Page 84 of Son of the Morning


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“Well, you are a complication,” Parrish admitted. “But I don’t think you’ve spent it all, or you wouldn’t be dressed like a bag lady. Maybe you don’t have it at all.”

“But I do.” Niall reached into his shirt, the movement prompting both Conrad and Paglione to lift their weapons. Niall’s eyebrows rose, and he smiled as if they were no more than presumptuous children. “Easy, lads.” He drew out his hand and slowly opened it, palm upward. A cr

ude golden coin lay there, gleaming bright in the sun.

Parrish smiled, too, his handsome face creasing in a benevolent expression that made Grace want to vomit. “Where is the rest of it?”

“It isna here. I moved it long ago, against such a day as this.”

“A pity.” Parrish shrugged. “You’ll tell me; Conrad will see to that. But you won’t like his methods, and unfortunately you look like the stubborn type.” He jerked his head at Conrad, and Paglione anticipated the order, moving toward Niall.

Something wild flared in Grace’s eyes. She had watched two men she loved die; she couldn’t watch another. A low, animal sound tore out of her throat and she jerked to the left so that she half faced Parrish, and drove the palm of her hand hard against his nose. Cartilage crunched, and blood poured out of both his nostrils. He staggered back, his grip on her loosening, and Grace tore free. Paglione whirled on her, the pistol rising in his hand.

Calmly Conrad tightened the slack in the trigger and fired. Grace screamed, surging forward, only to be jerked back as Parrish recovered and grabbed her again.

Paglione hung there in surprise, not even blinking. The small round hole in his forehead was neat, bluish around the edges. He dropped bonelessly to the ground and didn’t even twitch.

Parrish gaped in disbelief. “Are you fucking crazy?” he screamed at Conrad, his voice high and cracking.

“No,” Conrad said, and turned to face Niall. Slowly his simian head bowed. “I serve you, Guardian,” he said.

Niall acknowledged him with a single nod.

Parrish pulled out a pistol and pressed the barrel to Grace’s temple. He began backing away, stumbling over the raw dirt and tumbled rocks, dragging her with him. “I’ll kill her,” he said viciously, the words thickened by the blood streaming from his broken nose. “I’ll fucking kill her.”

Niall pulled the tip of the claymore out of the ground and rested the blade on his shoulder, his hand draped negligently over the hilt. “No,” he said. “You will not.” He looked at Grace and smiled, a smile so sweet and strangely radiant that her heart stopped in her chest. “Grace… move.”

She dropped immediately, lifting her feet and simply falling out of Parrish’s grip. He grabbed for her and stumbled off balance, going down on one knee in the dirt. Grace rolled, throwing herself away from him, and he fired the pistol. The bullet burned along the top of her right thigh and she cried out, grabbing her leg.

Parrish scrambled to his feet, aiming the pistol first at Niall, then at Conrad, daring either of them to make a move. Niall lifted the claymore off his shoulder, the smile on his face changing to something deadly. “Are you sorely wounded, love?” he asked in the most gentle voice Grace had ever heard him use.

“No,” she said, though her voice wobbled and her thigh burned like hell. Blood seeped through her fingers, and she pressed her hand hard against the wound.

Parrish fired at him, the shot echoing with a flat metallic sound across the sea. Niall began walking toward him. Parrish fired again, and still Niall advanced.

“Ye canna kill me, servant of evil,” Niall whispered.

“God damn you, you bastard,” Parrish screamed, and fired again. Niall was so close Parrish couldn’t have missed, yet his hand must have been shaking, the shots going wide.

Niall’s gaze was distant, fixed on something both beyond Parrish and yet inside himself. He turned his head and smiled at Grace, that piercingly sweet smile again. “My own Grace,” he said. “I found heaven wi’ ye, lass, but that time is gone.” Then he lifted the heavy claymore and rested the tip against Parrish’s chest. Grace saw Parrish’s handsome face go slack with shock, and a bolt of lightning split the cloudless sky. The blinding light enveloped Niall, arcing along the long blade of the claymore, and shot straight through Parrish. He screamed, lifting on his tiptoes as if hauled there by an invisible hand. He trembled and shook, and the lightning arced again. The front of Parrish’s trousers went wet and dark, and steam rose from his crotch. His eyes rolled back in his head, until only the whites showed. His lips split, and his hands began to scorch. His blond hair was singed, turned to gray ash. He tried to scream, his mouth open, but no sound emerged over the roar and blast of light. The skin on his face shriveled, pulling away from his bones. Through it all Niall stood motionless, wrapped in brightness. Then with a thunderous boom it was over and Parrish collapsed like a sack of rags, lying motionless on the scorched earth.

“Niall!” Grace struggled to her feet, ignoring the pain in her leg. “Niall!”

He strode rapidly across the ruins to her, catching her as her leg went out from under her and she started to fall. Gently he lowered her to the cool ground, lifting her skirts to bare her thigh and expose the wound.

The man called Conrad went down on one knee beside Parrish’s smoking, stinking corpse. What he saw must have satisfied him, for he gave a brief nod of his apelike head, then rose and came to Niall’s side.

Deftly Niall tore a strip of fabric off the hem of Grace’s undergown and wrapped it around the long gouge on the top of her thigh. He glanced briefly up at Conrad. “You are of the Society?”

“Yes. We have known of the Foundation’s existence for many years. Someone from the Society has always belonged to the Foundation, to monitor its activities. Only twice has it come close to finding the Power; in 1945, and today.”

“You were going to kill me,” Grace said, her teeth chattering with shock. She couldn’t quite take in that this man with the cold, dead eyes was somehow on Niall’s side, at Niall’s service.

“If necessary,” Conrad said unemotionally. “My concern was the papers, to retrieve them at all cost and prevent Parrish from acquiring them. Then I began to think that… perhaps… you were meant to have them. You are one of only a few people in the world who could understand what they were, who would know to go to the Guardian and bring him here.”

“Be verra happy ye didna harm her,” Niall said softly as he glanced up from tying the cloth around Grace’s thigh. His eyes were as cold as Conrad’s.

“We do what we must,” Conrad replied. “As do you.”

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