Authors: Virginia Kantra
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #General
would be barred from her bedside. But he had known she needed more
help than he could give. Medical help. Human help.
He’d stripped off Regina’s wet clothes and wrapped her in his shirt
before carrying her to the nearest house. One look at her, unconscious in
his arms, and the woman living there had called 9-1-1.
Caleb came, lights flashing, to drive them to the clinic and stayed
past the clinic’s offical closing at five to hear the doctor’s report. Out of
concern? Or to question Regina when she regained consciousness?
Antonia Barone came to smoke and pace on the sidewalk just
outside the front doors.
Nick came with his grandmother. He hunched over some kind of
video game, his thumbs busy, his face fixed and white, his attention
completely focused on the glowing screen. As if the future of the world
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depended on his ability to punch and kick the tiny bad guys into oblivion.
He had barely looked up the entire time they waited.
At the doctor’s announcement, however, he lurched to his feet, the
game system sliding unnoticed onto the chair.
Dylan followed the boy forward.
The doctor— female, sixtyish, with a round, brown face and salt-and-pepper hair— frowned over her clipboard. “Family only.”
“But he saved her,” Nick protested.
Dylan looked down in surprise.
“I’m sure your mom will thank him,” the doctor said. “Later. Right
now she just wants to see you.”
Antonia took Nick through the door to the exam room.
Caleb stopped the doctor as she turned to follow them. “How is
she?”
“Better. Tired,” the doctor said. “The warmed IV brought her body
temperature back up. I’m keeping an eye on her toes.”
“What about the baby?” Dylan asked.
“What baby?” Caleb’s tone was sharp.
Dylan’s shoulders tensed. “There’s a possibility she is pregnant,” he
said stiffly to the doctor.
The doctor glanced down at her clipboard and then up at him. “And
you are . . . ?”
Dylan set his jaw. “The father.”
“I’ll talk to the patient,” the doctor said and disappeared through the
door.
“You son of a bitch,” Caleb said.
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Dylan winced. Emotions seethed and bubbled inside him: worry,
responsibility, guilt. He covered them, as he had learned to cover all
emotion at the selkie court, with a sneer. “Why? Because you weren’t the
only one to enjoy himself on your wedding night?”
Caleb’s punch snapped back his head and rocked him on his heels.
Dylan ran his tongue around his teeth and tasted blood. “One,” he
snarled. “I’ll give you one.” He deserved it. “But hit me again and I’ll
take you down.”
“You can try,” Caleb said.
“If you were really eager to defend Regina, you would ask me why
she was taken.”
Caleb hooked his thumbs into his pockets. “I’m listening.”
It was one thing to confide his mission to Margred; quite another,
Dylan discovered, to discuss family matters with his brother. The Hunters
had never been big on communication.
“There are . . . stories about our family. About our mother.”
“Yeah, I heard most of them. After she took a hike.”
Dylan shook his head. “Not gossip. Legends. Prophecies, if you will.
The stories say that a daughter born of the lineage of Atargatis will one
day change the balance of power among the elementals.”
“Atargatis.”
“Alice Hunter. Our mother.”
Caleb’s eyes narrowed. “So?”
Dylan spoke carefully, in the even tones he’d learned at the prince’s
court. “If Regina is with child, a female child, that offspring could fulfill
the prophecy. It would be regarded by Hell as a danger to the present
order.”
“Regina’s child,” Caleb repeated.
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“Hers. And mine.” He felt a lurch of something— possessiveness?
pride?— as he said the words.
“You think the demons decided to take her out?”
“To eliminate the threat of the child. Yes.”
His brother eyed him grimly. “So, before you knocked her up, did
you tell her she was going to be a demon magnet?”
Dylan’s lips thinned. “I did not know she was a target.”
“You didn’t know she was pregnant?”
It chafed him to admit it. “No.”
“You still had no business putting her at risk.”
“Remember that,” Dylan said, “when you go home to your wife
tonight.”
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Ten
“I WANT TO GO HOME,” REGINA CROAKED.
Warmth seeped from the hot water bottles packed along her sides;
dripped from the IV attached to her arm. She was still cold all over.
Except for her throat. Her throat burned. She wanted desperately to feel
normal again. For everything to be normal.
“Don’t be stupid,” Antonia snapped. Her mother’s way of expressing
concern.
Nick’s hand tightened on Regina’s through the blankets. He’d stuck
his arm through the metal bars on the other side of the clinic bed, holding
on to her bandaged hand as if he never wanted to let go. Regina knew
how he felt. She wiggled her fingers, tickling his palm, until his tight,
pinched face relaxed.
Donna Tomah folded the blanket back over Regina’s feet. “Actually,
I can discharge her in a couple of hours. As long as she gets lots of rest
and plenty of warm fluids, there’s no reason we can’t all go home
tonight.”
“I can make tea,” Nick volunteered.
Regina smiled at him, so full of love she thought she might burst
with it.
“You’re spending the night at the Trujillos’,” his grandmother said.
Regina’s heart dropped.
So did Nicky’s expression. He tightened his grip on her hand.
“Not tonight,” Regina said.
Last night Nick had woken up in front of the TV to find her gone.
Tonight he needed to sleep secure in his own bed with his mother safe in
the next room.
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“I already talked to Brenda Trujillo,” Antonia said. “It’s all arranged.
She’s giving the boys dinner.”
“Dinner, fine,” Regina said. “But Nick needs to be home tonight.”
They needed to be home. Together.
Her eyes clashed with her mother’s.
“Fine,” Antonia said. “I guess I can stay with him until you get out
of here.”
The tension eased from Nick’s bony shoulders.
“Thanks, Ma.”
