by K. F. Breene
I laid my free hand on the deck banister, looking down at Edgar. “Hey.”
He snapped straight and spun, jamming the spray bottle behind his back. “Miss Jessie, hello. How was dinner? It smells divine.”
I grinned down at him as Austin came out behind me, his guitar in one hand and a glass of wine in the other. He didn’t seem fazed by seeing Edgar—he just set his things down so he could move the barbecue out of the way and pull the circular gas firepit from the side.
“It was so good.” I turned my face skyward. “Fresh pasta is a treat I’ll never get used to, and the sauce just melted in my mouth.”
“Oh, fantastic. How about dessert? Did you have that?”
Being a vampire, Edgar’s food source was a vein. He had no use or even memory of anything else. He knew I loved Austin’s cooking more than anything, though, and never passed up a chance to let me gush about it.
“He had some homemade chocolate chip cookies on hand.”
“With walnuts?”
“No walnuts. He made them for me the other night.”
“Oh, good, yes. You hate walnuts. It’s the fastest way to ruin a chocolate chip cookie, I remember you saying.”
Austin put wood into the firepit and lit it before sitting in his chair and lifting the guitar into his lap. He strummed the strings, the notes rising into the peaceful evening.
“What are you doing down there?” I asked Edgar, half wishing the rest of Ivy House had come with him. I loved Austin’s house, but the more time I spent here, the more I missed my crew, the strange antics of the house itself. Most importantly, I felt safe on Ivy House property in a way I couldn’t feel safe anywhere else in the world.
“Or maybe I just need to remodel and modernize Ivy House and have Austin over more,” I murmured to myself, chewing on my lip, wishing I could just transplant Austin’s whole house onto Ivy House property. I’d have to install a mountain, though. Because that was something people did every day…
“What’s that?” Edgar called up.
“Huh?” Austin paused in playing his guitar.
I shook my head. “Sorry, my mind is wandering. What’s in the squirt bottle, Edgar? You’re not trying to create attack flowers, are you?”
“Ha-ha-ha…” Edgar’s uncomfortable laugh wasn’t fooling anyone. “No, Jessie, not to worry. Though, now that you mention it…”
“No, Edgar.”
“Yes, Jessie, of course. Of course you’re right. The sunflower didn’t go well. But then again, it’s not like it had legs. It couldn’t actually chase anyone.”
“I love that little patch of meadow flowers, Edgar, I don’t want to have to call the basajaun in to eat it.”
“Yes, Jessie. Right. Though…the alpha does have a lovely singing voice. Better than the artists on my eight-tracks.”
“Eight-tracks?”
“Yes. I just never could get into radio. Eight-tracks have superior quality as far as I’m concerned. But the alpha blows them all out of the water. He could definitely do great things for attack flowers.”
“Maybe we’ll try again on Ivy House and let him at it, but let’s keep those meadow flowers normal, okay?”
“Yes, Jessie. I was just tending them—like normal. Just the normal tending.” He paused for a moment, and I wondered why he was hiding the squirt bottle if it contained nothing but the normal elixir… “I must admit, the possibility of militarized flowers has really gotten my ideas flowing. Have you thought about trying to make a potion or elixir that allows plants to speak? Or…maybe not speak but squeal? If someone tricked Ivy House again, and got onto the property without any of us knowing, then the flowers could all squeal and alert us. Wouldn’t that be nice?”
“Just this morning I found out the dolls could squeal, Edgar.” The music twanged, Austin’s fingers scraping across the strings. “I’m not ready for flowers.”
“Sure. Yes, it is a little progressive.” Edgar nodded. “I’ve always been a little ahead of my time. Don’t worry, Jessie, I’ll keep thinking.”
“Great,” I said dryly.
Spray bottle still behind his back, he started to wander deeper into the woods.
I frowned at him. “Did you plant more flowers in the woods?”
