Epilogue

Abhean stood in the circle of standing stones. His hands hung limply at his side. No breath of air stirred the grass or flowers. Even the leaves on the trees in the forest held silent. A golden red sun painted the misty blue mountains deep violet and the brilliant blue of the sky could blind a man if he stared too long. He ignored the trudging footsteps behind him, and said nothing for long minutes.

“You win.” Like dry leaves tumbling before a winter wind, he admitted defeat.

“No, Abhean.” Manannán appeared at his side. “This was not a contest between us, no matter how much you wished to make it so.”

“The mortals made the binding?”

“They did, aye.”

“Then you win.”

“No, Abhean. Love wins.”

“Ha! Love? What know yee of love, old man?”

“More than you, harper. You sing it into being with a heart closed and dark. You pervert it and twist it and use it to punish. But who do you penalize? The mortals? Nay. They find their way despite our interference. You wish to strike at me, but for all the millennium you have failed.”

Abhean whirled, his eyes narrowed and gleaming with feral reds and yellows. “I will beat you.” He ignored the look of profound sadness on Manannán’s face.

“No, son. You will not. For I know your heart far better.”

He opened and closed his mouth several times but no words came out. Before he could move, Manannán cupped his cheeks in his massive hands.

“I know that of which you seek. I know your hidden desires. I am the King of Tir Nan Óg, Abhean. I am the one who brought you here. Aye, perhaps for reasons far more selfish than I wished to admit at the time.” He pulled Abhean closer and pressed his lips to the harper’s forehead. “I could not bear to be apart from my son.”

Abhean forced his knees to lock so he could remain standing stiff and aloof. He would not listen, would not be tricked by the king’s lies.

“Love, my son, is a gift. I give it now to you.”

Clouds bloomed against that dazzling blue sky and the wind whipped around the two men before chasing through the standing stones and making them sing. Abhean listened, for this was a song he’d not heard before. Caught in the web of music, his heart expanded until he thought it would burst, even as it felt like claws shredded it to pieces.

“Go yee, Abhean, Harper of the Tuatha de Danaan, son of Manannán mac Lir, King of Tir Nan Óg. Go yee to the mortal realm until yee find the other half of your heart.”

Lightning struck the altar stone, sending up sparks, and Abhean, deafened by the crescendo of thunder that followed, stared at the man he’d hated all his life. Mist—swirling gray and black—enveloped him in a whirlwind. The hands cupping his face slipped away and he spun away into the vortex, his last word torn from his throat and lost in the void.

“Father!”