by Hall, Linsey
She whimpered and jerked at her bonds when he drew his mouth away. He rose swiftly up her body, rubbing her clitoris with his thumb while continuing to thrust his fingers inside her.
He watched her as pleasure clouded her eyes, occasionally dragging his gaze down to watch his big hand working between her white thighs.
Unable to help himself, he ground his cock against her thigh, helpless to stifle the groan that rose in his throat.
“You want this?” he growled, partially to remind himself that this was about her. But also to hear it from her lips.
“Yes,” she said on a breath, her eyes locked with his. Desperation flared in their depths.
Someone pounded on the door. Cam froze, then picked up his pace again.
“Cam!” Ana cried in alarm.
“Come for me, Ana,” he rasped.
The pounding continued. No, damn it. He would have this. She would have this.
“Ignore it. Come for me, Ana. Let me feel you.”
His words pushed her over the edge. Her pussy gripped his fingers in delicious spasms, her hips flexing and her arms straining against the bonds. He couldn’t look away, kept trying to coax her higher with his fingers as his eyes raced over her face.
The pounding came again, this time harder and faster.
“A minute, damn it,” he yelled.
He watched as the strained pleasure faded from her face, then he gently removed his hand.
“Hurry!” a voice yelled from the other side of the door.
“Fuck.” Cam undid the belt around Ana’s wrists, took one last look at her, and went to the damned door.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Cam swung open the door, ready to tear the head off of whoever had interrupted them.
“Someone’s after you!” Crone-chic cried, her fat black cat on her heels. It danced anxiously in place on too-small paws while Crone-chic waved her hands.
“How the hell?”
“Get dressed, get dressed! A man stopped by the desk, asking about someone like your woman. They had magic. Strong enough to sense the protections here. I can’t guarantee they’ll hold, not against one like him. You’ve got to get out.”
“Shit!” He turned back to Ana, who now leaned on her elbows, shorts tugged haphazardly about her hips. She stared at him, eyes wide.
“Cernowain,” she whispered.
Fuck. She had to be right. God of animals. He felt it then, like the snap of a rubber band against skin.
“Someone else is here,” Ana hissed.
Someone had come through the aether from Otherworld. Someone else, if Crone-chic was to be believed about Cernowain. Which she was. The witches prided themselves on the security of their hidden rooms. Protecting their guests when the spells broke was protecting their own reputation.
Cam cursed himself for being so caught up in Ana that he hadn’t felt Cernowain’s arrival. He dragged on his shirt, not caring that it was filthy, and turned to see Ana ready to go, dressed and with her bow strapped across her back.
“Hurry!” Crone-chic cried from the doorway, her cat meowing its agreement. “Just because I sent them away doesn’t mean they won’t be back!”
Cam grabbed his bag from the corner and followed Ana out into the hall, leaving behind an empty room and the heat that had so recently engulfed them.
“We need a flight out,” he said to Crone-chic. “Now.”
“Well, um—” Crone-chic waved her hands some more while the cat continued to hop around, nervous energy radiating from its spiked black fur and one good eye. Not good under pressure, these two. “There’s nothing ’til tomorrow, but my nephew can get you out.” A crafty gleam entered her black eyes. “But it’ll cost you.”
Cam sighed. “Of course it will. Take us to him.”
They followed Crone-chic down the stairs and into the back alley, eyes alert for their pursuers. Though he and Ana could feel the arrival of someone from Otherworld, knowing that person’s exact location was beyond their ability. He could only tell that they were nearby. Which could be in this very alleyway.
Cam kept his gaze alert, constantly scanning the darkened passage for any sign of movement. The night was black and still, the animals quieter than usual.
“Here, here,” Crone-chic whispered and pointed to a small door. “Inside.”
Cam ducked under the little doorway behind Crone-chic and Ana, surprised by the modern kitchen within.
“Wait here.”
She returned within a few minutes, a sleepy and disgruntled man of about twenty following her down the stairs.
