: Chapter 7
Blade Dance
Ann was scared. Heart-pounding, gut-churning scared. The Fae who could only be Davinâs father, Sean, had tossed her into the van like a rag doll. Heâd wrenched her arms behind her back and bound her wrists, then thrust a gag into her mouth before sheâd even had a chance to scream. His speed and strength had been terrifyingâand decidedly inhuman. There was another Fae driving whom she thought she recognized from her visit to Finnâs old house so many months ago. And with them was Nancy McTeer, who alternately sobbed for her missing child and screamed abuse at Ann.
Sean ripped the gag out of her mouth. âWhere is my son?â he snarled. He had the face of a handsome young scholar or clericâalmost prettyâso at odds with his dress and demeanor. He wore a skin-tight cotton shirt with long sleeves that picked out every muscle in his chest and frayed blue jeans of the same expensive indigo denim as his girlfriendâs. There were sheath knives strapped to his biceps and thighs and a leaf-bladed sword across his back.
âI donât know,â said Ann. âHe didnât come to school today.â
The Fae at the wheel turned and said, âSheâs lying.â
âHow can she lie when a Fae questions her, Patrick?â asked Nancy.
âShe visited the house a few months ago,â said Patrick. âFinn was fascinated with her because his voice didnât work on her. He thought she might be a thin-blood or something.â
That was news to Ann, and unwelcome news, because if they believed she was lying to them . . .
Sean smiled slowly. It wasnât a nice expression, despite his pretty face. âIâll just have to beat it out of her, then.â
âFinn wonât like that,â warned Patrick.
âFinn would do the same if it were his own son in the mix,â Sean shot back.
âHe would,â agreed Patrick. âYes, he would. But he wants the girl, so I doubt heâll appreciate you rearranging her lovely face.â
Ann felt light-headed and cold. The van turned a corner, throwing her against one wall and knocking her nearly senseless. A second later it lurched to a halt. Patrick killed the motor.
âFinn is one Fae,â said Sean, smiling again. âThe Fianna follow him at their will and pleasure. They wonât back him against me in this, and heâs only a single blade against the two of us.â
âHis son is a sorcerer,â said Patrick.
âHis son is more interested in fucking Miachâs pretty granddaughter than casting wards for the Fianna. Heâs not likely to put himself out to help his old dad protect some ginger slut.â
âMaybe not,â conceded Patrick. âBut heâs summoned the Penitent to Boston.â
Seanâs eyes turned hard. âThen I guess weâd best break the bitch, fast.â
They reached for her and she screamed, but as they dragged her out of the van, she saw why the Fae didnât bother to silence her. They were in a desolate neighborhood of shuttered warehouses hard by the water, with nary a soul in sight. The lights of Boston twinkled across the water, too far away for anyone to hear or help her.
She screamed anyway, until Sean struck her a blow across the face that left her momentarily stunned. A taste, she realized with growing terror, of what was to come.
Inside, the warehouse was stuffed with flat cardboard boxes, row upon row, stacked to the ceiling, muffling sound. Patrick flipped a single bank of fluorescents on as Sean threw Ann to the ground beneath the flickering lights.
âWhere is my son?â barked Sean.
He didnât wait for her to answer. He struck her another blow across the face, and this time Ann tasted the hot, coppery bloom of blood. And all the years she had spent practicing calm and avoiding conflict came back to bite her on the ass. Her anger didnât rise. She felt weak and small and she hated that.
âI donât know,â she said. Her lips were numb and her jaw ached, but she spoke anyway. âI told your wifeâI told Nancy. I promised Finn that I wouldnât call child services. I havenât seen Davin at all since he left school yesterday.â
Sean shook his head. âYou donât understand, do you? I am going to hurt you. And I am going to keep on hurting you until you give me my son.â
Sheâd always been tough. Skinned knees and banged elbows had never slowed her down as a child. If Sean had gone on beating her in silence, she might have gone on taking it, but his words fanned the sleeping coals of her anger. His assumption, that he had the right to hurt others to get what he wanted, that no one would stop him, snapped something fragile inside Ann. âI donât know where he is,â she snarled.
