Read Wolfsbane: 3 (Rebel Angels) Online

Authors: Gillian Philip

Wolfsbane: 3 (Rebel Angels) (2 page)

Having marked his escape, the two of them wouldn’t want to risk him reaching the enemy dun, not with what he had to tell Seth MacGregor. He wouldn’t get the leeway Iolaire had got.
For Turlach, for his pursuers, there was a deadline.

He rubbed his cold arms. He had to move. If he didn’t move soon, they’d smell him anyway, cornered here like a rat.

Cautiously he waded through the water, hating to disturb its slick surface. The loch-grasses were dense here, and he knew he was edging further from the fringes of the loch, though it barely
seemed to deepen. The suck and slosh of the water echoed too loudly.

Throw them off his scent, or throw them off his sounds: he couldn’t do both. He hadn’t reckoned on the mist, that was all.

A waterbird erupted at his feet with a cry and a clatter. In a mad reflex he snatched at it, stumbled, then stared after its flickering shadow, sweat beading on his forehead. It had vanished
into the soupy whiteness, but it must have skim-landed, because water-arrows rippled out of the mist, lapping delicately at his legs. His blood trickled cold in his veins as he watched the ripples
subside to stillness. There were other things in the loch, things far worse than noisy waterbirds; worse even than pursuing fighters.

Quite suddenly Turlach knew this had been the most foolish of moves. Stupid to leave himself exposed to danger both from land and from the loch. He waded fast towards the water’s
ill-defined edge, shoving reeds out of the way. Whatever their brutality, the fighters coming after him were at least human. He’d sooner take his chances with them than wait like a tethered
sheep for the creature to come out of the loch.

He skirted the fringe of the water as closely as he could, alert for the slightest disturbance of the surface. But the mist could help as well as hinder him, after all. He was letting the fears
of childhood terrify him out of using it to his advantage. That made him angry with himself, and that helped too.

The flank of the fir-tree hill was the best bet. He was happier to cross the marshy ground and get further from the water, and though he didn’t want to leave the cover of the mist
entirely, it was thinner as he climbed higher and easier to get his bearings. His destination was no more than a few hours beyond the low hill, and for the first time in many miles he began to
think he was going to make it. On the solid ground he quickened his steps, stumbling only once as his foot found a concealed runnel of water. Halting, breathing hard, he glanced behind.

At first he thought it was the sun breaking through the heavy blanket of mist: a single spear of light, bright gold and dazzling. He knew in an instant that it was in the wrong position by a
half-turn of the earth. No. The sun was behind him, just piercing the mist-line; the light ahead was its reflection on steel.

Turlach broke into a run.

In desperation he cut up towards the high slope, panting with panic and exhaustion, but the sound of hoofbeats was coming from two directions, ahead and behind. Doubling back, he plunged
downhill, tripping and crashing headlong into the mire. As he scrambled to his feet, he was slammed back down by a hard blow to the side of his head.

He hauled himself from the mud on all fours, hands sunk in the glaur, unable to stand. And that wasn’t exhaustion or the terrain; it was the violent trembling of his treacherous limbs.
Sick with shame, he couldn’t look up.

‘Runaway.’ The silky voice had a mocking lilt. ‘Run-run-runaway.’

Turlach shut his eyes, sat back on his haunches. Taking gulps of shallow breath, he forced himself to stagger to his feet. If he clenched his fists hard enough, the shaking subsided a little.
Just a little. He spat marsh-filth and looked up into the pitiless eyes.

‘Any regrets, Turlach?’

Slowly, he shook his head. ‘You’ve played a long game, haven’t you?’

Laughter. ‘We’re Sithe, man! What other kind of game is there?’

‘Games that aren’t blasphemy, you bastard. I heard what you’re going to offer Kate. It isn’t right.’

‘Right is when we win. Wrong,’ and the happy singsong voice was back, ‘wrong is when we die in filth and pain, running like a rabbit.’

Did he regret it? He was going to die, he was sure of that. The trouble was, Turlach was old enough to remember this man, and the last time he’d haunted the Sithe lands. He was old enough
to remember the brute’s reputation. Why else would he have run in the first place? Doubts he might have had in the past, but only this man could have impelled Turlach to leave his own clann.
As for the new skill the man brought from his adventures in the otherworld, the peace-gift he’d brought to his queen: only such a warping of witchcraft could have persuaded Turlach to try to
reach MacGregor, reach and warn him.

