Faelorehn (24 page)

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Authors: Jenna Elizabeth Johnson

Tags: #Fantasy, #Young Adult, #Romance

BOOK: Faelorehn
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My head was killing me, I felt like I was going to throw up, and if I hadn’t known any better, I would have sworn I’d been in a horrible car accident.  Every bone in my body hurt.  I had no idea human beings had so many bones.  Oh wait, scratch that, I wasn’t a human being.

Groaning, I tried to sit up.  I still hadn’t opened my eyes.  My eyelids were too tired to lift.  Thick, damp, soft moss or grass gave under the pressure of my hand and a cool mist caressed my skin like a chilly blanket.  I managed to push myself back a little, my shoulders coming into contact with what felt like a great granite gravestone.  My stomach lurched again and fear shivered down my spine.  If I was in a graveyard, I think I might just faint.

Finally, I managed to crack my eyes open, then blinked in surprise at what I saw.  The sky was thick with heavy mist, but all around me, in a large circle, were tall, natural pillars of granite.

At first I had the ridiculous notion that the dolmarehn I had entered had thrown me onto the Salisbury Plain and smack center within Stonehenge, but as my senses returned I realized that that couldn’t be right and for a few reasons.  First, I could almost see the tops of these stones and the monoliths at Stonehenge were much taller.  Second, the circle couldn’t be more than fifteen feet in diameter.  Third, and this was when the fear started clenching my stomach again, there was a gateway directly across the circle from me.

I knew it was a gateway because it had to be where I’d come from.  It looked like those stone dolmens you see on the covers of photography books featuring Ireland; two large slabs of rock topped with a third, creating a doorway.  This doorway was pressed into the side of a small hill and yawned black and menacing, as if the stones were merely outlining some deep cave.  Above it, on the hilltop, stood an old, gnarled oak tree.

Glancing around, I noticed more oak trees.  I came to the conclusion that this gateway to the Otherworld sat on the highest point in the middle of a small oak grove, for the quiet trees stood all around, their eerie silhouettes scattered about in the fog.

I took a deep breath and scooted myself further up into a sitting position, using the closest stone as a backrest.  It dawned upon me that maybe I had been launched out of the dolmarehn and slammed up against this rock.  That would explain the full-body ache.  But why was I here . . . ? Oh right,
Cade
.

A quiet rustling soon drew my attention away from everything else.  I squinted into the fog, my heart pounding as I wondered what might have caused the sound.  Out of the mist, a black shape swooped down from the oak tree above the Otherworldly gate and came to rest atop one of the stone monoliths.  It bent its neck and let out a long, mournful caw, sending goose bumps up my arms.  It was the raven that had been stalking me for the past several months, I was certain.

In the next breath, the bird swooped down to join me and as it descended the strangest thing happened.  Its feathers melted away and its legs grew longer.  It was morphing into a figure before my very eyes, and by the time it landed on the ground it had become a woman dressed all in black.  Her transformation from bird to woman had been so smooth and flawless that all I could do was gape.  Yet, that wasn’t the only reason I was gaping.  As she approached I got a good look at her face.  Pale white, flawless skin, obsidian black hair, blood-red lips and violet eyes.  It was the Faelorehn woman who had begged for my help: Cade’s girlfriend.

“Hello Meghan,” she said in a frighteningly calm voice. “I am so glad you could finally make it.  Welcome to Eilé.”

I can’t say how I did it, but somehow I managed to speak, asking the question I should have asked to begin with, “Who are you?”

She crossed her arms and arched one of those perfect eyebrows.  If anything, her unearthly beauty and overwhelming presence was magnified here, on this foggy, wooded hillside full of stone columns.

“Oh, I have a few names,” she said nonchalantly.  “Some call me Neaim, others Macha.  I’ve also gone by Badb on occasion.”

I was confused.  There was something familiar about those names, but I just couldn’t put my finger on it.  I think it had mostly to do with my aching head, but I must admit a good deal of it was because of the fear I felt brewing in my heart.  This woman was dangerous. I could feel that more than ever now, as if she had a hurricane brewing within her and she was just waiting to unleash it at the right time.