It was like a dog warning an abusive owner to back off. She was showing her teeth. Fool that he was, he didnât see them.
Sean struck her again, knocking her to the ground. She heard a buzzing in her ears. Horrible, maddening. It grew louder, instead of quieter, as she got back to her feet, and in that moment she remembered that this was what it always felt like right beforeâ
Finn allowed Iobáth through the door first. He didnât entirely like it, but Iobáth had the best sword arm, and Garrett would otherwise be all the more vulnerable if the Druid was present and he needed to cast a silence. Finn himself followed closely.
There was no Druid in the warehouse, thank Dana, only Patrick and Nancy watching Sean Silver Blade, who was standing over Ann. Ann was crouched on the ground, her red hair a tangled veil covering her face.
âGet away from the girl,â snarled Finn. He had planned a more diplomatic salvo but could not keep the concern, the anger, pent any longer.
Sean didnât bother to turn. He just shook his head and swung.
His fist connected with Annâs jaw, knocking the young teacher to her knees.
Finn darted forward and seized Seanâs curled fist before he could strike another blow. âThe girl is mine,â he said.
âThis bitch stole my son,â Sean screamed. He rammed an elbow into Finnâs stomach and broke free, raising his fist to hit Ann again.
And lovely, brave fool that she was, Ann was already back on her feet. She pushed the hair out of her face. When Finn saw her eyes, he froze. They were glowing red.
Finn stepped back. She had never looked more beautiful. It took his breath away. And cast him back two thousand years. He had not seen her kind since . . . before the fall.
He knew, then, that she didnât need him to defend her now.
Sean didnât see it yet. He was looking straight at her, but he didnât see her eyes. Or maybe he saw, but it had been so long since any Fae had encountered one of her kind that he didnât truly understand.
Finn both saw and understood. He removed his hand from Seanâs shoulder and took another step back.
Ann Phillipsâor the power inside her, ancient and magicalâgave a tinkling, silvery laugh and sprang.
She knocked Sean clear off his feet and smashed the flat of her small hand into his face. She took hold of his right arm and wrenched it up and to the side with a pop and a crunch that announced that Garrettâs services would be required tonight after all. Not for a charm of silence but because soon joints would need to be returned to sockets and broken bones would need to be mended.
Ann tilted her head slightly, surveying the room like a dancer searching for a new partner. Her eyes, glowing red like coals, lighted for an instant on Patrick. She only sneered and continued scanning the room for prey. Her gaze fell on Iobáth and lingered. A worthy adversary, but the Penitent was not the Fae for her.
Finn MacUmhaill was.
He stepped into her line of vision.
She blinked at him, doe-eyed, cocked her head, and circled him, licking her lips.
âWhat the hell is going on?â asked Nancy McTeer, as Finn fell into step with Ann, partners in a dance.
âGet out,â Finn said to his friends and followers. Ann was his now, and his alone.
Patrick took hold of Sean and started dragging him away. Smart man.
âAre you sure?â Iobáth asked. âShe has the blood, Finn. I can see it in her eyes. A match for many of us Fae, if sheâs been trained.â
âI know,â said Finn. âBut I donât think they train berserkers in the elementary schools.â At least he sincerely hoped not. He didnât fancy a broken nose and dislocated shoulder, but they were risks he was willing to take to dance with a berserker. She was beautiful, splendid, with the power coursing through her. Heâd wanted her when heâd thought she was just a human woman with a temper.
He burned for her now that he knew what she really was.
âI want my son,â slurred Sean, through what was more than likely a broken jaw.
âShe doesnât have your son,â said Finn. They were going to have to find the boy, as soon as Annâs eyes returned to their normal color and they didnât have the first berserker in two thousand yearsâangry and spoiling for a fightâon their hands.
âPretty man,â rasped the creature Ann became when anger ruled her. She rolled the syllables over her tongue like honey, slow and sweet. âYou think you can hurt me?â
The warehouse emptied out behind him.
