“The bloody thing's a trap,” he said, reaching for her, pulling her into him so tightly she could hardly breathe. “Carrying it back to Haven's going to be a challenge.”
“Can we shift it, magically? Maybe use a spell to transport it back separately?”
“God, no,” he said, burying his face in the curve of her neck. “I don't trust the damn thing one bit. Who knows how it might react to a spell? It's so powerful, Shea. I had no idea.”
“You beat it, though,” she murmured, nestling against him.
“Because of you.” He captured her face between his palms and turned her eyes up to his. “Because of what you gave me.”
His gaze moved over her features like a caress. She felt the tenderness welling up inside him and everything in her responded.
“I felt your love,” he said, “and that was enough to draw me back from the edge. Without you . . .” He shook his head and shifted to glance at the shard of black silver lying at their feet. The green grass around the Artifact was now brown and dead. As if just the touch of that dark magic was enough to suck the life from the ground. “I understand now, I think. What you and the coven felt so long ago.”
“It's seductive,” she whispered, her gaze, too, fixed on the knot of black silver. Even knowing what she knew, she had to fight to keep from reaching for it. From fondling it. From feeling the black rush of energy swimming through her veins again.
“More than anything I've ever known before.” He tucked her in close to him again and wrapped his arms around her, seeking comfort, or offering it. “In the past, we, the Eternals, couldn't comprehend how you could all turn your backs on what was right and just, for the sake of the promise of more power. But now . . .” His arms tightened like steel bands around her.
“I know. And a part of me still yearns for it,” she admitted at last. “I haven't wanted to say anything to you about this, Torin. But ever since we arrived in England, I've felt it so strongly. The Artifact calling to me. Whispering to me. And something inside me is listening.”
His fingers threaded through her hair and held her head to his chest, as if by the strength of his will, he could keep her safe. Deny the very words she was confessing.
“But you didn't listen, Shea. You let it go. That counts as well.”
“I hope it's enough,” she said. “Because this thing is like nothing else on earth.”
“It devours your soul, one nibble at a time. It's as if it's happening so fast and yet so slowly, you can't even see what it's doing to you until it's too late.”
She heard the wariness in his voice and she shared it.
“How are we ever going to carry the damn thing back to Haven safely?”
He took a breath and let it out again in a rush. “I have an idea about that. But it will still be dangerous.”
Shea squeezed him tightly, burrowing in close, as if trying to crawl inside his body completely. “It's not like we have a choice, Torin.”
“True enough.” He gave her one last, hard hug, then released her. “Let me tell you what I'm thinking. Then we'll go.”
Â
Kellyn was waiting.
She hated Wales.
Hated the cold. The wet. The wind.
Frustration and fury bubbled together inside her, creating a stew of dark emotions that rose up and threatened to choke her. But her strength of purpose, her will, conquered those more intransigent emotions and beat them into submission.
She wasn't about to let her own eagerness ruin a well-thought-out plan. This time it was her plan, done her way.
If she failedâwhich she deemed impossibleâshe would have no one to blame but herself. And better that way than having to deal with incompetent morons, no matter how well motivated.
Rain suddenly poured from a leaden sky, drenching her in seconds. Irritated and now soaked, Kellyn waved her hand and created an opulent cave in the side of the mountain. God knew it wasn't a five-star hotel, but she couldn't afford to leave the proximity of Haven. Her scrying mirror told her Shea and Torin were on their way back. If she missed them . . .
She shook her head, provided clean, dry clothes for herself, then created a fire. Easing down onto a makeshift bed of silk pillows and warm blankets, she watched the flames, losing herself in the mystic call of fire and darkness.
Chapter 48
T
he fire cage Torin constructed to contain the Artifact was a huge drain on his energies.
Especially since he had not only to cage the black silver but also to flash himself and Shea back to Haven. Their return trip was taking much longer. Even his strengthened powers were no match for the black silver. The jumps were shorter and the breaks to rejuvenate themselves were longer.
He glanced at his witch, read the fatigue in her green eyes and knew that her powers as well were being drained. They were linked so closely now, it was their combined energies being used to safely transport the Artifact to Wales. And the journey was taking its toll on both of them.
He hated knowing what this was doing to her and hated more the fact that he could do nothing to change it. Without their working together, the Artifact would never get back to Haven. He turned his gaze on the damn thing, resting on a now blackened rock beneath one of a pair of yew trees. They no longer set it on the ground, not knowing if the magic spilled into the earth or just blackened the patch of grass it rested on. Instead, they set it on rocks or suspended it from tree limbs with rope they fashioned magically.
Anything to keep from actually touching it. The effect it had on them was too severe to risk exposure to it again. Even with their combined magics, they might not be strong enough to resist its lure.
“We're nearly there,” Torin said quietly, his voice barely carrying over the hiss and spit of the campfire between them.
They hadn't risked staying in a hotel or a B and B. Not only were they in constant danger of being pursued or attacked, but carrying the Artifact was an invitation to disaster. So instead they had camped alongside a river just inside the border of Wales. By morning they would be at Haven. Despite their flagging magical strength, Torin was tempted to continue on, get this business done. But he didn't dare chance it.
If Shea needed him, he must have his full powers to draw on.
“I know,” she said, deliberately avoiding looking at the Artifact.
Torin understood. He too felt the pull of the dark reaching for him and she must feel it even more so. Shea was a direct descendant of its creators. A single link in a long chain. It reacted to her presence like a living thing and maybe, he thought, that was exactly what it was. Created from the breath and magic of the original coven, it was brought to life by the powers of the universe. Was it so hard to imagine that over time, it would grow stronger?
Become something else?
That thought was more disturbing than he liked.
