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Swallowing Darkness (Merry Gentry #7)(21)

By:Laurell K. Hamilton

“The king will not be pleased,” Turloch said.
“I have a mark of power from one of our royals,” Yolland said. “Turloch, don’t you understand what that means?”
“It means the king will see her dead.”
“He thinks I bear his children,” I said. “He will want me alive.”
“How can that be?”
I held the chalice above my head, and let it go. It hovered for a moment, then vanished in a shower of roses and vines. “Magic,” I said.
“Is the chalice gone?” Dacey asked, fear in his voice.
“No,” I said, and Lord Yolland echoed me. “No, once it simply belonged to its chosen bearer. It has chosen Meredith, and that is good enough for me, Dacey.” He touched his new tattoo. “I am yours when you need me. Only call and I will answer.”
“You will have no choice but to answer now,” Turloch said.
“That you did not ask for a mark is to your shame,” Yolland said. “I want to live,” Turloch said.
“I want to serve,” Yolland said.
“Go, tell what you have seen. It is time to stop hiding. The Goddess has returned to us, and her power is abroad once more,” Yolland said.
“They will not believe us,” Dacey said.
“They will believe this.” Yolland held up his tattoo.
“The king will kill you,” Dacey said.
“If he tries, then I will knock upon the sluaghs’ gates and join King Sholto and his queen,” Yolland said.
“You would ride with the sluagh?” Dacey asked.
“Oh, yes,” Yolland said.
Sholto picked Mistral up in his arms. “Dawn approaches. Go back to your courts, and tell them what the Goddess bids. We will tend the Storm Lord.”
I laid one hand on Sholto’s bare arm, and put my other hand on Mistral’s leg. The chalice had helped heal his wounds, but cold iron could be like poison to us. Just because you closed the wounds didn’t mean that the poison had stopped doing its deadly work.
Sholto echoed my thoughts, leaning in close to me and whispering, “You have done a miracle with the chalice and stopped his blood loss, but cold iron is a tricky thing, Meredith.”
“We must get him to your healers,” I said.
“I can get inside my kingdom almost instantly, but I do not know if you are strong enough for the way I would choose.”
I felt the strength in Mistral’s body under my hand; even unconscious, there was muscle and strength. “Save him, Sholto.”
“I am the King of the sluagh, the King of That Which Passes Between. Part of the wild hunt has not chosen its form. I can use it to simply step into the sluaghs’ mound.”
“Do it,” I said.
“You are no longer part of the magic of the hunt, Meredith.”
I looked back at what was left of the hunt in the meadow. The Seelie had gotten their horses and ridden away toward their faerie mound. The mare that I had ridden and Sholto’s many-legged steed were nowhere to be seen. What remained was the writhing tail of the comet we had traveled on. What was there was white and shining, as if the full moon could be turned into tentacles, limbs, and eyes, pieces and parts that formed nothing that the eye could see, or rather nothing that the mind could make sense of. I’d been told that it would blast my mind to see the unformed hunt, and once it had been true. I remembered the terror of that first time weeks ago. Now I stared into it, and knew, simply knew, that I could form what I saw into anything. It was the raw stuff of chaos, and that is the beginning of all things. I could bring order to it, and form it into the things of faerie. The power of the Goddess still rode with me, and with that, I did not fear.“I see nothing to fear. Bring it, but know that the Goddess still rides me, and she will bring order out of its chaos.”
“As long as you are protected, I am content with whatever happens,” he said. Then he called, not with words, but I heard the call, not with my ears, but with my body, as if my skin vibrated with some sweet word.
The glowing remnants of the wild hunt flowed around us. It was like being surrounded by flesh that ran like water, and even that was not exactly true. I had no words, no experience to match to the sensations of being carried by raw magic, raw form. My father had made certain that I was well versed in the major religions of the human world. I remembered reading about creation in the Bible. It seemed an orderly thing, as if God said “giraffe” and a giraffe appeared fully formed as we know it. But standing in the midst of the raw chaos, I knew that creation was like any birth, messy and never quite what you expected.
