Read The Lady of the Storm - 2 Online

Authors: Kathryne Kennedy

Tags: #Fiction, #Man-Woman Relationships, #Paranormal Romance Stories, #Blacksmiths, #General, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Supernatural, #Historical, #Bodyguards, #Epic, #Elves

The Lady of the Storm - 2 (22 page)

BOOK: The Lady of the Storm - 2
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“But it didn’t matter,” huffed Cecily. “You lost your life all the same.”

“But to a much greater purpose, my dear.”

Giles had been studying the small crystal instrument. “
It
protected you through the maelstrom. You played the flute again, didn’t you?”

Thomas grinned. “Well done, lad. A final act of desperation… yet it did create an opening within the spire, and I stepped through. But this stone lacked an open space, forming around me and cutting off my air, and yet… it has somehow kept my consciousness alive.” He raised his arms. “And it allowed me to uncover the secret of the Seven Corners of Hell.”

“But Professor Higley told us all about it.” Cecily stepped forward, as if she longed to throw herself into his arms, and pulled back only at the last moment.

Thomas lowered his hands and looked at his daughter with just as much longing in his gaze. “We humans know only that this is the place where the border of every sovereignty meets. We could only guess the convergence of the different magics is what created the chaos. But my dear, this place is more than that. It is the doorway to Elfhame.”

Giles sucked a breath between his teeth. “What do you mean?”

Thomas answered, although he kept his attention riveted on his daughter. As if this was the last time he would ever see her, and he must drink his fill. “When the elven lords created the doorway between our worlds, they did not close it all the way. There is a small opening, and indeed, this is the source of their magic. Through that opening flows the magic of Elfhame, like a river flows and spreads into a lake. This is why the elven do not press beyond England’s borders, for the magic can puddle only so far. And the scepters are useless without the magic.”

“Have you seen this opening?” asked Giles.

Thomas pointed to a group of stones between the meadow and the woods. Giles could just discern the glimmer of a small spring that bubbled up from within the shelter of the crystal rocks, creating streams flowing away from it. “It is there.”

Cecily frowned. “I see nothing unusual about it.”

“When the black fire comes, it changes. We do not see it truly, but that is the center. I can’t imagine a way to close this opening to stop the flow of magic, nor do I know if a true doorway between the worlds can be opened, or how. But if you bring this information to the Rebellion, perhaps those who follow me will figure out a way.”

Giles scratched his face. Damn if the little scrape from that monster’s claw hadn’t healed yet. “How do you know this for a fact?”

Thomas nodded. “Good question, Beaumont. I trained you well.” His gray eyes suddenly gleamed with some inner wonder. “I saw Elfhame. When this place erupted again, I could actually see the flow of magic from that stream with unshielded eyes. And I caught a glimpse before…”

Cecily’s breath caught.

“Before all hell broke loose.”

Cecily dashed the tears from her eyes. “But why did you take on such a dangerous mission in the first place? Breden’s soldiers raided our village and they killed Mother. And now you are… and I have no one.”

Thomas flinched when he heard of Eleanor’s death, but he didn’t appear to be surprised. Giles wondered how long Thomas had been trying to contact Cecily, and if he’d managed to be with her before she could see his actual vision. Thomas would know then, how hard Giles had tried to keep his distance from his daughter. Did he also know that, in the end, Giles had failed?

Odd, how it no longer seemed to matter.

“Cecily, my love.” Thomas floated forward, as if he would embrace her if he could. “What have I always told you? The good of the many outweigh the needs of the few. I think I did you more harm than I knew, by loving you as a father should. I allowed you to become selfish.”

She opened her mouth to protest. Giles put a hand on her shoulder.

“I know you want nothing more than to stay in that little cottage by the sea,” continued Thomas. “But don’t you see the world has need of your gifts?” His gaze flicked to Giles. “Don’t you see that others need your help?”

“I did not think…”

“I know, my dear. But now it is time for you to think about it. Will you promise me?”

Cecily bowed her head, tears freely flowing down her face. She did not sob or wail, just cried those thick drops of moisture.

“You are the only one I know of who has the level of power to survive the magic within this place. Will you at least take the ring, and the information I have given you, and bring it back to Sir Robert?”

