.”
Twenty minutes. It was not a long time, but it was also forever.
“And think upon this,” he continued. “These are warriors who have survived countless battles and wars against opponents much larger and more numerous than a nest of Fear Deargs. They have fought against those wielding soul-blades and worse. Nothing so meager as what amounts to a pack of hopped up rodents will bring them down. Trust them as well.”
He was correct. She was surely panicking over nothing. Her not-men were fine warriors. She had seen this in her visions. Pulling her hands from Finn’s, she stepped back and faced the entire group: Finn, Mell, Meera, the other banshees and fae and sluagh. Killer stuck by her side, his head and ears up in alert readiness. “I will allow this.” The words were among the most difficult she’d ever had to say, despite her assurances to herself. “And while these twenty minutes are passing, we will meet each other officially, so that we might be able to ‘work well together’ as Finn has said.” She would not be able to stand still and simply wait to find out if Finn was correct in his estimation of the situation back at the cottage.
Ailis snorted. “So, what, ya want us to go ‘round the circle and share with everyone our names and powers? Kind of like the first day of Primary?”
Bat nodded, not quite sure what Primary was, but the suggestion was sound. Ailis was very clever at most times. “Yes. This. It is a good idea. Unless you all know each other already? I know many of your names and faces from the pub, but I must admit I am not familiar with your skills and powers.”
The green-haired fae snorted then grinned as quiet chuckles spread through the group. These escalated until laughter roared through the morning air, Mell and even Finn joining in.
Bat stared at the assembled group, brows drawn. This was not a laughing matter. Killer barked, the sharp sound cutting through her allies’ inappropriate mirth and drawing their attention back to her. Finn quirked up an eyebrow. “Well then, let’s begin,” he said as the last of the laughter faded away.
Meera stepped forward. The banshee’s brown eyes were narrowed and her lips pursed. “I’m after thinking ya didn’t know we came over with the Fomoiri.”
It wasn’t a question, but Bat answered nonetheless. “The banshees were mentioned at the same time I found out any of you came from Egypt.”
Meera’s eyes widened as her fellow banshees moved to flank her, one with hair dark enough to match Bat’s and the other sporting bright red waves. “The O’Loinsighs didn’t tell ya?” This was the redhead.
Bat’s gaze flicked to Mell, whose head hung in exasperated resignation. “No, they did not. But this has been resolved.” Her chest tightened at the mere mention of her not-men. How many minutes had passed?
Meera glanced at the other two banshees, who nodded. Then she turned back to Bat. “Well, banshee is not our original name. I will not tell it to ya, as we left that existence long ago, but we can do more than wail for the dead.” She waved a hand toward the banshee who had yet to speak.
The dark-haired woman stepped away from the others, opened her mouth, and wailed. But this was no sound Bat had ever heard. This was not the crying of mourners or the weeping of those who had lost the ones they loved. This was rage and destruction wrapped into a scream that both terrified and fascinated—and it was directed at a small tree about thirty feet away. The trunk and limbs trembled, then exploded in a burst of splinters and leaves.
Bat tilted her head, considering. “This is a useful skill,” she said. She turned to Meera. “All three of you can do this?”
Meera nodded, a slight grin on her face. “Our aim is a little rusty. I wouldn’t trust it in close quarters, or for precision targeting, but for general mayhem and destruction, we’re yer girls.”
Bat looked to the redhead who had seemed so frustrated with not being able to join in the action back at the cottage. “This is what you had wanted to do earlier, in the battle.”
“Yup. Neasa, by the way. The grumpy one is Teagan.” She gestured to the dark-haired banshee.
Bat nodded. “It is nice to officially meet you. I have seen you in the pub.” And seen the way you flirt with my Mell. But she held those last words to herself. She next turned her attention to Faolan, the sluagh who had saved her harp.
“I’ve got my shadows, and they’re very good, my shadows,” he said. The sluagh had taken on his more human-like aspect, but the gray tint to his skin was even more obvious in the morning light, and red eyes glowed from his wrinkled face.
Another sluagh stepped up. Like Faolan his form was human, but the shadows were even stronger under his skin. “Ya don’t know what the shadows do, do ya?” He didn’t wait for an answer. “I’ll tell ya. They hide, and they trap. They can burn with cold, and they can stretch like a whip. I’m Carrig.” A shadow uncurled from him and stretched toward her.
Mell stepped forward, probably to intercept the thin tendril, and Finn caught his shoulder, shaking his head in a subtle gesture. Finn met her gaze and the message was clear—this was an official greeting of some kind, or a ritual, and she needed to complete it.
Bat held out her hand as the rope of shadow hovered just in front of her. It flicked, much like the tail of a cat that is contemplating whether to bite or purr. Then it wrapped around her hand, and cold seeped into her. The cold of lonely nights and an extinguished fire, of empty hearts and stern condemnation. It was not pleasant, but it was also not malicious. It simply was.
