The Witching Hour (The Grim Reaper Saga (Urban Fantasy Romance))

The Witching Hour (The Grim Reaper Saga (Urban Fantasy Romance)) Read Online Free PDF

Book: The Witching Hour (The Grim Reaper Saga (Urban Fantasy Romance)) Read Online Free PDF
Author: Marie Hall
not be enough to assuage her thirst for revenge.
    He went now to plead his case for the witch. She was still far from safe, he’d only granted her a temporary asylum. The Queen could chose at any moment to send another reaper out there to finish what he hadn’t. Whether the beating stripped all the flesh from his body or not, he meant to see her safe.
     
    ***
     
    “Well now, this has been a most interesting turn of events. Wouldn’t you agree, Chaos?” Dagda, king of the faes, said.
    The Morrigan narrowed her eyes at him. “I despise that name.” The air quickened with the sharp nip of frost.
    Oh yes, his queen was in a fury. He ignored her typical protest of his pet name for her with casual cool.
    “You do revel at my misfortune, ugly bastard.” Though her words were harsh, they were laced with a thread of humor.
    Dagda chuckled. The thunderous boom of his voice filled their antechamber with resonance; it echoed off the high ceiling, causing gold dust to shower down upon them.
    Despite the fact the fae god seemed merry, his voice held the power to kill if he so choose. He’d done so on rare occasions. Though he found he didn’t have the same taste for blood as his bonny Chaos.
    He covered her ivory hand with his dark one and proceeded to run his thumb along her knuckle. “Chaos, you old hag, calling your king a bastard. I take offense.”
    A swift smile played on her blood red lips. Then the humor was gone, replaced by an immediate, unnatural calm.
    “Frenzy, bring me my cat o’ nine tails and sharpen the blades on the ends until they gleam.” The Morrigan’s voice was a calm monotone.
    He, however, was not deceived. Dagda had seen her like this many times; this mood never boded well. She was as the eye of a hurricane, merely an illusion of quiet, peaceful tranquility.
    The stealthy figure of a reaper emerged from the shadows of the wall. Frenzy dipped low to his queen, his long crimson hair trailing along the stone floor like a sea of blood. Straightening, his silver eyes flashed with a hint of madness.
    Normally, Dagda would not interfere in The Morrigan’s punishment of Death. But he must find a way to temper her; far reaching works had been set into motion and she was not to do anything with lasting consequences. An oracle to the Chosen Ones had warned him long ago this day would come.
    Though it grieved him to do so, he must now assume the role of order to his queen’s chaos.
    “Chaos,” he said.
    Her eyes flashed with annoyance, their normal icy blue changing to the ruby red of her crows, Badb and Nemain.
    Dagda drummed his fingers on his armrest. “What do you propose to do with Cian?”
    Her nostrils flared, andthe fire and shadow of her hair swirled as she cocked her head. “Ten thousand lashes for his disobedience.”
    Dagda stroked his smooth chin. “And the mortal? What of her?”
    “I’ll send Frenzy. She will not escape her fate this time.”
    “I see.”
    She lifted a curved black brow, a knowing glint in her eyes. “Dagda,” she cautioned, “do not interfere.”
    His lip curved at the corner, but he didn’t say another word.
     

 
    Cian entered the castle gates and immediately he sensed all was not well, it was like a rush of ice down his spine. He scanned the dimly lit corridor noting how the inhabitants shuffled here and there, never glancing up, and unnaturally quiet. An expectant hush filled the stone keep.
    He narrowed his eyes, studying the retreating figure of a maid. She didn’t acknowledge him, but he knew she felt his gaze like the press of heated tongs. It was in the way she held her spine stiff, how she walked with an awkward gait. Her mahogany braid, reaching well below her knees, barely moved with her steps. But no matter what, she didn’t turn.
    The only eyes that stared back at him came from the skeletal heads affixed to the walls as candelabras. Golden flames flickering inside empty mouths cast strange and undulating shadows down the hall.
     The Morrigan,
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