She nodded.

Giles felt this odd squeezing in his chest, an overwhelming sympathy for her. He rolled his shoulders to loosen the tension in his muscles that the feeling had created. “I foresee only one slight problem, sir. The ring”—and he nodded at the crystal capsule—“is in there with you.”

Thomas frowned, his gaze still fixed upon his daughter. “You need to break it open with that sword of yours.”

“I tried that before, with that mountain of crystal in Stafford. Didn’t work.”

“And your sword showed good sense. Had you broken it, the elven lady would have been upon you in a blink.”

Giles glanced down at the hilt. It could show good sense? He had come to treat his sword as if it were alive in some way, but the fact that Thomas shared similar thoughts shook him. “It is naught but an enchanted blade.”

“But more powerful than we know, I think.” Thomas held out a trembling hand to his daughter. “Cecily. Dearest.”

She looked up.

“The crystal has kept my soul bound to this life. When it is broken… I may not be able to come to you again.”

She shook her head, but stayed silent.

“I love you, child. More than if you had been my very own. Remember what I said, and remember what value I placed on my life—do it now, Beaumont. You may not have much time left.”

Giles quickly glanced at the trees for a sign of black fire, sighed with relief when he didn’t see it, and drew his devil-blade, swinging it at the pillar in one smooth movement.

Ten

“No!” screamed Cecily, and she lunged forward at the ball of light, falling through it as the crystal spire cracked, Thomas’s vision fading as his physical body tumbled to the ground.

The ground beneath Giles’s feet trembled.

She spun, threw him a furious glare, and dug through the shards of crystal until she reached her father. She picked out the pieces of stone that had lodged in his face, swept his coat clean of debris. Her hands left behind smudges of her own blood. “Now I will have nothing left of you,” she said. “Nothing left at all.”

Another odd emotion swelled in Giles’s chest, something akin to envy this time, and he scratched at his face yet again. Cecily made him feel the damndest things. He recognized the emotion as unworthy but could not suppress it fully. He hoped that someday, Cecily would love him as much as she did her father. He had no family left to mourn him when he passed, but it had never bothered him before now.

The ground shook again. The faint scent of black fire reached his nose. Giles bent down and removed the ring from Thomas’s finger. The other man’s golden hair quickly turned gray at the sides, and a few wrinkles seamed his face, the corners of his eyes. Giles pocketed the ring, hesitant to put it on his own finger, despite the fact that the elven lords deemed it harmless—or perhaps because of it. Thomas still clutched an object within his other hand, and when Giles drew it forth he realized it was the small crystal flute the man had spoken of. He tucked it in his pocket next to the ring, and the ground shook again.

“Cecily, we must flee.”

She turned to look at him with blind eyes, the rims red from her tears. Then she blinked and focused her gaze, her eyes widening with fear as she studied his face.

“Yes, the fire is coming.” He held out a hand, she clasped it, and he helped her to her feet. “I’m not sure if we can outrun it this time.”

“We… we don’t need to. Just hold my hand tightly, Giles.”

He nodded, trusting her as he had never trusted anyone before in his life. Giles glanced over his shoulder, the acrid stench of the fire even stronger now, and spied the black flame dancing over the treetops. But the sight of it did not make his heart race as much as what Cecily did with her magic. The lake they’d sheltered in before erupted, an arm of it reaching out to them, forming into the rough shape of a hand.

Giles looked down at Cecily.

“Take a deep breath,” she warned with a grim smile.

And then the hand of water reached them, lifting them both off their feet, curling over their heads like some giant fist. Giles could no longer see past his nose, for white spray and bubbles churned in front of his face. He closed his eyes, spun head over heels, Cecily’s hand his only anchor as the wave propelled them forward with a speed he could barely comprehend.

His lungs had just begun to ache for want of another breath when he rolled one last time and came to an abrupt stop, the water receding about him.

Giles sat in a wet meadow, muddy grass beneath his bottom, still holding Cecily’s hand. He glanced over his shoulder, saw the chasm open in Seven Corners to swallow the maelstrom, and did not wait for the eruption that would follow. He lifted Cecily to her feet and dragged her as far away as he could before he collapsed in exhaustion, dragging her atop him to cushion her body.

