Read The MacGregor Online

Authors: Jenny Brigalow

The MacGregor (28 page)

BOOK: The MacGregor
4.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

When she came to a shuddering standstill, Sean was relieved. He wasn't sure how far they'd come as he'd had his eyes closed. But it hadn't taken long.

Light spilled out of the showroom window. They dismounted and Sean waited for Megan to speak.

‘I'll leave it under the front porch,' she said.

Sean nodded and followed her as she pushed the bike up the ramp and into the doorway. He handed her his helmet and she dropped it beside her own.

Sean observed her for a moment. ‘Are you OK?'

She looked at him. ‘I'm fine. It's just…' But words seemed to fail her.

He went to her then, for she suddenly looked very young, standing there in the old velvet gown and his sweater. He pulled her close. ‘I know…' he said softly. ‘I know.'

She pulled away and looked up at him. ‘Sean, let's hurry. I just have a bad feeling. Once we've been to the fort, I want to go home.'

And he knew then that she meant her grandfather's home, not his. And he understood. For it must be hard to be Megan MacGregor. Hand in hand they walked briskly down the streets. And then it struck him: his part was yet to be played in this intense tale of intrigue and tragedy.

At Dunadd his own fate would be spun. For better or for worse.

Chapter 94

It was terribly squashy in the mini but they managed. They were all subdued on the ride to Dunadd. Megan sensed that Sean was uptight. One hand gripped hers and the other gripped the oak staff. She watched, wholly enthralled, as the small branches brushed softly over his wrist and the roots wound around his leg.

The two witches talked softly. Megan could hear them clearly going over their plans. Nancy had a potion for Sean.

The narrow road flattened out and finally the old fort reared up on the horizon. Lydia parked in the visitor car park and they all got out and peered about. The brook chattered softly down its bed and sheep baaed but otherwise the vast flat land was still.

Nancy still seemed edgy. ‘Are we alone? No campers? No lurkers?'

Megan shook her head. ‘No one but us,' she said.

The sound of their car doors slamming seemed extraordinarily loud. Quickly they travelled up the well-worn path until they reached the fort. Megan was up first and waited impatiently for the others. She looked around. It was beautiful. She could see for miles across the landscape. To the mountains in the east and the sea to the west. The scents of salt and pine mingled in this ancient place. A fox screamed and Megan felt a rush of anxiety, but couldn't say why.

But once Sean appeared, flanked by the witches, she forgot her preoccupation. She followed them upward until they all stood around a great rock on the ground. Clearly marked on its smooth grey surface was a footprint carved into the stone.

Sean knelt down and touched it. ‘This is it,' he said.

Lydia nodded. ‘It's not the original stone. But that shouldn't matter. If you are truly who we think you are, then the magic here should reach you.'

Megan could hear his heart pumping like mad in his chest.

Nancy dug around in her bag and handed him a small glass phial. ‘Stand on the stone, Sean,' she said.

He took the phial and stepped up. Megan thought that she felt the smallest quiver in the close-cropped turf beneath her. But perhaps she just imagined it.

Then the witches chanted as they walked around the stone. Megan moved back a little, out of their way. Faster and faster they walked, faster and faster they talked. Their shapes seemed to smudge and Megan found it hard to focus. And she realised then that their feet moved in coordinated steps. A dance. Soon they were no more than dark blurs. Megan felt her pulse race as if she too were spinning around the stone.

The air around her became still and brooding. And, just as Megan became dizzy, the witches stopped. They threw something onto the rock. A yellow smoke writhed upwards and crawled up over Sean. Megan tried to move but couldn't. She watched as he lifted the phial and drank the contents.

And then he disappeared from sight, entirely covered by the eerie yellow mist. The witches dropped where they stood. Megan sensed their exhaustion. Like her, they watched and waited breathlessly.

Megan jumped like she'd been branded as the ground trembled. Then a wind came from the east. It blew in like a cyclone. And Megan could no longer see. Something stuck to her face and she scrabbled frantically to clear it. Leaves. The air was full of leaves. And she watched wide-eyed as they swarmed into the swirling mist. Thunder cracked and lightning licked the cloudy sky with forked tongues.

And then the wind dropped and was gone. The leaves fluttered to the ground. And there was silence. The yellow fog swirled away into the night.

