Sex and the Psychic Witch

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Sex and the Psychic Witch Page 18

by Annette Blair


  “Keep singing,” he whispered as his arms came around her, and he slipped a hand inside the front of her bikinis. “This is for you, Harmony. Nobody but you.”

  She tried to continue singing and playing, but her fingers moved slower on the keys as her climax neared, and the lyrics disconnected from her brain. “Midnight train . . . third boxcar fifty cents . . . king of the—”

  She turned into his arms as she came, and she kissed him with the power of her climax.

  He let her rest while he stroked that shivery spot at the base of her spine. “Ready for bed?” he asked against her brow.

  Need purled through her. No man had ever worked so tirelessly for her pleasure. She slid a hand into his slacks, his eyes changing from whiskey, to honey, to caramel stirred by desire. “I’m hungry,” she said.

  King groaned and laughed at the same time.

  She savored the sound and went for his mouth, upper lip to lower, lower to upper, until he swept her from the piano bench, and anticipation, like a wash of healing crystals, twinkled and spiraled through her.

  He put her on the bed, his clothes gone in a blink. Hers went faster.

  King rose over her, hard against soft, thick probing muscle against willing flesh, pulsing warm, a mating dance on silk, a new sensual high. Sex with King in a bed, at last. “The ceiling is clear,” she said.

  “Observation dome.”

  “Too bad we can’t see the stars.”

  Chuckling, he began an erotic journey with his lips, beginning at her nape and working his way down, her senses swimming with mindless pleasure. She needed more from King than from any other man, and when she realized it, she tried to keep the need from overwhelming her. “Come inside me.”

  He nipped at a breast, teased it with his tongue, and suckled her, and she came again, shocking them both.

  “Scream your pleasure, Hellcat. I wanna hear you sing some more.”

  He looked proud of his power as he teased her inner thigh, but she grabbed his shoulders and brought his to face hers. “If you don’t pluck me this blooming minute—”

  He surged and filled her, stretching, invading, satisfying. Oh, good Goddess, the satisfaction. She raised herself to meet him, sighed, moaned, and sang her pleasure—“Alleluia!”—and wrapped her legs around him to keep him there. “Hard,” she said. “I want it hard.”

  She came several roaring times as he rode her, her ecstasy blending into throaty, incoherent sounds of gratitude and appreciation.

  “I can’t get enough,” he said. “This is crazy, but I can’t . . . get . . . enough!”

  Feeling victorious, she watched him struggle to stay the course, but he lost the fight, and she rode his

  shuddering climax with him, one last amazing time, the stars flying about them, piercing and icy-hot.

  Sated, satisfied, and elated, she kissed him wherever she could reach, his chest, his man nips, and finally his lips. She made love to his mouth, saddened by her all-consuming need for a man who could never be hers.

  Despite her sorrow, she smiled at his attempts to get her beneath the covers. Once there, he entwined them like two halves of a Celtic puzzle ring.

  “You were wonderful,” she said, floating in a sleepy haze, sated, and drifting . . . drifting . . .

  As if a rug had been pulled out from under her, she opened her eyes. “Are we moving?”

  “Not possible.” He pulled her close.

  “King, we’re rolling.”

  “Nope,” he said. “Teams of men have tried to move these cars. They won’t budge.” He closed his eyes.

  “We’re buckled to the engine, right, to balance them on the opposing slopes?”

  “Not necessary.”

  “Gussie gets her energy from the sea, especially during storms like this.”

  King opened his eyes. “Are we moving?”

  “Dumb ass!”

  She shoved him aside to get up, but the car hit something solid and threw her back on the bed. They lurched as wood splintered around them.

  “We’re breaking through the door,” King said, climbing on top of her.

  “Get off!” She shoved at him. “This is no time to get frisky!”

  “I’m protecting you!”

  Protection. Good idea. Harmony wove a protective sphere of bright white light around them, just before the bedposts snapped. The lace canopy fell, trapping them like flies in a spiderweb. Then the parlor car buckled, and the observation dome met the floor, pinning them in place—like flies under glass. Glass that didn’t break?

