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Authors: Deborah Blake

BOOK: Wickedly Dangerous
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Liam was dumbfounded. “Here? You're staying here?”

“Where else am I going to find pie this good? Besides, I've grown quite fond of this town, and there are some good people here. If I'm going to settle down somewhere while Babs is growing up, I can't think of a better place to do it.”

Liam was still trying to wrap his mind around the concept. “So you're going to raise her in the Airstream?”

“No. It's really too small for a growing child. Besides, I'd kind of like to have a regular refrigerator for a while,” Baba said with an infinitesimal twitch. “I bought a house out on the South River Road, the old yellow farmhouse with the gray shutters and the red metal roof.”

“I know that one,” he said. “It's a great house, but people say it's haunted. It's been empty for years.”

Baba laughed. “I'm not worried about a few ghosts. I get along fine with the dead. The house is perfect; not too far from the town and school, but quiet and private enough that no one will notice if things get a little strange from time to time. I'll just park the Airstream out back, so it is handy on the occasions when I have to hit the road to deal with something, and it will still be close enough to keep an eye on the doorway to the Otherworld.”

“Oh,” Liam said. “Will you take Babs out with you when you travel?”

“Sometimes; she has to learn about being a Baba. Although I just hope I'll do a better job of teaching her to be a human being than my Baba did with me.” She sighed.

“You're a terrific human being,” Liam protested.

“Oh please, even Alexei says I have the social skills of a cranky mountain lion, and he's been known to start bar fights just because someone didn't pass the peanuts fast enough. I'm not sure I'm a great role model for a little girl.” She twisted one strand of inky black hair between slender fingers, as close to nervous as Liam had ever seen her. Apparently trying to raise a child was a lot more intimidating than facing off with monsters or trying to save the world.

“You're smart and tough and dedicated to helping those who need you; she couldn't ask for better,” he said. Baba's checks turned slightly pink. “Of course, you're also odd, mysterious, and infuriating . . . but that part actually grows on a person after a while.”

“I'm glad you think so, because I was wondering if you might be willing to help out with little Babs; you know, teach her some of the things about being Human that I never really got the hang of. Maybe show her which movies to watch. Take care of her when I had to leave town.”

“You want me to babysit?”

“Actually, I was thinking that the house on South River Road was pretty big for just the two of us and one large dog who is sometimes a small dragon. I was wondering if maybe you were tired of living in an old house filled with bad memories, and might be interested in making some new, better ones with us. Maybe help me learn to be a better Human too.”

There was a moment of silence as what she'd said sank in. “Barbara Yager—are you proposing to me?”

Her high cheekbones turned even pinker and she looked down at the table, not meeting his eyes. “Yes. Yes, I am. I realize it is a crazy idea, but what do you say?”

There was silence again, and Baba started to get up, fumbling with her chair.

Until Liam said, “Not as crazy as it would be to try to live without you. I haven't been able to take a deep breath since I got to that meadow and found the Airstream gone. I missed you every minute of every day since then. In fact, it was so hard being without you, I went out and bought this, in case by some miracle you actually came back.”

He pulled out a black box, and opened it up to show her a ring—a round circle in the shape of a golden dragon, with a sparkling diamond held in its mouth.

A huge grin spread over Baba's face. “You got that for me?” She slid back into her seat as though her legs had forgotten how to hold her upright.

“Well, it would look pretty funny on Chudo-Yudo,” Liam said. He slipped it onto her finger and leaned across the table to kiss her deeply, barely noticing the thunderous applause from everyone in the diner.

E
PILOGUE

My Dearest Barbara,

I hope this finds you well. Thank you for sending me the picture from your wedding. You all look so happy and attractive (especially that sheriff of yours . . . I don't suppose he has a brother). Your dress was lovely, although I'm not sure about the choice of the spiked leather boots to go with it.

I'm sorry I wasn't able to attend as planned, but I seem to have a small problem brewing out here by the coastal waters. Okay, maybe not so small; it's a little too soon to tell. I called in the Riders for help, but only Sun and Knight showed up. Do you by any chance know where Day is? He appears to have gone missing.

I'm sure it is nothing.

Congratulations again on your new life.

Much affection,

Your sister Baba,

Beka

TURN THE PAGE FOR A SNEAK PEEK AT THE NEXT BABA YAGA NOVEL

W
ICKEDLY WONDERFUL

COMING IN DECEMBER 2014 FROM BERKLEY SENSATION!

 

MARCUS DERMOTT WATCHED
the sunrise from the windswept deck of his father's fishing boat and wondered if the sea had changed, or if it was him. When he was a boy, growing up on this very boat, the sight of the water being painted with light could make his heart sing, no matter how troubled the rest of his life was. But all he felt now was numb. Numb, and a little bit cranky. The ocean might be beautiful, but it was the last place he wanted to be.

He'd planned to spend his life in the Marines, far away from the restless sea and the memories that came with it. He'd sure as hell never planned to come back to this damned boat. Or to his father.
Especially
to his father. But as the Master Sergeant who'd trained him liked to say, “Life is what happens while you are making other plans.”

