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Authors: Linda Robertson

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BOOK: Hallowed Circle
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Johnny laughed at him; I blushed and started to follow but Johnny held me back.

“Erik, there’s ointments in the upper cabinet of the bathroom,” I called, indicating the half-bath under the stairs. “Something there will be good for spider bites.”

While Erik went to review my supplies, Johnny leaned in, saying, “That’s a good idea he has there, you know,” and gave me a soft kiss.

“That’s eighty-three to go,” I said. I’d promised him a hundred kisses, so I was keeping count.

“I thought I had eighty-seven left?” He opened the door and we strolled toward the kitchen.

“Nope. Eighty-three.”

Nana was still upstairs with Beverley. I dropped my flannel overshirt on the bench back and slid in at the dinette; I expected Johnny to go for the food. Instead, he
slid in beside me, forcing me to scoot over to accommodate him.

“You’re full of surprises,” he said, wiggling his eyebrows and putting his arm on the back of the bench nonchalantly. He was so comfortable in his own skin. I envied that. He dipped his chin down and managed to make it seem as if he was looking up at me. It was very male, very sexual, and I knew another sexual allusion was coming. “Your running impressed me tonight, and I must confess,” his voice dropped low again, “knowing you have such strong thighs and a penchant for moving fast makes me very excited.”

It took an effort to keep from visually checking his groin to see just how excited.

He sat up straight. “But that”—he pointed at my face—“we have to work on.”

“Huh?”

“Everything you think shows on your face. To be the Lustrata, you’re going to have to hide those thoughts, disguise those doubts, and show no emotion.”

My forehead bunched up.

“See? Again, you react to my words. It’s not like I don’t want you to react to my words, but if you’re facing an enemy, they’ll play you like a violin, just by seeing your expressions.”

“Then I’ll wear a mask. Like Zorro. My secret identity will be safe.”

“I’m serious.”

Okay, so this must be Lesson One in filling the Lustrata’s shoes. “I understand, I just think hiding my emotions might become a habit that wouldn’t be good.”

“As time goes on, you’ll probably end up with fewer wrinkles.”

I hit him in the ribs.

He chuckled. “I’m kidding.” He reached up and smoothed my hair. “Nothing, not even time, will mar your beauty in my eyes.”

It was easy to shut down inside my own conflict. Giving in would complicate so many things. We had trust issues already. What about our separate expectations? I wasn’t sure what mine were, let alone his. And there was Beverley to consider. I was a role model for her now. My life was challenging enough already; adding to those worries unnecessarily was selfish. I needed to take care of Beverley and Nana, to get things in order for them before I opened myself to something selfish.

“That’s my girl,” Johnny whispered. A wry twist took his lips and a wistful tilt of his head made him seem sad. “I knew your expression would go blank if I mentioned how your beauty affects me.”

CHAPTER FIVE
 

He was taking it all wrong! “Johnny …”

“What?” he asked. Practicing what he preached, he did not allow a single expectation to show in his expression. He was right. I did shut down if he complimented me.

“Beverley needs me to be receptive to her. She’ll think I’m mad all the time if I show her nothing but blankness.” That had been my experience with Nana anyway.

“First of all, Bev’s not an enemy. With her, don’t worry about it. And second, when she becomes a teenager, this ability will be your best ally. Trust me.”

I shut my eyes when he said that word. “Trust.” His fingertips, callused from years of playing the guitar, slid over my bare arm. I smelled metal again. Winter could sleep away months. Spring could sprout everything anew, but my stain would never diminish. Nothing would ever be the same. How could I tell him the truth without losing him?

My eyelids parted slightly and I nodded, watching his fingers work their way to my wrist.

“We need to start some fight training too.”

My spine stiffened and I met his Wedjat gaze seriously. “I
can
fight.”

The white-gold hoops caught the light as he arched his brow dubiously. One was still missing from where Menessos had torn it out.

“I’ve done my share of fighting,” I assured him.

“Got a punching bag with my picture on it somewhere?”

“Not yet,” I retorted. “In college.”

“Oooo. Rough dates?”

This was bringing up some memories I wasn’t particularly fond of, but he might as well know. “In college, I dated a man named Michael. His younger brother, Chris, was inadvertently turned wærewolf by a girlfriend he was trying to kennel. Chris was targeted by wære-haters and Michael resolved to do something about it. He enlisted my help. I used divination to evaluate risks and determine the best way to proceed, and I did the occasional spell to send negativity back to its human originator. Basically, we bullied the bullies back and they left Chris alone. It was all they would understand.”

Johnny’s head bobbed up and down. “That’s been my experience with bullies.”

“Word got around. Soon, we had all the campus wæres training together for self-defense—methods that took wære strength into consideration and made sure they wouldn’t severely hurt mere humans.”

“Yeah, wasn’t that about the time that famous actor was outed as a wære when he defended himself a little too aggressively against the paparazzi?”

“Right. That actor ended up serving time for man
slaughter. Anyway,” I continued, “we even persuaded Ohio University to designate a dorm specifically for wære students and convinced those students that it was in their best interests to be together.”

“But you aren’t wære …”

“I took the self-defense classes along with them and I even acquired some conflict experience.”

“Conflict experience?” He almost chuckled. “Sounds like a code phrase girls use for slumber parties or brownie points earned for returning home alive after shopping on Black Friday.”

I poked him in the ribs again. “That’s sexist.”

“No, that’s witty. Was this before Celia and Erik were turned?” Celia had been my roommate in college. Later, after they were married, Erik had started drumming for Johnny. That connection was how Johnny had originally started kenneling at my place.

“Yeah. Michael and I were supposed to join them on that trip, but we broke up.”

Peering sidelong at me, he asked in a sly tone, “He broke up with you or you broke up with him?”