And fail.

He twisted his lip; it was as close as he could get to a defiant smile. ‘I wouldn’t have fought for you anyway.’

‘That’s a pity.’

A slew of the ice-hard gaze beyond his shoulder, a slight nod, and Turlach felt the slash of a honed blade across his hamstrings. The ground went from beneath him, and he dropped like a shot
bird. Shock left him anaesthetised for long seconds, and then the pain kicked in, searing his useless legs. His fingers curled round handfuls of thick mud and he pressed his face against the wet
ground to stop himself crying out.

The two of them stood over him, muttering words he couldn’t hear for the screaming in his head. A foot nudged his ribcage, the edge of a bloodstained blade tickled his neck.

‘Don’t, Cuthag.’ That musical, contented voice.

N
o
, Cuthag. Do. Please.
He could smell his own blood, after all, and the creature’s nose was sharper.

‘The sun’s setting.’

P
lease.

‘It’s hungry at this hour.’

Cuthag gave a low laugh, withdrew the blade from Turlach’s throat.

Cuthag. Please.

It was only an inner begging. It was nothing he’d let either of them hear. The last thing he could do, at least, was shutter his mind against the pair of them.

‘Poor Turlach. It’ll smell him. But let’s make sure.’

A boot kicked at the blood-soaked glaur around him, sending gouts of it flying, spattering softly onto the mere’s surface skin.

‘Let’s go, shall we?’

Turlach heard them mount their skittish, snorting horses but he didn’t listen as they rode away at a perilously hasty gallop. He listened only for the other hoof-falls, the ones he knew
were coming.

The white mist was darkening to grey, and the air was colder, thickening. He wouldn’t kick, wouldn’t struggle and flounder and draw the predator like a crippled fish. He didn’t
want the escaping killers to hear him scream.
Be still, Turlach
. And besides, in the lifeless twilight, the silence of his mind, a faint hope of survival flickered.

The flickering hope guttered and died at the splash of a surfacing body, the scrape of a hoof on stone, a questioning whicker.
Oh gods. Don’t move. Don’t breathe.

There was nothing to grip but the yielding boggy earth. He trembled, and gritted his teeth, and shut his eyes and tried not to see or hear.

The creature trotted close and straddled his bloody legs, pawing his head with a hoof and tugging experimentally on his hair, its hot tongue licking the skin of his neck. And suddenly, despite
himself, Turlach was kicking, squirming, dragging his torso desperately through the clinging mud, clawing towards an escape he knew he’d never reach.

It stopped playing. When it seized him with its teeth, shook him like a rat, and began to feed, the spasms of useless struggle were no longer voluntary at all; and Turlach no longer knew or
cared that his screams split the sodden air.

RORY

So all I had to do was tame the kelpie.

Any self-respecting Sithe could master a water horse, or so my father never tired of telling me. If he could do it, anyone could do it. And he was a good bit younger than me when he bonded with
his blue roan. And as my late but sainted Uncle Conal (who I don’t even remember) once said,
there’s nothing like it
. (I may not remember him, but I’m limitlessly
familiar with everything he ever said.)

Anyway, truly, I didn’t see what the problem was. Neither did my father.

Perhaps that was the problem.

Seth was in one of those high moods of his, happy and hyper-confident. Who ever said kelpies were easy? Not even him, not before today.

Still, maybe it was the weather, but his mood was infectious. The two of us rode out from the dun across a moor gilded with dew and spangled with spider-webs and misty sunlight. The hills in the
distance looked too ephemeral to be real, but I knew that as the sun rose higher the day would be diamond-hot. My father hadn’t wiped the grin off his face since he dragged me out of bed
before dawn. And dawn came
bloody
early at this time of year.

‘Language,’ he said absently.

I gave him a half-hearted scowl, and blocked my mind. He laughed.

‘I hope you’re not expecting too much,’ I told him.

‘Course not.’

Yes, he was. He always did.

