Island of Glass (The Guardians Trilogy #3)(14)
“Like I said, I could live in here. I’ll get some things from my room, then start that digging. My cell phone will work in here, right?”
“Here and anywhere else.”
“Can I help you with anything here?” Sasha asked.
“Maybe, but the fact is, Doyle would be more useful.”
He didn’t look very pleased about it, but shrugged. “I’ve got some things to see to, then I can give you some time.”
“Good enough. I’ll make some calls, haul some things down here, get going. Bran?” Hands on hips, Riley turned a circle. “This rocks it.”
? ? ?
Before she started, Riley contacted family. She should actually call, actually speak to her family, but . . . email was quicker, simpler, and she could blast one out to everyone at once.
She’d call her parents after the moon, but she could give them and her pack details about where she was on the quest—and where she was literally—via email.
Then she scrolled through her contacts list. She needed to line up a dive boat, scuba equipment. Since both the other stars had required diving, she’d assume they’d need it.
She found an archaeologist she’d worked with on a dig in County Cork years before, gave that a try.
It meant some conversation, some catching up—which was exactly why she’d chosen email for the family connection—but she scored a local name.
Within twenty minutes, a lot of phone flirting and negotiation, she had what she needed on tap.
She boxed up the books she wanted, along with her laptop and tablet, a couple of legal pads, and carted everything to the tower.
Wouldn’t she have loved working in here alone? she thought as she walked back in. Just her and hundreds of old books—and her own electronics. A big fire, a big table. Rain spitting outside, a little music from her playlist.
But she needed Doyle.
The man spoke and read as many languages as she did—and some of them better than she did. Which was annoying, she admitted as she set up her laptop.
Then again, he’d had a few centuries to learn linguistics. And everything else.
He had a good mind for strategy and tactics—she didn’t always agree, but he had a good mind for them. As a drill sergeant he was brutal—but she respected that. This was war, and war on an impossible level, so you trained brutally or you died.
And in battle, he was fierce, fast, and fearless. Of course, being immortal, why fear?
Not fair, she reminded herself. The man felt pain, just like anybody.
Anyway, it wasn’t a competition. Which was bullshit, she admitted as she arranged her things. For her, most everything was some sort of competition. She knew how to work on a team—pack animal, after all. But she preferred being an alpha.
Considering the night she’d put in, and what she hoped to accomplish now, she went up the circling stairs, made a pot of strong coffee. After a brief hesitation, she grabbed two thick white mugs.
If Doyle showed, having the second would save time.
Then she settled down at the table, fire roaring, rain pattering, and began to read—as best she could—the book written by Bran’s ancestor.
She made notes on the legal pad as she went, stopped when she needed to in order to check a word or phrasing with her laptop.
She barely glanced up when the door opened.
She wondered if the faded Grateful Dead T-shirt he wore was a snarky private joke about his immortality, or if he was—as any sensible rock lover should be—a fan.
Either way, it showed admirable pecs to advantage.
“Bran’s many-times-great-grandfather was full of himself,” she began. “Or maybe it just comes across that way. His writing’s pretty florid, and he’s pretty damn smug about getting invited to the rising. It’s what he calls the birth of this new queen.”
“Okay.” Doyle dumped coffee in the second mug.
“You could read this faster.”
“You seem to be getting through it. Besides, some guy’s trip to the Island of Glass hundreds of years ago doesn’t do much for us in the here and now. It’s wherever it chooses to be—that’s the legend, isn’t it?”
“‘It comes and goes as it wills,’” Riley quoted, “‘sailing the mists of time and place. Many have sought its shores, but the glass parts rarely. Only those chosen by the fates, those whose feats and deeds and powers merit, are gifted to pass through.’” She tapped the book. “Or words to that effect. This guy—Bohannon—is pretty pumped up about his personal merit. He’s taking the queen two jeweled birds—a lark and a nightingale—as his gift. One to sing her to sleep, one to sing her awake. There’s a whole passage about how he conjured them.”
“And that helps us how?”
“It’s information, Sparky. He’s definitely talking about an infant—so this verifies a birth. Most of the info we’ve dug up does, though there are theories about a young girl, à la Arthur, being chosen through a task or deed. But he writes about the infant queen, Aegle, and her guardians: Celene, Luna, Arianrhod.”
“We’ve had that much before.”
“More confirmation,” Riley insisted. “And his invite came through Arianrhod—Celtic to Celtic, I’m thinking. And he traveled from Sligo, to the coast of Clare—that’s here and now for us. He had to sail from here, which was rough on him—again thoroughly recounted. Dark sea under the full moon, blah, blah, but then it gets interesting.”
Nora Roberts's Books
- Of Blood and Bone (Chronicles of The One #2)
- Of Blood and Bone (Chronicles of The One #2)
- Nora Roberts
- Dark Witch (The Cousins O'Dwyer Trilogy #1)
- Blood Magick (The Cousins O'Dwyer Trilogy #3)
- Bay of Sighs (The Guardians Trilogy #2)
- Year One (Chronicles of The One #1)
- Stars of Fortune (The Guardians Trilogy, #1)
- The Obsession