Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
dreams—Erik. Then, Victor would claim Celeste and her power as a true
white witch, the seventh daughter born to a seventh daughter. Their joining
would render them invincible.
Then, when he had no further need of her, Victor would kill her, too.
Slowly.
She would pay for her interference. He would enjoy every second of
Celeste’s agony and pain.
Walking to stand in front of her, Victor imagined the torture he would
relish inflicting before ending her life as he watched Celeste sleep.
“Wake, witch!” Vincent kicked the chair.
Celeste jumped to her feet, nearly knocking into him.
“What’s wrong? Erik, are you in pain?”
She reached out to touch his arm. Victor knocked it away. He knew the
instant she looked into the eyes of the one she believed she knew and
encountered him instead. Victor.
Celeste moved to keep the chair between them. “I knew I saw you.
What do you want?”
Victor liked the mix of fear and defiance on the woman’s face. Enjoyed
the scent of it as it grew and filled the air between them.
“Everything.” He saw the confusion on her face. “Did you not offer
yourself in exchange for the return of a life?”
“Yes, but—”
“There is no but. You offered, I accepted.” Victor stepped closer to
Celeste. She stood her ground.
“Erik, where is he?” Celeste stared into him. “I offered myself in
exchange for his life.”
“Yes. And he lives. For now.” Victor absorbed the horror that flickered
across her face. “There was no stipulation that only he return. We are both
here. Thanks to you, witch.”
Turning, Celeste walked to the fireplace, never taking her gaze off of
him. “But Rose and I performed the ceremony exactly as the Grimoire
demanded. The only change was my offer.”
“Ah, yes, dear Rose.” Victor liked having that unknown in his arsenal.
“Your offer was the final piece needed.”
“What does that mean?” Celeste asked.
“None of your business. You offered yourself with the limited
information at your disposal.” Victor stepped next to the woman, staring
down into her eyes. “I wonder what else you might be persuaded to offer in
exchange for the man you murdered.”
Victor enjoyed the pain that crossed her features at the reminder.
He reached out and touched a strand of hair that lay across the top of
her breast. When she would have pulled away, Victor grabbed it and
viciously yanked her closer and forced her to look up at him with only the
space of a breath between them. Subservient in physical position, defiance
still radiated from her.
Victor lowered his head toward her mouth. He would teach her who
was master. She would declare it before he was done with her.
Celeste darted a glance toward the iron fire poker only inches from
where they stood. She strained away from his mouth, pain etched on her
face from the force of his hands, both of them now entwined in her hair to
hold her still.
Victor laughed without mirth. “Ah, Celeste, so transparent. You’d kill
Erik again?”
“No! Only you.”
“Right now, that is not an option. We are the same.”
The horror of the situation flickered in the witch’s eyes as he claimed
her mouth.
Excitement surged through Victor as he ground Celeste’s closed lips
against her clenched teeth until he tasted the salt of her blood.
ROSE WOKE DRENCHED in sweat, twisted in the sheets from the
nightmare that had assaulted her. Celeste had been in danger, and she’d been
unable to help. The memory of it caused a sob to surge into her throat. She
quickly suppressed it before it became a reality.
Not now, Rose. You’ve been strong this long
.
The feeling of dread wouldn’t leave even with sleep banished.
Grabbing the robe from the foot of the bed, Rose shrugged into it as
she pushed her cold feet into slippers. Something wasn’t right.
Trembling now, she hurried to find Celeste. To reassure herself that all
was well and that an ancient evil was not walking amongst them as her night
terror foretold.
Stopping short in the archway between the hall and great room, Rose
felt foolish at seeing the two silhouetted by firelight in an embrace.
No nightmare. All was as it should have been before.
She turned to slip silently away but stopped short at a muffled word
from Celeste.
“No.”
Rose moved back into the room and could see that Celeste was pushing
against Erik’s chest, and he had her hair in his hands. It was not passion
visible in Celeste’s gaze, but disgust and fear.
A trickle of blood was at the corner of her lip.
Rose moved as quickly as her aged frame would allow and gripped
Erik’s nearest hand. “Stop. You are hurting her.”
The man shoved against Rose with his forearm, knocking her against a
low table. “Off of me, old woman, or you shall pay for now what you did not
before.”
Rose shuddered. The voice was not Erik’s, nor was the look on the
man’s face.
Victor was here.
The nightmare was real.
Shoving Celeste away from him, Victor glanced toward the nearest
window then faced the two women. “Now is not the time. I will claim your
power when you offer it freely”
“Never!” Celeste said.
“Be careful of your words, witch. You have learned they have power.
Power you will live to regret.” Victor moved to stare out a window at the
sunrise tainting the eastern sky. The jagged bare limbs of trees stripped of
life reached toward the growing light. He gripped the marble sill in a death
grip, fighting the inevitable.
Erik grew stronger.
Temporary surrender, nothing more.
ROSE MOVED TO Celeste, dabbing her bleeding lip with a tissue from
Rose’s robe pocket. The younger woman trembled as they watched to see
what Victor might do next.
The man merely stared out the window, stumbled a couple of steps
back toward them before staring about him in bewilderment. He raised a
hand toward Celeste.
“Don’t touch me again.” Celeste put herself between Victor and Rose,
grabbed the poker and prepared to fight if necessary.
“What? Again?” Shaking his head, the man sat in the nearest chair,
holding his head in his hands. “How am I dressed?”
Celeste moved a step closer, retaining the poker. “Who are you?”
“I don’t know. Why are you bleeding?”
Celeste touched her tongue to the split in her lip. “You know. You did
it.”
