Read The Unicorn Hunter Online
Authors: Che Golden
Fenris looked disgusted while Nero practically spat his own teeth out with indignation. âA dog?' he growled. âYou want us to pretend we are
dogs
?' He looked over at George, who was sitting up in front of Roisin, his stubby front legs braced against the pommel of the saddle, and sideways at Bran, who loomed over him. âNo offence.' George barked and wagged his tail happily while Bran simply looked away with cool indifference.
âTry not to rise to the insults,' Fenris said to Nero. âIt makes life much easier.'
âEnough of this,' said Fachtna. âIt will be the Samhain Fesh soon and Cernunnos's patience must be wearing thin.'
Just as they turned to set off, Finn mac Cumhaill emerged from the trees. Bran gave a bark of joy and raced to his side, cringing on her belly and licking his hand while whimpering with delight.
âYou would still take her from me?' he asked Maddy, as the rest of the Fianna stepped from the gloom of the forest. Their horses nickered and stamped their hoofs, their hides steaming with sweat.
âI have to, you know that,' said Maddy. âBut you have my word I will send her back to you.'
âCome with us and you can stay with her,' said Danny. âWe really could use the help.'
Finn mac Cumhaill smiled sadly. âMy love is in this world, not in yours. I can never leave here, even for a moment. While she still breathes the same air as me, there is hope.'
âWe'll keep Bran safe and send her home soon,' said Roisin.
They turned their backs on the grieving hero and his silent men and plunged into the icy river. Bran and the wolves swam across, their heads held high, while
Fachtna simply flew to the other side. They cantered across a meadow still blooming with flowers with the moon at their backs until they reached the mound. Its unnatural shadow sat all around it like a barrier and Maddy could feel its chill on her cheek as she turned her head to take one last look at the forest.
âWe'll leave the horses here,' said Fachtna. She held out her arms to help Maddy down, while Danny and Roisin slithered to the ground. âThey will attract too much attention mortal-side.' She looped their reins around the saddles so they were not hanging loose around the horses' legs and slapped them on the rumps. They tossed their heads and cantered for home. Maddy looked at Danny and nodded her head slightly.
âAre you trying to delay us, getting rid of the horses like that?' she asked Fachtna.
âWhat are you accusing me of?' demanded the faerie, as Danny sidled around behind her and climbed on to a rock.
âIt's your queen that wants an eternal winter, a path into the mortal world, so if we don't make it back in time to hand the hunter over, then all of faerie goes to war and the boundary is too weak to hold them back at the mound,' said Maddy. âShe benefits if we are late. Halloween is the best time to break through, right, when you are strongest?'
âWhen time collapses into chaos,' said Fachtna. âYes.'
âSo a little bit of delay here would hand Liadan her dearest wish and mean you wouldn't have broken your vow that we would come to no harm.'
Fachtna's eyes blazed with rage while her wings rattled a warning. âI swore an oath to the monarchs that I would help you find the hunter, to my queen that I would not allow you to lie about her in the matter and to you that I would bring you safely home,' she barked. âI'm not a treacherous, deceitful, filthy mortal â¦'
âHey, Fachtna,' called Danny, and as the faerie turned toward the sound of his voice he aimed an upper cut to her face with his fist, catching her right on her pointed chin. The faerie crumpled to the ground without so much as a sigh. They all looked down at her in shock.
âI can't believe that worked!' said Danny as he hopped off the rock, massaging his hand. âBut I think I might have broken a finger on her jaw.'
âIs she really out for the count?' asked Maddy as George trotted over and swatted the faerie's face gingerly with a paw. Bran cocked her head at him and whimpered as he jumped nervously away from Fachtna.
âLooks like it,' said Fenris, his voice quiet with shock.
âIt was lucky that rock was there. I would never have got enough power to knock her out if I'd had to jump to reach her chin,' said Danny.
âWhat have you done?!' asked Roisin, her eyes wide with fear. âShe is going to be so angry when she wakes up!'
âShe is, isn't she?' said Nero, his voice quivering with nerves as he backed away toward the mound with his tail tucked between his legs. âPerhaps now would be a good time to leg it?'
