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Authors: P. C. Cast

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BOOK: Goddess of the Sea
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CC was standing in water that came just below her breasts, and her body felt somehow different. She looked down at herself and gasped. She was clothed in layers upon layers of cloth that created a beautiful dress, which sparkled and shimmered with the exact colors that had been in her mermaid's tail. The fabric was heavy and wet, but CC could still see the intricate needlework that covered almost every inch of it. Her fingers and wrists were covered with rings and bracelets. She shook her head in wonder and felt dangling earrings brush against her neck. Her hair, too, felt unnaturally heavy, and CC raised a hand to touch strands of jewels that had been magically woven within it and draped around her slender neck.
“The Goddess Gaea cares for her own,” Dylan said. The merman's tail was curled under him so that it appeared that he was standing beside her. He had drifted a step away from her, as if to give the magic room to work, but he didn't seem surprised by the sudden manifestation of CC's new wardrobe.
“Thank you, Gaea,” CC said aloud. She studied the thickly leafed trees lining the beach, but she didn't see any sign of the goddess. Then her gaze returned to the merman.
“And thank you,” she said. “I think I owe you my life.” The sun had come out and its rays were already warming her. She was exhausted and her body felt like it was made of lead, but her uncontrollable shivering had stopped, and now that she was dressed, she didn't feel nearly as helpless.
He shook off her thanks. “No, Undine. There is no debt between us. I only offered aid when it was needed.”
“Well, thank you anyway.” Automatically, she offered her hand to him, and with only a slight hesitation he took it. But instead of shaking it he lifted it slowly to his mouth and pressed it to his lips. CC stopped breathing. Dylan's lips were warm—and that warmth traveled through her body, making the fine hairs on her arm rise in response. His eyes met hers, and CC realized how darkly handsome he was.
She found herself wanting to whisper
I think I dreamed about you
, but his gaze mesmerized her into silent breathlessness.
He continued holding her hand in his, and she felt him stroke it gently with his thumb. Her skin tingled under his caress, and her breath came back in a rush. The smile on his full lips was reflected in his dark, expressive eyes. When he spoke his voice was rough with emotion.
“Undine, you are most wel—”
A shout from the shore startled them. In one blink, Dylan dropped her hand and plunged headfirst, disappearing instantly beneath the waves.
CC turned to the shore in time to see, surging from the line of trees, a man riding a huge black horse. She took a step forward and her feet became tangled in the thick skirts of her dress. She fell face first into the water, where she struggled and floundered impotently against the weight of her clothes. Before she could regain her feet she was pulled roughly to the surface, swept up into the man's arms and carried to the beach like a child. She coughed and wiped water from her eyes, thinking how extraordinarily tired she was of swallowing seawater.
“You are safe now, my lady,” the man said earnestly. Placing her gently on the sand, he kneeled beside her.
“Th-thank you.” CC coughed. She looked up at him and couldn't help staring. He was dressed like she imagined an ancient knight would have been dressed. He wore a pointed helmet made of silver metal that left most of his face open, except for a studded nosepiece. A long tunic of gray chain mail covered him from torso to knees, leaving his thickly muscled legs bare. He had a huge sword strapped to his waist and the scarlet cape that was tossed over his shoulders was held in place by a large pewter brooch in the shape of a roaring lion. Blond hair escaped from under the helmet and curled around his shoulders. He looked like a young war god.
But he wasn't looking at her. His attention was focused on the water. “My lady, were there no other survivors from your vessel?”
“No,” she said quickly. Then she remembered Gaea's words and pressed her hand to her forehead, leaning heavily back as if she was on the edge of fainting. “I-I don't know. I can't remember.” She felt her body quiver with shock and the sob that escaped her lips was suddenly very real. “I can't remember anything.”
He turned his attention back to her and his eyes widened as his senses registered the beauty he held within his arms. “Forgive me, lady,” he said hastily, patting her shoulder awkwardly. “You have been through a horrible ordeal. It is just that for a moment I thought I saw someone in the water with you.”
