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A Risky Proposition

Page 3

by Dawn Addonizio


  Sparrow’s gaze pierced mine as he continued, “But seeing as you claim no connection with that discipline, and judging from the interplay between you this evening, his interest was probably more…sexual in nature.”

  I blanched, visions of being forced into an eternity of sexual slavery filling my mind.

  “That doesn’t seem like much of a deal to me,” I mumbled. “Three wishes and then I get to spend eternity wishing I was dead? How is that ‘granting a death wish’?”

  Sparrow exhaled harshly. “You make a good point, Sydney, and an objection that has been put forth many times. However, I believe that the implied death is that of your mortality and the accompanying loss of your soul. The granting of your additional three wishes and the gift of immortality is considered a fair trade.

  “Not to mention that it becomes the responsibility of the djinn in possession of your soul to keep you in relative health and comfort, if only to protect his assets—an arrangement that some find preferable to the uncertainties of mortality, believe it or not. Granting of wishes aside, souls are valuable commodities. The death djinns’ contract to gain them is ancient and cleverly worded.”

  I snorted. “Sounds convoluted and dishonest to me. And I still don’t think Balthus should have been able to interpret what I said as a real wish.” I couldn’t help wanting to avoid the unsettling fact that, apparently, some part of me had truly wished to die tonight.

  Sparrow placed a hand on my shoulder, his eyes glowing with a curious intensity. “I, for one, am glad you didn’t really intend to wish yourself dead this eve,” he replied, sincerity whispering through his lilting brogue.

  My entire body shivered to life at his touch. His voice and his nearness were doing wicked things to my libido, and I mentally chastised myself for my shameless reaction. You’d think that after Balthus, my sex drive would have shut itself down for the night—if only out of self-preservation.

  Sparrow stared at me for a moment longer and then stood, breaking the tenuous connection. Nonetheless, I couldn’t help noticing the way the thin material of his shirt molded the muscles of his chest when he pulled his shoulders back. And my glimpse of a darker image beneath the taut white cotton had me heatedly imagining where else he might have tattoos.

  “Well, I’m exhausted, and I’ve still got one hell of a report to write before I go home for the night. You should probably go ahead and get some sleep, Sydney,” he advised as he pulled his jacket straight and made to leave the room.

  “Sleep?” I asked in confusion. “You mean here?”

  “Why not?” he asked over his shoulder.

  “This is Balthus’ hotel room, not mine,” I called, thoughtfully keeping the ‘duh’ to myself as I pursued him through the penthouse and out the door into the foyer.

  Sparrow snorted in amusement as he pushed the button for the elevator. “Not anymore. Haven’t you been listening, Sydney? This penthouse is yours now. It was your second wish.”

  I was so astonished, my jaw dropped. “Are you sure?” I whispered.

  “Yes, Sydney, I was standing right there.” He laughed at my shocked expression. “You wished you could live here. The key’s on the bar.”

  I could only stare; speech was a traitor that had deserted me.

  “And by the way,” he added as the elevator arrived and he stepped in, “I wouldn’t make any more wishes out loud if I were you. You have an open death djinn contract—any one of them can fulfill it if you make your third wish within earshot.

  “And they tend to have excellent hearing,” he called out loudly just as the doors slid shut.

  “Of course they do,” I muttered as I watched the tiny blue lights on the wall panel blink their way from 10P down to L. Mind reeling, I slowly turned and made my way back inside the penthouse.

  Chapter 3 – Ironing Out the Details

  The key to the most luxurious penthouse in Palm Beach was on the bar—just as Sparrow had said.

  I plunked down on the buttery-soft leather couch and tried to collect my thoughts. Could I really stay here? Even if Sparrow was wrong about the wish thing, it wasn’t like I would be charged for sleeping here. The hotel had Balthus’ info, not mine. And for some reason, the thought of going home made me a little nauseous.