Antonia’s mouth trembled. She bent it into a scowl. Her face
resembled a wooden mask, the lines carved deep, the eyes dark and
devastated. “I was going to spend the night at the restaurant cleaning
anyway.”
This had been an ordeal for her, too, Regina realized. And she was
trying, the best way she knew how, to restore her restaurant and their
lives, to make things right again.
Sudden tears pricked Regina’s eyes. She widened her gaze, staring
up at the stained acoustic tile. She didn’t want Nick to see her cry.
Antonia reached through the bars on the other side to pat her hand.
“Don’t you worry. They arrested that guy. Jericho.”
“Where . . .” Regina’s throat hurt too much to continue.
Antonia understood. “The hospital in Rockport. Caleb’s out front,
waiting to take your statement.”
Regina swallowed painfully. Caleb. Of course. He was the chief of
police. She thought she’d dreamed . . . She must have imagined . . .
“You don’t have to see him now,” Donna Tomah said. “You don’t
have to see either of them until you’re ready.”
Either of them?
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Regina’s heart began to pound. “Dylan?” she croaked.
Donna glanced from the monitor to her face. “Mm. He hasn’t
budged from the waiting room since he brought you in.”
Regina opened her mouth. No sound came out.
“He rescued you,” Nick said.
Dylan’s voice, deep in the dark. “It’s all right.” The water surging,
swishing, bubbling around her, and her fingers flexing, cramping. “You
need to hold on to me,” he’d said. “Hold on.”
Yeah, and then he’d turned into a giant seal.
Regina closed her eyes, cold and hot at once.
“Are you all right?” Donna asked.
He’d said that, too. Or had she imagined it, the way she’d imagined
everything else?
Regina moistened her lips. Her hand crept under the blanket to her
stomach. “Fine,” she said hoarsely.
She was fine. Everything was fine, as long as she ignored the
persistent ache in her throat, the pain of returningfeeling in her toes, the
panic fluttering at the edges of her mind.
Antonia left to take Nicky to the Trujillos’ for dinner, promising to
pick him up later and put him to bed. Rare hugs and more reassurances.
“I’m fine. I love you. I’ll be home soon.”
Regina lay back, exhausted. With one hand she stroked the change
of clothes her mother had brought: black sweatpants, a tank top, a hoodie.
She needed to get dressed. In a minute. Just . . . one . . . minute . . .
She slept.
Donna came back with Regina’s discharge instructions and scrawled
something on her chart. “I want you to come back tomorrow for more
tests.”
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Regina struggled to sit. She didn’t want more tests. She wanted to go
home, back to her real life and her regular routines, Nicky running up and
down the stairs to the apartment and her mother driving her crazy in the
kitchen.
“Can’t we . . . get them over with now?”
“I’m afraid not. All the fluids you’ve had will affect your hormone
levels.” The doctor’s voice was brisk and professional, her eyes
sympathetic. “Although if you’d prefer to take a home pregnancy test
tomorrow morning, the results should be fairly accurate.”
Regina’s breath caught painfully. Pregnancy test.
Donna knew.
Dylan knew.
“I’m not . . .” she’d said to him. “The baby.”
Realization crashed through her careful pretense.
Things were never going back to normal again.
* * *
Regina hobbled into the waiting room on Donna’s arm, clutching a
plastic bag full of her old, wet clothes.
She stopped dead at the door. They were both there, waiting for her,
Caleb, wearing his uniform and a thoughtful, guarded expression, and . . .
Dylan.
Her heart pumped. He was taller than his brother, darker, leaner.
Younger, until you looked in his eyes. His eyes were flat black and
dangerous.
She moistened her lips and looked away. “Where’s Ma?”
Caleb moved forward. “I told her I would bring you home.”
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Regina tightened her grip on Donna’s arm.
“She can’t answer questions now,” the doctor said. “Her throat’s
bruised. She needs to rest.”
“Understood. I can take your statement in the morning,” he said to
Regina. “Tonight I’m just your taxi driver.”
Her gaze flicked back to Dylan, black and brooding beside him.
“What’s he? My bodyguard?”
“Yes,” Dylan said. He wasn’t smiling.
Regina drew a shaky breath. O-kay. She didn’t feel up for an
argument. Besides . . .
“Should . . . say thanks,” she croaked.
“No, you shouldn’t,” Dylan said, relieving her of the bag. He
hesitated and then put his free arm awkwardly around her waist. “You’re
not supposed to talk.”
She snuck another glance at his hard profile. Was he kidding? She
didn’t know him well enough to tell. She didn’t know him at all, really.
The thought depressed her.
Donna unlocked the clinic doors. The evening air blew in, cool and
moist. In mid-August, the days were already shortening, the sunset almost
an hour earlier than a month ago. Regina shivered, grateful for Dylan’s
warmth as he helped her out to the curb and into Caleb’s Jeep.
She eyed the grill separating the front and back seats and tried not to
feel like she was under arrest. She didn’t need a police escort. Or a
bodyguard.
Why was he here?
“He rescued you,” Nick had said.
And now he wouldn’t even look at her.
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Caleb glanced in the rearview mirror, like a cop, like a father driving
his fourteen-year-old on a date. “All set back there?”
Regina nodded. Dylan had withdrawn to his side of the car. Fine.
She hadn’t asked for his company. She wasn’t going to cling. She pressed
her lips together, pressed her hands together, keeping them warm between
her legs.
They rode to the restaurant in silence.
* * *
Dylan gazed out at the unlit streets, his heart a live coal in his chest.
He needed to talk to her. He had to explain, to win her over somehow, to
make her accept . . .
Not him. Dylan scowled. His experience with his own family, with
his father and his brother, made him despair of Regina ever accepting
him.
But she had to accept his protection, the necessity of it. For the sake