The Obsidian Dagger Read online

Page 13


  Brendan did notice that they were walking a worn path where trees had been cleared away.

  “This path has been here for over six-hundred years,” Gorgoch said, perhaps sensing the unspoken questions the living might have. “The previous owner of the forest, Conchar, burned a path by breathing fire and decaying the trees and greenery.”

  “He could exhale fire?” asked Lizzie.

  “He could, but the fire didn’t burn,” answered Gorgoch. “Conchar was so evil that his fire acted like disease and killed on command.”

  “Where is this Conchar now?” inquired Rory.

  “No one can say for certain. He may be long dead, but I doubt it.”

  “Why is that?” Biddy wondered.

  “I’m sure you’ve heard it before, but evil is hard to kill.” Gorgoch turned back to look at the others. “I only tell you about the path because of its purpose. Conchar, and now Morna used it to both travel and to have human slaves transported to the castle.”

  “That’s terrible,” Dorian said with a sad shake of her head.

  “It is terrible, because once the witch has the humans she mutates them.” Concerned looks met his serious, ever-flowing features. “And the only way to free them is to kill them.”

  Silence was upon the group as they considered Gorgoch’s implication. Brendan was trying to muster up the courage to tell Gorgoch that he wasn’t sure that he could kill another person under any circumstances. Killing monsters and rogue fairies was one thing, but a person? Well, that was something entirely different.

  A howl in the distance sparked everyone back to the present.

  “Uh, what was that?” Lizzie asked in a shaky tone.

  Gorgoch looked into the distance and sighed. “I fear the Cu Sith is near.”

  “Cu Sith?” asked Lizzie.

  “I think I saw him in Star Wars,” joked Rory. Biddy punched him hard in the arm.

  “The Cu Sith is like a ghost dog,” explained Gorgoch.

  “Oh,” replied Lizzie. “A nice, cute, little ghosty pup, huh?” she asked hopefully.

  “More like a large predator of the soul,” responded the half-spirit. “When the Cu Sith does come, avoid its touch at all costs, lest your soul be torn asunder.”

  “Say that again?” Lizzie said, wincing.

  “Don’t let the dog touch you, deary,” answered Biddy.

  “Great,” Brendan huffed sarcastically. “Now there’s a ghost dog that can rip your soul apart. Where do these freaking things come from?”

  “It doesn’t matter, Brendan,” said Dorian with hard-set eyes. “I’m going to help protect you.”

  “Protect me? I don’t need you to… how are you going to do that?” Brendan asked.

  Dorian reached into her bag and removed the five vials that she had remaining. She held them out in her palm for the others to see. “Each of you needs to select a vial and pour the contents into your palms.”

  Brendan reached out and selected the silver vial. Lizzie took the purple while Rory got the blue and Biddy the orange. That left Dorian with the red which she instantly poured into her hands. Her hands began to glow red and a split second later the glow spread over the rest of her body as well. They looked at each other in anticipation and then followed Dorian’s lead and poured the magic into their palms.

  Rory’s hands began to glow and then the glow manifested itself as a bow and a quiver of arrows. “Wow! That’s cool!” said Rory.

  “Just don’t shoot any of us, alright?” joked Brendan. Rory gave a nod of agreement and smiled.

  Biddy’s back sprouted wings of orange. She started to float without trying. “Whoa! I’m flying here!”

  “Way to go, Biddy,” laughed Lizzie.

  Brendan’s silver glow shot down his right arm and extended out into the shape of a sword. When the magic had finished, he held the sword and marveled at its craftsmanship. “Now that’s crazy.”

  Lizzie was all smiles as her magical purple glow hummed and moved to her right hand as well. “Come on sword… or wings… or something awesome,” she wished. Her magic extended out further and further until it showed itself.

  “I get a stick!” cursed Lizzie. “A stinking stick?”

  Gorgoch smiled briefly and looked down the path. “I feel that we must hurry.” Gorgoch, Dorian, and Brendan started ahead of Lizzie, Rory, and Biddy.

