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Hunted

Kevin Hearne




  Praise for

  The Iron Druid Chronicles

  by Kevin Hearne

  “Kevin Hearne’s Iron Druid Chronicles has grown from strength to strength since its publication in 2011. Kevin’s writing style along with his characterization has made him the darling of urban fantasy readers all over the world.”

  —Fantasy Book Critic

  “They are clever, fast paced and a good escape.”

  —JASON WEISBERGER, Boing Boing

  “It may be possible that Hearne and Atticus could be the logical heir to Butcher and Dresden.”

  —SFFWorld

  “Celtic mythology and an ancient Druid with modern attitude mix it up in the Arizona desert in this witty new fantasy series.”

  —KELLY MEDING, author of Three Days to Dead

  “Kevin Hearne breathes new life into old myths, creating a world both eerily familiar and startlingly original.”

  —NICOLE PEELER, author of Tempest Rising

  Hounded

  “This is the best urban/paranormal fantasy I have read in years. Fast paced, funny, clever, and suitably mythic, this is urban fantasy for those worn-out of werewolves and vampires. Fans of Jim Butcher, Harry Connolly, Greg van Eekhout, Ben Aaronovitch, or Neil Gaiman’s American Gods will take great pleasure in Kevin Hearne’s Hounded. Highly recommended.”

  —JOHN OTTINGER III, editor of Grasping for the Wind

  “Filled with snarky descriptions … comradely characters, thumping action and a plot as stylized as a Renaissance Faire, this tale is outrageously fun.”

  —The Plain Dealer

  “A superb urban fantasy debut … with plenty of quips and zap-pow-bang fighting.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

  “Fans of fantasy and urban fantasy will eat this one up.… Hounded is a series debut that is absolutely not to be missed!”

  —My Bookish Ways

  “For both the urban fantasy and non–urban fantasy geekoids, Hounded is a tremendous read. Fun, well-written, and entertaining.”

  —Blood of the Muse

  “A page-turning and often laugh-out-loud-funny caper through a mix of the modern and the mythic.”

  —ARI MARMELL, author of The Warlord’s Legacy

  Hexed

  “Kevin Hearne … cranks out action and quips at a frenzied pace … in this fun and highly irreverent read.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “Hearne’s writing is fast paced and spot on … Hexed is steeped in magic and wrapped in awesome. It really doesn’t get much better than this!”

  —My Bookish Ways

  “The humor in Hexed is non-stop.… Hard to read without a smile plastered across your face.”

  —Blood of the Muse

  Hammered

  “In this adrenaline-spiked third Iron Druid adventure … Hearne provides lots of zippy plotting and rocking action scenes.… Fans will be thrilled.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  “I love, love, love this series, and Hammered is the best so far.… You’ll be turning pages in warp speed until the final battle, then you won’t be able to turn them fast enough.”

  —My Bookish Ways

  Tricked

  “Kevin Hearne’s Tricked manages to combine the fun aspects of the previous books and give the saga a darker turn to make this book more akin to a thriller.”

  —Fantasy Book Critic

  “Tricked is packed with thoroughly engrossing characters, fascinating mythology, creatures that will make your head spin, lots of action, and a ton of heart.”

  —My Bookish Ways

  “Hearne understands the two main necessities of good fantasy stories: for all the wisecracks and action, he never loses sight of delivering a sense of wonder to his readers, and he understands that magic use always comes with a price. Highly recommended.”

  —CHARLES DE LINT, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

  Trapped

  “Trapped is another amazing book for the series. Kevin Hearne is on a roll and I can hardly wait to see what trouble Atticus, Oberon, and Granuaile get into next!”

  —Blogcritics

  Hunted is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  A Del Rey eBook Edition

  Copyright © 2013 by Kevin Hearne

  Two Ravens and One Crow by Kevin Hearne copyright © 2012 by Kevin Hearne

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States by Del Rey, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  DEL REY is a registered trademark and the Del Rey colophon is a trademark of Random House, Inc.

  Two Ravens and One Crow was originally published seperately as an eBook by Del Rey, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., in 2012

  eISBN: 978-0-345-53877-2

  www.delreybooks.com

  Cover design: David G. Stevenson

  Cover illustration: © Gene Mollica

  v3.1

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Pronunciation Guide

  Translation Note

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Epilogue

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Other Books by This Author

  Author’s Note

  Two Ravens and One Crow

  Pronunciation Guide

  As always, please remember that while I provide these for reference, I’m completely okay with you pronouncing these names however you wish, because the entire point of reading is to enjoy yourself and not stress out about unusual names from mythology. If, however, you enjoy knowing how to pronounce them, here you go:

  Irish

  Aillil = ALL-yill (In The Wooing of Étaín, this name is held by both Étaín’s father and the brother of Eochaid Airem. It’s used here to refer to the brother.)

  Amergin = AV er ghin (legendary Irish bard whose name is spelled and pronounced many different ways. The modern Irish spelling is Amhairghin and pronounced something like OUR yin, but the Morrigan would use the Old Irish spelling and pronunciation.)