“This is Paolo. He’ll fly you inland.”
“Inland? We don’t have that kind of time. We need to get to the coast. To an airport big enough to get us to London.”
“Take it or leave it, man,” Paolo grumbled. “I got cargo to deliver. For you and your money, I’ll leave early. You can catch another flight from there.”
Cam considered their options and realized that they didn’t have any. “Fine.”
It took them five tense minutes to sneak across town to the tiny airport, thirty more for Paolo to prep the plane—all of which were fraught with anxiety—and finally they were airborne.
“Fates,” Ana muttered, shifting to find a comfortable place on the floor of the plane as it headed toward its cruising altitude. Cargo boxes full of who knew what teetered in piles surrounding her. “Finally.”
Cam just nodded at her, then settled back against his crate and folded his arms over his chest. He closed his eyes, pretending to doze.
So that’s how he was going to play this? Tie her up, give her a crazy orgasm, and then ignore her?
Fine by her. She shouldn’t have done it in the first place and maybe now she’d have a chance to pretend she never had. All the reasons she’d had for not getting involved with him — like the fact that one of them was going to end up in Otherworld — were just as relevant now.
More so, considering the fact that Cam in bed was something she could get used to. The memory of him, all tensely coiled muscle and harsh face hovering over her, was enough to send her over the edge. She shook her head. Forget it.
“So, what are we going to do now?” she asked.
“What Paolo said. Land, hope the gods haven’t followed us, and find the first flight out.”
“Oh. Okay.” Shit. Now she couldn’t think of anything else to say. And she wasn’t sure if she wanted to. Listening to his rough voice just dredged up memories of earlier tonight.
The rumbling of the landing gear woke her sometime later—seconds or hours, she had no idea.
“What?” She rubbed her eyes and looked around blearily. “How long has it been?”
“Hour.”
The plane pulled to a stop and Cam rose, having to duck in the small space. She followed suit, and soon they were hopping down onto the tarmac. It was narrow, set right into the jungle, which was as black as the night sky. Runway lights provided the only illumination. Animals rustled and shrieked within the forest.
Paolo shut the plane door behind them and said, “Got some time ’til the sun comes up. You’re in luck, the weekly plane out of here leaves just after sunrise. It’s a six seater, so maybe there’ll be room.”
“Will your aunt tell anyone where this plane landed?” Cam asked him.
“No. If your pursuers knew to ask, she wouldn’t say anything.”
“But she’ll be in danger!” Ana hadn’t thought of this before. Ugly guilt oozed through her at the thought of leaving the little old woman behind to face Cernowain.
Paolo laughed. “Not likely.”
Ana’s eyebrows rose. Must be some witch to stand up to gods. But there were beings more powerful than the Celtic gods, and Ana figured the Bruxa might as easily be one of them as anyone else.
Paolo led them across the abandoned tarmac to a little building set into the jungle. He unlocked the door to reveal a single room with a desk that was presumably for tickets, a big scale, chairs, and a tiny cafe that was nothing
more than a counter and a few tables.
A door in the back of the room opened, and Ana was grateful to see a man in an apron walk through.
“An airport this small has a cafe?” Ana asked, nodding at the aproned man.
Paolo shrugged. “Only place to eat in town, if you want to call it a town. Just happens this building had space. Luis will feed you if you ask nicely.”
Ana vowed to ask very nicely. She could eat a water buffalo right now.
Cam paid Paolo, handing over a fat stack of bills that made the man’s white smile cut across his tanned face. Twenty minutes later, they were tucking into a breakfast that was the best thing Ana had ever tasted. It’d been so long since she’d eaten that she’d have enjoyed almost anything.
Cam hadn’t said anything to her since they’d landed, just kept his eyes trained on the ticket table for when someone showed up to sell them a ticket. She peeked at him whenever she could. He looked more solemn than she’d ever seen him, his mouth pressed in a grim line and his eyes shuttered.
