by Nya Rawlyns
GUARDIANS OF THE PORTALS:
TREY
Nya Rawlyns
GUARDIANS OF THE PORTALS: TREY
Copyright © 2012 by Nya Rawlyns
Cover design: Sessha Batto
Book Design: Denysé Bridger
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
ISBN: 978-1-927479-26-1
Online copy provided in Canada
First Published by XoXo Publishing: September, 2012
XoXo Publishing™ a div of Ninni Group Inc
Visit us at: http://www.xoxopublishing.com
XoXo Publishing™ is a member of the
EPIC, SPAN and
EF Publishers Association
XoXo Publishing™ uses Canadian English spelling in our books.
[email protected]
Chapter One
“Sit down Number Two.” Gothi Eirik glared at the young man pacing restlessly
about the small chamber. “Trey, please, you are giving me a headache.”
The Gothi’s enforcer reluctantly pulled a rough-hewn stool toward the long table hogging most of the available space in the narrow quarters. He sat for a nanosecond, frowned and pushed away from the table, sending the stool to impact with a resounding thud against the log wall. He stalked instead to the Hearth Stone and adjusted the gas feed to a lower setting.
Turning to his liege, Trey spoke with a sneer, “A bit modern for your tastes, isn’t it Gothi?”
“Careful, boy, don’t test my patience today.” Once more the gothi waved his
second-in-command to sit. As soon as Trey righted the stool and pulled it close to the table, Eirik launched into the reason he’d brought the young man to the Althing
headquarters.
“You really screwed the pooch, Nephew. You not only lost the asset but you
managed to alienate our last contact within Greyfalcon.” Eirik thumbed through a sheaf of parchment scrolls and extracted one. “Read this. Our final communiqué.” He flipped it across the table and continued, “The Seid—she was our last hope.”
Trey glanced at the parchment but he had no need to read it. He let Gothi handle the machinations and conniving that passed for détente between and among the clans.
As for the asset, he could recall those details with excruciating intimacy. His gut clenched at the memory as he’d watched horrified, fascinated, as the asset chose a path of valour he could no longer conceive.
“Well?” Eirik punctuated, with a rap of his enormous fist onto the table. Instead of a thud, the oddly dissonant clanging of metal reverbing off hard-surfaced walls echoed eerily in the chamber. “What part of ‘our last hope’ failed to register when I gave you this assignment?”
“A little Steven Spielberg, isn’t it, Uncle? Now, should I counter with ‘but there is one other’?”
“Damn it, Trey, I’m beginning to understand why Gunnarr beat the royal shit out
of you so often. I never approved of his disciplinary methods but if you continue to tax me with your…”
The young man held up a hand to stem the tirade he knew almost by heart,
having heard it more times than he could count. “And I will say it again, Uncle, it was out of my control. Your so-called asset had more courage than all of us combined. She took the honourable path. Something I doubt any of us is capable of now.”
“You do appreciate the fact that her honour, and her courage, will cost us. We could lose this one, Nephew. They grow stronger by the day while we slowly become …
what’s the word?”
“Obsolete? How about ‘archaic’? Yeah, that one hits the nail on the head, don’t
you think? Listen, Uncle, if we don’t start taking control of the situation, doing what’s required, no matter the consequences, then we not only lose the skirmish, we lose the damn war.”
4
Eirik frowned at his nephew but could not fault him on his assessment of the
current situation. It had been generations since they’d engaged so formidable an enemy.
The Althing had become weak, ineffective and mundane. Desertions and natural
attrition had stripped their ranks, leaving only a small cadre to protect and preserve the natural order.
“I dislike violence, you know this thing. Lindisfarne taught us a lesson we should ne’er forget.” Eirik shuddered at the memory. It marked the beginning of the end for amicable relations with his brother. Gunnarr’s scorched earth policy, along with the wanton slaying and enslaving of a helpless population, had turned history on its head and had sent his possessed brother onto a path of insurrection, destruction and
conquest.
“Aye, but that was ancient history. Greyfalcon has evolved. They understand the
marketplace, far better than we do. They also know how to use the assets, as you all are so fond of calling them.” Trey once more pushed away from the table and paced the room.
“Yes, I know all this, but if we don’t maintain the moral high ground, and protect the Seids from the Clans…Why am I bothering to tell you this? You, of all of us, know that we stand for the gifted and the Portals. We always have. It is our legacy, our duty.”
Eirik grunted as he made to stand. His nephew appeared at his elbow and helped
him to his feet, a small courtesy and mark of respect.
“Thank you, boy. My time grows short. You must away and deal with this mess
you’ve created. I give you leave to do whatever you feel is necessary.” Though Eirik towered over his compact nephew, he felt frail, diminished, next to the raw power and strength of Trey.
“Are you sure, Uncle? Because once this starts, I will finish it.”
“No, one thing I can tell you with certainty, my boy, is that I am not sure. Turn off the hologram projector, if you would. I weary of the façade at times.”
