The Archer (The Blood Realm Series Book 3) (28 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

Little John’s soft brown eyes slid back and forth between them a moment, then he mumbled something under his breath and lumbered toward Percy. Another squeak escaped the lord as the bear shifter growled at him and then there was the sound of a hatful of coins being snatched away.

Robin didn’t spare the activity a glance, his focus locked on Marian with disturbing intensity. “There is a lovely glow in your eyes tonight. Can I assume you are enjoying yourself?”

His finger slid against her temple to brush a strand of hair behind her ear. The touch sent a tingle down Marian’s arms, the adrenaline still infusing her blood heightening the sensation, every nerve ending screaming with sensitivity. She almost turned her head into the caress, almost chased that delicious shudder of anticipation, but she stopped herself at the last moment.

Three days. That’s it. Don’t make it more difficult than it has to be.
She cleared her throat and took a step back, putting a little more space between their bodies. “I’ve never liked Percy or his wife. That was most satisfying.”

Robin’s pupils dilated when she said the word “satisfying” and Marian gritted her teeth at as her cheeks heated. “Thank you for the glamour,” she pressed on, her voice louder than she’d intended. “Tilly didn’t recognize me at all.”

“I told you, what I do, I do
very
well.”

The blush rose to a burn.
Damn him.
As he’d no doubt intended, his suggestive tone woke her imagination, sent all manner of carnal images parading through her thoughts. Seeing his warrior side had painted him in a whole new light. It combined with the lingering memories of their few shared kisses, giving his flirtation now more weight. She wanted to kiss him again.

The thought horrified her, the knowledge that following through with such a foolish urge would no doubt be the death of any chance she had of keeping the spell inside her intact. Anger surged to her defense and she crossed her arms, fixing him with what she hoped was a glare. “Do you intend to spend the rest of the night firing innuendos at me? Because if the productive portion of the evening has concluded, I would just as soon go to bed.”

A smile spread over Robin’s face like wildfire, the heat in his gaze unmistakable—and unapologetic.

“My bed,” Marian ground out.

The smile widened, baring smooth white teeth.

Embarrassment threatened to reduce her face to ashes and Marian growled, drawing her bow and an arrow at the same time. She nocked the arrow and pointed it at Robin’s chest, the familiar gesture somehow calming to her frazzled nerves. “I’m going to shoot you if you don’t stop smiling.”

“Then quit giving me such bounty to smile about.” His voice was teasing, but he acquiesced to her request. Bit by bit he reined in the smile, until the only remnant was a slight crinkling around his eyes. “The night isn’t over yet. We have the gold, but that’s only the first step. I dare say the second may not be as exhilarating, but I hope you’ll find it as rewarding as I do.”

His eyes grew fuzzy, as if he were looking at something far away. The bow sagged in her hands, anger fizzling out as she found herself chasing that look, wanting to know where it had come from, what it was about. His entire body changed, softened somehow.

“You seem different.”

The words were out before she could stop them, before she was even aware she’d intended to speak. Robin blinked, looked at her as if only just noticing she was there.

“Oh?”

In for a penny…
“You’ve seemed a little different since…” She looked down at her bow, ran a finger over the string. “Since I agreed to stay.”

“Do I?”

She lifted her head, ready to glare at him, but there was no teasing in his face now, no sign of mockery. Rather, he looked almost as disconcerted as she felt.

Strange.
“Yes. I can’t quite put my finger on what’s different. But you seem…more at ease?”

“Well, you haven’t caused me egregious bodily harm for a bit,” he mused. “Perhaps physical health agrees with me?”

His tone was joking, but the humor didn’t quite reach his eyes. There was a haze there that said he was thinking hard about something, something he wasn’t quite ready to share. And he was studying her with an unnerving level of scrutiny. She tightened her grip on her bow, determined not to fidget under that look.

“And you, Marian? Do you feel any different?”

Yes.
“No. No, not really.”

His brow fell, eyes narrowing with suspicion, but she turned before he could pursue the matter and walked around to the other side of the carriage. The air was easier to breathe over here, not so full of that scent that was wholly Robin Hood, rich earth and crushed clover. Her hand trembled as she replaced the arrow in her quiver and she balled her fingers into a fist.
Forget it, Marian. Forget him. Three days. Only three days.

