Phantom Series Boxed Set

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Phantom Series Boxed Set Page 26

by Julie Leto


  “Now, see, that’s where you’re going wrong,” she said, gesturing with her goblet, which was suddenly in need of a refill.

  He quirked a brow. “Excuse me?”

  “Not in reading the diary,” she insisted. “It’s actually about time you did that, after all the trouble Cat and Rousseau’s son went to in order to get it. But I have my doubts about you re-creating the castle and its furnishings in order to locate the source of the magic. I understand what you meant to accomplish, but you’ve done every room now, haven’t you? Have you found anything?”

  Damon cradled the cat in his arms as he stood and retrieved the decanter. “I thought perhaps the answer was in the mosaics. Rogan had several of them, nearly one in every room. I re-created them tile by tile, but when I called to the magic, nothing responded.”

  “Maybe what’s wrong is that what you’re re-creating is just that—a re-creation. You’re not conjuring the actual objects, are you?”

  He frowned. “I cannot say one way or another with any certainty.”

  After dropping the cat, who curled up near Alexa, Damon poured her wine and then abandoned the decanter. Hooking his hands behind his back, he paced the room with long, pensive strides, his unfastened shirt billowing around him, his bared chest gleaming in the firelight. His skin still shimmered with sweat, and Alexa’s mouth watered for a salty taste of him. She’d come so close to losing him—perhaps forever.

  She cleared her throat. “Then let’s assume the objects you conjured are just magical copies. Nothing could exist for nearly three hundred years without fading or cracking or being destroyed. Everything you’ve created looks brand-new.”

  He gave a curt nod. “Go on,” he urged.

  “As I promised,” she said, not hiding the reproach in her voice, “I spent the day trying to work out a solution. And I realized that while re-creating the castle might give you a clue as to the location of the magical source, you are working on too many suppositions and not enough facts.”

  “And what are the facts?”

  “That when you materialized in this castle, there was only one object here with you.”

  Damon crunched his brow. “The cat?”

  Dante mewed nastily.

  “No, he’s ghostly like you.”

  “You mean the painting?”

  She nodded. Instantly, Damon dashed out of the room.

  “Damon, wait!”

  He did not. Still naked, she wrapped the cloak around herself and ran toward the landing.

  Damon had removed the painting from the wall. His likeness, frozen in oil, stared back at him, but he didn’t seem to notice. He was peering close to the canvas, looking over every single detail. In the shadowed corner where he’d claimed to have first spotted the redheaded woman. Along the edges where the canvas tucked tightly into the frame. In every fruit basket and representation of fire.

  “The answer has to be here,” he muttered.

  Banging sounded on the front door. Alexa jumped. Daylight was at least an hour away. Who could be on her island?

  “Paulie?” she called, walking cautiously down the steps.

  The reply was muffled.

  Damon pointed at the door.

  “Let no one in!” he shouted.

  The thumping continued. The rhythm was unmistakably frantic.

  Damon had turned back to the painting. Alexa hurried down the steps. The closer she got, the clearer the muffled voice became.

  “Alexa, it’s Cat! Open up! We have Rousseau.”

  She struggled with the latch, but once the door opened, Cat flew into her arms. Their hug conveyed a backlash of emotion neither of them had time to process. Relief. Fear. Desperation. Elation. Suddenly, Cat pushed her back but kept her hands on her shoulders.

  “What are you wearing?” Cat asked.

  Alexa tugged at the dark material, pulling the sides close around her naked body. “Um, a cloak?”

  Cat arched a brow. “I can see that. And you got this cloak from whom?”

  Alexa glanced over her shoulder. Damon had the painting held high above his head, as if about to smash it to the ground.

  “Damon!” she screamed.

  Her shout didn’t deter him. He stalked to the railing, frustration etched deep into every line on his face. He was on the verge of hurling the cursed painting over the landing when another voice, this one male and booming, echoed against the stone walls.

  “Stop or you’ll never be free of Rogan’s curse!”

  “What?” Alexa asked, shocked. How did they know? “Damon!”