It was going to be harder than she’d thought to pretend last night hadn’t happened. Impossible, most likely. She chewed her eggs, realizing that they’d gone tasteless in her mouth.
Cam shoved up from his seat and she jumped. A relieved sigh escaped her when she saw the ticket attendant. Or rather, the woman shuffling papers at the little desk who she assumed was the ticket agent. Hard to tell.
Cam returned a few minutes later. “That was the pilot. I got us a ride out on the next flight. Leaves in an hour.” He didn’t bother looking at her, just tucked back into his breakfast.
Ana frowned, bothered despite herself. He’d been so intense last night. And now he wouldn’t look at her. Not that you want him to!
But she was a liar. And an idiot. Actually, she wasn’t just an idiot. She was the world’s biggest idiot. Because she was falling for the only person qualified to take her place in Otherworld.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
A day after fleeing Bruxa’s Eye on Paulo’s small plane, Ana sat next to Cam on the biggest airplane she’d ever seen.
“You all right?”
Cam’s voice sounded like it was pushing its way through water to get to her. She jerked her head. It was the first question he’d asked her, and some of the very few words he’d spoken to her since they’d fled Bruxa’s Eye. They’d made it to a bigger city on the coast, gotten two hidden hotel rooms for the night, then caught this monster of a plane that was supposed to take them to London.
Cam had barely spoken to her since that thing they did, but she’d caught him looking at her dozens of times as if he didn’t know how to deal with her. Good, because she didn’t know how to deal with him.
She jumped when she felt his warm, hard palm cover hers on the plastic arm rest. She twitched, but didn’t loosen her grip. Couldn’t loosen it, even though this was the first time he’d touched her since the other night.
“You weren’t afraid on the other planes,” he said. His low, concerned voice soothed her, if only a bit. “Remember that you can aetherwalk to safety if something goes wrong.”
Though huge, the plane was nearly empty. The only other passengers sat several rows ahead. The lights had been dimmed for anyone who wanted to sleep, according to the announcement made by a dark-haired woman in a red suit with matching lipstick. Ana had kept her eyes glued to the red scarf tied right below the beautiful woman’s chin.
“I’m not afraid.” Her voice almost cracked, and it horrified her.
He squeezed her hand, then pried it off the arm rest to grip in his own.
“Why are you being so nice?” she asked.
“I’m not. You’re terrified. I’m simply not being an asshole about it.”
A grin tried and failed to pull at her lips.
“Why, Ana?”
Some of their walls had broken down over the last days, it seemed. She drew in a ragged breath. “My bow. I’ve never been away from it.”
“Shit.” Realization tinged his voice.
Unlike the two tiny Mythean planes they’d taken, this stupid, gigantic ocean-crossing plane required that she pack her bow in the hold because the airline was run by mortals. For the first time in thousands of years, Ana had been parted from her bow. It was her protection, her friend, her past.
They’d been pretty sure the gods hadn’t followed them to Sao Luis, the city where they’d caught this plane, so there was no reason to think the gods could find them and send the plane into the sea. But if something did go wrong, she’d have to aetherwalk and leave her bow.
Leave her bow. She shuddered. It would be as good as gone; she had no idea how to get it back from the hold. Didn’t even know where such a place would be on such a big plane.
“I’ve seen how you hold it,” he said. “You clutch it when you’re nervous. I noticed that back when I first met you.”
That made her turn her head to look at him. The aloofness had faded from his eyes. The gray was warm with memory, his lovely mouth slightly upturned in his harshly beautiful face.
“Really?” she asked.
“In the forest. I’ve seen you do it recently, too.”
He’d noticed that about her? Her bow was more than just a thing to her. It defined her—restrung thousands of times, imbued with magic to make the wood last. It was her safety blanket, as stupid as it sounded.
“I know how it feels,” he said. “Giving up my bow after godhood was one of the worst things I’ve ever had to do. Took a hell of a long time to get used to.”