âI know that I canât,â said Finn, taking a step toward her, breaking the circle and taking their dance in a new direction. âThatâs what makes it so much fun.â
She swung at him, and he twisted and dodged. She sprang toward him, and he braced himself, taking the impact and allowing it to carry him to the ground. Then he rolled with her, pinning her under him. She snarled and twisted. He expected the first kick . . . but failed to anticipate the second. She flipped them over so she was straddling him and, with her uncanny berserker strength, she pinned his hands above his head.
He hadnât been so turned on in two thousand years. She twitched her hips and ground herself against him, sighing with pleasure, because berserkers lived entirely in the vexed space between sex and violence, thrived on it.
âMy lovely, lovely Ann,â he said. âItâs my mouth you want beneath that swollen cunny, that I promise you.â
Her lips curled into an expressionâalmost a caricatureâof carnal intent. Suiting actions with words, she replaced her hands on his wrists with her knees, keeping him pinned fast to the ground. He might struggle free, of courseâperhapsâbut he didnât want to. She wrenched her little velvet pencil skirt up, revealing white cotton panties with a spreading bead of moisture dotting the gusset. She wrenched them aside and lowered her dainty pink center to his waiting mouth.
He flicked his tongue out to swipe her bud. She tasted honey sweet and lemon tart, and her little nub grew tauter, transmuting in arousal from flesh to iron. He flicked again, swiped and swiveled and picked up the pace when she began to growl and whimper.
Her movements were uninhibited. She was using him to get off. It was pure and selfish, and the most erotic thing he had ever experienced. She screamed once at her climax, then slid forward onto her elbows, spent.
Finn turned her over and pulled her into his lap. She looked up at him, her eyes now brown again and dazed, but indisputably oh-so-satisfied.
âMy lovely, lovely Ann,â he said again. âJust what the hell are we going to do with you?â
âright before one of her fugue states. Only this time, the curtain didnât fall over sight or sound or memory. She lived it. All of it. Breaking Seanâs nose and his arm. Sparring with Finn. Briefly. And then . . .
Oh god!
Everything had been heightened. Senses, needs, desires. Everything had been possible. Even what she wanted with Finn. What she had needed, and taken, from Finn.
And now he was holding her. The climax had shattered a tension in her that she hadnât even been aware of. âWhat did I just do?â She ought to be ashamed and embarrassed. If past experience was anything to go byâalthough, frankly, all bets were off hereâhe was about to laugh at and belittle her.
âYou, my lovely girl,â he said, combing through her hair with his fingers as though he could be happy doing that, and just that, all day. âWhy, you just went berserk.â
âThatâs not exactly news to me.â
âBut I mean it quite literally. Youâre a berserker. Itâs what you are, what you do. Or at least itâs what your kind used to do. I havenât encountered one of you in two thousand years. And even then, not at such . . . close . . . quarters.â
She didnât like the sound of this at all. âDoes that mean Iâm some kind of Druid?â she asked. âThe creatures you hunted and killed?â
Finn shook his head. âNot a Druid. No. Not that. Nor a Fae. Youâre human enough. Almost. Well, not entirely. The gift of the berserker was present in the Fomoire, the strange people who were already in Ireland when the Fae arrived. The berserkers were fearsome Fomorian warriors with ingrained instincts to protect the weak, and hair-trigger tempers. In their berserk state, with a modicum of martial training, theyâre the equal of any Fae. Since it was not a power present in our race, we tried to breed with berserkers and create a warrior class to complement the Druids. But the two groups despised each other. Your trace of Fae blood is why you are not swayed by my voice, and it is one of the reasons the Druids hated your kind. Indeed, when the Druids staged their revolt, they slaughtered the berserkers first.â
âAll of them?â asked Ann.
âWell. Evidently not. Though your existence surprises me. We believed the Druids had, in fact, killed all the berserkers, down to babes in their cradles.â
It was too much. All of it. She didnât want to be a berserker. She didnât want to think about mass slaughter. And she didnât want to think about what she had just done with this man. Creature. Fae.
âI want to go home,â she said. Away from all of this. A hot bath and a good meal and a nightâs sleep, and she would wake up and this would all be forgotten. Wouldnât it?
