Their eyes continued to hold. He knew she wasn’t going to back down. He had no choice but to accept her help. Once the decision was made, she and Naðr proceeded to attack Hallstein with everything they had. And though he should have been able to fight off an older dragon and a female, something else began to happen.
Maybe it was her blinding ring.
Or maybe it was the steaming hot Gungnir blade.
Or, perhaps, it was as simple as Naðr and Erica so filled with hatred that despite his hundreds of dragons and incredible power, Hallstein was no match for what came his way.
Naðr unleashed every ounce of wrath he felt at what the enemy had done to Meyla and now all of his kin. And Erica? Simple, pure, unfiltered hatred and rage. Long overdue retribution for all Hallstein had done to her lifetime after lifetime.
For all he had done to everyone she cared about.
As they kept battling, she allowed something she wasn’t sure would work. Something very risky. She embraced her and Hallstein’s shared blood.
The evil. The dark power that matched his own. One she hoped would combat him more effectively. She and her siblings hadn’t discussed it again because it was dangerous. Foolish. But this was the time for a last ditch effort.
What happened next surprised even her.
Naðr only had a moment to tear into Hallstein’s throat before he was thrust away and nothing remained but her and the enemy. Even his dragons seemed suspended in time, yet she knew this had nothing to do with his powers. This was all her. Mostly. After all, there were a few children watching from shore that had just helped with some remarkable magic of their own.
This was her time, and she knew it as she and Hallstein were caught in some sort of animated suspension. This was her moment. Her swan song. Or dragon enemy apocalypse. Whatever you wanted to call it.
All that mattered is that it was hers.
And she intended to the do the last thing anyone expected.
Let Hallstein live.
Chapter Twenty
KODRAN DID NOT want to say goodbye. He didn’t want to let Erica go again. But he knew he had to. Those were his last thoughts as he stared into her dragon’s eyes for as long as he could. Then all went dark.
Before it went light.
Bright white.
The same white light that had transported him and Erica around in ancient Scandinavia.
Then he swore he saw Erica’s ring flash from above. A shiny beacon in all the darkness.
It became hard to breathe. Just like it had when Grant forced them on their journey. Just like it had when their rock sent them on their first mini-adventure. Those were tests weren’t they? A preparation of sorts.
For this moment.
Right now.
Desperate for breath, he tried to inhale only to realize that he couldn’t breathe because he was still deep underwater. At first, he didn’t struggle just stared at that beautiful white light so far above that had, in fact, originated from the ring. It shimmered down through the water like a peaceful escape from all the pain he had just suffered losing his kin.
Erica.
Maeva.
“Eluf,” came a whisper. “Can you hear me? Do you know where I am?”
Seconds later, he was in his cave in ancient Scandinavia pressing the Gungnir blade into Maeva’s hand. He was saying his final goodbye and sending her on her way. But then something happened. Something that didn’t happen before.
He followed her soul.
From her life in the far future to her death then where she went after that. Somewhere beyond the afterlife. Beyond this world. Kept safe until she could return. When everything grew brighter, he narrowed his eyes and tried to see more clearly. There were people there that held her. Protected her for him.
“Can you hear me, Eluf?” the woman’s voice repeated.
Soon after, he saw clearly where she had been kept before she was reborn. Where her spirit had been in limbo.
Vanaheim.
And under the protection of his kin.
“Can you hear me, Eluf?” a voice rang out again before a face filled his mind’s eye.
The female Vanaheim seer.
“I can,” he whispered.
“Good,” she murmured. “Then follow the light and make your way back to her.”
He tried to respond but couldn’t. There was too much water in his lungs.
“But there is not,” Grant said. “You can breathe, Kodran. If you but keep on the journey that has always been yours, lad.”
And what was that? To follow Grant into the cave at Mt. Galdhøpiggen’s peak? Acknowledge all Eluf had done to get them where they were? To accept that Eluf’s actions eventually led to the ruin of his kin?
