Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
admit.
Is he so sure of his power
?
She saw a pattern to his possession of Erik’s body. Pain, then sleep for
Erik. But it had been less than a day. There could be other indicators of his
taking control.
“What is it you hope to gain, Victor? You can’t control Erik forever.”
Celeste spoke with a conviction she hoped was true.
Victor strode to the mirror and rubbed his jaw. “It won’t need to be
forever, just long enough to banish his essence permanently. Then I will gain
my rightful place.”
His place
?
“To what end?”
“Why complete control, witch, what else is there?” Victor turned to
face her, placing himself squarely between Celeste and the doorway. “You
think this is some child’s game or that you are the ultimate prize? Tempting
as you are, Celeste, you are simply a means to an end. A means I will enjoy
on my journey.”
“You will never have me, Victor . . . nor will Erik and I stand by and
allow you to control anything in this dimension.” Celeste continued. “The
lengths we will go to suppress you should be more than clear in your
memory.”
Victor’s eyes narrowed. “Yes, but then so should my lengths be clear to
you. The two of you only bound me by finding an evocation by chance in
the Grimoire. But, how do you explain Erik living the same number of lives
that you have . . . or my being here again? You found one piece of black
magic, but I have more. Whose skull do you think you carried and caressed
daily these two hundred plus years?”
Nausea rolled in Celeste’s core. It wasn’t possible. They’d bound him,
cast him into darkness with Erik’s sacrifice and spilled life’s blood.
The night they’d unwittingly played into Victor’s hands, his pursuit of
ultimate evil was unknown to them. As Erik’s twin, also born with magic,
they had believed his intent to study with the brotherhood was based on
honor, as was theirs. Erik and Celeste had frantically worked to undo what
they’d done. With their combined powers and the untested spells of the
Grimoire, they’d helped Victor unlock the portal into black magic.
Immediately, they tried to undo their mistake. Almost as one mind, they’d
chanced upon the evocation in the book. Read the same words
together—the same instant.
Death of one loved by the purest of hearts, committed by the purest of hearts, is the only
way to ensure evil withdraws into its prison.
As Celeste reached for the knife to kill herself as the offering, hoping
her love would be considered pure enough, Erik had grabbed her hands and
turned the knife toward himself. She’d fought, but his strength and
determination were stronger. With his hands on hers, he’d buried the knife
in his own flesh. To bind Victor.
Please, no
.
All this time she’d believed Erik dead, believed his sacrifice had rid
them of Victor and the black magic he possessed. But, in reality, they’d only
bound Victor to Erik. They’d shared a body all these years, but Erik had no
memory of why. No wonder he thought himself mad.
“Why make me believe he died?” Celeste worked to put the pieces
together. “What about the skull?”
“All you did was delay the inevitable, Celeste. Erik didn’t die that night.
Your punishment was to believe he had and to spend centuries trying to
‘resurrect’ him. His was to have no memory of you or what had
transpired—I used dark magic to imprison his memories—to share his
earthly shell with me until you made me an offer I couldn’t refuse. That was
the important piece, Celeste. The pure heart who made Erik’s sacrifice
possible, who ‘bound’ me to him . . . had to also be the one to offer a
solution. By offering yourself.” Victor walked purposefully toward her.
Celeste held her ground having heard the crunch of tires on the front
drive. Rose. She couldn’t let her walk into this unknowing.
“Explain the skull, Victor. How did you manage that deception?”
“The skull was dug up in some cemetery while I was in control of ‘our’
body. I sent it to you to solidify your belief in Erik’s death. To remind you of
your guilt. You, Celeste, carried and cared for a stranger’s skull all of these
years.” Victor stopped less than a foot from her. “When you found the right
combination yesterday, spoke the right words of offering and exchange,
you
gave me the key I needed to begin my complete absorption of this body. The
ability to meld it to my essence.”
Don’t come in here, Rose
.
“But why Erik and I? What is it we have that you need so desperately?”
Victor reached out and stroked her hair before she could pull back.
“I’m far from an idiot, Celeste. You will not trick me into a boastfulness that
could jeopardize what I’ve waited so long to achieve. Suffice it to say that
you and Erik have something in common. Something I
will
possess.”
Celeste pulled away from his hand, thoughts of ways to supplicate him
gone with the revulsion his touch evoked. “There is a reason you have been
unable to gain this before now, a missing link in your pursuit. We will find it
and stop you again, Victor.”
No matter the cost
.
As Celeste walked to the door wearing a semblance of bravado she was
far from feeling, the echo of Victor’s laughter followed her. Slamming the
door only offered a brief respite, as the malicious sound clung to her like the
stench of decay as she went in search of Rose.
Somehow they would find a way to cut the heart from this evil. Or die
trying.
Again.
And again.
CELESTE FOUND ROSE busy in the kitchen, half empty grocery bags
strewn about the countertops.
“You should have waited for me to help you carry these inside.”
“I was just going to come find you to check that all was okay.” Rose
waved her off. “No worries, Brogan met me at the garage and carried most
of them. He has gone back out onto the grounds to make certain no damage
was done to trees that might threaten the power lines when this new storm
hits.”
The disturbing exchange with Victor must have been more visible on
her face than Celeste thought, because Rose stopped in the middle of
emptying a bag after glancing toward Celeste.
“What’s happened?”
“How is it you are the only one I am unable to keep my thoughts and
feelings from, Rose?” Celeste laughed, a small sound, but it helped to dispel
some of the darkness time with Victor left inside her. “Victor returned.
