The Archer (The Blood Realm Series Book 3) (17 page)

Read The Archer (The Blood Realm Series Book 3) Online

Authors: Jennifer Blackstream

Tags: #Robin Hood, #artistocrat, #magic, #angel, #werewolf, #god, #adventure, #demon, #vampire, #air elemental, #paranormal, #romance, #fantasy, #fairy tale, #loup garou, #rusalka, #action, #sidhe, #prince, #mermaid, #royal

Something tickled the back of his neck. Not a touch, but a feeling. The unmistakable sensation of being watched. Power warmed his fingertips, waking the cauldron of memories that fed his glamours. It churned inside him as he slowly turned around, ready to veil himself and flee if needed.

A small ball of light hovered several feet off the ground in the shadows under a nearby willow, its spherical body no more than a warm yellow glow. It bobbed as if in greeting and floated a few inches closer.

The tension melted from his shoulders and he shook his hands, banishing the readied glamour. “I thought will o’ wisps preferred bogs? Aren’t you a little out of your territory?”

The ball of light shot up a few indignant inches, lines of crimson shooting through its yellow glow, shedding stray campfire sparks on the ground.

Robin held up his hands. “Sorry, didn’t mean to offend. You’re right, you can go where you please.” He paused and gave the annoyed fey a considering look. “I don’t suppose you know where I might find some spindle berry?”

Colors swirled until the crimson was absorbed by the former buttery yellow. The will o’ wisp danced about like a seed on the wind for a bit, then meandered through a few trees. Robin followed amiably, and it stopped less than twenty paces away to hover over a small grouping of bushes. Upon closer inspection, they turned out to be spindle berries.

“Excellent. This is precisely what I needed.” He plucked a few of the leaves that held the best color and veins thick with nutrients, thought about it, then gathered some of the brittle stems as well. “Well,
I
don’t need them,” he muttered to himself. “What
I
need is to be following that red-headed secret-keeper.”

A distinct aura of disapproval buzzed against the edge of his consciousness. He glanced over his shoulder to find the will o’ wisp swirling in the air, gentle circles doing a fair impression of shaking its head.

“Don’t give me that look, you don’t know anything about it.” He squeezed one of the leaves he'd gathered, wetting his fingers with cool, green liquid. He started back toward the injured man, using the juice from the plant to clean his own injuries as he went. His nose burned as he dabbed at the dried blood, and a sneeze overcame him. When he recovered, he found the will o’ wisp hovering over the fallen man, its colors dancing in a kaleidoscope of emotions. The undulating aura gave Robin the sensation of a hundred tiny insects flying full speed into his exposed skin all at once. Not painful, but annoying.

“Quit shouting at me.” He fell to his knees beside the wrestler, giving the bobbing annoyance a dark look before turning his full attention to the man’s wounds.

As he’d expected, most of the injuries consisted of bruising and cuts that were not deep, but bled enough for ten. Head wounds in particular were notorious for looking worse than they were. Still, the man’s face was paler now, his breathing shallow. Robin shifted uneasily as he crushed more of the spindle leaves and set to work cleaning the cuts and spreading the nectar in a thin layer over the bruises.

“He might have internal bleeding. There won’t be anything I can do about that.”

He waited for the will o’ wisp to berate him for not being quicker about the man’s care, but he felt nothing. That was just as well since his own conscience seemed more than willing to supply enough guilt on its own.

A wet gasp suddenly erupted from the man’s lips, his brown eyes flying open. He stared at Robin, but there was nothing in his eyes to suggest he was registering what he was seeing. His arms spasmed on the ground as he fought to raise them. He managed to press his fingers to some of his wounds, but they were slippery with blood and spindle leaf juice and his hands slipped off, his arms thudding back on the ground. Robin laid a gentle hand on his arm, stopping him from raising it again.

“Quiet now, you’re all right. Be still and let me help you.”

The man didn’t respond. His eyes fluttered closed again, his body easing back onto the ground with the weight of the unconscious. Robin tensed, afraid he’d lost him. He put his ear near the man’s mouth, exhaling his relief when the man’s breath ghosted against his face. He sat back and resumed his care with more diligence, inspecting every cut and every bruise, prodding the flesh where the bruising seemed the worst to check for broken bones.