“But,” she continued, “you might know me best as the Morrigan.”

And at that moment it dawned upon me just how stupid and suicidal crossing into the Otherworld had really been.

“Where is Cade?” I whispered, my head lowered so she wouldn’t see my fear. 
The Morrigan was Cade’s girlfriend!?
  Just how much had he been keeping from me?  And who must he be to be dating one of the most powerful of the Celtic deities?

“I have sent him off on a tedious mission so that we might have a little one-on-one time together,” the woman, no, the
goddess
, answered.  “You see, I’ve been looking for you for a long time Meghan, and he was supposed to bring you directly to me if he ever found you.  But he was becoming distracted, so naturally I reassigned him.  Sorry about that little fib earlier, but you really were being very difficult.  I had to get you to cross over somehow.”

Wait,
what?
  What was she talking about?  She had been looking for me?  Oh wait, she was the raven . . .  But
why
had she been looking for me?  And what did she mean Cade was getting distracted?  By what?  And how had she reassigned him?  I braved a glance at her, but her eyes were unreadable.  Terrifying, sadistic, and now those very eyes were phasing from violet to crimson.

“What sort of mission did you send him on?” I braved, my voice quavering a little.  “And what do you want with me?”

The last conversation I’d had with Cade came screaming back into my mind. 
“Some people would rather see you dead than risk learning whether or not you are a threat.”

Oh Meghan, what have you done?

“This conversation grows tiresome,” the Morrigan said rather boorishly, “time to finish the job Cade failed to do.  Silly, sentimental little boy,” she continued as if I wasn’t there anymore.  “I really must have a word with him about that.”

She started to wander off, the skirts of her black dress taking on a life of their own, stirring and mixing with the mist around her feet.  I realized they were made of shadow and smoke, and something else . . . death.

“Wait!” I croaked, reaching out with a trembling hand.  What did she mean finish the job Cade had failed to do?  And how could he be with someone like her?  True, she was a beautiful goddess, but from what I’d learned from my research, she loved nothing more than to reign down war and strife upon those she ruled over.  How could the Cade I know, the thoughtful, caring Cade, care about someone so twisted and cruel? 
Because you don’t really know him at all, do you Meghan?
a little voice inside me said. 
Perhaps he’s been playing you all along . . .

Despite my wretched state, my stomach had the nerve to give off a twinge of pain and regret when I conjured Cade to my thoughts.  I knew my conscience was right, that Cade had probably used me, but it still hurt nonetheless.

The Morrigan turned her head and peered back at me from over her shoulder, her perfectly plucked, black eyebrow arched in annoyance once again.

“No, you miserable
fae strayling
, you do not address me,” she all but hissed.  “I am the Queen of Darkness and I have decided you may no longer exist.”

Real fear gripped me then, not just at this terrifying being’s words, but at the fact that she seemed to grow larger in size, the darkness she so claimed as her own spreading out from her like a black mist to dance and mingle and curl along the ground and in the trees surrounding us.

I could have sworn I heard voices whispering then.

Beware, Meghan!  Beware!
they seemed to say.

It took me a whole five seconds to realize it was the oak trees.

Beware, Meghan!
they warned.  But I was afraid it was too late.

The Morrigan closed her eyes and let her shoulders relax; her arms to drift away from her body.  She lifted her face to the grey sky and began chanting, a deep, resonant melody that made my blood freeze and my breath catch.  The words she spoke were ancient, archaic, and although I couldn’t understand them, I knew their meaning.

The earth beneath me trembled slightly and the oaks, once so still and solemn in the mist, began quaking as if in fear.  The sound of splitting rocks filled the air and the clouds above began to swirl.  I decided right then and there that this whole strange scene had to be just another nightmare.  Only, this one felt real.

A strange crackling began to blend with the cacophony of chanting, rumbling, and rustling, and when I dared take a good look at the changing scene around me, I nearly screamed. Dark figures had started crawling from the small middens dotting the hillside, looking like some horrible horde of grotesque cicadas unearthing themselves after their seven years of dormancy.