“Oh no. Who would see them? I don’t even think animals come around here—they’re afraid of the big bad bear.” He sang the last part. “No, I’ll just stick around for a while and make sure nothing tries to sneak up on you.”
“The gargoyles are here. I think we’re covered. I’d hate to keep you away from home all night.”
“The thing about the gargoyles is, when they’re in their other form…their heads are made of rock.” Edgar stared at me. “Their brains are stone.”
I stared back at him, not quite sure what to say.
“Can’t argue with reason,” Austin murmured, and laughter bubbled up inside me.
“I don’t mind, Jessie, really.” Edgar stepped farther away. “It’s refreshing to explore a new area. Maybe some night hikers will wander this way. Or some shifters who plan to attack the alpha and will instead make an unexpected blood donation.”
I watched him take incremental steps until he finally stepped behind a tree and disappeared from sight.
“You are the only reason why I allow that sort of madness near my home, I hope you know that,” Austin said as I shook my head and took a seat next to him. The flames licked the small logs within the pit and danced into the air. “If you ever wonder how much you mean to me, look no further than Edgar hanging out in my yard with a spray bottle.”
“What about Mr. Tom?” I turned my chair with an evil smile, slipped off my shoes, and propped my feet on his thigh. “If you let Mr. Tom hover around in the mornings, getting us stuff, being his weird self, what will that say about your feelings for me?”
The tune he played was soft and sweet, slow and delicious. His fingers moved deftly over the strings, strumming or plucking, sliding and pressing. He didn’t speak for a moment, playing that gorgeous melody.
Finally he said, “It would say that I was lost to you, completely, without regret. That I would give you the world if it would make your heart sing.” His gaze met mine. “That I would stop at nothing to make you happy and comfortable. It would be my greatest joy as your mate and your lover.”
I gulped, feeling something deep move within me. A pinkish-purple halo rose from my skin, shimmering in the air. Pressure filled my chest, and his heart beat a little stronger within me.
“It’s my gargoyle magic,” I said with a tight throat, blinking back tears. The world stilled again, like it had in the kitchen. “The colors…it’s pure magic, oozing out of me. I think it’s because I’m opening up to my gargoyle, like when I hide myself near buildings.”
“You’re giving way to your beast,” he whispered, our gazes locked. He kept picking, the melody seeming to swirl within my magic. “It is an incredibly intoxicating sight. You’re beautiful, Jacinta. Fierce.”
Another question rose, unbidden, as though bobbing to the surface from the very depths of my being. The question tasted sweet on my lips, but my voice turned rough with it. “And what if I were in danger? How would you show you cared for me then?”
His eyes sparked like embers in the growing darkness. Crackling rage pumped through the Ivy House link. Power blasted from his person, so potent and intense, so incredibly dominating, that it made me gasp.
When he finally spoke, his tone made my small hairs stand on end and set my pulse to racing. “I would tear the world apart and shed blood on its ruin. No one will ever harm you, Jacinta, not while I am alive. No one,” he growled.
I was up and ripping at his belt before I could think. He walked me backward into the house, the twang of his dropped guitar following us through the door neither of us bothered to close. He shoved at my pants and massaged the center of me while I pushed down his jeans and boxers. He tore off my shirt and bra without ceremony before bending and fastening a hot mouth to my budded nipple.
>
I groaned, dropping my head back, sliding my palm along his hard length. He moved to the other nipple, his teeth scraping against it, sending a little jolt of pain before he sucked, filling my world with pleasure.
He spun me around and, with a palm to the center of my back, pushed me forward. My hands hit the flat surface of the kitchen island. He gripped my hips and thrust forward.
My moan as uninhibited as his, I let my eyes flutter shut with the sensation, so gloriously filled up. He reached around me and continued massaging as he made good on his promise and pounded into me without mercy, pushing me higher with each thrust. Consuming me with each slide of his large, hard length.
