Enchantment (6 page)

Read Enchantment Online

Authors: Lawna Mackie

BOOK: Enchantment
9.34Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You
and
y
o
ur
father
w
ork
too
hard.
Do
y
o
u
kn
o
w
that
?

Paddy
sc
o
wled,
leading
the procession
down
one
of
the
hallw
a
y
s.

Kerrigan
had
long
since
outgrown
the
height
of
the
ceilings
in
the
lodge.
Enchan
t
m
e
n
t
was h
o
st to
m
a
n
y creatures, but Enchanters were—for lack of a better word

short. Kerrigan rese
m
bled
his
biological
father,
he
w
a
s
told,
with
long
legs,
m
uscular
build,
piercing
blue
e
y
e
s, and
a
hard,
defined
j
aw.

Kerrigan
knew
he
didn’t
fit
the
picture
of
a
t
y
p
i
c
al
Enchanter,
but
Pad
d
y
and
Todd
had ignored
the
obvious
and
took
him
in
a
s
one
of
their
kits.
Each
y
e
a
r
,
he
gr
e
w
stronger,
s
m
arter, keener,
and
see
m
ing
l
y
m
ore
cold-hearted
b
y
the
da
y
.
Only
Todd
and
Paddy
could
see
through his
br
u
sque
exterior.

To
Enchan
t
m
e
n
t,
he
was
the
Enforcer,
or
keeper
of
the
peace—a
warrior
of
sorts—not
an easy
j
ob
when
m
agic
c
a
m
e
into
the
picture.
The
use
of
black
m
a
g
ic
m
ade
the
Enforcer’s
j
ob difficult.

The
three
continued
through
the
ho
m
e,
and
Kerrigan
couldn’t
help
but
reflect
on
the
fond
m
emo
r
ies
he
would
alwa
y
s
have
of
this
place—Pad
d
y

s
constant
fussing
to
ensure
he
w
a
s properly
cared
for,
and
Todd’s
concern
the
coddling
w
ould
keep
the
b
o
y
from
ever
leaving ho
m
e.
Kits,
or
children
that
belonged
to
beaver
famil
i
es,
left
ho
m
e
in
a
couple
y
e
ars,
but Kerrigan
wasn’t
a
biologic
a
l
kit.
The
a
d
j
ust
m
e
n
t
had
been
difficult
for
Todd
and
Padd
y
.

Kerrigan
paused,
his
fingers
tracing
over
the
j
oints
on
the
wall
from
the
times
Todd
had raised
the
roof
to
acc
o
m
mod
a
te
his
height.
The
do
m
e
-
s
haped
ceilings
blended
into
the
closets and
drawers
carved
into
the
walls,
m
a
k
ing
the
m
ost
of
the
li
m
i
ted
space.

U
nease
filled
hi
m
.
If
his
two
s
ofthearted
beaver
parents
had
chosen
this
room
for
their unexpected
guests,
the
two
U
pper
-
Worlders
m
ust
be
tall.
A
long
time
had
passed
since
Kerrigan had
been
back
in
his
old
roo
m
,
and
he
w
asn’t
quite
sure
how
he
felt
about
strangers,
never
mind non-Enchanters,
sleeping
in
his
old
bed.

 

 

 

Cha
p
ter
Three

 

A
s
Paddy
pushed
the
bedroom
door
open,
trepidation
filled
Kerrigan
again.
The
wave
of apprehension
held
him
frozen,
unable
to
take
one
step
into
the
roo
m
.
Grinding
his
teeth
hard enough
to
hurt, he
balled
his
hands
into
fists.

W
h
a
t
the hell is
w
rong
with me?

Paddy
waddled
over
to
the
night
table,
turning
on
the
light
and
depositing
the
bandages
and other
supplies.
The
round
bed
made
with
d
o
wn,
straw,
and
a
bit
of
bought
m
agic,
had
been ho
m
ema
d
e
by
his
loving
parents.
His
m
o
m
had
knitted
and
quilted
‘til
all
hours
of
the
night
in her
belief
that
ho
m
ema
d
e
w
as
better
than
m
a
g
ic
-
m
ade.
All
his
t
o
y
s
had
been
paw-
m
a
d
e
with
the sa
m
e
love.

