Books by Nora Roberts

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Books by Nora Roberts Page 218

by Roberts, Nora


  “It lured you here,” Mac repeated.

  “That’s just bull.” But she started to shiver again, from a cold inside her bones. “Why would this thing want to hurt me? I’ve got no power.”

  “It hurts you,” Mac said, “it hurts Mia. You’re a part of her, Lu, so you’re part of this. What would’ve happened to the island—to the children the sisters left behind—if they hadn’t had the nurse to tend them? And we should’ve taken that into account before. It was stupid not to. Careless.”

  “We won’t be careless anymore.” Nell wrapped her arm around Lulu’s shoulders. “She’s cold. We need to get her home.”

  She let herself be carried, let herself be pampered, even tucked into bed. She felt her age, and then some, but she wasn’t done yet.

  “I don’t want Mia to know about this.”

  “What?” Ripley jammed her fists onto her hips. “A near-death experience rattle your brain?”

  “Think about what your man said back on the beach. Hurt me, hurt her. If she’s worried about me, she’s distracted.” With her glasses back in place, she turned to Mac and saw him clearly. “She needs all her strength, all her wits to finish this. Have I got that right?”

  “She needs to be strong, but—”

  “Then why muck her up?” There was nothing—nothing—more vital than Mia’s well-being. “How do we know this didn’t happen tonight just to make her upset and worried about me so she’s vulnerable? What’s done’s done, and telling her doesn’t change it.”

  “She could help protect you,” Nell put in.

  “I can take care of myself.” The minute the statement was out, she caught Zack’s lifted eyebrows. And huffed out a breath. “Been doing it for longer than any of you’ve been alive. Added to that, I’ve got me a big strong sheriff, a smart scientist, and a couple of witches looking out for me.”

  “She may be right about this.” Ripley thought of how pale, how fragile Mia had been when she’d come back from the flight. “Let’s at least agree to keep it to ourselves until telling Mia has a purpose. Nell and I can put protection around the house.”

  “You go right ahead,” Lulu invited.

  “I can set up a sensor,” Mac put in. “So if there’s any energy change, you’d be alerted.”

  “Sounds like a plan.” Lulu firmed her jaw. “Mia’s the target. Nothing and no one’s going to use me to hurt her. That’s a promise.”

  Eleven

  The candles burned low, and the air was full of fragrance and soft light when she woke. She felt him there almost before she felt herself. The warmth of his hand over hers, the weight of his worry.

  For an instant only, the years vanished and her heart was light with love. What she’d felt once, what she felt now, collided and dissolved before she could hold either.

  “Here, drink this.” As he had hours before, he lifted her head, held a cup to her lips.

  But this time she sniffed speculatively before she sipped. “Hyssop. Good choice.”

  “How do you feel?”

  “Well enough. Better, I’d say, than you. There was no need for you to sit up all night.” The cat that had curled beside her now slithered under her hand for stroking. “What time is it?”

  “Sunrise.” Sam rose now, began to extinguish the candles. “You only had about nine hours. You could probably use more.”

  “No.” She sat up, shook back her hair. “I’m awake. And starving.”

  He glanced back. She sat in the old bed, her face flushed with sleep, the black cat in her lap.

  He wanted to slide into bed with her. Just to hold, just to rest. Just to be. “I’ll fix you something.”

  “You’ll cook breakfast?”

  “I can manage eggs and toast,” he answered as he stalked out of the room.

  “Cranky,” Mia said to Isis. The cat swished her tail, then leaped off the bed to trot out after Sam.

  He brewed coffee first in hopes that a strong shot of caffeine would clear his head and improve his mood. He didn’t question the fact that his tender feelings, his steady concern of the night, had jumped straight to annoyance the minute she’d awakened and looked at him.

  A man needed some defense.

  While the coffeemaker grumbled, he turned on the cold water tap in the sink and dunked his head under the flow. And rapped his head smartly against the faucet when the cat brushed up against his legs.

  He saw stars, swore, then smacked the water off and came up dripping.

  When Mia walked in, he was standing, glaring at the cat, with water running down his face. She picked up a fresh dish towel and passed it to him.

