Hunted (The Iron Druid Chronicles, Book Six)

Hunted (The Iron Druid Chronicles, Book Six) by Kevin Hearne

Book: Hunted (The Iron Druid Chronicles, Book Six) by Kevin Hearne Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kevin Hearne
would be happy together forever. And I think I might have said that out loud, to his body, in a sort of high-pitched, incoherent keening that approximated speech but wasn’t intelligible. Twelve years of longing and being with him every day—closer to thirteen if you counted the year of flirting at Rúla Búla before I began my training—thirteen years of repression and stupid surrogate boyfriends so that I would be a stronger Druid, but only a few weeks of openly loving each other, ended by a small black hole in the side of his head. No chance to tell him goodbye or let him know one more time how grateful I was to be bound to the earth. No chance to let him tease me and then tease him back harder. No chance to cuss at him in Old Irish because he said it made him feel young again, or put on strawberry lip gloss and watch him go dizzy. He’d always had a thing about that for some reason.
    I don’t precisely know how long we cried over Atticus, but the moon was high in the sky, probably close to midnight, and my throat was raw before I remembered that Artemis and Diana were still after us. We’d probably cried away much of our lead.
    Oberon
, I said,
we have to go
.
    
    We have to. The huntresses are coming
.
    
    Atticus would care. You know that. He would want us to run and thwart them. We will bury him and say our farewells, and then we will honor him by sticking it to the Olympians
.
    
    By making it to England. Surviving will piss them off and make Atticus proud
.
    
    I know, Oberon, but staying here and letting the Olympians kill us won’t make him happy. Us either, for that matter
.
    Oberon ignored my wisdom and asked,
    I didn’t know where he was. Normally the Morrigan would escort spirits to their final resting place, but she was dead now. Perhaps Manannan Mac Lir would know. Maybe Atticus and the Morrigan were together somewhere.
    I’m not sure where he is, Oberon, but I’m sure we can’t see him. The dead and the living can inhabit the same planes in the Summer Lands, but they do not mix
.
    
    No, Oberon. I need you to stay with me. Please? Let’s send him off properly
.
    
    We will have whiskey as soon as we find a liquor store
.
    Fragarach was lying a short distance away, so I retrieved it and placed it on the ground in front of him. I didn’t roll him over or anything like that. I couldn’t bear to see the other side of his head. The small black hole would haunt me forever as it was; I didn’t want to see anything worse.
    I closed my eyes, pressing tears down my cheeks, and used my Latin headspace to contact the local elemental, Saxony.
    //Druid needs aid / Bury body and sword here / Keep surface undisturbed//
    //Harmony// came the reply. Atticus and Fragarach sank into the earth, and the turf nearby sort of stretched and closed over him, adjusting itself to make it appear as if nothing had ever happened there. No blood. No marker to indicate that the finest Druid to ever walk the earth ended his walk in this nameless field.
    My voice wasn’t up to speaking aloud, so I spoke mentally to Oberon.
Here lies Siodhachan Ó Suileabháin
, I said,
known as Atticus to us. He changed my life forever—for the better—and I can never repay the debt I owe him. All I can do is honor his memory by protecting the earth
. I paused, confronted by the impossibility of doing justice to my memories of him, so I simply ended with,
I loved him and will think of him every day, no matter how long I live
.
    I sobbed once and then did my best to weep silently so that Oberon would know it was his turn. He whined, indecisive, before he gave form to his thoughts.
    
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