Turns out that twelve years in the Corps was all he had in him. Three tours in Afghanistan had sucked him as dry as the desert sands, and as much as he missed the action, and the close bond with the other men in his unit, his head just wasn't in the game anymore. He'd been around long enough to know that if you didn't get out when that happened, you were dangerous to yourself and to everyone around you.

So he'd finished out his time, packed his kit bag, and headed home. One of the guys who'd gotten out a year before him had invited Marcus to come help out with the extreme adventure vacation company he'd started, and that seemed like as good an idea as any in the post-exit blur Marcus had been in. But life had had other plans there too, apparently.

“Are you going to stand there daydreaming all day, boy?” a low-pitched voice snarled in his ear. Even the musical Irish lilt couldn't make his father sound like anything other than a bear with a sore paw. “We finally start catchin' some fish after pullin' up empty nets day after day, and you can't bestir yourself to lend a hand? I thought you came back here to help me, not to stare at the sea like you've never seen it before. It's the same ocean it always was—waves and salt and finally, dammit, some fish. So move your ass and check the lines, will ya?”

Marcus sighed. He and his father had never gotten along, and twelve years apart hadn't helped that in the least. When he got the call telling him his father had cancer, Marcus had hoped that maybe if he went home to help, they could move past their differences. But the past had its barbs in them too deep, and the present was as cold and gray as the ocean. He didn't see either one of those things changing any time soon.

*   *   *

THE RED-GOLD GLOW
of the rising sun turned the sea into a fire of molten lava that belied the cold Pacific waters of Monterey Bay. Beka Yancy didn't mind, though; her wetsuit kept her warm, and it was worth braving the morning chill to have the waves mostly to herself.

Soon enough there would be plenty of people around, but for now, she reveled in her solitary enjoyment of the frothy white lace overlaying blue-green depths, accompanied only by the sound of the wind and the hooting laughter of a nearby pod of dolphins. She gave a chortling greeting in dolphin-speak as she went by.

Beka paddled her surfboard out until the pull of the ocean overruled the calm of the shore, feeling herself settle into that peaceful space she only found when there was endless water below her and infinite sky above. On land, there were human beings and all their attendant noise and commotion; here, there was only the challenge that came from pitting herself against the crushing power of the rolling waves.

The fresh scent of the sea filled her nostrils and a light breeze tugged playfully on a strand of her long blond hair as she steered in the direction of a promising incoming swell. But before she could angle herself toward it, her board jerked underneath her as if it had suddenly come to life, and she had to grab on tightly with both hands as it accelerated through the water at impossible speeds, cutting through the whitecaps as if they weren't even there.

What the hell?
Beka held on tighter, ducking her head against the biting teeth of the icy spray that washed over her. Through squinted eyes, she could barely make out what looked like a pale green hand grasping the end of her surfboard, gossamer webbing pressed against the bright red surface of the board. A powerful tail with iridescent feathery ends undulated just beneath the water, only occasionally breaking through the surface as it stroked forcefully through the ocean.

Mermaid!
Beka thought to herself. But the identification of her mysterious hijacker raised more questions than it solved. She doubted the water creature meant her any harm; they normally stayed far away from human civilization, preferring to hide in their own territory concealed by ancient magic within a two-mile-deep underwater trench. And Beka was friendly with most of the local non-Human residents, on the rare occasions that she saw them.

Still, she was glad of the small knife she wore in a waterproof sheath strapped to her calf, carefully disguised from sight with a tiny glamour that kept the other surfers from noticing it. Not that she really expected to need it, as she had other defenses much more powerful than cold steel, but she'd discovered long ago that it paid to be prepared for the unexpected. It came with the territory, when you were a Baba Yaga.

Most people had never heard of Baba Yaga. Those who recognized the name were usually only familiar with the legendary witch from Russian fairy tales; a curved-chin, beaky-nosed crone with iron teeth who lived in a hut that ran around the forest on giant chicken legs, flew through the air in an enchanted mortar and pestle, and ate small children when they misbehaved.

Some of that had even been true, once upon a time. Certainly, the Baba Yagas were powerful witches, gifted with the ability to manipulate the elemental forces of nature. Even the tales about the huts and the odd form of transportation had been true, back when the Babas had been found only in Russia and its Slavic neighbors. Things were done a little differently these days, though.

Beka might have been the youngest and most inexperienced of the three Babas who lived in the United States, but she was still more than a match for a single mermaid. So it was with more curiosity than trepidation that she sat up straight on her board when they finally reached their destination.

A swift glance around showed her that the mermaid had brought her quite some distance from the shore, only barely visible as an ochre-colored smudge on the horizon behind her. Two or three miles out at least then, a guess reinforced by the sight of a commercial fishing boat moving ponderously through the steely blue sea, dragging its gnarly mesh of nets behind it like a stout wooden bride with a too-long train. Red and blue buoys bobbed on the surface, giving the nets a festive look. Up on the bow of the boat, two men argued about something she was too far away to overhear; luckily, they were looking at each other, and not at her.

