Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 1 The town Elders looked askance at the tanned, well‐knit man clad in wolf fur and scuf...
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Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 1 The town Elders looked askance at the tanned, well‐knit man clad in wolf fur and scuffed leather that stood before the long table. Though they had sent for a Witch‐hunter and this one had a fearsome reputation as a soldier in the war against evil, his garments were outlandish, he carried weapons openly, and he had been none too respectful of the council thus far. “And what vile form has the fiend taken?” Witch‐hunter Sword of the Lord Cormac asked in his raw silk voice. “Form?” Goodman Comstock repeated. “Aye, what does the benighted bugger look like?” the Sword of the Lord said, plainly offending Comstock. “Ah,” Goodman Hill said. “We have the witnesses requested. Come forward, children.” Two young people rose from a pew and came to stand timidly behind the row of men in somber black. Both were young, fair of hair and face, with comely bodies beneath the drab clothing they wore. Neither raised their eyes from the floor as they were introduced. “This is Mayor Leigh’s son, Penitence, called Penn,” Goodman Comstock said. “The girl is Annika Riis, an indentured servant from Flanders. Both have entered the fiend’s house, and they will answer your questions as to what depraved acts occurred there to so corrupt these two innocent young souls.” The Sword of the Lord kept the ironic smile from his face with an effort. It was the Witch‐hunter’s experience that there was often corruption among the leaders of a community as well as its more unsavory elements. People were only human after all and could hardly be expected to behave like angels all of the time. All the Sword of the Lord asked was that they try to lead a good life. Putting the question of the
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 2 Elders’ integrity from his mind, he turned a sympathetic eye on the young victims. “I need to speak to them alone,” the Witch‐hunter pronounced. “I will not allow it,” the Mayor said. “Then find yourself another hound,” the Sword of the Lord said. Comstock and Hill spoke in a rapid undertone, and then Comstock addressed the Sword of the Lord again. “Very well, Master Witch‐hunter. You may question them alone, but for a single council member. We will let the children choose which of us shall remain.” “Parson Alcott,” young Penn said instantly. The Sword of the Lord took a hard look at the elderly yet hale pastor. The holy warrior liked what he saw in the minister’s forthright gaze and nodded his acceptance of the terms. As one, the Elders stood and shuffled from the meeting hall. “Would you like to sit back down?” the Sword of the Lord asked the young people. “Thank you, Master,” Penn said, sitting on one of the chairs the council had vacated. Annika looked nervously at the floor and didn’t answer. “It is all right, child,” Alcott said. “Sit and be easy. No one here will harm you.” Instantly, the girl collapsed onto a seat and folded her hands demurely in her lap, waiting for orders.
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 3 The Witch‐hunter spoke first to the Elder. “Parson Alcott, some of my words and actions will no doubt seem strange to you, but I will have your word that you will not interrupt, or I will ask you to leave.” “If it will help these children, you have my word, and I would prefer that you call me John.” The Sword of the Lord smiled in spite of the gravity of the situation. The old man was a charmer. “My Christian name is Gabriel,” the Witch‐ hunter said. John turned to look at the boy and girl, smiling in a reassuring manner. “You do not have to be afraid of Master Cormac, no matter how fierce his appearance.” Parson Alcott winked at the Witch‐hunter. The two young victims took the trusted minister’s cue and looked at the stranger. Gabriel averted his gaze, so as not to discourage them, and let them look their fill. He knew how bizarre he must appear in the eyes of these people, but in truth, he did not care. He was clothed very practically for his profession and that was all that mattered. “I have never seen anyone dressed completely in leather,” Penn said. Something in the young man’s voice alerted Gabriel’s sharply honed instincts. He glanced sidelong at the mayor’s angelic looking son and surprised a flash of heat in the wide green eyes. Disturbed, Gabriel turned to the maid and Annika dropped her gaze immediately, but not before the Witch‐hunter spied a bold sparkle in the girl’s eyes. Both young people were as outwardly cowed as good young Puritans should be, but Gabriel sensed a flaw in the veneer of humility. He wished the Elder were not here for he doubted two witnesses would speak openly with the parson present. With little hope, he asked a blunt question. “What did the wicked servant of the devil do to you?”