Authors: Virginia Kantra
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #General
was a line of dark spruce and then the shore, black rock breaking white
water, and then the ocean glimmering as far as the horizon, the white
caps’ plumes running before the wind like the horses of Llyr.
The wind drummed in Dylan’s ears. Doubt ate at his heart.
He was not anyone’s choice to stand against the power of Hell. He
should summon a warden, send for instructions, ask for advice.
Assuming Conn would hear and answer.
Assuming help would come in time.
The wind snickered, snatching at Dylan’s clothes and hair. The
waves raged like his heart.
He didn’t need this. He didn’t want her. He had witnessed firsthand
the wreck of his parents’ marriage, the tangled net of love and obsession
and resentment that had dragged his mother from the sea. He would never
give a woman that kind of power over him.
That did not mean he could not use his own power to find Regina.
To save her.
He had always been adept at small magics. He could summon a
wave, a woman, a breeze. For convenience, for amusement, for spite. But
no significant outcome, no significant other, had ever depended on his
skill before.
“You try being responsible for somebody besides yourself sometime,
and we’ll talk.”
Indeed.
The cross was in his hand. He spread his arms against the wind,
annoyed to notice his hands trembling.
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He gazed down on the sea, polished and pocked as a sheet of
hammered silver. The waters of the ocean ran through him, his mother’s
blood, his mother’s gift. The magic of the ocean was his birthright.
He planted his feet on the rock. He stretched his arms, opened his
mind, and invited the sea in.
Power rose like fog from the surface of the water, moist, heavy. He
felt it envelope him, stream over him and into him, pour down his throat
like wine and pool in his loins like lust. His mind spun as the power
surged, seeking an outlet. It filled him to overflowing; spilled from his
throat on a cry: “Regina.”
So he called her, by her name and by his knowledge of her, her flesh
and her spirit, and by the power of the totem in his hand.
Regina.
The wind in the trees replied. A bird soaring over the waters replied.
The quickening of his own heart answered him.
Clenching his hand on the burning gold of the cross, Dylan plunged
from the sunlit hill and into the shadow of the trees. He was already
loosening his belt when he reached the shore.
* * *
Regina stumbled in the dark, at the limits of her strength, driven by
terror and the rising water. The cold current dragged and hissed at her
knees, soaked her jeans, weighted her sneakers. If she took off her shoes,
she would cut her feet. If she didn’t take them off, she could drown.
A whimper escaped her. She set her teeth. She couldn’t drown. She
had to get home to Nick. Oh, Ma, I’m so sorry. Nick . . .
She had to keep her head above water. She had to find the chamber’s
highest point. If only she could see. She sloshed through icy water,
patting and slapping the cave ceiling, her fingers like frozen sausages.
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The ceiling rose away from the wall. She followed its slope, dazed
with cold, disoriented in the dark, her fingers fumbling, sliding, touching .
. . nothing.
She bit back a scream. There was a— She groped. A hole overhead.
She patted. A passage, a chimney in the rock, wider than her shoulders,
wider than her whole body, on a level with her wrists. Her heart pounded.
If she could pull herself up there, if she could climb . . .
She scrabbled at the edges of the hole, clawing frantically at the
rock. Stones dislodged, sliding and striking her head and shoulders. The
water lapped and sucked at her legs. She jumped, grabbed, and slid.
Jumped and slid. Jumped, grabbed, and caught a handhold in the passage
above.
Her arms screamed. Her shoulders protested. She hung there for long
moments, a dead weight with battered, bleeding hands. Her feet dangled
in the water. She felt it churning around her ankles, cold, cold, coming for
her. Her breath sobbed. Come on, come on. Think of Ma; think of Nick.
She kicked with her feet, twisting like a kid in gym class under the pull-up bar. Please oh please oh please oh . . .
Up. She scraped her elbow, wedged her ribs on the edge of the hole.
Her blood drummed in her ears. She did it. She made it. She was gasping,
huffing, sweating, although she couldn’t move her fingers or feel her toes.
She pulled in her stomach, struggled to bring her knee up—
And fell.
A cry ripped from her broken throat, a squawk of rage and despair.
No.
Cold water, cold, closing over her head.
She thrashed, flailing at the water, bumping her hip, her knees, her
elbow against the rocks.
The rocks. She located bottom; pushed off, dragging her feet under
her; and stood in water up to her waist.
Water streamed from her hair, streamed in her eyes. She drew great,
gasping, shuddering breaths, wrapping her arms around her waist as if she
could hold in her heat, hold herself together.
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She shivered violently, her teeth clacking together. It wasn’t fair,
goddammit. Nick was growing up without a father. He needed his
mother.
She could not control her shaking. She stretched her arms over her
head and groped again for the edge of the chimney. Had Jericho brought
her down this way? Loweredher down? How much time had she wasted
feeling her way in the dark?
She was disoriented, dizzy from her fall. The water was deeper. She
set her teeth and waded, feeling the rock ceiling overhead.
Something brushed against her leg. A rock. She ignored it. Again.
Something large and long and low, moving fast through the water. The
surface churned.
She screamed and stumbled backward, windmilling her arms for
balance. Oh, God, oh, no, oh—
“Regina.” Dylan’s voice, warm in the dark.
She was hearing things, imagining things. Nick’s face. Her mother’s
voice . . .
She turned her head wildly, frightened, freaked out, straining her
eyes against the blackness. Her teeth chattered.
“Regina?” Closer now, questioning.
She was losing her mind. She was losing it.
Something touched her shoulder. She jerked and struck out.