Fortunately for her resolve, Little John returned to the carriage with Percy’s bag of gold in his hand. The fat noble was still kneeling on the ground back where he’d fallen, but now he was staring after Little John with hatred in his eyes.

It would be smarter to kill him. He’ll never forget this. He’s a gluttonous coward, but he has the money to buy friends, pay people to care about his whining. Mercenaries.

“We don’t kill.”

Marian jumped, nerve endings in her arms all spasming at once. Will was right beside her and she hadn’t heard him approach, hadn’t noticed him at all until he’d spoken. His voice had a wet, hissing quality that would have told her he had a mouthful of sharp teeth even if she hadn’t been looking right at him. He grinned at her and she blinked, realizing that she’d drawn her bow and had an arrow nocked, aimed at his throat.

Quickly, she dropped the bow, the tension of the string sinking into her muscles, making them vibrate with the rush of adrenaline that had nowhere to go.

Will looked over her shoulder at Percy. “It’s hard sometimes. Not killing them when you know it’s dangerous to let them live. It’s unwise to make such powerful enemies and then leave them free to plot, to…accumulate.”

Marian followed his gaze. “Robin was very clear about his rule against killing.”

The spriggan hefted one shoulder, settling something more firmly over his back.
Tilly
, Marian realized. Will must have retrieved her unconscious body from the road.

Will opened the door to the carriage and plopped Tilly down onto the seat, not bothering to secure her or see that she was steady. Her body slumped, half-falling to the floor and lying there like a depleted sack of potatoes. He thrust the door shut and returned his eerie gaze to Marian.

“You are wondering if he thinks less of you because you are a killer.”

“I am not a killer.” The sentence flew from her lips as fast and sharp as one of her arrows. An image of Guy of Gisborne, bloody and broken with one such arrow sticking out of his chest like a macabre exclamation point laid itself over her consciousness like a pall and she bit the inside of her lip to keep from qualifying her statement, or trying to take it back.
I am not a killer.

“I am,” Will said calmly.

The well-worn grip of her bow caressed her fingers as she tightened her grip, but she didn’t raise it. Despite the implications of the spriggan’s statement, there was no threat here. She knew it as surely as she knew her own arrows. And the fact that she could put that sort of faith in a half-goblin she’d known less than a week sent a shiver down her spine.

“Don’t let his aversion to killing fool you. More than one villain has experienced death at Robin’s hands and lived to tell the tale. His glamour is not just for hiding, and you have experienced its strength firsthand.”

Marian’s stomach rolled. The thought of having that glamour turned on her as it had been on the sheriff, to have it take her mind through her own death. Another shiver ran down her spine.

“So you see, our grand leader has his own darkness. And Robin does not judge others for killing. He understands that sometimes it is necessary. But he says…” The spriggan twisted up his face in concentration, reaching for a memory. “Something about the energy of killing. He says killing marks you, and if you do it too often, then others will…sense it, somehow. Too much killing will frighten away those who would do you good and attract those who will do you ill. In our line of work, it would be too easy to kill too many, too often and then…and then we wouldn’t be a force for good anymore.” He frowned, then shook his head. “Or something like that. It all boils down to no killing.”

 “Is it hard for you?” Marian kept her voice low, not wanting Robin or Little John to hear her. The two men were on the other side of the carriage, holding their own conversation in quiet tones.

“Not as much now as it was.” Will shrugged. “I’m only half spriggan. My father was a goblin.”

His gaze intensified, watching Marian. Probably for some sign of disgust or fear.

Goblins don’t scare me, little one. And your goblin heritage is apparently more obvious than you realize.

“Then you have a bit of the bloodlust. A little more of a carnivorous appetite.”

Will grinned at that, the too-wide smile splitting his face and showing off a seemingly unending line of razor-sharp teeth. “Yes.” He looked at Robin then. “Never bothered Robin. He told me he didn’t care what I was, only what I did. Invited me to join him. Said it might help…take the edge off.”

“Does it?” She held her breath, even her heart trying to still as she waited for the answer. If her old life was truly gone, if the spell—if worst came to worst, perhaps there could be a place for her…

Stop it. Stop it!