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 4 A tide of red rose in Annika’s cheeks and spread downward to disappear beneath her bodice. Penn’s gaze wavered, and his hands toyed restlessly with one another. “Children,” John Alcott spoke up. “I will repeat nothing that you say here to anyone, unless you give me leave with your own mouth. This I do swear by God Almighty.” “The incubus,” Penn began, when the Witch‐hunter stopped him. “Why do you call him that?” Gabriel asked. “That is what my father called him, Master Cormac.” “It seems your father has more than a passing acquaintance with the subject, but say on, boy,” the Witch‐hunter prompted. “The… stranger bought the manor house left vacant by the Earl when the Earl went back to England.” “A regrettable loss of faith,” John interjected. “And to the coffers of the community and church, I should imagine,” Gabriel said dryly. Annika looked up in surprise at the man’s honesty and watched his face. She was heartened by the lack of distaste or contempt in the foreigner’s intense eyes as he listened to Penn’s story. Despite the Witch‐hunter’s stern bearing, the man listened indulgently, as though Penn were a beloved nephew that had fallen in with bad company. “The warlock invited me to his home,” Penn said. “I did not know he practiced witchcraft when I accepted. He was kind to me, offering me food and drink, and speaking to me as though I were an adult. I was beguiled by his dark charm.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 5 “And what happened while you were in thrall to the creature?” Gabriel asked. “I fell under his spell,” Penn said, his eyes dropping to his fingers. “He… he touched me. He touched me in a way that is forbidden.” “I see,” Gabriel said. “And you, Annika? Did the devil’s spawn violate you as well?” “Ja, Meister,” the girl said to the floor. “What else did the warlock do?” Gabriel asked. The two young people exchanged a quick glance. “Naught else of consequence,” Penn answered for both. “How long were you held captive?” “Some hours, Master,” Penn replied. Gabriel frowned in thought. This was most unusual. The practitioners of the dark arts that Gabriel had met in battle tended to hold on to their victims for as long as they could keep them breathing. In his lamentable experience, true witches rarely left live witnesses to testify against them. They had no law but their own will, recognizing no other authority, and people were cattle put on earth to be used by those with superior powers. The community of Perseverance was troubled by a most unusual warlock indeed. “Did he leave any marks upon your flesh?” Gabriel asked abruptly. “Marks?” Penn echoed.
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 6 “Aye, strange symbols that might look as if they were cut or burned into your skin.” “No, master, nothing like that,” Penn said. “The Elders examined us both thoroughly. There were only the marks left by his… by his mouth.” Gabriel grimaced; he could imagine how humiliating the examination had been. “I will not subject you to another search,” he said. “Be but candid with me. Did the fiend have intercourse with you?” Both blonde heads nodded reluctantly. “You see the wickedness of this monster,” John said. “Preying not only on maidens, but slaking his unnatural lust with our young men as well.” “Young… men?” the Sword of the Lord emphasized the plural. “These are not the only victims,” the parson said. “The scope of the creature’s depredations was only recently brought to light. Many, many young folk have been despoiled and even the new schoolmaster, Goodman Bradstreet.” Gabriel raised an eyebrow. “How was this evil discovered?” “Annika’s employer’s were suspicious of her absences and followed her one evening.” “None of the victims reported their defilement?” “The warlock bespelled them,” Alcott said reasonably. The Witch‐hunter held his tongue. If the minister chose to believe that a witch could control the mind of another person from a distance, Gabriel would not waste time trying to convince him otherwise.
