Font Size:  

The retrieval spell coiled around his wrist, jerked, and dropped the bag neatly back into her arms. But then she shrieked as he swooped in swiftly, made a grab. He twisted and she ended up in his arms, in the air, her body swinging over his. Losing her grip on the paper sack, she grabbed at his shoulders. In her worry about falling, she'd abandoned worry about her broken finger, but he hadn't. Before she could make the mistake of seizing at him with both hands, he'd completed the rotation, landing her on her feet, holding her with one arm around the waist, the bag dropping into his open hand on the other side of his body.

"No honor among thieves or angels," she snorted, though a little breathlessly.

David grinned down at her, handed back the bag. "You'd probably refuse to charm them anyway."

"I'd turn them into great big bugs to crawl around inside you. Make you squirm when talking to Jonah."

"He can make me squirm all on his own." David chuckled. "Sometimes he makes me feel like a kid caught smoking in the school bathroom. His daughter's not going to be able to get away with anything."

"He does do the intimidation thing well. Even better than Neptune." She dropped her voice several octaves. "I will vanquish you, pathetic mortal."

David let out a startled snort. "That came from Anna."

Mina shrugged. "I may not have a sense of humor, but I can borrow from others."

"Speaking of acting like a kid..." He stopped her with a touch on her arm, cocked a hip, a thumb sliding into his belt as he looked down into her face. A bracing pose, as if the words were difficult for him. "I should have handled all that better, at the diner. I'm sure I scared you. You're supposed to be able to depend on me. I'm sorry."

She shook her head. "We can't fathom the purpose of evil when it strikes those we love. Anna said that once as well. I assume it applies to everyone, even creatures as enlightened as angels."

"That sounded like your usual sarcasm. I'm feeling better already. Is that your way of trying to coax me out of a dark mood?"

"I would never do something that compassionate."

"True." David pursed his lips. "You might do it so you don't have to listen to me whine and moan about my past anymore."

"Perhaps you're starting to understand me after all," she said lightly.

He'd effectively pushed them away from the subject, but if the Schism had raised it, whether he liked it or not, they would be visiting it again. She'd let the magic take care of that. For now, she had other issues. As if a curtain had lifted from the landscape, the house lay before them, no more than several hundred yards ahead.

THE light impression of a dirt road was beneath their feet, the house driveway intersecting it. As they walked up the driveway, she examined the wood-and-stone two-story house that had been crafted by the master carpenter and his wife. There was a wooden split rail fence around it, and she saw the protection runes carved there, even as she felt the first wave of its specific energy reach out and assess her threat.

It almost made her stop, step back. But this was the moment of truth, and she wasn't going to cower from it. Squaring her shoulders, she moved forward. One careful step, then another.

David stayed close and watchful. Knowing David, he'd leap to her defense even before she had the chance to do it herself. It didn't anger her as it would have done less than forty-eight hours ago. Now it just made her feel an exasperation with him, as well as a reassurance she couldn't deny.

The house was simple. Beautiful. Built with love and yet careful alignment with the energies of the land. She suspected "Sam the Shaman" had been part of the design phase. Its position and construction made sure that no approach would go unnoticed, sitting just inside the scope of that magical fault line that didn't tolerate Dark Ones.

She opened the latch on the gate, pushed it inward and walked onto the grounds.

Well, apparently, it only rejected full-blooded ones. Unless it had a different line for half-breeds, waiting to blast them farther in the perimeter. Power flooded into her body, enhancing her own as it hummed throughout her system. No good or evil to it, just pure energy that vibrated beneath her fingers.

"There are fresh flowers on the front porch," she noted, letting out the breath she hadn't realized she'd been holding. And David noticed, his hand pressing briefly into the small of her back, a gesture that felt far too welcome. Like the house itself.

"Anna probably insisted Jonah flash her over and let her add some homey touches before we got here. Or made him do it. You know she's like that."

"Yes." Mina kept her fingers away from the flowers as she passed, knowing the dew-kissed roses would wilt beneath her touch faster than they would in the desert heat.

