Treoir Dragon Hoard: Belador Book 10

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Treoir Dragon Hoard: Belador Book 10 Page 22

by Dianna Love


  Way to go, Daegan. Storm hoped that won them a few points.

  Vines curled and slowly moved forward.

  Maybe not.

  Storm growled low at the vines. They quickly retreated, but this standoff would not last forever.

  The female looked around and every spirit focused on her. Were they communicating silently?

  When the spirits returned their blank stares to Daegan and Storm, the young girl slowly floated back around to face them, too. “What do you wish to know?”

  Since Storm could not speak in animal form, Daegan had to handle the negotiation. “We are looking for one of ours who has been taken. We wish to know who was the last person to visit this cave and ask for a Noirre plant.”

  She kept moving her head as she pondered her answer. “Family.”

  Storm wanted to growl at them to be more specific, but Daegan’s patience was paying off.

  “That explains one thing then,” Daegan commented.

  “What would that be?” she asked, genuine curiosity in her question.

  Daegan said, “That explains how someone entered your domain and left with his life and a plant.”

  She said nothing to counter Daegan’s words, which in Storm’s mind confirmed that it was indeed a male.

  Gently pressing her, Daegan said, “I would like his name.”

  “Do you wish to kill him?”

  Storm lifted his jaguar head to meet Daegan’s reptilian gaze. Hoping the dragon understood, Storm nodded his head up and down. He avoided lying to spirits. That never went well even if the consequences came years later.

  Swinging his big head back to eye level with the young girl, Daegan explained, “That depends on whether the man has harmed this jaguar’s mate.”

  The smooth skin on her forehead furrowed. She stared at Storm’s jaguar for a long moment. “Why would he hurt your mate?”

  This was too difficult in animal form.

  Storm shifted back to human shape and Daegan immediately covered his body in jeans and a T-shirt. Even in this young girl’s time, speaking to a naked man at her age was not appropriate.

  Nodding at the dragon, Storm squatted so that he would not be standing above her. “I’m not sure yet exactly what your relative has done, but I believe he was involved because pure Noirre has been discovered where my mate was attacked and kidnapped. I’m desperate for any help in finding her.”

  The girl’s eyes swelled as if she was about to cry, which would be a trick for a spirit. “No. This descendant swore he would use Noirre to avenge our deaths and harm no female or child.”

  Storm realized she was telling the truth and she must have made it clear about not hurting a female or child because of what had happened to those who died in this cave.

  This sucked, but he had to tell her. “He lied.”

  She floated backwards slowly.

  Uh oh.

  Daegan said, “She doesn’t believe us.”

  Storm asked, “Please don’t attack. Tell me how we can prove to you that we’re telling the truth.”

  She conferred with her spirit family once again. After the stretched silence, the girl came forward, but only halfway.

  What did that mean?

  Daegan lifted his head, wings back and ready.

  But the girl said to Storm, “Swear on your family’s blood that you tell the truth. If you give that oath in here and fail to tell the truth, you will regret it.”

  Daegan rumbled a noise, but Storm couldn’t look up and lose the tiny connection with this spirit. There were many reasons why he shouldn’t consider giving that oath, the first of which was that he had no absolute evidence that the kidnapper was her relative.

  His gut said it was. He was going with that, but he still wanted to make an educated guess with something this important. “Can I ask one question first?”

  She cocked her head, which he took as a yes.

  “When was the last plant taken from here?”

  “I have no sense of time, but it has not been long.”

  Daegan picked up Storm’s line of questioning and asked, “When was the last plant taken from this cave before that?”

  Energy rippled through the room.

  Spirits moaned and swayed.

  The female clenched her little fist, looking ready to put a beatdown on someone. Her voice went two octaves lower. “Was a very long time ago. A goddess sent her army, then her mage and then a druid who stole from us.”

  Lifting a hand to ask for peace, Storm said, “I’m ready to give my oath.”

