Twenty-eight – 01

Thordin’s gaze strayed toward the windows as lightning lit the world outside a pair of heartbeats before thunder boomed.  A gust of wind lashed rain against the far side of the cottage Matt and Hecate shared with their younger children.

“It’s growing,” he whispered, eyes growing unfocused for a moment as he cast his senses into the storm, fingers bunching in the fabric of his pants for a few seconds.

Sif still hadn’t joined them.  Either her conversion with Neve was taking longer than anticipated, or she’d stayed with the other woman a bit longer to wait for a break in the storm.

A break didn’t seem forthcoming anytime soon, as far as Matt could tell, but that wasn’t exactly his wheelhouse, either.  He leaned forward to rest his elbows against his knees, cradling the mug of tea Hecate handed him between his palms.  “What does it mean?”

“Not sure yet.”  Thordin’s brow furrowed for a few seconds as he squinted, his gaze still focused on something beyond their sight.  “Do you want me to…?”

Matt glanced at Hecate, who winced, catching the inside of her lower lip between her teeth.  The worry in her eyes, he knew, mirrored what was in his own.  He exhaled slowly.  “At what cost?”

“Shouldn’t be one,” Thordin murmured.  “Maybe an extra hour of sleep tonight or tomorrow morning.  Not unless I have to do anything more than just look.”  He blinked once, then again, and suddenly he was fully there, turning a wry smile toward his worried friends.  “Won’t know if it’s more than that unless I take the look.”

“Do you think it’s worth it?”  Hecate asked as she slowly sat down beside Matt.  “The risk that you’ll have to act?”

“Weighed against how quickly this is growing?  I’m starting to think so.”  The wry smile faded, his expression going slack for a few seconds.  “It could be completely natural—it could be nothing to worry about.”

“Or it could be something subtle?” Hecate asked quietly.  “A nudge, a tug, someone feeding it and guiding it with a light hand?”

The wry smile returned and Thordin nodded slowly.  “It’s nice to know someone listens when I ramble on about it.”

“It’s been a long time since something like that happened,” Matt said, looking away from Thordin and toward the window.  He gathered breath to continue, only for Thordin to say what he was already thinking.

“But with recent events, we can’t rule it out.  Especially with the report from the Hunt, what happened to our guests, and the attack on Lin.  We don’t even know who’s controlling them these days.”

“We don’t,” Matt agreed.  “It’s been a long time since it mattered.”

“But it matters now,” Hecate said, setting her mug on the low table that perched in front of the couch where she and Matt had settled.  For a few seconds, she stared at the inlay of the wood, the delicate carving.  It had been an anniversary gift from Thom so many years ago.  “If the peace is truly broken, then someone is coming.  Perhaps all of them will be coming—and more.  The old threats.  New.  Who knows what anyone’s learned about us and this place in eighteen years—and other places like this.”  Her gaze flicked toward Matt for a second, then to Thordin.  “It’s your choice, Thordin.  Do what you think is best.”

Matt nodded, reaching to the side to capture her fingers in his, squeezing gently.  “She’s right.  And we’re with you on it.  Whatever you decide.”

Thordin nodded, standing slowly.  He set his mug on the table before he crossed toward the window, gaze already growing unfocused again.  “If you see frost on my fingers—”

“We’ll pull you back,” Matt said.  “No one wants you lost out there, Thordin.”

The ghost of a smile curved his lips and he nodded before he turned back to the window.  He leaned against the sill, peering out through the glass at the raging storm.  Then his eyes grew unfocused again as his friends watched, his senses thrown out and up into the storm.

Hecate’s fingers tightened around Matt’s.  He squeezed back, perhaps harder than he intended to, gentling as he realized his knuckles had gone white.

“Are you afraid?” she asked in a bare whisper.

“Yes,” Matt whispered back.

“Me too.”

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Twenty-seven – 02

For a second, he thought his heart might stop.

The Wild Hunt.

They had been in those stories that Aoife O’Credne told all those years ago when he was still a boy, on those dark and fire-lit nights and the long winter days when he and his sister could do little but tuck in and listen.  There had been thousands of them, drawn from the fabric of centuries of life and even more of legends and tales she’d heard secondhand, passed along.  They were the stories that Grey Miller had memorized, had written down, so that he could pass them along to his son after Aoife left.  He didn’t think that Grey had forgotten a single one, either.

Like he knew.  Like he knew she was never going to stay.

