Read Circus of The Darned Online

Authors: Katie Maxwell

Circus of The Darned (17 page)

BOOK: Circus of The Darned
8.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

I meant I'd stop sharing myself with you
. His voice was warm in my head, reassuring, and yet stirring something deep inside me.

My mother entered the trailer, Davide at her heels. "Done already? That didn't take you long."

Just because I don't want to have sex with you doesn't mean I'm not… um…

Curious?

Yeah.

"Fran?Are you all right? You have an odd expression on your face."

The sensations of warm water that cascaded down his body were as vivid in my mind as

his.
There are some things I cannot share with you, Fran. But everything else I have is yours,
including my body.
Whenever you're ready for it.

"Honey?What's wrong?"

I blinked a couple of times to get rid of the vision of a wet, naked Ben. My mother stood directly in front of me, staring. "Are you all right? You're panting. If you don't close your mouth, you're

going to catch flies."

"Yeah.I was just… uh… thinking of something."

"Hmm."She gave me a suspicious look, but moved past me. "Why don't you put those thingsaway. I want to have a talk with you."

I put the last of the cleaning things away, and sat down on the couch while she unloaded her

invocation items. She chatted about how the day's circle had gone, just the same old stuff I'd

heard a hundred times. I mentally turned down her voice a couple of notches.

How about in two hours
? I asked Ben, trying for a light, playful tone, but I suspected he knew I was reeling in my tongue and drying not to drool.

For our date, you mean?

Yeah. Not anything else. I'm not ready for that yet.

I
know, sweetheart. And you know that I will not rush you. I've waited more than two hundred
years for you. I can wait a few more until you are comfortable with the thought of physical
intimacy
.

I'd never talked like this with anyone before, and I had an odd feeling I should be embarassed to be talking about sex, not to mention more or less watching Ben take a shower, but I wasn't. Ben was different from every other person, and not just because he was a vampire. He was… right.

Thank you.

Huh?

I think you're the right person for me, too.

Stop eavesdropping
! I yelled, mortified.

He laughed. I
wasn't. You're projecting to me. If you don't want me to hear your thoughts, you'll
have to shield them
.

Oh great, now I'm a radio station. Well, WFRAN is going off the air now. I'll see you in a bit.

"Fran?What is wrong with you today?"

I dragged my mind back from Ben and realized that once again my mom was standing in front

of me, having evidently been waiting for me to answer a question I didn't hear. "Sorry.Just thinking about things."

Her lips thinned. "It's Ben, isn't it? You were thinking about him."

I decided whatcould work for Ben could work for me. I said nothing, just looked at my mother.

Her lips thinned even more. I swore to myself that no matter how much she ragged on Ben or

me, I wasn't going to get into another knockdown, drag-out with her.

Things between us had been strained and tense since the last fight, and although I knew she was wrong about Ben, I didn't see that there was going to be any way of convincing her of that. She'd just have to see for herself what a trustworthy guy he was.

"Very well," she said, sitting down on the opposite side of the little table. "Now is as good a time as any to discuss this date you have with him tonight."

I continued to say nothing. I sure thought a whole lot of things, though. I thought so many, and thought them with so much mental hand waving and generalfreaking, I had to double-check first

to make sure that I wasn't broadcasting to Ben.

Mom took a deep breath and let it out slowly. "I'm not going to say I'm sorry about the argument we had the other night, primarily because I don't believe I have to apologize for caring about my daughter and worrying about her health and safety, but also because I can see by the sullen look on your face that it wouldn't do any good."

I fought down the urge to touch my face.Sullen? Me? I wasn't feeling sullen.Tired, yes; wary, oh yes.But sullen? Nope. Not this girl.

"However, I believe one good thing came out of that ugly scene—I know now the depths of

your feelings for Benedikt."

It was on the tip of my tongue to tell her that I didn't think she did, because not even I knew how I felt for Ben, not in the way she meant, at least. My feelings for him were still confused and more or less up in the air. Oh, I liked him. I liked how he shared himself in the shower. I
really
like kissing him. But anything beyond that was still unknown territory.

