Strands of Love (3 page)

Read Strands of Love Online

Authors: N. J. Walters

BOOK: Strands of Love
2.4Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The back door slammed shut behind her, but was covered with
a see-through mesh-like material so he could still see her. Rather than sit in
one of the two seats on the porch, as she called it, both he and Jace stood at
the door and watched her.

She bustled to the cupboard and drew down two goblets made
of glass. They shared a glance. She must be very wealthy to afford such luxury.
Wood cups were for everyday use and metal ones for special occasions. He’d
never seen ones made of glass.

Sam stood beside a metal bowl that was sunk into the counter
and turned a metal handle. Water flowed from the spout and she quickly filled
both glass cups.

When she turned and saw them both standing there watching
her, she took a step back. Water sloshed over the rims and onto the floor.
“What are you looking at?”

Darian could not lie to her. “You, Sam. We’re looking at
you.”

Chapter Three

 

It was official. Sam was totally freaked out. Both men were
standing at her screen door peering inside. They reminded her of stray dogs who
were afraid the kindness she’d offered would be taken away at any second.

Her phone was back in her pocket and she cursed herself for
not immediately calling the sheriff. She was alone with two strange men.

“We mean you no harm.” Darian kept his voice low as though
he didn’t want to spook her. Too late, seeing them both watching her so
intently had already done that.

The walk home had been bad enough. She’d felt their eyes on
her the entire time. It had left her feeling twitchy and unsettled. And, to her
shame, slightly aroused. What was wrong with her?

“Yeah, well stop looking.” Determined to get this over with,
she strode to the door and nodded toward it. Darian pulled it open and she
stepped out, thrusting the glasses toward them. “Here’s your water.”

Jace’s fingers stroked hers as he took his glass. She jerked
away and all but tossed Darian’s glass at him. Both men drank eagerly, their
Adam’s apples bobbing. She wondered how long they’d been wandering in the heat
and felt bad, not bad enough to invite them to lunch, but bad enough to offer
them more water.

“You want more water?”

“Please.” It was Darian who spoke and smiled. Jace just kept
staring at her in a manner that made her slightly uncomfortable and very aware
of herself as a woman.

“You’re not from around here, are you?” She pulled open the
door and motioned them inside. Keeping them on the porch in the heat made no
sense. They could get inside if they chose to. It wasn’t much cooler in the
house. She’d stopped running the air conditioning months ago to save money, but
having the shades pulled low made a slight difference. At least the sunshine
wasn’t beating down on them.

She went to the sink and turned the tap on, letting the
water run cold. “Help yourselves.”

Jace stepped up and did just that. He filled his glass twice
before his thirst was slaked. Darian did the same, but when he was finished
drinking, he turned the taps on and off several times as if testing them. The
expression on his face was that of a kid in a candy shop. He seemed enthralled
by her plumbing.

Once again, she wondered where they’d come from and how long
they’d been walking. They didn’t have any gear with them. Not a knapsack or a
duffle bag. Only what they wore, and there wasn’t a whole lot of that on top.
The only thing of value they seemed to have were those bronze metal bands
around their wrists and upper arms. She mentally shrugged. Not her business.

Sam crossed her arms over her chest to hide the fact her
nipples were standing at attention like good little soldiers. She was attracted
to them. So what? They were both good-looking, strong men in their prime. Only
proved she was human and healthy. It didn’t really mean anything.

“You boys need to tell me who you are and how you got here.”
She wanted answers and she wanted them now.

Darian glanced at his brother and Jace shrugged. She frowned
and wondered if they were a danger to her. They didn’t look like escaped
convicts or criminals but, then again, she hadn’t really met any, other than
Joe Bob Riley who drank too much on Fridays and tore up the local bar at least
once a month, and he didn’t really count.

Darian took a deep breath and slowly released it. She tried
not to notice the way his broad chest expanded and contracted, or the bead of
perspiration that rolled down his tanned neck. “We are from Javara.” He paused
and seemed to be waiting for some reaction.

“Where is that exactly?” She didn’t recognize it. Maybe it
was a town in Mexico. Maybe they were illegal immigrants despite the fact they
looked more Nordic than Hispanic.

Darian took a step forward and she took one back, deeming it
prudent to keep her distance. She was already gauging how quickly she could run
and be out the front door and to her truck if she needed too. The keys were
still in the ignition. She never bothered to remove them, as there was no need.
There was no one else around for miles.

