The Crow of Connemara (36 page)

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Authors: Stephen Leigh

BOOK: The Crow of Connemara
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“I'm not asking for worship. I'm asking for yer help while we have a common enemy.”

“Does it taste like ashes in yer mouth to come begging like this?” he asked her, then shrugged. “No matter,” he said before she could answer. “What 'tis it yeh need, Morrígan, seeing as we be temporary allies? What are yeh thinkin'?”

“It's been a long time since the aos sí rode across the water to the Head. Maybe it's time now.”

“That'll stir up the residents. Was'nah it yeh who told me over the last several years not to let the host ride, just to keep the leamh quiet? If we do this, they'll be howlin' for the Naval Services to take out the island, fog or nah. Maybe just bomb the village to rubble from above. This could cause yer war to come quicker, before yer ready for 'em.”

“It's a risk I'll take. It may also serve as a warning to them that we're not powerless and they're best leaving us be.”

He laughed. “And if we happen to pick up a certain stray mortal during our ride?”

“Then I'd certainly appreciate it if yeh also happen to bring him here.”

“Yer a devious one, Morrígan.”

Now it was Maeve who laughed, a sharp, abrupt sound as she showed her teeth. “'Tis a fact,” she said. “And more.”

28
The Night Ride

“H
EY, JEN,” Colin said as soon as he heard the click of her cell accepting his call. “How're things?”

“Colin!” His sister's near-shout rattled the speaker of his cell phone, temporarily overriding the loud conversation in Regan's
Pub
and the sound of Lucas' band tuning up before their set. “That's what I should be asking you. We haven't heard from you in
days
now, and Mom was about ready to call the gardai there to roust you. I think she'd half-convinced Tommy that he needed to get hold of someone in the State Department to notify the embassy in Ireland.”

He could hear the relief in her voice. Colin tried to chuckle and mostly succeeded. With his free hand, he cupped the pint glass in front of him, dark with a half-finished Guinness. “You can tell her that she doesn't need to do that. I'm alive and still here. I was out on Maeve's island, and there's no cell phone reception out there. In fact, there's no phones at all, of any sort, or electricity. I just . . . well, I'm back on the mainland right now.”

“Colin, what's wrong? You can't hide anything from me; I can hear it in your voice. What's the problem? Did you and Maeve already split up?”

Colin sighed, not knowing where to start or even whether he should try. “No. It's more complicated than that. A lot more complicated. In fact, I'm pretty sure most of it you wouldn't believe at all.”

“Try me.”

Colin did laugh at that. “Not yet,” he said. “But here's the part you'll understand, in a nutshell. Maeve and her people, they took over an abandoned island, and now the state wants it back and they don't want to leave. The gardai came, and there was a bit of confrontation.” He heard her gasp at that, and he hurried to add: “No one was hurt. But they pulled me off the island because they didn't want a foreigner caught up in it. Now the Naval Service has blockaded the island and I can't get back.”

“Oh.” Colin couldn't decipher the emotions behind Jen's single word. He waited. Lucas' fiddle skirled a bit of a tune. “I'm sorry to hear that, but honestly I'm glad you're out of the way, Colin. Mom will be, too. Maybe . . .” Another pause. “Maybe it's better this way. Maybe you and Maeve just weren't meant to be together.”

“That sounds like Mom talking.”

“Thanks,” Jen answered with heavy irony. “That makes me feel
so
loved.” Static hissed in Colin's ear and he missed the opening of her next sentence. “. . . what you're going to do?”

“I don't know,” he told her. “I really don't, at this point. I'd go back out there, but that doesn't look possible.”

“I'm just as glad—if you don't mind me sounding like Mom again. But you wanting to . . . that I can understand, I guess. If it were Aaron stuck on the island, I'd be trying to do the same thing.”

“Thanks, Jen. I appreciate you saying that.”

“Just . . . just promise me that you'll be careful, little brother. Do you hear me?”

“I hear you, and I will.” Lucas counted off “Connolly's Jig,” and the band launched into the tune. Colin raised his voice into the phone. “Listen, Jen, I'll give you a call tomorrow. Right now, I'm going to listen to some music and drink a pint or three. Love ya. Tell Mom and Tommy the same, and give Aaron my best, too.”

“I'll do that. Why don't you call Mom? She wants to hear your voice.”

“All right,” he told her. “I will.” It was a promise he wasn't certain he would keep, but he knew it was what she wanted to hear. “Talk to you later.”

“Bye, Colin. Love ya.” He heard the phone disconnect. He sighed and slid his phone in his jeans pocket. He picked up the glass on the table in front of him and drained it.

Sliding out of the booth, he went to the bar to order another pint. As he passed the band, he nodded to Lucas.

Lucas either didn't see him or pretended not to. Colin shook his head and continued on to the bar.

A thick tendril of mist snaked away from the greater cloud around Inishcorr.

In the moonlight, from an airplane flying over the area, it might have appeared to be a twisting rope of silver-white smoke, curling and slithering over the surface of a preternaturally calm and flat ocean. Leading Seaman Kieran Martin, on midnight watch on the offshore patrol vessel
LÉ Aisling,
saw the foggy arm detach from the bank covering the island, moving impossibly against the wind and heading directly toward the ship. Kieran unclipped the mic from his uniform, calling the rating who was manning the ship's radar scan. “Sean, are yeh seeing anything out by that island right now?”

“Neh. All quiet. What 'tis it yeh think yeh have?”

“I'm not sure yet. Maybe nothing.”

