Winter Kiss

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Winter Kiss Page 35

by Deborah Cooke


  “That’s two,” Sara said with approval. “What about water?”

  “Swimming?” Ginger asked.

  “It’s often shown by empathy and understanding,” Eileen said. “Compassion, an attempt to reconcile or create unions, soothe troubled waters.” She shrugged and smiled. “Or other things.”

  Ginger was already shaking a finger at Delaney. “That’s you. You went back to your mother, and you were worried about the planet in your nightmare. You’re air and water.”

  “And you’re earth,” Delaney agreed. “You’re completely in touch with the land and its cycles, with the rhythm of life.”

  “You said you missed that feeling,” Ginger said, and he nodded agreement.

  “Practical, problem solving,” Alex mused. “I think we can agree that Ginger has an affinity for the earth.”

  “So we need a token, willingly given, that represents the earth and the fire that you bring to this union,” Sara said. “That’s what will heal Delaney’s scale.”

  Ginger knew instantly what it had to be. She pulled off her mother’s amber earrings and offered them along with the scale to Quinn. “Can you use these? They look like fire to me, and they come from the earth, and they were my father’s first gift to my mother.”

  “Ginger!” Delaney protested. “You don’t have to do this.”

  “Yes,” she said with conviction. “Yes, I do.”

  Quinn took the earrings in his broad hand and turned them over as he examined them. “Set in silver,” he said. “They resonate beautifully.”

  “What do you mean?”

  He smiled at her. “They continue to be given in love. Gems know these things.”

  Ginger could believe that. “Can you use them?”

  “I’ll go one better,” Quinn said. “I can work the sterling easily. I’ll use just one for the scale.”

  “What will I do with one earring?”

  “Quinn can make the other one into a ring,” Delaney said, coming to Ginger’s side. He took her hand in his. “Make a ring that I can give back to Ginger.”

  She looked at him in surprise and his crooked smile made her chest tighten. “Wear it on your right hand for now. By the time the baby comes, you’ll know whether you want to move it to your left hand or not. Either way, it’ll always be yours.”

  And this man would always be in her heart.

  They stood in the old barn, its scents and history filling Delaney’s senses. Evening was falling and the twilight slid through the cracks between the boards, filling the barn with a velvety darkness. Delaney heard the meltwater dripping from the roof. He heard the girls moving restlessly and knew there was work to be done. He sensed the earth thawing, and knew spring would come, with more work. And he knew there would be a bountiful harvest on Ginger’s farm in the coming year.

  He stood in her old barn, surrounded by his friends and the power of the bond between them all, and stared into Ginger’s sparkling eyes.

  “What do I do?” she whispered, this woman who had already given so much to him, yet was always ready to give more.

  “Close your eyes,” he advised as Quinn inhaled deeply. “We’re all going to shift.”

  Ginger, predictably, kept her eyes wide open.

  Quinn changed shape first, shimmering brilliant blue around his perimeter, then becoming a sapphire and steel dragon. He breathed fire, the flames licking the earrings in his grasp and making Delaney’s lost scale glow a vivid copper pink. Sara stood beside him, holding Garrett, who watched his father with awe.

  Donovan changed next, resplendent in lapis lazuli and silver. He lifted his own son, Nick, in one arm and Alex in the other, holding them high so that they could see the proceedings.

  The barn was going to be full. Sloane shifted next, taking his dragon form of tourmaline and gold, then Erik shifted into ebony and pewter. There was a flurry of scales and talons and feathers, as Niall, Thorolf, and Rafferty shifted shape almost in unison. Niall was amethyst and silver; Thorolf was moonstone and silver; Rafferty was opal and gold. Their dragon forms gleamed as if they were jeweled, and the children’s eyes were round with wonder.

  Delaney noted the jet pin that marked his brother’s repaired scale, the runestone that had been Erik’s, and the iron fusing Quinn’s own damaged scale. He was honored to be entering this company of scarred but strengthened warriors, and he knew that it was Ginger who gave him this gift.

