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Cursed Wishes
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Cursed Wishes
Three Wishes Historical Fantasy Book 1
Marcy Kennedy
Copyright © 2018 by Marcy Kennedy
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author. It’s okay to quote a small section for a review or in a school paper. To put this in plain language, this means you can’t copy my work and profit from it as if it were your own. When you copy someone’s work, it’s stealing.
For permission requests, write to the author at the address below.
Marcy Kennedy
[email protected]
www.marcykennedy.com
This is a work of fiction. I made it up. You are not in my book. I probably don’t even know you. The names, characters, places, and incidents in this book are a product of my twisted imagination. Real locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, and institutions is completely coincidental.
Editor: Christopher Saylor at www.saylorediting.wordpress.com/services/
Cover Design: Damonza at https://damonza.com
Published June 2018 by Stronghold Books
ISBN: 978-0-9920372-2-2
Contents
Also by Marcy Kennedy
Free Book Offer
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
Letter from the Author
About the Author
Also by Marcy Kennedy
Three Wishes Series
Three Wishes: A Prequel Short Story
Cursed Wishes
Stolen Wishes (coming summer 2018)
Broken Wishes (coming fall 2018)
Fallen Wishes (coming winter 2018-2019)
Standalone Short Stories
Frozen: Two Suspenseful Short Stories
Busy Writer’s Guides
Showing and Telling in Fiction
Deep Point of View
Internal Dialogue
Description
Dialogue
Point of View in Fiction
Grammar for Fiction Writers
Fiction Genres
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Chapter 1
Isle of Skye, Scotland, 1501 AD
Only a madman or an eejit went out into a storm on the moors.
Thunder burst overhead, and Gavran Anderson instinctively ducked. He probably was a bit of both for trying to beat the storm, but the wolves or the weather would be the death of his missing ewe if he left her out here. And it was his fault she’d been left behind in the first place.
If he’d been able to sleep even one night through without the dream, he might not have miscounted the sheep when he drove them in. It seemed he must have done something to anger the Almighty. Or the fae. Why else would he be cursed with the same dream, every night repeating, like a fiddler who could play only one song? He’d begun to feel as if his mind weren’t his own.
He turned off the narrow cattle path and trekked uphill into the gale, measuring his steps through clusters of jagged rocks. His dadaidh swore before he set out that the ewe was a lost cause, and that Gavran’s time afore the storm hit would be better spent laying the framework for his new home. His wedding was planned for month after next.
Dig your bait while the tide is out, his dadaidh said. You’ve no notion of what the morrow will bring.
Madness though it might be, he wasn’t going home without his ewe. Whatever the morrow brought, he bore the guilt if they lost the ewe and, with her, the lamb this spring and meat or barter come fall. Leaving the ewe for dead stole food from his family’s mouths. He’d seen too many times in their neighbors that sometimes a single poorly timed loss meant the difference between prosperity and starvation. He’d not let his family become one of the latter because of a mistake he’d made.
He hoisted himself up onto the flat rock at the top of the peak and turned in a circle on its platform. The storm’s gusting wind yanked at his clothes, and thunder rattled his chest. No ewe as far as he could see.
Time played against him. The landscape looked like night drew in even though the sun rested high in the sky. Once the rain came and blinded him, it’d end his search.
A new cascade of lighting lit the bruise-colored sky, and the form of a bird careened against the backdrop of the charcoal clouds.
He shouldn’t linger on high ground.
Another flash drew his gaze back to the bird. There were two this time, looping in the pattern of vultures waiting for something to die. They might have found nothing more than a rabbit carcass, but they might have found his missing ewe.
His hands ached from clenching his fists. He splayed his fingers in a stretch and shook out his grip. The sooner he faced whatever they circled, the sooner he could return home. Maybe he’d even beat the heart of the storm.
He skirted down the opposite side of the hill from where he’d ascended. The vultures swooped over the dry river bed, near the end where a long-ago rock slide dammed it off from the water’s main flow.
Once on the flat, he broke into a jog. He skidded to a stop at the ledge.
A lump too large to be his ewe lay crumpled on the cracked ground at the bottom of the gorge. The wind licked up the edge of a cloak the color of wood left exposed to the elements for too many years. He caught a glimpse of the body beneath. No man’d be that frail. It had to be a woman or child whose bones the vultures were eager to pick.
He crouched and slid down the bank. Rocks and loose dirt cascaded in front of him. Halfway down, a small ledge stopped his descent, and he picked his way down the rest of the drop at an angle. The figure didn’t stir.
