The earthquake, and the destructive monster it had unleashed, registered on Tethys’ consciousness. The great waves were within her power to control, yet they were a normal part of the balance between life and death. Great destruction would come this day, and new life would arise from the old. All was as it should be. She shifted again, content to return to sleep, for the Mortal Realm would continue as it had for all the ages of her long life.
She drifted closer to sleep, but the ocean currents, disturbed by the earthquake, filled her living tomb with fresh water and new scents. An unknown flavor coated her tongue and tingled along the scales of her lower body. Her gills burned with it.
Heavy. Oily. A smothering chemical taste.
Like—and yet not alike—what the vents on the ocean floor spat up.
The siren opened her eyes for the first time in well over a thousand years. Even while she slept, Tethys was aware of the passing of time, the earth’s cycles of renewal and destruction, but this was not nature’s work. It did not belong in her world. A foreign taint. Unnatural. This was nothing the earth would spawn—but there was one creature upon the land capable of such depravity.
With a spark of rage, her magic expanded outward. The coral reef trapping her body burst apart, and she thrashed free of her resting place. Fish and other reef-dwellers darted away or sought fissures to hide in. Free at last, she hovered in the water, surveying her surroundings. Near at hand, a sleek, agile predator sliced through the water, drawing closer with each flick of its tail. She sensed its cold frustration at having its hunt disrupted first by the earth’s trembling and now by her rising.
Unable to give voice to a song of enchantment while underwater, the siren hummed instead. The deep sound carried far out into the surrounding ocean.
Currents swirled at her command, coiling and dragging the shark closer. It fought water made solid by her magic. She swam a circle around her prey, coming ever closer with each revolution. Even helpless in her power, the shark still struggled. Reaching out, she slid her fingers along his smooth, sleek skin.
The male’s thoughts were clouded with panic and base instinct. Through all the chaos, memories flickered across her mind, slippery and hard to hold. After focusing her magic, only one image came clear to her. Tethys frowned. She would get nothing useful from this one. She must try something else, locate one of the other sea creatures capable of understanding her.
With a gentle pat, she released the shark. Her rage wasn’t directed at him, after all. Her effort wasn’t entirely without benefit. She’d gotten one clear image from the shark, that of a strange two-legged creature peering at it from within a great metal cage, and accompanying it was the familiar oily scent. Though much weaker than what tainted the ocean, it was alike enough to confirm her earlier assumption. Humans were behind this catastrophe.
She’d hoped the passage of time would grant the young species wisdom.
Apparently, it had not.
It was time for another lesson.
Chapter 1
GRAN BUSTLED AROUND the kitchen in a whirlwind of activity, shifting dirty bowls into the sink, snatching clean ones out of a cupboard, and then gliding over to the stove to pull a tray of muffins out with one hand while sliding a sheet of cookies in with the other. Before the oven door had fully closed, she was already halfway across the room, attending to what Lillian could only assume was the beginnings of French toast. Gran possessed a culinary efficiency Lillian—and most everyone else—lacked, but at this exact moment, it was Gran’s ability to compartmentalize emotions she truly envied.
She currently would have benefited from a large dose of Gran’s stoicism, too. It might help numb some of the environmental ‘noise’ rubbing her newly heightened senses raw. Even watching her grandmother work almost caused Lillian vertigo. Sounds came too clear and sharp. What were once subtle scents like the salty, warm scent of butter melting in a pot, the hot, metal smell of the oven, or maple syrup and brown sugar—she now found overpowering to the point of inducing nausea.
In a desperate attempt to tune out some of the other senses, Lillian fixated on the heavy earthenware mug between her palms with its rich, dark coffee. A small chip marred the rim, but she couldn’t bring herself to toss out her favorite cup over so small a blemish.
Tiny drops of coffee slowly slid down the side of the mug where her trembling hands spilled it over the edge. Her vision swam, and her head took up a steady pounding.