When he was done, the bleeding had stopped and the man’s chest was rising and falling in shallow, but even breaths. Robin’s fingers were covered in his blood, but he didn’t want to leave him again to seek out water to wash them. The hairs on the back of his neck rose, alerting him that the will o’ wisp had floated closer, was hovering just behind his shoulder.

“It is conceivable that perhaps, maybe, you were right.” Every word was pulled from the depths of his being, the effort made possible only by the sight of the man before him, the man who could have died. Without meaning to, Robin put a hand on the man’s neck, needing to feel his pulse beneath the pads of his fingers.

The will o’ wisp kept its silence, even its emotions quiet. Waiting.

“That woman is a distraction.” He slid his fingers from the man’s pulse and settled back on the ground, legs folded beneath him, arms resting on his knees. “Whatever else I am, for now, I am also the protector of this forest. What good am I if I allow men like that to perform such evil? What good am I if I’m so intent on finding her secret that I cannot give a victim the attention he needs?” He shook his head, anger warming his insides. “He should have been my first thought. Not her.”

Something touched his head. There was a light behind his eyes, a brilliant flash that held a spectrum of vivid colors, and then images exploded in his consciousness.

Marian running through the forest with her crossbow, chasing the image of a fox he’d glamoured up to cover himself as he led her on a merry hunt. Him demanding she reveal her secret. Her shouting at him to leave her alone, him countering with a promise to haunt her until he discovered what she hid so desperately. Her calling him a selfish child, him insisting that it was her that was useless to others. Two shared kisses.

A thought beat against his psyche, the will o’ wisp’s attempt to communicate mind-to-mind. The words were there and not there, hovering just out of reach. Lost behind the deluge of images it projected.

But the images were not just flickers of memory, reminders of experiences past. Robin’s brain didn’t work like that, didn’t settle for such fleeting glimpses. Instead, every image was seized, stretched, colored, felt,
lived.
Pain radiated from every nerve ending, lacing over his skull in a spider web of agony that threatened to crush him, to drive him mad as he experienced all the events simultaneously. Someone was shouting and Robin realized it was him. Blackness ate the edges of his mental vision and he shook his head, fighting to keep from passing out. He reached inside himself for his center of calm, the white space he retreated to when the details became too much, the sensations too overwhelming.

Time passed, and when he registered the sensation of cool grass against the back of his head, he had no idea if he’d been lying there for a minute or an hour. The will o’ wisp flickered above him like a candle flame in a wind tunnel, panic arcing out of it like mini bolts of orange lightning.

“Calm yourself.”

The sound of his voice froze the little fey and it dropped like a falling star to hover an inch over his nose. He crossed his eyes, blinked, and shook his head. “A little space, please.”

The will o’ wisp rose no more than an inch, its panic a strange tingling against his skin.

“It would behoove us both if, in the future, you do not attempt to merge your mind with mine. My psyche is ill-suited to communication by images and memories.”

The will o’ wisp was still panicking, but now there was confusion mixed in with it, an extra bob to its little dance of hysterics.

Robin started to sit up, but the pain in his skull quickly convinced him to lie back down. He put a hand to his forehead and tried to hold his brains in.

“My mind works a little differently than others. Even two memories at once can be overwhelming if I am caught unprepared.”

That was an understatement. The amount of details that had surged over him with the will o’ wisp’s little mind meld still swarmed in his head like insects raging over a disturbed hive. He drew several deep, calm breaths, gently extricating himself from the flood.

It wasn’t until he’d sat up and was massaging feeling back into his temples that the implication of what he’d just seen hit him. He dropped his hands, staring at the will o’ wisp with mounting fury.

“You’ve been spying on me.”

The will o’ wisp grew still. Its yellowish orange light flickered with pink and then back to yellow. Little sparks flew from its center.

“I was not spying on Marian, I was
investigating
her.” He snatched up a handful of grass, tearing the slender blades to pieces as he glared at the fey. “You were spying.”

It didn’t take words or a mind meld to convey the will o’ wisp’s thoughts on his distinction. Robin scowled. He opened his mouth to tell the fey exactly what it could do with its opinions, but the rustling of leaves drew his attention to the forest behind him.

Marian stepped out of the foliage like a queen entering her court. Her green eyes shone as though lit from within, her smooth lips pulled into the first true smile he’d seen on her beautiful face. It made her more than beautiful, it made her radiant. Blood spatter painted her skin and gown in dots ranging in size from tiny blips to melting puddles, but if she noticed, she didn’t care.

