“Lord Dunham here. We sense your fear of the mine, Lord Sorn, and know the Ridge Lord is
not well. Lord Cynyr Cree is the closest and we will dispatch him if you think his help is
needed.”
“But your fear of going into the mine prevents you from being of any help to Lord Kiel,”
the
High Lord said.
“Should we send Lord Cree?”
Fontabeau was standing just outside the headframe, staring at the block of
explosive inside the cage. He strained to hear something—anything—but only the tell-
tale silence came back to him.
“Aye, I believe you should. I fear for Phelan,” he said.
“Then he is on his way,”
the third Shadowlord said.
“Contact us if you need to.”
But it was not the Shadowlords Fontabeau wanted reassurance from at that
moment. He closed his eyes and called out to the Triune Goddess, hoping Morrigunia
was close by to hear his call. When after the third attempt he gave up with a long,
ragged sigh, he heard the High Lord’s soft voice.
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“We too are trying to contact Her, Lord Sorn. We will keep trying.”
“Does it seem to you She is always around when you don’t need Her and never
around when you do?” he asked with exasperation, and was surprised to hear the High
Lord laugh.
“Aye, that it does!”
“I too am trying to reach Her.”
Fontabeau turned around to find Brell at the door of the captain’s shack. “You
feeling any better?”
“My head hurts like a Diabolusian warthog’s inside it nibbling away,” Brell
reported, “but at least I can walk without staggering. Do you want me to go after him?”
Fontabeau knew the Ridge Lord wasn’t up to the task but was grateful the warrior
offered.
“We’ll wait for the Reaper they are sending. Hopefully it won’t be long before he
reaches us.”
“I don’t like this quiet,” Brell said, sweeping his gaze over their surroundings.
“Something is definitely not right about this and what’s that gods-awful smell?” He
pointed at their horses. “Even they are reacting to it.”
The horses were skittish, snorting, their eyes rolling as they stamped at the ground.
Fontabeau had been so absorbed with speaking to the Shadowlords and trying to
raise Morrigunia he hadn’t noticed the oily scent that appeared. He drew a deep lungful
into his body and almost immediately his head began to hurt.
“I don’t know what it is,” he told Brell.
“It’s making my eyes water,” Brell said as he reached up to wipe at his eyes. “And
it’s setting my nerves on edge.”
“Aye, mine too. I guess that’s why the horses are so jumpy.”
“Let’s hope so.”
* * * * *
Deep in the tunnel system, Phelan was wiping his own eyes. The farther he went,
the stronger the odor became. It had a familiar stench about it but he couldn’t quite
place where he’d encountered it before. He didn’t remember the Ceannus having such a
rank smell when he’d ventured down there the day before. But the odor put him on his
guard and he stopped to see if he could gain a direction from which the scent was
coming.
Putting a hand to his aching head, he shifted his shoulders. The feeling that
something slimy was sitting on them, draped around his neck, was overwhelming and
it added to his unease. He removed the saddlebag slung over his shoulder because its
weight was causing even more apprehension.
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Once more he tried to contact the Shadowlords, though he was sure they couldn’t
hear him. He tried calling out to Morrigunia as well.
“So nice to know they’re watching my back,” he mumbled to himself as he reached
an intersection where three tunnels met.
Something clinked off to his right and he snapped his head toward the sound,
cocking it as he listened. His amber eyes tracked back and forth in the low light as he
concentrated, and when the sound came again, he straightened, starting in that
direction.
* * * * *
Cynyr Cree kissed his wife Aingeal goodbye, touched his son on his chubby little
cheeks then walked out of the house. Ten steps past the front porch, he shape-shifted
into raven form and took to the air. He could move faster, cover more distance in his
avian nature than he could on horseback or in a lupine state.
Something had been nagging at Cree all morning. He had been restless, gaining
Aingeal’s irritation as he’d paced the living room. He had just come off an assignment
and had been looking forward to a few days of down time to enjoy playing with his son
and loving his woman. He suspected Aingeal was pregnant again, but she was hiding
the knowledge from him.
Soaring over the tops of the Osage orange trees filled to overflowing with their
warty pale green fruit, he contemplated having another son. Thanks to the evil bastard
who had kidnapped her, she had miscarried their first child. Losing little Ancyn had
hurt her. She had her heart set on a dynasty of Cree boys for them to love and spoil.
“After Briton, there will be Chastain then Dayton, Evan, Finian, Galvyn, Harold…”
“Oh hell no!” Cynyr had bellowed at his lady. “No Harold!” The mere thought of
them naming a son after their fussy little steward set his teeth on edge.
“Then Harbin,” she said.
“Acceptable,” he’d agreed with a sniff.
“Then Ionatan, Jamison, Kenyon, Lorcan, Malone, Nolan, Oisin, Padraig,
Quinlan…” She’d smiled. “Ranger, Sloan, Taegan…”
“Enough, wench!” he’d cried, hands up. “That isn’t a dynasty. It’s a litter!”
“Aye, well, if you aren’t up to the task…” she’d goaded.
He’d shown her that he was. Now he suspected she was carrying little Chas within
her.
Just as he knew she’d planned.
Not that he minded. He was right proud of himself for impregnating her even
though Harold kept giving him looks that said he thought his employer was a satyr of
the highest, rankest order.
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“Please leave Harold alone, Cyn,” she’d pleaded. “You keep glowering at him and
when you do, he burns things.”
“I hate that prissy little fruit!” he’d told her.
“No you don’t,” she’d replied. “He’s grown on you.”
“Aye, like a canker,” Cree had grumbled.
“Behave or I’ll have to nip you on that stubborn ass of yours,” she’d warned with a
twinkle in her eye.