  When silence descended again, he gave his oath. “I swear on the blood of my ancestors who were honorable Navajos in a new world you would not know about. And I swear on my own blood that you are welcome to take my life if I lie, because I am willing to give my life to save my mate.”

  Whispers erupted behind her. The little girl lifted her only hand without turning, and all spirits quieted.

  Storm continued, “I ask only that regardless of what you determine, I be allowed to save my mate before you claim my life. A person used pure Noirre only one day ago where we live in another land. I don’t know if the person who wielded the pure Noirre majik was the descendant of your family, but if that is the only person to visit you recently and leave with a plant, then it is possible. He is either the one who attacked my mate and kidnapped her or he gave the Noirre to someone else who did. I had placed an emerald chakra stone on my mate’s chest using majik so that I could always find her. The person who took her from me clawed the stone out of her body and left the bloody emerald on the ground, then teleported away.”

  The female gasped at that. She shook like a volcano on the edge of erupting.

  She screamed a high-pitched wail that doubled anything they’d first heard.

  Daegan shifted back to his human form with his clothes on, and clamped big hands over his ears.

  Storm covered his, but he was still alive, which he took as an encouraging sign.

  When the spirit finished her fit of anger, she trembled, still a child at heart. “He lied to us.” She pointed to the skeleton that matched her size. “I gave him my own hand, which became a single plant once it was removed.”

  Storm cringed at the child giving up a hand even if it was from her bones. Spirits were energy and her spirit had suffered for a long time. She shouldn’t have to sacrifice even more.

  He offered, “If we return your plant, will that replace your hand?”

  “No. It cannot be replaced, just as half of that body cannot be returned.” She pointed to a spirit with only an upper body. “The druid stole that.”

  That would be Cathbad the Druid. Storm sensed that he and Daegan had stayed past the point of remaining safe. “Will you now please share the name of the descendant you gave the plant?”

  The girl’s spirit still shook. She floated back and forth in an agitated state. The others mirrored her movements.

  Storm glanced at Daegan, who looked just as concerned. They were losing her.

  Still angry, she stopped abruptly as if realizing Storm and Daegan were still present. “He is called La Cuchilla.”

  Daegan gave a small shake of his head. He didn’t recognize the name. Neither did Storm, and his stomach dropped. He could translate the Spanish words that meant “The Blade,” but La Cuchilla was not a Celtic name or any name he’d ever heard.

  But it was another lead. Something instead of nothing.

  Storm addressed the girl and her group. “Thank you for sparing our lives and sharing that information. What can we do for you in return?”

  Her face softened. “Why would you offer us anything when a descendant of my blood has harmed your mate?”

  Storm smiled a little. “I would give you eternal peace if I had that power. None of you harmed my mate and should not be held responsible. Also, if you knew my mate, you’d know that she would be disappointed in me if I did not offer what I could. I’m sorry for what happened to you and your people. I wish we had not needed to disturb you.�


  Swirling around in a blur of motion, she consulted silently with the other spirits. All heads nodded to her, then the girl returned to address Storm and Daegan. “We wish to never be disturbed again. If we are, we will move throughout the cave to bring others in to be with us.”

  That threatened human lives of the cave exhibition staff and visitors.

  Giving their situation thought first, Storm admitted, “I can’t guarantee another descendant will not attempt to come here in the future.”

  Her face fell.

  Why did he feel like he’d stomped a puppy when he was trying to be honest? He quickly continued, “But this dragon shifter and I can create a blood ward outside the entrance to your place of rest to prevent any other supernatural beings from entering, and possibly even a descendant. You should know that it will also prevent you from leaving as well.”

  Sounding more like a spirit who had been around for centuries now, she said, “This is where we will all remain forever. We have no wish to leave. We want the ward.”

  Daegan asked, “What do you wish done with your descendant when we find him?”

  Storm growled at possibly being prevented from making the kidnapper pay for harming Evalle.

  Daegan shot him a work-with-me look.

  The female didn’t smile, but her voice lightened to that of a child this time. “You may do as you please. It will not prevent him from paying his debt to us for breaking his oath.” She paused. “And he did not teleport here to visit.”

