Kiss of the Phantom (Forsyth Phantoms)
Page 18
“I don’t understand,” Mariah admitted.
“Rafe was in the stone you took from Valoren. He was put there by a curse made by a sorcerer named—”
“—Rogan,” Mariah supplied. “I know all about the curse and Rafe and who he was, er, is. What I don’t understand is, how do you know?”
Cat sat back in the seat and connected her seatbelt, but slowly, as if she expected another game of musical chairs any moment. “Do you know about his brothers?”
“And his sister.”
“Well, Ben and I don’t really know too much about her,” Cat said.
“We know she started this whole mess by falling in love and then running away from Rogan,” Mariah supplied.
“Counting Rafe, at least four of the Forsyth brothers who went after her were trapped by the same kind of magic that holds him now,” Cat added. “Three have been freed so far, including Paschal. He was freed over fifty years ago.”
Mariah turned to tell Rafe this amazing news, but she could tell by the gloss in his eyes that Ben was filling him in on the same information.
“Where are the others?” she asked, genuinely happy that Rafe would soon reconnect with his siblings.
“The eldest, Damon, is with my friend Alexa Chandler. They’re in Poland, but we’ll contact them after we retrieve Ben’s father in Texas. Damon and Paschal have been tireless in their search for items that might contain their brothers’ spirits. So have we, honestly.”
“And that’s how you found us?”
“Ben’s father has a talent called psychometry,” Cat explained.
“The ability to read information about a person from holding an object that means something to them.”
“Yeah,” Cat said, removing a watch from her wrist and handing it to Mariah.
She took it, surprised. She hadn’t even realized it was gone.
“You can do it, too?”
Cat wavered. “Sort of. Paschal has actual visions. He saw you in a jungle. Because of your problems with Velez, Ben was able to track down your general location. I’m more like a psychic GPS system. I was able to get a bead on you, so to speak, from holding your watch.”
Mariah sighed and relaxed into the rather comfy pilot’s chair. “Am I the only one around here who’s just normal?”
Cat laughed. “Depends on your definition of ‘normal,’ doesn’t it? A year ago, I was a sought-after debunker of psychic phenomena. It really destroys your whole outlook on life when the one thing you’re trying to disprove turns out to be very, very real.”
Mariah had no trouble imagining Cat’s conflict. She’d spent more than half her life stealing antiquities in defiance of curses, legends and other spooky promises of untold misery. She couldn’t help but feel a little humbled when real magic was now turning her life upside down.
“A week ago, I would have thought I was entirely insane for believing any of this,” Mariah admitted. “Now, guess I’m just as crazy as you are.”
Cat spared a quick but telling glance over her shoulder. “Looks like we have quite a lot in common, then.”
Mariah groaned. “Oh, we’re not going to have this conversation tonight, are we?”
Cat patted her reassuringly on the arm. “That conversation is for you and Ben to have. But I am glad you’re alive and that you found Rafe. For brothers who spent the majority of their lives in the eighteenth century apart, they certainly are willing to move heaven and earth to reunite. I guess I don’t blame them. I’m an only child, so it’s hard for me to relate.”
“Well, I have brothers, and seeing them once every five or six years is just fine with me.”
“All families are different. Still, I’d like to see the Forsyths reunited soon,” Cat confessed, with a weariness in her voice that Mariah couldn’t help but wonder about. “Four down, Two to go.”
“Four down? I thought you said only Rafe and Damon were free.”
“Rafe’s not really free, is he? We still have to work on that. But Aiden, the second-oldest, was released six months ago. He was in a sword.”
“The Dresden Sword?” Mariah asked.
“How do you know that name?”
“Pryce called it that. He had it with him in the jungle. He used it, or attempted to. Tried to make a pyramid come down on top of me in his attempt to get the stone where I found Rafe.”