A
dim
glow
filled
the
roo
m
,
casting
a
pale
golden
blanket
on
the
two
its
l
y
i
ng
in
his
bed. Kerrigan
w
a
s
stunned.
A
river
of
long,
dark,
shiny
hair
s
pread
out
over
his
pillow.
A
sable tributa
r
y
part
l
y
covered
a
cream
y
, pale
face.

Kerrigan
felt
as
though
so
m
ebo
d
y
had
thrown
a
m
a
g
ic
bolt
into
his
sto
m
ach.
Pad
d
y
br
u
shed aside
the
lock
of
hair
hiding
the
it’s
face.
He
couldn’t
breathe.
He
couldn’t
think.
He
couldn’t even
m
ove.
He
stood
m
otio
n
less
in
the
doorwa
y
.
In
all
his
life,
he’d
never
seen
an
y
t
h
ing
so u
n
speakab
l
y
unique
or
beautiful.

That
w
a
s
not the
face
of
an
it.
It
was
m
ost definite
l
y
a
she.

Kerrigan
glanced
down
at
the
touch
of
a
paw
on
his
ar
m
.
Silent
l
y
,
he
watched
Todd
shuffle across
the
floor
to
stand
next
to
Padd
y
.

Well,
are
y
o
u
j
u
st
going
to
stand
there?
What
do
y
ou think
it
is
?

Kerrigan
knew
what
he
wanted
to
s
a
y
,
but
of
course,
he
didn’t.
He
forced
hi
m
s
e
lf
forward. H
i
s
m
ind
told
him
to
turn
the
other
w
a
y
,
but
little
by
lit
t
le,
he
m
oved
toward
the
bed.
He
n
o
w understood
what
Todd
m
eant
by
“co
m
p
e
lling
.

“Todd,
it’s a
she.
A
hu
m
an
fe
m
a
le.”

Todd
hovered
next
to
his
wife,
his
face
s
crunched
up
in
consternation.
“It
does
look
like
an Enchanter,
doesn’t
it?
Look
h
o
w
long
s
he
is.
Kerrigan,
the
fe
m
a
l
e
is
a
l
m
ost
as
tall
as
y
ou are.”

Kerrigan
could see
the slight
form of
her
body
beneath the covers. H
i
s entire
body
gr
e
w stiff and
tight,
clear
l
y
betr
a
y
i
ng
hi
m
.
He
found
hi
m
self
wondering
what
s
he
looked
like
under
his
s
heets.

Shit!
This
is
not
what
I
need
to
be
thinking
about.
I
need
to
focus!
How
will
I
get
u
s
out
of this
me
s
s?

He
winced
as
Pad
d
y
re
m
oved the
blood-soaked
bandage
from
her
forehead.

W
h
y do
I
feel as
though
I
should care
for
the stranger?

The
large,
ug
l
y
cut
was
still
bleeding.
Paddy
looked
aw
a
y
from
the
patient
and
sought
her
s
on’s
e
y
e
s.

“Kerrigan, I can’t keep bandaging the wound and hoping it will stop
bleeding.
The cut is too deep.
I
could
stitch
it
up,
but
that
see
m
s
a
sha
m
e. Stitches will
leave
an
ugly
scar.”

He
knew
w
hat she
w
a
s i
m
p
l
y
i
n
g
. H
i
s
m
ag
i
c could
heal the wound
in a da
y
,
and
thus, get
this intruder out
of their ho
m
e.
Were th
e
y
all cra
z
y
?
The co
m
p
assion th
e
y
were
all extending to these two strangers
was unthinkable.
Many an
i
m
als
lost
their
lives
c
o
m
ing
near
the
lodge
in
the
Upper World,
and
if
th
e
y
ended
up
in
the
water,
death
was
im
m
i
nent. That
w
a
s
the
point.

Other books

In Ruins by Danielle Pearl
The Road from Damascus by Robin Yassin-Kassab
Every Second Counts by D. Jackson Leigh
Utterly Charming by Kristine Grayson
Ball of Fire by Stefan Kanfer
How It Went Down by Kekla Magoon
Bonds of Matrimony by Elizabeth Hunter
Juego mortal by David Walton
The Cypher Wheel by Alison Pensy