She closed her eyes for a moment but snapped them back open as a sharp tearing sound assaulted her ears. Her focus zoned in on Gran where she stood at the sink, innocently enough, just pulling labels from jars destined for recycling. Lillian’s ears twitched in time with each auditory detail.
Focus on the coffee, damn it. Just one thing at a time.
Strange how the scent of coffee, and the sight of rich cream clouding the dark liquid, had suddenly lost their usual comforting effect. Lillian gave her mug an idle swirl before raising it to her lips and inhaling a deep breath of the warm steam.
Nope, nothing.
She sipped at the coffee and grimaced. Nope, not nothing...downright nasty. Just three months before, she’d been a certifiable caffeine addict.
Who would have thought a three-month sleep inside a tree could cure addictions? Or heighten her senses to the point of pain?
And just what other changes, besides the ones I’ve already experienced, has my meddling hamadryad inflicted upon me while I lay senseless?
Truthfully, she knew without her hamadryad tree’s aid, she would have died. And Gregory, noble, loving being that he was would have followed her into death.
Just thinking of the gargoyle, her soul mate in the most literal sense of the word, had her turning toward the door leading to the living room. Presently, the other half of her soul was showering in the upstairs master bathroom. It was the only one in the house big enough to accommodate a gargoyle’s massive wingspan.
She’d finished her own shower a half hour ago, a long, arduous affair of scouring and scrubbing to rid herself of her tree’s pitchy afterbirth—a somewhat disgusting side effect from hamadryad healing, apparently.
If only the other magical side effects were as easily washed away.
Magic had saved her life—probably even saved her soul. After Gregory had woken to her call, he’d examined her hamadryad and informed her the tree had also trapped the demon seed Lillian had been unwillingly incubating. Without it, she now felt lighter and cleaner—not so strange, she supposed, since the demon seed had been feeding on her spirit and magic.
She thanked her hamadryad tree for its many gifts, but it didn’t lessen the slow, creeping fear from invading her mind. Honestly, the fear wasn’t so much about how deeply magic had interwoven itself into her life, it was the fact what she did know about magic was so very slight.
Frowning, she acknowledged she could probably write everything she knew about magic on a sticky-note and still have room to spare. After emerging from her tree, she hadn’t had much time to talk to Gregory before the rest of the family had descended upon them with hugs, laughter, and tears.
The snippets of what she’d been told only added to her uncertainty. Then Gran had chased everyone away—to give Lillian and Gregory a chance to clean up, she’d claimed. But Lillian would bet it was more a chance to collect their thoughts, for which she was grateful.
She was confident Gregory would be able to answer her questions. Now, if he’d finish up with his shower and get his big gargoyle backside down to the kitchen, she’d start asking those questions.
Warm amusement brushed against her mind, and she choked back a gasp of surprise at the intimate contact. Apparently, she had been more distracted than she knew.
“Easy, beloved.” Gregory’s calming influence washed over her mind and flowed out to every corner of her body. “I am with you always. We will get through this new complication together.”
“What’s happening to me? My skull feels like it’s being inflated by an air compr
essor.”
There was a long pause, which usually meant Gregory was hung up on a modern term. He rumbled to himself and then answered. “I believe your gargoyle father’s bloodline is asserting itself over your dryad mother’s.”
“Am I about to sprout a pair of leathery wings?”
“Yes. If you don’t get your cascading magic under control, you will shift.”
The pounding in her head made it difficult to think. Lillian fought for focus to make sense of Gregory’s words and the warning behind them. She’d shifted once before, back when the demon soul had full control of her. It was how she knew she possessed the ability. Thanks to the strength of her hamadryad, she was now free of the demon’s dark menace.
Oh, but during that time, she’d been all instinct, base urges, and raw emotions. She’d blamed it on the demon soul, but what if that was what being a gargoyle was? Gregory hadn’t alluded to such, but she hadn’t asked him either. Cold uncertainty dispelled some of the heady magic rising within her. Her skin still felt too tight and her body overly hot, feverish to the point she wouldn’t be surprised to see steam curling up from her body.
