Give the Devil His Due (The Sanheim Chronicles, Book Three) (30 page)

Read Give the Devil His Due (The Sanheim Chronicles, Book Three) Online

Authors: Rob Blackwell

Tags: #The Sanheim Chronicles: Book Three, #Sleepy Hollow, #Headless Horseman, #Samhain, #Sanheim, #urban fantasy series, #supernatural thriller

He managed to hold on though, and kept attacking, hoping to hurt him again while he was surprised. Quinn brandished the torches as if they were swords, striking from the left and right, varying his moves. Dub dodged a few times, before Quinn connected again. Dub screamed a second time.

Quinn sensed rather than heard Dother behind him preparing to strike. Now that he was fighting instead of running, his senses felt like they had kicked into overdrive. It was the same kind of power that he had used as the Horseman. Even though his
cennad
lacked a head, Quinn had always been able to “see” by using his supernaturally-enhanced senses.

As Dother was about to attack, Quinn abruptly broke off his assault on Dub and rolled to the side, narrowly missing a heavy blow from Dother. He looked both surprised and angry that Quinn had dodged his swing.

Quinn quickly attacked again. Far from feeling afraid, he felt invigorated. Time even seemed to slow down. Dub, who clutched his arm like it was wounded, tried to punch at Quinn with his other arm, but Quinn moved out of the way. Instead, Quinn swung and jabbed with his torches, stopping only to dodge another blow from Dother. Though Dub was quick, he was moving slightly slower than before and Quinn caught him again, this time burning his other arm. Dub let out a furious yell.

“Kill it! Kill it now!” Dub screamed.

Dother stepped up his attack, moving in front of his brother and swinging furiously at Quinn. Quinn moved with speed and agility to dodge him, but made a critical mistake. For a moment, he forgot his torches weren’t really swords, and he brought up one to block Dother’s strike. The shadow creature’s fist slammed through the torch’s staff. It split into two and the flame fell uselessly to the ground. Before Quinn could move away, Dother slammed his other fist into Quinn’s head, knocking him against the wall.

Quinn screamed in pain and there was a horrible ringing in his ears. He didn’t have time to pause, however. Dother came in for another attack, and Quinn rolled to the ground, this time with only one torch to use as a counter.

He knew he was going to fail. Dub was injured, but hardly out of the fight. Dother, meanwhile, was smiling from ear to ear, clearly enjoying himself. Quinn could run for another torch and he might even make it, but he would eventually fall. The two brothers were simply too much for him.

Quinn stared at the nearest torch even though he didn’t plan to go there. He tensed his muscles for a sudden leap, knowing both Dother and Dub were watching him closely.

He feinted a jump toward the torch. Both shadowmen fell for it, moving with lightning speed to block what they thought was Quinn’s path.

But Quinn was never heading that way. Instead, he launched himself forward at a dead sprint, ignoring the pain in his head.

Quinn feared he wouldn’t make it to the tunnel, almost expecting Dother and Dub to block his path. But the two of them must have been slower than he thought, and he burst into the tunnel with the two creatures close behind him.

Like before, he didn’t dare pause to figure out which way he should go. Nor did he try to remember which direction he had come from. He let instinct guide him. Quinn didn’t think this was what Janus had done in the cornfield — that seemed more deliberate. But he’d started to realize that thinking too much was part of his problem. When he used his instincts, Quinn fought like the Horseman. He didn’t think, he just acted.

He ran through the tunnels the same way — never thinking, just moving. He hoped it would get him out. He heard the sounds of the shadows right behind him, an angry roar following in his wake.

Quinn suddenly burst into the cavern where he had originally been, where Elyssa and Janus were held. But they were no longer there and Quinn shouted in triumph. The spider-creature’s plan had worked.

Quinn didn’t stop, instead running through into the next tunnel. When he came around the bend, he saw the exit out of the cave.