Giving my heart a quick re-examination in terms of that relationship, I decided it was all healed up. It didn’t hurt to talk about it. “The former.”

“Ouch. Let me guess—he was an ass.”

I rolled my eyes. “Duh. Standard post-breakup verbiage.”

“Anyone that would hurt you must be an ass.”

He was playing with my hair again. My cheeks began to warm.

“Can I ask why you broke up?”

With a heavy sigh, I gave myself over to the idea of sharing
all
my history. “Michael opened a second center in downtown Athens, without a word to me about it. I told him it bothered me he would do that. I just wanted to be kept in the loop, but he took it as if I meant he needed to clear things with me. One thing led to another. Within a few weeks, we not only broke up, but he fired me. He wound up with the woman he hired to replace me.”

Johnny didn’t say anything, just gave my hand an affectionate squeeze.

“I’ve always thought that if he and I had gone camping with Celia and Erik, perhaps with our training we could have saved them from being turned.”

“Or you might have become wære too.”

That wasn’t a thought I’d even entertain; I
could
have made a difference.

“If that were the case,” he added, “you wouldn’t have a kennel in your basement and we’d never have met.”

I didn’t say anything. It was true, but I couldn’t be glad Celia had been turned wære so that, years later, my path and Johnny’s could cross. Celia had wanted to be a mother so badly and being infected forced her to give up her dream of having children. I knew how devastating that was for her.

“So,” he went on. “When were you gathering your ‘conflict experience,’ exactly?”

Ignoring the taunt, I replied, “About four years ago.”

“Have you kept up with this training?”

“No, but ‘out of practice’ isn’t the same as ‘untrained.’ ”

Johnny leaned forward, face close to mine, eyes smolder
ing. “I say we should go upstairs. You can show me your moves and I’ll evaluate your strengths and weaknesses.”

My reply mocked innocence. “There’s no room for sparring upstairs.”

“Combat can happen anywhere,” he whispered seductively, sliding his body closer to mine.

His wære libido howled to me, my stain, and any part of me that would listen. Heat flared all through me. My breathing sped up. I wanted him to kiss me, to take me upstairs.

Get a grip on your hormones, girl!
I scolded myself, but it didn’t work.
Better yet, get a grip on his—

“Anywhere,” he repeated. “On … hard … surfaces and soft ones. In wide open spaces, or … tight … places. You always need to be ready for an encounter.” He made an “encounter” sound like a lifetime of bliss.

My resistance was kitten-weak. The only way to resolve it was to give in and see if it was me or the stain.

I could almost feel his lips on mine—

“Beverley is sleeping,” Nana announced, shuffling in wearing the thick terry robe that matched her pink fuzzy slippers. Erik came in behind her.

Johnny rose quickly and in seconds, he and Erik began filling their plates.

Nana sat in the spot Johnny had vacated and rubbed at her knees. Going up and down the steps was not good for her. I needed to do something about that.

“Where did you rush off to today,” she grumbled, “or are you still being all mum about it?”

“Oh, is something up?” Johnny inquired, emphasis on the word “up,” as he slipped his plate into the microwave.

Nana did that on purpose—asking in front of Johnny, knowing the pressure of their combined curiosity would be impossible to stand against. Might as well tell them. “Today I was nominated to be in an Eximium for the title of Venefica Covenstead High Priestess.”

“You’ve been what?” Nana asked, incredulous.

“You heard me,” I said.

“Wait. You might get to replace Vivian? Poetic justice strikes again,” Johnny quipped. “Hey.” He pointed at me. “That can be your slogan. Like Batman and Robin are the Dynamic Duo, and Superman has the bullet-stopping, building-leaping intro, you can be the Lustrata, Administer of Poetic Justice.”

I ignored Johnny. “The interim priestess nominated me.” I didn’t want to mention Lydia’s name, until I knew the circumstances of Nana’s estrangement from her.

“Why you? You’re a solitary! Not to mention that sooner or later you’re going to have to reveal yourself as the Lustrata to the council!”

She made it sound dirty. Of course her words caused Johnny to vigorously wiggle his eyebrows at me.

“Why doesn’t this interim priestess just do it?” Nana demanded.

“She claims to be too old for it.”

“More the reason she should lead,” Nana harrumphed. “Age equals experience and nothing guides better than wise experience.”

“Aside from her, the coven membership is mostly newbies and pretenders.” I wasn’t about to mention the current preference for youthful, telegenic coven leaders.

“Vivian’s assistant—”

“Is barely twenty.”

“Lord and Lady, was Vivian that ignorant?”

In response, I gave Nana a hard look. She knew the answer to that one.

She pulled her cigarette case from the deep pocket of her robe, took one out, and proceeded to light it. Her eyes searched nothing as she took a long draught and thought things through. Exhaling the smoke, she said firmly, “You can’t be in this Eximium.”

“Yeah, Red,” Johnny added. “This may not be a good idea.”

“I
want
to do this. I already agreed.”

“Well, you will just have to get out of it,” Nana said in the tone that meant her word would be the end of it.

I bristled inside but, taking Johnny’s advice, I made my face blank. My brows didn’t lower. My arms didn’t cross over my chest. I calmly said, “I know what I’m doing.”

Peeved, Nana feigned indifference. “You’re the Lustrata,” she muttered.

“It’s under control.”

Johnny frowned. With his Wedjat tattoos he looked as if he were plotting the most devious of deeds. I’d figured out, though, over the few weeks he’d been living with us, that this “evil” expression only meant his mind was racing. I was happy to see it. He was rethinking his position and giving some consideration to mine.

Then the microwave dinged and all else seemed forgotten as the wære zeroed in on his red meat. Admittedly, the roast smelled delicious. I almost wanted some.

BOOK: Hallowed Circle
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