  “Oomph.” Harmony fought for breath. “King, you’re putting too much weight on me.”

  “The dome’s wearing my ass print. We’re meat in a dome-and-mattress sandwich, Sunshine.”

  “I can’t believe the glass didn’t break,” she said.

  “Strong,” he said in her ear, “forerunner to the glass used in airplane windshields.”

  “Great.” Raindrops hit the dome as lightning lit the sky. “We’re halfway out the shed door, but we seem to be stuck,” she said.

  “Can you see the damn stars now?” he snapped, but the moon shone in blessing and reassured her, until the shed door collapsed on top of them, like a coffin lid sealing them in darkness. She prayed:

  “Neath the blessing moon,

  Goddess protect us, rain anoint us.

  Lightning shine our way.

  Charged air, fill our lungs.

  Earth, bind our wheels.

  Harm it none; hear my plea.

  The is my will. So mote it be.”

  “It’s okay,” King said. “Don’t be afraid. We’re not gonna run off a cliff. This is a sandy beach, and we’re bound to run out of track soon.”

  “Thank the Goddess.”

  “Is it high tide or low?” he asked.

  “What?” Harmony felt stupid, dazed, and confused by the question.

  “The track runs—ran—where the land met Marblehead. I’m sure the track that got flooded must be gone by now, but . . .”

  Harmony tamped down her panic and called on her beliefs. “Ground yourself, King. Picture your feet in the sand, throwing roots deep into the earth. Don’t let go of the vision. Your roots will keep you in place,

  and your nervous energy will flow into them and strengthen them.”

  “I’d eat a rubber chicken if it would stop this car.”

  “That’s not belief,” Harmony snapped, “and desperation won’t help.” Their slow downhill roll seemed to come to a quiet end with little more than a shuffle of debris inside the car, but something pushed them backwards, hard, and the car teetered precariously, tilting almost on its side. “If we flipped like a pancake,” Harmony said, “we’d be able to get out from under the mattress.”

  “And the box spring and bed frame, if we don’t break all our bones or drown.”

  “Positive!” she snapped. “Speak and think positive!”

  “This is no time to get hysterical.”

  She grabbed him by the skin of his nonexistent collar and pulled his face to hers. “This may be our last chance to get hysterical.”

  “Ow! Ouch! Sunshine, you’re digging your nails into my shoulder.”

  She let go, and calmed. The car stopped moving. Her heart pounded in her ears. King’s heart pummeled her chest. “We’re safe,” she said, but the car began to rock almost immediately. It listed from side to side and lurched forward with a bounce.

  “Oh joy!” King said, being positive in a mocking way. “It is high tide. The ocean’s trying to suck us in.”

  Chapter Thirty-two

  KING took steady breaths while the sea rocked them in that car like a maniac mother trying to shove pillows over their faces. Okay, he was losing it. He’d told Harmony not to be hysterical, but he was scared to death.

  He calmed before he spoke. “Any other witchy ideas to get us out?”

  “Sure, I’ll use the cell phone in my skin pocket. Oh no,
I can’t. There’s no signal on this freaking island.”

  She shrieked fit to bust his eardrum. “Wait. I can call my sisters!”

  “Don’t go bonkers on me. I’d rather die with a sane woman.”

  “King, if we die,” she said, frighteningly sane all of a sudden, “let’s come back in our next life together, okay? We have unfinished business.”

  She was losing it. “Okay,” he said. “It’s a date.” He kissed her brow. “I wouldn’t want to be in this spot with anyone else.”

  “I feel the same way about you.”

  This was more emotion than he liked. “About calling your sisters,” he said. “I don’t think it’ll work. The castle’s made of granite.”

  “I already called them. We have a triplet-to-triplet telepathic communication system. They’re on their way.”

  “Great guns, she’d already lost it.” She didn’t even realize that the sea was sucking them farther into its depths.

  At the sound of voices, King looked up and hit his head on the dome.

