Waking Eden (The Eden Series Book 3) (13 page)

BOOK: Waking Eden (The Eden Series Book 3)
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Chapter 15

R
amsay rolled away
from the sunlight slanting across his closed eyelids. His morning stubble scratched against the soft pillowcase, and Trinity’s spring and linen scent filled his lungs.

His eyes snapped open. No Trinity, just a dent on the pillow beside his. He checked the sun’s position with his senses. No more than six or six-thirty. Surely she hadn’t—

The bite of strong coffee drifted from the kitchen. Oh, no. Not gone. Looked like Trinity was doing the domesticated sex kitten routine. And praise The Great One, was that bacon?

He threw back the covers and padded to his jeans across the room. God, this woman was amazing. Drop dead gorgeous, innocent heart, wild as fuck in the bedroom, and she cooked bacon. Perfect. Abso-freaking-lutely perfect.

He gave up finding his T-shirt and ambled through the living room half dressed. Only the kitchen lights were on, leaving the rest of the apartment in the soft glow of morning.

Trinity shifted from behind the stove and tossed a utensil in the sink.

Guess he’d found his T-shirt, and damned if she didn’t look good in it, the hem reaching almost to her knees. A wallop of something he’d never felt before pushed his shoulders back and puffed up his chest.

He crept closer. Not just bacon on the menu. Toast, potatoes, and eggs too. “Not sure which I like better. You making food that won’t leave me hungry in five minutes, or what you wear doing it.”

Trinity spun around and smiled, a wide, killer one at full wattage. “I hope you don’t mind. I’ve read a ton of stories where the woman wears a guy’s shirt the next morning, and I’ve always wanted to do it.” Her smile turned sheepish and her cheeks pinkened. “It smells like you.”

So honest. Not a bone of pretense in her body. Was there a better word than perfect? “You like my scent being on you?”

The blush flared a hotter red and she twisted to the stove.

So, she did like it.

He liked it too. A lot.

The image of his family’s mark on her arm splayed across his mind. Dangerous, but damned inciting too.

He settled on a barstool. Even if he wanted a baineann, she’d have to be Myren to take his mark, not that Trinity seemed too keen on the idea of being Myren. And why in histus was that, anyway? “You care if I get coffee?”

“Help yourself. Cups are over the coffee pot. There’s creamer in the fridge and sugar in the small container.” She motioned to the smallest of the blue containers nestled in the corner and flipped the potatoes. The steady sizzle from the pan flared to an angry hiss.

Maybe she needed a less sexual demonstration of the perks of being a Myren. He opened the cabinet with his mind and pulled out a handcrafted tan ceramic mug.

Trinity froze, a strip of bacon dangling off the end of her fork and eyes locked on his trick.

He slid the carafe free, poured a full cup, and slid it back on the burner.

Trinity pivoted and followed the levitating cup of goodness across the room with wide eyes.

“Black works fine for me. Though the stuff we brew at home kicks a bigger punch, so I’ll usually go for cream there.”

The mug clinked atop the concrete countertop.

“That is so cool.” She might try to fit the unruffled librarian mold, but in that second her face lit up like a seven-year-old at Christmas.

“Ah, so you like my daylight parlor tricks better than my bedroom performance.” He sipped his coffee and winked. “I’ll have to keep that in mind.”

Her levity melted away, replaced with a shudder and softening mouth. So adorable. Runway models paid damn good money to get mussed hair and kiss-swollen lips like hers. “I liked that too. Though I don’t really get how you did it.”

“As simple as a thought. An impression of touch guided by the mind. Not much different from how I moved the coffee pot.” He took another drink. “That was only half of what I could’ve done. If you were Myren, I could have made it much better. As it was, I had to hold myself in check to keep you safe.”

“Safe?”

Ramsay sat the mug aside. “If you are Myren and unawakened, too much energy could trigger your awakening. You’re not even willing to consider you might be one of us, let alone be ready to take on your powers.”

She smoothed his T-shirt at her stomach and cleared her throat. “I was thinking I’d stop by my mom’s house and pick up some stuff the adoption service gave her.”

