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Authors: Maggie Shayne

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He drew a breath, somehow got to his feet, and holding her cradled as carefully as if she were made of ice crystal, he drew her with him as he made his way to shore. He wouldn’t leave her to the sea. He couldn’t. Something was niggling at him through his anguish. A faint, desperate hope that wouldn’t leave him alone. He didn’t want to let the hope form fully, for fear ’twould only destroy him if it turned out to be a false one. But as he stepped out of the waves and carried her onto the shore, he couldn’t suppress it any longer.

He laid her down, in the lush green grass, in a spot dotted with tiny blue forget-me-nots. And then he sat beside her, leaned over her, and gently spread her hair to dry in the grasses. “That first time I held you, lass, that first time I wept for you… you were nay dead then. You survived that noose. You told me you were immortal. You told me you couldna die unless the bastard took your heart.” He closed his eyes, recalling the thrust of Nathanial’s blade, but he’d been so far away. He couldn’t tell…

“Tell me that bastard didna do that.”

Gently he touched the front of her torn, bloodstained blouse. Even the cool kiss of the ocean hadn’t washed those stains away. Nothing would, and he hoped nothing would wash them from Nathanial’s hands, either.

His heart in his throat, he prayed in silence.
Please… please, dinna let it be…

Opening her blouse, he stared down at her chest. Pale, beaded with droplets of seawater, but unmaimed. There was no gaping hole, no wound near her heart.

He spread the blouse further and saw the wound she
had
suffered, the deep cut of Nathanial’s blade, high in her belly. But even as he looked, that wound began to heal. Its edges puckered and pulled in on themselves as if magnetized. One side met the other, pressed like a kiss, and seemed to meld before his eyes.

Stunned, he drew his gaze upward, focused on her face, afraid to believe, afraid to hope…

“Raven?”

And then she went rigid, back arching off the ground, hands clenching fistfuls of grass at her sides, heels pressing the earth. Her neck arched as well, chin pointing skyward, and she sucked in a harsh, greedy breath. It made him think of electrocution, that brief seizure. Her eyes went wide, too wide, for just an instant. And then her body relaxed again, and she lay limp on the ground, blinking slowly, staring at him from unfocused eyes.

“Raven,” he whispered. “Raven, Raven, Raven.” He slipped his arms around her, beneath her, lifting her gently against him, holding her close, but not close enough. It would never be close enough. She hugged his neck, so pliable in his arms, melting there. His hands burying themselves in her hair, he drew her head back slightly, and then he pressed his lips to hers, kissing her more deeply, more urgently than he had in this lifetime. Kissing her the way he had before, in that other time, when he’d known what she was to him. Because he knew it now. He finally knew it now.

She blinked in confusion when he lifted his head away. Her slender, perfect fingers touched his cheeks, touched the tears there as she frowned. He couldn’t speak, couldn’t put the overwhelming things he was feeling into words. Not yet, not yet. He felt as if he’d been lost… wandering and lost, and searching… and now he’d found her. He’d found himself. He’d come home.

He bent and kissed her again, and this time he didn’t stop. His hands pushed her blouse away, caressed her breasts, felt them warming, felt her entire body warming to his touch. He kissed her neck, her shoulders, her belly, where that wound had been. He kissed the place where her heart beat in her chest and willed that it would always remain there, strong and alive and full of love for him. He kissed her hips as he undressed her. Her thighs. Her center, where he lingered. How he loved her.
How he’d always loved her.

She whispered his name with her heart in her breath and her hands in his hair, and he tasted more of her, wanted to devour her, make her truly a part of him, take her inside him somehow and keep her there, cherished and safe. Always safe.

When she cried out, he moved up over her body once more. He ran his hands over her flesh. Living and warm. Over limbs, alive and responsive now, no longer limp and broken. Did she know what she was to him? Could she know? My God, was it even possible that he was that much to her, as well?

