Read Bloodstone Online

Authors: Gillian Philip

Bloodstone (29 page)

 

The world did not make sense for what felt like a very long time. There was too much chaos in his head, too much confusion, and – damn Seth to hell
– there was too much pain. After a while he couldn’t measure, Jed rolled onto his side, put his head in his hands, and let himself sob, softly and very briefly.

And that was enough of that.

He dug his fingers into dirt and leaf mould, finding purchase and pushing himself groggily to his feet. He staggered; caught his balance. For a moment he stood in the wild
wind, swaying a little. Above and around him, the noise of the trees was huge and hostile.

Conal. He could wait for Conal; except that Conal’s rage and madness had set his teeth on edge. He’d crept after the brothers earlier that night; had seen Conal
strike Seth viciously, had seen him curse the sky.

Trust him
, Seth had said; but what was Seth’s word worth? He’d taken Rory. Conal wanted the boy, too, and why should either of them give him back to Jed
if they were insane enough to think he was important to them?

Hell, no.

Flicking one last glance back at the bothy, letting one spasm of regret tighten his gut, Jed turned on his heel, and went after Seth.

 

 

Winter was days away. He felt it like a massing presence beyond the horizon, a building stormcloud. It was the light as much as the temperature, a chill of
brightness that permeated the sky but barely lit the earth. Where sunlight did pierce the shadows it had a glowing honey intensity. Beyond the upsweep of streaked violet cloud the unearthly light
of a concealed sun was intimidating: a warning to everything that crawled on the ground to scurry into holes and stay there till spring.

He wished he could do that himself. Lying flat on a slab of lichened rock, he searched the landscape, for a moment half-regretting his flight from the bothy. But that was only
cold, and misery. He hadn’t had a choice. Lifting his shaking fingers to the side of his face, he touched the swelling bruise that marked him from temple to jaw.

No. He’d had no choice.

Trouble was, he had no idea what to do, where to go. Now that he knew what had happened to him, now that he’d been warned, he could keep his mind to himself, and
he’d had enough of a start on Conal. The man had probably taken his small patrol back to his precious dun, for that matter. The fate of Jed wouldn’t concern him.

But after the short day’s journey, it was beginning to concern Jed very much.

He stared across the valley. In the ominous dusk the blue-grey clouds were blotched with snow-light, the pale sky floodlit while the earth lay in shadow. The air smelt of
frost and oncoming night.

Jed frowned. Only one chunk of the landscape drew the dying light, and that was a solitary hill, two or three miles distant. It looked lit from within, its summit glowing pink
and translucent above thin blizzard-drifts of cloud. It was eerily like looking through rock to the bare flesh of the land.

He’d started to scramble to his feet when he felt his hackles bristle, and then he heard it: a clear hoof-fall. Jed froze. He wondered if Conal would only kick the shit
out of him, or just kill him and be done with it.

‘You’re going the wrong way.’

It wasn’t Conal’s voice; it held a tinge of accent that Jed couldn’t place. His spine crackled with fear. He knew he’d have to turn in the end, but it
took every scrap of guts he had left to do it.

The horse was the colour of a fox, and it was no water horse. It was saddled, a thoroughbred with a fine head, pricked ears, and a silver gleam in its otherwise ordinary
horse-eyes.

A man leaned on the pommel. His face was Viking-handsome, his reddish-blond hair and beard cropped very short. He had a look of great curiosity on his face, and his eyes were
simply the warmest brown eyes that had ever mesmerised Jed, the colour of melted sugar.

‘And you are?’

Jed tensed, but not with fear. ‘None of your business.’

‘Well, None Of Your Business,’ the man laughed, ‘this is private land. So will you be moving on quickly or will you be telling me what you are doing on
it?’

‘I’ll
be telling
you that I’m looking for my little brother,’ said Jed, managing to sound both mocking and aggressive. ‘So if you
won’t
be telling
me where I can start to look, I’ll be going right on. It’s a free country. There’s a right to roam. You can’t throw me off this
land.’

The rider was silent, half-smiling, as if he both could and would do just that.

‘Nevertheless, you are going the wrong way. If you don’t believe me, go on and get lost and die of exposure. See if that helps your precious
brother.’

Jed grunted, bit his lip. Looked across the valley to the far hill. Came to a decision.

‘I’m looking for Seth MacGregor.’

Indulgently, the rider rolled his warm brown eyes. ‘Aren’t they all. Well, I can take you right to him, if you ask nicely.
Cuilean
.’

Jed swallowed to hear his name spoken by this unexpected man. He beat down the rising fear, and let himself hope. And for the first time in his life, he let himself
beg.

‘Please,’ he said. ‘Please.’

‘Good!’ The rider grinned and slapped the thoroughbred’s shoulder. ‘You know when to swallow your pride. That makes you almost a man, not a whelp, and
they’re arrogant fools to call you one. Come, then.’ Taking up the reins he turned the chestnut’s head and urged it forward. With his back confidently presented, Jed could see the
bronze-hilted sword buckled to it, and the sleek modern crossbow that hung from his saddle.

He didn’t feel like arguing anyway.

The light had gone from the far hill now, its silhouette fading into the wintry sky, but Jed kept up easily with the horse’s pace. The warm gaze of its rider made his
scalp itch.

The man gave a low laugh. ‘Listen mate, you stick with me. I’m no witch. Not like the freaks.’