  Rory patted Lizzie on the shoulder. “Sticks are cool.”

  “Yeah,” agreed Biddy from the air next to Lizzie’s head. “They’re really cool.”

  The threesome started to follow, but Lizzie just stared at her stick.

  “Man, this sucks.” She moped after her group with her staff in hand.

  Chapter 13

  Courage

  Groans, moans, and the low rattles of breathing were the only things Duncan could hear in his cage. The sad part was that he wasn’t aware if he was making the noises or if his cellmates were. He could see that Osis was floating near the top of her cage like a kid doing the Dead Man’s Float with her friends in the pool, only he wasn’t sure if she wasn’t dead. He wanted to ask, but that was going to take energy and that was something that he just didn’t have enough to expend for the question. He was concentrating on keeping Morna out of his mind, out of his magic, and that was draining all of his energies.

  Duncan spared a look in Wardicon’s direction, and his old friend was curled up like a ball; his chest was slowly rising and falling. The Sidhe King’s will power was long gone, and his mind, body, and clan were now under the control of the witch.

  That’s what she wanted. She was after the magic, but Duncan knew that she was also building an army. But why? What need did she have for an army? She also seemed to want to add the Leprechauns to that disdainful hoard. He was not about to let her have them.

  Not while he was king.

  …

  The travelers walked cautiously along the path. All, except Lizzie, of course, were thrilled with their new magical weapons, but none of them were really looking forward to using them. If it came time for them to put the weapons to the test, then that meant they were under attack. They all knew it would happen, but that didn’t mean that they had to look forward to it.

  Gorgoch stopped the group when they entered a diminutive clearing. There was a small river that was roiling ahead of them with much faster moving water than what would have been expected considering that it was a small river and the terrain was relatively level. It hadn’t rained much, as far as Brendan could recall, so it just looked weird.

  “That’s one fast-moving river,” stated Rory.

  “That’s what I was thinking,” agreed Brendan.

  “Don’t forget that it flows through a cursed forest,” pointed out Dorian. “It’s not like it has to follow the normal rules of nature.”

  “Good point.” It unnerved Brendan to think about magic as a real thing. He was only just beginning to understand the world, and now his experiences in Ireland and Scotland were teaching him something entirely different. He wondered what Newton would have thought about all this.

  The group walked further on the path and spotted a creaky wooden bridge. “That’s where we’ll have to cross,” said Gorgoch lifting one ghostly hand to gesture toward the bridge.

  “You think?” scoffed Lizzie sarcastically.

  “Keep your eyes open, folks. This is a good place for an ambush,” Dorian said readying her hands. They began to glow red and emitted a crackling energy.

  They drew closer to the bridge and had a much better view of the river. It was bubbling and foaming and flowing like mad. It was also black. It didn’t look like oil or sludge, but like regular river water, only dark and opaque.

  “Okay,” began Brendan. “Is that the grossest water ever or what?”

  “It’s pretty gross,” agreed Lizzie.

  Gorgoch searched the area suspiciously. “I have a bad feeling.”

  Just as he finished his sentence a streak of green shot out of the trees and slammed into Gorgoch smas
hing him to the ground. The green form and Gorgoch slid through trees even though the trees tried to move, they were too slow and became shattered into a million shards. The pair were instantly out of sight.

  “Gorgoch!” called Dorian. Whatever had attacked him had dragged him away.

  “What in the world was that?” asked Lizzie.

  “I believe that was the Cu Sith,” answered Biddy. “Let’s hope it can’t take Gorgoch’s soul.”

  “Isn’t he all soul?” asked Brendan.

  “Oh, bad dog!” called Lizzie. “You leave him alone.”

  A moment later the river itself came to life and spewed forth several boiling forms onto the shore. They seethed and roiled on the spot changing into different shapes, all of them menacing and gruesome.

  “What in the world are those ugly things?” asked Lizzie.

  “Those are Kelpies,” answered Rory. “They are fowl creatures.”