Beka jumped as the mermaid surfaced without a sound; her auburn hair turned almost black by the wetness that slicked it back from her face, green eyes bright with fear as she started speaking almost before her lips reached the open air. The now-risen sun glittered off shimmering scales and glinted on sharply pointed teeth.

“Baba Yaga, you have to help me!” The merwoman's head swiveled anxiously between the boat and Beka. Beka was about to reply; something about it being good manners to ask first before dragging someone out into the middle of the ocean, when a large cerulean tear rolled down the woman's sharp cheekbone and she added, “My baby—my baby is caught in the net!”

Damn it to Dazhdbog,
Beka thought. That was bad. Not just for the poor defenseless mer baby, who was much too young to be able to change shape or breathe outside of its natural watery environment. But also for the water peoples—the mer and the selkies—who had successfully hidden their existence from humans since the rest of the paranormal races had retreated to live in the Otherworld; this situation could be catastrophic for that closely held secret.

And since the Baba Yagas, while acting independently, ultimately reported to the powerful and volatile High Queen of the Otherworld . . . a failure on Beka's part could be catastrophic to her, as well. The queen had once turned a half dozen handmaidens into swans during a fit of pique; Beka had no desire to discover if she looked good in feathers.

“What was your baby doing out here in the open waters?” Beka hissed, trying not to panic. It wasn't that she wasn't sympathetic, but she'd been trying her best to avoid any major issues since her mentor Brenna, the Baba Yaga who'd raised and taught her, had retired a few years ago and left her to handle things on her own. After years of being told by the elder Baba that she wasn't “quite ready yet,” a tiny inner voice seemed to have taken up residence inside Beka's head, constantly whispering the same thing.

“Why aren't you in the trench with the rest of your people?” Beka slid into the cold water, barely noticing the chill as she tried to figure out how she was going to rescue the merbaby without being seen by the men on—she peered up at the clean white side of the boat—the
Wily Serpent
.

The sea creature tightened her grip on Beka's surfboard, gazing at the nets with terror in her wide-set eyes. “Didn't you know?” Her head bobbed up and down with the waves as she waved her long elegant tail in agitation. “There is a problem with our home; all the life there is being poisoned by something our healers have been unable to detect. The plants, the fish, even some of the people have become sickened by it. All the mer and selkies must move to a new place closer to land to escape the contamination, and my little one got away from me in the confusion.”

She let go of the board to grasp Beka's arm. “Please, Baba Yaga, I know I should have watched him more closely, but please don't let him die.”

Not a chance
, Beka thought grimly. Then gritted her teeth as she realized the boat had stopped its lazy forward motion and come to a halt. The mechanical screech of a winch disturbed the quiet sea air as the nets slowly started being drawn in toward the boat's hull. Pain accompanied the sound as the merwoman realized what was happening and unconsciously tightened her grasp, webbed fingers turning into claws.

“Oh, no,” she said, seaweed-tinted tears flowing faster now. “It's too late.”

Beka shook her head. “Not yet, it isn't,” she said, and set off swimming with strong purposeful strokes toward the slowly rising mesh of ropes. “Stay here,” she ordered, tossing the words over her shoulder. Then she swam as if a life depended on it.

As she drew closer to the boat, she could see that it wasn't as pristine as she'd thought; a blue-black crust of barnacles marred the deep green bottom half where it met the water, and the white paint on top was dull and peeling. For all that, though, the boat itself seemed solid and well constructed—as, alas, did the net that was slowly but relentlessly being pulled in toward its home.

Beka took a deep breath and dove under the water. Thankfully, since she spent so much time in the ocean, she had long ago done magical work that enabled her to keep her eyes open even without protective goggles. Through the gaps between the ropes, she could see the merbaby clearly, swimming in desperate circles round and round the ever-shrinking space. His tiny pale green face was splotched with crying, although any sound he made was lost in the metallic grinding of the winch as it pulled the purse seine in tighter and tighter. As he spotted her, he shot over to her side of the net, making soft eeping noises like a distressed dolphin.

Beka swam up to the choppy surface to gulp another breath, then down again; the trip was noticeably shorter on the way back and she knew she was running out of time. It was tempting to use magic to blast through the net, but she was afraid that she might accidentally hurt the child, and magic often didn't work well underwater, so in the end, she simply pulled out her knife and sawed away frantically at the tough fibers.

Twice more she had to dart above to take a breath, but after the last time, her efforts paid off; she had a ragged hole not much more than two feet long, but large enough for the small merbaby to exit. The fish within were already bolting toward freedom, brushing her with their tickling fins as they flashed past.

She gestured for the merbaby to come closer, only to realize that while she had been fighting with the robustly woven strands, the child's tail had become entangled in a section of net, and he was trapped, unable to get loose from the seine's unrelenting grasp.

Cursing soundlessly, Beka raced to get one more deep lungful of air, then threw herself toward the hole and eeled her way through the impossibly small opening. Frantically, she fought the sinuously twining ropes until the little one was free, and she could shove him through to the other side. Only to find herself trapped in the ever-shrinking net and rapidly running out of time and oxygen.

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