Yes. It shone from her eyes and danced on the tiny, tremulous smile on her lips as she opened to him, held him, drew him down, took him inside her. She held his gaze as he moved, and she moved with him. Rocked him, loved him. He stared right into her eyes, into her soul, it seemed, as he made love to her. And the pounding of her heart and the pounding of his own blended with the pounding of the waves against the shore until it was all one. All one… and he felt as if he and she were one. A single soul that had been split for a time, united again at long last. She never blinked, nor did he. And when her lips parted and her breaths came in short little gasps, and he rode her faster and harder and deeper, their gazes remained locked. He felt their souls connect and touch, through their eyes.

She cried out his name, those black eyes widening. He felt the pressure build inside him, and then the explosion as he spilled into her, his entire body quivering with the force of his release. And in that moment, he saw himself in her eyes. As if he truly
had
merged with her, as if his soul really did live inside her.

And only then did those eyes fall closed.

He relaxed atop her, sliding slightly to the side, to ease the burden of his weight. “I have so much to tell you,” he whispered.

She nodded. Kissed his head. “And I you. I’d been thinking, Duncan, that our chance had passed. That we could never be as we were before.” Her hand stroked his hair. “But I know now that I can’t go on without you, Duncan. So whatever you can give me, it will be enough. I’ll
make
it be enough.”

He lifted his head, stared down into her eyes. “You dinna ken what this was, do you, lass?”

She smiled slightly. “You sound like the Highland lad you were so long ago. Are you lapsing into a brogue you don’t even recall, Duncan?”

“Am I? I dinna care if I am. It doesna matter. Nothing does right now, except…” He licked his lips, swallowed hard. “When I saw you on the cliffs… when I saw you fall—”

She sat up straight, eyes flying wide. “Nathanial! The bastard nearly had me! Duncan, we have to…” She paused, looking past him. “Oh, no,” she whispered, and her face went pale.

“What is it?”

She snatched her clothes, wet and tattered, throwing them on haphazardly. “Arianna! She was with you. Where did she go, Duncan, where—”

He gave his head a shake. He’d completely forgotten about Raven’s friend. “We… we were together when you went over the edge. I dinna ken where she went then, Raven. I was only thinkin’ of you, trying to get to you. When I did… she wasna with me.“

Her face crumpled, and her fingers went to her lips. Open-mouthed, she sucked in a breath and got to her feet, righting her clothes as best she could. “She’s gone after Nathanial.” Closing her eyes, she shook her head. “He’s better than either of us knew, Duncan. He’ll kill her.”

“We’ll stop him.” He helped her to her feet, and when she stumbled, held her tight to his side. “Are you sure you’re all right?”

Raven nodded. Always so strong, so determined. “I love her, Duncan.”

“I know. I can see it.”

“He probably ran back to his lair—that obscenity he calls a museum. He doesn’t want to face Arianna. He fears her… She fought him once… nearly beat him, I think.”

“That’s where we’ll go. It’ll be all right, Raven, I promise. He’s never goin’ to hurt you, nor anyone you care about, ever again. I swear it.“

She stared up at him, and he saw the questions in her eyes. Maybe because he’d spoken with such passion just now, maybe because she sensed he meant every word.

“Later,” he promised, bending to plant a quick, tender kiss on her mouth. “I’ll tell you everythin’ later.“

He took her hand, closed his eyes briefly in ecstasy as he realized how good it was to hold that hand in his again… and together, they ran.

 

Chapter 22

Damn!

She’d done it, Nathanial thought viciously. Raven St. James had come between him and Duncan all over again. And she’d gotten away with it!

He’d had the woman! Had her right in his hands, impaled on his dagger, and
still
she managed to escape him! He should have held on to her, should have… but what use were
should haves
now? She’d escaped him. Fallen from those cliffs, to send his soft-hearted son scurrying after her. Once again Duncan had chosen Raven over Nathanial, even now, when they were supposed to be father and son. Even now.

But not her fair-haired companion. No, Arianna hadn’t been distracted for a moment. She’d headed
up
the cliffs, not down. And Nathanial had known then that she was coming for him.