Ah, the none-too-subtle change of topic approach. He’d go with it for now. “Is that where you found the necklace?”

Trinity ducked back to work and flipped off the burners. “I think that’s where it came from. Dad gave it to me when I was little.” She pulled two plates from the cabinet overhead and plated the food. “I get off work at five. I can pick it up on the way home and meet you back here.”

“Why not meet there? I can help.”

Trinity hesitated mid-spoonful of fried potatoes. “Mom’s a little difficult.”

The plates were done and her coffee full, but she still wouldn’t turn around. “Difficult how?”

She shook her head and pivoted with a plate in each hand, her face blanked with a kind of impassivity that seemed like a mortal crime on someone as bright as her. “It’s a long story. Not worth telling.”

“Not worth telling, or don’t want to tell?”

“Don’t want to.” She dug into her food and waggled her fork at him between bites. “Don’t you have…I don’t know…more important prince stuff to do?”

She didn’t want to talk about it, fine. He’d play along. But it was damned weird seeing her lock up. “Actually I could use today to catch up on how we’re doing with the Rebellion.”

“The what?”

Oh, that’s right. He’d missed that detail the night before, somewhere between getting her to admit she might be Myren and her fuck-buddy proposition. “The Rebellion. They’re a bunch of fanatics who think The Great One made us superior to humans so they could be our slaves.”

Trinity semi-coughed/choked on a mouthful of eggs.

“Shit. Sorry.” Ramsay stood and smacked her on the back.

She waved him off and covered her mouth, trying to suck in a steady breath. “Warn a girl before you scare the crap out of her, would you?” She poked her fork at his plate. “Eat. I’d like to make sure you’ve got enough energy to keep your local bad guys from ruining the rest of my life.”

Ramsay shrugged and got to work on his food. “Yeah, well,” he said around a mouthful. “It doesn’t help they’ve got rogue Spiritu helping them.”

Trinity’s fork clattered to the countertop. “Rogue Spiritu?”

Ramsay grinned. He couldn’t have stopped it if he’d wanted to. The look on her face was priceless. Big eyes, loose jaw, kinda like he’d just told her he could sprout two more heads and a tail. “Guess I kinda fell short on explanations last night, huh?”

She picked up her fork, studied the plate and pushed around what was left of her food.

Weird. She’d taken everything else no BFD, but this seemed to suck the life right out of her.

“You don’t sound like you like these Spiritu too much,” she said.

“Dislike probably isn’t the right word. Histus, I barely know them. It’s what they do that bugs me. Inspiration is what they call it, but the idea of someone pushing ideas that aren’t mine in my mind?” He shook his head and scooped up the last bit of potatoes. “It rubs me the wrong way. Too close to brainwashing, if you ask me.”

Trinity scraped her plate clean over the trashcan and loaded it up in the dishwasher. Everything about her seemed empty. Void of the usual life that energized her movements. Unplugged.

To hell with that. He wanted his sunshine back. To see her smile and put some of that innocent swagger back into her hips. He left behind his own plate and slid behind her, hands at her waist. “Did I mention breakfast at Trinity’s house is now my favorite pastime?”

Her knuckles went white gripping the sink ledge, but she tilted her neck to give his lips better access. “I’m not sure I have time for a lesson before work.”

“This isn’t a lesson. This is enjoyment.”

“Doesn’t this…” She eyed him over her shoulder. “I don’t know, muddy the waters?”

He splayed his hand across her abdomen, so soft. And damned if a quick dip with his fingers didn’t confirm she didn’t have a stitch on underneath. “Not to me. Touch, sexuality, intimacy, it’s the norm in Eden. Natural. Even PDAs are no big deal. I’d say they’re practically expected between two people in a relation—”

His mouth locked up the second the word registered.

Trinity slumped and she frowned, though she clearly tried to couch it as a smile. “That’s what I meant.” She turned and urged him back. “I respect your boundaries, Ramsay, but you have to respect mine too. Don’t pull me into something you’re not ready for.”

Son. Of. A. Bitch. How had he not seen that coming? And even more importantly, why did he want to tug her right back against him and tell her to hell with boundaries?