The thrill of survival raced through Giles. “That was amazing,” he said.

She looked down at him, sadness still in her eyes. He wished he could make it disappear. He wished he could bring back Thomas for her.

Giles smiled his most radiant smile, the one that he knew brought women to their knees. “Had I known how exciting it would be with you, I would have taken you up on your offer long ago. Little girl or not.”

“No, you wouldn’t,” she replied. “You may be a rake, but you have always been an honorable one.”

He laughed, bouncing her on his chest. “Well, my wandering days are over. There is only one woman I will be taking to my bed from now on, and no other could compare to her.”

A tremulous smile curved her mouth. “Do you mean it, Giles?”

“Aye, my lady, I do. Did you think I asked you to marry me out of some sense of honor?”

“Perhaps.”

He laughed again, curled his arms about her waist, lowering her face closer to his. “Mayhap that had a little bit to do with it. But the truth is… I want to spend the rest of my life with you, Cecily. I can’t imagine living it without you.” His grin faded as he looked deeply into those crystal blue eyes. “I’m sorry about Thomas. But you are not alone. You will never be alone, as long as I draw breath.”

She lowered her head and kissed him then, a kiss he never wanted to end, for he had never been kissed like that before. Such tenderness. Such love and longing and a need for him that spoke to his very soul. And in that moment, he knew their hearts met as one, melding together with a finality nothing could ever sunder.

When Cecily finally came up for air, Giles released a breathless gasp. “If we continue this, my dear, we shall be making love in mud, and although the idea has its merits…”

She swatted him gently and stood. “We must save our energy to find Apollo and Belle. I have no idea where my wave dumped us.”

Giles sat up and glanced around, muddy hair sticking to his cheeks. “I think that way.”

And so they walked for a time, the mud drying on his clothes until he felt as if he strode in armor, his boots as stiff as wooden clogs. They found their horses and rode away from that hellish forest toward Oxford, stopping at the edge of a river as the sun lowered from the sky, beneath a copse of willows that offered a bit of privacy and shelter.

Cecily slid from Belle and immediately discarded her clothing, Giles watching her with a longing gaze. Their mission had been too urgent for them to indulge in love-play on their journey to the Seven Corners of Hell, but now that they had survived the dire task and the excitement of true peril still flooded his veins, he could not help the direction his thoughts wandered.

He needed to possess her with an urgency that surprised him. But after what she had just gone through, he did not want to push her.

She dove into the water and sighed as if it brought her comfort she sorely needed, and he dismounted and made camp to the sounds of her splashing. But once he’d finished he could not deny the need to clean his prickly clothes, and after removing his sword belt, walked straight into the river himself, washing the mud from the fabric. Trying not to glance her way when the flash of pale skin caught his attention.

“Giles.”

He turned. Moonlight shimmered across the waves, danced in her enormous blue eyes, played along the soft curve of her shoulders. It seemed that being in her element had revived her strength, for the exhaustion that had dogged her steps throughout the day had faded to be replaced by…

He had not mistaken the invitation in her voice.

Giles leaped from the river, and with a speed that surely surpassed an elven’s natural abilities, he undressed and tossed the soggy garments over the root of a tree. He flung his boots next to his breeches and strode back into the water. It licked at his naked skin, the chill of it unable to douse the fire that burned in his blood as he watched Cecily swim closer to him.

She stood, water sluicing down her breasts, down her taut belly. And held out her arms to him.

Giles caught her up in an embrace, his mouth seeking hers with a need that frightened him. She wrapped her arms about his neck as he nearly devoured her, the darling woman opening her mouth beneath the onslaught, taking all he offered without hesitation.

At last he released her, holding her face close to his pounding heart. “I love you.”

She pulled slightly away from him, looked up into his eyes, studying his face with a frown that confused him. “And I have always loved you. No matter what happens, Giles, I will never stop loving you.”

Ah. She worried about their future. About her dream for a cottage by the sea, and his desire for adventure. “As long as we are together, we will work it out.”

She nodded, stepped away from him with a sudden wicked gleam in her eyes. “I see the cold water doesn’t bother you.”

Giles glanced down at the obvious proof of it, looked back up with a grin on his lips. “Apparently not.”

