The Elementals Trilogy
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Book 1
Water’s Threshold
Jillian Jacobs
Published by Green Moose Productions
Copyright 2014 by Jillian Jacobs
For sales information please contact: www.jillianjacobs.com
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, or mechanical, including photocopy’s, recording or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher or author. Requests for permission to copy part of this work for use in an educational environment may be directed to the author. This book is a work of fiction. References to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously.
Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination.
ISBN 978-1-942313-00-7
Cover art: Shelby Bertsch www.shelbybertsch.com
What happens when a lonely water-girl finally finds her shore?
In a tourist town at the base of the Tetons, Maya Conway, a mythical being known as an Elemental, stands at a crossroads. On her current path, she is content using her life force—water—to protect humans and the environment. Her direction is altered when Mother Nature taps her to guide Terran Forrester, an analytical scientist, on his journey to become the next Elemental—Earth. If Maya crosses into his world, will her lonely heart find a partner or will his rational mind reject her otherworldly existence? When an ancient evil evolved from dark matter shadows their steps, which path will they choose—logic or love?
Contents
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Epilogue
About the Author
Connect with Jillian Jacobs
Dedication
To Jeremy.
My grandmother always told me, marry a man who loves you more. And so I did.
Acknowledgements
The first person I’d like to thank is my Mom. By her example, I read romance. Although, we agree to disagree on the Outlander series, without her, I would never have ventured into other worlds. Her love of reading is now my own.
Next on this list are Sabrina Jeffries and Christina Dodd who, on their websites, suggested starting a writing career by joining Romance Writers of America.
That decision led me to LaNora Mangano and Tia Catalina. LaNora guided me through my first year at Indiana Romance Writers of America. She patiently answered every question and concern. Thanks LaNora. And to Tia, this book would not exist without her. As my critique partner, she took me step-by-step through the writing process and “rules”. She steered me through each roadblock, and for that she’ll forever have my gratitude.
My beta readers: Sherry Weir, Jennifer Hill, and my Mom. You’re the best.
I would also like to acknowledge every member at Indiana Romance Writers of America. Without that chapter’s positive reassurance and helpful comments, I would not have had the confidence to continue.
My cover artist, Shelby Bertsch. Because of her, this cover tells my story in a single picture.
And finally, to Donya Lynne, the ultimate Juicebox.
Prologue
Maya
I often wonder over the human fascination with vampires, werewolves, shape shifters, and other mystical creatures.
Vampires are especially intriguing as they are glorified for their sexual prowess, strength, and immortality. Why does only blood keep them alive? What is blood, really, but water when you break it down? Water flows through us and is part of what allowed our escape from the sea millions of years ago. Why isn’t water part of the mystique? Water becomes steam, ice, and fog. It breaks down mountains, swirls in a rage, destroys entire cities, and is a much stronger life force than blood alone.
Water is the staple of our existence, especially so in my case. It is the only force that flows within me and gives me life. Unlike the vampire who must live by consuming the blood of another, I stand in the rain to renew.
Does that make me fascinating? Will I be celebrated? Will I claim a place in history, or just wash away? Deep inside, I feel the drip, drip, drip as my link to humanity etches away. I stay afloat, stuck in time—in order to serve those whose blood continues to flow, pulsing along, unaware that the real monsters exist right beside them.
Chapter 1
Terran Forrester turned up the radio and cracked open the driver’s side window, hoping the cold mountain air flowing down from the Tetons would revive him. Driving home this late was not a brilliant decision. Where his headlights lit the empty road, he scanned for skittering wildlife.
Deer dash is not my game of choice at 2 am.
He would already be home if he hadn’t left the National Park Service fundraiser halfway through the evening. As a department head at The Conservancy, his presence was required, although he’d have preferred to skip the affair all together. Black tie events were not his style. A lab coat was his suit of choice.
Talking with Dr. Melinda Givens had offered an escape from stale golf course discussions and details of who had joined who on the Grand Teton ski slopes this past season. He followed her back to her place for coffee, where she informed him “coffee” was code for kitchen sex. Message received, he stayed for round two in the bedroom. Melinda hadn’t expected anything more and that suited him fine. She drifted to sleep with a satisfied smile. So, he threw on his T-shirt, dress pants, and shrugged on his dress shirt before heading out the door. At some point, he would connect with a woman who shared his passion for studying ways to conserve earth’s natural resources, but for now, sex fulfilled a basic need, just like food or water.
As the gas needle tipped toward E, he realized his truck also had basic needs. Terran pulled into the only station still lit up on the outskirts of Morgan Junction. Dust stirred as he drove across the gravel lot. While paying for gas inside, he’d grab an apple. The natural sugars would generate a much-needed energy jolt.