A tentacle touched me, and it suddenly glowed more brightly, then, with a cry, a white horse fell away from the circle that surrounded us. Something that was almost a hand reached for me, and I took that almost hand. I stared into eyes, and I felt this formless shape ask, “What shall I be?”
What would you do, if something asked you what should it be? What form would come into your mind? If only I had had time to think, but there was no time. This was the moment of forming, and gods do not doubt. I was Goddess’s vessel, but there was enough of me to know that I would never be a goddess. I had too many doubts.
The almost hand in mine became a claw. The eyes that I stared into changed to something like the head of a hawk, but it was all white and shining, and too reptilian to be a bird, and yet…. The claw cut my hand as it pulled away, and my blood fell like rubies, catching the white, white light. The drops of blood spun through the chaos, and where they touched, they formed shapes. All the oldest magics come down to blood, or earth. I had no earth to offer as we spun inside the whirlwind of flesh, bone, and magic, but blood, that I had.
I thanked the…dragon for reminding me what blood was for. Fantastic shapes formed; some of them had existed in faerie before, but some were new. Some had only ever existed in books, in fairy tales, not truth, but I was part human, and I had been educated in human schools. I had never seen many of the creatures of legend, so I could not wish them into being. It was as if my imagination was being mined for shapes. Some of the forms were beautiful, some were horrific. Never had I regretted more some of the horror-movie marathons that I’d had with friends in college, because they were there too. But some of the darkest shapes gave me eyes filled with compassion before they spilled away into the night. Some of the most heartrendingly beautiful shapes gave me eyes that were pitiless, like the eyes of a tiger that you’d hand-reared until the day you realize that it was never tame, and you are just food. 
Then we were inside the sluaghs’ mound with the last shining remnants of the wild magic, and the sluagh themselves turning to fight us.
Sholto yelled, “We need a healer!”
Most of them hesitated, staring at us as if struck deaf and dumb. Nightflyers peeled themselves from the ceiling and flew down one of the dark tunnels. I hoped they had gone to do as their king bid, but the rest of the surprised sluagh still seemed uncertain what to do.
The shining circle around us knelt if they had legs to kneel with, and I knew what they wanted. They wanted guidance. Guidance to pick what they would be.
I realized that we were in the great central hall. There was the throne of bones and silk at the center of the main table. This was where the court ate, and when there was an audience or important visitors the big tables were moved away. Throne rooms often doubled as the formal eating area in castles, in or outside faerie.
I spoke to the assembled sluagh. “This is wild magic; it waits to be given form. Come and touch them, and they will become what you need, or want.”
A tall hooded figure said, “The wild magic only forms to the touch of the sidhe.”
“Once magic was for all of faerie. Some of you remember that time.”
It was a nightflyer clinging to the wall who spoke, in their slightly hissing manner. “You are not old enough to remember what you speak of.”
Sholto said, “The Goddess moves in her, Dervil.” And the name let me know that it was a female nightflyer, though a glance could not have told me.
The shining, kneeling circle was beginning to fade. “Would you lose this chance to show the sidhe that the oldest magic knows the hand of the sluagh?” I asked. “Come, touch it before it fades. Call back what you have lost. I was the dark Goddess this night.” I raised my still-bleeding hand. “The wild magic tasted my blood. It shines with white light, but so does the moon, and is that not the light in all your night skies?”
Someone stepped forward. It was Gethin, in a loud Hawaiian shirt and shorts, though he’d left his hat behind somewhere, so that his long, donkeylike ears draped bare to his shoulders. He smiled at me, showing that his humanlike face was full of sharp, pointy teeth. He had been one of the ones who had come to Los Angeles when Sholto first approached me. He was not one of the most powerful of the sluagh, but he was bold, and we needed bold tonight.
He put his small hand on one of the shining forms, and it was as if his touch were black ink poured into shining water. As the dark color hit the shining light, the form began to change. The light and darkness mingled, and for a moment I couldn’t see, as if some magical veil had come down to hide part of the process. When it was clear to the eye again, it was a small black pony.
Gethin gave a cackling, delighted laugh. He threw his arms around the shaky neck, and the pony nickered happily at him. The happy noise showed that the pony had teeth as sharp as Gethin’s, but bigger. The pony rolled its eyes up at me, and there was a flash of red.