He stopped and glanced at his brother once again. This time
it was Jace who spoke. “It is not of your world.”

Great. Just great. She’d invited two lunatics into her home.
“So, you’re aliens?” She’d humor them until she could make a run for it and
call the sheriff.

Jace frowned. “I do not understand this word. We are from
Javara.”

“How did you get here? Your spaceship?”
Way to go, Sam
.
She had to stop antagonizing them.

“The tapestry brought us to you.” Jace raked his fingers
through his hair, looking as confused as she felt. “That is not the way it
works. The tapestry brings the woman to Javara, not the other way around. You
should have been brought to us.”

Okay, this was so not good. Whoever they were, they
obviously went around kidnapping women. Sam whirled around and ran for the
front door. She heard one of them call her name, but didn’t stick around to see
which one it was. She hit the front door running, yanked it open and launched
herself off the porch.

Heavy feet thundered after her. She could hear them getting
closer. Heart pounding, lungs burning, she reached for the handle of the truck.
Her fingers grazed the metal when strong arms scooped her up, ending her bid
for freedom.

“No!” She kicked her pursuer, the hard heel of her boot
landing on an unprotected shin. Like a wildcat, she fought, bucking hard
against him.

“Stop. I don’t want to hurt you.” It was Jace who had her
and he wasn’t letting her go. He tightened his grip on her, wrapping one arm
around her upper body and the other around her waist, keeping her arms locked
down by her sides.

She threw back her head, but with their height difference
she caught his shoulder instead of his jaw. She was frantic now. What would
they do to her?

“Calm down, Sam.” Darian stood in front of her, his hands
open in front of him, his eyes sad. “We will not hurt you. We would die before
we’d harm you in any way.”

The sincerity in his words sank in and she stilled her wild
struggle, panting heavily in Jace’s unbreakable embrace. Darian reached out and
touched the side of her face, gently rubbing his thumb over it. “Please, hear
me out.”

She nodded. She really didn’t have much choice.

“Darian.” There was a strain in Jace’s voice. She felt
Jace’s body shift and he turned them so they were both facing back toward the
house. There, suspended in midair was a small rug of some kind, which should
have been impossible. There was no wind to blow it around. In any case it
wasn’t moving, just sort of hovering there.

“The tapestry.” Fear coated Darian’s voice as he grabbed her
arm.

Now she was seriously freaked out. “What is it?” For some
reason she found herself whispering.

“It’s the magic tapestry that brought us here from Javara.”

“I don’t understand.” The air was charged around them and
the hair on the back of her neck stirred. There wasn’t a single cloud in the
sky, but she felt as though lightning could strike any second.

“Neither do we.” Jace’s grim tone scared her more than
anything else had today. “Hold on to me and don’t let go.”

All around them the dust stirred, spinning faster and faster
until it felt like being stuck in the center of a tornado. Her house, the sky,
the entire world disappeared. All she felt was Jace’s strong arms around her
and Darian’s unbreakable grip on her arm.

The ground seemed to disappear from beneath her and she was
falling, plummeting into nothingness. Sam screamed.

* * * * *

Jace’s eyes flickered open when something wet hit his face.
Rain. He started to sit up, but there was something on top of him, weighing him
down. No, not something, someone. Sam Calloway was sprawled across his body,
his arms still wrapped around her.

But where was Darian?

He sat up quickly, careful to cradle Sam in his arms. His
brother was slowly sitting up beside them. They were all safe. A huge weight
fell from Jace’s heart. But where were they?

A low whinnying sound came from the left and Jace smiled
when he saw the gray-and-white stallion and their other horses. They were home.

“We’re back.” Darian rolled to his feet and stretched before
crouching down in front of him. “How is Sam?”

She hadn’t stirred and Jace was beginning to get concerned.
“Sam.” He shook her lightly and was rewarded with a low moan. He shook her
again. “Wake up, Sam.” He used her name again, liking the way it rolled off his
tongue. Her eyelids fluttered open and he found himself staring into dark-blue
eyes.

She licked her lips and his cock roared to life, making his
leather pants very uncomfortable. “Where? Where are we?”

Darian smiled at her. “The tapestry has brought us home to
Javara. Welcome to our world, Sam.”

Jace felt her stiffen and didn’t try to hold her when she
jumped out of his arms. He rolled to his feet and inhaled deeply, drinking in
the moist, cool air that was such a contrast from the dry heat in her world.