He should have left this town, this state, perhaps this country, right then. Should have fled Arianna’s wrath without hesitation. He could seek out some weaker immortal once he was safely away, take the first heart he found and get stronger. But to leave without the hearts he’d already taken—those he kept captive in small wooden boxes— would be to leave whatever vitality remained. So he’d returned to the old courthouse, to the small room at the top where he kept them, locked away from prying eyes inside their tiny wooden prisons. Some beat so weakly now they could barely be heard. He suspected they’d stop one day. But they hadn’t. Most were no longer strong enough to support life, yet they kept beating on. One beat an hour, one beat a day. Were they truly immortal? Would they beat eternally? Somewhere, perhaps, in the dusty tomes he’d collected over the centuries, he might find an answer to that puzzle. An explanation. But he hadn’t yet.

If
she
arrived in time, he never would. And there would be no time to take his books or his journals with him.

Quickly he opened a large case and set it in the middle of the floor. And then he snatched the most recent kills, the strongest hearts, from the shelf, carefully setting those boxes inside.

Speed was of the essence here. He couldn’t face
her,
not now. She’d nearly beaten him once long ago, when he’d mistaken her for easy prey in Scotland. She’d been younger then. Weaker. He’d been at his best.

And she’d nearly killed him.

He would never forget the power of emotion again. Even as he’d battled, losing ground with every thrust, he’d wondered at her strength, her power. And reading his mind, it seemed, she’d uttered her curse. “You took the man I loved,” she’d all but growled. “And I’ll kill you for it.”

She nearly had. He’d run. Fled for his life, from a mere infant of a High Witch. And a woman, at that.

Thrusting the memory away, he closed his case, hefted it, and turned toward the doorway. Never again would he underestimate the power of hatred.

“It wasn’t the power of hatred, Nathanial.”

Her voice brought him up short. She stepped into view, into the doorway, blocking his escape. Arianna, a tiny mite of a woman standing with her legs wide, hands planted on her hips.

“So you truly
do
read my thoughts?”

“I hear thoughts sometimes. Yours are like poison. I’ll be glad to end them forever. But in the meantime, Nathanial, know this. Hatred
has
no power. The power that nearly killed you then was the power of love. My love for one of the many you murdered. And it’s that same power that will destroy you now.”

He took a step backward, setting the case on the floor to free his hands. “Which one was he, this victim of mine? It’s been so long… I can scarcely remember them all. Was he the barbaric Celtic warlord? The Mayan Shaman?” He shrugged. “Not that it matters. They all died on their knees, begging for mercy.”

“I can hardly wait to see how you do,” she said, and drew her dagger, held it lightly, tossed it from one hand to the other. “But to remind you, his name was Nicodimus, and he died with the blade of a coward in his back.”

She’d kill him. Nathanial knew it beyond a doubt.
If
he played by the rules.

He swallowed hard. “Will you kill me unarmed, Arianna, or give me a chance to draw my blade?” His hand inched toward the leather pocket at his side. He’d known she might get here before he could escape. He wasn’t a fool. He’d prepared for this.

She narrowed her eyes. “I’ll kill you in a fair fight or not at all,” she told him. “Go on.” And she nodded.

He drew the weapon from its sheath. Not his dagger. But a crude and inelegant handgun, the killing machine of the modern age. She sucked in a breath, but he simply leveled the barrel and pulled the trigger.

The impact sent her backward into the hall. She hit the stairs and tumbled, head over feet. Her body crashed down upon the first landing, bounced off the wall, and continued its brutal descent to the ground floor. Finally she came to rest at the bottom in a twisted, broken tangle.

Nathanial descended slowly, smiling to himself, and making certain she could hear his footsteps. He replaced the handgun, and drew out the blade as he approached her prone, battered form. She couldn’t move. Dying, she was dying. He’d make sure it was permanent.

“It’s a shame you prefer a fair fight,” he said, and he crouched over her, gripped her blouse in one fist, and tore it open. Sliced the center of her silken bra so that her breasts spilled free. “I prefer a sure win, myself.”