Flash. A shadow on a pale horse with glowing eyes, chasing after a fleeing human. A criminal. Behind the shadow rode dozens of others, atop steeds in a range of colors. Still more figures ran beside those horses, while others flew. Dark hounds coursed over the ground beside the hooves of the ghost-steeds. It was an army of shadows, all out to capture and punish the evil human.
She blinked, coming back to the mist-covered field. She had just been shown the Wild Hunt Shar had once mentioned. They hunted the wicked and the lost, he had said. Though their justice that she had just seen was cold, it was still a similar purpose to her own. She could understand these sluagh.
“It is nice to meet you, Carrig,” she said, keeping her hand steady in the grasp of the dark tendril twined around it. If the sluagh thought to disconcert her with his shadows… well, she had lived with much worse. I should make sure he meets Anubis some day, then he would know shadows. She sent a pulse of her power into the shadow, warming it slightly.
The sluagh’s red eyes narrowed then widened and h
e whipped the shadow from her palm. Faolan chuckled as though he knew just what she had done. “And this is Dalaigh,” he said, gesturing to the third sluagh, who hung back in the crowd, a large pack strung across his back. Bat nodded toward him, and the gesture was returned.
How much time has passed now? Surely twenty minutes is not this long?
“I’ll go next, then, shall I?” A golden-haired man stepped forward, his frame slender.
There was a sharpness to his features that reminded Bat of some of the drawings she’d seen of fairies in her Idiot’s Guide to Ireland. Had the book at least gotten this correct?
He bowed, the move graceful, and Ailis and Mell snorted in unison. The slender man ignored them. “Eoghan, at yer service, goddess. Ailis said there was a bit of fun to be had, so we’re along for the ride.” He gestured vaguely toward two others, a man and a woman, who stood near Ailis and shared the same sharp features. “These are Cliona and Ogma, and no, not that Ogma—this one’s parents simply had no imagination.”
Bat’s brows rose. She had no idea who that Ogma was, and she was not sure it truly mattered. “And what can you do, Eoghan?” Was this her chance to find out more about the trooping faes’ powers? And Ailis’s?
He shrugged. “Oh, a little of this, a little of that.”
She frowned as disappointment and frustration filled her. Allies being evasive was not something she should have to deal with. Ailis stepped up behind Eoghan and slapped the back of his head. “Just tell her, ya dunce. Now’s no the time ta be a gowl. Tell her what ya can do.” Ailis gave Bat a decisive nod and poked Eoghan’s shoulder until he shook her off and sighed.
“Right then. Well, glamour’s my main, as it is for most fae. I can do a bit of enchanting with smaller objects, and have a bit of nature-speak. Ogma’s good with the animals, and Cliona’s been known to… befuddle a male or two. Could come in handy.”
Bat studied the female fae, Cliona. There was something about her… and many of the males gathered had taken to casting sneaking glances her way. Bat’s gaze cut to Mell and Finn, only to find their eyes locked on her own. A bit of the tension riding her eased, and she realized there was, perhaps, a bit more healing her emotions needed to do.
“Good,” she said, pulling her attention from things that did not matter at the moment. If she began thinking of her relationships with her not-men, she would think of Dub and Shar and begin to worry again… “These will be useful skills to have.”
Finn’s phone went off. He snatched it from the pocket of his jeans and held it to his ear. As he listened, his expression darkened. Bat’s stomach clenched.
Chapter 2
SHAR
Shar swung his axe, slicing through yet another Fear Dearg—those little vicious cousins to the leprechaun—and sending the body flying through the air to land against the trunk of an oak. The tree shuddered, both abhorring Shar’s use of his axe and accepting the blood sacrifice. The trees were truly neutral, unlike the solitary fae, but they were willing to help those who spoke to them.
Another of the small creatures jumped on his back, its nails jabbing into his muscles as it sank its teeth in his shoulder. He grunted, ignoring the pain as he reached behind, tore the pest away, and then flung it at a half dozen other Fear Deargs heading his way.
Dub let out a roar as he spun, his sword a steel blur, gems winking at the pommel. It had been made for him by Giobnu—the original Smith—and Dub never failed to keep it close, tucked away in his personal pocket of space—well, except for that one time.
“Behind you!” Cuchi shouted, sprinting in Shar’s direction.
Shar spun and ducked, just in time to avoid another face full of fangs. There was a squelch as Cu Chulainn’s sword cut through the small body. At least he’s on our side this time. Shar hated to admit it, but the sidhe was an accomplished warrior. Hell, he’d defeated the brothers once. Granted, their hearts weren’t fully in the fight, not after what Derbforgaill had pulled, but Dub and Mell could be quite capable when they put their minds to it.
Another of the small, red-clad Fear Deargs came into reach of his axe and he swung, catching it just under the chin. He also knew he himself was no slouch. Not when he had something to fight for.
