Read Dancing on the Wind Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
them even if they are a bit snappish. Felines?” It shook its head. “Well, that’s a different
kettle of pike. I hate felines although…” He chuckled. “They are easy to peel and taste
fair to middling if you stew them long enough.”
A shudder of revulsion went through Fallon and he tore his gaze from the creature,
gritting his teeth.
“It was a joke, hound. A
joke
!” the Guardian said. “I am a vegetarian.”
This strange conversation puzzled Fallon and he had almost screwed up the
courage to ask
An Fear Liath Mor
what this was all about when the creature spoke again.
“They fermented in my belly and produced an intoxication I knew would happen,
and just as with the inferior races such as your human part, I became drunk off those
gods-be-damned little June berries.” It wobbled that huge foot again. “And like any
drunken man who places a lampshade atop his head, I made a fool of myself by
intruding upon you and your mate and,” it winced, “behaving as I did.” It dipped its
head. “And for that, I express to you my sincere apologies and ask that you not speak of
my indiscretion. If it is any consolation to you, I have a mother of a hangover.”
“I’m sorry,
Vainshtyr
,” Fallon replied.
60
Dancing on the Wind
“Coim,” the Guardian said. “You have earned the right to call me Coim.” It
grinned. “I have seen your woman naked.” It wagged its brows and wiggled its snout
to let Fallon know it was another joke. “So call me Coim.”
“I am honored,” Fallon said. “Thank you, Coim.” He couldn’t wait to tell his
mother of this encounter.
“Now bring me up to speed about these nasties for which you are searching in my
bailiwick,” came the demand.
“My apologies, Coim, but isn’t Scotland where…?”
“This entire world is my jurisdiction, pup. I can go wherever I like. The Doorways
open here, there, wherever I need them to. Once every three years I go home for the
span of a few months’ time.” Sadness flitted through the creature’s alien eyes. “My
masters grant me that boon and this is the year I may go.” It seemed to mentally shake
itself then asked the hell hound to continue.
“Okay,” Fallon said. He lifted his right leg and crossed it at the ankle on his left
knee. “The entities we’re looking for are called
drochtáirs
. They are blood fiends from
beyond our galaxy that prey on humans. Their bite will change a human into an undead
creature who will in turn seek out other humans.”
“Distasteful,” the Guardian pronounced with a lift of his rubbery lip. “And not on
my watch will this happen!”
“They live in lairs, burrows under the ground where it is fairly cold but not frozen.
Heat is anathema to them and fire is the only true way to destroy them.”
Ad Fear Liath Mor
rose gracefully to its feet and began pacing with its long arms
clasped behind its shaggy back. “What should I look for in order to find these
abominations?”
“The burrows would have no vegetation growing around them. Wherever the
creatures pass, they kill the grasses and plants, melt the snow. We will look for them
from the air, mark their burrows then go down and destroy them.”
“You believe them in this province then?”
“They may be in several provinces and the chances are good that they are.”
An Fear Liath Mor
frowned deeply. “How large are these nasties?”
“In their natural form it is believed they are like serpents. They can take over other
creatures like badgers, wolverines and the like in order to attack humans.”
The Guardian stopped pacing, lifted a giant foot then slammed it to the ground.
The ground shook. “I could make paste of them, eh?”
“I suppose you could, if you were of a mind to help us hunt.”
Massive shoulders hitched upward. “What else do I have on my plate?” it inquired
with a twinkle of its unusual eyes.
“But they must be reduced to ash so they won’t resurrect. Stomping on them might
be fun, but then you will need to incinerate the puddle.”
61
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
“I can call fire from the Doorway if needs be. That should suffice.”
“If you could take the three western provinces, Keenan and I could search these
three.”
“Consider it done.”
“I…” Fallon began, but the creature simply vanished, leaving behind a rank smell
and a low whistle.
For a moment longer, Fallon sat on the rock and thought about the strange
conversation. It was good to know there was no threat coming at them from
An Fear
Liath Mor
. It was even better to know the Guardian would be helping them eradicate the
menace to humankind. Rising, he grimaced as his feet squished in the wet boots. He
sighed heavily and started back to the cabin.
He should have been concentrating on eradicating the latest menace to his world,
but instead, he found himself thinking of Keenan’s lush breasts and willing body.
“You’ve thrown me way off kilter,
myneeast caillagh
,” he said to himself. “What are
you doing to me?”
As he cut through the dampness of the new morning, he hunkered into the comfort
of his faded denim jacket and thought of how quickly his life had so drastically
changed. He had gone from adamant fury about not having an Extension foisted off on
him to eagerness to be with her again. Gone was the anger that had made him snap at
her that first day to be replaced with a growing affection he could neither adequately
explain nor understand.
“It’s the bonding,” he said aloud, and knew that was part of it. The other part was
simply Keenan.
He jammed his hands into the pockets of his worn jeans and let his mind touch
lightly upon hers. In his mind’s eye he saw her. She was up and about, sitting on the
sofa with a mug of steaming coffee held in both hands. As soon as his consciousness
touched hers, she smiled and looked up.
“
Good morning
,” she whispered.
“
Good morning
,”
he sent back to her, though the contact made his head throb
.
“
Pour
me a cup
?”
He saw her put her mug aside, go into the kitchen and take another mug from the
cupboard. By the time he entered the cottage, she was seated again and his mug was on
the end table beside one of the chairs.
“I thought we’d be leaving at first light.”
“I had something to do,” he said.
“I sensed you were with our night visitor. Where did you find him?”
“It found me,” he answered. He told her what had transpired and she shook her
head.
“Poor thing. He must have been very embarrassed by his behavior.”