  I tried to pinpoint why, but my brain kept going blank when I reached for an answer. With a sigh, I gave up and looked around the well-appointed living room instead. The silence was a little creepy, so I set my mind to figuring out how to turn on the huge, flat screen TV that eclipsed the wall.

  The remote was easier to navigate than I feared, and the channel line-up appeared to be about the same as mine at home. I kicked off my heels and wiggled the circulation back into my toes as I flipped through the digital music stations. I debated over Salsa, and then settled on Light Classical.

  It’s hard to be freaked out when you’re listening to something as upbeat as Salsa, but right now I figured I was more in need of serenity. I turned it up and pushed myself off the couch for a little barefoot exploration of the place.

  The penthouse had a split level design with a spacious second bathroom and guest room down the hallway opposite the kitchen. I wandered back into the living room and ducked my head into the mini-fridge behind the bar, grinning when I found the half-full bottle of champagne.

  It had been a rough night—I figured I deserved it.

  I opened the sliding glass doors to the balcony so that I could hear the ocean and turned down the A/C to counter the warm air. Then I dimmed the lights and sank back into the supple cushions of the leather sofa, crystal flute of champagne in hand.

  Waterford, and probably worth about $75 a glass, I noticed with weary amusement.

  I let my mind drift as I sipped the champagne, enjoying the lyrical instrumentals that sighed from the speakers in soft counterpoint to the waves gently rolling onto the beach below. Before I knew it, I was finishing the bottle.

  Stifling a yawn, I tipped the last of the champagne past my lips, savoring the bubbles on my tongue before I swallowed. Then I pulled myself up off the couch, determined to make use of the huge canopy bed.

  A hint of Sparrow’s clean, woodsy scent lingered in the air, and I wondered if I’d be seeing the handsome Irish detective again. Probably not if he could help it. Although, he had seemed to warm up to me a bit toward the end of our conversation.

  I made my way through the kitchen and down the hall to the master bedroom, pausing to indulge my urge to sink my toes into the thick carpet. I wandered over to the bathroom, hoping to find some toothpaste so I could at least swish it around my mouth. I was pleased to discover both the paste and a new toothbrush wrapped in plastic.

  I took off my jewelry and laid it on the vanity, dimmed the lights, then stood by the bed for a moment debating about the vulnerability of being naked. In the end I chose comfort and pulled my dress over my head, dropping it on a nearby chair.

  I climbed between the soft, silky sheets and pulled the thick, cream comforter up beneath my chin, luxuriating in the feel of being snuggled in a warm cocoon. My eyes drifted closed and I smiled, exhaling deeply as I released the tension from my body.

  Amazing…an actual genie…and three wishes, I mused. And this penthouse was incredible. I had one more wish to go; too bad I couldn’t make it without losing my immortal soul. I frowned. That meant I had already made two. Sparrow said the penthouse had been my second.

  What had been my first?

  I began replaying the evening, my mind winding back up out of the comfortable peace it had settled into. What had I wished for between my first fateful comment to myself in the hotel lobby and my wish to live in the penthouse? My brow furrowed and my eyes shot open.

  “What the hell did I wish for?” I whispered in consternation, my hands gripping the comforter anxiously.

  “Relax, Sydney,” chimed a tinkling voice from somewhere in the vicinity of my right ear.

  I rolled to the left, nearly toppling off the bed as I frantically searched the room for i
ntruders.

  There, hovering just above the pillow next to mine, was the loveliest creature I had ever seen. It was a tiny woman, her delicate wings fluttering slowly and shimmering in the subdued light. She laughed at me in delight, and I felt a blissful grin spread across my face.

  She stood approximately three inches tall, her shining dark tresses falling in cascading waves over her shoulders and down her back. She was barefoot and wore a knee-length iridescent dress that seemed to shift from blue to purple to green. Her skin glowed with silvery light, and her small, pointed face shone with happiness.

  Somehow, in some deep place that defied memory or explanation, I knew exactly who and what she was.

  “Lorien?” I whispered incredulously.

  Her smile widened and pleasure lit her violet eyes as she nodded her tiny head in assent.