  He jerked to a halt, but the weight of the frame and the forward momentum stole the painting from his hands. Alexa screamed as the key to Damon’s freedom flew over the banister and shattered on the stone floor below.

  Twenty Eight

  Standing at the end of the dock, Jacob watched the yacht’s stern lights until they were nothing more than tiny pinpoints. Sure. Take the witch bitch and her new posse to Alexa, but don’t take him. See if he cared.

  He turned away from the water, but the fact that he did care about his sister vexed him more than Cat’s frantic arrival at the marina just before dawn or the way both the guy in the bomber jacket and the old man stuck to his ex like glue. He’d considered confronting them, challenging them when they’d ordered Alexa’s feisty captain to shuttle them to the island, but he’d decided to keep his mouth shut. He also needed to get to the island so he could find the magic source for the K’vr. He only hoped he could keep Alexa out of the cross fire.

  Sitting on the dock, he dangled his feet over the edge, just inches from the sloshing salt water, and tried to remember the man he used to be—the boy, really—who’d been so consumed with jealousy and hatred toward his stepsister that he’d arranged to have her killed. He’d siphoned thousands of dollars out of a little-used Chandler account and paid off not only an ex-con with auto mechanic experience to tamper with the brakes on the company limo, but the driver of the semi whose job it had been to run the car off the road. He’d had no idea his mother and stepfather would be running late for a trip to Bermuda and that they’d hop into Alexa’s limousine to share the ride.

  He’d watched them drive away, frozen, too afraid to stop them before they left with Alexa or waylay their departure or even volunteer to drive them himself so only his stepsister would die in the crash. All the options had come to him only later. At that time, he’d been paralyzed by his fear. The first hour passed in a frantic blur.

  The waiting. The dread. The oh-so-secret delight.

  He’d snorted his way through that hour. Shot up through the next. Drank through the third. It wasn’t until morning when he’d learned that Richard Chandler and his beloved second wife had died while Alexa, his target, had only sustained serious injuries.

  He’d learned a hard lesson that day. About fate. About retribution. About karma. As he’d helped his sister recover, he’d searched for spiritual cleansing. He’d found it with the K’vr.

  “Toss aside past sins. Embrace the future power.”

  That mantra had saved his life. And Alexa’s. He’d studied hard, often alongside the leader’s odd but intelligent son. Over time, the kid—on his father’s orders, probably—had encouraged Jacob to get close to his sister, not knowing the devious teen would call on him later to use Alexa to build his road to power. But then, Jacob hadn’t objected. He’d agreed.

  Now he had to figure out how to get her out of the mix without getting her killed.

  “Waiting for the sunrise?”

  Jacob spun so fast, he nearly lost his balance. Alexa’s assistant grabbed him by the shirt and tugged him away from a cold, dark dunking.

  “What are you doing here?” he asked, trying to remember the girl’s name.

  Her hands buried deep in the pockets of a long windbreaker, she hugged herself against the salt-scented breeze. “Couldn’t pass up a chance to see dawn over the Atlantic.”

  He twisted so he faced the water again. He really didn’t need or want
company right now. He had to figure out what to do about Keith and Alexa and the Charm and the castle and who knew what else. Keith had been calling his cell phone for hours. He could claim bad reception for only so long. He didn’t need his sister’s gopher interrupting his thoughts.

  “The view’s likely better over there,” Jacob replied, pointing to the main pier, which jutted farther into the water.

  “Company’s better here.”

  The sensual tone in her voice caught his attention. He’d interacted with the woman many times, but in Alexa’s presence, he’d never gotten more out of her than a curt brush-off.

  “What’s your name again?”

  “Rose,” she replied, scooting down onto the edge of the pier beside him.

  “Rose,” he repeated. He glanced sideways at her, but she was staring intently across the inky black ocean. The stars that had blanketed the sky when he’d first decided to wait at the marina rather than return to his hotel room were fading from view. Unless Cat fucked things up, Alexa would soon return to the mainland. If Jacob wanted her safe, which he was growing more certain he did, he’d have to convince her to abandon this project until he could get the situation under control.

