Kickass Urban Fantasy
Earth’s Blood
Earth
Reclaimed, Book 2By Ann Gimpel
Publisher: Musa
Genre: Urban Fantasy/Romance
99,000 words
Buy Link: Amazon
Buy Link: Musa
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In a post-apocalyptic world where most people have been slaughtered, the Celtic gods and a few humans with magic are all that stand between survival and Earth falling into alien hands. The combination of dark sorcery leveraged by the enemy is daunting. Destruction is all but certain if the small enclaves of humans who are left can’t get past their distrust of the Celts.
Captured by the enemy, Aislinn Lenear wonders if she’ll ever see her bond wolf or Fionn, a Celtic god, again. She’s had nothing but her wits to rely on for years. They haven’t failed her yet, but escape from her current predicament seems remote.
An enticing blend of urban fantasy and romance, this second volume of the Earth Reclaimed Series provides fertile ground for Aislinn and Fionn’s relationship to deepen. Headstrong and independent, the pair run up against each other’s demands time and time again. Fireworks spark. In the end, they learn to savor every moment in a bittersweet world where each day may well be their last.
Excerpt:
Chapter One
Fionn tumbled through a gateway and
leapt to his feet. Something was decidedly wrong. The wolf and raven were right
behind him, but he’d lost all sense of Aislinn’s presence in the traveling
portal. It made him half-crazy with fear, but there was nothing he could do
until the spell spit him out. Mouth dry, heartbeat thudding in his ears, he
waited to see who would follow him out of the ragged hole he’d left in the
ether.
For
the love of the goddess, please let me be mistaken about this.
Rune emerged. A howl split the
still air. “Where is she?” the black
and gray timber wolf demanded. He reared up and plunked his paws on Fionn’s
chest. “What happened to my bond mate? I
cannot feel her anywhere.” He howled again. It was a mournful sound, full
of grief. Fionn wrapped his arms around the wolf, but Rune dropped to the
ground, apparently not interested in comfort.
“Yes,
where did Aislinn go?” Bella demanded, bouncing forward with her awkward
avian gait. Ever cantankerous, the raven was bonded to him, so Fionn was used
to her moods. She spread her large wings, took to the air, and cawed her
displeasure. He stared after her and struggled to manage a mounting sense of
panic while balling his hands into fists. Both bond animals knew the truth:
Aislinn had disappeared somewhere between Ely, Nevada and wherever they were
now. He barked a word to close off his magic. The place they’d rolled out of
shimmered and disappeared.
He loosed a string of Gaelic
curses. “What the fuck went wrong?” he muttered. Fionn drew magic to augment
his night vision and gazed wildly about for clues. They were in the midst of
rubble that could well be Salt Lake City. So at least that part of his casting
had been true. No, an inner voice
corrected him, I doona know that. This
could be anywhere. He shoved straggling strands of blond hair out of his
eyes and sent his magic spinning outward to gather data. His heart beat a
worried tattoo against his ribcage.
The air to his right took on a
pearlescent hue. Bran and Arawn leapt through a portal in a flash of battle
leathers, the snug-fitting garments indistinguishable from Fionn’s attire.
Arawn barked a command; their gateway winked shut. His midnight gaze scanned
the small group. “Why is Gwydion not here?” he demanded. “He left afore any of
us.”
Rune threw his head back. Another
desolate howl split the night.
Bran’s coppery eyes narrowed. “Aye,
and where is the lass?”
“And that Hunter scum, Travis,”
Fionn growled. He spread his hands in front of him. “I havena felt Aislinn
since a few moments after we entered the portal. Join your magic to mine so we
might figure out what has happened.”
Bran nodded curtly. “Aye, Travis
must have lied to us, but to what purpose?”
“To save his own sorry hide, what
else?” Fionn snapped. “Or mayhap because he wanted Aislinn for himself.”
The air took on an iridescent
waviness. Gwydion stumbled out of the odd-looking place. Tangled in a welter of
blue robes, he clutched an intricately carved staff; blond hair swirled around
him. “Be gone, I say—Wait, what happened to—?” He took in the tableau as he
lurched unsteadily to his feet. Fionn almost heard wheels turning as Gwydion
tallied who was missing. The warrior magician pounded the end of his wooden
staff into broken asphalt. Lightning crackled from the end of the staff,
betraying his annoyance.