  Men shouted orders. Women screamed and wept.

  “Told you. My panic woke Des before I called. Storm and Aiden heard the crash, but it took them a while to find the source. They went for the gardeners and were almost back when I connected with Des.

  My sisters are crying because they’re relieved we’re safe.”

  “I won’t feel safe until we’re out of here.”

  “Positive. Stay positive.”

  “As positive as dying and reincarnating together? Right. Sorry. I’m the strong one. We’re safe.”

  Harmony huffed. “Strong and humble. But, King, we’re about to get caught with our pants down, so that macho thing’s about to drown without us. It’s going down to the sea in ships . . . with your tight-ass rep.”

  “Ah,” King said. “Something to live for.”

  The sea carried them on a huge, rocking surge, and the men’s shouts became frantic.

  “Are we floating?” Harmony asked.

  “No,” King said, watching water bubble into the car along the breaks in the floor. “We’re sinking.”

  “King? You should know that sex was never as good as it was with you.”

  His panic receded. “You never do say the expected thing. It was the best sex I ever had, too, and I’ve never said those words before.”

  “High praise.” She kissed him, and for his part, if he was going down with the parlor car, he wanted to go kissing Harmony.

  The car rattled like when it crashed through the door, but it also heaved, groaned, and moved. Really moved. Not toward the sea, but away from it. “Thank God,” King said.

  “We’re okay,” Harmony said. “They’re using pulleys and winches—is winch a word?—from the construction site to pull us from the water.”

  “You got that from your sisters?”

  “Des is trying to reassure me, keep me calm, but she’s giggling, so be ready for some teasing.”

  He met her brow with his. “Great.”

  Harmony started laughing, low at first, then with unbridled humor, until she could hardly breathe, and damned if it wasn’t contagious. A woman who could laugh at herself and make him laugh at himself . . .

  What kind of magick would she pull from her bag of tricks next?

  While their rescuers pulled the parlor car wreck up the beach, the shed door slid off, and King felt as if his casket had been rescued from its vault. “Spotlights on the world,” he said. “I hope there’s a blanket over my ass.”

  “Do you feel a breeze?”

  “Nope, my butt’s still kissing the dome.”

  “Hey, the storm’s over.”

  “In more ways than one. When we get out of this, can you do something about Gussie? I don’t care how drastic. She’s gotta go.”

  Harmony sighed. “That saves an argument. Glad I’m gonna live to appreciate it.”

  “See any of our rescuers?”

  Harmony stretched to peek beyond the side of his head. “Pretend . . . you’re a fish in an aquarium.”

  He groaned. “Who’s peering in at us?”

  “Everybody. The gardeners, Gilda and her husband. They’re waving, and they appear to be able to see us quite clearly.”

  “How can you tell?”

  “They’re all grinning. Did you ever see Gilda’s husband grin before?”

  “Never.” King groaned again.

  “Storm has her snout pressed to the glass like a Peeping Tom porker.”

  “I heard that!”

  “Then get us the hell out of here,” Harmony snapped.

  “Ouch!” King felt a lessening of pressure and a fresh breeze. “I take it the dome’s coming off?”

  “Inch by inch,” Harmony said. “Why? Did it hurt?”

  “Only when it ripped my butt bandage off.”

  Harmony snickered. “Thanks for climbing on top to protect me. Bet you never thought you’d get rescued sunny-side up.”

  King gazed into her eyes. “I think I have the shape of you imprinted on my ha . . . happy man brain.”

  He’d nearly said heart . Must be a near-death thing. “Feels good to lift and turn my head,” he said. “Hey, I can flex my ass cheeks again . . . in public, of course, kind of like living my worst nightmare.”

  “We’re living the nightmare,” his curvaceous mattress said, “but in my version, we die. Suck it up, McBulls-eye, and thank the stars you’re here to be humiliated.”

  The dome fell to the sand beside them. More spotlights went on.

  Their rescuers applauded.

  “Way to go!” Storm yelled. “You nearly fucked yourselves to death.”

