Myths & Magic: A Science Fiction and Fantasy Collection

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Myths & Magic: A Science Fiction and Fantasy Collection Page 9

by Kerry Adrienne


  Garren heaved, tears streaming down his face. His sobs filled the night air. Sophia reached to dry his tears, her heart aching that he was hurting. He looked like someone who’d been abandoned.

  “She had to go, Garren.” She rubbed his cheek. “You know that. She stayed to help you guard the inn but now she has to move on. She’s going to better things.”

  “I know.” He nodded. “I just wish we’d had more time. I wish I’d known she was going to leave.”

  Sophia clasped his hand. “It’s going to be okay. I promise. She even told you that.”

  “I’m going to miss her.”

  “I know you will.” She sighed.

  Another owl hooting broke the stillness of the night. A breeze lilted by, warm like a summer’s afternoon or a toasty fire.

  No more cold.

  “Sophia?” Garren cleared his throat.

  She turned to him and smiled. “Yes, Garren?”

  “Will you stay with me?” His eyes searched hers. The moonlight broke through again and golden circles filled his irises. “Here at Blackbird Inn? I feel like you belong here. Belong with me.”

  Sophia laughed and pointed to the ground. “This should answer your question.” Golden chains shimmered in the moonlight, attached to her ankles and wrists, but she didn’t feel she was wearing them at all. They crisscrossed Garren’s chains as they ran along the ground to the inn. “Does it look like I’m going anywhere?”

  Garren laughed and took her into his arms. When his lips met hers, she knew that everything was going to be okay. They’d guard Blackbird Inn for as long as they lived.

  Epilogue

  Sophia watched the dust swirling in the stripes of sunlight that cut through the room. Garren snored lightly beside her. She smiled and peeked into the bassinette beside her bed. Their baby girl lay sleeping, a tiny smile twitching on her face as she dreamed baby dreams, thumb in mouth.

  “Good morning, Bernadette,” Sophia whispered. “Today is going to be a beautiful day.”

  A blackbird pecked its good morning at the window and Sophia smiled.

  * * *

  The End

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  About the Author

  USA Today bestselling author Kerry Adrienne loves history, science, music and art. She’s a mom to three daughters, many cats, and various other small animals. She loves live music and traveling most anywhere.

  In addition to being an author, she’s a college instructor, artist, costumer, editor, and bad guitar player.

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  Heart of Fire

  Bec McMaster

  Heart of Fire © 2017 Bec McMaster

  * * *

  Copyright notice: All rights reserved under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, organizations, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Warning: the unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

  Heart of Fire

  The old eddas speak of dreki—fabled creatures who haunt the depths of Iceland’s volcanoes, and steal away fair maidens.

  Freyja wants none of such myths. Dreki seducing young ladies? Ha. They probably eat such foolish girls. But when the local dreki steals her last ram—costing her any chance of feeding her ill father through the winter—Freyja intends to confront the fearsome myth.

  Sentenced to a life of exile from his clan, Rurik is fascinated by the furious woman who comes to claim her ram. She reeks of mysterious magic, and challenges him at every step. He intends to claim the passionate firebrand, but to do so he must take mortal form.

  It’s the only time the dreki are vulnerable, and with a dragon hunter arriving on the shores of Iceland, he can barely afford the risk—but lonely Freyja, with her elf-cursed eyes and pragmatic soul, tempts him in ways he’s never felt before. Is she the key to reclaiming his heritage? Or will she be his downfall?

  Chapter 1

  Iceland, 1880

  “Here, father,” Freyja murmured, tilting the steaming cup of broth to his lips. “Perhaps this will take away the chill?”

  Her father slurped at the watery soup, his eyes blue and vacant as his trembling hands tried to cup hers. “It’s delicious, Freyja. One of your best.”

  Freyja pasted a smile on her face, even though he couldn’t see it. Bitterness burned in her throat. “Yes, Papa. It is, isn’t it?”

  There were more vegetables than lamb in the broth, and more water than both, but the fact he sought to spare her feelings made her shoulders hunch. It had been such a long winter, with little food or respite from the storms. The few coins they had left were drying up and her small herd of ewes was dwindling. She couldn’t justify slaughtering another just to add more flavor to their soup.

  Her father coughed, that same dry, hacking cough that had haunted him all winter. Freyja grabbed a rag and helped to dry his cheeks with it. Sometimes she wondered if he would survive to see another winter.

  A fluttery feeling rose up to choke her, and she forced it down ruthlessly. No point in being maudlin. He was here and this was now. The future could wait.

  “How was the village this afternoon?” her father asked. “You didn’t see Ingmar’s boy, did you?”

  If she had, then Benedikt would have no interest in her. Not a respectful interest anyway. He had already hinted he might have means to offer her coin to keep her larder stocked through the spring. Telling her father that, however, might send him to an early grave. He had such hopes. Freyja intended never to enlighten him; with his poor health, their dwindling resources, and her eyes, she was unlikely to make any sort of respectable match.

