Wait for the Wind

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Authors: Brynna Curry

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BOOK: Wait for the Wind
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WAIT FOR THE WIND

Elemental Magic, Book Three

 

By Brynna Curry

 

 

 

 

 

LYRICAL PRESS

http://lyricalpress.com/

 

KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.

http://www.kensingtonbooks.com/

 

 

To L.J., Anna and Kayla, you’re my greatest treasure.

I am truly blessed to have the three of you in my life.

All my love, your mom.

 

 

Acknowledgements
 

 

As always, thanks to my family for putting up with me and being there, I love you all. Thanks to my editor Piper, to Renee and Frank Rocco and everyone behind the scenes at LPI. A special thank you to a group of ladies (gentlemen too) known as the ‘Momwriters’, who have cheered my ‘Roars’ with me, answered tons of research questions, and together support this crazy dream we call writing. You hold a special place in my heart.

 

 

Author’s Note

 

Thank you for taking this journey with me. I hope you enjoyed Ryan and Kate’s story. Look for
Sea’s Sorceress
, Skye’s story, the next installment in the
Elemental Magic
Series. Love is the truest magic and with it life is an adventure.

 

 

Chapter 1

 

Haleyville, Alabama 2010

Ryan rolled on the sweat-dampened sheets and tossed with the effort to wake up. Disoriented, he only knew that his body seemed trapped in sleep while his mind dreamed in the conscious of another.

With a flourish of her hands, Arianne coaxed the flames in her hearth to raise high against the wind of the brewing storms. Candles on the table flickered and mirrored the rising fire. Her power was stronger with Briella’s stolen magic, but not quite enough to control fire, only change it to her benefit. Not enough to gain her sister’s husband and child, either. Once she unleashed Daemon’s inner demon and manipulated it into doing her bidding, she’d not only take Brie’s power, but her life.

Briella’s hold over the nixie was strong, but her naiveté would be her downfall. Even now, the threads connecting her to Briella slowly siphoned the young woman’s power. Arianne gathered the dried herbs she’d prepared for the next step in her plan. Together in a stone crucible she ground rosemary, lavender and thyme into dust. Then added a splash of water and mixed it into a thin soup of disastrous means. Her past attempts to win Daemon had failed. She and Briella were twins. Did they not have the same eyes and face? Did they not have the same body? Still, she knew ways to appeal to his wicked nature her sister could never have dreamed.

Stirring the air, she lifted the stone bowl and allowed it to float above the flames and boil heavily. An incantation whispered under her breath imbued the liquid with her power. Daemon need only drink the mixture and he would be hers, but how would she trick him into consuming it? There was one way to be sure she’d have what she wanted. Arianne dipped her finger into the concoction and began to paint her mouth with the mixture. Her prey was just like any other man inside. She must bind him to her physically.

Someone pounded on the door. She set aside the bowl, walked across the room and faced a furious Daemon. He could kill with a look, a thought, in his current state. Her only chance was to make him believe she was Briella. She began to mask her power, pulling on her sister’s magic until it was impossible to tell the opposing forces apart.

“What are you doing to Brie? I feel her energy waning. Let her go!”

Arianne smiled sweetly. “Don’t be silly. Ari’s done nothing to me. I’m right here.”

“Brie? Are you sick? Your magic. It’s–”

“I’m tired, that is all. Nothing to be concerned about.”

“Why are you here?”

“I’m waiting on Ari to bring some herbs for Etain’s poultice. Her shoulder isn’t doing well and still aches horribly with the cold weather. Are you feeling ill?” Arianne stepped to him and felt his forehead, pretending to check for a fever.

“No. You seem different.” Daemon caught her hand and kissed her palm where the potion still lingered and was caught. “Brie.”

Arianne accepted his kiss, his embrace, and triumphed quietly inside. She’d finally taken one of the two things her sister held dear.

Ryan woke startled and disoriented. Beads of sweat slicked his bare chest in spite of the cool temperature in his air conditioned bedroom. He tossed off the covers and sat up. For some reason he couldn’t catch his breath.

Swinging his feet over the side of the bed, he walked barefoot toward the bathroom in the dark. He bumped his knee into one of the taller statues he had yet to ship back home. Cursing, he half-hopped into the other room and flipped on a light. When he examined the blooming bruise across his kneecap in the shape of a long curved line, he decided it must have been the dragon statue he hadn’t packed yet. Bloody hell.

One more night on American soil, just one, and he’d be on a flight back to Ireland. The morning couldn’t come fast enough to suit him. Finally, all the trials were over. Agent Spiller had kept his word, seeing to it Ryan was granted immunity in exchange for his testimony.