Two men on horseback burst through the tree line. The warrior shouted orders to them.
“Marten, Gilbert—search the shore and the waters for other survivors. This lady is injured. I must get her to shelter.”
The two men saluted him and instantly obeyed his orders, but CC couldn't help noticing the way their eyes kept snaking back to her. The way they looked at her made her feel like she was still naked. The man kneeling beside her seemed to notice their looks, too, because he shifted his body to block her from their view.
“Can you ride?” he asked gently.
CC glanced at the gigantic black beast and gulped. Slung over its odd-looking, curved pommel was a large silver shield that looked a little like a monstrous kite. The creature pawed dangerously. The only horse she'd ever ridden had been attached to a carousel, and that had been many years ago.
“Not without help.” She definitely wasn't pretending when her voice shook.
In one motion he scooped her from the sand and strode to the waiting horse, who snorted and shied at the waterlogged body in his master's arms. Without any warning, he tossed CC into the saddle, then grabbed a handful of the stallion's thick, dark mane and vaulted up behind her. Leaning forward he gathered the reins, kicked his heels into the horse's sides and the stallion leapt forward.
“Wait!” CC felt a stab of panic as they headed into the forest and away from the ocean. Something inside of her wrenched, and a wave of dizziness washed over her. “Where are you taking me?”
“Do not fear, my lady. There is a monastery not far from here. The good monks will give you aid.”
“But I can't leave the ocean,” she said frantically. “My family—” she broke off with a frightened sob.
His arms tightened around her protectively as he thought of her lovely helplessness. He was unaccustomed to having a woman touch his emotions, but it felt as though this young woman's beauty had already cast a spell upon him. She most assuredly shook him. When he spoke his voice was gruff, making his words sound harsh.
“We are not leaving the ocean. Caldei Monastery is but a short distance up this coast.” He forced himself to add a smile to his voice, trying to reassure her. “And it would be impossible for us ride away from the ocean. Caldei Monastery is built on the island of Caldei. We are surrounded by the ocean.”
The man's words didn't seem to register to her battered brain. She couldn't stop her body from shaking. What had she gotten herself into? Where was Gaea?
They broke through the trees onto a dirt-packed road and the warrior pointed his horse to the right. Clearing his throat and forcing himself to speak in a more soothing tone, he said, “My name is Sir Andras Ap Caer Llion, eldest son of the great Lord Caerleon. I am pleased to be of service to you, and I pledge that I will not allow any harm to befall you.” His warm breath touched the side of her face. “May I be honored with your name?”
CC forced her eyes from the snatches of blue that she glimpsed through the trees. Her mind was in turmoil. She wanted nothing more than to shake free from the cage of the knight's arms and to hurl herself back into the ocean.
You will ache for the waters
. Gaea's words drifted through her memory as she struggled against the primitive urge that engulfed her.
“Your name, lady?” the knight prompted.
CC breathed deeply, forcing herself to relax in his arms. The sun glinted through the trees that lined the dirt road, and as the stallion galloped forward, the play of light and shadow danced alluringly over the knight's silver helmet and golden hair. CC felt another wave of overwhelming emotion. She had been rescued first by a creature from her dreams and then by an authentic knight in shining armor.
And through it all, her body ached and cried for the sea.
“I am the Princess Undine, and I cannot leave the water,” she whispered, closing her eyes and allowing her head to rest against the strength of his shoulder.
 
 
A safe distance from shore Dylan watched as the human man carried Undine away. His hands balled into fists, and he clenched his jaw until it ached. It didn't matter that he knew this was what she had always wanted. It didn't even matter that he knew the soul inside her body wasn't that of his childhood playmate, Undine. He still felt drawn to her. He remembered the look in her eyes when he had kissed her hand, and the hope that had filled him at her unexpected response to his touch. Watching her ride away, he felt like a piece of his body had been hacked from him.
