Page List


Font:  

"We'll survive. Can we use the cwn?"

The boy frowned. "Why don't they use the cwn?"

"Good question."

Both looked at us expectantly. I glanced at Lloergan. I'd been considering asking her for help, but the rogue Huntsman who'd enslaved her had forced her to track humans and fae, and not for the reasons a cwn is supposed to track.

"Lloergan?" Gabriel said. "Could you help?"

"Is that her name?" the boy asked.

"It means moonlight," the girl said.

"You know Welsh?" I said.

"We know many things." Again, she tried--and failed--to look suitably crafty and mysterious. Then she added, "It is a lovely name."

"An excellent name," the boy said.

"If nearly impossible to pronounce. Much harder than ours."

She gave us another expectant look. We hadn't asked their names. I'd been avoiding that, actually. It implied a future relationship.

"What are your names?" Gabriel asked, surprising me.

"He's Alexios. I'm Helia."

Gabriel nodded and turned to the cwn. "Lloergan?" He crouched before her and pulled a sock from his inside pocket, one he must have snagged from the hotel room. "This belongs to the person we're looking for. Can you follow her trail from here? It's up to you, of course."

She sniffed the sock gingerly, as if it didn't smell very good. Then she snuffled the ground and headed into the alley. We followed.

"We can come along?" Alexios called after us.

"Shhh," Helia said. "Don't ask. Just follow until they make us leave."

Gabriel turned, and Helia fell back with a yelp.

"Let me make this clear," he said. "If you wish to help us, we will not stop you. Nor will we set you on tasks or give you any information that might be used against us. If we seem paranoid, understand that we have cause. Outside Cainsville, fae who have asked for help or offered it have been uniformly--"

"Nasty," Helia said.

"Horrid," Alexios said.

"Don't interrupt him."

"I'm not the one who--"

"Yes," Gabriel said. "They betrayed us, which has taught us a few things about dealing with fae. It has also, I hope, taught them a few things about dealing with us. Namely, that we are enough fae ourselves to understand the concept of quid pro quo. Help us and we help you. Hinder or harm us..."

"We have heard the fates of those who crossed you," Helia said, going serious. "We might seem foolish, but we did not live to this age by being foolhardy. Our help is offered freely. In return, we hope for a bit of fun and, yes, the favor of Matilda and Gwynn, which is no small thing. The favor, not a favor."

"Not a specific thing or a chit," Alexios said. "Just to--in the colloquial--get on your good side, because it seems a fine place to be."

"All right, then," Gabriel said, and we returned to following Lloergan.

--

The trail didn't go more than a mile before Lloergan lost it. Cwn aren't tracking hounds. They can pursue prey in the forest, and they can find them in the city, but the latter requires preternatural abilities, some of which her injuries stole from her.


Tags: Kelley Armstrong Cainsville Fantasy