The reek of the fly-covered vomit next to the body choked him. He gulped air in through his mouth, but the taste lingered on the back of his tongue, and he fought down bile. This would be a simpleton’s errand if he’d come all this way to find only a rotted corpse. But if the person had already passed, the vultures would be feasting, not flying. The person must still live.
He squatted and rolled the body over. A woman—tangled, rust-colored hair matted around her face. A gash split the sleeve of her leine from elbow to wrist, and the hem of her skirt was frayed beyond saving, revealing ankles thin enough to snap with one hand. Her feet were bare and bloodied.
The next burst of light highlighted skin blackened by dirt and bruises. The woman’s eyes were closed, and she dragged in rasping breaths.
She still lived, but not for long if the storm caught her out in the open in such a condition. How did a woman come to be lying here, alone, so near to having the Cù-Sìth arrive for her soul?
The roaring sound of a heavy downpour r
ushed toward them.
They were out of time.
He’d risk both their necks to climb back up the steep bank with over seven stone of dead weight on his back, but the river gorge traveled half a day’s walk before leveling out into a gentler slope.
Many would tell him not to risk his life for a woman who seemed to be flirting with the hereafter already, but he refused to be the same man in life as he was in his cursed dream. He didn’t abandon the innocent.
He knelt, grabbed the woman under her arms, and rolled her forward, chest down, over his shoulder.
Black clouds sank and hunched near to the ground. No time to take the long route. He picked his way up the embankment diagonally. With each step, he dug in his toes, then breathed. Dug his toes, then breathed.
The first drop of rain splattered on his brow. He had to reach the top before the rain turned the slope into slick mud. He gulped in two lungfuls of air and lunged the final steps. He hit the grassy flat and stumbled to one knee.
The clouds opened up. Rain soaked through to his skin and drenched the woman’s clothing, adding more weight. She twisted in his hold but showed no other sign of coming awake. Escaping the storm would be much easier if she could at least stand on her feet. She convulsed again.
A knot grew in his stomach, and he clutched her legs tighter. He couldn’t carry her if she kept flailing. He sang the words of a ballad into the wind—the song his sisters begged for when they were little and couldn’t sleep. Perhaps this woman’s soul would hear him and take peace from it even if her mind couldn’t.
She stilled on his shoulder, and he struggled to his feet.
Lightning burned across the sky, so near the stench of scorched air filled his nose, and the thunder threatened to crush him with its weight.
They’d not make it home before lightning fried them both. He’d be wiser to wait it out in the abandoned Campbell cottage the next croft over.
He stepped over the low-lying stone fence that hadn’t been patched since the Campbells left when he was a lad and ducked his head against the rain lashing his face. The cottage crouched ahead of him in the haze, as if it didn’t want to be found. The daub of clay and straw had crumbled away from the thin oak branches woven behind it to create the walls, and the reed roof had collapsed in the back like a sinkhole.
He shouldered the sagging door open and lowered the woman to the dirt floor. He sank down beside her and rested his head back onto the wall. Mud soaked through his cloak and trews to his skin, and drops of rain dripped from the roof, barely missing his feet.
Exhaustion seeped through his body along with the wetness. He’d rest for a moment to catch his breath before seeking to find what ailed the woman. They wouldn’t stay dry, but at least they’d be safe until the storm passed…
His chin dipped to his chest, and he jolted awake.
Christ defend him. With the dreams keeping him up at night, he couldn’t even stay awake during a storm that might well blow the cottage in on top of him. And with a near-dead woman to care for. A bead of sweat joined the rain running down his temple.
He couldn’t bear the dream, the sleepless nights, much longer without going mad.
Ragged breathing rattled the woman’s twitching form. He wasn’t a healer like his mamaidh, but he could check if a sickness or broken ribs caused her labored breaths.
He wiped his clammy palm on the chest of his wet leine and touched her forehead. He jerked back. Her skin burned like cooking coals.
Her eyes fluttered open.
Lightning shattered the darkness with a boom that made his ears ache. She stared up at him with brown eyes that didn’t seem to see him.
A beat harder and deeper than the thunder shocked his heart. He recognized her eyes. The dying woman on the floor in front of him was the woman from his dreams.
Chapter 2
She couldn’t be the woman from his dreams. His mind played him false. A dream was but a dream. Only bairns still believed their nightmares were real after waking, and he was a man of five and twenty.
He leaned in closer. With pale skin and high cheekbones that would crinkle her eyes if she smiled, she looked like enough to the woman in his dream to be her changeling. Perhaps his mind used her face to fill in the gaps. He could never bring the woman in his dreams into focus.