Something snapped in Fionn. Bright,
brittle anger lanced through him He launched himself at Gwydion and drove the
other Celtic god to the ground. “Bastard,” he screamed. “Ye were in charge of
Travis. What? Ye couldna control a simple human? Look what your slipshod seeds
have sown—” He raised a fist and drove it into the side of Gwydion’s face. It
was more satisfying than using magic. Closer and more personal.
Rune jumped into the fray and sank
his teeth into Gwydion’s leg. Bella cawed her disapproval. She tangled her
talons in the mage’s long hair and pulled as she pecked at him. Gwydion
bellowed in pain. The air thickened and developed an electric quality as he
reached for his magic.
Fionn had just cocked his arm back
to hit Gwydion again—before his fellow Celtic god shielded himself—when strong
arms closed about him and dragged him back. Magic surrounded him, forming a
barrier.
“That willna help,” Arawn, god of
the dead, revenge, and terror, said, voice stern with command.
“Aye, it willna get your lass
back,” Bran agreed. God of prophecy, the arts, and war, he often had a gentler
approach than the other Celtic deities.
Gwydion rolled to a sit, looking
dazed. He placed his hands on the wolf and raven, muttering in Gaelic. After a
time, both animals retreated. He touched the bloodied places on his thigh; the
flesh mended quickly. The master enchanter and god of illusion did not make any
move to get to his feet. He settled his blue gaze on Fionn, bowed his head
slightly, and said, “I am most sorry. Ye are right to be angry with me. The lad
came at me flanked by Lemurians. I never even knew how many. When I sent my
magic spiraling out to find Travis, he was gone beyond my reach.”
“Why didn’t ye tell me?” Fionn growled.
“How?” Gwydion countered, sounding
weary. “Communication isna possible in the portals.”
Fionn groaned inwardly. He knew
that. Where were his brains? Taking a wee
holiday, a sarcastic inner voice suggested. Fionn jerked against the magic
holding him. “You can let me go now,” he told Arawn and Bran. “I’ve returned to
my senses.”
He stepped forward and extended a
hand to Gwydion, who grasped it. “I am sorry I lost my temper.”
Something sparked from the mage’s
blue eyes—compassion laced with pity. Gwydion stood, and then brushed off his
robes; dust flew in all directions. He bent to retrieve his richly carved
staff. It glowed blue-white when he touched it and he arched a brow at Fionn.
“See, the staff knows battle lies ahead. The important thing is what we do now.
A good start would be not tearing one another to bits.”
Though Fionn agreed, he secretly
wondered if Gwydion might have tried harder were it not for the bad blood
between them over Tara, Aislinn’s dead mother. As a MacLochlainn, Aislinn was
bound to him, just like her mother had been. But Tara had loved Gwydion. To
avoid marrying Fionn, she’d given herself to a stranger and run away to
America, effectively severing an age-old bonding. Tara MacLochlainn had been an
Irish queen. Under laws of blood and dynasty, she should have belonged to him,
Fionn MacCumhaill, Celtic god of wisdom, knowledge, and divination…
Guess
she had other ideas about that. What a fankle. Mayhap one we are still paying
for. Fionn forced his mind to stay in the present. No point in dragging old
bones out and chewing them half to death. Rune’s large black and gray head
rammed his side. The wolf bared his fangs and growled.
“I understand.” Fionn settled his
blue gaze on Rune. “We have to find her. And we will.”
“Let us go over what we know.” Bran
stepped closer. Blond braids were tucked into tight-fitting battle leathers. He
had a dreamy look about him, but Fionn wasn’t fooled. The god of prophecy’s
mind was sharp as a whip.
“Good idea,” Arawn echoed. Dark
hair cascaded down his leather-clad shoulders. Looking as grim as the dead he
commanded, his face etched into harsh lines. Eyes so dark iris and pupil were
indistinguishable, flashed fire.