“I’ve got to get to work.” Trinity snatched the dishtowel off the counter, wiped her hands, and headed to the living room. “Do you need me to drop you somewhere?”

Praise The Great One, where was his head? He’d forgotten he didn’t have a car.

Still stuck on figuring out if the cost for the candy you’re craving is worth it.

His conscience was a lippy pain in the ass. “No, I’ll port over.”

Trinity drew up short and looked back. “Port over?”

“To Eden.” As far as parlor tricks went, portals were one of the best. Second only to flying. And The Great One knew she needed some serious pepping up after his flubs this morning. “You wanna watch?”

She glanced at the kitchen clock. “I still need to get dressed and get to work. Do we have time?”

“Plenty.” He eyeballed her in his shirt and grinned. “But one way or another I’ve got to get you out of my clothes first.”

* * *

S
erena touched
down a few feet outside Uther’s front door, Underland’s noonday sun blasting down on her bare shoulders. Knowing her luck, she’d end up with noticeable tan lines and blow her one big covert task on a wardrobe misfire.

Praise The Great One, she hated this place. As close to a human desert as you could get. Scorching in the daytime, and bitter cold at night, but without any hope for an oasis. How Uther’s family had survived here so long, she’d never understand.

She knocked on the weathered front door, and the crumbling whitewashed finish scraped her knuckles.

The door opened.

Uther stood with one arm propped on the door’s edge and the other on his hip, his chocolate linen pants and loose ivory shirt more indicative of a laborer than the Rebellion strategos he’d once been. He scowled and looked her up and down. “Took you long enough.”

She pushed past him and headed for the kitchen. The tiny place barely held its own against her family’s gardener shack, but compared to the brutal outside it was paradise. “What do you mean, ‘Took you long enough’? I’m on house arrest. By the way, thanks for all the support.”

She ran water over the shallow cuts the door’s dried paint left behind.

Uther tossed a mostly clean hand towel in her direction. “I knew where you were.”

“Then why didn’t you come help me?”

“Couldn’t be sure you wouldn’t throw me out as bait to get yourself off the hook.”

Well, he was right on that score. Any longer cooped up at the warrior’s training facility and she’d have thrown her own mother out as bait. “You could’ve come after.”

“Nope.” He strolled to the navy blue couch across from the well-used but unlit fireplace, settled in, and kicked up his feet on the scarred walnut coffee table. “Needed to be sure I had something to keep you in line first. Any woman who’ll knife her own fireann can’t be trusted.”

Serena tossed the towel aside and crept closer. Goose bumps raced up her arms and across her shoulders. “Keep me in line how?”

“Put a little more skin in the game for you.” He stared at the empty hearth, unbothered to even meet her gaze. “Make sure you had enough incentive to help me out.”

She lurched into his field of vision. “So you forced me to break my house arrest? Is that it? Do you have any clue how many guards are on me at any given time? Praise The Great One, they’re even saying someone’s bringing humans to Eden and claiming it was me.”

At her last shrieked word, his gaze snapped to hers. “I know exactly what’s going on because I’m the one bringing them here.”

Serena’s thoughts tumbled. “You set me up?”

“Keeps the malran busy while I take care of my own business,” he said, not the least bit concerned with the fact her lungs wouldn’t work right.

“They’ll strip my powers if they prove it was me bringing humans here. Histus, I doubt Eryx will even be held to proof. Supposition will be more than enough.”

“Oh, I don’t know. Seems you’ve got quite the following lately.” He smirked. “Unrequited love suits you.”

“Stop it!” She stomped to within an arm’s reach. Even standing on her feet she barely towered over his seated height. “This isn’t a joke.”

“I’ll bet Maxis didn’t think his plans were a joke either, but you took him out quick enough didn’t you?”

Fuck this. She straightened and schooled her features to that of a fearful, innocent woman. “I was afraid.” She nudged a wave of sympathy toward Uther, a barely detectable cloud of emotion to skew his natural response. “He was about to give us all away to Reese. I couldn’t risk him sacrificing all we’d done. If anything, I protected you. And now you put my powers in jeopardy? They’ll cast me out.”

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