She took his hand. “Then come.” And led him deeper into the river, until it enfolded over both of their heads, shafts of moonlight penetrating the depths.

Giles did not start when the bubble appeared around his head this time, just eagerly awaited her kiss to pierce it. But it did surprise him for a moment when he felt the water seem to thicken around him, slither against his body in undulating ribbons. Ah, he’d never felt anything like it before. A soft caress twirling about his chest, around his legs. Silky pressure along the skin of his thighs, between his legs, beneath his hair and along the back of his neck.

Cecily made the water come alive. And it sought to touch him with an erotic slide across every inch of his skin.

When it curled and tightened about his shaft, he gasped, the bubble making the sound loud to his ears, and reached out for her.

Cecily led him a merry dance. He would grasp her slick skin to have her slip away from his fingers. Giles would feel her breasts slide across his back, turn to grasp nothing but swirling water. Her hair tickled his feet and he reached down, only to tumble over in vain, his feet toward the surface and his own ghostly looking hair swirling around the bubble that surrounded his face.

Her magic astounded him yet again. For the bubble continued to surround his head.

He would die of frustration sooner than he would by drowning.

And then he felt her warm palms against his cheeks, the smooth glide of her hands as she penetrated the bubble, a sheen of water sliding up her face. When her lips met his he no longer knew which way was up, a thrill coursing through him that he’d never known before.

He clasped her in his arms, triumphant he’d caught his flirtatious mermaid.

Cecily’s hands replaced the teasing of the current, roaming the contours of his back, smoothing over the rounds of his bottom. He could not help pressing his shaft tightly against the warmth of her legs.

Cecily drew her mouth away from his, trailing kisses across his cheek, down his chin. She lightly bit his neck and Giles growled, soft and low.

“Release me, Giles. I promise I will not go far.”

It took every ounce of willpower he possessed to loosen his hold.

She slid down his body, until the crisp hair at the junction of her legs stroked his engorged shaft.

Giles panted. Another bubble replaced the air he’d managed to use up so quickly, and he wondered how she knew he needed it. For her own head had withdrawn back into the water, her dark hair swirling around that lovely face, rays of moonlight highlighting a soft cheek, the curve of her full lips.

He felt the blood leave his head as they slowly drifted upright again, Cecily curling around his body akin to the mermaid he’d likened her to. She twirled about him as she’d done with her water, but the heat of her skin brushing his brought another dimension to the pleasure. When he felt her hair tickle between his legs, and looked down to see her face rising upward, trailing kisses along his shaft, he could bear no more.

He caught her arms and dragged her up. Saw the gleam of her teeth as she smiled and drew up her legs, wrapping them around him, slowly floating toward the tip of his erection, until her moist warmth kissed it with a softness that made him groan.

Giles resisted the impulse to buck against her. He ruled on dry land, but here and now she had control of this game, and he did not wish to argue the point. It felt too damn good.

She pressed forward so slowly he had to grit his teeth. She encased only the tip of him with her warmth, her water-magic still circling his shaft in ever-tightening spirals. He became aware again of the strokes still circling the rest of his body, curving around his arms and chest. Smoothing around his legs and pushing up between them, creating a pressure that made him throb even harder.

The silky water pushed and prodded in places that he hadn’t known could feel so tantalizing.

When Cecily tightened the grip of her legs, her heels digging into his backside, and fully encased him inside her, the contrast of her hot sheath from the cold water nearly made him come undone.

Thank heaven for experience. Otherwise he might have lost his control.

Cecily relaxed her legs and pulled slightly away from him. The pressure of the water that had circled his shaft now roiled between them, a vibration that surely touched her nub.

Ah, clever woman. She had learned so quickly.

Cecily abruptly clenched her legs and pushed against him again. Clutched his shoulders and repeated the movement. Giles placed his big hands under the smooth mounds of her bottom, but only to caress, not to guide. He threw back his head and allowed her to control the rhythm, allowed himself to become lost in the myriad sensations this lady and her magic created for him.

The world tilted upside down.

Blood flowed to his head again.

Giles climaxed with a furious pleasure he’d never, ever experienced before. Felt the tremors of Cecily’s own pleasure course through her warm body.

BOOK: The Lady of the Storm - 2
10.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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