  “You’re welcome to use the shower if you’d like to do more than soak your head.” After exchanging a decidedly female glance with the cat, Mia opened the door to let her out.

  Rather than trust himself to speak, Sam wrenched open the refrigerator, took out a carton of eggs. Mia reached down to get a skillet out of a cupboard, then held out a hand. “Why don’t I take care of this?”

  “I said I’d fix some damn eggs, so I’ll fix some damn eggs.”

  “All right.” Complacently, she set the skillet on a burner before moving over to get down two mugs. She poured, trying to keep her lips from twitching while Sam slammed around her kitchen. But the first sip of coffee made her eyes water.

  “God. Well, this is strong enough to go ten rounds with the champ.”

  Sam slapped an egg on the side of a bowl. “Any other complaints?”

  “No.” She decided to be broad-minded and not mention the bits of shell that had gone into the bowl along with the egg. Sipping delicately, she wandered to the back door again, and opened it to the morning air. “It’s going to rain.”

  Barefoot, her white robe billowing, she stepped outside to look at her garden and leave Sam to brood. Wind chimes tinkled as she wound along the paths. There were always surprises. A new bloom just opened, a bud just hazed with color. The blend of continuity and change was one of the great appeals of the garden for her.

  She glanced back toward the kitchen. The boy she’d loved was now the man fixing her breakfast. Continuity and change, she thought with a sigh. She supposed, under it all, that was one of Sam Logan’s great appeals for her.

  And because she remembered he’d held her hand while she slept, she broke off a tightly budded peony. Curving her hand over it, she encouraged the bud to unfurl and free its soft, fragrant pink petals.

  Brushing it against her cheek, she went back to the house.

  He was at the stove, looking wonderfully out of his element. His legs were spread, and the spatula held like a weapon in his hand. He was burning the eggs.

  Foolishly moved, she crossed to him and gently turned off the flame. She kissed his cheek, handed him the flower. “Thank you for watching over me.”

  “You’re welcome.” He turned away to reach for plates, then simply laid his forehead against the glass doors of her cupboard. “Damn it, Mia. Damn it! Why didn’t you tell me what you were going to do? Why didn’t you call me?”

  “I’ve gotten out of the habit of calling you.”

  He straightened, a mix of anger and hurt enveloping him.

  “I don’t say that to hurt you.” She spread her hands. “I don’t. It simply is. I’m used to doing things my way, and on my own.”

  “Fine. Fine.” But it wasn’t. He rattled plates as he dragged them out of the cupboard. “When it’s you, it’s just being who you are and doing what you do. But when it’s me, I’m going behind your back.”

  She opened her mouth. Then was forced to close it again and clear her throat. “You have a point.” She walked by him to get jam out of the refrigerator. “However, what you did on your own was step into my territory, risk bodily harm, then call out the troops.”

  “Your territory isn’t exclusive. And you risked bodily harm.”

  “That’s a matter of debate. I didn’t do this behind your back, not deliberately. In hindsight, I’ll admit your presence in the circle would have be
en valuable.” She set the toast, stone-cold and crisp at the edges, on the table. “You’re a better witch than you are a cook.”

  “You’re a hell of a lot cockier than you used to be,” he countered. “And you always were cocky.”

  “Confident,” she corrected. “You were cocky.”

  “A fine distinction.” He sat with her, scooping half the eggs onto his plate, half on hers. The peony lay pretty and pink between them. He took his first bite. “These are terrible.”

  She sampled, tasting scorched egg and bits of shell. “Yes, yes, they are.”

  When he grinned at her she laughed and went right on eating.

  He took her up on the shower and ran the spray hot to ease muscles stiff from the night’s vigil. He supposed they’d called a truce, a moratorium of sorts over lousy eggs and cold toast. Maybe, he thought, they’d taken a tentative step toward being friends again.

  He’d missed that part of them, too. The easy silences, the shared laughter. He’d known when she was sad, often before she knew it herself. He’d felt the thousand little pinpricks of her hurt whenever her parents had blithely, benevolently, ignored the child they’d made between them.