It was one thing to go off chasing stories and legends because David had seen something.  But now, sitting here, confronted with the Wild Hunt, all the moisture from his mouth dried up and something inside of him coiled up, shrank back—a primal fear, a soul-deep warning.

“I think he’s heard of us,” Miriam quipped.  “Look at his face.”

“Don’t be that way, Miriam,” Bastien said, his mirth fading.  “He looks fit to run back out into that storm and I’m the first to tell you, boy, that’d be ill-advised.”

“I take it you’ve heard the stories,” Caleb said, his voice still gentle.  “I won’t tell you that they’re not true, but they’re certainly a product of another time—another age.  And not all of it’s true.  There’s quite a bit of exaggeration in some.”

“And not enough in others,” Jakob observed, pouring another mug of tea, his manner relaxed, casual, but not lacking…something.  It wasn’t predatory, nothing like that, but…

A readiness.  An alertness.  Bryant’s fingers tightened around the enameled metal of his mug, eyes fluttering shut for a few seconds as he tried to find his center, find calm.

Breathe.  Just—just breathe.

“But the stories—” he started, then stopped, his heart stumbling over itself.  “—the stories always said that you were doomed to keep riding, always hunting.  And—and I thought you’d faded from the world.  That you were gone.”

“The Hunt never truly goes away,” Miriam said.  “Either a gift or a curse, that.  With everything in the last couple decades, the rules have gotten more flexible, though, if they ever really were rules at all.”

“Rules, spellcraft, who knows,” Ariel rumbled from where she was still dressing the deer.  She held a haunch out toward the fire pit and Bastien heaved himself up, moving over to take it from her and mount it on a spit Bryant hadn’t noticed.  “It all got strange when the Otherworlds started cracking open and spilling back into the world.  One wonders if the folk who spilled out are trapped here now, or not.”

“Or if those Otherworlds still exist,” Caleb said, his voice almost too quiet to hear.  For a second, his gaze flicked toward the barracks, then off toward the rest of the village.  “If all we’ve learned over these years is to be believed, they may well not.”

“Well that’s a cheerful thought that I’m not nearly drunk enough to consider,” Miriam said.  “Is that the current theory, then?”

“Something that’s been batted about, anyway,” Caleb said, then shook his head.  “Not our business until someone makes it our business.”

“And that hasn’t happened yet,” Bastien said, starting to season the haunch.  Bryant recognized the salt he sprinkled on it, but nothing else from the tins open on bricks of the fire pit.  “And may not be anything we ever quite need to know.  The watch continues, the ride eases.  Did you hear what Gilad came back to report?”

“Anselm’s already planning on sending out another group,” Jakob said.  “See if they can pick anything up.”

Bryant’s gaze bounced between them, his brow furrowing.  “I—”

“Probably nothing for you to worry about,” Miriam said, though the troubled look that crossed into her expression suggested that she was reconsidering the words even as they left her mouth.  “Just an increase in raiding.”

“That we haven’t seen in more than a few years,” Bastien muttered, glancing at Caleb.

The scarred man sighed and scrubbed a hand over his face.  “It could be something—or nothing.”  He turned a reassuring smile on Bryant.  “Could be bad luck.”

“Yeah,” Bryant said with a faintly furrowed brow.  “Guess so.  We saw some on the roads on our way here.”

“Is that how your friend got hurt?”  Ariel asked.  At the silence and the stares of her companions, her brow furrowed and she paused in her butchery.  “What?  I heard everything from Paul when we were down in the ravines this morning.  He was on watch.”

For a second, Bryant’s voice lodged in his throat, the images—the memories—flickering through his head.  “No,” he managed.  “No, not unless raiders are big, coal-black things with wings and claws and glowing red eyes.”

The group of Huntsmen went silent, exchanging looks.  It was Jakob that spoke, his voice quiet.  “Camazotzi.”

“Like Thom and Marin’s boy,” Bastien said, his gaze settling on Caleb.  “Think Anselm knows?”

“Probably,” Caleb murmured.

Bryant picked up on the subtle shift to their mood and slowly set down his mug.  “I—I’m sorry if this comes off as rude, but this clearly means something to all of you that I’m missing.”

Bastien mustered a smile and shook his head.  “Not anything for you to worry about yet, lad.  Maybe not even anything for us to worry about yet.”

But there was something in all of their expressions—especially Caleb’s, especially Miriam’s—that said something different.  It said something had changed and it wasn’t good.

As he reached to pick up his mug again, Bryant decided he wasn’t sure he actually wanted to know.