Sean materialised before her eyes. His face was distorted. Hidden behind a leafy mask. Only the brilliant sky blue eyes remained the same. His body was indistinct. Mossy and grey. The oak staff melded to what had been his legs. And his hands were twigs and sticks.

And then the mask cracked wide and he spoke. And the Olde words poured over Dunadd once more. The skies opened and rain poured down. The leaves were washed away. And all that was left was Sean and a garland upon his head of oak and acorn. The King had returned.

Chapter 95

Water ran down his body like a lover. The stone beneath his feet spoke to him like a brother. And in his hand the oak staff trembled with the promise of his power.

And Sean felt at peace. For everything was clear in his mind. He lifted his face to the sky and opened his mouth and drank. And then he looked around, searching for her. His fox.

And he found her. Amber eyes glowing in the dark. And he stepped off the stone and went to her. Her dress was soaked once more. The jumper heavy with water. Her long red hair curled around the smooth plane of her forehead. She did not move. He looked down into her beloved face.

‘Megan MacGregor, will you marry me?'

And she threw back her head and her lips formed a perfect O as she let out a long, lingering howl. On and on it went. Winding like a ribbon through the endless dark of the land.

He grinned and pulled her close and stopped the sound with a kiss. ‘I'll take that as a yes!' he said when he surfaced.

She smiled then. ‘You may.'

He remembered Lydia and Nancy and turned to find them. ‘Thank you,' he said.

Nancy smiled. ‘Sean. How do you feel?'

Lydia peered at him anxiously. ‘Are you all right?'

He breathed in deeply. ‘I am all that I should be.' But then he realised that the two witches were saturated and shivering. ‘You must go, ladies, before you catch a chill.'

Nancy looked at him slyly. ‘No chance of a quick-dry spell then?'

He laughed. ‘I'm sorry, Nancy. But I fear not.'

The two women came closer, their faces agog with curiosity. Lydia wiped water from her face. ‘Sean, what then? What are you now?'

He pulled Megan closer and thought for a moment. ‘I am a conduit.'

Nancy looked blank. ‘A conduit of what?'

Again he considered the question. ‘A conduit of the elements. I am earth, wind, water and fire.'

Megan stepped back. ‘Holy crap!' Then she grinned exultantly. ‘That'll fix the bastard Campbells. Don't suppose you can add pestilence and plague to that list?'

He laughed. ‘I'm not death, Megan. I am life.' He thought she said ‘Bugger', but couldn't swear to it.

The rain eased. He looked at his staff and realised that both the leaves and roots had vanished. It looked like it was no more than a fine, sturdy staff. But it wasn't. It was mature wood. Eager and willing to aid him.

Megan startled and looked around. Her ears twitched.

‘What is it, Megan?' said Sean.

She turned slowly and he followed the line of her gaze. Sheets of rain spread all around them. Silver and white. But he knew that her eyes were much sharper than his own. And her hearing too. Then she looked back at him, a frown creasing her pale forehead. ‘Something is out there. We should leave.'

Sean nodded. ‘Lydia, Nancy, it would be wise to do as Megan bids.' He stopped and thought. ‘In fact, I think that you should go away for a while. Until the moon begins to wane once more. Just to be on the safe side.'

The two witches exchanged knowing looks. Nancy shivered. ‘I think we might just do that.' There was no argument from Lydia. And after a heartfelt goodbye they ran down to the car park and drove away.

Sean turned to Megan. ‘Home?'

She nodded. ‘I will lead the way.'

Sean could sense her frustration at the thought of matching her footsteps to his own. He smiled to himself and lifted the oak staff to the gunmetal grey sky. The words came to him, falling from his tongue like raindrops off a leaf.

The wind came at his call. She caught him up in cold, clasping hands. Sean watched Megan's eyes pop with surprise as his feet lifted from the ground. ‘What are you waiting for?' he said.

Megan blinked and then smiled. One hand went to her chest and checked that her bridle was secure. The other lifted her long skirts. And she ran. And where she went, Sean followed.

Chapter 96

The hounds picked up the scent despite the rain. But there was no denying they were lucky. At the top of a steep cliff they stopped and cautiously peered over. The huge black dogs slavered and leaned against their leashes. But they were silent, as they had been taught.