  I had never seen her before, but I had felt her. I had spoken to her almost every day for as long as I could remember. I had never heard her answer, but some part of me had always believed that she was real and not just a product of my over-active imagination.

  A distant memory tickled the back of my mind, of a time when I had simply accepted that faeries existed. I didn’t have any sisters or brothers, and floating just beyond my grasp were vague memories of the tiny winged beings acting as my playmates when I was a small child. A haunting, unearthly music accompanied the vision, but sound and sight faded away before I could coax them into solidity.

  I had no problem conjuring my very real recollection of trying to explain the faeries to my disbelieving older cousins. I had been teased mercilessly. In embarrassment and desperation to fit in, I had quickly abandoned my attempts to convince them. And in a way, I guess I had abandoned the faeries as well. But deep down, a piece of me had preserved the knowledge that they were real.

  And some instinctive part of me knew that this being’s name was Lorien, and that she was my faerie guardian.

  “It took you long enough,” she said with a grin.

  “Hmm?” I mumbled dazedly, still staring at her in wonder as bright little spots of color began to dance across my field of vision.

  “Sydney? Hellooo!” She waved both hands in front of me, but my body felt too relaxed to bother with a response, so I just smiled.

  “Snap out of it!” she demanded, multihued sparks flying from her fingers as she darted toward me and snapped them in my face.

  “Ow!” I exclaimed, my hand coming up to cover my nose against a sudden onslaught of prickling explosions. It felt like I’d snorted Poprocks and soda.

  “Ooh, sorry about that Sydney,” she breathed contritely. “Let me see.”

  I cautiously lowered my hand and went a little cross-eyed as she zoomed in closer to my nose and sprinkled a fine, silvery dust over the skin. I let out a violent sneeze, reaching up too late to cover my mouth. I searched for Lorien with a rueful expression, but she had darted out of the way before the blast hit her, and stood watching me again from the pillow.

  “Faerie magic,” she explained apologetically. “Sometimes it makes humans a little loopy. I wanted to snap you out of it before it made you too spacey to talk. Is your nose okay?”

  “Yeah, it’s fine,” I sniffed, rubbing my fingertips over the tip. “It didn’t really hurt, just gave me a shock. What was that anyway?”

  “Fire dust.” She shrugged in chagrin.

  I stopped rubbing my nose and sat up straighter against the headboard, pulling the comforter against my nakedness. “I can’t believe you’re real!”

  “Hmph,” she rolled her eyes at me. “You almost believed more times than I can count. I can’t believe all it took was that hunk of a half-faerie, Agent Sparrow, telling you faeries were real to push you over the edge.”

  I blinked at her and then laughed in disbelief. “Do you mean to tell me that all I had to do to be able to see you was to believe in you?”

  “That’s the way it generally works,” she said dryly. “Even your popular fairy tales will tell you that much.”

  “Unreal.” I chuckled, shaking my head in amazement.

  She floated closer and looked me in the eye, sounding offended when she spoke. “You talk to me every day, Sydney. You’ve heard me when I was trying to lead you away from danger—remember last month when you took the long way to the office, even though you were in a hurry, and you just missed that horrible accident on the interstate? You even guessed my name—although I suppose it could have remained in your mind from childhood.”

  “I knew I remembered faeries from when I was little!” I cried triumphantly.

  “Big whoop,” Lorien muttered. “Children are natural believers. But no matter what I did, you couldn’t bring your adult self to believe I was real until you heard it from that half-sidhe.” She shook her translucent wings out in an indignant gesture.

  “Actually, I think it was watching the djinn get sucked into the lamp that did it for me,” I pointed out wryly. “If I hadn’t seen that, I don’t think Sparrow telling me faeries were real would have had nearly the same impact.”

  Lorien snorted. “Well, at least I’ll win my bet with Eleanor.”

  “Who?” I shot her a confused look.

  “Never you mind,” she said with a pleased expression, “Just a friendly wager between sprites.”

  “Sprites?” I repeated questioningly.