"As for your accusation that I don't trust you—" Mompaused a minute and frowned at me.

So much for not talking about the fight.

"—I want you to know that I do trust you. If I didn't, I wouldn't allow you to go on this date."

My back straightened up at that "allow" business, but I decided to let it go. A fight now would only piss us both off even more. "Good," I said at last, figuring she'd get snarky if I kept up the Ben-trademarked silence.

She took another deep breath and used the knuckles on one hand to rub her temples. "As a

woman and a mother, however, I know what sort of trouble you can get into placing yourself in a position of weakness with a man. Any man—I'm not speaking specifically of Benedikt here.

Going off with a man on a date is one of the times when you
are
vulnerable to assault: sexual, physical, and mental."

"I've already told you," I said, deliberately keeping my voice calm. "Ben and I aren't going to have sex. He's not going to physically or mentally assault me because I'm his Beloved. That

means he pretty much can't, even if he wanted to, which he doesn't."

Mom flinched at the word "Beloved" but didn't say anything about it. "There are such things as date rape, honey. There are drugs that men can give girls to knock them out so they can rape

them." I started to open my mouth to protest Ben's innocence in anything so ridiculous, but she raised a hand. "No, hear me out. I know you don't think that any of this will ever happen to you, and goddess only knows I pray that it doesn't. But I want you to be prepared for any sort of

attack on you, no matter whom it's from."

I bit my lip to keep from telling her I could take care of myself. She reached behind and grabbed a small bag, pulling a couple items from it.

"This," she said, holding up a small black canister, "is pepper spray. It won't cause any permanent damage, but it should slow down anyone who attacks you."

I took the pepper spray without comment. I had actually kind of wanted some before, but never

had the need for it.

"This is a Green Tara amulet." Mom held up a chain with a small stone amulet hanging from it.

She slipped it over my head. I held the stone amulet up so I could see it—it was a woman who

sat lotus style, kind of like a female version of Buddha. "It is warded and spelled for protection.

It should keep you safe from any being from the dark powers. Keep it on you at all times. And

last…" She pulled out of a long leather case a big herkin' knife. "If the pepper spray and Green Tara aren't enough to stop someone, this should. I don't condone violence against others, as you know, but self-protection does not fall under those precepts."

"OK," I said, pushing the knife away when she shoved it at me. "The pepper spray I'll take because it's cool. The green Buddha lady I'll take too, because it will make you happy. But I am not going to walk around with the equivalent of a sword on me!"

"Fran, it's for your own—"

"I know," I said, standing up. "And I appreciate it. The first two are fine. I won't let Ben slip me any pills, not that he would. I won't go into a dark alley with anyone. And I won't get in any

strangers' cars, OK? Are you done? It's almost six, and I have to get changed for the palm

reading, so I can end early and get ready for my date."

She wasn't done, of course, but I didn't wait for her to finish before I got dressed for my time at the palm reading table. She continued to warn me right up to the moment I left the trailer.

"Mom, it's just a date, one little date, not the end of the world," I said as I opened the door and

started down the stairs. She stood in the doorway giving me the same worried look she'd been giving me for the last half hour. "Stop worrying. Everything is under control, OK? Nothing bad is going to happen."

"Women and children to the hills!"Finnvid yelled as he raced by, clad in his original Viking outfit of leather and wool, his huge shining sword in one hand as he ran for the

beach."
Anfall!Anfall
! Every man to arms, we're under attack by the Vangarians.ToValhalla !"

"Except, of course, if the Vikings Eirik called for help attack us instead," I said with a lame smile.

Mom just stared.

Chapter Fourteen

"How bad is it?"

Eirik looked over his shoulder at me. He was half-hidden behind a rock, shouting orders to his

men as they took up defensive positions. "Goddess Fran, you should not be here. Go back to your camp."

"Weren't these guys supposed to be helping you with Loki?" I peered over the rock at the five boats that were bobbing up and down on the waves, about twenty yards off shore. "Arethose

whatchamacallit… dragon ships?"