  “Ready?” he asked, feeling tender and protective of her. She nodded without hesitation, which made him smile. He held her gaze as he let himself begin to shimmer, as his body did what it did best. She didn’t flinch; she didn’t blink; she didn’t evade his reality.

  Because she had accepted him as he was, both good and bad mingled together. She knew his truth and didn’t hold it against him—in fact, she had a habit of seeing the good in him.

  And that made him a better Pyr.

  The change gained in momentum then and he tipped back his head to roar as it claimed his body fully. He felt triumphant and strong, potent as he hadn’t been in years. He stretched, showing the spot where he had lost the scale and where Magnus had driven deeply.

  “Fire,” Quinn said, breathing his own fire to merge scale and gem. The scale looked like it was burning, the edges so brilliant that the light reminded Delaney of his firestorm. The copper was almost pink, so radiant and fluid, and the emerald shone like a beacon in the night.

  “Earth,” Sara whispered as the amber earring glinted in the light of the dragonfire. Quinn worked the setting of the stone with remarkable agility, reshaping the hook to make a triple circle around the oval gem. He set it in the middle of the scale, deftly attaching it with his dragonfire.

  “Air,” the Pyr said, and exhaled as one, their breath making the flames surrounding the scale dance high. Quinn stepped forward and pressed the scale into place, deliberately and firmly. The heat sent a stab of pain through Delaney and he felt it illuminate every corner of his being.

  But then, Ginger had already sent her sunshine through his darkness. He was awed by his own good fortune and his heart was full enough to burst.

  He had never expected to be whole again.

  Delaney felt his single tear of gratitude slide down his cheek and hiss as it landed on the scale. Then Ginger put her hands over the repair, her fingers light and warm on it. She bent and touched her lips to the repaired scale, her breath making him shiver.

  “Will it come loose?” she asked, her expression so worried that Delaney feared he’d lose another scale over her.

  “Never,” Quinn said, and shifted back to human form. He took Garrett out of Sara’s arms and tossed the boy high. “We should get going.”

  “No use overstaying our welcome,” Eileen said. “We’ll be seeing you.”

  “We’ll fly home,” Donovan said, and tossed Delaney a set of keys. He caught them out of the air, acting instinctively, as his brother grinned. “I knew you sold the Viper, so I found another one when I felt your firestorm. I figured that if you had a mate, you might be sticking around, and you’d probably want some decent wheels.”

  “My pickup truck is decent,” Ginger said, and Donovan laughed.

  “I thought the Viper was yours,” Delaney argued. “I can’t take this from you.”

  “You’re my brother. It’s a firestorm gift.”

  “Now there are firestorm gifts?” Niall muttered. “I’ve got shopping to do.”

  “Besides, I am a Ducati man through and through,” Donovan said.

  “Except for the minivan,” Alex teased, and Donovan rolled his eyes.

  “Don’t tell them that!”

  Alex laughed. “Let’s go. These people want some privacy.”

  “I gotta get back to my greenhouse,” Sloane said, heading for the door.

  “And I’ve got bookings to manage,” Niall said, pausing beside Delaney. “If you want back into the partnership, just say the word.”

  Delaney smiled down at the woman in his arms. “I’m going to inves
t in another partnership,” he said, watching Ginger’s eyes light. “I hear that Sinclair Farms needs some help, some more cooperative help. I’m pretty interested in learning more about organic farming.”

  Ginger’s eyes danced. “Don’t come crying to me when you find out how hard it is.”

  “Not a chance,” he said, and caught her close. He bent to kiss her, willing his fellows to disappear, and by the time he lifted his head, they were gone.

  “Better than beguiling them,” Ginger said with satisfaction.

  Delaney was startled. “What do you know about beguiling?”

  “Only that if you ever do that to me, you’ll be toast, hotshot.”

  “Burned toast.”

  “You should be so lucky.”

  He flicked a glance to the loft, then back to her. “Maybe we should look for your lingerie.”

  “Maybe we should try the bedroom this time.”