The creatures that crawled forth out of the earth were something from a horror movie.  Some looked like corpses of bony goblins, vaguely resembling human beings.  They walked like spiders and insects, ropes of fur and hair hanging from their rotting flesh.  Some had violent, red eyes while others seemed to have no eyes at all.  Jagged teeth and long snouts, horns and leathery wings adorned the bedraggled gargoyle-like demons.  As they drew closer to our stone circle, hissing and spitting and growling in rage, the Morrigan continued her endless chant, her cruel laughter tainting her ancient words as she called upon her minions to do her dirty work.  A horrible smell soon followed them and I had to cover my mouth and nose to keep from gagging.

Screaming in terror once again, I tried to scramble to my feet but I think my leg might have been broken.  Wincing in pain and fighting back tears, I darted my eyes around to look for something to defend myself with.  A chunk of rock, possibly broken during the initial earthquake of the Morrigan’s calling, lay within arm’s length.  I launched myself at it, falling on my stomach.  At first I thought to throw it at the closest faelah demon, but then another thought came to mind.  If I threw it at the Morrigan, would it distract her?

Without giving it another thought, I drew back and launched the stone with all my might.  It flew towards the Celtic goddess but bounced off some invisible force field surrounding her, like a bird smacking into a window.  She didn’t even falter in her chanting.  I had wasted a perfectly good projectile and now the creatures were moving closer.

Just then a terrible baying broke through the scratching and hissing of the creatures.  My stomach curled up in dread once again.  The corpse hounds.  The Cumorrig.  I knew that sound well and any shred of hope or bravery I might have had left fled in the next instant.

Swallowing hard and trying to see through the blurry tears pouring from my eyes, I snatched up a fallen oak branch and huddled near the stone slab I had woken up against.  I would fend them off as long as I could, but I knew I was a goner.  I thought of my family, my mom and my dad and my brothers.  They would come home to find me gone without a trace, only a note saying I’d be out late.  I would become another one of those lost girls, abducted by aliens or murdered and well-disposed of.  How long would my family search for me?  Would they ever give up, even when they never found me?

Finally, I thought of Cade.  Oh, how I had trusted him.  Why had I trusted him?  Why did he have to betray me?  I gasped and my sobs grew stronger as the creatures inched closer.  The hounds were getting nearer as well and I could hear their yipping as their excitement grew.  My impending demise approached, and the Morrigan continued to chant her death song.

The first hound circled and snapped at the closest faelah demon.  For a few minutes a fight ensued, but the corpse dog easily won, tearing the wings of the creature to shreds.  The sound of its pain made me even more nauseated.  The Cumorrig moved in, panting and growling, squaring its shoulders for attack.  I closed my eyes and waited for impact.

A sharp pain in my leg was the first sign my death was occurring.  I screamed and beat at the dog with the stick, but it did no good.  Like a swarm of sharks waiting for that first drop of blood to hit the water, the other hounds and creatures swarmed in.  I felt them tearing at my clothes and hair, the dull sting of their sharp teeth, twisting my arm almost to the breaking point.  I screamed and fought back.

Despite the pain, I was able to make contact with the branch and chase off a few, but there were just too many.  I felt my strength sapping, but just before I drifted towards unconsciousness, a shout of sheer anger and desperation split the air.  The creatures of darkness blanched for a second and the Morrigan’s incessant chanting faltered.

I heard a feminine gasp and the rustling of feathers followed by a loud, furious cawing.  The dogs began yowling again and I could feel, more than see, the demons retreating to their holes.  They weren’t fast enough though, for something terrifying swept into my circle of stones and started to wreak havoc.

I cracked my eyes open as far as they would go and saw the strangest thing in front of me.  Of course, it was only my delirium.  Cade was standing there, looking more terrifying than I could ever remember.  He seemed to be growing larger, his thick hair forming into spikes, as if some imaginary hand was adding hair gel and forcing it to stand on end.  For some reason, the hair stylist decided to add dye to it because I could see beads of dark red gathering at the tips.  I chuckled, coughing on blood.  Who would want to dye Cade’s hair red?  It was already that color.

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