That must be it. It was a passing resemblance. Nothing more.
Or maybe it went the other way. Maybe he had met her before as a boy, and his mind had created the dream woman from a faded memory of her. Just because his dream borrowed a piece of reality didn’t mean the rest of it had to be true as well.
“Do we know each other?” he asked.
Her eyes rolled back, and her lids fluttered closed.
His hands trembled like he’d been hit with a palsy. Despite the reasonable explanation he’d come up with, a tiny voice in his head chanted for him to run.
Run and not look back. Run and leave her behind. No one would know he’d found her. No one would know he’d left her. Bringing home a woman who looked so much like the one in his dreams could only bring trouble down upon his head.
A deep cough bucked the woman’s body.
He rocked back on his heels, putting more distance between them and shrinking the distance between him and the door. Leaving her here condemned her to death, but taking her with him wasn’t necessarily the right thing to do, either. If she had a catching sickness, bringing her home would place his family at risk.
Nae, that was an excuse. He knew it as sure as he knew his own name. He could send Finnegan and his sisters away before he brought the woman near, protecting them. His mamaidh would gladly take the risk the same as she did when she went to minister to the needs of any who fell sick.
He wasn’t the same man in life as he was in his dream. He wasn’t a coward. He wasn’t selfish. He’d not allow a woman to suffer if he had the power to save her.
He whipped off his cloak, wrapped it around the woman, and drew her back into his arms. The roof had stopped dripping, so the storm had likely passed. He needed to take advantage of this break while they had it. The weather on the isle changed in a blink.
He stepped out into a light drizzle. The sun chased at the clouds.
He crossed to the sheep path, now a sludge trail of manure and mud. He waded through the grass on the edge instead.
A wave of dizziness unlike anything he’d felt before shoved him sideways. Her sickness couldn’t have passed to him so quickly. The dizziness had to be because he hadn’t eaten anything since the night’s meal day before. When he left at sun-up, he hadn’t planned to be gone so long.
All he needed was a moment’s rest.
He sank to the ground and cradled the woman in his lap. Even unconscious, her body seemed to curl into him like a child starved for human touch. The stench of sweat and rot leached from her, and his stomach turned over. Maybe it was best he had an empty stomach after all.
He forced himself up again and trudged the final mile home.
His dadaidh pushed a barrow filled with dirt across the soggy turf by the house. “Some ewe.”
Gavran shrugged his unburdened shoulder. “She’s deathly sick. Best send the others to the Nicols’ before I near in case it’s catching.”
“I’ll send the lasses away with the bairn.” His dadaidh lowered the barrow. “But your mamaidh won’t go, seeing as the priest’s come again. You’ll need her help with the care anyway.”
The now-familiar tension that accompanied every one of his mamaidh’s attempts to purge him of the nightly dream slid up Gavran’s spine and fused it into a rod. If it weren’t for the woman in his arms, he’d turn back and spend the night in the Campbell cottage rather than listen to the priest prod him to confess whatever secret sin the dreams were retribution for. If he could free himself of the dreams by a simple confession, he’d have done it long ago.
His dadaidh disappeared into the house, and moments later, Morna and Ros set off through the field, a bundle that must be Finnegan tucked i
n Morna’s arms.
His dadaidh came out after them and retrieved his barrow. “Since the ground’s too muddy now for much else, I’ll take a look for your ewe.”
The way his dadaidh glanced back over his shoulder toward the house made Gavran think he’d been looking for an excuse to escape until the priest was gone. Like as not, he suspected why the man of God had come again, and all talk of Gavran’s dreams made his dadaidh want to plug his ears and hum a tune.
Gavran carried the woman inside. The smoldering fire in the center of the house filled the room with smoke and the heavy smell of wet ash. When the rains came strong enough and at the right slant, nothing could keep them out.
His mamaidh and the priest rose to their feet on the far side of the table.
Gavran laid the woman on his straw tic. Her skin had a greyish tint where raindrops had washed away the grime. She looked so fragile, as if she should have blown from his hold on the walk back. “I found her on the moor. I don’t know what ails her.”
The priest set aside his mug. “I’ll have a look. There’s fair little I haven’t seen before.”
Gavran sacrificed his place at her side to the priest and pulled his mamaidh to the farthest corner of the house. “Strange time for clergy to pay us a visit.” He kept his voice low.
She gave him her you-might-be-a-grown-man-but-I’m-still-your-mamaidh glare. “You’ve bags under your eyes big enough for a grouse to nest in.”
Facing an inquisition was supposed to help him sleep better? He crossed his arms over his chest.