She climbed to her feet. The slickness between her legs was a tangible reminder of what she had just done with this Fae, with Finn. Her body ached in all kinds of places, and there were already bruises forming where she had been tumbled about in the van and manhandled by Sean.
The warehouse seemed suddenly cold now that she wasnât in Finn MacUmhaillâs arms, and the urge to return to his embrace was strong. She fought it. She didnât know if she really wanted to be part of this strange and frightening new world.
âYou canât go home yet,â he said. He rose in one smooth movement and reached out to touch her bruised cheek. âIf we donât do something about that eye, youâll have a shiner in the morning.â
âIâll put a bag of frozen peas on it,â she said.
âPeas will only take the swelling down. My son can heal the damage.â
âIs your son a doctor?â
âBetter. Heâs a sorcerer. He can make sure you donât end up with a black eye tomorrow, which you might have a difficult time explaining at work.â
âOr to the police,â she replied evenly.
âYou could charge Sean with kidnapping, but since heâs the one with a dislocated shoulder and a broken arm, it might not be such a clear-cut, straightforward case.â
âOh my god,â she said. It was her worst nightmare. Sheâd hurt someone again. âI had it under control,â she said accusingly. âBefore this. Before . . . before meeting you.â
He cocked his head and looked at her. âHow, exactly, did you control your berserk state?â
âI learned exercises that helped me to manage my anger,â she said.
âYou mean you learned tricks to suppress your birthright and abilities. Not how to call on your power when needed, like the moment Sean snatched you off the street. If you had control of your berserker, you could have summoned it to fight him off. You wouldnât have needed any rescue.â
âYes, but no one snatched me off the street before I met you.â
âThatâs what I tried to tell you the other night. Our world is dangerous, Ann. But the other night I thought that you had a choice, that you could walk away from it and us. You canât. I see that now, and so should you. That part of you that is Fae and berserk will always be with you, even if weâyou and Iânever cross paths again.â
âI want to go home,â she repeated.
âAnd Iâll take you. Just as soon as you let Garrett take a look at your cheek.â
She was in a decidedly unsavory neighborhood with a pack of criminals, so she didnât have much choice. Ann followed Finn outside where the air blowing off the Charles was brisk and fresh. The strange Fae with the long white-blond hair and the broadsword was there, leaning against the hood of the van. The one they had called Patrick was slouched beside the warehouse door, looking nervous.
âBring me my car,â Finn said to him.
âWe have the van,â said Patrick.
âWe are not driving Miss Phillips home in the van you used to abduct her. Bring me my car.â
Patrick had the good grace to look sheepish before he nodded and vanished into the earth. Ann supposed he had passed. She was just glad Finn hadnât suggested taking her home that way.
The door to the van was rolled back and her kidnapper was sitting in the opening. Another, younger, Fae had a grip on Seanâs arm. The younger one made a short, sharp motion, and Ann heard Seanâs shoulder pop back into place.
âNow letâs see the wrist,â he said.
âNo,â said Finn. âSet his bones in a splint. He can suffer while they mend.â
âI was within my rights,â said Sean. âThe girl took my son.â
âI didnât,â said Ann. âI havenât seen him since the end of school yesterday.â
âYou,â interjected Finn, looking right at Sean, âconspired with a Druid to work magic in my domain. Nothing you did from that moment was lawful because you were no longer a member of the Fianna.â
âThe boy was going soft, encouraged by her,â said Sean. âHe needed the ink, and your son refused because of your quarrel with him.â
âI would have refused anyway,â said the young Fae who had set his arm, who must be Garrett. But that couldnât be right. Garrett couldnât be Finnâs son. Finn looked barely thirty. Garrett was clearly in his twenties . . . Annâs mind reeled even as the conversation went on around her.
âYour son was too young to have his destiny chosen for him,â Garrett continued to Sean. âI told you that. The marks you wanted would have forced him down one path in life, following the sword. Just because that was your choice doesnât mean it will be his.â
âWe need to find my boy,â said Nancy McTeer. âIf child services doesnât have him, then where could he be?â
The Fae with the long hair stepped forward and spoke. âThe answer is obvious. The Druid has the child.â
Nancy McTeer screamed and collapsed. âThis is your fault,â she wailed at Sean, pointing. âYour fault for having him marked.â
Ann had the feeling of having walked in on some family drama, the awkward guest at the dinner party when the secrets start to come out and the cutlery begins flying.