She floated forward, swaying, almost dancing, and threw something to the ground. It landed with a thud near the still-unconscious man’s head and Robin arched an eyebrow as he recognized it. It was the sack of gold the men had run off with.

“How is he?” She gestured at the man with one hand, long pale fingers caressing the air.

“He’ll live.” He gestured over his shoulder at the will o’ wisp with his thumb. “Unfortunately, we’ve picked up a visitor. It refuses to leave.”

The anger he’d been expecting to tighten Marian’s lovely face never came. She beamed at the will o’ wisp like a drunkard greeting his next glass of whiskey and fluttered those delicate fingers in its direction. “Hello.”

Robin’s lips parted. She was more than just happy, she was drunk. Drunk off the thrill of the hunt…or a feast of fresh-caught meat, it was difficult to tell. He didn’t see any blood smeared around her mouth to suggest she’d eaten the men she’d taken the gold from, but that didn’t completely eliminate the possibility.

An idea took root, blossoming to fill Robin’s consciousness with the thrill of an epiphany. “I have a proposal for you, Marian.”

She sauntered over to a nearby tree, putting her palm against the rough bark, that strange smile still curling her lips. “Oh?”

“Yes.” He prowled around her, studying her body language, his mind still trying to parse out exactly what had happened during the time they'd been apart. He stopped in front of her, his shoulder brushing the trunk of the tree she’d braced herself against. “Instead of paying me back the four hundred pounds in gold, perhaps you would be interested in working off your debt?”

Her smile wilted at the edges, her shoulders going stiff. Slowly she slid that green gaze toward his eyes, emeralds holding a new light now—the warm flame of anger. In a flash he realized what his offer must have sounded like. He held out a hand to ward off the coming tirade.

“I am not suggesting that you work off your debt in my bed.”

“Then I suggest you get to the point and tell me what you did mean.”

Her voice had taken on a hard edge, slicing away the tantalizing rasp that had been so pleasing to his ear. Robin set his jaw and met her eyes without flinching. “The men you chased down tonight. They are not the only ones who commit acts of evil in this forest.”

The smile made a brief return to her lips, tugging at the corner of her mouth. “They won’t be causing any more trouble.”

Interesting.
“But there are others like them who will.” He pointed at the man still lying on the ground, his face smooth with sleep. “Tonight’s events have reminded me of the duties that I have neglected in my…enthusiasm for our acquaintanceship. For nearly a year now, I have taken it as my personal duty to see that these forests do not provide a haven for such threats.”

Marian pressed her shoulder against the tree and snorted. “
You
are the threat in this forest. A parasite seeking to attach itself to whatever beast would be most bothered by your presence.”

Robin narrowed his eyes. “Of the two of us, only you have taken something without giving anything in return. Perhaps you should take a closer look at your own situation before you label me a parasite.”

Green eyes darkened and her mouth pressed into a thin line, but she didn’t respond. Satisfied he’d made his point, Robin continued. “A large part of my duty to my people involves redistributing wealth in a manner that is healthy for the economy of this kingdom.”

“You’re a thief.”

He clenched his hands into fists. “I am a hero.”

“Depends on who you ask, doesn’t it?”

Robin exhaled slowly through his nose. “You owe me four hundred pounds. Now, you can earn that money working in your fields, struggling to increase production enough to allow for significantly more savings—work that will take the better part of a year and keep you from your precious hunts. Or, you can join me and my allies in fighting against the tyranny that sees fat men profiting from the labor of those unfortunate enough to be born outside the nobility. The choice is yours.”

Marian didn’t lose the stubborn set to her jaw, and he could practically hear the insult she no doubt had readied on her tongue. But she bit it back, kept her silence as she stared off into the forest, eyes unfocused.

“Work in the fields can be very rewarding, I’m sure.” He stepped closer to her, careful to watch her body for any signs of intended attack. “Certainly it is much safer than prowling the woods with me, seeking prey, fleecing them of their ill-gotten wealth. Men who feel such entitlement, who think nothing of taking food from the mouths of the less-fortunate, often fight with single-minded ferocity. They are not used to giving up what they so foolishly believe is theirs, and there is always a certain danger in challenging them.”

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