She couldn’t even imagine. “This is the first you’ve really spoken to me in almost two days.”
“Been thinking.”
“About what?”
“About a lot of things. About how to help you get out of Otherworld.” Cam’s eyes met hers. Hers looked a little less panicked, he noted with relief.
Her jaw slackened. “Wow. Thanks. Does this have anything to do with what happened when you tied me up?”
“Maybe.” But he’d been headed toward this decision for longer than that. If anything, the night in Bruxa’s Eye had tipped him over the edge. He’d backed away from Ana since that night because the things he was starting to feel freaked him the hell out. But he couldn’t avoid it any longer.
“Well, whatever the reason, thanks for the help.”
“Sure. Don’t know what the hell we’re going to do though, because I’m not too keen on going back.” The idea made a muscle at the corner of his eye twitch as memories of Otherworld surfaced. He wasn’t cut out to be a god. When he’d been young, he’d assumed he was destined for greatness. How could he not, having been born into such power?
He’d been wrong. As the years had passed, he’d grown to hate Otherworld and the other gods. He’d been the only one to feel emotion, that lowly element that separated the mortals from the gods. Becoming enamored with Ana all those years ago had led him to fuck everything up. No matter what he’d thought as a kid, he wasn’t destined for greatness. Certainly not as a god.
“We’re going to the university first, right? I called my friend Esha to see if she knows anything about Druantia. Hopefully she’ll learn her location or something else useful.”
“If she discovers something, we can stop by.” For someone on the run from gods, it was safer than anywhere else in Scotland. Gods who hadn’t been granted permission to be on campus couldn’t trespass on the grounds.
“Good.”
“You’re really friends with a soulceress?” Creepy and dangerous, they were.
“She’s not as bad as everyone thinks. She gets a bad rap for stealing people’s power, but she doesn’t mean to.”
Perhaps not, but Cam didn’t fancy having the strength of his immortal soul sucked out of him. But he stayed silent, not wanting to insult her friend. He closed his eyes and tried to ignore how good it felt to hold her hand.
Just as he was debating letting go, her voice broke the silence. “Do you think about Otherworld at all?”
He shrugged.
Of course he’d thought of it. If you escaped prison, how could you stop thinking of it?
“So you don’t miss anything about godhood?” she asked.
“Parts of it, sure. Aetherwalking. My bow. Miss that a hell of a lot. Having a role and a job that’s valuable.” Though he’d been shit at being a stone cold god after he’d met Ana, he’d been a damn good god of war. He’d kept the battles even—for the most part—and the casualties not overwhelming.
Her eyes caught his, her brow scrunched. “Is that why your drug company is non-profit?”
He twitched. She’d always been insightful, but it was annoying when she caught something he felt weird talking about. At her unwavering stare, he said, “Yeah, I suppose so. I guess I got used to making a difference in Otherworld, doing something important. The company is my way of doing that here on earth.” And of making amends for everything that I screwed up by sticking you in an awful fucking afterworld.
“Interesting choice. Most Mytheans wouldn’t care about helping mortals.”
“Yeah, but I started out as a god. That’s our job. Doing that on earth, albeit in a different way, just made sense to me. Though it took me some time to figure it out.”
“It suits you, running all over the Amazon looking for fancy plants. Fighting in bars at night. Making out with nymphs.”
The word nymphs made him flinch, though he didn’t know why. But she was right, the life did fit him. Adjusting to life on earth had taken centuries. The more fun he’d had, finally free of responsibility and with access to the lowlier pleasures earth offered, the guiltier he’d felt about ditching godhood. He’d run from his problems and was probably still running from them. He shook the thought away.
“Yeah,” he said. “The Amazon works for me. No rules, not too many mortals to worry about.”
Plenty of things to keep his mind occupied. So what if the nights in places like the Caipora’s Den had started to get lonely? He still liked the fights, if only as a way to temporarily clear his head, and the women were nice. But even variety got old once you’d had enough of it.