Chapter Seventeen
Anna Larsdotter Ohm was sitting on the porch of her cabin waiting when Quinn drove up.
She had sharp, merciless gray eyes set in a wind-wrinkled face that was tanned to the color of strong tea. Her bone-white hair was done up in an elaborate braid. Anna was a wild-crafter and healer who had lived her entire life on the edge of the Opari. She harvested mushrooms and grew a variety of herbs and obscure plants which she distributed for herbalists and restaurants as far away as San Francisco. Her log cabin--a combination workshop and greenhouse--was tucked into the base of a massive lightning-struck cedar. Her place was a quarter mile from the workshop of old Finn, where Quinn had spent his apprenticeship.
Anna was the one who led him at seventeen into the Murk and left him without explanation with the
V
Ãsdómur
.
Quinn gave her a surly nod. He still hadn't forgiven her trickery, but the little wolf-girl needed a healer and Anna was the best.
"Hello Lachlan," she said, ignoring his less than enthusiastic greeting. "I've been expecting you. What on earth are you doing with a Wolf-kin? Come here, girl."
The girl looked at Quinn and after he nodded, she walked over, stopped, and looked up wide-eyed at the hedge witch.
She knelt and held the girl's chin and gazed into her eyes.
"She's change-impaired. What happened to her?"
"I don't know. A shifter woman showed up at my house and shoved her into my arms. She managed to
shift
back okay, but Edie down in Oldtown told me to bring her to you. By the way, a Hag showed up looking for her." Quinn closed his mouth and watched for her reaction.
"Wait here." She held a hand to the little girl and the pair disappeared inside the cabin.
Quinn stood and let the soothing sounds of the meadow that stretched in front of Anna's cabin seep into him. He breathed deep. Green smells, like every spring and summer and fall, all rolled into one. Faint and subtle sweet pansies and petunias planted in the sunny corner of Anna's porch to the overpowering heady smell of mint and lavender in the huge herb garden on the south side to the toasted smell of meadow grass as it yellowed in the July heat. Fat gray squirrels were flickering speedy shadows as they ran their mysterious errands through the old-growth cedar and maple trees.
He could FEEL the colossal life-force of the Opari Forest--millions of tiny rustlings and whisperings -- feel the vibrations of their tiny lives down deep in the root of his brain--resonating a kind of welcome? The yammering whispering in his head now had a note of childlike eagerness as The Goddess called Opari welcomed him.
"At last. You've come back at last." A thousand million voices sang.
The dragon's whip symbiote in his arm rolled and twisted as it basked under Her regard. Quinn was no different. He felt like the spotted pony at a kid's birthday party.
The
Other,
however, sat back in the corner of his mind and regarded Her presence with profound suspicion.
The whispering in Quinn's head grew louder. Again, he tried to follow the whispered conversation that tickled the edge of his perception. A lassitude overtook him--peaceful and oh so soothing.
The Other shouted a warning.
The glyphs flared and there was a sudden quiet.
Wow.
Fifteen minutes later Anna came out.
"You say a Hag visited you?"
Quinn nodded. He took a seat on the tailgate of his pickup and waited for her reaction.
"Damnable Hags, filthy greed-cursed women. So Althea was correct that one of them was roaming about. The Covens won't be happy."
"Mistress Anna, why was that witch after that little girl? What's going on? What the hell are the covens up to?"
Her cold eyes raked over him. She ignored his question.
"Tell me everything."
Quinn dutifully filled her in on the night's events.
"Mother of All," she barked. "What a mess. Why did you take the pup, you idiot?"
"I had no choice."
"There is always a choice. "
"There wasn't for me."
"You're a fool, but no matter, you cast the dice. I can sense the symbiotes that are infecting you. Show me."
Quinn pulled up his shirt, showed her the glyphs that lay on his back. Next, he rolled up his sleeve, showed her the satiny silver ribbon that started at his wrist, wound around his forearm, and disappeared up under the sleeve of his shirt.
She touched it and jerked her hand away.
"Evil thing," her face twisted in a moue of disgust. "Damn VÃsdómur. Mother of All, why they favor those disgusting sentient weapons, I'll never know. Can you even control it? They live on life force. It will kill you eventually, you fool."
Quinn looked at her, irritated at her willful stupidity. "It's not like I had a choice in the matter. Listen up witch, you left me with them. What did you expect? Do you even know what they did to me?"
"No, and I don't want to know, boy. Your father said it was necessary, so I did what I was told."
"The old following orders excuse," he said. "That makes it right."
"It was your duty. Quit whining boy, there are far worse things than spending a summer with some trolls."