“You can breathe, laddie,” Adlin added. “All you have to do is take a breath.”
Kodran stared at the white light. Could he breathe? How? Because he was dead. Or so he assumed. Which meant he must have crossed over to spirit form. If that was the case, he might still be able to help Erica.
“Shit, you run a little morbid, eh?” Kage muttered into his mind.
“Not usually,” Tait defended. “My brother’s typically as quick to humor as me.”
“Right,” Sam said.
“He always seemed it,” Lauren agreed.
It only took Kodran a few more moments to realize what was happening.
His kin were literally coming back from the dead and swimming past him toward the surface. They weren’t spirits but alive, healed and by the looks of it, furious.
“You’re alive?” he managed. Even for a dragon, he had been without oxygen for too long.
“Yes, we are.” Shannon nudged him as she passed. “But if you don’t get motivated, you won’t be for long, Brother.”
Kodran couldn’t help a smile as he watched dozens of fallen comrades make their way up. They really were alive. But how? Had it been the healing power of the ring?
“Does it matter, Cousin?” Heidrek asked as he came alongside.
“Because it shouldn’t,” Cybil said from the other side.
Before he knew it, they were nudging him along until they officially snapped it into his head this was no fantasy. They were alive.
And so was Erica. He could sense her.
They had made it.
He frowned. Or had they? Because Hallstein’s heart was still beating.
Panicked, he shot to the surface straight into the air. The second he did, Hallstein and Erica crashed down into the ocean with Naðr right behind.
“Go after her, Kodran,” Heidrek said. “We’ll take care of everything else.”
Kodran was already gone, desperate to save Erica then rip Hallstein apart. He inhaled enough oxygen to sustain his dragon and dove after them.
Naðr and Erica didn’t say a word. They didn’t revel in his strange resurrection. But he got the sense Erica knew he had returned and was waiting for him before she killed the enemy. She wanted him to be part of this.
Whatever happened, whatever new strength the three of them possessed as they attacked Hallstein, it proved to be lethal. Erica ripped at his flesh, and her dragon did things to his manhood-dragonhood that would make anyone cringe. And it was all done with the Gungnir blade and her talons. A slicing and dicing that was brutal by anyone’s standards. Violent. An ending for a cock he wouldn’t wish on his worst enemy.
Until now.
Naðr kept at him as Kodran tore at his flesh over and over, grateful for every ounce of blood that reddened the water and every scale that peeled away.
At last, his uncle got his jaw clamped down on Hallstein’s neck as they landed on the ocean floor. Kodran thought for sure he would end him there, but he didn’t. Instead, his eyes met Kodran’s. “Erica sensed you were coming back. She saved him for you. Are you ready to take your final revenge?”
“There is no final revenge,” Hallstein seethed, his voice high pitched due to the extreme pain he had to be in. “Because I will be back.” His eyes went to Erica. “R
ight, my love?”
That was it. That was all Kodran needed. To have Hallstein look at her like that. To remember all this dragon had taken from them. From her. The strife he had caused. And that, it seemed, was all it took to access the power he had possessed in another life.
So when Naðr released Hallstein, Kodran embraced his former self, the power of Eluf and pounced on his enemy. Yet when he roared, met his nemesis’ eyes one last time then tore his throat to shreds it wasn’t any previous life he saw. It was what Hallstein had put Erica through in this life, whether or not she was in her physical body.
After that, it didn’t take long.
Kodran kept his jaw locked on Hallstein’s bare vocal chords as Naðr and Erica pinned him down. Then they all enjoyed the satisfying moments of watching his life seeping away. When Hallstein’s heart thudded one final time, a strange pulse rippled through the water.
“I know that feeling,” Naðr murmured before he left and shot to the surface. “It happened the last time a small boat traveled through time.”
Kodran and Erica made sure Hallstein was finished and were about to pursue when a dark figure sauntered their way beneath the water.
Hel.
Fury lit her eyes as she stopped and looked down her nose at her son. Seconds later, though his body was still in their clutches, his spirit drifted free. Not as a dragon but human.