  “He must have been busy, I’m sure,” she replied, squeezing his hand, then levering to her feet. Gathering the ceramic bowls together, she crossed to the kitchen. “He has all that land to tend, after all.”

  Some of it theirs—or what she’d been forced to sell after her father’s eyes faded and he could no longer work the land. She’d done what she could, but tending to him took a lot of her time.

  The shutters banged on the windows as the winds lifted. Freyja glanced through the glass toward the enormous storm clouds boiling on the horizon. A storm from the north then, and bound to be bitter with the kiss of Arctic winds on its breath. She could feel it in her bones, tingling beneath her skin as if she herself were tied to the storm. It would blow a mighty gale, tearing its way through the mountains that shielded their little homestead, then blow out by morning. She knew it, with some inexplicable sixth sense.

  Most of Iceland suffered from bitter chill at this time of year, but the area surrounding Akureyri was somewhat warmer thanks to a trick of the coastline, of cliffs and mountains. Of course, out here they were virtually alone. It was a day’s sail to Reykjavik and longer overland, if one even dared.

  “I have to fetch the sheep in,” she called, watching the dull gray edge of the clouds roiling. Lightning flickered in the distance. “We’re in for a storm.”

  “Be careful,” her father called, sinking into his shawl and coughing again. “Don’t be too long.”

  “I won’t, Papa.”

  “And take Loki.”

  She rolled her eyes at the small bundle of white fur that nestled by her father’s feet. “Come.”

  The little ar
ctic fox yawned at her, seemingly content to stay where he was. Another mouth to feed when she truly couldn’t, but then a part of her couldn’t throw him out the door. He’d been with them since he was a pup.

  Freyja frowned, reaching out with the inner part of herself that had some sense of connection to the creature. Come.

  Loki rolled to his feet and shook himself, discarding strands of long white hair. Underneath, his summer coat grew darker. Another week or two and he’d lose the rest of his winter coat. He leaped with agile quickness to dart beneath her skirts, and threatened to trip her.

  “You will make me a nice fur muff one day,” she threatened, though he ignored her and scratched at the door, knowing full well the threat was harmless.

  Skirts wrapping haphazardly around her legs, Freyja fought her way across the yard. It was almost five in the afternoon and evening was falling. In the village, most of the men would be retiring to the tavern to talk and laugh beneath the smoky eaves, whilst the goodwives tended their children and tucked them in for the night.

  Not so out here. Freyja had been raised on these rugged slopes, beneath the looming volcanic mountain of Krafla. In the distance its constant plume of smoke seemed almost invisible against the gray clouds.

  Still, its presence was more than felt. Freyja crossed herself. “Blessed Father, watch over us,” she murmured, glaring at the mountain. “Let dreki sleep another night.”

  The small flock of ewes must have sensed the ominous press of the storm, for they were at the woven stick fence, bleating to be let into the small barn. Two snowy white lambs with black markings peered at her from beneath one old ewe. Despite her mood, Freyja couldn’t help a smile.

  Loki watched them with avid interest, licking at his cheeks with his long pink tongue.

  Don’t you dare. She snapped the thought at him and he sat down obediently, giving her a sly, long-suffering look.

  It took little effort to draw the small herd into the barn, coaxing them into the separate stalls. Her boots shuffled over the thin straw, the air still and musty here. One pen remained empty and she hurried back outside to fetch the battered old ram from his own paddock.

  Loki yipped as she stumbled. The skies were darkening swiftly now, large fat drops of rain spattering down. One struck her cheek like an icy bullet, wind whipping her skirts and shawl. Her long blonde plait slapped her in the face. The whisper of the storm drove through her, setting her alight with a feverish excitement, her heart quickening. This was the time she felt most alive.

  “Henrik!” she called, her voice stolen from her lips by another gust. The pen was empty; or no, not quite. The ram cowered against the wall, head bowed as if to fight the force of the wind.

  “You stupid beast,” she muttered, grabbing her skirts and straddling the fence. Loki darted in and snatched a mouthful of skirt, almost hauling her back onto his side.

  “Curse you,” Freyja cried, trying to shake him free. A sudden sharp spatter of rain made her gasp. “Do you wish me to be soaked? Then I shall catch a chill and you must find your own dinner!”

  The little fox worried at her skirts, his ears flat to his head. Freyja scraped the wet strands of hair off her face and tugged the material, her curses lost in another hammering echo of thunder.

  Let go!

  But the little fox would not.

  Henrik bleated suddenly, turning in circles as if he didn’t know where to go. Freyja shot him a frustrated look, then reached down and grabbed Loki’s ruff. A blast of wind knocked her into the ram’s pen. She landed flat on her back in the mud, breathless and cursing—

  A sudden roar echoed through the air, cutting through the thunder as if it were nothing.

  The scream of it beat against her skin, pulsing in her ears until she was forced to clap her hands over them. The primal shiver of it seemed to be inside her, in her head, in her pounding heartbeat— everywhere. It was the type of sound that echoed down through ages past, and sent both man and animal fleeing in mindless fear.

  It cut off and Freyja choked in her first gasp, lifting her head in disbelief as a sinuous tail flew directly over her.