After filling the gas tank, he stepped through the automatic doors. A nicely framed young lady, most likely in her mid-twenties, sat at a table by the window. Her long, jean-clad legs were propped against the table’s edge as she tipped back in her chair. Her bare toes twitched and her hooded head bopped, no doubt due to the ear buds attached to the iPod in her hand.
Why is she out at this time of night? Why isn’t she wearing shoes?
As Terran walked over to the coolers, he
spotted a brown minivan pulling up for gas, which sounded a chime at the store’s counter. He picked the least-bruised apple from the wicker basket placed inside the cooler and retraced his steps. Stopping next to Shoeless Girl’s table, he lightly tapped her shoulder.
She removed one ear bud and raised a brow.
“Excuse me, I’m sorry to bother you. Do you need a ride back to town? Are you waiting for someone?”
She turned away and focused her attention out the window. “No,” she answered, and met his gaze in the reflection of the glass. Her sweatshirt hood framed her delicate features and aqua blue eyes. A tendril of blonde hair escaped from under the hood and shone in bright contrast against the black fabric.
“Kind of late, handsome. Maybe you should hurry home.” With a scrape of her chair, she pushed away from the table and exited through the back of the building.
That’s what you get for being a nice guy, Forrester.
He shrugged then headed for the counter, juggling his apple from hand to hand.
“Hands up!”
Terran halted upon hearing those words shouted by a bearded man waving a pistol and standing between him and the counter.
“Stay back.” Pointing the gun in Terran’s direction, the gunman yelled, “Get down on your stomach. Face on the floor.”
As Terran raised both hands in a show of compliance, he kept his gaze on the crazed man. “Stay calm. I’m going down.” Not quite sure if his comments were meant for the robber or himself. He’d come in for an energy jolt, and by the way his heart was pounding, he’d succeeded. On his way down, he glanced out the window. Shoeless Girl stood talking to a young lady in a red wool cap on the van’s driver’s side.
Is she crazy? The van lady is part of the robbery.
The robber ordered the night clerk to give him the money.
Bruised apple still in his hand, Terran considered using it as a weapon. Better not chance it. He braced his weight on his forearms. No way was he lying face down on this sticky, slushie-covered floor. He tilted his head to the side, keeping an eye on the action at the counter.
A thick fog seeped under the automatic doors, filled the front of the store, and made seeing even an inch in front of his face impossible.
Odd. Is this a new kind of security system?
The robber, the gun, the fog—the tableau playing out before him was so bizarre he refused to blink. Steady, slow breaths did nothing to calm his pounding heart. This thief was unstable enough, adding in this unknown element might push him to fire his gun. Where are the exits? Hadn’t Shoeless Girl left out the back?
“Turn it off. Turn it off,” the robber shouted at the clerk.
Terran waved a hand in front of his face, attempting to clear the hazy soup blocking his vision. His sense of hearing kicked into overdrive.
A desperate cry startled him and further accelerated his heartbeat.
Two shots were fired and glass shattered, tinkling onto the floor.
Reverberations from the gunshots made his ears ring. Sound was muffled, but he made out a clatter of metal against the tile floor.
A muted ding from the sliding of the automatic doors preceded a woman’s horror-filled scream.
The fog grew thicker.
Fine beads of mist covered his arms and face. Only the sound of his quick, shallow breaths broke the eerie calm.
Terran rose and crouched on the balls of his feet. He unbuttoned his dress shirt and wiped the condensation from his glasses with the T-shirt underneath. Streaks of water still clung to his lenses as he glanced over his shoulder to determine the distance from his current location to the red blur indicating the rear exit sign. He stuck out a hand and heard the slight crackle of a bag of chips. That sound guided his way as he bent level with the aisle and slipped toward the red beacon of freedom. With quick steps, he moved toward the back, but stiffened when a heavy water drop trickled from his earlobe to his neck. He remained rooted in place as a wet glide rasped against his cheek, and a voice commanded, “Back door, now!”
What?
An unearthly shriek kicked his adrenaline in gear, and he raced down the aisle, away from the chaos shaking his usually rational mind.
Where’s my apple? Do I still need to pay for gas?
Steps away from the back exit, he stopped and glanced over his shoulder to determine if anyone had noticed his flight to safety. The fog had lifted enough to reveal the incredulous scene by the counter.
The woman from the van now sat on the floor next to her cohort. Their faces were contorted, and their bodies thrashed. Fog wrapped around them and red blotches like steam blisters appeared on their skin.
How is that possible? Where is the clerk?
Their screams tore through the misty air. “It burns…make it stop…please stop…they’re in the van…the van.” Their cries halted when the entire store once more filled with fog.