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Twenty-seven – 01

Maybe I should’ve been worried about those clouds after all.  Bryant frowned up at the sky from the shadows of a tree.  This is not a safe place to be standing.  And yet, the tree was providing some protection from the rain, despite the increasing wind and thunder, and until he knew which direction he was about to sprint in, here he’d stay.

He’d wandered further afield than he’d intended and wasn’t entirely sure where he’d ended up.  He could see a watchtower and the wall off to his right, so he was fairly certain he was still within the official boundary of the village itself.  Even that wasn’t a sure thing, though, and it was hard to gauge the distances and which was closer—the wall or watchtower—through the pouring rain and the increasing darkness that came with the storm.

There was a pavilion closer to him, though, further from where he thought the village proper was, perched in the shadow of a strange hill that seemed to curve back in on itself.  Beyond it, he thought he saw some kind of longhouse or barracks of some kind and he thought—perhaps—he could see the flicker of a campfire through the rain.  It left him puzzled—and almost incurably curious in a way he thought had died in him.

He could either sprint for the village, for the watchtower, or that pavilion at the next break in the rain—and pray that he’d have enough time to reach it before rain increased again or something worse happened.

Bryant took one breath, then another, jaw firming.  I knew I should’ve stayed with Issy and David.

He listened to the sound of the raindrops, waiting for it to ease for even a moment.  Thunder grumbled, vibrating the tree, the ground.  The hair on the back of his neck rose and a shiver skated down his spine.

This is bad.  No time.

The sound changed just enough, coupled with a fresh gust of wind and he sucked in a breath, sprinting across the summer grass and a gravel path toward the shelter of the pavilion.  The air crackled with a lightning strike close enough that he felt and heard the boom even as the flash left him momentarily blind, skidding to a halt as soon as he felt the rain stop falling on him.

A hand grasped his arm and he jerked backward with a curse, ears ringing from the thunder.  His back slammed into one of the pavilion’s support posts and stars exploded behind his eyes.  As his hearing started to return to normal, he could hear the quiet chuckle of another man—one still holding onto his arm, as if to steady him, apparently.  As his vision cleared, Bryant could make out his features in the dim—grizzled, a scar slicing across his cheek, leaving a rift in an otherwise full beard of dark, curling hair.

“Easy,” the stranger said, the scar tugging as he smiled.  “You moved at the right time, traveler.  If you’d lingered a second longer, we’d have been pounding on your chest in the hopes that your heart would start again.”

Bryant blinked, sucking in a breath as the words registered.  He twisted slightly, back pressed against the post, and looked back.  The tree he’d been under hadn’t been struck, but there was a patch of ground he’d crossed that was blackened and steaming.

His stomach turned over and it was all he could do to keep himself from emptying it right there.

“Come on,” the stranger said, tugging his arm gently.  “We’ve got the cookfire lit and I’m thinking we’ve got some tea that’ll put that stomach to rights and help your heart settle down after that.  Maybe I shouldn’t have drawn your attention to it.”

“No,” Bryant said, swallowing once, then again.  “No, thank you.  I—it’s good to occasionally be reminded of your own mortality, right?”

Because that didn’t just happen a few days ago when those things—the camazotzi?—attacked us on the road.

The stranger smiled wryly and nodded.  “I’d suppose so.  Come on, lad.  Come by the fire and you can tell us why you found yourself caught out in a summer squall when you seem the sort to have enough sense in your head to know better.”

Bryant started to answer but swallowed the words.  He just nodded and let the stranger lead him toward the fire pit he’d glimpsed through the blowing wind and rain.

There were a few others gathered by that cookfire—two men and a woman—with another woman off to one side, nearer the edge of the pavilion, working on dressing a deer.  Bryant stumbled a step, blinking at the sight of them.  These weren’t the village folk that he’d seen so far in his time here—these people were something else, he could tell.  Oh, they looked as if they just might blend in if they tried, but as he took in the cut of their clothing and the bits of armor and weapons that each carried, he knew.

These people were different.  These were soldiers, mercenaries—something else, something other than the civilians he’d seen and the leaders he’d met.

The man who’d brought him from the edge of the pavilion waved him toward a bench next to the fire pit.  “Have a seat.  That’s Bastien there on the left, Miriam, Jakob, and then Ariel there with the deer.  I’m Caleb and you’re quite welcome by our fire.”

“Bryant,” he said, sinking down into the proffered spot.  Jakob was already reaching for a kettle that perched near the edge of the fire’s glowing embers, reaching into an old picnic basket for a mug—enameled steel or aluminum, Bryant guessed, watching as the man filled it with tea from the kettle.  “Sorry to intrude.”