“Let us ask the goddess’ blessing,”
Fionn intoned. A weight like a cold stone settled into his guts. They couldn’t
afford to make any mistakes. Aislinn’s life depended on them getting this right
the first time. And my life right along
with it. Fionn thought about the next thousand years without the only woman
he’d ever truly loved; his soul shriveled. He cursed his immortality. Life
without Aislinn wouldn’t be worth very damned much.
Gwydion began a Celtic chant. The
other three joined in at proscribed intervals punctuated by Bella’s shrieks and
Rune’s barks, whines, and howls. Night yielded to a sickly orange sunrise as
they sang.
“I believe we are ready,” Gwydion
murmured.
“Aye, I feel a goddess presence.”
Arawn spoke reverently. “’Twill provide a balance point against all our male
energies.”
“Let us return to cataloging what
we know.” Fionn gestured impatiently. Though he understood the wisdom of
securing divine assistance, he wanted to get moving before something lethal
happened to Aislinn. A vision of her being tortured—long limbs splayed over a
rack—rose to taunt him. He muffled a cry, but his mind wouldn’t clear. Blood
ran down Aislinn’s face and blended with the red of her hair. Her golden eyes
were glazed with pain. He bit down hard on his lower lip, feeling powerless.
Adrenaline surged; it left a sour taste in the back of his throat.
“We are, indeed, ready.” Bran
nodded.
Fionn latched onto the sound of
Bran’s voice and let it pull him out of the black pit his mind had become.
Bran inhaled sharply. “The Hunter,
Travis, sought us out. I dinna try verra hard to test his words, but there was
enough truth in his tale to satisfy me.”
“And I, as well,” Gwydion agreed.
“So mayhap his small group of humans truly was set upon by Lemurians—”
Fionn snapped his fingers. “I have
it. That putrid poor-excuse-for-a-human cut a deal to save himself. Mayhap part
of it was designed to wrest Aislinn away from me since he was in love with her,
too. She told me—” The words curdled in his throat. He couldn’t bear the
thought of Aislinn fucking anyone else. She’d been with Travis once. If she was telling me the truth… Mayhap she
was with him many times and softened the telling to spare me.
Arawn cocked his head to one side.
“Even though ye stopped midstream, what ye did say made sense. Travis agreed to
serve as bait in exchange for his life—and mayhap the life of his bond animal
as well. If he had his eye on the lass afore all this, well, the pot would have
been all the sweeter.”
Fionn waved him to silence. “Ye say
ye felt Lemurians?” He looked at Gwydion who nodded. “Well, then, she must be
in Taltos. Where else would they take her?”
Relieved to have a destination and
something to do, Fionn pulled magic, intent on leaving immediately.
“Hold.” Gwydion put up a hand.
“What?” Annoyed, muscles strung
tighter than a bow, Fionn locked gazes with him. Blue eyes sparred with a
nearly identical set.
“Ye canna go off half-cocked. There
are not enough of us.” Gwydion hesitated. “As the god of wisdom, knowledge and
divination, Fionn MacCumhaill, I would think ye would know that without me
having to tell you.”
Frustration fueled rage. Fionn
opened his mouth to tell Gwydion what he really thought of him. “Why you
sanctimonious—”
“Never mind that,” Bran spoke up.
“We need a strategy.”
“And mayhap more of us,” Arawn
added.
“Aye, and what about Dewi?”
Ignoring Fionn’s bitten off words and the challenge beneath them, Gwydion
furled his brows.
Fionn blew out an impatient breath;
his anger receded. The others were right. Dewi, the blood-red Celtic dragon
god, was linked to the MacLochlainn women. She’d also spent centuries in the
tunnels beneath Taltos, spying on the Lemurians. Yes, they definitely needed
the dragon.
“All right,” he ground out through
gritted teeth. “I get it. I agree we need Dewi, and probably more of us as
well.”
“We
must return to Marta’s house. As soon as we can.”
The wolf’s voice startled Fionn. He
turned to look at Rune. The wolf padded closer. “I have been to Taltos both ways,” the wolf reminded him, growling
low. “It is much easier and more direct
if we enter through the portal in Marta’s basement. That way we maintain the
element of surprise. The Mount Shasta gateway is akin to going to their front
door and ringing a bell.”