Bat’s visage, the last glimpse he’d had of her just before Finn transported the main group away, flashed before him. Her eyes had been wide, her face pale, as she spoke quickly to the guardi captain. Shar had tried to tell her with a look everything would be fine. The trees had warned him what was coming, and it wasn’t anything they couldn’t handle. He wasn’t sure he’d succeeded.
A low coughing sound came from a pile of red coats, and Ari’s arm shot out from underneath them, his many-jointed fingers and razor claws coated in blood. He hooked those claws into the back of a Fear Dearg and tore it away, then the next, until he stood amidst a circle of bloody and torn bodies.
The remaining small fae, less than a dozen, retreated to the edge of the trees. Hovering there, they whispered to each other, the sounds no more than spare chittering. What were they doing…?
More come. You must leave, protector. The ancient oak shared a pulse of urgency with him.
What was coming…? He shook his head. It didn’t matter. “Dub,” he called out. “We need to go, now.”
His brother turned to him just as four guardi appeared on the path from the trees to the cottage, fully equipped with dull black armor and short swords. One man had an axe similar to Shar’s, though not quite as large.
“Took you long enough!” Cuchi said, not taking his eyes from the tree line.
“We still need to get out of here,” Shar said, again. “There’s more coming, and no use continuing this fight now.” He stepped back, putting himself farther from the trees. “Everyone, get over here.” He and Dub were going to have a serious talk after this about putting someone in charge. They wouldn’t be able to continue on as they had, with Bat more of a consultant than anything, and the brothers and Finn acting with “cooperation.” Once the fighting started—and who was he kidding, it had started—there needed to be one person in charge.
Dub’s eyes narrowed on Shar, but he nodded and eased backwards, refusing to turn his back to the coming threat. Ari copied him, stepping lightly over the twitching pieces of the Fear Deargs he’d torn open. They would heal, eventually, if those pieces were lucky enough to find their way back to each other. Just like the sluagh they’d fought off would recover.
But what was coming through the trees was neither sluagh nor another pack of Fear Deargs.
Tree roots shook in soft vibrations and leaves rustled in the still air.
Fir Bolg, the ash whispered.
Like the sluagh, the Fir Bolg stuck to the bogs and the dark, they could call upon the shadows, and they tended to hunt those who’d been lost to wickedness. Unlike the sluagh, they possessed an inner savageness that no amount of living among the “civilized” would ever erase.
The newly arrived guardi shifted into a defensive circle, facing out. “It looks like you got this covered,” a female guardi said, though she was careful to keep her attention on the Fear Deargs.
“It’s Fir Bolg. Get over here. Now.” Shar didn’t need to argue with allies who were late to the battle. He gripped his axe handle as the trees’ vibrations became strong enough to feel through the soles of his feet. It’s the Hunt. The Wild Hunt. Run.
Shar froze, his heart pounding. The Wild Hunt. The trees were warning him, trying to keep him and the others safe. But fighting against the Wild Hunt was not something the oaks or ash or even the rowans could do—not when the Hunt had someone’s scent.
Cuchi’s head lifted, his nostrils flaring, and his eyes widened. “It’s the Hunt!” he shouted, calling out the warning before Shar was able to wrap his mind around the fact that the Hunt was after them. Their enemy was not simply Fir Bolg or more sluagh, but the Wild-fucking-Hunt.
This shouldn’t have been possible. A few sluagh or Fir Bolg swayed to Balor’s side he could understand—but
the Hunt as a whole? They could be vicious and merciless, yes, but they tracked those who were lost—lost to wickedness or apathy or who could not find their own way anymore. They did not hunt on behalf of anyone but themselves. They remained… neutral.
No longer. Balor is persuading those who have been neglected and lost. It is not a far stretch to imagine him seducing the Hunt. If Bat had not come to Ireland when she did, how many more would have already gone to Balor’s side? How many of the solitary fae would have decided they’d had enough of not being seen by their own gods, would have hungered for the acknowledgment and recognition Balor had promised in Bat’s dream?
Shar suspected it was thanks to their little goddess that so many of the solitary fae remained watchful in their territories.
Dub had reached Shar by then. Ari loped over to stand beside the brothers, his needle teeth bared in a fierce grin. The guardi also made their way toward Shar, though they weren’t moving fast enough for his taste, trying too hard to maintain their formation.
The woman twisted and met his gaze. “Go. We’ll delay them, try to lead them away.” Then she grinned, echoes of The Morrigan in that smile. “It’s been a while since I’ve had the opportunity to take on the Hunt. If nothing else, yer goddess has brought back interesting times.”
Shar gave her a sharp nod, uncertain if the woman cursed or praised Bat. He wanted to protest that none of this was Bat’s doing. Instead, he looked to Dub.
The oldest brother’s face was grim, but at least he hadn’t fallen into a battle frenzy. It would have been impossible to get him away if that had been the case. Was he, too, thinking of getting back to Bat?
It was a redundant question—of course Dub would be focused on their goddess. Hells, his brother had been focused on her long before she ever stepped over the pub’s threshold on that fateful St. Paddy’s day.
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