âIt doesnât matter whose fault it is,â said Finn. âWe have to find the Druid and recover the child.â
âYouâll help us?â Sean asked, incredulous.
âFor the boyâs sake, yes,â said Finn.
âShow me where you last saw the Druid,â the long-haired Fae with the sword said to Sean, âand I will track him.â
âGo with Iobáth,â Finn said, nodding. âCall me as soon as you find something.â
Sean, Nancy, and the long-haired FaeâIobáthâdeparted. Ann sat in the vanâs open door and allowed Garrett to examine her. He ran his hands down her arms and legs, over her rib cage and stomach, then up to her face. His palms felt strangely warm against her cheeks, and for a brief moment his touch stung. Then he stepped back and turned her face this way and that.
Ann noted how closely he resembled Finn. The same hair, the same eyes, the same feral chin balanced by high, wide cheekbones.
âYouâve got no broken bones or internal injuries,â he said. âAnd Iâve taken care of the bruises.â
âIt wonât change how she feels the next time she walks down a street by herself,â said Finn pointedly.
âAnd how am I to blame for that?â asked Garrett. âFor not tattooing Seanâs child?â
âNo. You were right to refuse Sean,â said Finn. âBut your wife knew, or suspected, what Ann was when she sent her to my house the first time.â
Another jarring piece of information for Ann to process. She had gone to Finnâs house that day because little Garrett MacUmhaill had missed over thirty days of school during his second-grade year. Nieve MacCecht, the childâs mother, had given Finnâs address as her residence. Wrongly, Ann had assumed that Finn was the boyâs father. Finn had corrected her, claiming that the child was his nephew, but that couldnât be right either. Everything she had heard tonight indicated that little Garrett was in fact Finnâs grandchild.
She stood up and felt faint. She must have swayed, because before she knew it, Finnâs hands were on her shoulders steadying her, and he was looking into her eyes but talking to Garrett. âAre you sure about the internal injuries?â
âYes,â said Garrett.
âIâm fine,â said Ann. âJust tired.â
âHungry, probably, too,â said Finn. âBerserking takes a lot out of you.â
Now that she thought of it, she was hungry. And not for the cold cereal sitting on top of her refrigerator. âIâm starving,â she said.
âIâll have dinner for us sent to your house,â said Finn.
âTakeout does sound good,â she said.
Her Fae rescuer whipped out a new smartphone, which confirmed her suspicions about Finn MacUmhaillâs relationship to modern technology. A few clicks and he seemed satisfied. There were only a few places that delivered to her end of Charlestown anyway, mostly pizzerias and Chinese restaurants, but Ann didnât care what it was as long as it was hot.
She didnât know much about cars. She had never owned one herself because Bostonâs public transportation was so good and parking was so difficult to find, but even she could see that the little silver coupe that pulled up with Patrick at the wheel was a ruinously expensive model. Patrick left the motor running and the door open, and Finn slid smoothly behind the wheel while Patrick went round the other side and held the passenger side open for Ann.
Garrett followed them to the car, stood at the driverâs side window, and asked, âWhat about the Druid?â
âThe Penitent will call when he runs him to ground,â said Finn.
Garrett nodded, but he didnât step away, and Ann sensed that he was waiting for something. She leaned across the console and said, âThank you. For treating my bruises. And for rescuing me.â
âYouâre welcome,â said Garrett. âMy son wishes he could do second grade over again just to be back in your classroom.â
âMr. Feeny has that effect on people. Tell him third grade doesnât last forever,â said Ann.
âYouâre good with children,â he said, stepping away from the car. âThat must come in handy with my father.â
Finn sighed. âWait until your son is grown, Garrett. Fatherhood looks easy when itâs all seesaws and bicycles and swimming lessons. It gets harder when itâs alcohol, cars, and girls.â He rolled the window up and put the car in drive. They shot off down the narrow road hugging the water.