He heard the shadowmen behind him howl in fury and Quinn never slackened his pace. Just as he was about to escape, however, Quinn nearly stopped dead in his tracks. In front of him were four other creatures, dark shapes lined up in the snow, carrying what looked like large, round weapons.

It’s not fair
, Quinn thought.
Now they’re six of them?

Quinn heard Janus’ voice shout at him.

“Quinn, down!”

Quinn dove into the snow bank, momentarily savoring the cold when it touched his bruised body. He lay in the snow for a second and turned over.

“Now!” Buzz shouted.

Beams of light suddenly flashed into the entrance of the tunnel. Quinn heard a hideous sound. After a moment, he realized it was Dub and Dother screaming. They had emerged from the tunnels into a blaze of light.

Quinn realized Elyssa, Janus, Buzz and Carol — all now somehow in snow gear — were aiming large flashlights directly at the creatures. Dub and Dother tried to move back, but the lights were too bright. Quinn watched as they grew smaller and smaller, and finally became nothing but wisps of black smoke.

From far away, Quinn thought he heard something else let out a roar, but the shadows themselves vanished relatively quietly, their screams growing fainter until they disappeared entirely. Dub and Dother were gone.

 

*****

 

Quinn stared at his companions as the six of them gathered again inside the first cavern. Only Quinn seemed cold now. The rest of them looked like they had been shopping at REI. Quinn looked enviously at their snow pants, thick jackets, fur-lined boots, hats and ski masks. Janus had gone one step further and also wore ski goggles.

“We need to get you some new clothes, mate,” Janus said as he saw Quinn staring at them.

“First tell me what happened to you,” Quinn said.

Janus gestured to the newest addition to their group, the spider-creature facing them a few feet away.

“He dragged Elyssa and I out of there after you left,” Janus said.

Quinn nodded toward the spider.

“I assumed that’s what you had in mind,” he said.

“I would have been little help against Dub and Dother,” the spider responded. “But I knew I could get your friends out and plan a proper trap if you gave me the opportunity.”

“You guys weren’t even moving when I found you,” Quinn said.

“No idea what that was,” Janus said. “Elyssa and I were just walking ahead in the snow when those shadow things jumped us. They got me first and dragged me off here. She followed them.”

“I tried to fight them,” Elyssa said. “But it was like fighting smoke.”

“Light was the key,” Quinn said. “I hit them with torches.”

“Parker here told us about the light, once I stopped screaming and trying to hit him with my shoe,” Janus said.

“Parker?” Quinn asked.

“It is his name for me,” the spider replied gesturing toward Janus. “He judged it would be easier if I had a more pronounceable name.”

Quinn rolled his eyes at Janus.

“What?” Janus said. “What did I do now?”

“Parker, huh?” Quinn said. “As in Peter Parker?”

“It fits, doesn’t it?” he said, smiling.

“I don’t understand,” Elyssa said.

Quinn tried to frame it in a way that wouldn’t offend their new companion.

“There’s a legendary hero in the mortal world,” he said to Elyssa. “He’s a man with the powers of a spider. His name is Peter Parker, but mostly he’s known as Spider-Man.”

Quinn couldn’t be sure, but he thought the spider — or Parker, he supposed — looked quite pleased. Elyssa merely nodded her head.

“You and Kieran would get along,” she said to Janus with a bemused expression on her face.

“Is it okay if we call you that?” Quinn asked the spider.

“I would be honored,” the creature responded.

“Okay,” Quinn said, “Parker it is. But you better hope Stan Lee doesn’t end up here when he dies or he’ll be very upset.”

Janus laughed.

“Anyway, once I stopped freaking out, Parker here told us the score,” Janus continued.

“So where did you get those flashlights? Is there a sporting goods store on this mountain or something?”

“You should know; you figured it out,” Janus said.

Quinn looked quizzically at Carol.

“Buzz was tracking you,” she said. “We knew you’d been taken and followed you to this cave.”

“There was a misunderstanding,” Parker said.

Buzz grunted.

“I may have, uh, mistakenly thought he was an enemy,” Buzz said.