  Even before he and she had become lovers they’d been a part of each other. And how could he explain to her that it had been the link, the absolute and unquestioned link in the chain of their destinies, that had driven him to break the tie?

  She didn’t ask, and he didn’t say. He thought that was for the best, at least for now. At least until they were friends again.

  The muscles in his belly contracted when she stepped in behind him, slipped her arms around him, pressed her wet body against his back.

  “I thought you might share.” She nipped playfully at his shoulder.

  This time, they were fated to reverse the process. Lovers first.

  He turned, and fisting his hands in her hair, dragged her with him under the pounding spray.

  “You have the water too hot,” she told him, turning her head as his mouth rubbed along the side of her throat.

  “I needed hot.”

  She picked up a bottle, squirted some of the pale green liquid over both their heads.

  “Wait! What is that? Girl stuff?”

  Amused, she reached up to lather it in his hair. God, she’d always loved his hair. So black and thick and untamed. Wet, it fell nearly to his shoulders, a dark rain of silk.

  “My own blend. The rosemary promotes hair growth, not that you need it, and smells good. Even for manly men.”

  He worked it into her hair as well. Sniffed at it. “It’s not just rosemary.”

  “Not just. Some calendula, linden flowers, nasturtium.”

  “Girl stuff.” Suds slid down their bodies, slicking them. “It works on you.”

  “So do you,” she said when his mouth covered hers again.

  Steam, fragrant with herbs and flowers, rose as they washed each other. Teased each other. Slippery hands over slippery skin aroused in slow beats that savored each moment, each touch and taste.

  Long, lazy strokes coaxed the pulses to quicken and low, lingering moans to mix with the sound of drumming water.

  Her mouth was wet and warm, and with restless nips and nibbles grew eager under his. She deepened the kiss as her body rubbed and rocked against his. Invitation, demand, delight. And every breath he took was full of her scent.

  As the air turned sultry, he turned her so that he could trace kisses over her back, so that he could mold and cup her breasts. His thumbs scraped her nipples, tortured the hard points while her back arched in pleasure.

  When his hands skimmed lower, she reached back, hooking her arms around his neck and holding on to him when he sent her flying.

  “Now.” She turned to him. “Fill me now.”

  He slid into her, achingly slow. And she felt herself open, and give. She gripped his shoulders while the water sluiced over them, tuned her body to his.

  Long, silky strokes so that pleasure was a low, sustained beat. Everything she was focused on the need to prolong, to hold this moment like a jewel. Shining and rich. Her blood pulsed, seemed to sing under her skin until the beauty of it wept inside her.

  She crested, an endless, warm wave, and her mouth pressed to his as she rode it.

  They ended up on the bed again, flat on their backs.

  “We never seem to make it here for the first round,” Sam managed.

  “Be that as it may, round two will have to be postponed on account of working for a living.”

  “Yeah. I’ve got an eleven o’clock meeting.”

  She stirred enough to twist for a look at the clock. “You’ve got some time yet. Why don’t you stay, get a little sleep?”

  “Huh.”

  She rose, raked her fingers through her damp hair. “I’ll set the alarm for ten.”

  He grunted again, and didn’t move a muscle.

  Nor had he moved when, thirty minutes later, she was groomed and dressed for the day. Obligingly, she set the alarm clock, tugged the sheet over him.

  Then just stood looking at him.

  “How did it happen you’ve ended up sleeping in my bed again?” she wondered aloud. “Does it make me weak, stupid, or just human?”

  With no answer, she left him sleeping.

  Nell pounced the minute she walked in the door.

  “You’re all right? I was worried.”

  “I’m fine.”

  “Don’t look any the worse for wear,” Lulu commented after a careful study. All the tension balled in her stomach loosened and smoothed out.

  “I told Lu,” Nell explained and struggled with the hitch in her conscience. She wasn’t being as forthcoming with Mia as she was about her. “I . . . thought I should.”

  “Of course. Is the coffee up? I’m desperate for a decent cup. And to economize time and effort, we’ll go upstairs and have some while I save the two of you the trouble of poking at me about what happened.”

