Read Hunting Medusa: The Medusa Trilogy, Book 1 Online
Authors: Elizabeth Andrews
Impossible.
He got to his feet, his green eyes dangerous now.
She dashed toward the door. She only made it halfway before he caught her, ripping one of the belt loops on her jeans in the process. She fought, striking whatever she could reach and wishing she’d at least gotten shoes on so she could do some real damage since he was still naked.
But the Harvester was stronger than she was, and he simply held on until she wore herself out.
Andi finally stopped struggling, her head drooping, breath coming hard again, but with far less satisfaction this time.
He carried her back to the bed and snapped her wrist into the handcuff, his mouth set in a hard line. “I have another set, if I need both of your hands out of commission,” he ground out.
She didn’t bother to answer, struggling still to catch her breath. And against more of the unexpected tears.
Damned hormones.
He sat down beside her, hands braced on his hair-spattered knees. “I thought we were going to each do a little trusting,” he said finally.
She looked at the wall to her left, rather than at him. “I saw the handcuffs and I had to try.”
“Was it worth it?”
A scalding tear rushed down her cheek, making her glad she’d turned her face away.
“I know you weren’t faking,” he whispered, leaning nearer. “You can’t fake that.”
She bit her lip, swallowing around the giant lump in her throat.
“And neither was I.”
She barely kept herself from turning to look at him, but the shock still made her body jerk.
He rose and drifted a kiss on the top of her head. “Try to get some sleep.”
Behind her, she heard him gathering his clothing before he padded into the bathroom next door. The water ran briefly, and a few minutes later, she heard him slowly go downstairs.
She lifted her free hand at last to swipe at the tears on her face, closing her eyes.
She should have known this would turn out badly. Who knew the Harvester could undo locks without keys?
Her eyes flew open. What other abilities did he have that she didn’t know about yet?
Gods help her.
Chapter Four
Kallan sank onto the hard chair at the table and buried his face in his hands. Tonight wasn’t working out at all as he’d imagined it might. Andrea had warned him that morning she wouldn’t forget what he’d done last night. A mirthless laugh rumbled up his chest. He should have realized Andrea wouldn’t completely surrender. She was a fighter, his Medusa.
He frowned. She wasn’t
his
Medusa. She wasn’t his anything. Perhaps a temporary lover. And ultimately, his target. His family’s enemy.
That didn’t mean he’d allow his cousin get to her, however.
With that thought in mind, he booted up the laptop, fingers tapping over the keyboard. Sure enough, Great-Uncle Ari had responded to Kallan’s earlier posting, with a command to Stavros to head in the same direction rather than to follow his own lead. None of the cousins ever disobeyed Aristotle Tassos, even now when they were adults and hunting on their own—not even Stavros, arrogant and brutal as he was.
Breathing a small sigh of relief, Kallan idly pulled up his favorite page of the mythologies, one with plenty of photos of ancient artifacts to go along with the stories. Artifacts which had never been seen publicly, items that had instead passed down through generations of Harvesters. Currently, Cousin Demitrios was the keeper of the private collection, though word among the cousins was he wanted to get back in on the hunt and turn the curatorship over to his brother Vasily. That was up to Great-Uncle Ari, and the old bastard never rushed a decision.
He scrolled through several pages until he got to the photo he was searching for. A large urn decorated in great detail, including a scene depicting the very beautiful Medusa about to be slain by Perseus. The first Medusa was gorgeous, with wide eyes and a generous figure. The spitting, hissing snakes atop her head didn’t detract at all from her beauty.
He looked up at the ceiling. There was only silence from Andrea’s bedroom. He wasn’t sure if that was good or bad.
He glanced again at the urn. Perhaps she should see it.
To what purpose, though?
The voice in his head sounded very like Ari.
He frowned and picked up the computer, then headed for the steps and ignored the imaginary voice.
The light was still on in the bedroom, and Andrea sat just where he’d left her, her shoulders slumped.
Something in his chest tightened. He reminded himself she’d set this in motion, but he still felt a pang of guilt.
He cleared his throat. “I have something you should see.”
She didn’t move, didn’t jump, didn’t give any indication she’d heard him.
Kallan’s frown deepened as he crossed the room to her.
She was sleeping. Sitting there exactly where he’d left her, with tear stains on her cheeks.
Goddess, he felt even worse. He put the laptop on her dresser and turned back to the bed so he could ease her down into a more comfortable position. Certainly more comfortable than sleeping sitting up. She didn’t wake, just burrowed into the pillow, making an indistinct sound of protest.
For a moment, he watched her, trying to figure out why his chest ached and failing. He gave himself a shake and returned to the computer, then shut it down before he kicked off his shoes and stretched out behind her on the bed, careful not to disturb her. She’d had a rough enough day.
He smiled to himself at that and shut his eyes. They both needed some sleep to deal with what was coming.
Andi realized before she opened her eyes that the Harvester was sleeping with his arm around her. It was why she was so warm.
She frowned and peered through her eyelashes. Early light shone in the window on the other side of the room. The last thing she remembered was racking her brain trying to figure out if the Harvester had any other special talents he hadn’t told her about besides the lock thing. Now she was beneath the sheet and blanket, and his body heat warmed the back of her even more.
She shifted slightly, and knew when he came fully awake.
“Good morning, Andrea.”
She didn’t answer, setting her jaw.
