Swallowing Darkness - Laurell K. Hamilton [109]
“What does the queen want me to do?” I asked.
“I haven’t been inside the court, Merry. Galen and I took Hettie back to her inn. But as we rode toward it, other sidhe and lesser fey joined us. They followed behind us, singing and dancing, and the white light of the horses flowed across all of them.”
“It was a faerie radhe,” Doyle said, and his voice held wonderment. “Yes,” Rhys said.
I pushed them both away enough so I could study their faces. “I know what a faerie radhe is—when the sidhe used to go riding across the land. Other sidhe would join with their horses and hounds, and lesser fey would be drawn to it, to march with us. Even humans could be drawn into it sometimes.”
“Yes,” Doyle said.
“But there has never been a faerie radhe on American soil,” Rhys said. “We lost our horses and our ability to call the folk to us.”
He laid his lips against my temple, almost a kiss, but not quite. “We rode along the highway, and cars passed us. People took pictures with their cell phones, and they’re already up on the Internet. We made the news.”
“Is that good or bad?” I asked, leaning in against him. Doyle moved with me so that I was still held securely by both. Touching was a way of feeling better, and the metal we rode in could not have felt good to them.
“The Seelie who joined us are eager for you to bring them into their power.”
“We had Seelie who were forced to join the wild hunt, too,” I said. “The old powers return,” Doyle said.
“Every brownie on American soil came out to receive Hettie. They took her from us, and keened for her.”
“I should have been there,” I said.
Rhys hugged me close. “Your aunt Meg asked where you were. Galen told her that you were hunting down the people responsible for your Gran’s death. Meg was content with that, and so were the other brownies. She asked only if the murderer was sidhe.”
Rhys did kiss the side of my face then. “We said yes.”
Doyle reached out and touched the other man, squeezing his arm, as if he too heard the pain in Rhys’s voice. Rhys continued. “Another brownie who I don’t know by name asked, ‘The princess will kill a sidhe for the murder of a brownie?’ Galen said yes. That really pleased them, Merry.”
“She was my grandmother. She raised me. Brownie or sidhe or goblin, I would have sought vengeance for her.”
He kissed my cheek ever so gently. “I know that, but the lesser folk are not used to being thought of as equal to the sidhe, not in any way.”
“I think that is about to change,” I said.
They held me more tightly, so tight that it was getting too warm in my fur cloak. I was about to ask them to give me some breathing room when the radio crackled to life, and Dawson’s voice came. “We’ve got a group of sidhe standing in the middle of the road. We can’t go forward without running them over.”
Rhys whispered, “If we said run them over, would that be bad?” “Until we know who it is, probably,” Doyle said.
“Who is it?” I asked.
Specialist Gregorio relayed my question.
“Galen Greenhair says one is Prince Cel and the other is the captain of his guard, Siobhan.”
“Not good,” Rhys said.
“I don’t know,” Doyle said. “I’ve wanted to kill Siobhan for years.”
I said. “I am the queen’s assassin, and a warrior of many battles, Meredith. I did not become one of the greatest killers of our court because I didn’t enjoy my job.”
I studied his face, and found a hint of a smile. “You’re pleased,”
I thought about that as he held me in the curve of his body. I thought about him enjoying the killing. I didn’t like the thought much, but if he was a sociopathic killer, then he was my sociopathic killer. And I’d let him slaughter them both if it would save us. No, more than that, I knew that eventually Cel and Siobhan had to die for me and mine to live. Tonight was as good a time as any, if he gave us enough excuse to justify it later to the queen.
I sat there, with my Darkness and my white knight, and thought, utterly calmly, that if we could kill Cel tonight, we should probably