  “You been here all night?” Rose asked.

  “Hard to beat the view,” he said.

  “You can’t see anything in the dark. I thought maybe you were avoiding someone.”

  He stared at her, but she still hadn’t turned her face away from the water. “Why would you think that?”

  “You’re not answering your cell phone.”

  “You called me?”

  “He’s not pleased that you’re avoiding him,” she said cryptically. “Not pleased at all.”

  When she finally faced him, her cold stare chilled him to the marrow.

  “Who are you?” he asked, but the answer popped into his head before her mouth curved into a self-satisfied smile.

  The mole?

  “How do you know Keith?” He asked the question on the off chance Rose was relaying an innocent phone message.

  “Same way you do.”

  No such luck.

  She twirled a blond lock behind her ear and revealed a tattoo—a hawk carrying a fire red jewel—along the base of her neck. Most K’vr members had the brand in inconspicuous places or hidden among other, more mundane tattoos. That this woman wore hers so boldly spoke to her devotion.

  “I’ve never noticed that before,” he said.

  “Makeup does wonders.” She glanced behind her, as if waiting for someone, and seconds later, Jacob saw a stretch Hummer pull up the marina drive, gaudy lights trimming the windows and a purple glow emanating from underneath. Crass and juvenile.

  Keith.

  Jacob moved to stand, but an icy steel jab in his side stopped him cold. The weapon, clutched confidently in Rose’s hand, dispelled any thought he might have of escape.

  For him…or for Alexa.

  ***

  With a deafening slam, the portrait shattered against the marble floor. Gold-leafed wood splintered in every direction. Damon watched as Alexa ran forward, her hands shielding her face from the spray of sharp spikes.

  “Alexa, no!” Damon commanded.

  She skidded a few feet away from the ruined portrait, the cloak flapping around her, revealing her nude body in a flash of fabric. His throat tightened. His heart raced. His image lay amid the ruins, wilted and torn, and still he felt nothing.

  He was still a phantom. Trapped. Captured by a curse set by his greatest enemy—forbidden by fate to have a life with Alexa. A life outside these thick stone walls.

  Damon had acted on instinct, hoping and praying that the destruction of the painting would set him free. But as he looked down at his hands and then back up at the windows, still dark, he anticipated the change that would soon twist through his body—but not the change he’d strived for.

  Soon, the sun would rise and he would fade.

  Below him, a dark-haired woman with round black eyes placed her arms protectively on Alexa’s shoulders.

  The old man who’d come in behind them shuffled toward the painting, throwing aside the broken bits of frame to reach the canvas beneath. He muttered to himself while Cat assured herself that her friend was all in one piece.

  “I take it this is your ghost,” she said wryly, looking up at him.

  Alexa spared her a half grin. “Well, he’s not exactly ghostlike during the night.”

  “Which explains your lack of apparel beneath that cloak,” she cracked.

  Damon cleared his throat and stood taller. “Surely women in this time do not gossip so openly.”

  The women exchanged bemused glances. “Yes, actually, we do,” Alexa informed him.

  He frowned. “Then I assume you are Cat.”

  “None other,” Cat replied, uncertainty and distrust evident on her olive-skinned face. She could have been a Gypsy, this one. She had quick eyes, he could tell. Likely missed very little—a good friend for Alexa to have.

  “I appreciate your hesitation,” he said, starting toward the stairs. He hadn’t much time before the sun rose and banished him again to the shadows. If Alexa’s friends had arrived to help his pursuit, there was no time to waste. “The portrait was my prison. I thought by destroying it, I might find my freedom.”

  “That’s not the way,” replied a gruff voice.

  The old man looked up, his stare accusatory.

  “And you are?”

  The man hesitated. Damon was sure he’d never seen anyone quite so old, yet possessing such strength of spine.

  “Paschal Rousseau,” he informed him, his chin tilted upward.

  Damon locked his gaze with that of the man who assessed him so boldly. Alexa slid next to Damon and took his arm. No doubt, she recognized the meeting for what it was—each man taking the measure of the other.