62
Dancing on the Wind
Then he told her the Guardian would be aiding them in finding the
drochtáirs
.
“That should cut down on our tracking time,” she said. “How soon do you want to
leave?”
“We can leave now,” he said.
“I could make you breakfast.”
He paused with the mug halfway to his lips. “You’re offering to cook for me?”
“If you’re hungry.”
“
Can
you cook?” he queried.
She thought of what Matty Groves had said to her and repeated it. “I’m a Georgia
woman and I’m Celtic. I was born to cook.”
Fallon had a glimpse of Matty’s face flitting through her mind and frowned. “Keep
him out of your thoughts,
myneeast caillagh
. I’m the jealous sort.”
“Are you really?” she countered over her shoulder as she walked into the bedroom.
“I didn’t think so, but apparently I am,” he admitted, following her as far as the
door. “So don’t let that idiot’s face drift through your head again.”
Keenan laughed and finished the remainder of her coffee. “I’ll strip the bed and…”
“No need,” he said. “The staff will send someone to see to the cleaning.” He
glanced at his watch and frowned. “It’s almost nine o’clock. I didn’t realize I’d been
with the Guardian that long.”
“Time flies when you’re having fun,” she said as she stuffed a shirt into her bag.
She paused. “I didn’t have any fear for your safety this morning. I had a feeling the big
guy would be looking out for you.”
“Else you would have come looking for me.”
She bobbed her head. “You betcha I would have. You want breakfast?”
Fallon didn’t know if that pleased him or scared him. Either way, he thought it best
to let the matter ride for the time being. “Nah.”
Before another half hour had passed they were airborne and flying low over the
tundra to the north of the cottage. Following the ecotone—the delineating boundary
between the forest and the stark landscape of the tundra—Fallon began to expand the
search area along the set grid lines he’d drawn on the maps. Within another four hours
they had marked three suspicious-looking areas along the grid and were headed back
that way to put down nearby to inspect the spots. The first two proved to be nothing of
value, and other than the sharp, buffeting thirty-five-mile-hour winds hitting them as
they inspected the indentions on the site, there was no problem.
The third site proved to be an entirely different can of worms. They landed just as
the sun was riding the ridge of mountains and the air was grower colder. Keenan
switched on the flashlight and swept the beam toward the burrow.
“Do you smell that?”
63
Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Fallon nodded. “Putrid,” he said as they neared a spot in the ground around which
the close-cropped sedges, mosses and lichens were dark brown.
“No trails leading away from the burrow,” she said.
“That’s a good sign. It means it hasn’t been out since it got here.”
They were being very careful on their approach. The sky was a deep magenta color
as the sun lowered behind the ridge, and the wind was biting cold despite it being
summer. There wasn’t a hint of moisture in the air but dark gray clouds were roiling
overhead.
Keenan stopped. “Movement.”
Fallon halted as well. He too had felt the shifting of the land beneath his boots. The
stench intensified. “It’s coming up,” he said quietly. He motioned her back and well
away from the rim of the burrow.
A greenish vapor oozed from the center of the burrow and filled the air with the
noxious stench of sulfur. Fallon fingered the handle of the experimental laser pistol that
the Supervisor had provided for him.
“
You most likely won’t need it with Keenan’s pyrokinetic powers, but I’d rather err on the
side of safety
.”
Slipping his finger into the trigger guard, he withdrew the heavy weapon and
thumbed off the safety. Even as he leveled the weapon at the burrow, he could feel the
air around him change, an electrical charge building. He didn’t need to look Keenan’s
way to know the change was coming from where she stood.
“Here it comes,” she said, and from the corner of his eye he watched her wave her
hands in a strange, complex pattern. Her fingers began to glow as though she had
dipped them in phosphorescent powder. Trickles of tiny embers fell from her fingertips
like floating fireflies.
Fallon flexed his knees, the pistol held firm in a two-handed grip, but when the
slithering mass of ugly-ass creatures came shooting out of the burrow, he was too
stunned to pull the trigger.
Not that he needed to for Keenan concentrated the thrust of her growing power at
the serpent-like beings and twin balls of sizzling flame shot from her hands and directly
into the path of the vipers. A wild shriek of ungodly pain split the early evening air and
a stink more powerful than before blasted through the air.
Fallon lowered his pistol—his attention riveted on Keenan as she concentrated the
flame on the disintegrating heap. Around her there was a dark orange aura that
shimmered like a heat mirage. As the flames diminished, the aura began to waver until
it was nothing more than a pale misty shape around her. When that too faded, Keenan
staggered then dropped to her knees.
“Keenan!” Fallon shouted, and raced to her. His head was throbbing like a bass
drum.
64
Dancing on the Wind
“I’m all right,” she said, but he could sense the drain on her life force and scooped
her up in his arms, hurrying back to the chopper.
Over his shoulder, he glanced at the curl of blackened forms that lay clumped just
beyond the burrow.
“Did I get them all?”
“You fried them, baby,” he said. “They are fucking toast.”
“I counted three.”
“Well, that leaves four wriggling around somewhere.”
“I sautéed three as well, pup.”
The voice was faint but both Fallon and Keenan heard it clearly as he lifted her into
the chopper.
“Shit! That means they may travel in threes, Fallon,” Keenan said, her voice weak.
“That is my thought as well,”
An Fear Liath Mor
stated.
“You are well, Mate of the
hound?”
“I will be. Using fire really takes it out of me.”
“Then rest. Look after her, pup. I’m off to hunt.”
The voice faded away.
“If we’re dealing with three of those little shits per burrow, that means there may be
twenty-one of them,” Fallon said as he buckled her into her seat.
“If they’d gotten away from us, they could have contaminated six people,” Keenan