“What the hell have you done to me? Did you drug me?” Sam
was angry, but beneath the anger he could hear her fear, and that just wouldn’t
do.

“Do you remember the tapestry?” Jace asked her, keeping his
voice low just as he would when dealing with a high-strung filly.

“The small rug.” She rubbed her temple and frowned. “Yeah, I
think so. But that couldn’t have happened. A rug doesn’t simply float in the
air.”

“This one does. A powerful sorceress created the tapestry a
very long time ago.” Jace relaxed his stance as he continued speaking, keeping
his arms loose by his sides. Darian carefully inched slightly behind Sam, ready
to catch her if she decided to run.

“In Javara women are scarce and the sorceress gifted our
world with the tapestry. Once or twice a generation, the tapestry brings a
woman from another world to ours. It is a woman who has the potential to thrive
in our world.” Jace frowned, still not understanding what had happened. “The
tapestry has come several times in our generation and this is only the second
time in history that the tapestry has taken any of us with it when it went to
find the woman.”

Sam crossed her arms over her chest and scowled and Jace.
“That’s all fine and good for you, but I want to go home.”

“Sam,” he began, but she wasn’t having any of it and
actually stamped her foot.

“No, I don’t want to hear it. I want to go home. Now.”

Jace shook his head slowly, his heart breaking for her, for
all of them. Obviously, the tapestry had made a grave error. Sam was a wealthy
woman in her world, a landowner. Nor did it seem as though she was interested
in them at all.

He, on the other hand, was totally enthralled by her, her
strength and obvious courage, her beauty and kindness. She’d taken two
strangers into her home, offering them refreshments from such priceless glass
cups. What could they offer her here?

Their hearts and their love. It was all they had to give.
Their loyalty and the promise of a family. But would it be enough?

Sam was desperately trying not to panic. She had no idea how
long she’d been unconscious, but it had to be quite some time. She definitely
wasn’t on her farm or anywhere near it. The woods here were thick and moist
from recent rain and a mountain rose up behind them.

It was obvious both men believed the tale they were spinning
and expected her to do the same. Not happening. There were three horses off to
her right. She planned on borrowing one and finding civilization. Her phone was
still in her back pocket. As soon as she was away from Jace and Darian she’d
call the authorities. She hardened her heart against the sadness in Jace’s
eyes. They’d somehow kidnapped her. Still, she didn’t want to get them in
trouble with the authorities. They were both like wild stallions and would die
in prison.

“If you let me go, I promise I won’t call the cops on you.”
That was the most she could offer them.

It was Darian who stepped up and took her hand in his before
she could pull away. He rubbed his thumb over the back of her hand. “We will
take you to our home. You will meet our mother. If you wish to contact anyone
then, you are free to do so.”

Why did that sound all too easy? She glanced at Jace and he
nodded his agreement. She slowly pulled her phone out of her back pocket. Both
men watched as she tried to turn it on. It was dead. She didn’t know if it had
been damaged when they’d taken her to this place or if the battery had simply
died. She didn’t always remember to charge it.

Darian touched her face and she jerked her head up. He
thumbed a tear from her cheek, making her aware she was crying. She never
cried, couldn’t afford to. She was a Calloway, and Calloways were tough. They
just did whatever needed doing without complaint.

“Do not cry, Sam.” Darian leaned forward and touched his
lips to hers. The light brush of his mouth against hers sent all her senses
spinning. Her lips tingled when he eased back. “All will be well.”

Sam suddenly wanted to crawl away somewhere safe and have a
good cry for all that she’d lost—her brother, her father, her mother and, now,
potentially her home. But she wasn’t safe and couldn’t afford to shed any more
tears. She swiped them away with the back of her hand and straightened her
shoulders. “Let’s get going.”

Jace reached out his hand to her and she walked toward him,
but didn’t take it. He slowly lowered it back by his side. His expression
didn’t change, but she felt as though her action had hurt him. She almost
reached out and apologized before she reminded herself she was the injured
party here, the one who’d been kidnapped.

“So where is Javara exactly?” She wondered if they’d tell
her the truth or continue to spin their tall tale. No one liked a story better
than a Texan and the wilder the better. But this wasn’t funny. This was her
life they were playing with.

Other books

The Woolworths Girls by Elaine Everest
Middlemarch by George Eliot
Drop of Doubt by C.L. Stone
Small Man in a Book by Brydon, Rob
The Windup Girl by Paolo Bacigalupi
A Clubbable Woman by Reginald Hill