  “Yes, sprites,” she replied in exasperation. “That’s what we…what I am.”

  I kneaded my forehead. “I thought you were a faerie.”

  “A sprite is a type of faerie.” She scoffed. “But I’m not here to give you a lesson on the faerie races. What we need to be discussing is this rather nasty situation you’ve gotten yourself into with Balthus. I tried to warn you about him, you know…several times, in fact!”

  I sighed in frustration. “I knew something wasn’t right with him. There was a kind of prickle in my spine when he said certain things to me, but I didn’t want to believe it.”

  She nodded at me reprovingly. “You, of all people, should know better than to ignore that sort of intuition, Sydney.”

  “Yeah,” I grumbled. “I remember feeling it the day of that accident, when I decided to get out of the turning lane for the interstate. I wish I’d…” My thought was interrupted by a violent sneeze.

  “Shhh…Hush Sydney!” Lorien admonished in alarm, a sparkling red cloud of faerie dust drifting behind her as she flitted away from my nose and back to her perch above the pillow.

  I sent her a watery glare.

  “No more wishes for you,” she announced, returning my glower.

  “I doubt there’s a death djinn hiding in the closet,” I sniffed crossly.

  “It doesn’t matter! There might not be one for ten miles or there might be one ten feet away! The point is—you won’t know until it’s too late. You need to remove that word from your vocabulary until we figure out how to get this situation under control.” She shook one tiny forefinger at me, her wings buzzing in agitation.

  I pursed my lips sullenly and nodded in grudging agreement. I knew she was right, but being told what to do always activated my stubborn streak.

  “I still don’t think it was a fair contract,” I grumped.

  “Fair? Hello—death djinn! Since when has anyone trying to gain possession of someone’s immortal soul ever played fair?”

  She zoomed to the foot of the bed and looked back at me with a grin. “It’s not all bad though; just look at this place!” she exclaimed, trailing iridescent green fairy dust around the room.

  “It is pretty cool,” I admitted.

  “Oh, it’s better than that!” she teased. “And you’ve not only wished yourself into physical luxury, but you did a pretty decent job of wishing yourself into an equally satisfactory mental state,” she giggled.

  “What does that mean?” I demanded, pushing myself upright again and fighting the bed’s cushy invitation of softness.

  She clasped her hands behind her back, her expression mischievous as she recited my forgo
tten words to Balthus, “I wish I could forget about my problems, even if only for a night.”

  I stared at her blankly. “What did I forget?”

  Lorien bit her lip. “You spent a wish on forgetting it. Far be it from me to force the memory back on you.”

  “But what if it’s important?” I argued with a pleading look.

  Her gaze softened. “It’s nothing you need to think about tonight, I promise. And the way you worded the wish means tonight is probably the only reprieve you’ll get from it.”

  A weight settled in the pit of my stomach and an inexplicable wave of depression moved through me.

  “It’s no good worrying about it now,” she said with a sad smile. “You made two rather clever wishes, I thought. You mortals have a nasty habit of creating pandemonium when given the freedom to make three wishes come true. But you’ve done amazingly well so far.”

  “Well, I guess I could have done worse than to lose a memory and gain a penthouse,” I muttered.

  “That’s the spirit,” she agreed merrily. “Just remember not to make any more wishes.”

  I frowned at the remnants of red dust on the comforter. “Yeah, I could do without you shoving more pepper up my nose,” I said with a sniff.

  “It’s not pepper—it’s faerie dust.” She crossed her arms over her chest and looked at me with a disgruntled expression. “And if you can come up with a quicker, more effective way for me to shut you up, let me know.”

  I grumbled at that and then changed the subject. “I’ll be able to see you from now on, right?”

  “You’d be amazed at how much you can see when you actually look,” she retorted.

  “Hey, it’s not my fault that life beat the belief in fairy tales out of me,” I said with a yawn. “So what do we do now?”

  “I’ve got somewhere to be, and I think you should try to get a good night’s sleep.”

 

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