Cat nodded as if she suddenly understood. “That’s what Paschal was talking about. We weren’t sure what he was saying. The connection was bad, and he was more concerned with us getting to Mexico than he was with filling in all the details. So Pryce is attempting to use the magic. That’s not good. That’s so not good.”
Cat’s naturally dark skin paled, and Mariah took that as a very bad sign. Catalina Reyes didn’t seem like the type to worry over nothing. Now, not only did Mariah have a ruthless collector after her in Hector Velez, but she had some psycho with paranormal powers at his disposal gunning for her, as well.
She busied herself with checking the instruments on the plane simply for something to do. She’d left the aircraft on autopilot, but again, the closer they got to Texas, the more she thought they might be going in the wrong direction.
Cat, however, was sitting still in her seat, her teeth clenched and her jaw tight.
“If it makes you feel better,” Mariah offered, “I don’t think Pryce knows exactly how the magic works. If he did, chances are Rafe and I never would have gotten out of there.”
“He’ll find out sooner or later,” Cat surmised, frowning deeply.
“Not if we stop him,” she replied. “You said Damon was in Poland, but what about Aiden?”
The tension in Cat’s shoulders eased. “You know Lauren Cole, the actress?”
“The Athena chick? Not personally.”
“Looks like you’ll get a chance to meet her. She originally found the Dresden Sword. She freed Aiden and now he’s in Bolivia, working with her on her next flick.”
Mariah raised her eyebrows. “He’s an actor?”
“He says he’s eye candy,” Cat said with a laugh. “The Forsyth men certainly don’t come standard-issue. Anyway, once he knows about Rafe, he’ll head back as soon as he can.”
Mariah tried to imagine an eighteenth-century man thrust into the Hollywood world, but the image had her shaking her head. She was having trouble picturing Rafe at ease in the modern world. Or maybe it was just her modern world she struggled to see him in. What would he do with himself? She supposed he could continue studying to be a shaman, but why, if he had no clan to guide anymore?
“So that’s three—Rafe, Damon and Aiden,” Mariah recapped. “You said four.”
“Paschal,” Cat reminded her.
“Wow...when you said ‘uncle,’ I thought you meant ‘great-great uncle’ or something. How can Paschal be brothers with Rafe? His name is Rousseau.”
“Paschal was born Paxton Forsyth. He was released sixty-plus years ago, near the end of World War II. He took his wife’s surname and changed his first name to fit in with the French Resistance, which they were both a part of.”
“But I met him in the daylight,” Mariah reasoned. “And if he’s aged—”
“He’s human now,” Cat clarified. “Rafe isn’t. He’s in the phantom state. We don’t know how long they can survive that way. Paschal attained human form really quickly. Damon and Aiden each existed as phantoms for less than two weeks.”
Mariah’s chest clenched. “There’s an expiration date?”
Cat shrugged. “We don’t know. No one’s ever had to find out.”
Shivering, Mariah checked the environmental controls, but found the temperature inside the cockpit had little to do with her shakes. She thought she’d understood everything about the curse, but she was wrong. Rafe had asked her to help him break free of the stone, but while she’d agreed, she hadn’t had the time to figure out how to do it.
She was starting to realize how incredibly selfish she’d been. She wasn’t surprised. She never failed to disappoint. Even
herself.
“How does Rafe become human again?”
“Well, he can’t do it without you. You’re the woman who awakened him to the phantom state. You’re the one who can free him.”
“How?”
“Oh, that’s easy,” Cat said nonchalantly. “You just have to fail in love.”
20
Ben returned to the cockpit a few minutes later, but Mariah seemed utterly disinterested in any more talking. She relinquished the pilot seat to him, ran her hand along Cat’s arm in what seemed like a gesture of thanks, and then drifted back to Rafe. Though his uncle sat forward as if eager to share all he’d learned with Mariah, she touched his lips softly, snuggled beside him, closed her eyes and dropped off to sleep. Or at least, she pretended.
Rafe didn’t seem to mind, He ran his hand lovingly across her cheek, then turned to the window and stared out into the purple sky.