  Storm started asking, “What is the consequence of ... ”

  She pointed to the wall. “Leave now.”

  Daegan didn’t hesitate. He teleported them to the tunnel where Storm and Daegan placed a ward that would require the both of them working together to break.

  Storm said, “That will protect the humans who remain in the public area of the cave, but that won’t stop the Medb and others from wielding Noirre majik that is currently out in the world.”

  “This is true, but that is not our concern at this moment.”

  “You don’t know anything about La Cuchilla, do you?”

  “Sadly, no, but we have the largest force of warriors in the world. We will find him.”

  Storm believed that, but would it be soon enough for Evalle?

  Daegan asked, “Did you catch that last part?”

  “What specifically?”

  “When she said, ‘He did not teleport here to visit’.”

  “That’s right,” Storm murmured. “Wonder what she meant? He has to be teleporting to get around from continent to continent and inside here.”

  “It is curious, but he does walk or use other transportation on occasion based on what Reese discovered. He may have entered a different way than we did.”

  Daegan teleported them outside to join the group.

  Quinn immediately asked Daegan, “Please teleport Reese home.”

  “How many times do I have to tell you that you do not make my decisions?” Reese said, shoving her face up at his face.

  Unperturbed by her bulldog spunk, Quinn said, “You’re sick and you won’t tell me why.”

  Stepping back, she crossed her arms. “Are we looking for Evalle or not?”

  Tristan asked, “Did you two find the Noirre? You don’t stink of dark majik.”

  Daegan filled them in, drawing a lot of horrified looks. As he wrapped it up, he said, “As for the Noirre smell, I think it comes from wielding the majik or ripping a plant from the skeleton, though it was said they grew originally from the remains. We slashed vines to break free, but they immediately reformed back to the host skeleton.”

  Walking back and forth as Daegan spoke, Storm waited for the dragon to finish before he jumped ahead to his next concern. He asked, “Anyone ever heard of La Cuchilla?”

  No one spoke up.

  He asked, “Got any idea how to find him?”

  Adrianna said, “I have an idea.”

  CHAPTER 24

  Back in Atlanta moments later, Adrianna felt sympathy for Evalle, who often suffered motion sickness when she teleported. Adrianna normally didn’t, but her stomach argued that hurling could be in her future if she did this much more today.

  She’d asked Daegan to drop them in Piedmont Park where the skies were still dark, but that was due to being early evening as much as the rain continuing to fall. The dragon king had told her to envision the specific spot she wanted and he landed them exactly where she’d chosen.

  That’s why they could now emerge from the shadows with no humans being the wiser.

  Thankfully, one human passed out against a tree with a beer bottle inches from his outstretched hand had seen nothing. Soaked from head to foot, he slept on.

  She’d almost dried out in Ireland, but this drizzle seeped in, drenching everyone. At this point, she welcomed the weather that kept more people inside than out in the park right now. A few humans in raincoats were out in the large field, walking dogs that didn’t care about the wet weather. None of them had been close enough to see her group appear out of thin air.

  Still, Daegan and the team were going to get caught with so much teleporting.

  “What is your idea?” Daegan asked, snapping her back to the moment.

  Storm stepped up and said, “Probably Isak. Am I right, Adrianna?”

  “You two don’t need me if you can answer your own question,” she said with a gentle tease in her voice to beat down the tension that had ridden Storm for so long. “Yes, Isak can find almost anything, human or preternatural, and you know he wants to help.”

  “Call your soldier while we move toward the road to meet him,” Daegan said, prompting Adrianna to pull out her phone and send a text while they walked.

  When Isak didn’t reply immediately, her stomach clenched.

  Then his text came through, asking what she knew about this La Cuchilla. She told him they were back in Atlanta and believed that was the kidnapper’s name. Also, that in spite of his Latin sounding name, he could possibly be of Celtic descent.

  Isak sent back a simple, Copy that.

