Authors: Virginia Kantra
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #General
have something to show you.”
Dylan surveyed the chart covering the surface of the desk. “Since
when do we depend on human maps?”
“It suits my purpose,” Conn said.
“Which is?”
Instead of replying, Conn spread his hands over the desk. He
concentrated his gift, adding his little findings to the information already
imbued in the map. Gradually the image came alive, colors winking into
being like stars in the night sky, forming streams and clusters of light.
27
Dylan’s brows flicked up. “Impressive. What is it?”
Conn closed his fists, ignoring the faint, residual headache that
exercising his magic always gave him. The map pulsed and swirled with
color. “The gray”— great swathes of it—“indicates human habitation.
The blue represents our people.”
A few, too few, thousand scattered points of light, almost lost in the
vastness of the oceans.
“The children of earth are here.” Conn’s finger followed the trail of
green along the mountain ranges, tapped the sacred places of the sidhe.
“Demons here.” A sweep of his hand indicated the children of fire,
spattered like blood across fault lines and land forms.
Dylan stepped closer to the desk, narrowing his eyes in
concentration. “I do not see the children of air on your map.”
“Because they are not there. Angelic intervention is less common
than most humans believe. Or would welcome,” Conn said dryly.
“Besides, it is the demons’ activity that concerns me.”
“Because of Gwyneth.”
Conn’s rage welled, deep and slow as ice. Six weeks ago, the selkie
Gwyneth of Hiort had been lured to land, stripped of her pelt, tortured,
and killed by a demon in human form.
“Because they murdered one of us,” Conn agreed, “and because they
attempted to cast blame on the humans. I will not be tricked into taking
sides in the demons’ war on heaven and humankind.”
Dylan frowned at the map. The darkness Conn had sensed earlier
was a red blot off the coast of Maine. “You may not have a choice. If the
demons upset the balance—”
“Margred restored the balance when she bound Gwyneth’s murderer
in the sea.”
Dylan raised one eyebrow. “A life for a life?”
28
“After a fashion.” Elementals were immortal. The selkie would be
reborn in the sea; the demon was trapped for eternity. A fair enough
exchange, in Conn’s view. “But Margred’s action carries its own
consequences.”
“You think she is in danger?” Dylan asked sharply.
“I think she could be.”
“Revenge?”
Conn considered. The demons understood justice; they were not
ruled by it. Revenge would certainly play a part in their response. But
they were driven by more practical considerations. “Say, rather, that
Margred’s demonstration of power may have put her at risk.”
“Why are you telling me this?”
“She married your brother.”
Dylan’s lips pulled back from his teeth. “Unfortunately. She is
human now. Which means her choices and her fate are really none of my
business.”
Or yours. The implication hung in the air, unspoken.
“Unless she carries your brother’s child,” Conn said evenly.
Dylan’s pale face turned white. There were feelings there, Conn
thought. Feelings he would not hesitate to use for his own purposes.
“What difference would that make?” Dylan asked.
“Your mother’s blood was strong. Her gift was powerful. There are
songs—” Prophecy or history? Conn wondered. Impossible to tell from
the whales’ song. The great mammals had even less concept of time than
selkies. “There are stories that a daughter of Atargatis’s lineage could
forever change the balance of power and the destiny of her people.”
“A daughter.” Dylan’s eyes were black. “Not a son?”
Conn sympathized with his disappointment. Better for them both if
Atargatis’s power had devolved to a son. To Dylan.
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“The songs say a daughter.”
“Then . . .” Dylan scowled, still regarding the red-tinged map of
Maine. “My sister?”
Conn shook his head. “Both your brother and your sister are human.
So far the demons have considered them unworthy of notice. But if your
brother were to have a child—”
“Or if I did.”
“Yes. I had hoped—” Conn broke off. He did not indulge in hope
any more than anger. “The combination of your mother’s blood and
Margred’s gift might be regarded as an advantage for our people. Or as a
threat by the demons.”
“So what do you want me to do? Tell my brother he shouldn’t fuck
his wife?”
Conn thought about it. “Would he listen to you?”
“No.”
Conn shrugged. “Just as well. Our numbers are declining. We need
children. We need this child.”
Dylan sneered. “Assuming he can get Margred pregnant.”
“Assuming their child is selkie. And female. Yes.”
“You assume a great deal.”
Conn’s mouth twitched in a rare smile. “True.” And few of his court
dared to speak the truth to him. “Yet something draws the demons to
World’s End. I need you to find out what.”
* * *
Dylan stared at his prince, his heart thundering in his ears. For a
moment he wondered if he’d heard Conn correctly. “That’s a warden’s
job.”
30
The prince’s gaze was clear and light as frost, deep and measureless
as the sea. “Do you refuse me?”
“I— No, my lord.” He was startled, not stupid. “But why not send
one of them?”
The wardens were Conn’s confidants, his elite. Chosen for their
loyalty and the strength of their gift, they kept the prince’s peace,
defending his realm from the depredations of human and demon kind.
Since he was fourteen years old, Dylan had burned to be counted as
one of them, to wear the wardens’ mark around his neck.
It had been a bitter realization to accept he was too nearly human to
have either their power or the prince’s trust.
“They do not have your knowledge of the island,” Conn said. “Or
your connection to it.”
For some reason, Dylan’s brain presented him with a picture of the
woman, the prickly one with the ward on her wrist and the tight body
humming with energy.
They were not connected, he thought. He had merely had sex with
her. He had sex with many women.
And banished the memory of her voice saying, “You’re the first in—oh, a long time.”