Eirik rolled his eyes for a moment before snatching up a walkie-talkie and barking anorder into it. "You have seen too many movies. Those are long boats, traditional Viking ships. Yes, we called the Vangarians to help us, but evidently they were jealous when they heard how you took

us shopping, and now they wish to pillage our many fine possessions."

An arrow whizzed past us with an odd humming noise.

"Arrow," Ljot said helpfully as he trotted past us, an air horn in one hand,a paint ball gun in the other.

I closed my eyes for a minute. "Please tell me you're not going to let them get past you to the Faire."

"No, of course not," Eirik said, shooting me an irritated glance. "There are only twenty-five of

them. We will take them easily."

The walkie-talkie came to staticky life again. Eirik listened intently for a minute,then answered in Swedish.

"Good, because if there is one more incident, I don't think Absinthe is going to be very happy.

Crap, I'm late. I'll check on you later to see how things are going."

"Enjoy your date. We will be here with Loki when you return," Eirik said, sticking a knife between his teeth as he grabbed his sword and leaped over the rock to race down to where the

long boats were landing.

I shook my head and hustled back to the Faire, wondering for the umpteenth time why things

never seemed to go easily for me.

An hour later I was in the middle of explaining to a woman that I was not responsible for her

hand saying she was going to have three kids when a man jumped up on my reading table and

cut off my head.

Or rather, he tried to.

"Hey!" I yelled as the sword swung straight for me. I threw up my hands to protect myself, only realizing as he started a second swing that I could partially see through him. I narrowed my eyes at the Viking. "I don't recognize you. You're not one of Eirik's men, are you? I bet you're one of those Varangians he called. Will you stop swinging that sword through me? It's annoying!"

There were three people in line behind the woman seated at my table. All four people stared in

amazement as the Viking ghost turned toward them. He was dressed similarly to Eirik and his

men in that he had a bare chest, wore a bit of fur strapped around his back, and had cloth pants tied on with leather leggings, but unlike my Vikings, he was partially translucent. I took it to mean he wasn't grounded the way the local ghosts were.

The people in line gasped as the Viking ghost flung himself off the table to race into the crowds wandering up around the Faire. A couple of people shrieked as he tried to behead one person,

disembowel another, and hack to bits a Goth guy and girl with matching face piercings, but most people applauded. Just like with Eirik and his men the previous day, the visitors thought the

Vikings were part of the GothFaire performers.

"I'm sorry, I'm going to have to close early," I told the people waiting for me to read their palms.

"We're having a bit of a problem with our… er…Vikings. Sorry. I should be here again

tomorrow night."

Two more strange Vikings raced down the aisle, screaming what I assumed were Viking war

cries, trying to kill as many people with their phantom swords as they could.

"Fabulous special effects," I heard one guy say in an English accent."Straight out ofHollywood .

Are they holograms, do you think?"

"Have to be," his friend answered, watching curiously as one of the Viking ghosts stabbed a sword into his body a couple of times."Bloody good ones, too. I wonder where the projectorsare?

"

"Top of the light poles," I lied, pointing to the nearest tall stand of lights that lit the aisle.

"Ah." Both men nodded. I spied a familiar, much more solid-looking Viking, and ran to intercept him. "Isleif, what's going on? I thought you guys were going to hold your buddies at the beach?"

"They're not grounded," he answered, slinging his bow
over
his shoulder. "We
are
. We can't stop them any more than they can hurt us."

"Oh, for heaven's sake… what are we going to do?"

"Ref and Gils and I are trying to round them up. Once we have them together, Eirik can tell them about our plan to battle Loki. They'll like that. We'll summon Loki then, and hold him for after your date."

My date was beginning to look like it would never happen. "How
are
guys who can't interact physically with us going to help you with Loki?"

BOOK: Circus of The Darned
8.53Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Academy by Bentley Little
Deus Ex: Black Light by James Swallow
Dreams to Die For by Alan G Boyes
The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare
Dangerous Lovers by Jamie Magee, A. M. Hargrove, Becca Vincenza
Worth the Drive by Mara Jacobs
Seven Night Stand by Helm, Nicole