“Welcome, Son,” she half whispered, half seethed as she eyed him over. “It is time for you to come with me.”
“Never,” he started to say, disgust in his eyes. “You should have relinquished your throne to your better, but you never had the intelligence...”
That was the last thing he got out before she snapped her wrist and he became a flicker of fire in her palm. “I think it is time we start over, Son,” she said softly. “Maybe someday I’ll allow you to live again, but it will not be for a very, very long time and then only if I deem you ready.”
Then she was gone. Vanished.
Kodran and Erica looked at each other. Though not sure what to make of that, they had other concerns. Naðr and what had caught his attention. So they raced after him. When they surfaced, the whole world was stormy and on fire. He and Erica launched into the air and tried to make sense of what was going on. The storm still raged. Ships still burned. But his kin and the ancient Sigdir dragons were scooping up their humans and bringing them inland to safety.
“We’re winning,” Kage said. “Whatever’s been happening has shifted the tide altogether, and we’re seriously kicking their asses.”
Kodran eyed the horizon and tried to figure out where he should go next, whom to fight, but all those who had been killed were rising up and fighting once more.
“I think it’s our ring and blade,” Erica said. “I think they’ve caused this somehow.”
He started to shift left then right, looking for a dragon to fight, an enemy to take down, but all were being conquered. All were being destroyed. His eyes shot to the shore where his Vanaheim seers stood watching him. They were alive and well. Resurrected like the rest.
All three pointed toward Naðr’s ship, and he understood why.
“Erica, the sail is glowing,” he said. “Just like it did before with your ring.”
When Kodran saw Naðr shift and land on the ship, he did the same. A moment later, Erica did as well.
“What is happening, Uncle?” he asked as Naðr raced to the bow and peered into the darkness. It was hard to see through the waves, wind, and storm.
Naðr’s eyes never left the horizon as the battle simmered down and the last of the enemy finally fell from the sky. All the while the sail continued to glow as his father, Uncle Raknar and Uncle Kjar joined them and stared into the distance as well. What were they looking for?
As they watched the horizon, Kodran pulled Erica back against him, grateful to have her in his arms again.
“There,” Naðr finally roared and pointed through the foggy aftermath of the departing storm. “Do you see?”
Kjar joined him and narrowed his eyes as a small smile came to his lips. “I do.”
Kol and Raknar said nothing but came alongside their brother.
Kodran and Erica looked over the side, curious, before he saw what his elders already knew was coming.
A small Viking boat.
One built by Megan and Sean a long time ago.
One that had brought Megan back in time once to her true love and had just done it again.
Naðr flew down the ladder and leapt into the boat before it even brushed the side of his ship.
“Husband,” Megan said as she stood, tears in her eyes. It was clear she was weak. “Is it really you?”
Naðr didn’t waste time with words but pulled her into his arms and held her tight. Then he gave her a kiss that put all to shame. The way he loved her was thorough, all theirs. And Kodran understood that more than he ever had before.
“I hate to break up a good time,” came a soft, teasing voice. “But perhaps we could take this onto the ship?”
“Angie?” Erica exclaimed, peering down at the shifting burlap in the back of the boat. “Is that you?”
“Please, call me Mema Angie,” she said, her voice muffled until she stuck her head out. “Forgive the delay in my introduction. It’s been a wild ride.” She peered down beneath the canvas. “And I’ve been trying to keep things safe.” Her eyes widened on the ship. “Thank goodness for that glowing sail. It led the way through the storm.”
What things was she trying to keep safe beneath that burlap?
“Come.” Kjar smiled. “Let’s get you both onto the ship then we’ll get this boat towed to shore.” His brows rose. “It wouldn’t be the first time, after all.”
Raknar leaned over and held his hand down to Megan. “No, it wouldn’t be the first time.”
Megan smiled at him and took his hand as he helped her up. “I guess we’re just repeating history, aren’t we, Brother?”