His fingers slid slowly over her belly as he withdrew his arm, and she ground her teeth against the surge of PMS-fueled desire, certain the caress was a deliberate tease. Not that she’d give in to her hormones again. Not with
him
.
“We have work to do today.”
She shut her eyes.
“I have something for you.”
Something soft brushed her cheek, and she realized it was the sleep mask. She jerked her head away.
“You did agree.” His tone was patient.
She glared at the dresser and watched a big gouge mark appear on the side.
“Ah, yes, definitely time for this.” He chuckled and slipped it over her head.
Andi kept her mouth shut, hoping she didn’t grind her molars to dust.
“Do you want to hear our plans for the day?”
She curled her fingers into a fist beneath the blankets, trying to tell herself it was best if she didn’t hit him again today. Not three days in a row.
“No? You’re not at all curious?” He adjusted the mask, then touched the short hair at her nape. “I have something I want you to see, but it will have to wait for a day or two now. Today, we’re going to figure out a place to go to avoid my cousin when he gets back from Ohio.”
She jerked her head in his direction before she could stop herself.
“Mm. Yes, it seems Cousin Stavros got orders from our great-uncle to follow my hot lead there instead of heading here to follow up on his own leads. That gives us a few days to decide what to do.”
She turned her head away again on the pillow, considering. She hadn’t actually seen the entire message he’d posted, just the part about being on her trail and that he would complete his assignment in the next few days. She hadn’t seen where he told them he was.
He patted her hip. “Come on. Time to get up.”
She sat up reluctantly, her mind awhirl. It was possible he had actually lied to his cousin. But why? Because he wanted the glory for himself? Because he wanted the amulet even more desperately? She couldn’t begin to guess at his reasoning.
His strong hands settled at her waist to lift her to her feet.
She stumbled, off-balance from her imposed blindness, and he steadied her against him.
She took a step back, bumping into the bed, and he chuckled.
“I don’t think you’ll make it down the stairs this way.”
“I’m fine,” she said stiffly, reaching out to push him away.
He flattened her hand on his chest so she could feel his strong heartbeat. “I meant with the handcuff.”
She clenched her jaw.
He undid the cuff, and she wondered idly if he’d used the key or his handy talent. Then he caught her wrist in his free hand and turned her.
She concentrated on getting out of the room without crashing into anything. Or into him. She made it down the stairs without incident, then sat when he gave her a gentle nudge into a chair at the kitchen table.
“What would you like for breakfast?”
“Your obituary.”
He was silent for a few seconds, and she smiled, childishly pleased with herself.
“For a woman who’s just missed out on what was bound to be a very unpleasant encounter with Stavros, you don’t sound very grateful,” he said at last.
“One Harvester or another.” She shrugged.
His silence this time was more protracted, and tension filled the room.
She realized he may not just be thinking of his task, but of what had occurred between them already. She felt heat in her cheeks, suddenly grateful he was behind her.
Eventually, she heard him moving on the other side of the island, and she relaxed a little. Her belly twinged, and she stifled a sigh. Right on time. She stood up.
“Where are you going?”
“Bathroom.” She felt her way to the end of the table, mentally reviewing the space ahead of her. About fifteen steps to the half bath between the kitchen and living room, and no furniture in her path.
He didn’t argue, but his footsteps came nearer, and then his fingers caught her wrist.
“I can get there on my own.”
“I’m sure you can.” Nonetheless he guided her along the short hallway. “I’d hate for you to bump into anything and bruise yourself.” He released her at the doorway.
Andi didn’t flip him off as her first instinct suggested, but instead went into the smaller room and closed the door firmly—she hoped right in his face. She flipped the sleep mask up and glanced at her reflection in the mirror over the sink. Her spiky hair would have to wait. Right on cue, another cramp made her flatten one hand low on her belly.
A few minutes later—some aspirin washed down with a little water and her hair finger-combed—she hesitated for a few seconds, then tugged the sleep mask back down and fumbled for the doorknob. He might not still be standing outside the door, so if she walked back to the kitchen without the mask, he’d have time to turn away before she could do any damage to him. And he
had
held up his part of their bargain last night by producing the scissors she wanted.
Kallan met her at the door and guided her back to the table. “Do you need anything else?”
“The couch and a heating pad in about half an hour.” She sat. If he intended to wait on her, then he could really wait on her.
One of his hands brushed over the top of her head as he moved away. “I’ll see what I can do about that.”
She frowned. “And stop touching me.”
He muttered something she couldn’t quite hear, then banged a pan onto the stovetop.
She wondered what he’d said. And tried to figure out what he was making for breakfast. She really needed to go for groceries.
Sizzling began a moment later, and then the aroma of fried potatoes teased her nose.
Her stomach rumbled. She was starved. And no wonder, since she’d hardly eaten any of her supper last night.
Then something else scented the air. Bacon.
She frowned. Maybe there’d been some in the freezer? She didn’t care where he’d found the food though. It smelled delicious.
She rubbed one finger along the side of the table, feeling a small nick there. She’d have to sand it out once he was gone.
Assuming she was still alive.
Frowning, she gave her head a slight shake. She
would
be alive. Then she could even out the new gouges in the floor and on her dresser too.
A plate hit the table in front of her, and the amazing aromas assaulted her full-on. Her mouth watered.
“How do you think you’re going to eat?” he asked evenly.
She felt around for the fork she’d heard him put down.
Nothing.
Annoyance tightened her mouth. “If you go back to the other side of the island, I can eat without the mask on.”