“Eh, you’re not,” Bastien said, his grin broad as he regarded Bryant with bright green eyes, like sunlight through bottle glass.  “We were taking bets on when one of the visitors would finally stumble across us.  I don’t think any of us had it during the storm, though.”

Caleb took the mug from Jakob and passed it to Bryant.  “Trying for a breath of air, I’m guessing, and get caught?”

“Something like,” Bryant said, studying them.  “I—I don’t mean to be rude.”

Miriam barked a laugh.  “Whenever a man says that, it’s always a prelude to something offensive coming out of his mouth.”

Heat washed into his cheeks.  “I just—sorry.  This is going to come out wrong.”

“Try anyway,” Bastien suggested, starting to lay some cast iron pots out on the stones that surrounded the fire.  A gust of wind sent embers and smoke swirling toward him.  He deftly shifted to one side, avoiding the worst of the embers, only a few winking to darkness against the leather of his sleeve.

“You’re not like the others here,” Bryant said, the warmth of the mug bleeding into his fingers.  The tea wasn’t so hot that the cup was burning his hands, but if it’d been poured any earlier, it easily could have.  “Like—like most of the people I’ve met so far.”

“It’s an astute observation,” Miriam said.  “It’d be because we’re not.”

Caleb slanted her a look and shook his head.  “We’ve been a part of them, for better or worse, for nearly two decades.”

“But you keep yourselves apart,” Bryant said, his gaze wandering.  The long building that looked like a barracks.  A few cottages clustered around it neatly.  Two large stables beyond.  “Why?”

“Habit,” Jakob said, his voice like sifting gravel.  “Centuries of habit, lad.”

“Centuries,” Bryant echoed.  “So—so you’re like the Aes Dana?”

Bastien started to laugh.  “Far from,” he said through his chuckles.  “Thank you for that, though.”

“What’s so funny?”  Bryant asked.  His stomach began to sink.  There was something tugging at the very tip of his memory, something just beyond his reach.

“We’re not like the Otherlanders,” Caleb said, his voice gentle.  “We’re the Wild Hunt, Bryant, and the Valley’s been the first place we could call home in as long as any of us dare remember.”

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Twenty-six – 06

[This post is from Kailey Astoris’s point of view.]

Alone.  The word echoed in her ears, ricocheted through her thoughts like a buckshot deflecting off one of the old grain silos south of the village.  Would they all go, everyone near her age, maybe even younger?  Would they really leave with these strangers on their seemingly insane quest for something she wasn’t even sure existed?

Lin believes them—but I’m not sure that I should use him as my stick to measure any of this, either.  Sometimes I’m not sure how much of what he believes I should believe.

But so what if she stayed and she was the only one her age that did?  It wouldn’t be the first time she’d self-selected herself out of something.  I’ve only regretted doing that once or twice, anyway.

She frowned at the door that Peril had disappeared through, jaw tightening.

Rushing off into unknown danger.  Sure.  That’s the best idea any of us have ever had, right?  Let’s absolutely do that.  Great idea.  She made a disgusted sound, pushing  herself to her feet and starting to pace.  Rain drummed on the roof above her and thunder growled somewhere nearby.  Another summer storm that was nothing to sneeze at and here she was, safe inside, as she so often had been her whole life.

And so what if this is the rest of my life?

Her hands balled into fists, her tea abruptly forgotten.  It would serve them right.

It would serve them all right if they assumed and were wrong about me.  It would serve them right if I decided to stay.

Hell.  Do they really even need me, or do they think they do?  She’d been Lin’s shadow all of her life, the one that was always there to try to keep him and Tory and all the rest out of trouble—that had been her whole life, always left to be the responsible one, always looking before they all leapt.

And that’s what I’m doing right now, isn’t it?  And I’m afraid of not knowing what’s beyond my sight, what my imagination is painting into the gap.

Thunder boomed close, startling her, sending a shiver through the roof and the walls.  Kailey swallowed hard.  Was it really fear?

Of course it is.  But that doesn’t make it wrong.

That doesn’t make it wrong at all.

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Happy 11th anniversary

It’s been 11 years since the first post!

We’ll be back from hiatus soon with some explanations.

Thank you for your support and patience.

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Twenty-six – 05

[This post is from Kailey Astoris’s point of view.]