Fionn kicked himself. Even the wolf is thinking more clearly than
I am.
Rune had been bonded to Marta and
knew her secrets. She’d been onto the Lemurians, delving deep into the extent
of their lies. Before they’d killed her, she’d managed to figure out that the
war against the dark gods was a sham. The Lemurians were actually in league
with the dark. They were the ones who’d masterminded cracking the veils between
the worlds to allow the dark ones access to Earth. An ancient race, the
Lemurians understood they were dying. They needed an infusion of magic so
they’d cut a deal. Access to Earth in exchange for—
Fionn filled his lungs with air,
blew out a breath, and did it again. He had to get hold of himself or he’d be
less than useless hunting for Aislinn. That
will not happen. Focus, goddamn it. Pull it together. Fionn pushed the ache
in his heart aside and buried it deep. He couldn’t afford emotion. Not now. Or
mental forays into Lemurian treachery. When he’d met Aislinn, she’d been a foot
soldier in the Lemurian army, branded so she couldn’t use her magic against
them.
Voices flowed over him. When words
fell into coherent patterns again, he heard Gwydion ticking off a plan on his
fingers. Apparently one the others had formed without any input from him. How dare they? Anger flared hot and
bright. Fionn welcomed it like a drowning man might grab a spar. He needed the
energy to find the woman he loved.
“…agreed, Bran will hunt for Dewi.
Arawn will return to the Old Country to muster as many of us as he can find.
Fionn and I and the bond animals will return to Marta’s house. We will sneak
into the tunnel a time or two to see what we can discover, but we will not move
to rescue the lass until you arrive with reinforcements.”
Gwydion nailed Fionn with his blue
gaze. “Aye and ye have returned to us. Did ye hear—?”
“Aye.” Fionn cut off Gwydion’s next
words. “Let’s get moving.”
The master enchanter inclined his
head. “As ye will.”
Fionn looked at him and wondered if
it were mere coincidence Gwydion would end up babysitting him. He decided to
test those waters. “I really would be fine with just the bond animals, feel
free to join either Arawn or—”
“Pah!” Gwydion interrupted. “Not on
your life. I know you, Fionn MacCumhaill. If ye returned alone, ye would turn
Taltos upside down to find your lady love. Then the rest of us would have two
to search for.”
Arawn moved forward and laid a hand
on Fionn’s arm. “Remember,” he said, “the Lemurians came from Mu. They may
still have a way to retreat there. If they do so, we will not be able to
follow. Or they might strike a deal with the five remaining dark gods and go to
one of their worlds if they feel threatened. We can travel to the border
worlds, but it isna pleasant. Nay, if they have truly taken Aislinn to
Taltos—and we do not know this as a fact—it is imperative they remain there.
So, doona do anything foolish.”
“I understand.” Fionn clamped his
jaws shut. Thoroughly chastised, he felt like a child again. He hadn’t
considered either of the alternatives Arawn had just outlined. Apparently
they’d come up in the part of the conversation he’d missed while wrestling with
himself.
“I know ye do.” Arawn favored him
with a rare smile. “Bran and I are leaving.” The words had scarcely left his
mouth when the air around both mages took on a numinous quality.
Fionn locked gazes with Gwydion.
“Are ye ready?”
“I am.” Rune took up his traveling
position next to Fionn’s side.
“As am I.” Bella settled on his
shoulder in a flutter of wings.
Fionn stared at the bond animals.
They’d returned to audible speech; that must mean they’d gotten their anger
under control. If they can do it, so can
I.
Gwydion nodded slowly. “I do not
believe there is aught else to be done right now, so the answer to your
question would be aye.”
The air thickened as Gwydion drew
magic to open a portal. Blessedly numb inside, Fionn added his own to the mix,
buried a hand in Rune’s neck ruff, and stepped through.