The little loch was in its summer mood, innocuous and enticing, looking smaller than it truly was because of the thick growth of reeds and grasses blurring its edges. Seth rode his horse in up
to its fetlocks, let the reins fall loose on its neck. He’d left the blue roan behind; no point provoking the kelpie with one of its own kind, he said. The bay gelding he’d brought in
its place looked none too happy about being expendable. It tossed its head, pawing the water nervously.

Seth patted its neck, murmuring to it absently as he watched the rippling surface. ‘Go on, then, Rory. Get on with it.’

My own horse didn’t want to go as close to the water and I didn’t blame it. I slid from its back and hooked its reins over a broken stump, then waded into the shallows. The water
wasn’t even that cold. A moorhen appeared out of the reeds, cocked its red face-shield at me, then vanished without urgency into a clump of bulrushes.

‘I don’t think it’s around,’ I said.

‘Not yet, it isn’t.’ There was an edge of impatience in his voice. ‘Call it.’

I dropped my block, focused, let my mind sink under the silver glittering skin of the loch. The song in my head was familiar enough; I’d learned straight from my father’s brain the
way to sing in silence to a water horse, and I’d practised last night in the stillness of the dun till I almost hypnotised myself.

Seth leaned forward on his horse, and I realised he was holding his breath.

The surface trembled, stirred. The marsh birds stopped singing. I knew what to expect, but when the creature’s head breached the water I still stumbled back.

It was all muscle, gloss and savagery. Its jaws were open, ears laid back, its grey mane matted with weed. Loch-water cascaded from its arched neck and its forelock as it twisted its head to
stare at me with eyes as black and impenetrable as a shark’s.

We looked at each other for an infinite moment, and then it lurched up and forward, squealing and plunging into the shallows, its hooves sending spray exploding upwards. When it was hock-deep,
it halted, glaring.

At least my father couldn’t interfere. He was too busy swearing at the bay gelding, which was backing and snorting with fear. By the time he’d calmed it, the kelpie was so close to
me I could feel its hot jetting breath on my cheek. It pulled back its lips, grazed its teeth along my hair.

I thought my heart was going to stop.

‘Keep calling it,’ Seth barked. ‘Don’t let it in your head yet.’

That was easy enough; almost automatic, so long as he would quit distracting me. In fact I doubted I was ever going to get the song out of my brain. Of course, just keeping the kelpie at a
mental distance wouldn’t stop it killing me. If it felt that way inclined.

I raised a trembling hand to the crest of its neck. Its mane was silk in my fingers; hard to imagine it could lock tight and hold me. Inside my head the song had become a dull constant chant,
embedded enough to let me concentrate on the creature, the feel of it. Oh gods, the warmth and power beneath that cloud-white skin. For the first time this wasn’t something I was doing for my
father; for the first time I really, truly ached for this horse.

I closed my fist round its mane, close to its withers. I shifted my weight to spring.

It jerked aside, violently. Then it screamed and slammed its head into my chest. The breath was knocked out of me and lights exploded behind my eyelids, but I staggered and kept my footing, and
rebalanced myself in time to see it lunge, teeth bared.

I threw myself flat onto the sodden ground, felt its hooves hit the water on either side of my head, drenching me as it bolted. I didn’t see it plunge back into the loch, but I heard the
gigantic splash, and the panicked clatter of waterfowl.

I leaned on my elbows, mired in my father’s silence as much as in the muddy water. I did not want to raise my head. Ever.

After an endless wordless time, he blew out a breath.

‘Well,’ he said. ‘I suppose it had just eaten. Luckily.’

There were things my brother had told me about the hideous, perilous otherworld beyond the Veil. Honestly, I sometimes wondered how it would be to live there. I sometimes dreamed of a place
where they called social services if your parents sent you to school with the wrong kind of gloves.

I pushed myself up out of the bog and brushed off pond-muck as well as I could. ‘Sorry,’ I muttered.

‘Don’t worry,’ he said shortly, pulling his horse’s head round. ‘Obviously untameable.’

‘I thought there was no such thing,’ I snapped.


Obviously
there
is
.’

What he meant was, if his son couldn’t tame it, nobody could. And I’d have liked to tame it, to prove him wrong, but I knew I was never going to. And this time, as I hauled myself
onto my horse’s back, I made sure my block was just perfect; not because I was afraid of Seth knowing I feared failure, but because I didn’t want him to know how much his disappointment
was going to matter to me.

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