She boggled at him for a few seconds, her eyes widening.  “You can’t possibly—”

“Of course I can,” Peril said, abruptly straightening, is eyes all but blazing as he stared at her.  His voice rose in both tenor and cadence, words tumbling over each other.  “We have been stuck here our whole lives, Kay.  None of us  have ever been further away than New Hope.  Now there’s a chance that we get to go somewhere and do something important and you’re ready to tell these people to sit and spin?  You’re batshit.  If I was you, I’d already be gone.”

“That’s because you wouldn’t stop to think,” she snapped, her wide-eyed stare sharpening into something that was more like a glare.  “Peril, there’s a lot more to all of this than just a damn field trip!”

“Yeah,” he drawled.  “Yeah, I get that.  All of us get that, Kay.  You’re just flipping out because you’re terrified to even contemplate what leaving home might actually mean.”

“I am not.”

“The hell you’re not.”  Peril shook his head, gulping down his tea.  Still soaking wet, he got up, heading for the doors.  “I’m going to go find Lin.”

“In this storm?  To do what?”

“What else?  Strategize.  Figure out exactly what the next steps are.  You must’ve realized by now that most of us are going to leave with them, Kay.  Even if you decide not to come along, you’re still going to be stuck alone.”

He yanked the door open and was gone, out into the rain and wind, before she could stop him.

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Twenty-six – 04

[This post is from Kailey Astoris’s point of view.]

“Gods and monster, I hate you sometimes,” Kailey muttered, glaring in a decidedly different direction from where Peril sat beside her.

“But only sometimes,” he said.  His hand dropped onto her knee and for a few seconds, she stared at it like it was some kind of slug that had suddenly taken up residence on her jeans.  This time, when he pressed, his voice was gentler.  “Look, Kay.  I get it.  Shit’s happening fast. It’s completely normal to be totally out of sorts because of all of it.  It’s cool.  We’ll get through it.”

“You have no idea what’s going on,” she muttered, glaring at his hand, now, instead of staring off in an opposite direction.  “How could you possibly know what I’m going through right now?”

“There’re are a lot of lies I can spin about that,” Peril said, taking a sip of his tea.  “But that would be wasting a hell of a lot more of our time than I really feel like wasting.  I eavesdropped when our visitors were talking to Uncle Matt and the council, then I spied on the council a few hours ago while you were probably brooding or yelling at Lin for something that may or may not be his fault.  I know why they’re here and I can infer a lot more from that.”

“Really,” she said dryly.  “Can you?”

He shrugged.  “I think so.  Especially based on Tory’s behavior today, too.”

“Tory,” she echoed.  “What does Tory—”

“Don’t like to me, Kay.  Remember, I heard a lot of what they talked about.  I know what they’re looking for and if you ask me, no one fits that bill like Tory does.”

Kailey snarled, pushing to her feet and starting to pace.  “Is it so awful that I don’t want to do what they’re asking us?  That maybe I don’t want to go?”

“Yeah,” Peril said, leaning back.  “Yeah, it really is.  That’s nuts, Kay.  Really, really nuts.”

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Twenty-six – 03

[This post is from Kailey Astoris’s point of view.]

Peril exhaled a long-suffering sigh, one that suggested the weight of every single one of his teenaged years.  Kailey continued to stare parallel to where he was sitting, trying not to pay any attention to him, though the sound was already enough to start to unravel her resolve.

I should have just gone home.  I should’ve gone home and locked the door.  No one would have come to bother me, especially not with the storm.  I swear, what was I thinking?

But that was the question, wasn’t it?  She was thinking too much, too many things.

Everything was just too much.

What the actual hell did I do to deserve any of this, really?  Why me?

Peril sat down beside her and she jumped, then glared at him.  He just offered her a cheeky grin.

“What the actual hell, Peril?”

He shrugged.  “You were in your own world.  I asked you three times if you were okay and you didn’t answer.”

“I was ignoring you.”

“That was not your ‘I’m ignoring you’ look, Kay.  You were on another planet.”

Her nose wrinkled as her fingers tightened around her mug.  “I don’t want to talk.”

“Yeah, I heard you say that.”  He shook his head.  “I just really don’t care that you don’t want to, because I can tell you need to, so why don’t you just spill and get it off your chest and then you can go back to being your bright and sunshiny self?”

“I am not bright and sunshiny.”

“Compared to some of our friends, trust me, you are.  But right now, you’ve got a level of attitude toxic enough to take down a buck, so I wish you’d just chill.”

“I’d rather hit you.”

“You’d have to catch me first.”

