Fireshaper's Doom (21 page)

Read Fireshaper's Doom Online

Authors: Tom Deitz

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Fireshaper's Doom
13.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Kinslayer,” David whispered, recalling how that word had rustled through the host of the Sidhe nearly a year before when he had stood before their assembled Riding after the Trial of Heroes, while a makeshift spear protruded from the chest of a fair-haired Faery boy who might someday have become his friend. The boy’s father had wielded that spear, but it had nevertheless been of David’s making. And then the accusing Faery chorus had begun:
“Kinslayer.”

“Kinslayer,” Morwyn said again, her voice cold as bitter ice. “And among my mother’s kind such deeds demand accounting.” David sat up straighter and rearranged the cover, wishing the woman would go away at least long enough for him to get his act together. “Why are you telling me this?” he asked slowly. “What’s it got to do with me?”

The woman leapt to her feet, spun about to glare at him. “Because, fool of a mortal, Fionchadd was my son! Because Ailill was
my…
husband, you would say, though
he
would not. Because I loved him once and he betrayed me, then betrayed Fionchadd perhaps beyond any Power to recall, and for that I must have my vengeance!”

David was suddenly wary. “Wait a minute—what do you
mean
‘Beyond any Power to recall’? Does that mean Fionchadd’s
not
dead?”

Morwyn shrugged again and began to pace back and forth beside the bed. “Who can say? What is death? Death is the breaking of that which links Earth and Air: matter and spirit. With your fragile kind, there is no mending. With the Sidhe, the link can ofttimes be rejoined, but by strength of will alone. Yet with the Death of Iron, it is not so simple. Iron blasts the body past repair. Sometimes it can even shatter the spirit, so that it remains forever lost, forever fearing a return of the agony that marked the breaking.”

David nodded thoughtfully. “I suppose there would be pain.”

“What do you know of it?” Morwyn shot back fiercely, stopping dead in her tracks. “Imagine, boy, that you cut yourself. A mere scratch. Then imagine that the scratch takes fire. Imagine each tiny part of your body aflame. Burning outward from that point, slowly, oh so slowly, but without quenching or hope of solace. Were the flesh in truth consumed, the pain would be no greater!”

“But you still haven’t told me whether or not Fionchadd’s really dead,” David ventured at last.

Morwyn shook her head emphatically. “Oh, he is dead—in that body. Whether his spirit may find or build another, I cannot say. Such a thing requires Power. It requires will. I do not know how much of either Fionchadd had. I tried to teach him well, but he had been long from my keeping when he died.”

“But he was your son—”

“I have seldom seen him since he was a child. He was fostered with Finvarra.”

David couldn’t take much more. His head was clearing rapidly. The wine was helping a lot. Memories were returning; the cobwebs of muddle were nearly gone.

“Okay, look,” he said carefully. “What do you want? You wouldn’t have snagged me
from…
while I
was…
while I was swimming, if you hadn’t wanted something. So what is it? I presume it has something to do with Ailill, but what? And can I have my clothes, if you don’t mind? I’m a little sick of sitting around here naked!”

Morwyn raised an eyebrow. “As to what I want, that I will tell you shortly. As to your clothes,” she added airily, “I suppose they are where you left them.”

“Well, that’s just great!” David snarled bitterly.

“I rather like you the way you are.”

“Humph” came David’s derisive snort, as he tried to adjust to another of Morwyn’s abrupt mood swings. “Do you no good.”

“And how do you know that it has not already?”

David felt his cheeks burning. “You didn’t!”

“Maybe.” The woman’s smile was cryptic. “It is best when both desire it, when spirits link as well as bodies, when—”

“Okay, okay, I get the message,” David snapped, his voice rising on every word. “And I know I’m probably stupid to do this, probably stupid to get pissed off and holler at a sorceress who’s got me naked and helpless and half-drunk and God knows where—but if I’m
not
dressed and out of here and on my way back home by the time I count fifteen, I’ll—”

Morwyn laughed aloud, the sound oddly light and crystalline, yet filled with biting mockery. “What? In one of my dresses? At the bottom of a lake? For that is where this World touches yours. Would you
like
to drown? You almost did, you know. Of a certain it would be no problem to arrange.”