She clutched the edge of the table and told herself she wouldn’t shift. There was no more demon soul to coerce or control her. “I’m in control. Of myself, my magic, and my fate,” she mumbled under her breath.
It helped a little. Then the scent of forest, male, and what she’d come to think of as the distinct scent of warm stone surrounded her, seeping into her lungs, the pores of her skin, and maybe even her soul. A moment later, the warm weight of large hands settled on her shoulders. Eyes still closed, she turned her head and inhaled a deep breath of Gregory’s scent. It calmed her, as it always did, and the pounding in her head subsided enough so she could think.
The hands squeezed gently as Gregory’s voice washed over her. Calming, soothing, peaceful. “I’m here. My strength is yours. Think of your tree growing tall, casting her soft lacy shade throughout your glade. Your escape from the world. A place to rest and heal. A dryad’s haven. Remember what it is to be a dryad.”
Even if he had spoken in a language she did not understand, she would still have taken comfort in his voice. The tension in her shoulders and belly eased.
In truth, she knew no more about being a dryad than she did about being a gargoyle. But forests and glades, the scent of loam, the sharp sweetness of sap, and the ability to feel the land—all those things were a natural part of her existence. When she opened her eyes, her vision came into focus. Lights and sounds returned to their normal levels. She released a ragged sigh and tilted her head up toward Gregory.
Muscular and towering to a lofty eight and a half feet, he dwarfed her smaller frame like a tremendous hulking shadow. His wings, even folded against his back, arched high above his shoulders, framing his horns where they brushed the ceiling in two long, elegant spirals. His fearsome exterior housed a gentle heart, as well as the other half of her soul. When he’d first explained they shared one soul between them, that they were the mortal Avatars of the Divine Ones, she’d been doubtful. But no longer.
Her heart still pumped with fear, but whatever was happening to her, she knew they would face it together, for they were one being in two bodies, far stronger together than alone.
“Hmm.” Gregory leaned forward and sniffed along her shoulder. “Entirely too close. The tight, narrow confines of the kitchen is no place to learn to shapeshift.” His nostrils flared as he inhaled a second, deeper breath. With a snort, he shook himself, his thick black mane flying in all directions. The shiver continued down his body, morphing into a full-body stretch as it worked its way to the tip of his tail.
“Yes, don’t break the china,” Gran injected with a chuckle. “You know how much I hate shopping.”
Gran’s lighthearted banter dispelled some of the nervous tension, and Lillian was able to slow her breathing into something resembling a reasonable pace. Sweat still trickled down her back and along her temples, but otherwise, she was unharmed. However, something in Gregory’s comment about the narrow confines of the kitchen made her think he downplayed the danger. She doubted he was worried about the kitchen; more likely he was concerned about the other people in the house.
As if Gregory knew her thoughts—which he probably did—he leaned closer until his muzzle brushed her hair and whispered, “Later, we’ll go into the forest, and I’ll assess your abilities and teach you control.”
Lillian only hoped it was half as easy as he made it sound.
With a rattle of dishes, Gran brought over a steaming plate of French toast and warmed maple syrup. Next came a plateful of steaming muffins slathered thickly with butter and an assortment of jams and jellies to pick from.
“Let me help.” Lillian stood and skirted the table. Guilt pricked at her conscience, if a tad belatedly. She’d sat staring at her cooling coffee, oblivious to everything going on around her when she could’ve as easily spent the time helping Gran with breakfast.
“No need, dear,” Gran said with a snort. “The day I can’t whip together a quick breakfast will be my first day in the afterlife.”
Regardless, Lillian helped set the table, laying out settings for three, even though Gregory disdained cutlery, preferring to use his three-inch claws. Surprisingly, he was a dainty eater for an eight-foot behemoth with wings, claws, and horns.
The mindless routine of minutia helped Lillian conquer the last vestiges of the strange wildness surging through her blood. Calmer, she returned to her seat next to Gregory. She’d barely sat down on the tall stool before the warm weight of Gregory’s tail snaked its way around her waist. The spade-shaped tip landed heavily in her lap. With a chuckle at his predictability, she obliged him with a firm pat before turning her attention to her food.