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 7 “I have finished my examination,” Gabriel said. “I only need to know one more thing.” “What is that, Master Witch‐hunter?” “The way to the manor house.” =:::+:::=+=:::+:::=+=:::+:::=+=:::+:::=+=:::+:::= The Sword of the Lord stood in the drive and surveyed the front of the graceful mansion. The clean lines of the half‐timbered facade gave no hint of the evil contained behind the white washed stone as the Witch‐ hunter’s sharp eyes automatically searched each window for any flicker of movement. He could see no signs of occupancy, but he could feel the waves of uncanny energy radiating from the dwelling. Squaring his shoulders, Gabriel touched the cross at his throat and the dagger in his belt before he lifted the knocker. The heavy front doors swung soundlessly open, revealing a foyer paved with black marble. The floor was polished to mirror smoothness, reflecting the candlelight of the chandeliers like the surface of a still lake. Cautiously, the Witch‐hunter stepped across the threshold, noting the gilt frames around the paintings and the sumptuous fabrics of the upholstery. It seemed the Earl had neglected to pack before he left. “At last.” A softly accented voice spoke from the direction of the staircase. Gabriel turned, controlling his reaction to his first sight of the enemy. He was used to comeliness in his foes for the Father of Lies made his minions pleasing to the eye to tempt the righteous, but, by all that was holy, this one was Beauty incarnate. “Good evening, sir,” the richly dressed young man said. “I am Alastair. Be welcome in my home.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 8 “I have come to apprehend you in the name of the Lord.” “Your name is Lord, sir, or is that your title?” “The Lord God,” Gabriel said evenly. “I am astounded to find the Lord God on my doorstep,” Alastair said. He tilted his head to one side and spoke critically. “Your beard is not as large and white as I have been led to believe by religious paintings.” Gabriel wisely began the conversation over. “Spawn of Satan, I will deliver you into the hands of justice where you will be made to answer for your crimes.” Lips with curves of heartbreaking sweetness parted in a gentle smile. “My crimes?” Alastair replied. “I was not aware that I had broken any laws and you do not look like a constable.” “I could not begin to guess at all your trespasses,” Gabriel said. “Suffice it that the good people of the town of Perseverance have grievance with you.” “I thought it was pronounced Persecution,” Alastair mused. “Of what crime am I charged?” “That you did willfully and with malice use black arts to seduce the virgins of Perseverance to corruption, infecting these innocents with the disease of lust.” Alastair blinked, astonishment widening his soft, dark eyes. “Oh dear. All that? What a wicked fellow I have been.” The Witch‐hunter’s eyes tracked the young man’s hand as it rose. However, Alastair merely pulled on the red velvet ribbon that bound his
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 9 long hair at his nape. The burnished curls slid free to cascade over black brocade and snowy lace as Alastair shook his head, laughing softly for no discernible reason. “There is nothing humorous in this situation, fiend,” Gabriel said, drawing his eyes from the shining tresses. “You will submit yourself to justice, or I will destroy you.” “You do not even know me, sir,” Alastair said. “Yet you are willing to slay me. For what reason? For coin? For your faith? For the pleasure of the hunt?” “Because it is right and meet that you die, Creature of Darkness.” Alastair stepped into a bar of sunshine from the open door. His lustrous skin absorbed the light and echoed it in a soft glow. “I am not of the dark,” he said firmly. “My senses tell me otherwise,” Gabriel said. “They have served me well thus far. I think I will trust to them rather than your word.” “Do your instincts tell you that I am evil?” “They tell me that you are not human,” Gabriel said, taking a step to the right. “That is nonsense,” Alastair said firmly. “What else would I be?” “You are Satan’s minion, vested with dark powers by your evil master, and thus, you are part demon and your soul doomed to Hell.” Alastair laughed aloud. “If I had magical powers, would I not use them on you?” “I certainly expect you to try.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 10 “Tell me something, Witch‐hunter. Did my so‐called victims complain of me?” “No, it is true that the innocents you corrupted have not spoken against you,” Gabriel said. “I cannot explain it.” “Maybe I did them no harm.” “Do not seek to cloud my mind, Incubus,” the Sword of the Lord said. “I will not be swayed by your charms.” “What a pity. I am more than passing fond of flaxen‐haired men, but I was not trying to seduce you.” “It would avail you naught,” Gabriel assured his enemy. “So you have said. What will you do now?” “I shall take you into my custody and deliver you to Perseverance gaol.” “They will torture me and eventually kill me in a particularly gruesome fashion,” Alastair said. “Will you deliver me to that?” “You deserve a gruesome death, warlock,” Gabriel spat. “I look forward to meting it out.” “Who hurt you?” Alastair asked. “It was not I.” “Perhaps not, but it was one of your kind,” Gabriel said coldly. “An animal that defiled my sister, killing her and her unborn child, causing my brother‐in‐law to commit the mortal sin of suicide. I shall not rest until all your ilk are destroyed.