Read When Irish Eyes Are Haunting: A Krewe of Hunters Novella Online
Authors: Heather Graham
Tags: #Paranormal Romance, #Heather Graham, #Krewe of Hunters, #1001 Dark Nights
She rolled into his arms, burying her head against his chest and delivering kisses against his flesh. He was instantly aroused, aware that his every muscle seemed to twitch, that she could awake a fire in him instantly, and that she could tear at his heart with a whisper or a word. He felt her move low against him, felt her hair fall upon him like caresses in silk and his arms wrapped around her as he groaned and then pulled her up to him, meeting her mouth with his own with desire and hunger and love. He meant to play, to tease, to worship the pure beauty of her form, and yet the fire burned so quickly that she smiled as she straddled and set atop him, until they rolled again, entwined, and lay side by side, then rolled again, moving, writhing, making love, laughing breathlessly at awkward positions, their laughter fading as urgency prevailed until they climaxed almost simultaneously and fell beside one another—panting for breath.
Then she curled into his arms again. She whispered that she loved him, more than she had ever imagined possible. He returned the words.
“I love you more than life itself,” he vowed.
For a moment, she stared down at him and the solemnity of his words seemed to encase them as if they were one.
“I love your eyes,” he told her.
“My eyes?” she asked.
“Oh, yes.”
“I was thinking of other things I love about you right now,” she said, laughing. And then she abruptly jerked.
Somewhere in the castle, a clock was striking midnight. The sound seemed to reverberate through the stones in the walls.
“Amazing the Karney family has survived so long!” Rocky said, laughing. “How the hell did they ever sleep?”
Devin started to smile again, but then froze.
He did, too.
Along with the sound of the great clock striking midnight, there was another sound.
It was like a cry on the wind, a wolf’s howl, a screaming lament. It was as if the wind roared and the sea churned and all came together in a mighty crescendo.
It was a sound unlike anything Rocky had ever heard before, and looking up at his wife, like a fantastic character of fantasy herself, blue eyes diamond bright and wide, black hair a fan about her pale flesh, Devin spoke softly.
“The banshee,” she said.
Breakfast was in the pub. It was part of the “bed and breakfast” aspect of the castle. The “pub” didn’t turn into a “pub” until 11:30 a.m. It was then when it opened not just to those staying at the castle, but to visitors staying at other B&Bs or hotels or guest houses in the village.
Some of those staying at the castle hadn’t heard the clock or the strange wailing sound that had seemed to shake the very stone. Some had, and most of them stopped by the booth where Devin ate with Rocky, Kelly, Seamus, and Brendan. Some were regulars for St. Paddy’s at Karney and had known Collum. They offered their sympathy to the family.
And then asked about the wailing sound that had shaken the castle at midnight.
“Ethereal—not of this earth!” and elderly man said.
Devin saw a stricken look in Kelly’s eyes and answered quickly. “Ah, well, we heard it, so it was real and of this earth!” she said lightly.
“It’s the sound of the wind when it strikes against the cliffs below on certain nights,” Seamus explained.
“Hmph!” one woman told them. “It certainly gives credence to those tales told by Gary the Ghost!”
“Wicked cool!” said their teenaged daughter. And the two smiled and chatted and they walked on to their own table.
“’Wicked cool?’” Brendan asked.
“Aye, brother!” Seamus said, nodding. “They must be from New England. It’s an expression used there. Ask me niece, Devin there!” he said, lifting his coffee cup to her. “She’s a wicked lovely creature, she is!”
“That’s kind, Uncle Seamus. Thank you,” Devin said.
“Wicked cool,” Brendan repeated. “Wicked lovely. I like it!”
“But do you believe it?” Rocky asked him quietly.
“That Devin is a wicked lovely creature? Indeed, I do!” Brendan said lightly.
“Thank you, again Brendan, but that’s not what he means,” Devin said, smiling gently.
Brendan was still and thoughtful for a minute and then he looked at Rocky. “I don’t know,” he said quietly. “The sound came the night before the morning the housekeeper found Collum dead.”
Kelly reached out a hand to cover her uncle’s.
“It is the wind tearing against the cliffs, Uncle. I know it,” Kelly said. She didn’t believe it at all, Devin knew. She just wanted her father and her uncle to believe that she wasn’t unnerved or frightened.
“Either that,” Rocky said, “or someone’s mechanical idea of a prank.”