  Storm and Daegan had avoided the overhead lights, opting to gather the group in a dark area near the tree line close to the road.

  She’d just closed her phone and turned to join the others when Grady’s translucent shape took form. Poor guy. “Grady?”

  He floated over to her.

  She suggested, “Step over to the tree with me.” When he did, she extended her hand. “Evalle would want you to have this.”

  She waited, giving him time to think it through, then Grady accepted her handshake for only about five seconds, then he let go.

  “Uhm, Grady, you should have shaken with me for a full ten seconds to stay solid for ten minutes,” she gently told him. Surely he knew that.

  He took corporeal form quickly and kept his voice low. “You heard what Quinn said in that art park.”

  She recalled Quinn commenting about observing Grady and Evalle, but he hadn’t elaborated. “Yes. What was he talking about?”

  “I can make my body solid by myself sometimes. Cain’t tell you why ’cause it’s a secret, but I’m good for a while now. I ’bout had to give that Quinn a smack when he started sayin’ too much.”

  “I’m not sharing anything,” she assured Grady.

  “I know. You a good friend to Evalle. What ya’ll find out?”

  Funny how a ghoul could lift her spirits with his knowing she was a friend. She suggested, “Let’s go talk with Daegan and Storm. They were attacked in the Noirre cave, but they survived and have more information.” As she led the way back to the group, most of which had been watching her, Adrianna said, “I sent Isak a name we discovered and he’s using his network to trace it.”

  When they reached the group of weary teleporters, Grady asked, “You don’t know where Evalle is yet?” His voice broke.

  “We’re working on it and got a lead,” Storm said, patting the old guy on the shoulder. The Skinwalker looked as if he couldn’t believe h
e was comforting a ghoul.

  Adrianna smiled inside. That was life with Evalle’s surrogate family.

  Grady said, “I been pushin’ every ghoul I know for anything. One thing I found out is that the guy who took Evalle shielded his face whenever he was seen walkin’ around the city.”

  Reese asked, “Anything else, Grady?”

  “Hold on,” Grady said and faded.

  “What have you got, Grady?” Storm asked when the ghoul became visible again.

  “That hooded guy ain’t been teleportin’.”

  Tristan held his hands out in confusion. “He had to teleport to move Evalle out of here without leaving a trail. Otherwise, Storm could track him or Reese could find him with her gift.”

  “You callin’ me a liar, Alterant?”

  “No, Grady,” Tristan groused. “I’m just pointing out facts so we can figure this out.”

  “Grady might be on to something,” Reese said, grabbing everyone’s attention. “I’ve been working under the impression that we knew for sure Evalle was teleported away.”

  Adrianna kept her eyes on Daegan, whom she considered a barometer of whether they were getting close with a lead. He was locked on Reese’s words as if he could tell she was on to something.

  Storm brought up a point. “The little spirit in the cave actually said La Cuchilla had not teleported in to see them.”

  “La who?” Grady asked.

  “The kidnapper related to the spirits,” Daegan provided.

  “Oh.”

  Reese said, “If everyone will let me finish, I’ll explain where I was going with this.” Once they all quieted, Reese asked Quinn, “Do you remember when we had to go to New Orleans to find Phoedra?”

  “Yes.”

  “The kidnappers didn’t teleport when they vanished. They opened a bolthole. The only way I knew that at the time was because both in Seattle and in Oklahoma, I actually saw the bolthole open and swallow them.”

  “That’s right. In fact, the van dragged you into that bloody hole at one point.”

  Reese waved her hands. “Forget about that. I’m saying that if the kidnapper is using a bolthole and I can’t see that, he could be using something to shield his action each time. Maybe that’s why he went after the pure Noirre. If that’s the case, the reason I could follow the kidnapper’s path in Atlanta and Kilkenny had to be due to him walking. Though why would he have walked away after murdering those guys?” She shook her head, “Maybe he was saving energy for some reason. Anyway, bottom line is he could very well be using a bolthole, but if that’s his trick, he’s got some extra juice to cloak his bolthole departures.”

 

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