  “You were so pale.” Nell went up the steps first. “Ripley and I were about to pull you back when you came on your own. But you were as white as a sheet.”

  Guarding her province, Nell hurried behind the counter to pour the coffee. “You were gone for nearly an hour.”

  “An hour?” Mia was surprised. “I didn’t realize. It didn’t seem like . . . His power’s crafty,” she said quietly. “He blocked my sense of time. I wasn’t prepared to stay so long, which explains why I was so weak when I came back.”

  She took the coffee Nell offered, sipped, considered. “It won’t do to forget that a second time. You look a little peaked, Lu. Aren’t you well?”

  “Up late watching a Charles Bronson marathon,” Lulu lied glibly, and behind the counter Nell flushed with guilt. “That Logan boy took good care of you?”

  “Yes, Lulu. That Logan boy took good care of me. You sound like you’re catching a cold.”

  The surefire way to distract her girl, Lulu knew, was to poke at her. “I didn’t see his fancy car in front of the cottage this morning.”

  “Because it’s still parked in my driveway. He sat up all night with me, then fixed me a nearly inedible breakfast this morning, after which I seduced him in the shower. As a result I’m feeling very rested, very serene, and just a little hungry. Nell, how about one of those apple muffins?”

  “He sold his condo in New York City,” Lulu stated, and had the satisfaction of seeing Mia blink.

  “Really?”

  “I keep my ear to the ground. Signed the papers on it just yesterday. Got a bunch of stuff going into storage. Doesn’t sound like he’s planning on going back there anytime soon.”

  “No, it doesn’t.” She couldn’t think about that, Mia told herself. Not just now. “And as fascinating as that is, we’ve more immediate concerns than where Sam stores his living room furniture.”

  “Smart money says he sells it.”

  “Hmm. In any case,” Mia continued, “we have to decide what to do, if anything, about Evan Remington. I don’t think the
authorities would sanction a coven of witches attempting a casting out on an inmate.”

  She nibbled her muffin as she considered. “And to be honest, I don’t think it would work, not the way it did with Harding last winter. Harding was a pawn, unaware and largely unwilling. Remington isn’t unwilling, and my sense is that he knows. He not only accepts, but revels in what comes into him. He welcomes it.”

  “I could get in to see him.” Nell waited for Mia to look back at her. “He would agree to that. I might be able to reach him.”

  “You couldn’t.” Mia reached out to squeeze Nell’s hand. “You’re part of his catalyst. More important, Zack would have my head, and rightly so, if I encouraged you to try. Another face-to-face encounter between you and Remington is too dangerous under any circumstances, but it might be harmful for the baby.”

  “I wouldn’t try to . . .” Nell’s eyes went wide. “How did you know about the baby? I took a home pregnancy test at dawn.” She pressed a hand to her belly. “I’m going to the doctor this afternoon to back it up. I haven’t even told Zack. I want to be sure first.”

  “Be sure. I felt it when I took your hand.” Joy swam into Mia’s heart, over her face. “New life. Oh, Nell.”

  “I knew, the night . . . when I conceived, I knew. I felt a light inside.” Tears spilled over. “I was afraid to believe it, to get my hopes up. We’re having a baby!” She pressed her hands to her cheeks, spun in a circle. “We’re having a baby! I have to tell Zack.”

  “Go, tell him now. Right now. We can handle things here until you get back, can’t we, Lu? Lu?” Mia turned, saw Lulu digging a tissue out of her pocket.

  “Got allergies,” Lulu announced in a strangled voice. “Go on.” She waved a hand at Nell. “Go tell your man he’s going to be a daddy.”

  “A daddy!” Nell danced around the counter, threw her arms around Lulu’s neck, then around Mia’s. “Oh, I can’t wait to see his face. Oh, oh, and Ripley’s! I won’t be long. I’ll be back.” She raced for the stairs, then spun around with her face glowing. “I’m having a baby.”

  “You’d think no one ever managed to get knocked up before.” After a last sniff, Lulu stuffed the tissue back in her pocket. “Guess I’ll have to knit some booties. A blanket.” She shrugged. “Somebody has to step in and play grandma.”

 

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