They all exchanged looks and then turned and ran through the mound, Maddy calling for Bran as she ducked inside it.
In the light of the torches their shadows loomed large on the walls. Maddy felt hysterical laughter bubbling up inside her as they sprinted for the mortal world, the dogs and wolves bounding alongside them. They emerged from the tunnel into Blarney and the teeth of a storm. Wind and rain lashed them so hard it drove the breath from Maddy's lungs and she had to pause for a moment, rain plastering her hair and clothes to her body, as she caught her breath.
âHow is Bran supposed to track the hunter in this?' she yelled to Danny over the shriek of the wind. âHow will she even pick up the scent?' He shrugged, eyes half closed against the driving rain.
âMaddy!' yelled Roisin behind her. âWe've got a really big problem.'
âWhat now?!' yelled Maddy in frustration as she
turned to see what Roisin was talking about. Her jaw sagged as she watched Roisin help a shivering naked old woman with long grey hair up from the grass outside the mound. Fenris and Nero had twined themselves around the woman to protect her from the fury of the weather as she clung to Roisin's side and gazed all around her in terror. Her blue eyes looked very familiar.
âWho
is
that?' asked Danny.
Roisin stared at them with eyes as wide as saucers as the woman trembled and whimpered.
âIt's Bran,' she said.
âWhat do you mean, Bran?' yelled Danny, while Maddy sank into a crouch, staring at the old woman, while a dreadful thought strolled nonchalantly into her head and gave her brain a cheery wave.
âBran was there one minute â the next, her,' said Roisin. âConsidering she's stark naked and she has the same eyes as the wolfhound, I think it's safe to say
she
is Bran.'
âOh no,' said Danny.
âI've been so stupid,' said Maddy.
âWhat? Why is this about you?' asked Roisin.
âDon't you get it?' said Maddy. âThey didn't need me at all. Meabh must have known that Bran would transform on mortal soil and could make her way through Blarney on her own to track the hunter down.'
âBut she said it was you,' said Danny, looking confused.
âNo, she said it was “one such as” me,' said Maddy. âI should have listened more carefully to what she said, I should have listened to
every word
â¦'
âBut the Coranied said you were the one as well,' said Roisin.
âNo, everything they said was in the future tense, that it
would
be me,' said Maddy. âAnd they were right â I fell right into Meabh's trap. But they didn't say it
had
to be me; they didn't say it couldn't possibly be done by anyone else â not that I asked.'
âOh, I get it,' said Danny. âSo basically you just got yourself tied up with the Autumn Court and Meabhâ'
âFor no good reason,' interrupted Maddy, as she rocked on her haunches and jabbed at her head with the heels of her hands. âFor no reason at all other than my own pride. I kept asking the wrong questions â even Meabh said that.'
âWell, I don't see how it could have been done by poor Bran â she hasn't even got any clothes!' said Roisin. âHow's she supposed to track anyone?'
Maddy looked at the shivering woman. â
Una!
' she yelled.
âThere's no need to shout,' snapped a high voice, and the little banshee came shuffling forward with her odd, rolling gait, a bundle under one arm.
Danny and Roisin stared at her. âWho is
this
?' asked Roisin.
âI'll tell you later,' said Maddy. âHow did you know we were here?' she asked the little faerie woman.
âI always know where every member of the family is,' said the banshee. âThat's my job.'
She crouched down in front of the snivelling Bran and gently touched her cheek. âBran, child, it has been too long,' she said.
Bran stopped crying for a moment. âUna, is it really you?'
âIt is,' said the banshee, clasping one of Bran's hands in hers.
âHow long has it been?' asked Bran. âHow long have I been gone?'
âA long, long time,' said the faerie sadly as she opened the bundle and began to wrap Bran in grey rags just like her own. âAll you loved are lost to you now. All except Finn mac Cumhaill. Does it hurt to be human again?' asked Una, smoothing Bran's wet grey hair back from her head with her withered hand.
âIt does,' said Bran. âI want to go back, Una. I want go back to being a wolfhound and forgetting it all. When I am a wolfhound I don't remember anything about being human.'