“What do you
mean?”
David asked with forced civility. “Isn’t this Tir-Nan-Og?”

Morwyn laughed again. “Oh no, young sir. Lugh’s realm is closed, its borders lately sealed. We are in quite another place, a place a Powersmith alone might venture.”

“Not Tir-Nan-Og?”

“Oh no. A bubble into another World, perhaps. The fires under your land, as Tir-Nan-Og is the sky above it.”

Damn!
David raged, in large part at himself.
More Faery metaphysics!
Distracting him from the matters at hand. Like escape, first of all. Like figuring out Morwyn’s intentions for him, which seemed to be the only way to accomplish the former.

Morwyn’s voice became suddenly earnest. “I need a hero, David. More to the point, I need a thief.”

David’s mouth popped open in amazement.

Me?
You stole me from my world and now you want me to steal for
you?
You’ve
got
to be kidding. And steal what? The friggin’ crown from Lugh’s head? That’d be a trick, wouldn’t it? Or maybe a pile of shit from Ailill’s stable? Bet you could grow some fine taters with that stuff! Give me a break, woman. I’ve never stolen a thing in my life—and even if I could, why would I do it for you?”

Morwyn fixed him with an appraising stare. ‘To save your life, perhaps? To save your family?”

“Bullshit. I’m protected!” He felt automatically for the ring, first at throat, then at finger. A cold fist gripped his heart.

“By Oisin’s ring?” Morwyn suggested coolly.

“Yeah, by the ring,” David flung back recklessly. “I gave it to my girl friend, but it should—” His voice faltered as a shadow of doubt clouded his conviction. “It should protect whoever
she
loves now. And I think she loves me, at least she
said
she did.”

Morwyn’s lips curved wickedly. “But about this
ring…
Tell me, does it have Power?”

David folded his arms and looked away sullenly. “I expect you know that. You know everything else.”

“It protects you and everyone you love against the Sidhe? Against physical intervention by the Sidhe?”

“No comment.”

“Have you asked yourself, then, how, if your lady’s love protects you, I could capture you?”

David’s breath hissed a sharp intake as horrible realization dawned on him. An edge of fear stabbed into his gut and twisted there tike a dagger.

“Half of my blood is not of the Sidhe, David Sullivan, and that half is enough.”

“But Fionchadd? The ring worked against Fionchadd, and he’s your son!”

“Fionchadd’s blood was quartered, mine is half.”

“Oh,” David said in a small voice, suddenly feeling very foolish.

Morwyn smiled her triumph. “So you see, you have no choice. No real choice, except to aid me.”

David shook his head. “No, I don’t guess I do.”

“Good. So we can talk now. We have plans to make.”

“I’d be more willing to talk if I had something to wear.”

The woman’s eyes filled with sudden merriment, making her look almost girlish. She pointed absently toward the wall opposite the foot of the bed. “I forget, sometimes, how tiresomely modest you mortals are. You may find some clothes behind that panel with the golden dragon on it.”

David sighed and heaved himself out of bed, wrapping the velvet coverlet about his hips with an angry flourish. It dragged behind him as he found the panel indicated. A gold-worked dragon indeed coiled there, devouring its own tail, its legs an intricacy of knotwork.

“Press the eye,” Morwyn called.

David did. The panel popped open; inside were piles of velvet and silk—red, of course. He pulled them out and stared at them doubtfully.

On top was something that looked like a pair of tights, but with a series of laces at the waist and a flap tied on in front. David knew what that was for, what it was called. But even thinking of it made his cheeks burn. He glanced around at Morwyn, made vertical, spinning motions with his fingers.

“Could you?”

“Indeed not!”

He sighed again and sat down on the floor with his back to the woman. With some difficulty he began to tug on the hose. It was damned awkward. Halfway through he had to stand up. Inevitably the wrap slipped off. He shrugged, and pulled them the rest of the way up. At least they weren’t too uncomfortable.

