“How soon?” Thom asked, the
usual fear for the safety of his lover underlying the two words.
“In the morning,” Keegan
replied as he made one more check to be certain he had everything that he would
need.
As soon as he’d arrived home
to find Keegan packing, Thom’s mind had pictured every possible scenario of
what could go wrong, as it always did. He just prayed that Keegan would be
dealing with a mere human, not a Scriostóir. Keegan soon debased him of that
idea since, from the moment that the two men had realized there was more
between them than just friendship Keegan had been completely open with Thom.
* * * * *
They had first met late one
night in a dark back alley of the city.
Thom knew how stupid he’d
been to use it as a shortcut, but he’d done it before with no problems. That
night was different. As he hurried down the alley three men had stepped into
view from shadowed doorways, surrounding him, jeering and taunting as they
closed in, bats or iron bars in their hands. He’d tried to run but they made
escape impossible as they herded him towards the alley wall.
He’d cowered there, arms
over his head to protect it, waiting for the first blow to fall. When it came,
a glancing blow to his side, he’d cried out in pain.
Then a voice he would come
to know in all its permutations said, “Cowards. Three on one? I think not.”
“Shit!” one of Thom’s
attackers growled.
Thom peered out from under
his arms, expecting to see a policeman. Instead there was a man of about twenty
five, dressed in casual clothing, carrying a sword in one hand, a flail in the
other. The man immediately put the latter weapon to use, wrapping it around the
bat one of Thom’s attackers held, yanking it from his hand. Then the sword
flashed down, severing the tendons in the attacker’s wrist.
The second attacker began
circling the man, his iron pipe held defensively as he looked for an opening
even as his face registered disbelief. The third man opted for the wiser choice
and fled down the alley.
“Do you really want to take
me on?” Thom’s rescuer scathingly asked the man holding the pipe. When the
attacker held his ground, the flail was swung again. This time though it bit
through flesh, the sound of cracking bone coming seconds before the shout of
anguish from the attacker.
“Remove yourselves, now,”
Thom’s rescuer ordered, uncaring that both his victims were bleeding and
moaning in pain. “If I ever see you again, I shall not be so lenient.”
The two men fled, not
looking back.
“Now, for you, let me see
how badly you are hurt.”
“I’ll live,” Thom told him.
“I owe you my life. I don’t know how to thank you, sir.”
“It’s Keegan, not sir,” the
man said as he beckoned Thom away from the wall. “And I do intend to make
certain that you’re alright. So lift up your shirt.”
Thom did, at the same time
telling Keegan his name.
“Well, Thom,” Keegan said
after gently probing the bruised area on Thom’s side, “you’re correct, you will
live and nothing was broken, although I for one would get checked out to make
certain no ribs were fractured.”
Taking a deep breath, Thom
then shook his head. “No fracture. Been there, done that, it doesn’t hurt to
breathe.”
“Been attacked before have
you?” Keegan asked, frowning.
“No. Just a bad fall off my
bike when I was younger.”
Keegan nodded, not taking
his eyes off of Thom. After a long moment he said, “I’ll walk you home, or to
your car, or wherever you were headed before so foolishly coming down this
alley.”
For
a few seconds Thom debated, and then said, “Home.”
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