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 11 Alastair looked at the man gravely. “It is plain that you have not grieved for your loss. You have replaced sorrow with anger and a hunger for vengeance. That is very sad.” “Do not presume to pity me,” Gabriel said, taking a set of manacles from his belt. “Will you come without a struggle or must I subdue you?” “Subdue me, I should think,” Alastair said. Gabriel lunged without warning and was surprised when his grab met nothing but air. This one is fast, Gabriel thought, as he feinted to the right and reached for the warlock’s wrist with his left hand. Alastair turned his arm and pivoted. Snatching up one end of the set of manacles, the young man clapped it on Gabriel’s wrist. In surprise, Gabriel tried to swing around, but his other arm was held in an iron grip. In another moment, the opposite manacle was locked on him. Alastair moved a few paces away and looked drolly at the red‐faced man in restraints. “Now I have really done it,” Alastair said. “I will warrant you are not best pleased to be trussed in your own bindings and I shudder to think what the punishment might be for humiliating an appointed servant of the esteemed town council of Perseverance.” Gabriel was already working the key from a pocket of his leathers and did not so much as glance at the warlock. The Witch‐hunter got hold of the iron key with two fingers and drew it forth. Alastair smiled indulgently and knocked it from the man’s hand. Gabriel kicked at his enemy, but the boy skipped lightly aside. “I do not wish to tire you,” Alastair said, slipping behind the other man and booting him hard in the backside. “Perhaps we could cease this useless activity.” Gabriel went to the floor, tucking a shoulder and rolling up onto one knee. “You have some skill in combat,” Alastair observed. “How delightful.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 12 Gabriel could not agree. This slender stripling was more than a match for him at grappling and the Witch‐hunter soon found himself lashed to a chair with his own leather straps. Each of Gabriel’s ankles was tied to a leg of the heavy, throne‐like seat and his shackled wrists were hooked over a wall bracket. “You look very angry,” the warlock chided. “Is wrath not a sin?” Gabriel glared murder at his tormentor, but did not deign to reply. “What of lust?” Alastair said slyly. “Perhaps if your manhood is roused, your ire will fade.” “You would not,” the words burst out of the Witch‐hunter. “You named me a minion of Satan. Why would I not?” Gabriel swallowed hard. It seemed he must endure a trial of faith. Stiffening his spine, the Witch‐hunter resolved that no matter what the creature did, he would not be roused. “Take your hands off me,” Gabriel said angrily as the young man worked at the laces of his breeches. “Very well,” Alastair said, finishing the job with his teeth. Gabriel grimaced as his manhood was freed and he felt the warlock’s breath on his flesh. A deep shudder ran through the Witch‐hunter’s body as time hung suspended. “You do not have to suffer this,” Alastair said. “Promise you will not pursue me and I will leave now and never return.” “I will promise nothing, spawn of Satan. Do your worst.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 13 “I hoped you would be stubborn,” Alastair smiled. “You are a most comely man and I cannot wait to taste your joy when you spill your seed for me.” Gabriel’s breath hissed in over his teeth as hot wetness closed around the head of his cock. Though the Sword of the Lord’s will was strong, his traitor flesh was weak. In moments, the Witch‐hunter’s rod was stiff as a nor’easter in winter. He fought to remain still and silent, giving no sign of the pleasure he felt as the warlock used lips, tongue and teeth to bring the his cock to quivering tautness. When Alastair took the straining length in hand and drew the man’s velvet balls into his mouth, Gabriel could not hold in his moans as his sack was gently sucked and licked. He tested the limits of the strength of his bindings when Alastair’s tongue darted into his lower opening. “Stop, fiend!” the man cried, driven beyond pride to beg for surcease. “Am I hurting you?” Alastair left off to ask. “What you are doing is an abomination.” “Why?” “Because we are both men, servant of Satan.” Alastair sat back on his heels. “How could anything that gives so much pleasure be evil?” the young man asked. “It is a sin!” Gabriel insisted. “Who are you to judge?” “I follow the word of God.