“Mechanical?” Seamus asked.
Seamus, like Brendan—and as Collum had been—was a big man, broad-shouldered, tall, and with a full head of snow-white hair. They had been built ruggedly, Seamus had told Devin once, because rugged was their heritage. Maybe because they hadn’t come from the city, but they’d all been born at Castle Karney, a place as wild as the jagged cliffs that led to the tempest of the Irish Sea.
They’d come from a long line of warriors, he’d once told her proudly—except that now, of course, he prayed for nothing but peace around him, in Ireland, and about the whole of the world.
“I’ve been thinking about the sound all night,” Rocky told them. “I got up and took a look around the tower—it really might be some kind of mechanism.”
“Looking around the tower,” Brendan said. “So that’s what you were doing after you and Devin came to my room and you left Devin there to guard me through the night ’til you returned!”
“I just kept you company,” Devin said.
“And nothing happened, thank the good Lord!” Seamus said, crossing himself.
“And had the banshee been real…” Devin murmured.
“Bizarre that the sound came directly at midnight. Nature isn’t good at planning noises at a precise time. Anyway—it remains to be seen,” Rocky said.
Brendan looked at Rocky and nodded sagely. “Ye’re here to investigate, and that’s a fact. Honeymoon, my arse!” he added, looking reproachfully at Seamus.
“Ach, now, brother. ’Twas Kelly who called on the two of them now,” Seamus protested.
“It is our honeymoon. Really,” Devin told him. “But, of course, it’s true. What we do is investigate.”
“There’s nothing like meeting the family,” Rocky said politely, causing them all to laugh.
“Ah, yes, meet the family!” Brendan said.
“I mean it; it’s wonderful to be here,” Rocky said.
“You’re a good niece!” Seamus told Devin. “And you,” he added, nodding to Rocky, “you seem to be a fine man for my niece.”
“Thank you,” Rocky said.
“Investigate with my sincere blessing!” Brendan said. “I knew my brother well. I never saw such a look on his face. Something odd is definitely afoot, and not even Gary the Ghost really believes in the tales he tells. We love them all, we do. We love our ghosts—and our pixies and leprechauns and so on. But…something is afoot.” He offered them a grim smile. “
Wickedly
afoot! Collum, just in ground not quite a full two weeks, visitors a-flooding the place, and the festival on the way. We’ve got to know. It would be a hard enough thing, losing m’brother, as it were. But, to wonder like this…’tis painful.”
“I’m so, so sorry, Brendan!” Devin said.
She noticed the way he looked over at Kelly—as if seeing her there pained him as well.
And then she realized that he was worried about her.
“You and Kelly and Uncle Seamus are going to be fine,” Devin said, determined.
He quickly glanced her way, looked down and nodded.
“Uncle Brendan tried to get me to go home,” Kelly said. “He called us for the funeral and to come—and since, he’s tried to make me go back to the States.”
“I shouldn’t have had you here,” Brendan told Kelly and Seamus.
“Collum was my brother, too, Brendan,” Seamus said. “Just because I’m an American now, doesn’t mean he wasn’t my brother. Or,” he added softly, “that I’m not still Irish or that Kelly escapes that, either.”
“Kelly escapes that?” Rocky said, looking perplexed. “I’ve some Irish in my background—and I love it,” he said.
Devin shook her head. “You’re talking about the prophecy—which does not say that something will happen to every Karney. Stop it. We’ll find out if something is or isn’t going on. If it is, I don’t believe it’s the banshee. Is there anyone who held a grudge against Collum or the family?”
“Something is going on,” Kelly said flatly, looking hard at Devin. “You heard the banshee wail.”
“We heard something,” Rocky said firmly. “A banshee? That’s questionable.”
“You don’t have any belief in our myths, legends, and ways?” Brendan asked.
“Oh, I do. I just don’t believe that what we heard was a banshee,” Rocky said.
“You found something?” Seamus asked him.
Rocky shook his head. “No, but I didn’t go banging on anyone’s doors and I can’t say that I know the castle well enough to really explore.”
“We can fix that!” Kelly said excitedly. “I mean, sounds bizarre, but it is our castle—you can go wherever you choose!”
“Thank you. I’d like to make a few calls this morning, and then I’d very much enjoy a private tour by one of the masters—or the mistress—of the castle,” Rocky said.