“It is no matter,” Parker said. “You were a worthy foe.”

Buzz nodded appreciatively in his direction.

“I knew Parker was here,” Buzz said. “I’d seen him following us earlier. Once we straightened out that he was on our side, we had a meeting of the minds.”

“They showed up with this terrific snow gear,” Janus said.

“Your theory was right, Quinn,” Carol said. “How we appear here depends on our own vision of ourselves. Buzz identified himself with his favorite jacket, so he had it with him. It stood to reason that if we could picture ourselves with jackets, we could follow his lead.”

“If you figured that out, why didn’t you put on a jacket yourself?” Janus asked Quinn.

“I understood the theory, not the practice,” he said.

“I’ll show you in a minute,” Janus said. “It’s quite easy.”

“But I still don’t get the flashlights,” Quinn said.

“That’s the best part,” Janus said. “You can imagine yourself with objects too. Once Parker mentioned that those shadow blokes could be hurt by light, it was easy.”

“You could have imagined yourself with something a little more powerful,” Quinn said. “Like maybe a machine gun.”

“No, that won’t work, hon,” Carol said. “It has to be an object you’re familiar with. The deeper your connection to it, the easier it is to conjure. If you have no experience with it, nothing happens.”

“I tried to summon a flamethrower,” Janus said. “It didn’t work, but bloody hell, that would have been epic.”

Quinn smiled and nodded.

“Nice idea,” he replied.

“Okay,” Carol said. “We need to keep moving. Parker says there’s a tunnel down here that will bring us out on the other side of the mountain. That way we can avoid all of this damned snow.”

“Great,” Quinn said. “Let’s head out.”

When he stood up, he grunted in pain. He had forgotten how much his head hurt for a moment. He put his hand to the side of his head and felt blood.

“Are you okay?” Janus asked.

Elyssa crossed over to him and examined his wound.

“He’s hurt,” she told Carol. “The bruise is completely black. It even seems to have some black liquid on it.”

“Did Dub or Dother hurt you?” Parker asked.

“Dother whacked me in the head. It’s nothing.”

“It’s not nothing,” Parker said.

He crawled over to Quinn, but Quinn unintentionally pulled away. He liked Parker, but he creeped him out.

Janus leaned over and looked at the wound too.

“Yuck. Looks nasty, mate.”

“Thanks so much for the help, Janus,” Quinn said.

“Try some light on it,” Buzz said.

Before Quinn could say anything, Janus turned on his flashlight and pointed it at Quinn’s head. Quinn looked down to see a thick, black substance dripping onto his shoulder. But as the light hit it, the black goo started to evaporate. Like the monsters that had hurt him, in a minute, the goo turned to mist and dissipated.

“Wow, it’s totally disappearing,” Janus said.

Quinn touched his head and didn’t even feel a wound anymore.

“All better,” he said. “Let’s head out.”

But when Quinn started to walk away, he noticed the spider had lifted an appendage in the air. It took Quinn a moment to realize Parker was raising a hand.

“I’d like to ask a question before we go.”

Quinn saw him look wistfully deeper into the cave.

“Did you find it?” he asked. “You mentioned torches. Do they still burn?”

“Yes,” Quinn responded. “It’s beautiful down there.”

Parker looked down at the ground.

“Down where?” Carol asked.

“The Altar of Damhán Alla,” Parker said. “It has been lost for a long time.”

“Then how did Quinn find it?” Janus asked. “He used to get lost driving to Purcellville.”

“He is a Prince of Sanheim,” Parker replied. “He was drawn there.”

“Are you the one known as the Spider?” Quinn asked. “Are you a Prince too?”

The spider let out a strange sound that startled them before Quinn realized it was a laugh.

“No,” Parker responded. “He died long ago.”

“But this was his home?” Quinn asked.

“Yes,” Parker said. “It was our home. He ruled from here.”

Quinn looked at him strangely.

“Ruled?” Quinn asked.

The spider’s eyes blinked and he nodded.

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