Page 113 of The Prince of Souls

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“Boring stuff, that.”

“It might have been less dull if we’d known it was written by the man who’s been shoeing Seannair’s horses for the past three hundred years.”

“I wonder if he’s the same lad who made your dragon charm?”

She shrugged. “King Sìle didn’t tell me his name, but I wonder.” She paused, then looked at him. “I’ve been thinking about something else.”

He only waited. That he didn’t make some insulting comment about that having been a challenge for her…well, she knew she should have been accustomed to that by then, but that didn’t make it any less lovely.

“I was thinking about that fire you made from your grandmother’s spell in your garden,” she said, finally.

“With the dragons, in honor of you.”

“Aye, that one.” She hesitated, then cast caution to the wind. If he was going to think her a fool, he could. “Did you hear it? The song it sang?”

“Ah,” he began slowly, “nay. What was this song the fire was singing?”

“This will sound daft—”

“Many important things do,” he said. “Go on.”

“I thought I was dreaming that song,” she said. “I heard it in your mother’s house.”

“The mind boggles,” he said with a shiver, “truly it does.”

“I finally figured out where I’d heard it before.” She took a deep breath. “It was a lullaby my father used to sing.”

He closed his eyes briefly. “When you say your father, do you mean your step-father?”

“Nay, my father. I’m almost sure of it.”

He looked at her in surprise. “Did your parents have any magic?”

She looked at him helplessly. “My mother? Nay. My father—or step-father, rather—I don’t remember him ever using any. What my true father had, I have no idea.”

He paced with her for several minutes in silence. “Prince Coimheadair said your sire was the last of his particular line,” he said thoughtfully, “so that leaves us without anyone to ask. But one wonders what went on in his homeland, aye?”

She nodded hesitantly, then decided there was no point in not speaking her mind. “I was wondering where you might hide a spell, if you had a spell to hide.”

“Besides under sofa cushions and thrones?” he asked with a faint smile. “I suppose I tend to tuck things in books, but as we can see with those spells from Ionad-teàrmainn, that goes awry more often than not.”

“But the spells you hid, the ones that work on their own. Why did you choose where to put them?”

He shrugged. “Because hiding things in plain sight, or as near to it as I can manage, tends to leave things undisturbed. Evil little mages are always on the hunt for things lurking in the shadows, not ordinary items sitting out in the open.”

“Then what do you think about that book we found that had just the cover left? Do you think Slaidear is the one who took whatever was inside?”

“Spells of revealing don’t lie,” he said slowly. “Whatever it contained—and I’m guessing it was spells—was definitely removed and more than likely by him. Why?”

“Do you think he’s also the one who cut the pages from my book of faery tales?”

He nodded. “Same answer there. And just so you know, my nose is starting to twitch with this direction you’re taking. What are you getting at?”

She was rather glad he had put his hand over hers on his arm to keep her somewhat captive. If she’d been able to, she suspected she might have run right out the door and continued on until she could breathe properly again.

“We can sit, if you’d rather,” he offered.

She shook her head. “That won’t make it any easier.” She took a deep breath, then stopped and looked at him. “If he is the one who took that story, it made me wonder why he would have wanted it.”