“What will you do first?” Seamus asked, looking at Rocky. Devin lowered her head, not offended that Rocky would be their go-to man—and not her. Her mother had always told her that Ireland was now racing toward a world beyond discrimination with all haste, but when her mom had been young, there had been separate rooms in most pubs for women.
Sexual discrimination died hard in many a place—even in the States, she knew. But, in the Republic of Ireland, divorce had only been legal since 1997, which, of course, wasn’t really discriminate on either side—just hell for people who discovered they simply couldn’t live together. Old ways died hard, especially in a small village like Karney.
“We’re going to see your doctor and coroner,” Rocky said. “And talk to him about Collum’s death.”
Brendan sniffed. “He acts all big shot—he’s a country doctor, and that’s a fact—I don’t care about all his high-falutin’ medical degrees. He’s a doctor, a fair one, but it’s just that we’re small here, and so, he’s the coroner, too.”
“But, he has a solid medical degree, right?” Rocky asked.
“He has medical degrees,” Brendan said. “Went to school in Dublin—and over at Oxford. And we have a sheriff and a deputy sheriff, too, but, seems to me, they all want the obvious and that’s it.”
“Brendan, I know you’ve been asked, but tell me what happened the day before Collum died, and then when you discovered his body,” Devin said.
“Ah, the day before,” Brendan murmured, drumming his fingers on the table. “We’d been to the church—you know our church has a relic, a bit of bone, said to have belonged to Saint Patrick himself?” he asked, distracted by the idea and smiling.
“That’s—great,” Devin said, not sure how to respond.
He nodded. “And, as you know, I think, for years and years—centuries even—St. Patrick’s Day was mainly a holy day here. Parades and celebrations and all have become part of the festivities in later years. So, of course, we’re traditional here. Early in the day, at least. There’s a fine parade in the village with Father Flannery carrying the cross and a host of his altar boys walking along, the choir singing in their place and all. We’d been to see the good Father due to all that, plotting the parade course and all. And we have a big show out here—just outside the walls, where the old fire pit is—with dancers and singers from St. Patrick’s of the Village. He’s a fine fellow, Father Flannery, he is. Anyway, so we met with him. Came back, reviewed the list of vendors who we’ve given space to within the walls for the fest—it will start tomorrow and go through St. Paddy’s—and then I went to pay bills and Collum spent time arguing with the Internet people. We ate dinner together at the pub. Collum went up to his room and I stayed down here talking with some guest, filling in some historical gaps, that kind of thing. Didn’t see him again until I saw him—dead. The housekeeper was in his room, screaming her head off. I came running and saw what she saw. Called the emergency number and they alerted the sheriff and Dr. Kirkland. They told me to try to resuscitate—and I would have tried, God help me, he was my brother—but he was dead. Stone cold dead.”
“You couldn’t have revived him,” Rocky said.
“No,” Brendan said softly, looking into space. He shrugged. “The central tower was alive with activity, official cars coming and going—and the hearse, coming and going.” His eyes fell directly on Rocky’s again. “I just want the truth—and justice for Collum. And…safety. Safety for Castle Karney.” He hesitated again. “For my brother and myself, and most importantly, for Kelly. If there’s something out there, ’tis better to know. And…”
“And?” Devin prompted.
“If it was the banshee, and it was me she wailed for last midnight, then see to it that you get yourselves and Seamus and Kelly out of here as quick as possible,” Brendan told him.
Rocky nodded, meeting Brendan’s eyes. “There’s one thing I need for you to do today,” he told them firmly, looking from Kelly to Brendan to Seamus, who all sat across the booth from them.
“What’s that?” Kelly asked.
“Stay together—go nowhere alone. Be in the public eye, if possible. Can you promise to do that for me?” Rocky asked.
“As you wish,” Brendan said.
He looked then, Devin thought, like a lord of the castle of old. Strong, judicial, fair.
And yet…
Convinced of his own power as well.
“Seriously, Brendan, you three stay together. Do not be alone,” Devin told him.
“Of course, lass. As you say,” Brendan told her. “And what then? Will the two of you be staying with an old man in his chambers night after night?”
“If that’s what it takes,” Rocky said firmly.
“On your honeymoon?” Brendan asked.
Rocky laughed.
He and Devin looked at one another.
“If that’s what it takes,” they said in unison.
The village was charming.