Fever 4 - DreamFever (34 page)

Read Fever 4 - DreamFever Online

Authors: Karen Marie Moning

  "I'm not common and you know it." I would never admit he had a valid point. Mirror
neurons did funny things to us, made us mentally live things we observed, firing
whether we were performing the action ourselves or merely watching someone else
perform the action, numbing us bit by bit. But who needed media to desensitize? What
was I going to be like after living a few more months of my own life? Numb to
everything. "Look at you. All stalky and badass."

  "Stalky. Do you think that's a word, Ms. Lane?"

  "Who was the child?" I said.

  For a moment he said nothing. Then, "You ask absurd questions. What did I feel?"

  "Grief."

  "What bearing would something as trivial as the child's name or his relevance to my
existence have on anything?"

  "Maybe it would help me understand you."

  "He died. I felt grief. End of story."

   "But it's not quite that simple, is it, Barrons?" I narrowed my eyes. "It's not the end
of the story."

  "Try, Ms. Lane. Just try."

   I inclined my head appreciatively. I hadn't even really reached out to test the edges of
his mind; still, he'd felt it.

  "I let you off easy last night. You punched into my head."

  "You invited me. Got all rubby up against my mind."

  "I invited you to slaughter. Not to where you went from there. There's a price for
that. Don't think you've escaped. I've merely delayed sentencing."

  I shivered on a cellular level, refused to identify the emotion behind it. "Try,
Barrons," I mocked. "Just try."

  He said nothing. I looked over at him. There was a strange tension in his upper lip. It
took me a second to realize Barrons was trying not to laugh.

  "You're laughing at me," I said indignantly.

   "Look at you, all puffed up on yourself. Took a push into my head last night and now
you think you're the Shit." He gave me a hard look. It said, Get in my skin, go as deep
as I go, then you can puff about something. Until then, you're feeble, Ms. Lane. "And,
for the record, I could have stopped you."

  He could have? He wasn't a boaster. Jericho Barrons had let me see his grief? Why?
Just what the hell did that mean?

  We both saw the floater at the same time.

  He yanked the wheel. We barely missed the drifting IFP.

   "Those things are dangerous! Where are they coming from? Are they new or are the
stationary ones somehow getting cut loose?"

  He kept his gaze on the road. "Looks like they're getting cut loose by someone.
Probably the Unseelie, just to add to the random chaos."

   We drove for a time in silence, occupied with private thoughts. I suspected he was
still brooding about the drifting IFPs, but I'd moved on to alternately worrying and
being excited about the woman we were on our way to see.

   After last night's exhausting events, I didn't stumble to bed until nearly eight in the
morning, and then I slept until Barrons pounded on my door at five o'clock this
afternoon.

  A sidhe-seer was waiting downstairs, he told me.

  I'd tugged on jeans and a sweatshirt and rushed downstairs, expecting to find Dani.

   It was Kat, exuberant with information. They'd found a woman who might talk to us,
a woman who could tell us about "unholy doings at the abbey" that had happened
twenty-some years ago. They'd stumbled on her by accident while scouring the
countryside for survivors. She refused to leave her cottage. Wasn't about to go
anywhere near that "befouled parcel o' land" and insisted they not breathe a single word
to the Grand Mistress about her or she'd seal her lips for good. She'd waved a walking
stick forged of purest iron in her gnarled fist and said she knew a thing or two about the
Old Ones and was just foine on me own, so get ye awa!

  "What did she tell you?" I'd demanded.

  "Not a blasted thing. She said we had to bring her something to prove we weren't in
cahoots with those dark daoine sidhe running amuck."

  "Like?"

  Kat had shrugged. "I'd the feeling she was meaning something of the Seelie. We
thought of Dani and the sword, but ..." She trailed off, and I understood her concerns.
Of the two of us, I inspired a little more confidence than the impulsive teen. "She
seemed afraid we were working with the Unseelie. She seemed to know quite a bit
about Fae lore."

  I'd been raring to go right then and there.

  Convincing Barrons had been the hard part.

   He was determined to stay close to the heavily warded bookstore, rooted in his
territory, until we'd dealt with the Lord Master.

  "But I need to know about the prophecy," I insisted, "and whatever she knows about
when the Book escaped. Who knows what this woman might be able to tell us?"