‘Aye, right,’ said Jed. ‘What are you doing here then?’

The rider wasn’t letting it go. ‘I came with a woman, mate. Got me out of a tight spot.’ He chuckled. There wasn’t much humour in it. ‘I’d
stay in stranger places for a woman like her. But you watch these faeries. They’re not like you and me. Can’t trust them, mate. You watch that Seth.’

Jed gave him a cool look. ‘Don’t you worry about me,
mate
.’

At a distance the hill had had a barren look, but as they climbed higher the trees grew denser and the mist frayed. Underfoot Jed could feel heather and soft peat, alive with
fungi, blaeberry and bearberry. Though the light faded fast and the night darkened, the forest was dappled with starlight, and the silver light stayed constant, so he wasn’t quite aware when
the sky vanished and a narrow twisted cavern opened into a hall flagged with grey stone and roofed with arches of ancient wood, high as a cathedral. Vines twisted up the pillars, moss and pale
lichen frosted every edge and curve, and the air was white-scented with night flowers.

It could have been heartbreakingly beautiful, thought Jed. But only if your heart was the right shape.

He was aware of being watched, aware of murmurs of interest, of people loitering in the shadows to follow his progress, but he felt surprisingly unthreatened. When the echoing
hoof-falls halted, the blond rider beckoned him forward and dismounted, keeping his hand on the bridle.

‘Kate. Another guest.’ A fragile green veil sighed as he drew it aside.

The woman who rose from the bed pulled crumpled linen sheets across her nakedness. She didn’t seem so terrifying. She wasn’t intimidatingly tall, but her beauty
was breathtaking. Her hair was a bolt of copper silk that caught the light as she pushed it out of her heart-stopping eyes. They were golden, like the eyes of Conal’s wolf’s, but
darker: the colour of honey. Her smile was wide, there were faint laughter creases at her eyes, and her expression was all warmth and kindness.

‘Jed, darling one. Welcome home!’

 

 

Jed barely heard her. He was too busy staring at the man who rose from Kate’s white-linen bed, who tugged on his jeans and came forward into the
flickering silver light, buckling his belt. The bronze buckle was familiar; it had crossed Jed’s mind to nick it. It might have been crass if it hadn’t been so beautifully carved: the
outstretched wings of a merlin.

Seth was all languid, loose-jointed, but there was a febrile glint in his eyes as he leaned on the wall unsmiling. His chest and arms and stomach were as hacked about with old
scars as Conal’s. Jed had thought of him as weaker than Conal, and he realised with a sickening jolt that he wasn’t. He was smaller, and leaner, but his spare thinness was all strength,
like one of those steel cables that if it snapped could take your head right off.

Seth’s angular face was harder than ever, his left eye violently bruised and swollen and filled with a whole new intensity of pain and hate. It was impossible to go on
looking into it, so Jed’s gaze slewed to the tattoo on his shoulder muscle, intricate knotwork that came to a point at his bicep. It was identical to Conal’s, to the one he’d seen
when the man stripped to wash. Only yesterday, he thought. After Jed had slept on his shoulder. Something knotted Jed’s stomach, and suddenly he felt like howling with regret, as if
he’d made some terrible mistake but didn’t yet know what it was.

‘Where is he?’

‘Safe,’ said Seth.

‘No. I said
where is he
?’

‘Hush, lad.’ Kate touched Jed’s arm, but he ignored her. ‘Seth’s telling you the truth,’ she said. ‘Rory is safe. And he’s
happy, happier than ever he’d be with bandits and rebels in the wilderness. I’ll take you to him.’

She glanced back over her shoulder at Seth. She seemed to hold his gaze exactly as long as she wanted to, and when she broke it Seth looked sick. This time he avoided
Jed’s eyes. Seizing a white shirt from the tumble of sheets he pulled it on, covering the tattoo. The shirt looked thin and cool but it clung to his damp muscles as if he was burning up with
shame and desire.

All the same he shot a look of contempt at the blond rider, who spat on the floor as he passed. Seth stopped. Loathing oozed out of him like sweat.

‘You hurt the whelp, Laszlo, I’ll have your balls on a spike.’

Jed swallowed hard and stared at the blond, whose lip was curled in something not unlike amusement. Though not much like it, either.

‘Boys,’ murmured Kate. ‘Laszlo won’t touch the young man, Murlainn. Jed is my guest. Although if you’re keen on him yourself...’ She left
it hanging, her mouth quirking with the joke.

Seth turned, and searched Kate’s golden eyes. ‘Oh, I believe he’s taken.’

Kate’s facial muscles tightened ever so slightly, but her smile remained fixed. ‘Murlainn?’

‘Isn’t he? Spoken for? I thought that was Laszlo’s whole problem.’

‘Naughty.’ With an air of barely contained patience, Kate flicked out her hand towards Seth, presenting the back of it.

He stared at it for long seconds, then sullenly took a step back towards her. Lifting her hand, he kissed it, and pressed it to his forehead.

‘Better.’ Kate’s lively air was restored. ‘Now, Nils. You and I will take Jed to his brother.’

Seth strode out of the hall in silence, the dark shape of Branndair loping to his side as he disappeared through an archway.

‘Such a sulker.’ Kate tied a leather belt round her dress and ushered Jed and Laszlo from the hall. ‘Now, you’re my guest, Jed! Go where you like.
Treat my home as your own. Because that’s what it is.’

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