Trey flicked a switch on the near wall and watched with interest as the log walls and the furniture constructs faded slowly, ghost images on the retinas, until nothing but green screens and recording devices on a long metal table remained visible in the small studio. He understood the necessity for the artifice, and he much appreciated the technology that allowed them to mask their presence as they violated time-space to do what his uncle and the Jarls so fondly called their “Good Works”. However, on this day, with only the two of them present, he did not grasp the necessity for the artificial staging.
“Shall I call for Astrid?” Eirik nodded yes and padded awkwardly toward the plate glass window overlooking the East River.
He turned back to glance at Trey as he fumbled for his iPhone. The young man
had accorded him respect and a measure of penance by dressing for his visit as second-in-command with a soft deerskin, hip-length jerkin lined with sheep’s wool and belted with stiff ox hide. Eirik smiled to himself that the young man had foregone the
traditional sheep’s wool leggings and sandals in favour of his normal jeans and Doc Marten steel-toed boots. He was not so ancient and stuck in his ways not to recognize the comforts of modern dress, though he preferred a more tailored look. Trey unhitched the device from the leather holder strapped to a loop on his jeans and tapped in the housekeeper’s number, then texted a quick message.
Eirik asked, “Is that a new toy?”
5
Trey nodded and grinned. “Just replaced my Blackberry, still don’t have all the
features down yet.”
Like all of the younglings under his wing, they loved technology and used it with abandon whenever deployed in this dimen
sion. Back home, such devices rarely
functioned for long as EMF perturbations wreaked havoc on electronics. That was the assessment offered by their scientists. Mercifully the same could be said for most modern weaponry, although the explanation for that rested more on the wards he’d carefully placed about the Portals to ensure that bit of legerdemain.
Trey would be the first to admit that he was addicted to modernity and its ever-
evolving technology, and had been for some time. It helped safeguard the Portals without investing in a huge expenditure of manpower, which sadly, the Jarls could ill afford. Greyfalcon’s increasing presence in illegal activities, and their single-minded recruitment of the gifted for the planning and execution phases of their nefarious schemes, put untoward pressure on his peoples’ limited resources.
Trey joined his uncle at the expanse of plate glass. He stared at the impressive view with unabashed pleasure and murmured, “It’s nice here, isn’t it?”
“I guess so, my boy. I do miss the mountains and the fjords and the forests and I miss our old place, but it will do until we can rebuild.” Eirik sighed and turned toward the young man. “What will you do now? Do you have a plan?”
Trey barked a rough laugh, “Plan? Uncle, when did I ever have a plan, or even a clue?”
“Listen and listen well! If ever you needed what you call a clue, now is the time. I sense we approach a crossroads. What choices we make or what direction we choose will forever change our realities.” Eirik grasped Trey’s shoulders and stared hard into his nephew’s eyes. “Means and ends, boy. Make it right or we shall all suffer the
consequences.”
Trey nodded solemnly, then bowed slightly from the waist and backed away. Eirik
tracked his movements with laser intensity. When he reached the door, he called out,
“Wait!”
“Yes, Gothi?”
“Where will you…?” he left the question hanging.
“Like I said, Uncle. There is one other. I’ll start there.”
Eirik turned back to the view, now cloaked with lowering gray mists, the cityscape shadowed to softness.
“Can you really do it, boy? Can you save us from my mistakes?” The words
echoed with hollow intensity.
Eirik returned to the metal desk and sank gratefully onto the leather seat. He
hadn’t been exaggerating when he said his time was short. He’d spent too long in this dimension, fighting the constant fires of discord set by his brother.
“Ah, Gunnarr. He is your son. Why do you torture him so?”
Leaning against the headrest he allowed himself the small pleasure of
remembrance and contemplation, tiny gifts that served to bolster his flagging resolve. At his core he knew his people carried the heavy burden of safeguarding the Portals willingly. Their commitment never faltered, but they were few, their enemies many, and unmonitored gateways proliferated at an alarming rate, spreading their resources beyond thin into the realm of impossible.
His legacy of protecting a universe of virgin worlds rested on a tortured young
6
man who’d made a decision that cost him his birthright and a family, but whose loyalties seemed solid, implacable. Yet the Jarls had doubts, as had he. If his nephew’s father ever discovered the extent of Trey’s gifts, not even their gods would be sufficient to protect him, and them, from the avaricious greed of the Greyfalcon head.
The Portals kept their kind safe and the other dimensions secure from
humankind’s relentless pursuit of power and dominance. In turn he and his people vouchsafed the innocents living out their lives as the gods intended, free from human discord and exploitation.
So what of Trey? With preternatural ability he discerned unmapped Portals
existing in the insubstantial aether, a secret he and his scientists kept with a blood oath.
“There’s more, isn’t there, Nephew?” He chuckled to himself. “Old fool. Talking to yourself. See what you’ve done, Trey?”
There’s more, more than you’ve let on. You hide it well, from them, but not me. I know you too well. If Gunnarr knew, or even suspected, he would reassert his blood right and destroy his son in the process.