“A little. A chase helps get the blood going, keeps the muscles and bones from getting too antsy. And if it gets too bad, there’s always the more dangerous game.” His yellow eyes darkened to a burnished orange. “It’s not just the thieves and fat cats we deal with, you know. There are larger threats. Monsters, both human and not, that give up their right to be left alone by taking the lives of others. If the hunger ever gets too great…”

Marian leaned forward, lured closer by the promise in the spriggan’s voice. Yes, she could imagine that. Could imagine all the evil out there, evil that had no solution but to be killed, permanently removed as a threat. If Robin didn’t like to kill, he would need…help, in that area. And Will was only one creature, one man. He couldn’t do it alone.

A knowing glint lit Will’s fiery eyes and Marian realized she’d been hanging on his every word, her own hunger rising. She jerked back, stumbled a step. Her shoulder slammed into the carriage.

“Everything all right over there?”

Robin’s voice seemed to come from far away. Marian’s attention was locked on Will, on that look that seemed to see far more than she ever wanted anyone to see. He let her go, didn’t say another word. Still, there was too much understanding in his eyes, too much…kinship.

Marian mumbled something even she didn’t understand and quickly skirted around the carriage to stand next to Robin and Little John. The
sidhe
stared hard at her, green gaze flicking over her face. Whatever he saw there made his brows knit in concern and he slid his glance over to Will then back at Marian. He arched an eyebrow in question.

“All’s good,” Marian said with forced cheerfulness. “Are we done here?”

“Almost.” Robin gave her one last scrutinizing look and then turned to Little John.

The shifter wrapped several gold coins into a brown handkerchief, folding it tightly so the money didn’t make any noise. He handed it to the driver and whispered something to him. The man nodded, bent his head to kiss Little John’s hands, and quickly tucked the handkerchief into his pocket. Little John shuffled as if embarrassed by the show of gratitude, then mumbled something under his breath. The driver nodded again and Little John put a hand on his shoulder. At the count of three, he flung the driver out of the carriage and into the road.

Marian arched an eyebrow as the man cowered in the dirt, arms covering his head as if to ward off a blow. Little John turned his back to him, winked at her, and walked into the forest without another word. Will followed after him, his gait heavy and clumsier than it was in his smaller form. Robin took Marian’s arm and they followed.

The scent of moist earth and rich green leaves welcomed her into its embrace as they ventured farther from the road, deeper into the woods. The tension knotting her muscles slowly relinquished its hold, the atmosphere of the forest kneading her shoulders with gentle fingers. She let her head fall back, her eyes close for just a moment. Oh, how she loved it here. Tucked away in the shade, the canopy creating a separate world far from the tedium of landscaping and harvesting. Far from the bustle of people milling about like cattle.

Whatever else happened, she could be grateful for this. For being strong-armed into spending more time in the wilderness that was so dear to her heart. She would carry this time with her always. Perhaps it would ease the pain of leaving, of walking away when it was getting harder and harder to remember why she had to.

But you have to go. You know you have to go.

“I like Kevin.”

Will’s voice broke into her reverie, blessedly distracting her from the dangerous path her mind had been about to meander down.

“Kevin?” Marian asked.

“The driver,” Little John supplied. “Good man, four children. The Heaths pay him a pittance, and more often than not order him to remain on call the entire day. ”

Marian snorted. “That sounds like Percy all right. He lives in horror of having to walk from one room to the other.” She looked back over her shoulder. “We should have disabled the carriage. Made him walk back home.”

“Carrying his wife,” Will added.

“He wouldn’t have carried his wife,” Little John corrected him. “He would have made poor Kevin do it.”

“Don’t be absurd, lads,” Robin cut in. “How could Kevin possibly carry Lady Heath when his arms would be full of her husband?”

They all had a good laugh at that, both for the image it produced and the probable truth of it. The laughter and camaraderie felt almost as good as the embrace of the forest and when Robin smiled at her, she smiled back after only a second’s hesitation.

Other books

Tengo que matarte otra vez by Charlotte Link
Banquet on the Dead by Sharath Komarraju
A Cold Christmas by Charlene Weir
La conspiración del mal by Christian Jacq
Exposed by Kaylea Cross
Court of Foxes by Christianna Brand