“We are,” Raknar murmured as he set her in the boat and hugged her tightly before Kol and Kjar did the same.
“It’s so good to have you back,” Kol murmured and kept an arm around her lower back. “Do not ever leave us again, woman.” He kept her close as Raknar looked her over, his eyes concerned as he touched her here and there. While some might think it inappropriate it was normal for those dragons considered their own. They might be able to feel the mind, but they also needed physical contact. They needed to know that their lifeblood was okay. And though Megan might not be dragon, she was theirs.
Kodran was about to speak to Erica, to embrace and kiss her properly, but became distracted by the way Naðr and his uncles inhaled as they stepped close to Aunt Megan. They were catching a scent.
A good scent.
A cancer free scent.
“Well, I’d say something favorable is going on by the happiness in everyone’s eyes as you’re sniffing me,” Megan said. “But if you wouldn’t mind, I’m pretty tired and would like to sit.”
Kodran squeezed Erica’s hand and nodded. Megan might be weak and gaunt, but whatever had happened, she was healed.
She would survive.
And he suspected it happened because of the ring’s powers. Vanaheim’s healing metal. The very same reason everyone had returned to life.
“It’s a good day,” Mema Angie declared as she joined them and grinned at Kjar as he lugged her big package onto the boat. “Demi-god Viking that he is, he just loves to do things the hard way.” She winked at him. “When magic would have worked just as well.”
“I am doing things the way I know you want them done, woman.” He nodded over her shoulder. “Just ask the dog. She agrees.”
Erica’s eyes widened on Guardian as she appeared behind them.
“What, dear?” Angie asked Erica. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
“It’s just,” she murmured, not sure how to phrase it as she glanced at Megan.
“Well, I do,” Mema Angie said, clearly following her tho
ughts. “You, like everyone else, was under the assumption Megan would die and be reborn as Heidrek and Cybil’s child. Mainly because of Guardian being determined to protect Cybil’s womb, the baby inside, a soul that had treated her so well when she once lived.”
“That’s right,” Erica said.
“Perhaps that might have happened but it won’t anymore thanks to you and Kodran.” Her voice softened with respect. “Eluf and Maeva.” Her eyes went to the blade and ring. “And of course, those.” A smile came to her lips as she seemed to see something they couldn’t. “No, now another soul entirely will find its way to Cybil’s womb.” Angie’s eyes went to the dog as Guardian began to fade away. “Perhaps Guardian is determined to protect that soul instead. One that was good to her in yet another life she lived.”
That made sense. And it was a much better outcome than having lost Aunt Megan.
As the ship headed inland and his aunt spent most of her time in Naðr’s arms, Kodran figured his uncle had the right idea. It was time to be with their mates. To appreciate that they were together and had a life ahead of them.
Erica didn’t say anything at first, telepathically or otherwise, but he knew her thoughts were churning. He knew she was still trying to make sense of things. So he pulled her to the back of the boat, sat her down, wrapped an arm around her waist and kept her close.
“He’s gone, Erica,” he murmured and kissed her temple as he followed her thoughts. All the sudden worry and doubt. Above all, the absolute fear that somehow, someway, she had let everyone down. “Every last one of our people was brought back. My kin and yours. All of them resurrected.” He tilted her chin until their eyes met. “We survived and won.”
Her eyes held his for a long moment before her gaze dropped to the ring on her finger. “When we...when you...”
He took her hand and rubbed his finger lightly over the ring as she trailed off.
“Something happened, and I’m not sure what it was.” He cupped her cheek so that her eyes returned to his. “Maybe it was all part of the elaborate spell Eluf cast. Part of Maeva’s fairytale happy ending.” He kept his touch soft, his words even softer. “All I know is that it worked.” Red skirted his vision as their eyes held. As his dragon made sure her dragon truly understood. “We’re here, and everyone’s safe, Erica. The war is over, and it’s time for peace.”
Pride of a Viking (The MacLomain Series: Viking Ancestors' Kin, #5) Page 25