“Raven… will kill you for this…”

“Oh, I’m sure she will try.” He positioned the tip of his blade just to the left of the center of her chest. “Do you ever wonder about the bodies, Arianna?” he asked, pressing a little, drawing a droplet of blood, and hearing her suck air through her teeth. “They die, but don’t really. They remain ever new, ever young. Do you suppose their minds are still alive, as well? Do you suppose they
know
that they’ve been buried alive?”

He smiled slowly at the terror in her brown eyes, and then he drove the blade in to the hilt.

Raven went still, eyes bulging, and screamed out loud. Her hands pressed to her chest, and she dropped to her knees.

Duncan was beside her in a heartbeat. They’d just stopped his car, got out, and had been running toward the courthouse when she’d suddenly… suddenly
what!

“What’s wrong? Raven, what—”

She didn’t answer, just lifted her wounded, watering eyes toward the courthouse, and screamed, “Arianna!
Arianna!
Noooooo!”

He didn’t know what to do. Didn’t want to leave her, but he had to go inside, and sensed what he would find once he got there. He scooped her into his arms, and headed for the car, intending to lock her in where she’d be safe while he went to see to Nathanial.

Halfway there she squirmed free and hit the ground running. He saw her pull that dagger from her hip as she went. Could barely keep up with her speed. Damn, he didn’t want her going in there if what he thought was true.

She burst through the front door, cried out, and raced ahead. Duncan entered on her heels, only to find her on the floor, holding Arianna’s blood-soaked body in her arms, sobbing hysterically. Arianna was a slick, scarlet shimmer. Raven was rapidly becoming one, too. He saw the gaping, jagged hole in Arianna’s chest, and then he looked away, unable to bear the sight.

It only took a footstep from above, and a glimpse of Raven’s eyes to set him into motion. Nathanial would pay. He’d pay for this.

“Kill him,” Raven whispered through gritted teeth, her voice raw.

Duncan nodded once and took the blade Arianna had given him from its place at his side. Carefully he stepped over the body at the foot of the stairs and headed up. And then he paused, because he swore he heard a whisper.


Take mine, too
.”

He turned quickly. But Raven only knelt, crying, and Arianna couldn’t have spoken a word. Still, he knelt and took Arianna’s blade from where it lay on the floor beside her, blessedly away from the spreading crimson pool. He tucked it into the back of his jeans, and continued up the stairs.

The sound came from the room at the top. It lay up a second flight, and through a door.

Duncan stepped into the room to see his self-proclaimed father opening the window, a suitcase at his side. His hands were coated in Arianna’s blood, his sleeves stained with it. Atop the suitcase sat a small wooden box, fresh blood dripping down its sides, a soft beat coming steadily from within. Arianna’s heart.

“Damn you to hell for this,” Duncan said softly.

Nathanial turned. He met Duncan’s eyes, closed his own. “Not you, Duncan,” he whispered. “I’ll face any of them, but not you.”

Duncan stepped forward. “Maybe I havena been immortal long enough yet to understand. You’re willin’ to fight with women, but not with a man?“

“Not with my son.”

“I’m not your son,” he said very softly. “The only father I knew was Angus Wallace, and he’s been dead over three hundred years. I suppose I had another, this time around. But ”twasna you, Nathanial Dearborne. ’Twas never you.”

Nathanial lowered his eyes. “So you remember.”

“Aye. I remember the man you were. A killer in the guise of a priest. Makin‘ a mockery of the faith you pretended to serve.“

“It’s all true. But you don’t understand, Duncan.”

“I understand that you had my birth parents murdered just to get your hands on me. Raised me without a hint of love, all so I’d lead you to Raven one day.”

Again, Nathanial nodded, confirming what Duncan had still hoped, in some tiny corner of his mind, he would deny. “It began that way, Duncan. But the truth is… I’ve come to care for you, boy. Just as I did before.”

“I can see how you care for me. ”Twas clear in the way you tried to murder the woman I love.“

“I might have died without another heart.”