  “Wyrm,” she whispered, the heat draining out of her face.

  Not just a wyrm, but the Great One. He who haunted Krafla’s depths, slithering out to stalk the night and hunt his prey.

  She’d never seen him this close before. Golden scales gleamed even in the stormy darkness, each wing sweeping out an impossible forty feet wide. She shouldn’t be scared; the village paid its tithe and had for decades in exchange for being left alone. But there was something distinctly primeval about the sight of it directly above her. Some ancestral fear that made her feel like prey.

  Then its forelegs curled up, claws plucking delicately at its victim. Henrik bleated one last time, and she could sense his fear as the wyrm thrust its wings downward again, launching itself into the air.

  With her ram in its talons.

  “No!” Freyja pushed herself upright in disbelief, mud squelching through her fingers. Without the ram she couldn’t breed. It wouldn’t matter this spring, but next year…. “No!”

  Leaping to her feet, she chased after it. Curse you! We pay the tithe! Each week a lamb or goat was tethered out on the hilltop as sacrifice, though eddas told of a time when the sacrifice had been virgin flesh. Her father’s face flashed into her mind, thin with lack of nourishment and color fleeing his cheeks as he coughed.

  “Come back!” She snatched up a stone and hurled it skyward.

  A pitiful effort, for the wyrm sailed high, soaring beneath gray clouds with mocking disdain, both for her and the weather.

  Freyja sank to her knees in the mud, the fist in her chest tightening. What was she going to do? Hope and pray one of the undropped lambs was a male? There were only two ewes still due to deliver, and even if the lambs were male it would be years before she could breed them.

  She and her father didn’t have that time.

  Something broke inside her. Tears she hadn’t shed even when her mother passed away three years ago, finally tore free. Since then she’d been holding on, trying to keep it all from washing over her as she looked after her increasingly frail father. Slamming her fists into the dirt, Freyja heard the lash of lightning strike the hill nearby. Again. And again. Lightning crashing down in answer to her fury. She would not accept this. She would not fail.

  Not even if she had to take her ram back.

  The cold rain washed away her hot tears as she looked up. Loki slithered through the wickerwork of the pen and licked at her hand tentatively as if to appease her, but Freyja shook him off.

  “I’m going after him,” she told the fox. Dragging her shawl tight, she lurched to her feet, wet through, her skirts caked in mud.

  The creature had terrorized her village long enough.

  And Freyja was not without her defenses.

  Chapter 2

  Freyja waited until her father was tucked in bed and snoring before she began ruthlessly stripping off her mud-encrusted clothes. Cold was a constant enemy out here.

  Slipping into a pair of her father’s old trousers, she belted them tight and dragged her boots on. An oiled sealskin coat went over her shirt to keep the rain off, and she dragged her father’s bow out of the chest by his bed.

  The storm was blowing itself out by the time she ventured forth. Loki scrabbled at the door behind her, yipping to be let out, but Freyja ignored him.

  She strode with cold purpose across the plains behind her house, feet sure on the mud-slicked sides of the hill. Her anger boiled beneath her skin like a storm of her own, frequently sending belated strikes of lightning down nearby. A crater still smoked as she passed by it.

  The terrain grew rocky, and soon she was striding past the enormous standing tors no farmer dared remove. Goodwives whispered that trolls lived there, lurking beneath their rocky bases. Freyja had never seen one, but the hairs on the back of her neck tingled as if something was watching her. Glancing around, she loosened her grip on the bow.<
br />
  Come on, she thought. If you dare. For anger was her ally tonight, and though the storm was abating, she could summon its fierceness to life again if she wished.

  But nothing confronted her. She was almost disappointed as she set her body against the long climb ahead of her.

  Stubby grass soon gave way to rock, and then ice. No matter how much she wanted to hold on to it, her anger waned as exhaustion began to tax her heavy limbs. Her father wasn’t the only one dining on broth these days.

  Lightning flickered in the distance, highlighting the smoking caldera of the volcano. Steam billowed from fumaroles as though hell itself rested beneath the mountain. Though she ached to rest, the sight urged her on. She had to hurry, or it would be too late; perhaps it already was, but somehow her mind was set on saving her ram. It couldn’t be too late. It simply couldn’t. She wouldn’t believe it.

  The Great Wyrm had haunted the depths of Krafla for over three decades, plundering what it wanted until the villagers agreed to pay it the tithe. Nobody knew where it had come from, though rumor whispered there were more throughout the center of Iceland and the southern coast, following the volcano trail, for that was where they lived.

  Cold-blooded creatures they were, difficult to kill, and incredibly dangerous. She could remember the tales her mother used to tell of them. The fabled dreki. Constantly hungering for heat and slumbering close to the volcano’s depths.

  Freyja’s favorite tale had been that of Marya, the virgin shepherdess who had been staked out for the tithe of the mighty Beirammon, back when wyrms still thirsted for human flesh. Instead, a young soldier named Alvar hunted the wyrm and his prey back to the volcano, and killed it in a dangerous duel.

 

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