An anguished gaze turned to her, the man looked into her eyes.
Erik
.
“You can’t let me sleep.” Erik shook his head. “The nightmares . . . I
don’t understand.”
“What do you remember?” Celeste lowered her weapon but maintained
her hold on it. For now.
“Questioning you about the vision of you stabbing me. Then nothing.”
Erik sat straighter. “It has been like that for too long. War is the only thing
that helps.”
Celeste moved to sit on the table in front of him. “Do you remember
getting dressed? Waking me? Kissing me? Hurting me?”
Each question caused shutters to close over Erik’s expression.
“Nothing.”
Celeste turned to Rose. “Please, may we have some tea? We have much
to discuss.”
“Are you sure ‘tis safe to be with this one?”
Looking for a moment into the eyes of the man before her, Celeste
nodded.
Rose stared at Celeste gravely before leaving the room.
Celeste turned back to Erik after watching Rose leave the room; for a
moment she wanted to call the older woman back. Her presence always
offered calm and security. But Rose had just endangered herself by trying to
intercede for Celeste when she’d been held by Victor. Celeste wanted to be
sure that didn’t happen again.
“What did you mean by ‘War is the only thing that helps?’”
Erik stood and paced in front of the fireplace. Celeste feared he would
refuse to answer.
“I don’t understand it, have told no one since they’d think I’m crazy.”
Erik stopped. “But my visions make me believe you will not doubt.”
Celeste stood. “I will trust anything you choose to tell me.”
A look of doubt crossed the face of the man before her. His features
were at once familiar and foreign. She’d believe in him based on the love she
still felt. Separating this man from the one who’d hurt her just moments
earlier was a struggle, but Celeste focused on doing so.
“Sometimes I’ve not known who I am. But, fighting seems to be
something I’m born to do.” Erik watched her face closely. He moved to
stand in front of her. “I’ve done it for a long time. Lifetimes it seems.”
Her breath caught on an inhale. Lifetimes? How was that possible when
he’d been dead? She’d seen him die. Had killed him. Hadn’t she brought him
back with the magic of the Grimoire and ceremony?
“Knowing my name is not the same as knowing who I am. Nor does
knowing my name help with understanding why I keep finding myself living
new lifetimes, not dead.” Erik shook his head. “It sounds crazy.”
Celeste pushed her own fears about Victor reappearing aside to offer
comfort. “Not crazy.”
“Why not?” Erik demanded.
“Because I have spent lifetimes fighting for something.” Celeste feared
sharing too much, too soon.
“For what?”
Deciding truth would be met with truth, Celeste took a deep breath and
cautiously reached up to place her palm against his whisker roughened
cheek. “You.”
ERIK SEARCHED THE woman’s expression. To see the lie behind her
words. They made no sense. He’d remembered her stabbing him, killing
him.
The softness of her hand contrasted with the tenseness he held in his
jaw. He fought an urge to turn his head and place his mouth against Celeste’s
soft hand. A hand that held a touch familiar, a touch his body responded
to . . . a touch he wanted more of. Now.
A sound from the doorway alerted them that Rose waited, tray in hand.
She moved further into the room and put the tea tray on the coffee table.
Erik took a step back from Celeste, and her hand slipped back to her
side.
“She speaks the truth, Erik. I have been there each time.” Rose moved
to sit in a nearby rocker, seeming to sense that the conversation was between
Erik and Celeste now that Rose had offered her assurance as to the validity
of Celeste’s claim.
“Tell me.” Erik motioned Celeste to sit.
Celeste moved to the chair he pointed to, and once seated, Erik sat
across from her. The small split on her slightly swollen lip bothered him,
especially since she claimed he’d caused the wound.
“This is my fourth lifetime.” Celeste paused as though waiting for him
to dispute her statement.
Erik waited.
“In my first, we knew each other. We trained under the same high
priest. Each of us was sent by our families to live with this man once our
gifts
were noticed and they realized we would be safer there.”
“Why safer?”
“People at that time feared magic of any kind. We’d just left the
seventeen hundreds behind, but not the fear. It actually grew, escalated.”
Celeste did not look away from his gaze, seeming to will him to understand.
“Many like us, those born with the magic within, were killed by those who
didn’t understand. Usually in infancy. We were safe here, within the walls of
Montbleu. Our families knew that.”
Erik looked around the great room, familiar yet not, out the windows,
then back. “We were in this building?”
“Yes.” Celeste hesitated only a moment before continuing. “Here we
learned from our teacher and the Grimoire. It was here . . . you died. I have
spent centuries holding onto this place in order to bring you back.”
Erik laughed mirthlessly. “You mean here is where you stabbed me? In
this room?”
Celeste closed her eyes, pain crossing her features. “Your vision is true
but not complete.”
Standing abruptly, Erik knocked the chair to the ground. “Why believe
you? Everything I’ve done has been based on the treachery of others. Other
cultures, other men. Why believe you are different?”
“Because your soul and both of our lives depends on you being able to
trust me.”
“You ask too much, woman.” Erik’s anger only increased at the sight of
sadness on Celeste’s face and the silent tears running down the older
woman’s face. “Why am I here? For days I was drawn to drive to the east
coast from my base in New Mexico. Had to ask for leave based on the
migraines. I couldn’t admit to the insanity and dreams . . . or rather,
nightmares.”
Celeste stood, cautiously, as though fearful any sudden movement
would alter the atmosphere of the room even more. She walked to the
window and looked out for long moments before turning.
Helplessness coursed through Erik. He hated not knowing what
happened while he slept, hated that he was drawn so powerfully to this