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What Dusk Divides
Copyright © 2019 by Clara Coulson
Cover Design by Christian Bentulan at http://
coversbychristian.com/
All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of the author, except where permitted by law.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and events are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locations is entirely coincidental.
For more information:
http://www.claracoulson.com/
To contact the author, email [email protected] Contents
I. But Hope
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
II. Burns Brightest
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
III. After Dusk
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
To Be Continued
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Books by Clara Coulson
About Clara Coulson
To all my teeth that decided they needed dental work this fall: screw you.
Part I
But Hope
Chapter One
Ten Hours Till Dusk
Four faeries sat in a circle, knocking back potions like vodka shots.
The battle to save the city from the machinations of Vianu the elder vampire had ended in failure twenty-four minutes ago, and everybody needed a pick-me-up. Not only because our moods grew poorer as the destruction of Kinsale drew closer with each passing minute. But also because the horde of vicious vampires in the park had fought fast and fiercely, and some of us were currently being held together by the equivalent of duct tape and crazy glue.
It was hard to concentrate on saving the world with a death rattle in your chest.
The first round of “drinks” consisted of prototype healing potions I’d pillaged from Watchdog R&D and stored under my bed, meant to be used in the event I caught a bad case of evisceration by vampire on the way home from work or play. While the potions couldn’t heal iron wounds any better than our natural healing factors, they would succeed at fixing all our regular injuries slightly faster than our faerie blood could manage. What they didn’t heal I had enough bandages to cover up, so we could at least appear to be fully functioning people.
The second round consisted of stimulant potions mixed by the great Tori Melville. They shocked your system into overdrive and allowed you to soldier on for twice as long as your body would normally allow. When the potions wore off, you suffered a terrible crash and slept at least a whole day away. But since we only had ten hours left until the Wild Hunt arrived to destroy the world, and some of us were likely to die before we reached the limit, we all considered the crash an acceptable tradeoff for giving us enough energy to try and prevent the next apocalypse.
While we waited for the potions to take full effect, we turned our ears toward the door of my war room and listened to the faint voices emanating from down the hall. In my living room, Saoirse, Odette, Drake, Mallory, Granger, and the least-injured sídhe soldiers were trying their best to interrogate a man whose mind contained a vast wealth of knowledge but whose brain had been totally fried in the process of obtaining it. The husk of Nolan Kennedy could produce information about practically any topic relating to Tír na nÓg. But in order to get the right information, you had to ask the right question in just the right way.
It didn’t sound like anyone was having much luck.
Indira, seated opposite me, grunted as her dislocated elbow popped back into place under the healing potion’s influence.
Having regained the use of her arm, her first move was to dig around in her jacket pocket and produce a tube of hot-pink lipstick. Which she applied to lips that were still slightly puffy from where she’d been punched in the jaw by a vampire. She pressed her lips together to get the spread even, then said,
“Much better.”
“Strange,” said Orlagh through clenched teeth, “how the little touches always improve your mood the most.” Her back was up against the wall, ramrod straight, while Boyle stitched up the iron wound on her upper chest. During the chaotic battle, she’d explained a minute ago, a vampire had hurled an iron rod at her heart. Orlagh, dealing with four other vamps at the same time, hadn’t been able to deflect it until it pierced the skin just above her breast. The wound was shallow, thankfully, but her
entire shoulder was inflamed from the iron contact, and the swelling had reduced her dominant arm’s range of motion.
Boyle snipped the end off the thick thread he’d grabbed from my first-aid kit and tore open a pack of medicated gauze to cover the wound. Faeries didn’t get serious infections, but a dirty iron wound healed slower than a clean one. The fae body found it hard to shake off the effects of iron, primarily because it burned the soul just as badly as it burned the flesh.
“There,” Boyle said as he stuck the last strip of tape over the edge of the gauze. “All done.”
Orlagh slumped and let out a sigh. “It hurts more than I anticipated.”
“Iron always hurts more than you anticipate,” I said, easing myself away from the wall. My entire abdomen felt like it was full of boiling water, each breath a chore, as the healing potion rearranged the pieces of my bullet-blended organs. It should have been working a lot quicker, but the bullet the unknown asshole sniped me with had an iron tip. So the potion could only heal the peripheral damage done by the bullet’s kinetic energy. Any piece of me the bullet’s tip had actually touched was shit out of luck.
“You need a stitch job too, Whelan?” asked Boyle, gesturing with the needle.
“Don’t know yet.” I peeled the wad of loose gauze off my abdomen.
The bleeding had slowed, and the gaping hole under my ribs was much smaller than it had been a few minutes ago. But I’d have to wait until the potion finished up before I got a verdict on the extent of the iron damage. On my back, where the bullet entered, I could feel the burn was just a pinpoint. The bullet had been totally normal, except for a tiny piece of iron on the end. Not meant to kill a faerie, but to stun them.