Conn must have taken his silence as dissent, for he said, “You grew
up there.”
Dylan dragged his mind back to the tower and the present
discussion. “Many years ago.”
“Your family lives there.”
A touchy point. “They are not my family any longer. I am selkie
now.”
The prince regarded him with cool, light eyes. “And yet you keep a
human habitation not three miles east of them.”
31
Dylan flushed. How much did Conn know? And how much did he
hold against him? “The island was my mother’s.”
“Your father built and furnished the house.”
He had not known. He told himself it did not matter. “It’s a
convenient stopping place, that’s all,” Dylan said.
“Certainly it will be,” Conn agreed. “You may need to live among
them for a time.”
Dylan’s stomach sank. “After more than twenty years, the islanders
are likely to question my sudden reappearance.”
“Not so sudden,” Conn pointed out. “You were at your brother’s
wedding.”
Something Dylan regretted now. “That’s hardly the same. I didn’t
have to talk to them.”
Or his father. Or his sister.
Sweat broke out on his lip and under his arms.
“They will want to know why I am there.”
“The humans have a story, do they not? Of the prodigal son?”
“I do not think my brother”—the older brother, the good son, the one
who stayed with his father—“will buy that explanation for my return.”
“Then you will have to offer him another one,” Conn said coolly.
“You can think of some excuse that will satisfy him.”
Unbidden, the woman appeared again in his mind’s eye, her chin
raised in the moonlight, her panties balled in her fist.
“Yes,” Dylan said slowly. “I can.”
* * *
32
Regina counted the twenties under the tray of the cash register
drawer. Forty, sixty, eighty . . .
The lunchtime rush was over, the tourists gone to catch the two
thirty ferry to the mainland. The afternoon sun slanted through the
restaurant’s faded red awning, warming the vinyl booths and scratched
wood floor. Beyondthe plate glass window, the harbor sparkled blue and
bright, boats at anchor in the quiet water.
Margred loaded glasses from an empty table into a dish pan, her
movements languid and graceful as the resident cat’s. She and Caleb had
returned from their two nights in Portland yesterday.
“So.” Regina snapped a rubber band around the pile of bills. “How
was the honeymoon?”
Margred showed her teeth in a slow, satisfied smile. “Too short.”
Regina laughed, ignoring her own wistfulness. “That’s what you get
for marrying the only cop on the island in the middle of the tourist
season. If you’d waited until September, he could have taken you on a
real honeymoon. Hawaii, maybe. Or Paris.”
“I do not want Paris.” Margred’s smile spread. “And Caleb did not
want to wait.”
Regina fought a pinch of envy. Had she ever been that happy? That
desired? That . . . confident?
“I was surprised to see his brother at the wedding,” she said.
“Dylan?” Margred cocked her head, leaning forward to wipe the
table. “Did you like him?”
“I barely talked to him.”
No, she’d just had sex with him on the beach. Really excellent sex.
But no meaningful conversation.
Her face burned.
She wasn’t looking for meaningful, Regina reminded herself. And
neither, obviously, was he. At least, not with her.
33
“He seemed to know you, though,” she added.
Margred’s rag paused. “He is Caleb’s brother.”
“From before.” Regina wiped her sweating palms on her apron. “He
said he knew you before.”
“Did he?” Margred continued her slow, even strokes on the table.
“What else did he say?”
Regina had a vision of Dylan’s face, black and bitter. “I did not
come for my brother.”
She cleared her throat. “Nothing, really. I just found it interesting.
Since you, you know, lost your memory and all.”
“Ah.”
Let it go, Regina told herself. Not your problem. None of your
business.
“So, how did you meet him?”
Margred straightened, rag in hand. “Curious?”
Regina scowled. “Concerned. Damn it, you’re my friend.”
My employee.
Cal’s wife.
“So I am. And as your friend, I am telling you to leave this alone.”
Regina closed the register drawer with a short chaching . “Fine.”
Margred’s expression softened. “I promise, there is nothing in our
relationship that Caleb could object to.”
“Does he know?” Regina asked before she could stop herself.
“Oh, yes. I have no secrets from Caleb.”
34
“Bet the memory loss thing helps with that,” Regina muttered.
“Excuse me?”
The bell over the door jingled. Jane Ivey, the owner of the island’s
gift shop, entered wearing a lumpy cardigan and the determined look of a
woman on a mission.
“What can I get you?” Regina asked.
“Here’s the bride!” Jane exclaimed as if she hadn’t spoken. “You
looked real good on Saturday, honey.”
“Thank you,” Margred said.
“That whole wedding— it was real nice,” Jane said.
Margred smiled. “Regina did it all.”
Jane’s tight brown perm quivered as she nodded. “Well, I know that.
That’s why I stopped by. The girls are coming home for Frank’s birthday
in September,” she said to Regina.
“That’s . . . great,” Regina said. Was it great? She couldn’t
remember how well Jane got along with her absent children. Sons stayed
on the island, took over their fathers’ lobstering business or bought boats
of their own. But daughters moved Away, seeking education,
opportunities, husbands.
Sometimes they came back.
“We never thought when Frank had that episode last winter that he’d
make it to his sixty-fifth,” Jane said, clutching her purse. “But he did, the
old coot. Anyway, they’re all coming, Trish and Ed and Erica and the
grandkids. We’re having a big party. And I want you to cater it.”
Regina felt a spurt of satisfaction, warm and sweet as biting into
pastry filling. She knew her food was good. But she didn’t get many
opportunities to show what she could do. “Um, I’m not really set up for—