As fear engulfed him, Terran strove to maintain his focus on reality and not succumb to the panic bounding down his spine. The vapor reached him, but did not burn his skin. He froze as the eerie mist swirled around his body. Aqua blue eyes flashed against a white cloud, and a wet hand caressed his face.
“In sleep forget,” a soothing voice, murmured in his ear.
A vision of Shoeless Girl crossed his mind before he fell to his knees, weightless as if floating in a clear, blue pool. Drifting down, down until surrounded by sapphire darkness that faded into black.
# # #
After making too many changes over a short period of time, Maya Conway needed to recharge. A portion of the criminals’ evil she’d absorbed tonight at the gas station still pulsed through her veins. Earlier in the evening, she’d gleaned the couple’s intentions to abduct two little girls. Knowing they’d need fast cash, she mentally tracked their plans to rob the station on the outskirts of town. The showdown ended well and kept the children safe. After she dealt with the criminals, she placed an anonymous call to the police with the woman’s cell phone. When sirens blared across the morning quiet, Maya used her elemental connection with water to evaporate.
Now she needed to refuel.
Her well-hidden freshwater hot spring waited at the bottom of Signal Mountain. The warm water would wash off the filth that had crept down deep and would wipe the slate clean.
The film of pain and despair filtered away as she reformed from mist to body then drifted deeper and deeper toward the bottom of the spring. Revolting images from the criminal couple’s minds vanished as she settled beneath the water’s surface, eyes closed, with her body completely submerged in the naturally heated water.
Landing in a place between dreams and consciousness, she healed, fed on water—Adam’s Ale—in order to renew. Sustenance flowed through her, and she breathed in water as if it were air. Though she preferred salt water, this fresh water spring served its purpose. Mother Nature had sent her to this mountainous region to conduct her Elemental duties—saving innocents and using her gifts for good.
Since arriving in Wyoming only a few months ago, Maya had experienced a strange energy pattern that interrupted her sense of peace. A consciousness never felt before, as if something attempted to anchor her in place—a pull unlike anything she had experienced since starting this new life nearly one hundred and fifteen years ago.
This internal strife was because of him—Terran Forrester. Mother had warned this would come. He was part of her purpose in being in this place at this time. Her orders were to guide him, because their destinies were entwined. Having Mother Nature set her up on a “fate date” left her feeling like a contestant on a game show. During her human life, Maya strove to control her own destiny, never handing over power. As an Elemental, she remained determined to give her all to their cause, but it chafed when Mother asked for more—to open her heart. Why now? Why was this burden of love thrust upon her with a mate she had not chosen?
Mate. What a ridiculous word.
Maya blew out a breath, causing a bevy of bubbles to dance their way to the surface. S
he couldn’t have children so Mother using that specific word made the whole idea more ludicrous. Yet, Mother’s wishes had come to fruition and that fact rankled. When spying on Terran, Maya experienced emotions surfacing she’d thought buried in a deep well long ago.
Her duties included watching him as he went about his daily human life. She enjoyed observing his frequent visits to the banks of the Snake River where he filled little glass vials. A soft hum raced through her body each time she spied him doing ordinary things, like working up a sweat at the gym or grabbing a cup of coffee at the local café. Since her last sexual adventure occurred in the free-love laced 70’s, she was more than overdue for male attention. Terran would, no doubt, approach sex with the same care he did his experiments—meticulously and thoroughly.
That trickle of lust thrummed especially strong tonight at the gas station, when he’d touched her shoulder, all concerned citizen, seeking to offer assistance to an unfamiliar woman. Her waterlogged heart had pumped like a steam engine traveling uphill.
There he’d stood—destiny’s eternal match—a tall, handsome, dark-haired scientist, wearing spectacles that seemed to have no frames.
Tonight, he’d smelled of sex, earthy and appealing. Peering into those dark brown eyes, she’d been drawn in, entranced by the stabilizing force surrounding him.
Thinking of Terran’s steady nature, perhaps she should verify he’d suffered no ill effects after tonight’s traumatic events. He wouldn’t remember anything after she’d disappeared out the back door. She had wiped his memories clean. And gotten him very wet.
A fountain of desire flowed through her as she remembered the way her body had molded to his, although only in fog. Kicking to the surface, Maya hauled herself out of the spring, sat nude along the edge, and dangled her feet in the water.
A clamping sensation tightened her chest and dryness wrinkled her skin.
How can this be?
Her lips puckered against her teeth as an intense wave of salt crossed over her tongue. Eyes burning, she blinked, attempting to remove the brackish substance drying her body. Seawater could renew her life force, but pure salt would desiccate her.
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