Ben readjusted the pilot’s seat, put on his headphones and speaker and motioned for Cat to do the same. He wanted a more private conversation this time.
“So, did you tell her?” he asked.
“As you predicted, she totally clammed up. I’ve never seen a woman get so freaked out about something that’s so obviously already happened,” Cat said, glancing over her shoulder at the cuddled pair. “You sure you’ve told me everything about your breakup with her?”
Ben groaned. “While I’d love to take the credit for being so important that I changed the way she’s viewed relationships for the past ten years, even I’m not that arrogant. She’s always been commitment-phobic. It’s the way she’s wired.”
Cat shook her head. “Avoidance like hers comes from hurt, Ben. Maybe not hurt you caused, but someone did. Probably her parents, from what you’ve told me. Daddy who didn’t know what to do with her. Mommy who abandoned her. It’s classic.”
Ben wondered if Cat was thinking as much about Mariah as she was about herself. Shortly after her birth, Cat’s parents had turned her over to her maternal grandparents. Like Mariah, Cat had turned the lack of parental attention into fierce independence, but unlike Mariah, Cat never lost the capacity to love.
Not so with Mariah. As much as he’d hurt her all those years ago by ending their affair, Ben knew that it wasn’t a broken heart that had soured Mariah on him—it was the lost partnership. His disloyalty and abandonment had burned her much more than the fact that he hadn’t had deep enough feelings for her to ignore his mother’s deathbed request that he give up treasure hunting to take care of his father. Mariah had never understood his choice. Love over money? Obligation over adventure? Totally beyond her comprehension.
His uncle was in a lot of trouble.
“Think maybe we’ve been watching too much Dr. Phil?” he asked Cat, not wanting to consider the consequences for Rafe if Mariah couldn’t free him from the stone. Would he have a second chance at life? Could he find someone else to love him? Or was the woman who triggered the initial awakening the only one who could finish the job?
Cat slid her hand over his. “Isn’t it funny how pop psychology gives us all the tools to deal with everyone’s problems except our own?”
“We don’t have any issues we can’t deal with,” he said.
“But we don’t deal with them,” she replied.
She was right. After what amounted to a chance meeting fueled by an instantaneous and combustible attraction, Cat had given up her entire life to help him reunite his family. She’d shared his fears, his triumphs and his bed for more than a year. When she’d exhibited misgivings about chasing after Mariah, had he reassured her? Told her how deeply he cared about her? Promised that his past relationship with the Aussie treasure hunter was just that—the past?
No, he’d made jokes.
“Thank you for doing this,” he whispered into the speaker.
“Doing what?”
“Everything,” he replied. “Flying into the line of fire with me, more than once. Helping find Rafe. He’s a little shell-shocked, but excited to know that three of his brothers are alive. But mostly for putting up with Mariah. I know she dredges up a lot of unresolved shit from my past.”
“It’s your past, Ben, not mine. The only person who can put it to rest is you.”
“Mariah and never had what you and I have. Or what we could have, if my crazy family would stop getting in our way.”
“We wouldn’t have met without your crazy family,” she reminded him, her gaze drifting out into the darkness of the night sky. Her luscious lips turned downward at the corners, and when she turned back to him, her eyes were sad in a way that made his chest hurt. Her inky irises possessed a heart-wrenching melancholy, but her voice, when she spoke, was as strong and forthright as ever. “If you had to put a label on us, what would it be?”
He took her hand in his and kissed her knuckles, then pressed her flesh to his cheek. “We have what we’ve had from the start—a whole lot of trouble.”
She pulled her hand away with a snap. “You’re going to avoid this conversation, aren’t you?”
Again with the jokes. After a deep breath, he checked the instruments for any sign of upcoming turbulence and, when he saw none, he twisted around to close the small door between the cockpit and the cabin, taking the extra second to engage the lock. Then he removed his headphones, undid his seat belt, did the same to Cat and pulled her onto his lap.