Goddess, how he loved his lady. She had turned his world from a dark-stained
existence to the brightest life a man could have. Her smile was enough to make his heart
pound, and when she gave him one of her patented saucy looks…
His wings shuddered as he flew, the blood within his avian body heating as
lecherous thoughts invaded.
He should be in his nest with his lady-bird, he thought, and not winging his way to
Phelan’s aid.
“What have you gotten yourself into now, Kiel?” he asked.
* * * * *
Kiel was wondering the same thing. The closer he came to the occasional clinking
sound, the more his head hurt and his eyes watered. He’d been forced to pull out his
kerchief and blot at the tears rolling down his cheeks. The musky scent had a biting
acridity to it that burned the lining of his nostrils. He’d smelled it before, but for the life
of him he couldn’t place the stench. For reasons he couldn’t fathom, he associated it
with a jail cell but that made no sense.
Ahead there was a dim glow wavering over the tunnel walls. The clinking sound
had stopped but shadows moved in the flickering light. Careful to be as quiet as
possible, Phelan inched closer to the luminescence. The odor was stronger, his eyes and
nostrils burning with the stench. He was finding it harder to breathe. His heart was
pounding with what he realized was fear—an insight that puzzled him. Though the
Ceannus were an ugly-ass lot, he saw no reason why the things should make him as
apprehensive as he was fast becoming. He could feel sweat gathering in his palms,
under his arms, tracing a rivulet down his chest.
Suddenly there was a brighter flare of light and then a low rumbling sound that
shook the rocks behind his back. He flattened himself against the tunnel wall as the
sound died down. The light diminished then faded altogether and he heard words he
knew had to have been spoken by one of the Ceannus.
“That is the last of them. You may shut down the BlackMoon.”
BlackMoon
? Phelan mentally repeated, wondering what it was. He edged closer to
the flickering light.
“Our work here is done,” one of the Ceannus said. “Now we wait.”
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Phelan hunkered down and withdrew one of the two remaining charges. His initial
plan had been to place one of the charges in the lab where the ’bots were being
manufactured and another midway the tunnels. Instinct told him here would be a better
place to set one of the charges. Whatever the BlackMoon was, it needed to be destroyed,
but he did want a look at it beforehand. After placing the slapper detonator in the block
of explosive, he rose to his feet and began to cloak himself with the psychic shield that
would make it possible for him to boldly walk into the room with the Ceannus and not
have them see him. He had to get a glimpse of the BlackMoon, gain a mental picture of
it to transmit to the Citadel.
His corporeal body began to fade and when he knew he was no longer visible to the
naked eye he slipped into the room.
The Ceannus were standing off to one side—each flanking a large platform with a
black matte floor. The platform was curved in a crescent shape with soaring polished
tin sides that appeared to have no seams or rivets. Above the platform, running its
length, were five rows of what had to be lights—each light encased in a shiny mesh-like
metal. Running lights along the perimeter of the platform pulsed a soft green color.
Phelan took a few steps closer to the platform, speculating about its purpose. He
kept one eye on the Ceannus who had not moved but rather seemed to be watching him
with their unnerving black insect-like eyes. That silent regard sent a cold chill down his
back and he had to remind himself that they could not see him. Another step and he
turned his full attention on the platform. His eyes moved from top to bottom, left to
right—tracking a mental image of the curious platform that would be stored in his brain
for the Shadowlords to retrieve. That accomplished, he stepped back—his scrutiny now
on the Ceannus as he walked backward out of the room. Outside the room’s opening,
he turned as the shield began to dissolve and plowed into a hulking creature whose
arms came around him in a punishing grip.
* * * * *
Fontabeau went to the window to peer out. “What the hell is taking so long? He
should have been back by now!”
Des ran a shaky hand over his sweating face. “Something must have happened.”
Fear shot a sharper arrow through the gunman. He felt as though his chest were
already ventilated with an entire quiver of the debilitating things. He put a hand to his
heart, flexing his fingers over the pounding organ. Twice he’d gone to the door and
twice drawn back his hand. He was having trouble drawing breath as he thought about
going down into the mine.
“He knows you’re claustrophobic, Beau,” Des said.
“Aye, but what kind of man does that make me that I give in to it? What kind of
Reaper does that make me? What kind of friend?”
“I used to have a fear of high places,” Des said. “I was terrified of climbing even the
shortest ladder.”
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The gunman looked around. “You sound like the fear is in the past. Did you get
over it?”
“With a lot of help from the goddess,” Des replied. “She put me in a situation
where I had two choices—let a friend die or get over my fear.” He shrugged. “There
was no choice.”
Fontabeau winced. “What you’re saying is I’m a coward,” he said, hanging his
head, digging his fingernails into his palms.
“No, that isn’t what I said. We deal with our imperfections in different ways, Beau,”
Des said.
The gunman turned back to the window, laid his head on the cool glass. “Gods, that
stink is making my head split wide open. It’s hard to think!”
“Aye, it is,” Des agreed.
For a moment longer Fontabeau stood where he was then with a violent curse he
straightened and strode to the door.
“It’s been too long,” he said, snatching open the portal. “The gods help me, I’m
going after him! He needs someone he can trust at his back!”
Des said nothing. The stench was making him nauseous and the headache was
worse. He could not hold his head up and the moment Fontabeau was out of the cabin,
Brell slumped on the cot, his legs giving way beneath him.
* * * * *
Cynyr dove toward the coordinates Lord Naois had sent to him, skimming the tops
of tall pines and oaks, surprised to find no other birds soaring through the warm day,
no small creatures walking in the forest below. But it was the stench permeating the
clearing to which he was gliding that brought him up short, causing him to bank away
steeply with a loud caw of protest.
“What the hell…?”
he shrieked as he landed on the branch of the tallest pine he