  “You are the reported expert on the Romani of Valoren?”

  A quick, enthusiastic grin spread across the man’s face, but only for a moment. Just as quickly, he pursed his lips and averted his eyes. The hair on the back of Damon’s neck rose. He pushed Alexa behind him.

  “You should dress,” he said to her, though his eyes never broke from Paschal Rousseau.

  “My bag is by the door,” she replied.

  Damon lifted his hand to summon the bag, but she immediately slapped his arm.

  “Don’t. You. Dare.”

  Surprised by his actions, he lowered his hand immediately. Was the magic so entwined within him now that his instincts reverted to it without thought? How many times could he tempt his soul with the magic before he lost his center completely? Alexa’s inventive means of restoring his humanity had worked well once, but he had no guarantee the strategy would work forever.

  And he didn’t have forever. He would have rather endured the foggy half awareness of the painting than knowing that a world existed beyond these castle walls of which he could not partake. He looked down at the broken portrait frame and realized, with no disappointment whatsoever, that he could not retreat. He wanted his freedom above all else.

  Even more than he wanted Alexa, he acknowledged sadly. He could be no man to her if he dissolved into nothing with the coming of every dawn.

  Damon turned his focus to the younger man, who’d remained in the doorway.

  “What is your name?” Damon demanded.

  The man crossed his arms. “Ben Rousseau.”

  Damon nodded toward the old man. “This is your father, then?”

  “Yes, and he’s come a long way and endured more than a man his age should in order to help you, so I suggest you soften your tone.”

  Damon quirked an eyebrow. Assertive, this one. Quick to anger. Reminded him of himself. He supposed some allowances had to be made for the professor’s advanced age and reputedly useful knowledge.

  “You know of the Gypsy curse as well?”

  Ben shook his head. “I only know what my father told us on the way here. Bottom line is, we’re here to help you. Wha
tever you are.”

  “Ben,” Paschal chastised, “mind your manners.”

  Tension seeped into Damon’s neck, and when he held out his hand to Ben, who’d picked up Alexa’s bag and brought it to her, Damon wondered why he felt so ill at ease with strangers who claimed to want to help him. When Ben turned away, Damon grabbed his arm and gazed into eyes, trying to read his true intentions.

  Ben tugged his arm free. “What are you? A ghost?”

  “No, son,” Paschal interjected. “He’s not dead.”

  Cat tugged Alexa toward the dining hall to dress, but she hesitated until Damon assured her all would be peaceful until her return. In the meantime, he meant to extract what information he could, knowing he could not trust either of these men until they had proved their worth.

  “How do you know I am not dead, sir?” he questioned Paschal. “It is my understanding that your knowledge of my predicament has been gleaned entirely from books and hearsay.”

  Paschal chuckled and, while raspy, the sound was hauntingly familiar. “That is a misconception I myself created. For obvious reasons.”

  “Obvious to whom?”

  “You’re just as haughty and overbearing as ever, aren’t you?” Paschal accused, though his tone lilted with humor.

  Alexa and Cat returned to the foyer. Dressed hastily in pants and a blouse, Alexa cradled Rogan’s cloak over her arm. The fire opal broach on the collar flamed in the light from the torch beside her. Damon turned back to Paschal, whose eyes suddenly looked even more familiar than his son’s—because they looked so very much like his own.

  “Who are you?” he asked.

  They could not be descendants, could they? All his brothers had died or disappeared, though he imagined Aiden or Logan might have had an illegitimate son at some point. He’d had no uncles. To the best of his knowledge, thanks to Alexa’s computer, the Forsyth line had died that night in Valoren.

  Or had it?

  Paschal’s smile, so easy, so full and relaxed, instantly gave him away.

  “Good Lord above,” Damon said, his gut tightening as if he’d just been pummeled. “Paxton? You bloody, duplicitous whelp!”

  “Paxton?” Ben asked, planting himself firmly between Damon and his father. “Who the hell is Paxton? This is Paschal Rousseau, the noted Gypsy researcher.”

 

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