“Is that a challenge?”

Peril just grinned and it took every fiber of her being not to punch him in the face right then and there.

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Twenty-six – 02

[This post is from Kailey Astoris’s point of view.]

“Is that why you’re here?”

The question shouldn’t have startled her, but it did anyway.  Kailey took a deep breath, fingers flexing around the ceramic of her mug even as Peril set about pouring himself some tea, eschewing the generous dollop of tea she’d spooned into her own cup.  He glanced toward her as the silence stretched, then reached up to flick sodden hair from his eyes.

“Well?”

“Does it matter?”

He shrugged.  “I mean, if you’re here to be alone, sorry not sorry.  I’m not leaving.”

She turned away, exhaling a sigh that wasn’t quite annoyed.  “We established that.”

“Then you did come here to be alone.”

“I didn’t say that.”

“No, I’m inferring that from your tone and the fact that you’re walking away from me.  It’s stupid, though.  If you wanted to be alone, you shouldn’t have come here.”

She almost lied, but the words died on her tongue.  She blew out another breath.  “How the hell do you manage to do that, Peril?”

“Do what?”

“Find the truth and annoy me in the same damn breath.”

The teenager snorted and shook his head.  “I guess it’s a gift, Kay.  Why the hell are you so surprised by it?”  He leaned against the counter, watching her as she moved to one of the tables, sat down.  She didn’t look at him, but she could feel the weight of his gaze, could see him in her peripheral vision.  “Whatever you’re freaking out over it’s probably not worth this amount of angst.”

“How do you know?”

“Again, I guess it’s a gift.  Are you going to talk?”

“No,” she said simply.  “No, I’m not.”

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Twenty-six – 01

[This post is from Kailey Astoris’s point of view.]

Kailey’s hands tightened around the mug in her hands as the door behind her opened, carrying with it the sound of soaking rain and moaning wind—the latter sound far more suited to a different season than the end of summer.  Of course, the chill to that wind was also unseasonable and she found it worrying her without a conscious reason why.

She didn’t look back to see who’d entered the dining hall.  Part of her didn’t want to talk to anyone right now—she wouldn’t have even come indoors if not for the impending storm.  At the same time, she hadn’t wanted to cloister herself away in her cottage, either, nor had she wanted to go to her parents.

And so here she was, clutching a mug of tea between her palms from the pot she’d made, again somehow knowing that the arrival of someone else—anyone else—was all but inevitable either in spite of or because of the weather coming in.

At least I saw it coming.  Would’ve been nice if Astrid warned me, but who knows where she hared off to today.

A shiver crept down her spine, one she couldn’t quite suppress.  I wish something didn’t tell me that it was connected to our visitors and all of—all of the mess that seems like it’s coming.

“You get caught in the rain, too?”

She shook her head in response to the question and for a second, she wished her friend would just go away.  The rising storm outside made that an utter impossibility, though.  “No.  I saw it coming and got inside before it started.  What were you out doing?”

Maybe talking to Peril would help.

It wasn’t his real name, but it was all they’d called him since she and Lin were barely ten and he was seven.  She couldn’t even remember why anymore.  It somehow seemed fitting for the son of Phelan O’Credne and Jacqueline Bell to be named something like that, though—somehow more fitting than the far more formal Bréanainn Cáel O’Credne, which was his given name.

He shrugged as he crossed the room, dripping water from his clothes with every step.  She watched him over his shoulder and suppressed the urge to shake her head.  Wherever he’d been and whatever he was doing, he was soaked to the skin on his way here, that much was clear.  “Does it matter?  Is the tea fresh?”

“Yeah,” she said softly, stepping away from the counter so he could get himself some.  He didn’t seem to notice how wet he was and for a second, she envied his ability to ignore his physical circumstances.  If her clothes had been that wet, the first thing she’d have wanted was to be dry.

“You’re looking at me funny,” he said.

“You’re soaking wet.”

“Yeah.”  He shrugged again as he got down a mug and poured.  “And if I went back out into the rain to find something dry to wear, I’d just end up wetter on the way and then get wet again on the way back.”

“You wouldn’t have to come back.”

“Mmm, yeah I would,” he said, turning toward her.  “I don’t feel like chilling out in my room right now.  Seems like a better idea to not be alone.”

“Any particular reason?” she asked, ignoring the fresh chill that ran down her spine.

His blue-eyed gaze seemed to see straight down into her soul.  “Do I need one?”

“No,” she said softly.  “I guess not.”

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