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 14 “Speaks directly in your ear, does he?” “I can read His Word set down in the good book,” Gabriel answered. “Written down by mere men,” Alastair pointed out. “And men are notoriously fallible. I think you would have to agree with me on this.” For some reason this logic had never occurred to Gabriel before. The idea that men had compiled the Bible was a disturbing one. Gabriel shook his head to clear it of the insidious thoughts and glared at the creature. Alastair gave the Sword of the Lord a charming smile in return and lowered his mouth to the eager shaft again. No matter how hard Gabriel tried to resist the stimulation, his organ of procreation betrayed him. The Witch‐hunter’s unruly flesh craved the warlock’s attention and stood proudly to receive it. If he were honest with himself, Gabriel would admit that he’d never felt anything so good in his life, and that he was eager for the sweet conclusion of this act. “It is not only about the pleasure of the flesh,” Alastair said, startling Gabriel with his clairvoyance. The warlock pumped the man’s cock to a tantalizing beat as he spoke again. “It has always been my pleasure to give pleasure to others and I soon realized that we make love with more than our bodies. Can you feel it?” Gabriel clenched his jaw and refused to answer. He did indeed feel something and it distressed him. Aside from the delicious feelings blooming in his groin, Gabriel felt warmth growing within him. When he glanced at the evil one, Gabriel did not feel disgust any longer. He now noticed that the young man’s eyes were as kindly as they were beautiful. “No,” Gabriel groaned and clenched his fists as a wave of bliss swept through him. “Do not struggle so,” Alastair said softly. “Let yourself know pleasure again. It has been far too long since you felt a tender touch.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 15 Gabriel knew himself lost as the sweet voice entered his ears. Something huge was poised to crash into him and he could feel its rapid approach. He would be overwhelmed by this sensual sorcery and never find his way back to the solid ground of righteousness. Sensing the man’s precarious emotional state, Alastair lowered his head and laved the Witch‐hunter’s rod until it gleamed with saliva. The young man stood and unbuttoned his snug fitting knickers of black silk, pulling them off with his shoes and stockings. Under Gabriel’s anxious gaze, Alastair slowly stroked his own arousal. Spitting on his fingers, the witch gingerly inserted one in his lower opening. Gabriel’s eyes widened as another finger joined the first, stretching the furled aperture for the addition of a third. “What are you doing?” the Witch‐hunter could not forbear asking. “Readying myself for your big cock,” the young man replied matter‐of‐ factly. Gabriel shook his shaggy head. “You would not!” he said again. For answer, Alastair straddled the man’s thighs and took hold of Gabriel’s hard length. Carefully, the warlock positioned the stiff shaft and began to sink onto it. Unable to tear his eyes away, Gabriel watched his staff slowly disappear into the alluring opening. An indescribable surge of heat coursed through Gabriel, converging on his crotch. His organ grew even harder and the urge to thrust was well nigh irresistible as Alastair’s buttocks settled onto his muscular thighs. “How like you this?” the witch asked, placing his hands on the Witch‐ hunter’s shoulders. The Sword of the Lord gritted his teeth and refused to reply. The truth was that he liked it very much. In fact, he’d never felt anything that
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 16 approached it. It wasn’t just that his cock was encased in something that hugged it like a jealous bride; this went beyond physical pleasure. In his heart was a growing fondness for this beautiful sinner. “Do not fight it,” Alastair whispered. “This is not wrong; it is not a sin. The rules that bind you were made by bitter old men envious of joys in which they did not share. These laws have no sway over me nor over you if you will but free your mind.” Gabriel reached desperately for control, but it was not to be found. The sensations that commandeered his senses and the young man’s soft voice, speaking words that seemed like the wisdom of the ages, had conspired to tear down the walls of the Sword of the Lord’s fortress heart. As the last defenses crumbled to dust, he wailed abjectly in surrender. “Shhh,” the warlock soothed, stroking Gabriel’s tousled hair. “Once you give in, you will see that there was nothing to fear. Leave your cold world with its stern regulations and joyless worship of a petty, cruel God that His Son would not recognize. Come with me.” Gabriel let himself fall under the spell of that melodic voice and the snug sheath that embraced his arousal. Alastair flexed his thighs rhythmically, rising and sinking, impaling himself on the Witch‐hunter’s wonderfully firm rod of flesh. Bracing his knees against the chair cushion, the young man altered his angle so that the blunt head passed across his most sensitive flesh. Gabriel’s eyes opened as the warlock fetched a deep sigh. The Sword of the Lord had never beheld anything so lovely as the fiend’s face at this moment. The boy’s flawless features were aglow with transcendent pleasure, his lovely eyes focused on the middle distance as though he gazed on some ineffably lovely vision that only he could see. Gabriel’s desire to thrust, to bury a part of himself in this magical creature, could no longer be denied. Alastair moaned as the Witch‐ hunter lifted his buttocks from the seat, driving the thick shaft deeper. Other than his head, Gabriel’s hips were the only part of his body that he