I couldn’t tell where my world began and ended. I couldn’t control my magic or keep it in as the pleasure soared, as my heart—and his—matched it. I hit a peak yet continued climbing. Power pumped through the room, blistering in intensity but delicious in feel, scraping against my skin and cutting into his. He yanked me back by my hair, gripping me against his chest as he thrust like a wild thing, claiming me in body and spirit.
Writhing against him, goading him with magic, crying out from the onslaught, I pushed him on, wanting it all, needing to consume every piece of him, utterly lost to the feel of his body and the incredible sensations filling my world.
He growled with his release, shuddering against me. I cried his name with mine, practically convulsing against him. Magic and pleasure and passion boiled through me before calming, leaving behind a vibrating sort of bliss.
Our rough breathing filled the silent room.
He pulled out of me and turned me around, capturing my chin in his fingers and looking deeply into my eyes. He didn’t say a word, but he didn’t have to. I could see the intense emotion soaking through his eyes, feel it through the link and the beating of his heart in my chest. My emotions were every bit as strong, but for some reason I couldn’t vocalize them. Something was blocking me from moving to the next level with Austin. But it wasn’t fear or logic. It wasn’t anything trivial like worry about moving on too soon after the divorce.
It was that unnamed darkness within me, I could feel it. It was my gargoyle—or the beast, as Austin called it. It wanted something more. A payment in blood, as was the Ivy House way. But what kind of payment?
I didn’t know what would satisfy this strange craving I could feel slicing into my bones.
I didn’t know if I could ever rest easy until it was sated.
As if understanding my turmoil, knowing what I felt and wanted to say but couldn’t, Austin smirked, unworried.
“You’re mine, and I mean to prove it. I’ll wrestle that beast until it submits.” His kiss was bruising. My passion ratcheted up to impossible levels. “In the meantime, I plan to make you scream so hard you go hoarse.” He picked me up and threw me over his shoulder, carrying me to bed like a caveman, dragging out my excited laughter. “You will declare your feelings. It’s only a matter of time.”
Eight
The cool evening worried my hair. Shadows lurked at the bases of the trees at the edge of the grass in my backyard, growing denser, some already seeming solid. The metal of the lounge chair I was sitting on had started to chill.
One week to go.
I had one week before the to-do at Elliot Graves’s place.
One week until we were essentially locked in a mountain, our wings no good. I’d have to rely heavily on my magic and the few weapons I could stash on my person. I’d have to rely on the team we put together.
Spells tumbled through my mind, crammed in there from all the intense practice and studying I had been doing. Even so, I was far from ready for someone like Elliot Graves. We all knew that. Nor was I sneaky or cunning like the other mages he’d almost certainly invited. I didn’t know how to play false to someone’s face with the intent of physically stabbing them in the back. The best I could do was fake politeness, like at a dinner party from my Jane years, and I wouldn’t even be able to manage that if someone messed with Austin. Since that night at his house a week ago, when he’d cooked shirtless and then made love to me until the first rays of the sun lightened the horizon, I was not even remotely rational where he was concerned. I completely flew off the handle if anyone threatened or maligned him in any way.
There’d been an episode at the bar the other night. A disgruntled and overly intoxicated regular had caused a scene and taken a stumbling swing at Austin. The threat had been nonexistent, but I’d pounced on the guy and started pummeling him before Austin could throw him out of the bar. Four big pack members had needed to drag me off him.
Strangely, no one had seemed overly upset by the situation. In fact, Austin had been desperately turned on. I, however, had been mortified.
The only thing I could say for myself was that I hadn’t gone for my magic this time. I had no idea why I hadn’t, since I hadn’t even remotely been in control, but it had saved the man’s life. Still, I couldn’t be trusted. The situation made me incredibly nervous. I hadn’t been out in public with Austin since.
I wouldn’t be able to section myself off from other people at Elliot Graves’s place, though. And if Kinsella was any indication, some of the guests would be vocal about their dislike of shifters. To put it mildly, we were headed for a dicey situation.
The basajaun entered my woods from the other side, moving fast, heading for the house. No one was with or in front of him.