âI know,' said Una, âbut there is a job to be done first â¦'
âNO!' Bran recoiled in horror. âNot me, don't make me do it â¦'
âIf you do not find your prey, there will be a war, Bran, a war much like the last one,' said Una. âYet this time I do not think the humans will fare as well. They might not be strong enough against the Tuatha. Would you see these children ruled by Tuatha as once you were?'
Bran shook her head. âThe faeries are cruel overlords,' she said bitterly. âThey taught me that.'
âIt is your fate to be the gentle huntress,' soothed Una. âYou are the one who always brings her prey back alive and unharmed.'
âI live to find mac Cumhaill's love,' said Bran. âThat is my fate.'
âYou have not found her yet,' said Una. âBut right now these children need you. Track your quarry for these children, finish the hunt you started in TÃr na nÃg, and then you can find peace in a wolfhound's form again and stay by Finn mac Cumhaill until his wife returns to his side.'
Bran nodded and straightened up. She linked her fingers with Roisin's and looked at Una.
âIt hurts,' she said. âThe ground where this hunter trod burns with its curse.'
âThen follow it,' said Una, squeezing her free hand. âWe will walk with you.'
Bran began to hobble forward, Fenris and Nero clinging to her sides, causing Roisin to stumble over their huge paws.
âNero, this is awkward,' she said, bending down to push him away. The wolf turned and snarled at her, snapping his teeth at the air, his eyes gleaming turquoise. âWhat is wrong with you?!' squealed Roisin, as George yelped with fear and ran to cling to Maddy's leg. Nero just carried on snarling at Roisin, his ears pinned back to his head and his black lips peeled to show teeth and gums, while Fenris rumbled on the other side of Bran, his lips twitching from his teeth.
They all eyed the wolves nervously. âI think they've got a bit more “wolfy” this side,' said Danny.
âProbably best to just let them do what they like,' said Maddy. White-faced, Roisin nodded her agreement.
It was slow going. The downpour had turned the ground to a slippery muck beneath Maddy's feet. Her jeans were soaked and hung like cardboard from her legs, chafing her cold skin at every step. Gusts of wind drove the rain into her face as hard as a smack while Bran wept and clung to Roisin and Una as they coaxed her along. George trudged alongside her, his head held low and the rain sheeting off his thin spine. Tremors
shook his little body. The only ones who seemed to be comfortable in the weather were the wolves, who slitted their eyes against the gale and seemed immune to the rain that dripped from their shaggy coats.
Step by painful step they made their way out of the castle grounds. They had to coax and pull Bran through the gap in the fence, and Maddy gritted her teeth and tried to ignore the old woman's cries of pain. They walked through the village, which was deserted and closed tight against the storm and the lateness of the hour. Maddy breathed a sigh of relief when Bran walked past Granny and Granda's house and again when she failed to take the road that would lead them to Cork city and Aunt Fionnula. The unicorn hunter was no one in her family. But the sick feeling of dread still lingered in her stomach. It was someone here, someone she knew, someone whose kids she went to school with.
They walked out of the village and headed for the countryside, past the brand-new housing estates with their raw landscaping and the identical ornamental boulders with each estate's name carved into them. On they went along the deserted road, the tarmac glistening in the wet, the street lights hurting Maddy's tired eyes with their sodium glow. Houses were more and more spread out here, until Bran turned down a rutted lane,
little more than a dirt track that gave access to a handful of houses crouched behind trees. Bran might be finding every step she took on her bare feet agony, but she was full of purpose as she limped up to the door of a little one-storey cottage, not unlike Granny and Granda's, and put her hand flat against the wood.
âHere,' she said, her eyes full of sorrow.
Everyone looked at Maddy, even George and the wolves, so she squared her shoulders, stepped up to the door and knocked on it loudly. They all stood and waited, breath held to see who would answer. They waited and waited and waited, and no one came.
âThis is ridiculous,' said Maddy. She knocked again and cocked her head, listening for footsteps. Hearing none, she tried the door handle, more out of frustration than hope, and was surprised to find it turned easily in her hand. The door swung open into a darkened hallway that had a musty, dirty smell.