  The Kelpies shape-shifted into hideous monsters. One became a dragon while another became a minotaur. Two others resembled velociraptors. The rest took the form of demons. Though they all came in different forms, none of them could shake the black water look. They all boiled and bubbled and roiled within the shell of the creatures they became.

  “What are we supposed to do against these things?” Rory said with a cracking voice.

  “We take them out and we do it fast.” Dorian took the lead and the five squared off against the black water Kelpies.

  The Kelpies hissed and bared their fangs. The dragon let out a battle cry and the Kelpies sprang into action. Dorian didn’t have to tell the others to fight because the fight was brought to them.

  The odds were overwhelming at seven to one, but the five had magic on their side. Sure, they were fighting hideous creatures of the dark with killer claws and stupendous strength. The group didn’t have the numbers on their side or the home-field advantage. All of that didn’t seem to make that big of a difference though, since each one of them had become supercharged by Dorian’s gifts.

  Demons charged at Rory who was perched atop a stone on the banks. He let loose with an arrow and nailed an ugly Kelpie between the eyes. It fell to the banks in a splash. Rory was ready to reach back to find another arrow, but one appeared in his bow without his help.

  “Now that is cool,” he exclaimed. He continued to fire at the Kelpies. He had a moment and looked out to find Biddy. She was in the air avoiding the slashing claws of a few of the demon Kelpies.

  “Keep your hands to yourselves, boys,” she cried. Biddy zoomed in and out, feeling that there was nothing much she could do but cause a distraction. If that was all she could do, then she was going to do it well. She zipped around the battlefield and acted like an annoying bug.

  She flew high above and tried to find a place she could be of some use. Noticing Rory was starting to bite off more than he could chew, she dove at a group of newly transforming Kelpies. “Leave him alone!”

  They spotted her coming and they changed their forms into ravens and clawed at her as she drew near. She changed courses and narrowly avoided the razor sharp talons. The Kelpie ravens pursued her, and Biddy had to will herself to fly faster and harder. She could hear their hissing and feel their breath at her rear. She figured that this was it. She wasn’t scared, though. She didn’t give up or give in to the beasts. She turned and lashed out with her will. To her surprise, several feathers were flung from her wings and shredded the Kelpie ravens to pieces. Black water splashed against her face as the creatures rained down on the earth below.

  Dorian looked up as droplets of black rain fell from the sky. The drops sizzled away as they neared her and her magical red glow. She looked out at the river and watched as more Kelpies rose and transformed into one creature or another. She blasted here and there and evaporated many of the filthy beasts. She mostly watched out for her friends as she kept one eye on the large dragon that squatted on the bridge and hissed and roared.

  Brendan decided that he was going to be fearless. What reason was there not to be? The creatures were made of water, after all. How tough and scary could that be?

  He soon found out.

  The smaller demon-like Kelpies weren’t much trouble, but when the Minotaur charged, Brendan was put on the defensive. This Kelpie was huge and fast. It exhaled a black mist as it ran at Brendan. The American dodged to the right and rolled to his feet in time to see the Minotaur annihilate a very large and thick oak. Now he knew why he should have been somewhat frightened.

  The giant, ugly creature didn’t bother to turn around to face him again. Instead it reformed itself, and the face poked out of the back of its head. It let out a fear-inducing battle cry and charged again.

  “Whoa!” Brendan exclaimed as he spun away and slashed at the creature’s leg. The blade passed through with little resistance, but the creature showed no effect. He could see it smile as it turned back again. It held out its arm and a giant club took the place of its hand.

  “Come on! That’s not even fair,” Brendan admonished.

  The beast slammed his club down and nearly crushed Brendan. A quick step to the left allowed him to keep breathing. It lashed out again with the heavy club and drove Brendan back. It slammed the club down and Brendan backed away. The scene played out like that until Brendan teetered on the bank of the black river.

  The Minotaur paused and looked at Brendan as if to say that the end was near. Brendan glanced down at the babbling blackness and he knew that if he went in there then it was the end.

  “Can’t we talk about this?” asked Brendan.