Good. I didn’t need more drama. In a few moments, I’d be heading inside to officially welcome the three new people to the Ivy House team. Hollace, the newly reincarnated Cyra, and Nathanial had all agreed to join my circle. They’d get the magic, we’d get a link between us, and our team would be stronger than ever.
I ached with guilt for putting them in danger.
Austin’s footsteps touched down on the front walkway. His heart beat comfortingly in my chest. We’d slept in the same bed—whether his or mine—every night this past week, but I always missed him the second we parted. Even now, knowing he was coming around the house to me, I felt a pull toward him.
The basajaun kept coming as Austin started around the side of the house. Austin came into view first, wearing a dress shirt that molded to his perfect torso and a pair of fashionably faded jeans that showed off his powerful thighs. His hair was styled, short on the sides and messy on top, and his expensive watch flashed within the motion-sensor light that clicked on as he passed.
I glanced down at my stained and mud-splotched purple sweats, mostly shapeless on my body. I hadn’t changed since the practice session had ended a couple hours ago. I hadn’t even moved from this seat, choosing instead to sit here in partial misery, going over all the spells in my mind again and again.
“Hey.” Austin took the chair next to me, leaning back as I was doing and putting his feet up. “Just taking in the night?”
He knew I wasn’t. He’d be able to feel the worry dripping through me like acid, churning my stomach. I wasn’t hiding it from him as I was from the rest of the crew. I didn’t hide anything from him anymore. I never deadened the Ivy House link between us. There was no need. He never judged me or held my feelings against me. That wasn’t in his nature.
“The basajaun is nearly here,” I said, watching the tree line. “You look handsome, by the way.”
He reached over and squeezed my thigh. “Any idea what the basajaun wants?”
I shook my head as the basajaun slowed near the tree line, utterly invisible in the dwindling light even though he should’ve been in plain view. His ability to blend into his natural surroundings was incredible.
No, it was magic. Sometimes I forgot that magical creatures each had their own special blend of it.
“He wasn’t at training today. Maybe he wants to see what he missed.” I watched the spot, finally seeing him as he pushed out through the tree limbs. My eyebrows pinched together. “What in the heck?”
The hair all over his body lay flat and tamed, almost like it had been lightly spritzed with gel and then combed. His
long, usually bushy beard had been re-braided, no part of it out of place. The hair on his head had been parted on the right and slicked over, and a bow tie adorned his hairy neck.
“That’s my cue.” Austin swung his feet off the chair and stood.
“What cue? What do you mean?”
“He wants to talk to you privately.”
“How do you know? Is it the bow tie?”
“Body language. I’ll be right over there, okay?” He pointed toward the back door. “In case you need anything.”
I frowned but nodded, and he bent down to kiss my forehead. The look he shot the basajaun as he walked toward the door was long and poignant, not so subtly making a statement that if the basajaun acted out of turn, there’d be hell to pay.
My stomach fluttered and a strange fizzy sensation bubbled through my blood, like I was being aerated or something. Odd.
The basajaun stopped in front of me. “Miss Jessie Ironheart.”
Bewildered or not, it felt like I should be standing for this, whatever this was.
“Hi.” I grimaced as I stretched, stiff from sitting still for so long. “What’s up?”
“Basajaunak, as a whole, are family-oriented creatures. We typically stick with our own. If something happens to one of us, vengeance can be claimed by all of us, and often is.”
I hoped I was keeping my frown of uncertainty off my face. The basajaun had strange rules I usually only half understood, and when you slighted him, he went crazy. I sincerely hoped this wasn’t his way of telling me that I’d unintentionally wronged him and his entire family was about to hunt me down. That would not be a good time.
“I love my family, of course,” he continued. I nodded. “But they can be stifling. I am what’s known as the black cow of the family.”
“Black sheep, I think you mean—”
“I wanted my independence and to see more of the world. I wanted to choose my own mountain and enforce my own rules. That is not usually done by one so young as me.”