“You think that makes it all right? You kill others just to prolong your own life, an’ you think that makes it all right?“

Nathanial shook his head slowly. “It’s the way things are for us, Duncan. The way it’s always been…”

“Not for you,” Duncan uttered quietly. “Not anymore.”

Nathanial closed his eyes. “I don’t want to kill you, Duncan, but I will if you make me.”

“I rather thought you would. An’ that says it all. Dinna you think…
Father
!“

Duncan lunged forward, still seeing Arianna’s blood, Raven’s pain, in his mind’s eye. Nathanial dodged, and then drew his own blade, attacking, stabbing, fighting as fiercely as an animal, a rabid animal.

“You’ve no chance against me, Duncan. I’ve seven hundred years of practice!”

Duncan tried again, but this time Nathanial kicked and the blade went sailing out of Duncan’s hand.

He heard Raven, her footsteps rushing up the stairs, through the door.

“Don’t, Duncan! Don’t fight him! I didn’t mean—I wasn’t thinking!”

Nathanial lifted his blade and came at him. Raven ran into the room behind him and cried out. And Duncan stood where he was. One hand flashed behind him, to close around Arianna’s blade. He brought it forward just as Nathanial lunged at him. And the blade sank into the old man’s chest, deeply and brutally, though Duncan hadn’t even thrust it. ’Twas Nathanial’s own forward motion, his attack, his own hatred, that killed him.

Blood welled, warm and thick, spilling over Duncan’s hands, and he took them away, disgusted. Sickened.

For a moment he stood, looking down at the man he’d called father, the man who lay dying. “I wanted your love,” he said. “I wanted it more than you know.”

Blinking slowly, his eyes already glazing over, Nathanial whispered, “You had it, son. I
did
love you… in my way…” His eyes fell closed, briefly. But then they opened again. His hand snatched the front of Duncan’s shirt with surprising strength, and he pulled him close. “I’ll prove it to you now,” he managed, and then he whispered something in Duncan’s ear. A second later his breaths stopped, his hand went slack, and Duncan straightened away from him.

Duncan’s throat closed off and he turned away, eyes burning. Raven enfolded him in her arms. Held him tight to her, where he belonged. Nathanial hadn’t loved him. That wasn’t love. Even with that one final gesture, it wasn’t love. Guilt, maybe.
This
was love, this thing he felt right here, this woman he held, who was healing him even now. This was love, and ’twas all he needed. All he had ever needed, or ever would.

“Don’t mourn him, Duncan. The world’s better off without him. He was evil.”

“I know.” He looked down at her, kissed her lips, finding some soothing elixir in her taste that eased his heartache. “But he’s still evil. He’ll… he’ll revive… ?”

“I’ll do what has to be done.”

He stepped away from her, searched her face. “Nay, lass. I canna ask you to do that—“

“I’ll do it, Duncan… I’ll do it because I love you.” She touched his shoulders, kissed his face. “If you knew, my darling, if you knew what you were to me… What you still are to me, you’d understand. Let me do this for you.”

“What I… still am?” he asked her. Lowering his head, he shook it slowly. “I doubted you. I called you crazy and gave my father more chances than a saint deserves, while refusing you so much as the benefit of the doubt. I nearly got you killed, Raven—”

“No.” She shook her head hard. “No, Duncan, it was your father who nearly killed me. You had no part in that.”

“An’ Arianna? Will you tell me now that
her
blood doesna stain my hands?“

Raven took his hands in hers, holding them tightly. “This is the way we live, Duncan. The Dark Ones pursue us, and when we meet them, we fight. Sometimes…” Her eyes filled, though she blinked against the tears. “Sometimes we die. Arianna knew that as I do, and she’d never have blamed you. She cared for you, Duncan. And I love you now, as I always have.”

“Do you, lass?”

She nodded. “I always will,” she told him.

Sighing, he nodded. He’d tell her the truth—that he
did
remember, that he
was
the man she’d been searching for all this time… that he loved her. By the Gods,
he loved her!
But first he wanted to give her something. A gift. A gift he knew how to give… because of an evil man’s dying words. And they might have been lies for all he knew. But he had to try.

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