Whatever, whoever it was, simply pulled her close, trapping her
sluggish, useless arms between them, wrapping her in a strong, warm
embrace, murmuring, “It’s all right now. It’s all right.”
Dylan’s voice. Dylan’s scent.
She was hallucinating. Had to be. But he felt solid and warm and
real against her, and she was cold, so cold, and alone. She buried her face
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against his chest, wet and slippery smooth, burrowing against him. He
was strong and warm, close and . . . naked?
She jolted as he held her, as he stroked her hair. “Where—” Her
voice was a croak. She coughed and tried again. “Clothes?”
He was silent.
Maybe she’d offended him.
Maybe he wasn’t there. Like her mother. Like Nick.
“Sorry. Dumb question. My fantasy,” she babbled, holding on to
him. Don’t leave me alone. “Why wouldn’t you . . . be naked?”
“Regina.” His voice was shaken with laughter or something else.
“Are you all right?”
“Lost . . . my mind.” The words ripped her throat. “Unless . . . you’re
here?”
“I’m here.” His voice flowed over her, deep and reassuring. “You’re
fine. We’re going to get you out.”
Her head wobbled. She let it drop against his chest. The relief of
having someone here, someone warm to lean on, was unspeakable.
“How?”
“We’re going to swim through the tunnel.”
His words roused her to doubt. If he were really here, if he were
really real, wouldn’t he be wearing . . . Her confused mind stumbled
among options. Diving equipment?
“How did . . . you find me?”
Another moment of silence. “It doesn’t matter.”
He sounded like her mother. Her dreams of her mother. But maybe
that didn’t matter either.
“Regina.” His tone was sharper now.
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Her arms were tight around his waist, absorbing his warmth. “Mm?”
“We need to go. You need to hold on to me.”
He was so warm. If he were a figment of her imagination, would he
feel so warm?
“Am holding you,” she slurred.
“Not like that.” He broke the circle of her arms, makingher murmur
in protest, her body bereft at the loss of his heat.
She heard splashing and then he thrust something into her hand.
Wet, soft, flowing . . .
Seaweed? She pulled her hand away.
He caught her wrist; forced it back to the thing between them.
Her fingers splayed. Flexed. “What . . . ?”
“A sealskin. I need it to take you through the tunnel.” She stroked
the wet fur. She could not feel an end to it in the dark.
“— go underwater,” he was saying. “Not a long way, but it will be
quicker if I Change. Can you hold on?”
Her limbs felt too heavy to move. Her fingers were fat and numb.
Regina took a deep breath and thought of Nick. Hold on. She just had to
hold on a little longer.
She nodded, forgetting Dylan couldn’t see her in the dark.
“Good girl,” he said, taking her cooperation for granted. “This way.”
He put his arm around her waist to lead her forward. And maybe he
could see after all, she thought dazedly, because he guided her without
any trouble deeper and deeper into water up to her breasts. Up to her
neck. She began to shake against his arm, hard, deep tremors that hurt her
bones. She was so cold now that the water felt warmer than the air, but
she felt its pressure in her chest as if she were already underwater. Her
womb contracted. He was taking her into the water. Under the water. She
couldn’t breathe.
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She stopped, her hands curling protectively over her stomach.
“It’s all right,” Dylan said.
“I’m not . . .” But she was afraid. Horribly afraid. “The baby.”
“Baby,” he said without inflection.
She didn’t, couldn’t, answer him. She stood there, her teeth
chattering, shaking like a dog in the dark.
He turned her into his body. His fingers stroked her cheek. He
cupped her face in his hands. Was he going to kiss her? Now? Why not?
She wanted him to. Either he was here— the only man who had ever
showed up when she needed him— or she was dreaming. Let him kiss her
before the water took her.
His breath skated over her eyelids, over her lips, hot, drugging, salty
sweet. She stood a little on tiptoe, wanting to be closer to him, but he
slipped away. She felt the sealskin again, in the water between them,
moving with the current, heavy against her legs.
“Hold on,” he said.
And then he was gone.
She cried out in shock and loss, reaching for him, stretching her arms
through the black water. The sealskin flowed under her hands, thick, soft,
fluid. Her fingers curled reflexively. Hold on. His voice? Hers?
The pelt rolled with the water, assuming weight and form, muscle
and mass. Her hands dug deeper in its folds. It was huge. Warm. Pulsing
with life. The sleek fur glided under and against her like a dog nudging
for attention. A really big dog. She caught her breath at the feel of the
solid body under her hands, and it pulled her off her feet and under the
water.
A confused rush filled her ears, filled her head. She couldn’t think.
She barely had time to be afraid. She was weightless, warm, buoyed up
and supported by the powerfulbody surging under hers, by the water
streaming and bubbling over and around her. Her mind churned. Her grip
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tightened. The darkness grew gray and then gold and then erupted in
dazzling light.
Sunset spilled over the rocks, and Regina sprawled beached on a
block of granite with the day going down in banners of pink and gold on
the horizon and a massive thing . . . shape . . . warm, black, sleek . . .
beside her. She blinked. Gasped. Raised her head. Pushed up on her
elbows.
A violent fit of coughing seized her. Helpless, she heaved, spasms
squeezing her chest. Her head exploded. Her lungs rattled. Tears leaked
from her eyes.
When she forced her lids open again, Dylan knelt naked at her side,
and the sealskin lay empty on the rocks.
She passed out.
* * *
“You can go in now,” the doctor said.
Finally. Dylan stood.
He hadn’t known when he carried Regina into the clinic that he