* *
* *
After they returned to Marta’s
house in the ruins of Ely, Nevada, Fionn spent the next hour rattling through
it looking for clues that might help them. He started in the bedroom, but
Aislinn’s scent, a mix of honey and musk, clung to everything and nearly undid
him. When he caught himself pulling her pillow to his nose, he threw it against
the wall and stormed out of the room they’d shared.
The rest of the house hadn’t
yielded anything. Fionn didn’t bother going up to the attic. Marta’s parents were there, trapped in a
state of suspended animation by a strong spell. Best leave them to their rest
since they held the gates between the worlds open.
Because there wasn’t anything else
to do, he settled at the kitchen table with a bottle of mead and nearly emptied
it. The anesthetic effect he hoped for hadn’t happened, though. At least not
yet.
“Would ye like to talk about it?”
Gwydion’s melodic voice interrupted Fionn’s bleak thoughts. He swiveled his
head to look at the mage standing in the doorway, flanked by Rune and Bella.
Dirt clung to his robes; Fionn wondered where he’d been. Gwydion had told him
where he was going, but Fionn hadn’t paid much attention.
Hmph.
Even the animals deserted me.
I’d
have deserted me, too, a different inner voice inserted dryly. The way I banged around in here wanting to
kill something—anything—if only it would bring Aislinn back to me. Fionn
understood at a level beyond reckoning, if he ever laid eyes on Travis again,
the Hunter would be dead before he saw what hit him.
He tipped the bottle in Gwydion’s
direction. “Not sure what there is to say,” Fionn mumbled.
“Och and there is much to be said
between us.” Gwydion clomped to the table, hooked a chair out with one of his
perpetually bare feet, and sat heavily. “For example, we havena ever truly
talked about Tara—”
“With good reason,” Fionn snapped.
Gwydion shook his head. “Ye doona
trust me. I sense your hesitation. We must clear the air.”
Fionn opened his mouth, but Gwydion
shook his head. “Hear me out. That empty place inside you? The one ye’re trying
your damnedest to ignore—or drown with spirits? ’Tis akin to how I felt when
Tara fled Ireland to escape having to choose you or me. She wanted me, but the
ancient bond demanded she wed you.”
“I know all that. I still doona
see—”
“For the love of the goddess, would
ye stop interrupting?” Gwydion’s blue eyes flashed dangerously. Fionn subsided
against the back of his seat. “’Twas no skin off your ass when the lass left
Ireland, yet I mourned her loss every day. It’s been years, but I miss her
still. ’Twas a gift to see her once again in the tunnels under Slototh’s
lair—even if she was already dead.”
Something in Gwydion’s words
penetrated the desolation surrounding Fionn. He’d known Gwydion cared for Tara,
but he’d never appreciated the extent of his loss. Truth hit home and shame
washed over him. When Gwydion waved it in front of his nose—no, make that
shoved his nose right in it—Fionn recognized kindred pain. He drew his brows
together. “Why were ye not angrier at me? We had words, but it seemed we made
things up soon enough.”
“Nay, I simply buried my
resentment. What would have been the point in holding a grudge? I tracked Tara
to America. By then she’d wed another and made it painfully clear she wanted
nothing to do with you or me—or the dragon—ever again.”
“At least part of that was my
fault. I could have—”
A bitter laugh bubbled past the
close-cropped red-blond beard on Gwydion’s face. “Aye, ye see it now. Ye dinna
see it then. All ye could see then was that she was the MacLochlainn. Your MacLochlainn.”
Fionn looked at his hands. What
Gwydion said was true. He hadn’t loved Tara and he’d known she didn’t even like
him, yet he’d insisted on pressing forward with marriage. Of course, there was
the niggling problem he already had a wife, so he’d been finagling a divorce.
That had been when Tara, finally eighteen, took matters into her own hands and
left Ireland.
“I really am sorry. I should have
been more considerate—of both of you.”
“Och, aye.” A thread of magic
forced his gaze to meet the master enchanter’s. “I forgive you.”
A corner of Fionn’s mouth turned
downward. “The question is whether I can forgive myself.”
Gwydion held out a hand for the
mead. Fionn passed it to him. Eyeing what was left of the bottle’s contents,
Gwydion said, “There never was a drink that offered enough oblivion to purge
Tara from my thoughts.”