“Dammit, sweet Freyja, I should have intervened sooner. Instead, I stood and
watched…”
****
“Show him, Bryn take the pretty. The youngling shall have the hag, or should we
say she’ll have him?”
Snickers. A shove. A ‘go on, boy, you earned it.’
“Father, please.”
Gunnarr pointed to his oldest son. Sig grinned and turned to his youngest brother with a wink. He quickly stripped the quaking youth, using the jerkin to wipe away the blood seeping from his nose.
“Sig, don’t make me. Please.”
Sig whispered, “It will be all right, I promise. Today is the day you become a man.
The last test: first the pain and now the pleasure.” Sigmund wrapped his arms about his smaller sibling and half-carried, half-shoved him, into the center of the circle. The fire flared and settled, sending shadows dancing about the clearing. The thick pines stood silent sentinel for the rite of passage, the stars overhead sharp, unforgiving.
Gunnarr waved the old woman over and gave her a wolfish grin. “Show me.”
The crone winked and gave her liege-lord a toothless smile. She greedily grasped the flagon of mead he handed her and drained it in a single gulp. Licking her lips, she hobbled toward the young boy still struggling against his brother’s firm grasp.
“Bryn. Bring that one here. Let Trey watch and learn.” He bent to whisper in the crone’s ear and pressed a coin into her filthy palm. Satisfied, he turned and strode into the forest. Normally he would have remained to goad and torment, but he feared his youngest would balk at his presence and he had no wish to be humiliated by the pup. It had been a surprise that the child-man acquitted himself admirably on the field of battle. It had brought honour to the clan. But he still remained a dreamer. No amount of discipline, no matter how stringently applied, had managed to dispense the fanciful nature that was his mother’s legacy. Gunnarr had known in his bones nothing good would come of the coupling with the fay creature and the boy had proven him right on too many occasions. He thought of his first wife, Inga, a true shield maiden, murmuring, 7
“Now there was a woman,” as he melted into the dense undergrowth to watch his pups at play. Trey relaxed once his father withdrew from the circle. Three of his brothers and two cousins closed ranks as Sig positioned them with their backs to the flames.
Flickering yellow light cast Bryn and the young girl in stark relief. He knew, in principle, what was about to happen. He’d been billeted with five older brothers for his entire life without the presence or influence of a female in their longhouse. This was the first time he’d ever seen it performed, as if on stage. It was, if nothing else, disappointing. The girl lay impassive, her eyes shut, and not even his brother’s roar of release to the claps and catcalls of his audience could roust her from her stupor.
Trey watched as each of his siblings and cousins grunted and thrust with
abandon. When Sig released him to take his turn, the young boy knew his time drew near and he felt the familiar tingling in his groin, his cock finally responding. He shut his eyes and imagined how it might feel but he had little frame of reference other than the rough hands of his brothers and his own frantic strokes. Judging from their
eagerness and obvious satisfaction, he began to hope that it might be even better than what his imagination conjured.
Bryn took his older brother’s place, though the youngling no longer required
restraint. He glanced down at his smaller brother and grinned. The boy finally
responded. He’d feared he might have to stimulate the lad in front of the others. That would bring shame on both of them, though in truth he wanted nothing more than to feel the smooth skin in his rough pal
ms one last time. After the lad’s initiation, such roughhousing was strictly forbidden, and that pained him sorely. He watched the crone approach and kneel down in front of the boy. Gripping Trey’s shoulders, he forced the boy’s back to arch as the crone took the young man’s cock into her mouth.
The boy moaned and twisted at the strange sensations pulsing up and down his
swollen length as the old hag sucked and teased with tongue and gums.
Bryn released his brother and whispered, “Do it like that,” and pointed to Sig
thrusting with abandon, his hips wildly gyrating as he plunged so hard and deep the girl finally grunted and expelled a sharp breath. He cradled the boy’s hips and rocked him gently until his brother felt the rhythm, allowing him to back away.
The circle reformed about Trey and the crone, silent but for the harsh breaths and grunts as the boy took his final steps to manhood. When he finally released, his mouth formed an “O” of surprise as his clan mates broke into cheers and jeers, thumping him on the back and dragging him toward the girl. When the time came, he would need no goading, nor instruction.
8
Chapter Two
“It’ll be all right, girl.”
“What part of having your house trashed is ever going to be all right?” Caitlin
wailed. “It don’t mean nothing.”
“Nothing? Nothing! Dad, look at this. The table is splinters. The, the…” Caitlin gasped in dismay at the wreckage in their home.
“I’m the one that started this. I never should have gone to the newspaper. If I’d kept my mouth shut, none of this would have happened.”
“They scammed your friends out of their life savings. How are you going to live
with that?”
Jake O’Brien knew it wasn’t a matter of living with it. He had no intention of
sitting back and letting the bastards walk all over him. What he didn’t like was how his family had gotten sucked into the mess he’d made of everything.