A glance at a nearby mirror showed Morwyn’s face. She looked amused.

David completed the ensemble as fast as he could: a long shirt of crimson silk (why hadn’t he found that first?); a tight red jacket that the hose laced to; a short, pleated tunic of burgundy velvet with absurd flowing sleeves that fell almost to his calves. Thigh-high boots of scarlet suede.

“I feel like an idiot,” he choked when he had finished, certain his face was redder than the fabric. He tried to fold his arms and look disgusted, but the unwieldy sleeves got in the way.

“You
look
magnificent,” Morwyn countered pleasantly. “Quite the Elven prince. Rather short, perhaps, but one can’t have everything. And the color sets off your cheeks to perfection.”

David rolled his eyes. “Tell me about it.”

“Your anger seems to be subsiding,” Morwyn noted.

“Anger won’t get me out of this,” David gritted. “Common sense might. If I didn’t have
some
of that, Ailill would’ve got me the first time I met him.” Seeing no obvious chair nearby, be helped himself to a seat on the floor.

Morwyn’s eyes sparkled as she tossed him a cushion and sank down beside him. “Ailill is that way, isn’t he? But still too devious for his own good.”

“This
is
about him, then? This business about stealing?”

“Oh, aye,” Morwyn replied instantly, handing David a goblet of wine in lieu of the earlier chalice he had not finished. “Ailill has escaped.”

David paused, his hand frozen above the offering.
“Escaped?
But Nuada said there were locks on him, locks and spells!”

“Four metal and four magic,” Morwyn quoted. “Not counting the binding spells—according to his sister.”

“His sister?” David’s face contorted in a mask of horrified dismay. “Oh, Jesus, no!”

“Oh, yes! Ailill has a sister—Fionna nic Bobh, by name. Worse even than him, I suspect, from our two or three encounters. Or at least less scrupulous. She it was released him. I sought to capture him, but he escaped. I tried to scry him out, but he eluded me. My summoning did not find him.”

It
was
him,
David thought.
Ailill
was
the Crazy Deer.
“Maybe he
couldn’t
come,” he said slowly. “I think he may have been in deer-shape—elk-shape, actually. And he may have been wounded; a car hit what I suspect was him, anyway—you know what a car is?”

“I am not ignorant, boy—and what you have told me seems very likely, for deer are Fionna’s favorite animals. But tell me of this wounding. Was there blood? Does Ailill’s essence color the Lands of Men? If so—”

It was David’s turn to smile. “What’s it worth to you?”

“What is your sanity worth to you?” Morwyn shot back. “If you do not tell me, I will rip your mind apart and search the fragments until I find that memory!”

Watch it, Sullivan!
David warned himself
. Play it close: Draw her out. Let her do the talking. Give nothing away without something in return.

“So you can’t find out yourself?” he said at last. “Well now,
that’s
interesting. Are there, like, maybe, limits to your Power, then?” He raised an inquiring eyebrow.


Something
limits it right now,” Morwyn snapped angrily. “A wall of arcane fire through which I cannot pass—and curse Lugh to the Cold for that. That is why I need you.”

David took a sip of wine and tried to look wise and crafty. “Ah! A wall of flame that even a sorceress can’t get through. And something to be stolen, something to do with Ailill, I bet. Well, that’s right up my alley! I just took
Locks-and-Keys 101
in school last year.”

Morwyn took a sip of wine. “Your tongue leads you onto dangerous ground, my boy,” she said sweetly. “And if you are not careful, you may find no ground beneath you at all. But come, I will tell you my tale straight out. And then you will tell me about Ailill’s wounding. Is that fair?”

Other books

Kiki's Millionaire by Patricia Green
Through Russian Snows by G. A. Henty
The Cure of Souls by Phil Rickman
Courting the Countess by Barbara Pierce
Sexualmente by Nuria Roca
Climates by Andre Maurois
Deity by Steven Dunne
The Absent One by Jussi Adler-Olsen