The solid, wide oak door had an archway over it with the carved words "Be at Rest Here." For some reason, the antithesis flashed through her mind. Dante's Inferno: "Abandon Hope, All Ye Who Enter Here." Dante didn't know that his imaginings of Hell had come straight from the Dark Ones, but she did. She'd recognized it the first time she'd read the book, many years after her first dream of the Dark Ones' world. If men knew how many of their nightmares were simply windows into the world of the Dark Ones, trying to grasp at them through their dreams...

David glanced at his witch. She had gone very quiet as she scrutinized everything about her closely. When he pushed the front door open, she stepped in and he followed, flanking her, trying to gauge her mood. What she might need.

Mina felt his regard, but she focused on the interior. The furnishings of the house were all hand carved. Open kitchen, living area, lots of windows to look out over the flat ranges of desert. The rock formations rose as a backdrop, the sun turning everything brilliant reds and oranges that she knew would likely shift to purple and violet as the day waned. A rainbow offered each day to whoever sat in here and watched the canvas paint and repaint itself, shadows from the clouds always adding something different to the landscape.

There was a tire swing out back, hooked up to a lone leafless tree with spreading branches. Surely a Schism oddity, for it looked like a naked oak, which she couldn't imagine would survive this far away from a water source, beneath a baking sun.

She also saw an intriguingly ordered area comprised of rocks and sand, with patterns in the sand that seemed etched by the rakes propped at the cornerstones, four very large stones with the tops smoothed for sitting and perusing the pattern.

"A Japanese rock garden," David supplied, at her curious glance toward him.

Nodding, she turned from the view and toward an open staircase curving up to the second level. As she followed it, she studied the framed photographs on the wall along it. Mostly desert scenes, but personal, intriguing. Probably picked out by Anna, since she'd always been fascinated by the human ability to capture a moment of time on film, the way Mina admitted being fascinated by the way a writer could capture the same thing on paper. Or perhaps they'd been left by the carpenter and his wife, a shared gift for the next occupants.

Upstairs, she found a large bed in an inviting master bedroom. A thick quilt for the nighttime desert chill, with numerous pillows stacked at the headboard. A scattering of flower petals over the coverlet. The bed was a sanctuary unto itself, so wide and long that Anna apparently had not been exaggerating when she said Matt, the carpenter, was as impressive in size as Jonah. Mina checked the other rooms on the second level and discovered that this was the only one of the upstairs bedrooms prepared for sleeping.

"She probably remembered angels don't necessarily have to sleep," David said casually. Mina shot him a narrow glance, detected amusement there that she did not share.

"I think the only one making assumptions is Anna," she retorted. "She doesn't understand. She never has."

"Or maybe"-David's hands came to rest on her tense shoulders, a thumb making a passing caress along the base of her throat as he stood behind her-"she does understand. She does these things as a way of telling you she'd change it for you, if she could."

Mina shrugged that off, moving away from him

as well. "No sense in that. It is what it is. And why does she assume I'd want any changes to my life?" She shot him a glance. "I'm left alone, with the recent exception of my popularity with overprotective angels. I've dedicated my life to study, so that I've surpassed my ancestors with respect to magic and knowledge of the world around me. I intend to keep building on that."

"And do what with it?"

"Whatever I wish," she snapped.

"Okay." He continued as if the air wasn't crackling with tension around her. "There's an underground spring that runs beneath the house. A hot spring. Jonah said the cellar leads to it. It's a good place for a swim or bath. There's also a cistern. Electrical power is fueled by the Schism's energy, so he said it can be a little unpredictable, but the point is that the house is self-sufficient. There's a general store about ten miles down the road, and an old pickup truck in the garage. I can show you how to drive it. Way out here, I don't think you'll have to worry about a license."

She knew he'd been trying to read her face since she stepped into the perimeter of the property, and she'd purposefully remained dispassionate. Because with every step, the meshing of the energy with her own, the stretch of the world out on either side, the heat of the desert, the blue of the sky... It was perfect. It was everything she could want or need. And the idea of learning to drive a vehicle was astounding enough to almost make her forget herself and insist he show her now. But she kept her voice even, with enormous effort. The expression "too good to be true" had come into being for a reason, she reminded herself.

Source: www.allfreenovel.com
Articles you may like