We . . . talked. Rose, I was so wrong. So misled.”
Rose turned the flame under the kettle up and motioned to the seats
alongside the tall counter. “What did the evil one say?”
“So much, but so little.” Celeste again felt the horror at his taunt about
the skull. “He told me that the skull . . . the skull is not Erik’s. It’s a
stranger’s. All these years, I have touched and protected it.”
A small cry escaped Rose. “You could not have known . . . we could
not have known.”
“By offering myself in the ceremony, it is my fault he is able to hurt
Erik. He wants to use the body himself. What does that mean for Erik’s
essence? How do I fight this without hurting him again? Without losing him
again?” Celeste shook her head. “I can’t let it happen. Help me, Rose, you’ve
always known how to direct me, to help me see what was unseen. What am
I missing?”
“There has been a price for that guidance, child, a price willingly paid.”
“A price? I don’t understand.” Celeste stared at the woman who’d been
so loyal, who’d nursed her soul through the darkest times. Anytime she’d
questioned why, Rose had been vague, never giving a solid answer.
Rose patted her hand. “When the time is right, the need great enough,
then you will know.”
Standing, she began the calming ritual of preparing tea. Celeste wanted
to ask, to push, but knew from centuries of experience that Rose would
share only when she was ready.
Until Rose deemed the time right, Celeste would trust that the woman
wanted the best for her.
And for Erik.
In the middle of drinking her cup of tea, Celeste looked up through the
rising tendrils of steam and caught sight of Victor/Erik through the window
above the sink. Brogan stood with the other man beneath a broad, bare oak,
deep in conversation, motioning about him at the grounds.
“Rose, I’ll be outside. Brogan is with him.” The ‘him’ referred to was
obvious to both women.
“Go, I’m fine.” Rose waved her off.
Hurrying, trying not to appear or feel alarmed, Celeste pulled a jacket
on as she joined the men. Brogan nodded to acknowledge her presence, and
the other man met her gaze squarely.
Erik
.
He was back, sooner than the last time. How?
“I wanted to thank Brogan for finding me in the storm yesterday. He’s
said a car is a couple of miles up the road twisted around an oak about the
size of this one.” Erik pointed toward the massive oak they all stood
beneath. “The registration in the glove box proves the car is mine. Seems I
had a narrow escape.”
“Aye, from the looks of the car, you are lucky to be breathing, much
less walking about,” Brogan said. “I let the emergency services know the
driver was okay. They’ll tow it into town.
Celeste wanted to check Erik again for injuries after hearing the
condition of the car he’d been driving, but knew he wouldn’t appreciate it.
“Thank you, Brogan. Mr. Cahan will be staying with us for a bit at Montbleu
while he secures new transportation.”
Erik lifted an eyebrow, seemingly caught off guard by her words.
Is the man daft to believe I’d let him out of my sight after trying to get him back for
over two hundred years
?
“I need to get back to clearing the storm debris. Let me know if you’ll
be needing anything else, miss.” Brogan tipped his hat and wandered back to
his truck. It started with a low grumble before being driven toward the back
of the estate.
Moments of silence stood between Erik and Celeste, but it didn’t feel
awkward. Celeste felt no need to rush into conversation to fill the emptiness
with words.
This was the way it had been in their first lifetime. No need to speak,
but saying so much with their silence.
Milky sunlight filtered through the many branches above them as a
companionable wind stirred the last clinging leaves. One then another fell
with a faint rustle.
“I can’t remember the last time I noticed the wind.” Erik spoke softly,
“Unless it was to wonder if it would affect an airstrike or other artillery. I
forgot it could be this way.”
“It is easy to overlook the ordinary if we aren’t careful.”
Celeste wanted to know about where he’d been, how he’d chosen the
path of warrior after magic. She motioned toward the long drive.
“Walk with me.” She ended the sentence as a question, rather than a
demand. Hopeful. Cautiously hopeful. They still had much to face.
Erik offered his arm. Celeste hesitated only a fraction of a second
before accepting it. This was Erik, not Victor. A warrior, a mighty wizard
and always the gentleman. Some things never changed.
For several minutes they walked, each lost in their own thoughts.
Erik cleared his throat. “You mentioned we were here before. When?
How did you manage to keep this place—Montbleu?”
Safe questions. Ones easily answered to fill the gap in time since they’d
known each other. It was a start.
“Sebastian, the priest—our teacher—willed it to me. After that first
lifetime when we were here at the same time, I made sure to know the laws
concerning inheritance in order to make sure I retained it. I willed it to
myself each lifetime . . . or rather, a descendent of the original Celeste
Soraya. No one questioned the passing of a family name along with
Montbleu.”
Erik listened intently, head angled toward her to let Celeste know her
words and answers were important.
“How about you? How did you transition from wizard to warrior?”
Erik looked away for a moment before answering. He stopped walking,
and she stopped with him. She left her hand on his arm, unwilling to
surrender the contact.
“In my first lifetime, there is no memory before I woke in a
monastery . . . dying. A knife wound. The infection was the worst part,
leaving me with a brain fever and barely alive for weeks. Months. The
monks who cared for me didn’t know who’d brought me to their doorstep.”
Erik looked at her. “Now I imagine it was you.”
Her hand dropped from his arm at the horror of what he had gone
through.
“No, Erik. If I’d known you lived, I would have cared for you myself.
But I woke from unconsciousness believing I’d killed you, there was no
reason to believe otherwise.” Celeste shook her head. “What malicious evil