He looked around the sparse bathroom. Everything had been packed away and boxed up to be shipped home, except for a couple of suitcases filled with the basic things he’d need. Ryan opened the glass shower door and turned the knob to cold. Standing under the chilly spray, he let the water pummel the dream away. He didn’t have time for cryptic messages and devilishly witchy dream women who sucked his sleeping mind into subconscious role plays.

He’d sold the house to a young couple just starting their family, people who would appreciate the space and history his house had to offer. When he got home and settled a bit, he’d find a new one. Maybe one that needed fixing up. That would give him something to do while he figured out where to go from here.

 

 

Chapter 2

 

Ireland

Kate jumped at the shrilling phone on her desk.
Unknown
was the only clue her caller ID gave.
No, not again. I don’t have any more to give you.
Damn Mick to his immortal flaming hell! She took a deep breath and picked up the receiver.

“O’Connell Clinic.”

“Where’s the rest of my money?”

Always that hate-filled growl demanding more money.

“I’ve given you the last penny you’ll see from me. I don’t owe you anything.”

“Your beloved Da owes us another fifty-thousand dollars. He’s dead. That leaves his whelp, Doctor.”

She heard the scraping sound of something gritty on metal. Was he sharpening a knife? Was he just trying to mess with her mind?
Leave me alone, please, just leave me alone.

Swallowing past the lump in her throat, Kate tried to bite back the raw fear running rampant through her thoughts. “I don’t have any more. That’s the last penny.” God, she hated the way her voice shook.

“Maybe I should pay your daughter’s class a visit. I wonder what Allaina’s screams will sound like when I start peeling the skin off her fingers. One at a time.”

“Leave my daughter out of this. I can’t get more money until I sell the house. I can’t–”

“Two days or I’ll leave her brains splattered all over the classroom walls.”

The line went dead. Kate placed the receiver on the hook and walked to a small sink in the corner of her office. Turning the water on cold, she wet a paper towel from the dispenser and bathed her neck with it. Those calls always made her feel sick to her stomach. Dear old ‘Dad’ had managed to accrue sixty-thousand dollars in gambling debts to a loan shark named Seamus Milligan. Horse races were the one thing he spent money on other than alcohol, and he always bet a losing game.

She’d already given them ten thousand dollars of her start-up funds, depleting the cushion she’d saved for the tough start ahead until the clinic brought in an income. If they hadn’t threatened to hurt Allaina, she’d have told them to kiss off. She would never put her daughter at risk. Not if she could help it.

There had to be something she could do about the threat, but if she went to the police Allie would be killed. She could find Ryan. Show up on his doorstep and demand he help her protect their daughter. A daughter he didn’t know existed. Or she could turn to his powerful cousin, Devin, who would scare the Bejesus out of them with his magic. If she told him about it, but she had wanted to handle this herself. Too late for that. There was no other choice, even though she hated asking anyone–especially a man, even one she loved as family–for help.

The appearance of Ryan’s cousin shortly before Liv and Jack married altered her way of seeing the world. Science was only a sliver of hope compared to the wonders she’d seen him accomplish. Devin McLoch, a former jewel thief, now gentle wizard turned his crafty nature towards teaching Allie how not only to control her magical abilities, but twist and use them to help those in need.

Kate stepped out into the hall and locked her office door before going to the front desk. “What do the afternoon appointments look like, Carrie?”

“You’ve got a four o’clock with Mr. O’Malley and that’s all.”

Thank God for small favors, until the bills started coming in the mail, anyway. “I’m going to walk over and check on Mrs. Roarke, get some fresh air. Call if you need me.”

“Will do.”

* * * *

The screen creaked in welcome as it had so many times before. Ryan Corrigan stepped into his mother’s kitchen. She turned around at the sink where she’d been drying dishes. A little more gray streaked the blond waist-length braid of her hair. Fine lines appeared at the corners of the green eyes which she’d passed to her son. A smile bloomed across her face.

He crossed the space between them and wrapped his arms around his mom, just holding tight. There was nothing like home, and he craved it. Home. Whatever came next, he could deal with it.

“Mama.” One word from his lips told the anguish of every moment since he’d left and the relief he felt now that the time away had come to an end.

“Oh, I’m so glad you’re home.”

“Me too, Ma. You look good.”

She’d visited him many times while he’d lived overseas, but Ryan knew it wasn’t the same as having your child home. He wished he could have the same opportunity. His child. What would he have been like? Or maybe it would have been a girl. Someone to treasure and protect. Kate had seen to it he would never get the chance to know.

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