  Brí Léith = Bree LAY (the síd or home of Midhir)

  Eochaid Airem = OH het EH rem (High King of Ireland once upon a time)

  Étaín = eh TEEN (so epically hot they wrote an epic about her)

  Fódhla = FOH-la (one of the poetic names of Ireland and the name of the Irish elemental)

  Fúamnach = FOO am nah (Midhir’s wife)

  Midhir = ME er (member of the Tuatha Dé Danann; half brother to Aenghus Óg and Brighid)

  Orlaith = OR la (Yep, that –ith on the end is just to make it look pretty)

  Polish

  Dukla = DOOK la

  Gościniec pod Furą = gohsht NEE etz pohd FOO roh (basically long o wherever you see oh)

  Jasło = YAHS woh

  Katowice = Kat oh VEET suh (city in southern Poland)


  Pustków Wilczkowski = POOST kov wiltch KOV ski

  Sokołowska = SO ko WOV ska

  Wojownika = Vai yov NEE ka

  Wrocław = Vroht SWOF

  Żubrówka = Zhu BRUF ka (bison grass vodka, popular in Poland and available here, quite tasty mixed with apple juice or cider)

  Translation Note

  There is a passage in the novel where Atticus recites some verses from Dante’s Purgatorio in the original Italian, but he neglects to share an English translation. I have duplicated the verses here and followed each with a translation by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.

  From Canto V:

  Là ’ve ’l vocabol suo diventa vano,

  arriva’ io forato ne la gola,

  fuggendo a piede e sanguinando il piano.

  There where the name thereof becometh void

  Did I arrive, pierced through and through the throat,

  Fleeing on foot, and bloodying the plain.

  Quivi perdei la vista e la parola;

  nel nome di Maria fini’, e quivi

  caddi, e rimase la mia carne sola.

  There my sight lost I, and my utterance

  Ceased in the name of Mary, and thereat

  I fell, and tenantless my flesh remained.

  Chapter 1

  It’s odd how when you feel safe you can’t think of that thing it was you kept meaning to do, but when you’re running for your life you suddenly remember the entire list of things you never got around to doing.

  I always wanted to get blindly drunk with a mustachioed man, take him back to his place, do a few extra shots just this side of severe liver damage, and then shave off half his mustache when he passed out. I would then install surveillance equipment before I left so that I could properly appreciate his reaction (and his hangover) when he woke up. And of course I would surveil him from a black windowless van parked somewhere along his street. There would be a wisecracking computer science graduate from MIT in the van with me who almost but not quite went all the way once with a mousy physics major who dumped him because he didn’t accelerate her particles.

  I can’t remember when I thought that one up and added it to my list. It was probably after I saw True Lies. It was never particularly high up on my list, for obvious reasons, but the memory came back to me, fully fantasized in Technicolor, once I was running for my life in Romania. Our minds are mysteries.

  Somewhere behind me, the Morrigan was fighting off two goddesses of the hunt. Artemis and Diana had decided that I needed killing, and the Morrigan had pledged to protect me from such violent death. Oberon ran on my left and Granuaile on my right; all around me, the forest quaked silently with the pandemonium of Faunus, disrupting Druidic tethers to Tír na nÓg. I could not shift away to safety. All I could do was run and curse the ancient Greco–Romans.

  Unlike the Irish and the Norse—and many other cultures—the Greco–Romans did not imagine their gods as eternally youthful but vulnerable to violent death. Oh, they had nectar and ambrosia to keep their skin wrinkle-free and their bodies in prime shape, changing their blood to ichor, and that was similar to the magical food and drink available to other pantheons, but that wasn’t the end of it. They could regenerate completely, which essentially gifted them with true immortality, so that even if you shredded them like machaca and ate them with guacamole and warm tortillas, they’d just re-spawn in a brand-new body on Olympus and keep coming after you—hence the reason why Prometheus never died, in spite of having his liver eaten every day by a vulture who oddly never sought variety in his diet.

  That didn’t mean a fella couldn’t beat them. Aside from the fact that they can be slain by other immortals, the Olympians have to exist in time like everyone else. I’d tossed Bacchus onto an island of slow time in Tír na nÓg, and the Olympians took it personally—so personally that they’d rather kill me than get Bacchus back.

  I didn’t think for a moment I could do the same to the huntresses. They were far more adept in combat, for one thing, and they’d be watching each other’s back while doing their best to shoot me in mine.

  “Where are we going?” Granuaile asked.

  “Roughly north for now. Situation’s fluid.”

  Oberon said. The Morrigan had taken both arrows in her shield and told us to run.

  “I almost did too, Oberon,” Granuaile said. She could hear his voice now that she was a full Druid. “I should have been ducking or tackling Atticus or almost anything else, but instead I was just trying my damnedest not to pee.”

  “We’ll have to take a potty break later,” I said. “Distance is key right now.”