And stun me it did, right at the crucial moment, I thought bitterly.
I’d been one second away from derailing Vianu’s attempt to summon the Wild Hunt to Kinsale, one step from wrecking his blood-soaked summoning circle, one breath from victory against a powerful vampire lord. Then some dickwad shot me in the back and left me bleeding at Vianu’s feet. And, of course, he’d fled afterward, too scared to hang around when our own sniper, Mallory, caught sight of him and started shooting back.
A hired gun was my guess. Some mercenary whose fear of the sídhe had been overridden by the mountains of money Vianu inherited along with most of Agatha Bismarck’s underground business empire.
I really hoped Vianu hadn’t paid the guy up front. Because if he hadn’t, the man would leave this besieged city empty-handed,
since his employer was now a melting pile of ice chunks in the m
iddle of a park.
“Need a hand cleaning up?” Boyle asked me as he dumped the remaining contents of the first-aid kit on the floor and started doling out shares to each person. “You’re still moving a bit sluggishly.”
“Low on energy.” I grabbed one of the rods on my weapons rack and hauled myself off the floor. My knees almost buckled. “I used too much to cast that freeze spell, and now it’s catching up to me.
The stim potion should dampen the fatigue shortly, but it’s going to be a little while before I’ve got enough magic in my coffers to cast even the most basic combat spells.”
I huffed. “Just what I need with the Hunt on the way.”
“Don’t be so hard on yourself.” Orlagh readjusted her shirt to cover her chest and carefully slid on her tattered uniform jacket. “You killed sixty-four vampires, including an elder, with a single spell. Which may very well have broken some kind of record. And you demonstrated such pinpoint precision in the casting that not a single bystander was injured despite the immense power outlay.”
She paused long enough to throw me a look that indicated she thought my possession of so much power was suspicious, and that she planned to find out the truth about the strange new energy source I’d acquired after breaking my soul glamour.
If she solved the mystery before I did, I hoped she told me the answer.
“Until half an hour ago,” she continued, “I would have said that level of spellwork was beyond a half-sídhe, not to mention a practitioner your age. If I was you, I would be proud of what I’d accomplished.”
“I would be proud if I’d stopped Vianu before he finished the summoning ritual.” I took a deep breath to steady myself before I let go of the rack. “But I didn’t. So any small sprout of pride that might’ve been growing among the weeds in my head was thoroughly crushed by the weight of the Hunt’s imminent arrival as it rolled over all my other concerns. All I feel right now is a growing sense of dread that makes me want to vomit all over the floor.”
“Or maybe that’s just your intestines hanging out,” muttered Indira.
I glanced down to find that, sure enough, a tiny piece of my small intestine was poking out of the hole in my gut. I pushed it back into my abdominal cavity and tugged my shirt down to cover the mess. “I think I need more cleaning power than gauze and
alcohol pads can provide.” I took a step toward the door. “My fingers are caked in so much blood, they’re starting to stick together. I’m going to go wet some washcloths and…”
The next thing I knew, Boyle was holding me up by my arms and Orlagh was crouching beside me.
“What happened?” I murmured, my thoughts fuzzy.
“You blacked out for a second,” Boyle said.
Orlagh checked my pulse with two fingers and pulled up the hem of my shirt again to examine the hole, which was drooling a lot more blood than it had been a minute ago. “Think that bullet grazed a major blood vessel, and you tore it just now by moving in the exact wrong way. The hemorrhage caused a sudden drop in blood pressure.”
She grabbed another wad of gauze and gently pressed it to my abdomen. “The tear should heal pretty quickly. But until it does, you should probably allow someone to help you along. Unless you want to add a concussion to your list of injuries.”
Shaking off the lingering dizziness, I pointed a finger to my right. “Bathroom’s that way.”
Boyle slung one of my arms over his shoulder and half carried me down the hall, Orlagh following a step behind us. Boyle deposited me on the lid of my toilet and leaned me back against the tank as Orlagh grabbed a handful of washcloths from the cabinet and wet a few in the sink. She indicated my bloody shirt, which prompted Boyle, unbothered by notions like the difficulty of acquiring clothes in the post-apocalypse, to simply tear my shirt right down the middle.
I was about to complain, when I noticed the horrified look on his face.
Orlagh, who’d been shuffling over with the washcloths, let out a gasp and dropped them on the floor with a wet plop. “Good gods,”
she whispered, “who did that to you?”
My gaze dropped to my chest. My heavily scarred chest.
Oh. Right.
Most faeries who had iron scars acquired them in battle, so they generally came packaged as cuts or puncture marks made by various pointy weapons. Such scars were viewed as badges of honor, signs that a warrior had triumphed over a faerie’s greatest weakness.
