Blood Magick (The Cousins O'Dwyer Trilogy #3)(35)
He set off again, came back with a fluffy towel the color of moss.
“Egyptian cotton,” Branna observed, and smoothly lifted the dog out, bundled him up before he could shake.
“I don’t have an old towel. And it’ll wash, won’t it?”
“So it will.” She rubbed the dog briskly, kissed his nose. “That’s better now, isn’t it? All clean and smelling like a citrus grove. An Egyptian one. Give him his treat, Fin, for he’s a good boy, a good, brave boy.”
Bugs turned those adoring, trusting eyes on Fin, then gobbled down the offered treat.
“He could do with some water before . . .” She glanced down, and stared. Truly horrified. “Belleek? You’re using Belleek bowls for the dog’s food and water.”
“They were handy.” Flustered, he took the dog, tossed the towel on the counter, then set Bugs down by the water bowl.
The dog drank thirstily, and noisily, for nearly a full minute. Let out a small belch then sat, stared up at Fin.
“He only needs a warm place to sleep for a while,” Branna told him.
Fin picked the dog up, snagged a pillow from the sofa in the great room, tossed it down in front of the fire.
Egyptian cotton, Belleek bowls, and now a damask pillow, Branna thought. The stable dog had become a little prince.
“He’s tired.” Fin stayed crouched down, stroking Bugs. “But he doesn’t hurt. His blood’s clear. There’s no poison in him.”
“He’ll sleep now, and wake stronger than he was. I had to give him a boost to bring him back. He’d lost so much blood.”
“He’ll have a scar here.” Gently, Fin traced a finger over the thin, jagged line on the dog’s throat.
“As Alastar carries one.”
Nodding, Fin rose as the dog slept. “I’m in your debt.”
“You’re not, and insult us both by saying it.”
“Not insult, Branna, gratitude. I’ll get you some wine.”
“Fin, it can’t be two in the afternoon.”
“Right.” He had to scrub his hands over his face, try to find his balance again. “Tea then.”
“I wouldn’t say no.” And it would keep him busy, she thought as he walked back into the kitchen, until he settled a little more.
“He’s for the stables. It’s been two years, thereabouts, since he wandered in. I wasn’t even here. It was Sean cleaned him up, fed him. And Boyle who named him.”
“Could be he wandered here for a reason, more reason than a bed of straw and scraps and some kind words. He’s in your home now, sleeping on a damask pillow in front of the fire. You took him on Samhain.”
“He was handy, like the bowls.”
“More than that, Fin.”
He shrugged, measured out tea. “He has a strong heart, and I never thought Cabhan would pay him any mind. He’s . . .”
“Harmless. Small and harmless and sweet-natured.”
“I brought him in one night. He has a way of looking at you, so I brought him in.”
Yes, still some of the boy, she thought, and all the kindness born in him. “A dog’s good company. The best, to my mind.”
“He chases his tail for no good reason but it’s there. I haven’t any biscuits,” he realized after a quick search. “Of the human sort.”
“Tea’s fine. Just the tea.”
Understanding he’d want to be close to the dog, she took a chair in view of the fire, waited until he’d brought the tea, sat with her.
“Tell me what happened.”
“I wanted a ride, a good, fast ride. The hills, the open.”
“As I wanted to walk in my garden. I understand the need.”
“You would. I thought to ride, to do some hawking, and took Bugs along to give him an adventure. Christ Jesus.”
“Your horse, your hawk, your hound.” She could almost see the guilt raging around him, hoped to smooth it down again. “Why wouldn’t you? You’re the only one of us who can link to all three.”
“I wasn’t looking for Cabhan, but in truth, I was more than pleased he found me.”
“As I was, walking in my garden. I understand that as well. Did he attack?”
“He started with his blather. I’m his blood, the lot of you will betray me, shun me, and so on. You’d think he’d be as bored with all that as I, but he never stops. Though this time out he promised to give you to me, should I want you, and that was fresh.”
Branna angled her head, and her voice was dry as dust. “Oh, did he now?”
“He did. He understands desire well enough. Understands the hungers of lust, but nothing of the heart or spirit. He knows I want you, but he’ll never understand why. I turned it on him. Began to draw him to me. It surprised him I could, for a moment, I could, and it threw him off. I called for the three—for we’d promised that—and as he became the wolf I pulled the sword from the cupboard upstairs, enflamed it.”
He paused a moment, got his bearings. “I could have held him off, I’m sure of it. I could have engaged him, with Baru and Merlin with me, until you came and we went at him together. But he didn’t come at me. He streaked to the side, had Bugs by the throat. All so fast. I went at him, struck at him, but he shifted away. He went for the dog who barely weighs a stone, tore his throat, then vanished away before I could strike a single blow. He never came at me.”
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)
- Island of Glass (The Guardians 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