Night Rune (Prof Croft Book 8) Brad Magnarella (the red fox clan TXT) đ
- Author: Brad Magnarella
Book online «Night Rune (Prof Croft Book 8) Brad Magnarella (the red fox clan TXT) đ». Author Brad Magnarella
âCrusspatch?â I called.
The man wore a colorful robe. Long white hair fell from under a stocking cap, draping his knees and nearly touching his slippered feet. A thick book lay off to one side, presumably dropped when heâd dozed off.
âCrusspatch?â I tried, more loudly.
When he didnât respond, I eyed the threshold, then tested it with my cane. No protections, or at least none that I could feel. I wondered now if Crusspatch relied on his reputation to serve that function.
The other explanation, of course, was that someone had already breached his protections.
I moved the amulet across the cottage before stretching a leg over the threshold. Nothing blew up. Within a few cautious steps, I was close enough to prod Crusspatchâs shoulder with my cane. His head lolled, showing his face.
I jumped back, a scream wedged in my throat. The fae exileâs mouth was open, jaw canted to the side. But where his eyes should have been were blackened holes. The smoke corkscrewing from them carried the stench of sulfur.
A demon attack.
âYouâre too late,â someone spoke in a low maleâs voice.
Shouting the Word to activate my bladeâs banishment rune, I dropped my amulet into a pocket and separated my cane into sword and staff. As I pivoted from the dead fae, my rune pulsed with holy power. But though the voice had spoken from mere feet away, I couldnât see anyone in the sudden play of light and shadow.
âShow yourself!â I called, heart pounding through the words.
A scuff sounded, and a hooded figure who hadnât been there a moment before stepped from behind the table. I pushed more power into the rune until the glow highlighted a blade-like nose and a chin of iron stubble.
âWho are you?â I demanded.
The hooded figure didnât flinch from the light of banishment. âAn ally.â
I opened my wizardâs senses, but a powerful cloaking spell covered him. I was only seeing him because heâd allowed it. Whoever he was, his presence near Crusspatchâs body couldnât have been a coincidence. We were either talking powerful demon or the fae who had fallen under shadow.
âI need a name,â I said, pushing power into my wizardâs voice, âor so help me God, Iâll assume youâre a demon and treat you like one.â
âYeah,â Bree-yark barked.
He arrived in the doorway, goblin blade glinting in my light. When the figureâs hands came up, I braced for an attack. But he drew his hood back by the sides. Dark hair spilled out, framing a rogueâs face with cunning black eyes. Regardless, I didnât know him. Before I could say as much, he brought a finger to his lips.
âYou once called me âSub.ââ
As I repeated the name to myself, the faeâs face began to smooth. His dark hair lightened and turned honey-blond. His lips filled out. I felt my sword arm sag as a pair of familiar, feminine eyes peered back at me.
Holy crap.
15
Iâd given her the nickname âSubâ back when we had neighboring classrooms and I would show up late to find her teaching in my place. She had been Caroline Reid then, my friend, colleague, and crush. Weâd made love once. Now she was a powerful princess who had bargained away her feelings for me.
She was also in the cottage of a dead fae.
âWhat are you doing here?â I asked carefully.
âCrusspatch was dangerous. He might have helped you, but not without harming you.â
I glanced over at the slumped figure in the chair. My last hope to access the time catch. âSo you killed him?â
âI planned to intervene, not harm him. The deed was done before I arrived.â
Caroline held my gaze as if inviting me to weigh the truth of her words. Two years had passed since sheâd helped me cast Arnaud into the Below. But having spent most of the intervening time in Faerie, sheâd aged ten times that. While her face remained fae smooth, a certain hardness possessed her blue-green eyes.
Do not engage her, Angelus had warned. She is not herself.
I could feel the weight of the calling stone in my pocket. By holding it and speaking the word, I could summon him. As casually as I could, I moved the sword from my damaged right hand over to my staff hand.
âYouâre supposed to be missing,â I said.
âMy kingdom is compromised. I left of my own free will.â
âCompromised how?â
âA demonic presence moves among us.â
That jibed with what Iâd gathered from Pip and Twerkâs warning, but I needed an assurance that she wasnât the one doing the moving among. She remained strongly glamoured, either to hide from her kingdom or to conceal the truth from me, possibly both.
âYour husbandâs looking for you,â I said.
Like Iâd done with Angelus, I watched for her reaction, but she only nodded. âHe doesnât see the danger.â
âSo youâve been, what, hiding out in the Fae Wilds?â
âIâve been waiting for you.â
I slipped the hand into my pocket. âMe?â
âOsgood said you would come here.â
My suspicions spiked. I hadnât even been considering this trip when Iâd gone to the fae townhouse that morning. But as my fingers closed around the stone, I realized that Osgood would have overheard the Upholders and me discussing the Crusspatch option the day heâd intruded on our meeting. With my aid from the fae cut off, he might have divined that I would revisit that option.
âWhy not just go to my apartment?â
âThe portals between our worlds are being watched.â
âWhy are you helping me?â I asked pointedly.
âBecause the demon threat is real, and the answer is in the time catch.â
My magic had given me its first strong assertion when Iâd said the same thing to Gretchen that morning.
âHow do you know?â
She peered over at Crusspatchâs body. âBecause something is intent on preventing your return.â
âThere are no other fae who can send me? What about Osgood?â
Despite my suspicions of her, fresh hope crackled inside me. If she had been in contact with Osgood, maybe the powerful fae butler was back in play. But Caroline quickly smothered the notion.
âThe entire kingdom
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