Shea's gaze moved over open fields and a lake where the reflection of the nearly full moon shone like a spotlight from the heavens. Then she lifted her eyes to the sky and the moon itself, high overhead. “It's almost full now. Tomorrow, our month is gone.”
“And we've succeeded.”
“Have we?” She flicked an uneasy glance at the Artifact and worry glittered in her green eyes. Rubbing her hands up and down her arms as if to fight off a soul-deep chill, she reminded him, “That thing is still here. Its temptation is still buzzing around us. We haven't gotten it to Haven yet. Anything could happen. For all we know, there's another ambush aimed at us right this minute.”
“We're safe here, Shea.”
She looked at him. “How do you know?”
He moved around the fire to sit beside her, then drew her onto his lap, wrapping his arms around her. Leaning back against the gnarled trunk of one of the centuriesold yew trees, he said, “We set up wards, remember? No one can see us. No one will find us. Between both of our magics, we're safe.”
“But that thing,” she argued, refusing to look toward the Artifact again, “it doesn't want to be locked up, Torin. I can feel it.”
“Whatever it is, it won't beat us,” he said, tipping her chin up to look directly into her eyes. “Not if we stand together.”
“How can you even trust me?” she asked. “I touched it and changed.”
“As did I,” he reminded her.
“Yes, but you didn't
want
the change. That's the differenceâI did,” she admitted. “At least, a part of me did. The same part that still wants to grab that thing and use it as it was meant to be used.”
He shook his head and slid one hand beneath the hem of her shirt. His fingers unerringly found the tattoo encircling her breast. She shivered as he stroked each individual flame and teased her nipple until she wanted to squirm in need.
“How can I
not
trust you?” he countered. “You felt the pull of it. Your body and heart changed beneath its magics and still you resisted. You turned your back on what it promised. You
chose
atonement. You chose to do the right thing and you always will.”
“I wish I were that sure,” she admitted.
“You should be,” he insisted. “You're not the witch you were so long ago. You've grown through the centuries. Your soul has been tested time and again and always you have met the challenges you faced with your head high and your honor intact.”
She smiled and leaned her head on his shoulder while his fingers continued to caress her branding tattoo. “If I remember those past lives correctly, it was pretty close a time or two. I didn't always want to do the right thing.”
“True,” he acknowledged. “But you
did,
whether you wanted to or not. I was there, remember. Even when we weren't physically together, I was there, watching over you. And I saw your growth. I saw you fight to become the soul you are today. I have no doubts about your heart, Shea. How can I?”
She sighed softly and felt just a tiny bit of the weight on her shoulders slide free. “You make me feel as if it's all going to work out. As if I really am who you believe me to be.”
“Trust me in this, Shea. You are a part of me.” He nudged her face up so that he could look into her eyes and she could read the truth of his words shining out at her. “You are the best part of me. We are one and nothing will ever divide us again.”
He bent his head to claim a kiss and Shea met his passion with a rising one of her own. It wasn't just desire pushing her, though; it was a need for tenderness. For the feel of his love wrapping itself around her, blanketing her in the warmth of the strongest magic of all. She linked her arms around his neck and leaned into him, feeling the burn of the branding tattoo on her breast and along her spine.
She accepted his need and offered him hers.
Sighs and whispered promises filled the air. And when their bodies as well as their spirits joined beneath the soft, pearly light of the moon, it was as if the goddess herself blessed them.
Yet still the Artifact shone darkly, its menacing promise alive in the night.
Â
It was time.
Kellyn set down the scrying mirror, uninterested in watching Shea couple with her Eternal. She had seen what she needed to see. The first shard of the Artifact was free of its prison and on its way to
her.
The very weave of the universe trembled at the possibilities spreading out before her. Even from a long distance, Kellyn felt the lush, dark call of the black silver.
She smiled to herself, hugging the nearly erotic sensation of power to her as she would have a lover. The magical metal created by the coven and lusted after by demons would soon be hersâand her hands literally itched to hold it.
Dousing the fire in her shelter, she leaned over and bathed herself in the coiling, shifting, thick black smoke, allowing it to seep into her pores. It filled her soul, not with the brightness of the light but with the absence of it. With the power of extinguishment. This was where the real power lay.
In the blackness.
In the shadows.
Night crept closer, now that the fire held nothing at bay, and Kellyn welcomed it.
The stain on her soul spread and she rejoiced in the inky crawl of it. She'd waited long enough. It was time to begin her own quest.
And the first order of business was to enlist Shea Jameson. She had no intention of turning the Awakened witch over to her partner or the Seekers or anyone else. She'd only used them to get what she wanted and what she wanted was Shea. And then the rest of the Awakened witches. To help her claim what the coven had given up so long ago.
To finish at long last what had begun centuries past.
To accept the dark, open the Hell gate and welcome a new lord and master.
Â
Manorbier castle stood silent and empty in the hush of dawn. Over the sea, the sunrise spilled slowly across the sky in dazzling color that brightened with each passing moment.
Torin and Shea stood together in the inner ward, surrounded by the heavy stones of their joined past. The castle was testament not only to the passage of time, but to the enduring legacy of man. And here Shea and Torin would add their efforts to that legacy. They would, at last, set the past right and claim eternity.
Shea held the fire cage in an uneasy grip. She wouldn't be able to relax until the black silver was inside Haven where it could do no more damage.
“We made it,” Torin told her, as if sensing her trepidation.
Another voice, unexpected, spoke up. “Took you long enough.”
Chapter 49
S
hea whipped around at the sound of that impatient feminine voice. A woman stepped out from beneath the still-elegant curve of stone stairs sweeping up to the chapel. She was dressed in silk and denim and her short black hair was spiky, making her look almost elfin.