“So,” Lillian said around a mouthful of French toast. “Let’s talk about what we’ve all been avoiding since Gregory and I first awoke.”
She didn’t bother looking up from her food. Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Gregory’s right ear swing in her direction, but he didn’t move otherwise, remaining hunched over his meal, eating with the single-mindedness of a hungry male.
Waving a butter knife in Gregory’s direction, Gran eyed the gargoyle with a smile large enough it crinkled the skin at the corners of her eyes. “First off—no more wandering around buck-ass naked in gargoyle form.”
Gregory glanced first at Gran and then down at his attire, which consisted of his usual beaded loincloth and the wrist and armbands that Lillian had been quick to learn were anything but vain ornamentation. His ears swung forward in question then flattened along his horns in confusion, or more likely, annoyance. Gregory could be a little touchy about his appearance. And she was unsure of Gran’s line of thought herself. If they were to compare prudish personality traits, Lillian was sure she’d come out ahead as far more prudish than her grandmother.
A full-bellied laugh escaped Gran. “If you two could see your expressions. I haven’t lost my mind or suddenly turned into a dried-out prune. If our little town was as sleepy as it used to be, I’m sure Gregory could walk through the forest in broad daylight and no one would be the wiser, but things have changed.”
Lillian arched an eyebrow. She’d known by the underlying tension something was bothering her grandmother, something more worrying than the possibility of the Lady of Battles invading sometime in a vague and distant future.
“In the last three months,” Gran said, her voice souring. “Gods, I can’t believe it has only been three months—what must be half the membership of the RCMP, the OPP, CSIS, and a whole multitude of military acronyms, have trampled through every fen, stream, bog, glen, marsh, and game trail, all in the name of collecting evidence. With, I might add, a total disregard for the delicate balance in some of those places.” Gran snapped her teeth together. “And don’t get me started on the more recent addition of the media hounds—they’re worse than death hounds!”
The memory of a death hound, its steel-grey teeth expose
d to rend and tear, flashed through Lillian’s mind’s eye. Somehow, she doubted simple reporters could compare to those deadly destructive, unnatural creatures, but she remained silent, leveling Gran with a probing look instead.
Gregory bolted to his full height and bumped the table hard enough to rattle dishes. “What form of creature is this Media Hound? I sensed no immediate danger to Lillian when I first woke.”
She laid a restraining hand on Gregory’s arm. “They...” Lillian frowned, trying to explain in a way that wouldn’t end with innocent humans being hunted by her gargoyle. “They’re...harmless truth gatherers.”
“Harmless truth gatherers? Really?” Gran rolled her eyes. “Gregory, don’t believe one word of the rubbish that just exited my granddaughter’s lips. The media is far from harmless. The local human population saw something in the sky the night the Riven nearly sacrificed Lillian—a bright, swirling power dancing in the sky. It was snapped, filmed, Tweeted, Facebooked and YouTubed to every corner of the Internet before we even had a hope of containing the damage.”
Gran stopped to pour herself some tea. Once she’d stirred in the perfect amount of milk, she glanced back up. “If that was the worst of it, we could have mesmerized scientists and officials into believing the event was nothing more sinister than the northern lights fluctuating in response to a solar flare, or some such web of lies. That would have been within the Coven’s power. But no,” Gran said with an uncharacteristic snarl and waved her teaspoon for emphasis. “Human authorities reached the site first, they found bodies. The bodies of cottagers and campers the Riven had fed upon and discarded.”
Lillian shivered as a boy’s image surfaced from the morass of her chaotic memories—a beautiful boy, his expression cherub-like and sweet. Her stomach soured. She might never know if the Riven’s host body was a child he’d possessed or merely shapeshifted to appear as one. He and his fellows were the cause of so many deaths, she doubted if the demon would have spared a child.
The Complete Gargoyle and Sorceress Boxset (Books 1-9) Page 28