Calix smiled when he glimpsed the tiny croft huddled in the bay. He could smell smoke and fish. And lycan. He tasted the wet air. There was something else. Then he had it. Fox. He savoured the moment. It had been many, many years since they had tracked down a MacGregor. The last time had proved to be mightily entertaining. The lycan bitch had taken a long time to die. Hopefully today's catch would be equally as rewarding.

Behind him his sister Celeste moved restlessly. Her desire for revenge burned as brightly in her dark heart as his own. She had recovered from the silver bullet but she had suffered. Still he waited. Foolish to make a mistake now when they were so close.

He backed carefully away and turned to the eager faces of his companions. ‘I can't see anyone. But there is a boat moored, so someone is home.' He spat on the ground. ‘Besides, I can smell their stink from here.'

Celeste stepped closer, her eyes black as coals. ‘She's mine!'

Calix looked at his mother and his cousin questioningly. His mother shrugged but Cordelia nodded. Calix wondered where Callum had got to. What, he wondered, could have distracted his cousin away from the night's sport? But there was no time to dwell on the matter. Callum would keep.

‘All right. Let the dogs go. We'll go down. Be alert. When we reach the bottom, spread out.' He pointed to his mother. ‘West.' At his sister. ‘North.' Then his cousin. ‘East. And I'll come in on the south.'

Celeste's eyes glittered in the night light. ‘What if they won't let us in?'

Calix smiled. ‘Then we'll burn the place down.'

There was a satisfied silence and Calix enjoyed the delighted countenances of his kin. ‘Are we ready?'

They all nodded and he unclipped the leads from the dogs' collars. They streaked over the edge of the cliff and disappeared from sight. The Campbells followed as silently as wraiths. No more than shadows in the mist.

At the bottom they split up and raced across the shingle, weapons primed and ready. In a few seconds they had surrounded the tiny white croft.

A heartbeat later Celeste appeared at Calix's side. ‘The door's open. No one's home.'

Calix cursed to himself. And then he caught the scent of herrings and the frantic bark of dogs rang out from the west over the boom of the surf. A smile curled across his face. ‘The boat!'

His sister nodded and slipped away, returning with the Mater and Cordelia. They exchanged exultant glances and raced seaward. The smell of dirty lycan grew stronger as the ground slipped beneath their feet.

Thrilled, Calix stopped and stared at the boat. The dogs were gathered on the crumbling timber landing. They raced up and down, eyes and ears never losing sight of their quarry.

Standing alone on the deck was an old lycan. His red hair was streaked with frost and time had traced deep trenches into his face. Only his eyes seemed young. As bright and green as spring grass.

Calix sensed he was very old. Ancient even. He felt oddly deflated; he'd been anticipating better sport. It appeared the old lycan was alone. Megan MacGregor wasn't there. Frustration washed through him. He would teach the bitch a lesson anyway.

For a moment he was still as he contemplated a fitful end for the old ruin. But Celeste had less self-control. She sped past him and leapt upon the deck. She snarled and hissed and pulled out a long curved knife.

Calix wasn't sure who was most shocked, himself or Celeste, when the old man made a graceful sweep with one booted foot and disarmed her. The knife cartwheeled up and into the surf.

Celeste screamed with rage. Or was it outrage? And Calix and his kin moved in for the kill.

Chapter 97

Every time Megan turned to check on Sean, he was there. Right behind her. It was strange and wonderful at the same time. She couldn't wait to get home and see the look on Grandad's face when he copped an eyeful of her intended. She could barely believe it herself.

As they raced up mountains and skirted lochs Megan felt truly happy. In Sean she had met a man who could match her. A man who was not a man at all, but a great mage. Like the days of Olde. Her sense of wellbeing was heightened by the weight of the velvet gown. Her mother's gown. And also by the bridle wrapped firmly around her chest and shoulder. Her mother's bridle. She felt that some kind of balance had been restored to her life at last.

The rain eased and the cloud thinned. Megan could see the moon's silver shimmer behind the thin cover. Her power poured out like a potent potion and her blood leapt and raced like a salmon surging upstream.

BOOK: The MacGregor
4.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Tableland by D. E. Harker
Commandos by Madlen Namro
The Ordways by William Humphrey
Posse by Kate Welshman
Broken Star (2006) by Murphy, Terry
Jezebel's Lion by Hazel Gower
The Guardian by Elizabeth Lane