  “And I’m guessing stealth isn’t? This is going to be an easy trail to follow the way we’re moving through the forest.”

  “We’ll get crafty when we have the space to do so.”

  The Morrigan’s raspy voice entered my head. It wasn’t my favorite habit of hers, but it was convenient at the moment. Her tone was exultant.

  Here is a battle worthy of remembrance! How I wish there were witnesses and a bard like Amergin to put it down in song!

  Morrigan—

  Listen, Siodhachan. I can keep them from pursuing you for some while. But they will hunt again soon enough.

  They will? What about you?

  I am better than they. But not immortal. My end is near; I have seen it. But what an end it will be!

  I slowed down and looked back. Granuaile and Oberon paused too. You’re going to die?

  Don’t stop running, you fool! Run and listen and do not sleep. You know how to stave off the need to sleep, don’t you?

  Yes. Prevent the buildup of adenosine in the brain and—

  Enough with the modern words. You know. Now you must either find one of the Old Ways to Tír na nÓg—one that isn’t guarded—or make your way to the forest of Herne the Hunter.

  The forest of Herne? You mean Windsor Forest? That’s a hell of a run across Europe.

  You can always die instead, the Morrigan pointed out.

  No thanks. But Windsor is not much of a wilderness anymore. It’s more like a groomed park. People drink tea there. They might even play croquet. That’s not a forest.

  It will suffice. Herne is there. He will defend it. And he will bring friends. And, Siodhachan, remember that Gaia loves us more than she loves the Olympians. They have given her nothing in all their long lives. Even now they traumatize her with pandemonium. I am unbinding their chariots; they will be afoot for some while until their smith gods can make them anew. Take advantage and give yourself as much of a lead as possible.

  Something didn’t compute. Morrigan, if you saw this coming, why didn’t you warn me?

  You were with your woman.

  My woman? If I tried to call Granuaile that, I would promptly lose some teeth. She’s not mine. You can’t possess anyone.

  I have learned that lesson very well.

  Fine, then what does that have to do with this ridiculous fight with the Olympians? We could have avoided it all.

  No. It was always going to come. Delaying would do no good.

  Are you kidding? That’s what living is. Delaying death. Let’s get you some Prozac.

  Hush. I have for you what modern people call a lovely parting gift.

  I shuddered to think what the Morrigan considered lovely, so I simply said, A parting gift?

  In Tír na nÓg there is a Time Island with the following address. A vision appeared in my head of a short stone obelisk etched with Ogham script. Do you see it?

  Yes, but—

  Record it well in your memory. Circle the island. On the side facing upstream, look closely at the tree line and you will see someone there you might wish to retrieve. If you do, ask Goibhniu for help.

  Morrigan. Why?

  Because I am trapped and this is the only way out. And because you have chosen, and you have chosen well. I cannot fault her.

  I lost a step or two as the import of her words sank in. Gran
uaile shot a worried glance at me and I shook my head once, reassuring her that nothing was wrong. But … Morrigan, you never said anything.

  Would it have mattered? Would you have ever chosen me?

  I don’t know. But I didn’t get a chance.

  Every day was a chance, Siodhachan. Two thousand years of days. If you were interested, you had ample opportunity to express it. I understand. I frighten you. I frighten everyone, and that is a fact I cannot escape, however I may wish otherwise.

  Well … yeah. You’re fighting off two Olympians right now and having this conversation. That’s frightening.

  They came prepared. Their fabrics are synthetic. I cannot bind them. And they are very skilled, trying to wound my right side and affect my magic.

  Morrigan, just get out of there. You saved me and we have a lead now.

  No. This is the choice I have made. It is only recently I have tried to change in earnest—I mean since you slew Aenghus Óg—and discovered that somehow change has become impossible for me. I cannot make friends. I cannot be gentle except under the most extraordinary circumstances. My nature will not allow it. All I can do is terrify, seduce, and choose the slain. Is that not strange? Long ago I was merely a Druid like you and could do whatever I wished. But once I became a goddess, certain expectations came with the power. Call them chains, rather. I didn’t notice them until I tried to break free. My nature now is no longer my own to do with as I please. I can be only what my people want me to be.

  I’m sorry. I didn’t know.

  I tell you so that you may grow wiser. It is a hidden law of godhood, and woe unto she who finds it. I have been trying to deny its reality, but it has asserted itself too often to be anything but the truth. Yet I have some comfort now.

  You do?

  Here is my victory, Siodhachan: I am permitted to do battle, and I do not need a reason. Still, I usually have one, and that reason can be whatever I wish. So today I do not fight for glory or honor or bloodlust or vengeance. I fight for … something else.

  I understand. But say it anyway. For the win.

  Love.

  Morrigan, I—

  I felt as if something popped softly in my head, like the release of tension when a taut cord is cut. Or a binding. There was a sudden emptiness, and an overwhelming sense of vertigo caused me to stumble over a root and execute a graceless face-plant.

 


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