  Chapter Thirty-three

  “AND you think I have a smart mouth,” Harmony said. “But look at the bright side. At least there’s no Live at Five news crew here.”

  “We need blankets,” King called, and several landed on them as their rescuers’ laughter receded.

  “Are they gone?” Harmony asked.

  “Yeah, they’re going in through the train shed.”

  “Thank the Goddess.” Together she and King removed the lace canopy and bedposts. “I gotta stretch in the worst way,” Harmony said, getting up. “Oh, ouch, everything aches.”

  King arched and rubbed his ass. “I’ve really been taking a licking.”

  “But you keep on ticking.”

  King hooked her around the waist and brought her naked body against his. “Got any energy left?”

  “Are you kidding me?”

  He groaned. “Not that kind of energy. I want the mattress and box spring in the Dumpster. Less explaining when the crew fixes the shed door.”

  “They’ll see the mattress in there.”

  “Won’t matter. Tomorrow, we’re throwing out a dozen mattresses.” King shrugged. “So we started early.”

  “You actually think our rescuers will keep their mouths shut?”

  “They’ll razz the hell out of us, but I don’t think any of them will tell the crew.”

  “Can I tell you how much I don’t want to remove the evidence right now?”

  He kissed her brow. “Better than drowning, right?”

  They got back to the dorm an hour later, everyone but Aiden and Storm asleep. Tiptoeing around in the dark, they took turns in the bathroom and climbed into their respective beds.

  “I figured you went to the tower,” Morgan said into the darkness. “I kept waiting for you to fall through the ceiling.”

  “They don’t go looking for kinky,” Destiny said. “It just finds them.”

  Harmony gasped. “Des!”

  “They’re just jealous,” King said.

  “I’m really, really glad my son sleeps soundly,” Reggie said.

  “Oh God,” King said. “My daughter heard that.”

  “Don’t worry,” Des said, “nobody told her what happened.”

  Reggie scoffed. “I can guess.”

  “Not in
a million years!” Morgan chuckled, and that was the closest Harmony had come to liking him.

  Reggie sighed theatrically. “I imagined my dad would be a pipe and slippers kind of guy, but what do I get? A new millennium stud puppy. I’m so glad Jake is a sound sleeper.”

  “Me, too, sweetheart. At dawn, we start giving everybody their own rooms.”

  “It’s already dawn,” Morgan said.

  King cleared his throat. “At noon, we start giving everybody their own rooms.”

  Storm woke Harmony at nine. “The mural’s done. Wait till you see.”

  Harmony turned to King’s cot, but he was gone. She’d slept later than anyone. Great.

  When she got to the parlor, she saw that the mural itself did, indeed, fill the entire wall. Storm was sprinkling salt and protective herbs in front of it.

  Destiny stood back, examining it, while Gingertigger and Caramello paced the length of it like guard soldiers, stopping to hiss or charge the mural, only to bounce off and charge, pace, and hiss again.

  Tigerstar stood in front of the Queen Anne chair with her back arched. Warlock used the same stance beside the piano.

  Before long, Aiden, King, and her sisters gathered round in earnest, as if they’d waited for her. She and her sisters clasped hands. “It’s bizarre,” Harmony said. “Uneven.”

  Aiden nodded. “From its condition and the types of paint and tints used, I think it was painted over a period of ten or twelve years. The brushstrokes reveal time-lapse inconsistencies, including a growing unsteadiness that would indicate the painter’s aging hand.”

  King walked to the far end. “I don’t see a signature.”

  Harmony swept the mural with her gaze. “At first sight, I’d say the signature runs horizontally along the bottom. The way the mural is sectioned off vertically in different colors and shades reveals the painter’s mood, right? The colors also mimic the mood of the dolphins at the bottom of each respective section.

  “Bright colors equal laughing, playing dolphins in a bright sea. Dark colors equal dolphins beneath a gray sea. Oh, and look at the end. One lone, beached dolphin. Who died alone here? Gussie? Who collected dolphins? Gussie. The dolphins are her signature.”

 

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