Kieran stared out over the bow rail, blinking his eyes as he lifted binoculars to his face and tried to focus the lenses, not certain what it was he was seeing. He pondered whether to alert the ensign in charge of the watch, when the foggy limb flexed and advanced suddenly and rapidly, growing in size until it was nearly level with the
Aisling
's
deck, the single coil splitting in two as it rushed toward the ship, as if a hurricane were whipping it into motion.

Kieran fumbled with the mic on his lapel, starting to call an alarm and backing away from the rail and the strange mist. The smoky murk was riddled with strange twinkling lights like torches glimpsed on a foggy night, and it was full of noise as well: thin voices shouting in ancient Gaelic, the sound of pounding horses' hooves, and the blare of shrill trumpets and pipes. The apparition flanked the ship before Kieran could find his voice, a cold wind like the air from a grave flowing outward from it. The mist surrounded the ship, and voices called to him from within the sparkling gray. A hand seemed to whip from the cloud with a laugh, pulling the cap from Kieran's head and flinging it past the cannon mounted on the foredeck. More hands plucked at him, knocking him to the deck, tearing away his uniform jacket and tossing it after the cap. Other hands grabbed him as voices whispered around him.
“Come with us! Join us, mortal!”
they called as they pulled at him, trying to drag him over the rail. He felt his body scraping over the deck plates. He clutched at a stanchion as the spectral hands pulled harder. The frigid white fog roared past him; streaks of blurred light from torches flaring within. As it engulfed him, he thought he glimpsed armored warriors riding horses with men and women running impossibly alongside.

“No!” Kieran cried, holding hard. “Leave me be!” The voices laughed, but the hands released him as the eerie fog swept past, moving beyond the
Aisling
toward the mainland, the twin strands recombining into one once more as they passed the ship's stern. As the last bit of the fog passed, the ship canted over before righting itself sluggishly, as if a giant swell had struck it from the side. From the rail, Kieran watched the mist dwindle, the clamor of it fading as alarms rang over the ship and spotlights flared wildly and belatedly.

“Kieran!” his earpiece rattled. “What the bloody hell is going on out there, man?”

Kieran shook his head. “'Tis nothing of this world, I'm thinkin',” he said.

The mist would have laughed with the comment. The line of wild fog continued to rush eastward, far faster than any speed the
Aisling
was capable of matching. As it neared Ceomhar Head, the fog flowed over a low island hugging the rugged coastline. A farmhouse stood there; the misty river of the wild ride flowed around and past it, trumpets blaring and riders howling. The sheep bleated in terror, the cows lowed in alarm. When the family within the farmhouse emerged, the turmoil having rousted them from their sleep, the riders were already gone, leaving behind ocean fish flopping open-mouthed in the pasture, in the yard, and on their windowsills. Their best milk cow perched precariously on the roof of the barn. Their tractor had been plucked from the barn and was buried nose-first in the hayfield, its two huge rear tires still spinning slowly. Several of the sheep had strips of their thick wool sheared from them so closely their pink skin showed, and they would find two ewes and a ram missing entirely.

The husband and wife shivered, clutching each other and looking toward the headland where a line of glowing, rushing nothingness flowed along the Beach Road toward Ballemór.

In the office of the marina along Beach Road, a security guard sat snoring in a chair with his feet up on the desk. The first indication that something might be amiss was the rattling of windows in the office, a tidal rolling of the marina dock and the slamming of boat hulls against their fenders. The harsh report of snapping nylon dock lines—sounding like automatic pistol shots—was finally enough to rouse the guard from his sleep. Bleary-eyed and frightened, wondering if the marina were somehow under attack, he ran to the door and opened it. He was immediately confronted by cold fog and wind, the marina lights cocooned and haloed in a white cotton blanket. Strange sounds assaulted his ears: not just the sounds of the restless boats, but muffled trumpets and strange, hoarse shouts. Hands from the fog fondled him as voices laughed. His hat was taken from his head and flung into the breeze; the long, hefty weight of his torch left his belt as the flashlight's beam seared his eyes, then it, too, was gone. More hands were at his belt buckle and his pants went down to his ankles as high voices giggled. Someone pushed at him from behind as he bent to bring his pants back up, and suddenly he was flailing in cold water with a forest of hazy pilings around him. His feet could just touch the rocky bottom, and he sputtered, coughing up oily saltwater. He could hear the boats striking into each other along the marina pier, and saw one of the black-hulled hookers sailing past with ghostly figures clinging to the rigging of the red sails.

The fog whipped by him, loud with hidden creatures, then was gone. As he climbed a rope ladder back onto the docks, the moonlight revealed a tangled mess of boats and lines around the marina, and—most strangely—what appeared to be a startled ram staggering out of the office door on unsteady hooves, its wool dyed a bilious and garish pink.

The guard cursed aloud, shaking his fist at the departing mist, which was moving rapidly down the Beach Road, and only mocking laughter answered him.

The mist advanced toward Ballemór proper. It being a Friday midnight, the main square there was still crowded, and those out on the streets turned in alarm as the wall of fog advanced on them without warning, with its blaring of ethereal trumpets, hooves, and voices and glimpses of strange, martial figures inside. The fog overran the moon and blurred the streetlamps, filling the main square before squatting stolid, heavy, and unmoving there. The residents of Ballemór ran aimlessly about, shouting their alarm and confusion: as the trumpets blared once, then stopped; as the clamor of hooves on the road faded to the breathy whinnying and stamping of horses reined in after a long gallop; as the sound of clinking armor rose around them; as mocking voices and unseen hands assailed the people from seemingly every side. The residents fled in any direction they could. They thought they glimpsed a squadron of ghostly, ancient warriors marching down the road through the mist, moving purposefully and steadily, the rapping of their spears on the ground terrible and frightening.

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