  "We know all we need to know," he said flatly. "We've got three of the four stones
and four of the five Druids."

  I gaped. "The five that we need are Druids? The five are people? What the hell? Does
everybody know about this prophecy but me?"

  "It would appear," he said dryly. "The Keltar, arrogant fucks, believe they are the five
Druids: Dageus, Drustan, Cian, Christopher, and Christian. But, Christian's missing and
V'lane has the fourth stone. Frankly, Ms. Lane, I think you're the wild card that might
make all the rest unnecessary. I'm placing my bets on you."

   Unfortunately, I wasn't certain just how wild a card I was. I was afraid there was
something in the prophecy about me and it wasn't good. But I wasn't about to tell him
that. Instead, I argued that it would be a mistake to pass up any opportunity to learn all
we could about the Book. And if this woman knew how it had escaped, who knew what
else she might be able to tell us?

  Bring the woman here, he said.

   Not a chance of moving her, Kat had informed us. Her age was matched only by her
stubbornness, cantankerousness, and a pronounced tendency to nod off to sleep without
a moment's notice.

  So, here we were, making our way to the far edge of County Clare.

  Where ninety-seven-year-old Nana O'Reilly was waiting for us.

I'd seen crofters' cottages before, but this one took the cake. Illuminated by the
Hummer's headlights, it was a study in whimsy. An uneven stack of field rock, thatch,
and moss tumbled across a yard of tiered gardens that, in summer, would yield a
profusion of blooms, garnished by fanciful statues and Escher-esque stone fountains.
Beyond it, the Atlantic Ocean glistened silver in the moonlight, salting the breeze.

  There were no Shades here. The perimeter of the yard was heavily warded.

   As we drove over the line of demarcation, I flinched. Barrons had absolutely no
reaction. I'd been watching him carefully since the moment our headlamps picked up
the faint silvery glow, curious to see if the wards would bother him.

  He was the portrait of perfect impassivity.

  "Do you even feel them?" I asked, irritated.

  "I know they're there." Typical Barrons nonanswer.

  "Do your tattoos protect you?"

  "From many things. From others, no." Another nonanswer.

  We got out and made our way up the nearly overgrown flagstone path to the cottage
door. It was green, painted with many symbols. The misshapen shamrock was
unmistakable. Nana O'Reilly knew of our order. How?

  Kat opened the door when I knocked. She'd hurried to the cottage ahead of us,
hoping to smooth our way with tea, fresh water, and crates of supplies from town for the
old woman.

  I peered into the cottage. Candles burned and a brisk fire crackled.

   "I'll be getting me own door, I will. I'm no' dead yet!" Nana O'Reilly nudged Kat
aside. She wore her gray hair in a long braid over one shoulder. Her face bore the
wrinkles of an old sea captain, from nearly a century of living on the shore, and she had
no teeth. She gave Barrons a rheumy look and said, "The likes o' ye'll be findin' no
bide `ere!"

  With that, she yanked me inside and slammed the door in Barrons' face.

"What kind of likes is that?" I said, the instant the door was closed.

  Nana gave me a look that suggested I might just be too stupid to live.

  Kat settled the old woman in a chair near the fire and draped a faded quilt of many
patterns and fabrics about her shoulders. The blanket looked as if it had been made
decades ago from leftover patches of her children's outgrown clothes. "I'll be asking
you, too," Kat said curiously. "What likes is that?"

  "Air ye daft, lasses? No' our kind."

  "We get that, but what is he?" I said.

 Nana shrugged. "Why would ye care? There's white, and there's not white. Wha'
more need ye ken than tha'?"

  "But I'm white," I said quickly. Kat gave me an odd look. "I mean, you can see that
Kat and I are like you, right? We're not like him." If she could discern people's true
natures, I wanted to know mine.

  Her rheumy brown eyes fastened on me like muddy leeches. "Ye color yer hair, ye
do. Wha's the truth o' it?"

  "Blond."

  She closed her eyes and went so still that for a moment I was afraid the old woman
had fallen asleep.

   Then her eyes snapped open and her mouth parted on a gummy O of surprise. "Love
o' Mary," she breathed, "I ne'er forget a face. Yer Isla's git! I'd no hae thought to see
ye again ere I passed!"

  "Git?" I said.