  “Don’t tell me you’re going to get all predictable on me.”

  “Not a chance!” Ginger laughed. “No stockings or garters today, for example.”

  “As if I care,” he said, his voice low as he reached for her. “It’s just wrapping, Ginger, and the outside isn’t what counts.”

  By the way she kissed him, Delaney was sure they were in agreement on that.

  Don’t miss the next paranormal romance

  in the bestselling Dragonfire series

  from Deborah Cooke,

  featuring Niall’s story....

  WHISPER KISS

  Coming from Signet Eclipse in August 2010

  His intruder was female. Niall suddenly felt warm in the entry to his studio. It was because he was out of that crazy wind; he knew it because the building was folded protectively around him. It had a stillness about it that he liked a lot, maybe because it was so old. He narrowed his eyes, noting that the intruder was at the top of the stairs.

  She had great legs.

  She rounded the corner without looking back, taking the route to Niall’s apartment.

  He followed her silently, his suspicion growing even as he wiped a bead of perspiration from his lip.

  Who was she?

  Why was she here?

  What did she intend to steal from him?

  She went to the third floor. He heard the steps creak, just as they always did, and was surprised at her lack of hesitation. She moved decisively, quickly, knowing her destination, and certain she wouldn’t be interrupted or caught.

  Maybe she didn’t care.

  Interesting.

  He climbed the stairs, finding it warmer with every step he took. The heat always rose in the stairwell, wafting up from the radiator just inside the exterior door, but Niall couldn’t remember it ever being this hot. And the furnace should be off at this time of year.

  Niall heard her knock once on his door, then try the knob. He smiled at her expectation that anyone would leave a door unlocked in Manhattan. She jiggled the knob, then again, more vehemently, and he thought she swore.

  Then she kicked the door.

  He frowned, reached the top of the stairs, and eased around the last corner. She was trying to peer through the lock, her skirt rising high in the back. She was short, but her legs were lean and muscled. Remarkably so. Niall shook his head at his own awareness of her gender, then eased around the corner.

  The spark that leapt between the two of them shocked Niall in more ways than one.

  He froze at the sudden brilliance of it, and felt dizzy at the heat it sent rocketing through his body. He understood immediately that he was experiencing his firestorm.

  The woman at his door, the woman who must be his destined mate, pivoted to glare at him. Niall knew instantly that she was as unlikely a companion for him as could be imagined.

  Could the firestorm be wrong?

  She was petite, her hair dyed black with fuchsia tips and moussed into spikes. She wore a black leather biker jacket liberally embellished with studs, a black and yellow tartan skirt, biker boots, and black fishnet stockings. He could see her tattoos through her stockings and at the edges of her chain-mail gauntlets. Her eyes were lined with black, her lips painted burgundy, and her gaze filled with hostility.

  “What the hell was that?” she demanded. Her voice was her only asset, the low throaty purr of a jazz singer.

  “What do you think you’re doing?” Niall said at the same time.

  “Who are you?” She put her hands on her hips and confronted him, her eyes flashing. He was surprised that she was undaunted—she couldn’t have weighed one hundred pounds, and he was fully pumped after his workout. “Don’t tell me that you’re Niall Talbot?”

  “Who else would I be?”

  Her sudden laugh took him completely off guard and transformed her features. She fell against the wall as she laughed. She looked young then, mischievous and unpredictable. Sexy. Niall checked her legs again without meaning to do so. He felt something tighten within him, something he wasn’t inclined to heed.

  Firestorm be damned.

  “You mean that you really exist?” She shook her head in rueful amusement. She wore a long silver earring on her left ear, and it sparkled as she moved. Niall couldn’t see a mate on her other ear. “Because that would really take it, if that big dope wasn’t lying to me.”

  Then she swore with an eloquence that made him blink.

  Niall took a step closer and the firestorm’s heat flared between them with unmistakable intensity. “Why wouldn’t I exist?” he asked, wondering what she knew about him and his nature.