Scars that were acquired by accident, on the other hand—like those obtained on Earth through carelessly touching something made of iron—were dealt scorn and ridicule. They were considered
a sign that someone didn’t take their fae heritage seriously, didn’t treat it with the right amount of reverence.
And as for scars that signified torture by iron, a faerie’s worst nightmare?
Well, those provoked a great and terrible pity within all fae who saw them.
Orlagh and Boyle looked upon the chain-shaped marks that would forever mar my skin with such absolute despondency that, for a second, I was convinced they were actually going to cry. But they were battle-hardened soldiers—born and raised in Orlagh’s case—so they packed away the pain in a little box in their brains and replaced it with a more distant sympathy that didn’t compromise their hardline faerie logic.
Orlagh spoke gently, “Those are old scars. From the purge?”
I nodded. “The day I was outed as fae. A group of men snuck up on me, wrapped me in a chain, and beat me up.”
Boyle scowled. “Were they punished?”
I thought about that for a second. The cops who’d turned on me had never been formally charged for their actions; if they had been, none of them would still be breathing, because the fae justice system condemned to death anyone who tortured a sídhe scion with iron. But that didn’t mean they hadn’t suffered for their mistakes.
Those men lived in terror now, every waking moment of their lives. They had since I’d been publicly exposed as half sídhe.
Now, they knew just how badly they’d fucked up all those years ago, knew what kind of retribution I could drop on their heads at a moment’s notice. All I had to do was point the finger at them, say the magic words, and everything they cherished would be ripped from them by the unstoppable power of their faerie overlords.
They would suffer as much as I had when they wrapped me in that chain and kicked me senseless. They would suffer worse. And then they would die.
The existential fear of that probable torment would plague them for the rest of their days. It plagued them so much already that it had caused all of them to quit the force shortly after I rejoined. Merely seeing my face, hearing my voice, was enough to make them piss themselves. I had become their worst nightmare, just like they’d been mine during the purge.
So no, they weren’t technically punished, but…
“They got what they deserved,” I said. “They got enough.”
“Good.” Orlagh picked up the washcloths. “Then let’s get you cleaned up.”
Orlagh efficiently scrubbed the blood off everything north of my belt and applied two square bandages with an extra wad of gauze tucked underneath to my exit wound, so my intestines couldn’t flop out again. Once she finished, she sent me off to my bedroom to change my torn and bloodstained clothes.
As I stood in front of my disordered closet, I considered putting on the shabbiest clothing I owned, in anticipation of another dirty fight. But something that might’ve been pride led me to dress in my best instead. I threw on a clean pair of designer jeans, brand-new black work boots, a crisp white button-up shirt, and an expensive tan coat that fell to my knees.
If I died today, at least my corpse would look nice. Also—
Someone knocked on my door while I was admiring myself in the mirror.
I hurried over and yanked it open, revealing Saoirse on the other side. An air of nervous excitement hung around her, even as bone-deep exhaustion weighed down her normally upright posture and flattened her every
expression. She’d been abducted by the vampires after yesterday’s catastrophic raid operation and spent the morning in their clutches, being brutalized and fed upon. She was only on her feet right now because a Watchdog healer had seen to her after she was rescued from Vianu’s ward array.
She deserved a long break, after all she’d been through. But the only way to make her take one would be to knock her out. And Saoirse would kick my ass to the moon and back if I forced her off her feet during so critical a time, when the city needed its few competent leaders to shoulder the strain of yet another damaging attack on Kinsale’s crumbling infrastructure.
She had already made it abundantly clear to me when she first took the position as Watchdog captain that I was not to ever prioritize her well-being over that of the city. She was just one human among millions, she’d claimed, and that made her replaceable.
I didn’t believe that statement was entirely true.
“Hey,” she said as she gave me a once-over, “are you feeling better?”
My abdomen felt like it was filled with acid, but Saoirse had better things to do than worry about me right now, so I replied,
“Much. What’s the word?”
“Drake got a lead on a possible method for stopping the Hunt.”
Saoirse lightly punched my arm. “I take back my earlier
reservations. It was a good move, recruiting him. He’s smart. A little creepy, with the yellow eyes and the tiny fangs. But very intelligent, and far more good-natured than I thought he’d be.”
“Bear in mind he doesn’t actually work for us.” I stepped out into the hall, swiftly closing the door behind me so Saoirse didn’t see the pile of bloody clothes on the bedroom floor. “He technically fulfilled his remaining obligations to me by helping us fight this battle against the vamps, so he’s free to go whenever he pleases.”
“Do you think he’ll bail?” She massaged her right arm, which must’ve still been sore. She’d suffered a bad break in the ulna, and when we first met up after the battle, she’d been wearing a sling to pin the arm in place while the healer’s magic sealed the crack.
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