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 17 could move and he made full use of his range of motion. Joining with this boy was suddenly an imperative that could not be ignored. Clenching and relaxing his ass, Gabriel thrust in abbreviated, but enthusiastic strokes. The sounds Alastair made were very pleasant in Gabriel’s ears and, he made a greater effort to elicit more of them. At the very moment Gabriel thought that his shaft was going to explode like an unreliable musket, Alastair stopped moving and looked down into his eyes. The Sword of the Lord met the young man’s gaze steadily and felt a tingle in every cell of his body at the shock of recognition. Here was a soul as pure as his own. No darkness shadowed the brilliant glow emanating from this untarnished spirit. “My love,” Alastair murmured. “Do you know me now?” “Aye,” Gabriel breathed. “I begin to. What magic is this? I can discern no evil in it.” “Because none exists, my own,” Alastair replied. “We stand together at the gates of paradise. Will you enter with me?” “Aye,” Gabriel said again. He did not fully understand what was happening, but if it were of the dark, he would sense it. Whatever this was, it was right and good, and no minister or Bible could ever convince him differently. “Remove my bindings.” A slow, sweet smile possessed Alastair’s mouth as the key to the manacles slid from between his lips. The young man unlocked the iron shackles and threw the key over his shoulder. The man reached instantly for him, and Alastair soon lost interest in freeing Gabriel’s legs. Gabriel didn’t mind; he didn’t need them for this. Wrapping his big hands around the slender waist, Gabriel held him in place as he thrust powerfully. Alastair grasped the arms of the chair and bore down, providing resistance for the man to push against. The tip of the Witch‐hunter’s thick cock dragged against Alastair’s sweet spot on its way in and out‐ drawing, making the warlock cry out in ecstasy. As if it were the most
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 18 natural thing in the world, Gabriel took hold of the other man’s yearning erection and stroked it rapidly. The witch’s breath came in great ragged gasps and his thighs trembled as he balanced on the cusp of his climax. Fever bright eyes looked down into Gabriel’s and ignited Gabriel’s release. Alastair felt the big shaft jerk in his socket as Gabriel groaned deep in his chest. The warlock let himself sink all the way down onto the twitching rod and triggered his own orgasm. Gabriel felt hot, thick fluid spill over his fist, but did not break eye contact with the remarkable creature that rode him. Both were lost in the wonder of a mutual bliss that joined them, body‐to‐body and soul‐to‐soul. “My beloved,” Gabriel whispered as Alastair’s head drooped to rest against his forehead. They remained locked in a languid embrace for long moments, but eventually, the lovers had to disengage. Alastair rose and leaned down to place a kiss on the end of the man’s sated shaft. The seed‐slick rod stirred and Gabriel stared at his crotch in disbelief. Looking up at the young man apologetically, he tucked away his uncooperative cock. “It seems there is witchcraft in your lips, though I deem you to be no warlock now,” Gabriel said with an affectionate smile to show that he was teasing. Alastair’s eyes sparkled. “No?” he said archly. Gabriel cringed back in the chair as he found himself face to face with a brindled wolf. The animal’s dark eyes danced with laughter and the fearsome jaws gaped in a lupine grin as huge paws thudded against Gabriel’s chest. Then Alastair’s lithe frame filled Gabriel’s arms. “I never said I was not a warlock,” the young man said. “I merely denied that I was evil.”
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 19 A shiver ran through Gabriel’s body as the boy’s lips touched his. The Witch‐hunter did not resist the gentle kiss, but responded in kind. “If you have magic in you, which I do not doubt,” Gabriel said, “it is surely white magic. I have never felt so whole and alive.” “Yes you have, my own,” Alastair said. “Every time we meet.” Gabriel shied away from this subject. He was just getting used to the shocking new ideas that he enjoyed coupling with another man and that magic was not necessarily bad. Accepting the concept of reincarnation was asking a bit much of him just now. Hugging the warlock’s slender body tightly, Gabriel closed his mind to doubt and held on to what was real. “What now?” the Witch‐hunter asked. “I cannot go back to the Elders with this tale.” “You would not face them for me?” Alastair asked. Gabriel looked up, his eyes somber. “Yes,” he said slowly. “I would. I would defy any who stood against you. Is that not a wonder?” “It is,” Alastair agreed. “But you have always been my protector, my strength and my steadfast heart down through the ages. Shall we leave this place now and never look back? Or shall we face these sour hypocrites together?” Gabriel thought of the faces of young Penn and Annika and his decision was easily made. He stood, setting Alastair on his feet and taking the young man’s hand. Together, they walked from the mansion and took the road that led to Perseverance. The Sword of the Lord had a new mission, which he intended to pursue with the same zeal and dedication he had brought to his previous one.
Blue Magic by Connie Bailey 20 He would seek out practitioners of magic, but he would not expose and destroy them. Instead, he and Alastair would gather the maligned and give them safe haven. Leaning across in his saddle, Gabriel gave his love a kiss and a heartening smile before facing front again. The Witch‐hunter was looking forward with most unseemly glee to the expressions on the Elders’ faces. The End. Check out these other titles by Connie Bailey…