  As he drew near to her, he noted the curve of her jaw, the soft line of her throat, the fairness of her skin, and he swallowed. She was pretty, more pretty than he had initially realized.

  Her perfume teased him, making him keenly aware of her femininity—even if she tried to hide it. She would have been undeniably alluring if she were dressed conservatively, wearing pearls, her hair flowing loose instead of sharpened into spikes.

  “I just thought T was lying to me, that’s all.”

  He saw her grimace, as if hurt, before her expression turned insouciant once more. It was astonishing to Niall that any woman could care enough about Thorolf to be hurt by anything he said.

  “I guess T—I mean Thorolf—was telling the truth after all. There really is a Niall Talbot.”

  That glimpse of vulnerability, and the fact that she’d struggled to hide it, made Niall wonder what other secrets she had. He was surprised by how much he wanted to know. He took another step and a spark flashed between them.

  “Holy shit,” she whispered as she stared at it. “You gotta do something about the wiring in this place.”

  “It’s not the wiring,” Niall said flatly, and she met his gaze with surprise. “So, who are you and what do you want?” His tone was more challenging than he’d meant it to be, but she didn’t appear to be intimidated by him.

  She straightened and lifted her chin, her gaze sliding over him. “I’m Rox,” she said with pride, and another piece of the puzzle slid into place for Niall. Thorolf had mentioned someone named Rox before—in another time and place, Niall might have found it amusing that he’d assumed no person named Rox actually existed.

  “What do you want with T?” she demanded. “Because, you know, if you’re intending to take advantage of him, you’re going to have to deal with me first. He might not be the sharpest guy, but he means well, and he trusts people too easily. . . .”

  Niall shook his head at her fervent defense of Thorolf. There was something particularly bittersweet about the notion of his destined mate being smitten with Thorolf—the bane of Niall’s existence—but Niall had no time to express his irritation or defend his own position.

  Because the earth heaved.

  He remembered that sense of pending doom and cursed himself for being distracted by Rox and the firestorm.

  It was too late. Whatever was chasing him had arrived. Rox squeaked in surprise as the floor rippled beneath their feet and they fell against the wall
together. Niall was sure he heard the wind roar with fury. He heard the pavement crack in the street below. There was the crash of windows breaking, and sirens going off. The building tipped and moaned.

  He threw himself protectively over Rox just as a long jagged crack opened like a zipper in the opposite wall. That crack rose to the ceiling and a gap opened there, yawning ever wider. Plaster began to fall all around them and Niall feared the worst. He heard the beams rip in the attic and instinctively shifted shape.

  Niall changed to his dragon form to protect his mate from the threat against her. Only after the transformation was done did he worry about the repercussions. Some humans went insane when they witnessed the change, but it was too late to worry about that.

  He heard Rox gasp as he folded himself over her and hoped for the best. She was small, delicate, and achingly feminine. The firestorm flared as he pulled her closer, making his blood simmer, giving him other ideas.

  Seductive ideas.

  Untimely ideas.

  The roof fell in chunks, landing on his back and shoulders, filling his lungs with dust from who knew what illicit building material. He thrashed his tail and roared, deflecting the falling debris, snarling as the building fell into rubble.

  Rox curled tightly against him, but she didn’t shake and she didn’t cry. He heard the quick rhythm of her breathing. She didn’t scream, which he liked a lot, but she definitely hung on. Her tiny hands slid across his chest, and he realized she was exploring his dragon form.

  Not driven crazy at all. Niall’s eyes widened with surprise that she was checking him out.

  She flattened her palm and slid it across his scales, her caress coaxing his blood to a boil. She ran her hands over his claws and across his belly, leaving him dizzy with the firestorm’s demand. He felt her catch her breath, heard the pulse of her heart and nearly forgot everything except his mate.

  The firestorm simmered, bathing them both in golden light that teased their bodies to awareness, tormenting Niall with possibilities. He smelled dust and felt the ripping wind yet couldn’t ignore the sweet scent of Rox’s perfume.

  Or turn his thoughts from the temptation of the firestorm.

 

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