  The Minotaur shook its head slowly.

  Brendan narrowed his eyes and stared at the creature defiantly. “Okay, chump, bring it.”

  The large Kelpie reared back with its club and then dropped it down at Brendan with tremendous intentions to crush. Brendan raised his sword to block and when the two connected, something incredible happened. Brendan lost his footing and nearly fell into the water. The only thing that kept him out of it was the fact that his sword was stuck in the Minotaur’s club.

  The beast hissed and laughed until it realized that Brendan hadn’t fallen into the water. It looked around for him and then spotted him dangling from the club.

  Brendan looked sweepingly back at the ugly thing and waved. “Hi. Uh, don’t mind me.”

  The beast grew furious and tried to shake him loose. Brendan called out for help.

  Lizzie held her stick out and cursed silently at her bad magical luck. “Stupid stick,” she mumbled.

  The demon Kelpies didn’t care that she was unhappy with her weapon and didn’t bother to wait for her to get a new one before they attacked. If they would have been smart they would have waited, or better yet, they would have ran.

  They charged her with the insane rage of hungry predators, but when she began to splatter the Kelpies in every direction with her staff, they started to take a new approach. They circled around her, and they looked like they felt confident.

  Lizzie saw their plan. “That’s a bad move, fellas.”

  They charged all at once, but Lizzie was too fast for them. She leapt into the air and spun. She forced her staff out in a wide circle and by the time she had landed her attackers had been reduced to puddles of black water.

  “Lizzie,” hollered Dorian. “How are you holding up?”

  Lizzie looked at the black carnage and smiled, “Oh, I’m good.”

  She turned her head when a cry for help rang out from the banks of the river. “Brendan!” She ran as fast as she could to help.

  “There’s no way that I’m going into that water, pal!” Brendan clung to his sword for dear life as the beast unsuccessfully tried to shake him loose.

  Suddenly, the creature stopped shaking Brendan and held a very surprised look on its face.

  “What the… ?” said Brendan in surprise.

  The beast dropped to its knees and Brendan’s feet found soft footing on the grass. He yanked his sword free and glanced down where a purple staff
was jammed up in between the Minotaur’s legs. Brendan looked past the beast’s big head and saw Lizzie waving from just behind its shoulder.

  “Oh, thanks, Liz,” he said.

  He slashed out and chopped the Minotaur’s head off with a single motion. The head and body held their form until they landed in the black water. There they were absorbed by the current.

  “Nice use of stick, little sister,” smiled Brendan.

  “You know, sticks are cool,” she smiled back.

  They ran back into the battle to help Dorian with the Dragon.

  …

  Dullahan was enjoying the show from his vantage point astride his demon steed. The horse was anxious to charge down the path and enter into battle as well, but Dullahan held the reigns steady. The stallion only tugged a few times before it got the message. It took to snorting out balls of fire and making the trees shift their roots to avoid the heat.

  Dullahan didn’t mind or care about the trees at that moment. He was too busy making notes about his adversaries. They fought well with their Leprechaun weapons. The small Leprechauns were moderately effective while the Leprechaun princess showed that she was a good leader and a valiant warrior. The humans were holding their own as well. The Kelpies hardly stood a chance, but Dullahan knew that before he sent the mindless fools into battle. The group was much more formidable since he had first faced them on the road in Ireland. They had courage and skill and of course they had that insipid Gorgoch, but they were also short on time. That desperation was going to be their undoing. That was going to make them take chances, and that gave him the advantage.

  …

  Gorgoch was having a hard time dealing with the vicious jaws of the Cu Sith. It had already shone that it could tear through his visceral being. Luckily for him the ghost dog only tore at the vapor-like clothing that he wore, but that was enough to make Gorgoch know that this apparition could do him some serious harm.

  The jaws snapped shut in blood-thirsty bites attempting to separate Gorgoch’s spirit half from this realm. Gorgoch had his forearm in the Cu Sith’s throat, so that prevented it from laying its large fangs into his ghostly form.