"You ignorant woman. It was far longer than a summer. Years longer--time flows differently in the Murk. And listen to me, Witch, there are few worse things. Would you like to see what you wrought?" Quinn stepped close to her, grabbed her hand, and let her sense the
Other
that lurked inside.
She quickly stepped back, her eyes widening. Her right hand reached up to hold the medicine pouch around her neck. "Mother of All save us," she whispered. "You are an abomination."
"Why, yes, I am, Witch. You and the old man created a monster. Fix my little shifter friend or you will get to meet what you wrought in person. I'll be back tomorrow to pick her up."
Chapter Eighteen
Quinn cursed his out-of-control temper as drove down to the end of the meadow to Gus' workshop. After taking some time to calm himself, he entered without knocking.
"Honey, I'm home."
"I wish I could understand why you think that is so humorous. It wasn't the first time you said it--it's less now--a lot less." Saria Glass spoke tartly from her workbench, where she was marking out dovetails for a drawer.
"Not my fault you have no sense of humor, Sar. It's too bad I'm not up here any more often. I could coach you on the finer points of humor so you wouldn't embarrass yourself by saying stuff like that."
He looked around wistfully at the stacked white oak lumber drying alongside one wall. He'd always loved this cozy place. The workshop had been old Finn's, now it belonged to Sari and Gus. The air was rich with the scent of freshly sawed oak and aromatic cedar. He'd like nothing more than to spend the rest of his days working here.
Saria was Gus' partner in their furniture business. She was an Asrai-halfling. Her mother had an adventure with a tall, handsome wood elf out of the Opari before she met and settled down with a human. Tall and willowy with yellow eyes one size too big for her face, she could have named her price as a model for Vogue. Since she was not out among mundanes and didn't need to cover her pointed ears, she wore her blue-black hair in a ponytail to keep her hair out of her eyes with their vertically slitted cat pupils. Her ears twitched her irritation. Quinn figured he must have startled her as she made a slight miscut on the dovetails in a wide desk drawer she was working on.
Sari's hobby was figuring out how to be a mundane human. Because of her elvish half, she was cool-blooded and ultra-rational--emotions of humans confused and fascinated her at the same time. That was one reason why she and her cousins were addicted to movies and television.
He set the bag of chocolate on her work bench.
She looked at the bag. Her nose twitched and she smiled slightly. Saria seldom smiled, so it was worth the trip to surprise her.
"Where's Hopeless," Quinn said. "He's making you do all the work, as usual."
"Stop calling him Hopeless," she snapped tartly. "I've asked you not to do that a hundred times. He's still in Seattle working on landing one of Sven's friend's remodeling jobs. If you quit being a jerk, there might be some work for you as well."
"That's good news. I'm going fishing for two weeks, but I've got nothing going after that." Quinn heard a vehicle drive up. He looked out the window. A Hummer. It was Gus' resident millionaire client, Sven. The desk Sari was working on must be for him.
"It's your admirer," he said.
Sari frowned.
"S'up Dude. Hello Sari," said the big man as he slouched into the shop.
"Hey, Sven. Nice to see you," Quinn said.
"Sven." Sari nodded to him and went back to her dovetails.
According to Gus, Sven had become his most important client in their custom furniture business. They were currently building furniture for his fishing cabin/mansion up on the bench.
Sven Anderson, although he was six foot eight and 280 pounds and looked like he could start at a tight end for the Seahawks, was an ultra-smart tech nerd. After he'd graduated from Cal Tech at 17, he sat himself down in his mom's basement and started writing compression algorithms that were effective enough that Jeff Bezos paid him a boatload of money to license them.
He had a serious lust-crush on Sari and according to Gus was constantly dropping in "to check" on things. So much so that he knew more about things in Emory than was good for him, especially given the witches' paranoia. According to Gus, he had practically stroked out one night when Sari's cousins, twelve of Opari's forest sprites, showed up for one of their Friday night
Veronica Mars
TV binges. Sari had to call Anna to bespell him to keep both his sanity and the Opari's secrets.
"Hey Sven," Quinn said. "I thought you were at a big meeting in Denver or some such."
"It was Boulder, dude. It was a gaming programming conference. I thought I would drop in to see how Saria was coming on my desk. I thought you would be up in Montana by now."
"So did I," Quinn said sourly. "How's the game project coming?"
Sven's newest gig was the design of a video game. Quinn knew nothing about video games, a fact that was a source of amazement for Sven, who maintained that he was probably the only male his age in the world who hadn't played at least one video game.
"Real well. Check out my latest iteration of my warrior princess." He reached into his briefcase and pushed a picture of a voluptuous armor-clad woman across the desk to Quinn.
The warrior woman looked remarkably like Sari.