“No,” he said, burying his nose against her neck and inhaling the very essence of her. “Up until tonight, I admit, I’ve been avoiding the conversation, trying to get around telling you how much I care about you in words and relying on only actions. But that’s not enough, is it?”
Cat licked her lips, and Ben suddenly wondered why, with all the cross-country flying they’d done in their time together, they’d never made love in the sky.
“Your actions have been very nice,” she admitted huskily. “And I haven’t exactly been shouting endearments from the rooftops, either. We’ve both been living in the moment, but with one foot firmly planted in the past. Your relationships with your father and Mariah. Mine with—” Her voice drifted off. Cat’s previous boyfriend had died because of the quest for Rogan’s magic. Though there had been no love lost between them at the end, she had not come to this point unscathed. “When this is all over, when your family is all together, we’ll concentrate on the future. Our future.”
“You’re willing to wait that long?” he asked, surprised. Possibly more shocked because he didn’t think he could wait for the completion of a task that might never be finished.
Cat pressed her mouth to his and kissed him until he was certain he’d inadvertently spun the plane into an inverted roll.
“Maybe not for all your family to show themselves,” she replied. “But let’s get this uncle solid and breathing and then we’ll take some time off for ourselves. Agreed?”
He didn’t bother answering with words, though for the first time, he honestly wanted to say them. He hesitated, not because of the consequences or the expectations of saying, “I love you,” to a woman who mattered, but he wanted to say it right—when they were alone, in the most romantic setting he could imagine. Not on a plane. Not while on the run.
But, while he had her here and the skies were clear, Ben decided that now was as good a time as any to practice a bit more of showing his love through actions and not words.
***
Rafe’s experience with hotel suites had been limited, but when he awoke the next day beside Mariah in a bed big enough for a small family, he realized that wealth had its privileges. He’d always eschewed his father’s predilection for luxury, even going as far as building a vardo at age fifteen out of an abandoned infantry wagon and several splintered doors and dragging the traditional Gypsy dwelling into the middle of his father’s carefully tended English garden, where he announced he would follow the traditions of his mother’s ancestors.
One rainstorm in the middle of a frigid German winter had convinced him that a solid roof over his head and a blazing fire
in the hearth weren’t something to scoff at, but moving back inside the manor estate had done nothing to increase his appreciation for comforts like cool silk sheets, downy pillows and room service.
Until now, with Mariah.
They’d arrived in Texas just before dawn, so Rafe had retreated into the stone after watching Mariah stumble into the hotel owned by Cat’s friend. Though he’d lost corporeal form, he had not surrendered to sleep until after she’d picked over a plate of scrambled eggs, showered and slid safely into bed. She’d said very little to him during that time, but he’d sensed, from the moment after she’d returned from talking with Catalina Reyes in the front of the small plane, that she was deeply troubled.
Troubled enough to have slept all day.
A knock sounded from the other room, but Mariah merely turned over and placed a pillow over her head. With a grin, Rafe closed the double doors between the bedroom and the living area, then answered the summons. Ben stood there, not with his father as expected, but with a single sheet of paper clutched in his hands and a concerned expression knitting his brow.
“What is this?” he asked, taking the parchment from his nephew. His nephew. He was having a hard time accepting this, since at nearly forty, Ben was older than he was. In normal years.
“A message,” Ben replied.
“From Paxton?”
He pinched the bridge of his nose, suddenly appearing as weary as Mariah. “I spoke to my father this morning. He has strong reasons, let’s say, to want to avoid any dealings with Farrow Pryce. He’s going to meet us in Florida. After we’ve taken care of this.”
Rafe motioned Ben inside as he scanned the paper. The type was small and seemed to contain only a series of numbers underneath Mariah’s name, which was printed in big, bold letters.
“It’s called a fax,” Ben explained. “The plane was recognized in Mexico as belonging to Chandler Enterprises. The entire chain of hotels received this message.”