Through the trees he could see that the horse had turned and was traveling parallel to the ocean. Ignoring his despair, he glided through the water, careful to keep her always within his sight.
She may still have need of him. He had failed her at the grotto; he would not fail her again.
CHAPTER NINE
“THIS princess has been shipwrecked!” The warrior shouted at the robed man standing nervously behind the barred doors. “I am Andras, son of Caerleon. I demand entrance and sanctuary for this lady.”
“I must get the abbot.” The little man scuttled quickly out of sight.
Andras made a derisive sound though his nose, and the black stallion pawed restlessly. CC closed her eyes on a wave of nausea. She could no longer see the ocean. The monastery had been built on the top of a cliff that dropped steeply to a rugged shoreline. Although out of sight, she could hear the waves crashing against the rocks below, and if she focused hard enough on the sound, it soothed her frayed nerves.
“Not much longer, Princess,” Andras said. “Abbot William and my family are well acquainted. We will be admitted.”
CC wanted to say that she thought monks were supposed to help people, whether they knew their families or not, but she couldn't summon the energy to speak. She wanted to get her drenched clothes off and sleep for days—and not necessarily in that order.
But most of all she wanted the sea to quit calling to her.
“Andras! Is that you, my son?” A soft voice with an accent that sounded vaguely British called from within the walls of the monastery.
“Yes, Father. I am in need of your aid.”
“Of course, of course,” the voice said hastily. “Brother, unlock this gate and allow our friend entrance.”
Rusty hinges complained as the gate swung open. CC tried to sit straighter, ashamed of her bedraggled appearance. But before she could even smooth her hair, Andras slid from the horse's back and pulled her down beside him. CC was horrified to realize that she couldn't stand on her own. Her vision was blurred and everything went cloudy and gray as her knees buckled. Instantly the warrior lifted her into his arms.
“The princess needs rest and care. I found her washed ashore not far from here.”
“Brother Peter, have the guest quarters readied for this lady and have one of the sculleries attend to her.” CC could hear the scuffle of robes as the man hurried to do the abbot's bidding.
“Are there other survivors to follow, my son?”
CC could feel the warrior shaking his head.
“Poor child,” the priest spoke quietly, but he made no attempt to mask the obvious curiosity in his voice. “And you say she is a princess?”
“She remembered her name, but I am afraid she has not been able to say much else,” Andras said.
“What is her name?”
“She is the Princess Undine.”
Silence greeted the knight's words, and CC wanted desperately to open her eyes and see the abbot's expression. But common sense warned her that it was best to keep up the pretense that she had fainted and was still unconscious.
“Undine?” The man enunciated the name carefully. “Are you quite certain she said Undine?”
“I believe so,” Andras answered. “Yes, I am certain she told me her name was the Princess Undine. Do you recognize that name, Father?”
“I only know that in some tongues an
undine
is a spirit from the sea. How very odd.”
“Abbot William.” The first monk hurried back to them. “The guest room is ready for the lady and the scullery awaits.”
“Let us get her safely within,” Andras said. “There will be time to question names and such when she has recovered.” CC could feel the warrior's eyes on her and when he spoke his lips were close to her ear. “Look at her, Abbot. It is most certain that she is a princess.” Andras's arms tightened possessively around her.
“Let us not be deceived by beauty, my son.” The abbot's voice was condescending. “But you are correct, she must rest before we can expect her to speak. Follow me to the guest quarters.”
CC rested her head against Andras's shoulder, slitting her eyes to try and catch a glimpse of her surroundings. She saw the green of the grass as they crossed some kind of courtyard, and she was surprised to note the fading light. It was obviously dusk, but it had seemed like only minutes had passed since she had been pulled ashore by the merman. Her hand twitched in remembrance. Surely that wasn't his kiss that she still felt warming her skin?
When they entered the monastery, the heels of Andras's shoes rang against the stone of the floor, and all CC could see through her half-closed eyes was the gray of the stone walls in a dark, narrow corridor.
BOOK: Goddess of the Sea
7.22Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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