  Kat looked stunned. "Daughter," she said.

My mother's name was Isla O'Connor.

   I had the unmistakable look of her, Nana told me, in the shape of my face, the
thickness of my hair, my eyes, but most of all in my carriage. The way my back flowed
into my shoulders, the way I moved, even the angle at which I tilted my head sometimes
when I spoke.

  I looked like my mother.

  My mother's name was Isla O'Connor.

  I could have repeated those two thoughts over and over for hours.

  "Are you sure?" I had a lump in my throat I could barely swallow around.

 She nodded. "Countless were the days she an' me Kayleigh played in me gardens.
Were yer locks blond, lass, I'd o' been mistaking ye for her haint."

  "Tell me everything."

   Nana's eyes narrowed. "She carried something, was ne'er wi'out it." Her gaze
clouded. "Though later, `twas lost. Ken ye what it was?"

  "From the Seelie?"

  Nana nodded, and my eyes widened. Slowly, I reached inside my coat and pulled out
the spear. "My mother carried this?"

  Nana's eyes disappeared in nests of wrinkles as she smiled. "I fashed ne'er to see it
again! Heard tell `twas fallen to nefarious hands. Blazes wi' the glory o' heaven, it does.
Aye, yer mam carried the Spear of Destiny, and me own dear Kayleigh carried the
sword."

  "Everything," I said, dropping to Nana's knees by the fire. "I want to know
everything!"

Isla O'Connor had been the youngest sidhe-seer to ever attain the position of Haven
Mistress--spokeswoman for the High Council--in the history of the abbey. Such a
gifted sidhe-seer had not been born for longer than any cared to recall. The Grand
Mistress feared the ancient bloodlines had been too diluted by reckless and
unsupervised unions to again produce such offspring. Just look at those gall�glaigh
MacRorys and MacSweenys, breeding with the Norse and Picts!

  "Gallowglass," Kat clarified for me. "Mercenary warriors of a sort."

  No one knew who Isla's father was. My grandmother, Patrona O'Connor--Nana's
face creased in a smile of toothless delight when she said her name; they'd been
contemporaries and friends dearer than sisters--had never wed and had refused to
divulge his name. She bore Isla late in life and carried the knowledge of her child's

father to her grave, which, by the by, was a few miles south if I had interest in paying
respects.

  Patrona! That was the name Rowena mentioned the day I'd been searching the
museum for OOPs and she'd found me in the street. She insisted I had the look of her
but was unable to grasp how that could possibly be. She said she would have known.
Now I understood why: Rowena had known my grandmother!

  "Are there other O'Connors, besides me?"

  Nana snorted. "Eire's full `o `em. Distant kin. Nary a line as potent as Patrona's."

   Rowena said there were no O'Connors left! Had she meant only my direct line? As
far as I was concerned, at best she'd misled me, at worst she'd lied.

   Although the Grand Mistress had disdained my mother's un-proven lineage, Nana
continued, there'd been no disputing Isla was the finest sidhe-seer any at the abbey had
ever encountered. As time passed, she and Nana's granddaughter, Kayleigh, had not
only been initiated into the abbey's most private and hallowed circle but were appointed
to positions of the greatest power therein.

 Life was blessed. Nana was proud. She'd raised her Kayleigh well, trained in the Old
Ways.

  The old woman's eyes closed and she began to snore.

  "Wake her," I said.

  Kat tucked the blanket more closely around her. "She's lived nigh a century, Mac. I
imagine her bones are weary."

  "We need to know more."

  Kat cast me a look of rebuke. "I've yet to hear a word about a prophecy or the Book."

  "Exactly why we need to wake her!"

  "Focus less on your kin and more on our problems," Kat chastened.

   It took several minutes of gentle shaking and coaxing, but the old woman finally
stirred. She seemed to have no awareness that she'd been asleep and resumed talking as
if she'd never stopped.

  It was a time of great hope, she said. The six most potent sidhe-seers lines began to
grow stronger again: the Brennans, the O'Reillys, the Kennedys, the O'Connors, the
MacLoughlins, and the O'Malleys. Each house was producing daughters with gifts
awakening sooner, developing more quickly.

  But things changed and dark days came, days when Nana walked the land and felt the
wrongness beneath her feet. The soil itself had been ... tainted. Some foul thing had

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