I don’t think so, Connor decided, and only cocked his head, smiled.
“Parlor tricks and pets? I bring fire, water, earth, and air. Test my powers if you dare. The hawk is mine for all time. He and me as part of the three will fulfill our destiny. Light is my sword, right is my shield, as long ago my path was revealed. I accept it willingly.”
He struck out then, with the sword formed from the ball of fire, cleaved the air between them. He felt the burn—a bolt, a blade sear across the biceps of his left arm.
Ignoring it, he advanced, swung again, hair flying in the cyclone of air, sword blazing against the dark.
And when he sliced it down, Cabhan was gone.
The shadows lifted, the fog crawled away.
“As I will,” Connor murmured, “so mote it be.”
He let out a breath, drew in another, tasted the night—sweet and damp and green. He heard an owl hoot on a long, inquisitive note and the rustle of something hurrying through the brush.
“Well now.” For a moment, Roibeard leaned in, and their cheeks met, held. “That was interesting. What do you wager my lorry starts up easy as you please? I’m off to Fin’s, so you can go ahead with me there and have a visit with his Merlin, or go back home. It’s your choice, mo dearthair.”
With you. Connor heard the answer in his heart as much as his head. Always with you.
Roibeard rose into the air and winged ahead.
Still throbbing with the echoes of power—dark and light—Connor got back in the lorry. It started easy, purred, and drove smoothly the rest of the way to Fin’s.
He walked straight in. A fire crackled in the hearth, and that was welcome, but no one sprawled on the sofa with a beer at the ready.
As at home there as he was in his own cottage, he started toward the back, and heard voices.
“If you want hot meals”—Boyle—“marry someone who’ll make them.”
“Why would I do that when I have you so handy?”
“And I was happy enough in my own place making do with a sandwich and crisps.”
“And I’ve a fine hunk of pork in the fridge.”
“Why are you buying a fine hunk of pork when you don’t know what in bloody hell to do with it?”
“Why wouldn’t I, again, when I have you so handy?”
Though his head ached a bit, like a tooth going bad, the exchange made Connor chuckle as he continued back.
Strange, he felt he’d already had that beer. Quite a lot of beer, as he seemed to be floating right along, but on a floor tilted just a bit sideways.
He stepped into the kitchen where the lights burned so bright they made him blink, made his head pound instead of ache. “I could do with a hunk of pork.”
“There, you see?” Grinning, Fin turned—and the grin fell away again. “What happened?”
“I had a little confrontation. Jesus, it’s hot as Africa in here.”
He struggled out of his jacket, weaving a little, then stared at his left arm. “Look at that, will you. My arm’s smoking.”
When he pitched forward, his friends leaped to catch him.
“What the fuck is this?” Boyle demanded. “He’s burning up.”
“It’s hot in here,” Connor insisted.
“It’s not. It’s Cabhan,” Fin bit off the word. “I can smell him.”