“Wasna working for me, either.”
Fionn snorted. “I should know this. Ye told me, but I wasna paying attention.
Where did you and the animals go?”
“We did the same outside as ye were
supposed to be doing within. That would be hunting for clues Travis may have
dropped while he was here.”
Fionn waited. Instead of talking,
Gwydion tipped the bottle and drank until it was empty. “Did ye find aught?” he
asked after it appeared the other mage wasn’t going to say anything else.
Gwydion’s forehead creased. He
shoved blond hair over his shoulders, pulled a leather thong out of his robes,
and bound it out of the way. “It was odd,” he murmured. “At first we all,” he
gestured toward Rune and Bella, “thought we sensed Old Ones—ah, I meant to say
Lemurians. When I looked more closely, though, whatever had been there was
gone.” He shrugged.
Something tugged at Fionn’s
internal alarm system. Attuned to danger, it rarely failed him. “Do ye suppose
they were after Marta’s parents?”
For a moment Gwydion looked
confused. His features smoothed. “Och, ye mean the Lemurian-human hybrids
ensorcelled in yon chamber.” He waved a hand over one shoulder. “Mayhap. There
is little else here to draw the Old Ones.”
Fionn thought about the genetic
manipulation that must have gone into hybridizing the couple in the attic and
shuddered. Did the Old Ones want Marta’s parents’ blood so they could do the
same thing to Aislinn?
“At least Aislinn is likely still
on this side of the veil,” Gwydion muttered.
Fionn looked sharply at Gwydion,
realizing the other mage must have read his thoughts. He dragged a hand down
his face. “Aye, we all hope that.”
Something sharp closed over his
calf. Rune had bitten him. “It is time. We should go into Taltos. I must see
for myself whether my bond mate still lives.”
“Can ye feel her?” Fionn asked.
The wolf’s amber eyes gleamed in
the dim kitchen. “No, but if she is in Taltos, I will know it once we open the
gateway and I cross over.”
“They might have her shielded in
some way—” Fionn cautioned.
“Enough words.” Rune nipped Fionn
again. As if to support her fellow bond animal, Bella landed on Fionn’s
shoulder and dug her talons deep.
A wry smile split Gwydion’s face.
“It would appear the animals have spoken.”
“We did tell the others we’d do a
reconnaissance.” Fionn stood.
Gwydion followed suit. Both men
went to the corner of the kitchen with the hidden trap door. Fionn kicked the
rug aside and tugged the door upward. When he looked back he saw Gwydion’s
staff glowing with a blue-white light.
Fionn worked his way down the
ladder, helping the wolf. It was awkward. When Aislinn had gone into Taltos
without him, she’d used magic to transport the wolf to the gateway. The thought
of her seared his soul. His throat felt thick. A pulse pounded behind one eye,
promising a mother of a headache if he didn’t focus magic to soothe the
inflamed blood vessels.
At the bottom of the ladder, he
strode to the section of wall holding the gateway and began the incantation
from Marta’s journals. Gwydion’s energy vibrated next to him. Stones scraped
against one another as the gateway swung open. Fionn bent to give Rune
instructions, but the wolf bounded through the opening and disappeared into the
dark.
“Damn it.” Fionn swore softly. “Ye
stay with me,” he said to Bella.
“I am not going past this doorway,”
the bird informed him. She fluttered from his shoulder to a chair and perched
on it. “Fewer of us, less chance of discovery. Safer for Aislinn.”
Fionn couldn’t help but agree with
her. His bird had warmed to Aislinn much to his relief, since she’d taken a
perverse delight in making all the other women in his life—including
Tara—miserable.
“Mind
speech,” Gwydion said sharply. “And
precious little of that.”
“I
suppose we follow the wolf. He gave us little choice.”
“After
you.”
Fionn stepped through into a dark
tunnel. Careful to mute his magic in case the Lemurians had posted guards
nearby, he turned left and trailed after Rune. Guts tight, barely breathing, he
moved beneath Taltos, the city built by Lemurians deep inside Mount Shasta.
Desperation thrummed through him.
I
have to find her. Failure is not an option.
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