Etaín opened her eyes to find Cathal and Eamon hovering above her. “Jesus, Etaín, Jesus,” Cathal said, hands shaking as he pulled her into a sitting position and then into his arms, not all-encompassing but angled so Eamon could embrace her too.
“Let’s take this private,” she whispered, the clothing she wore an irritant to her skin, and their clothing, an unacceptable separation.
“Let’s,” Cathal said, nearly a pant, and Etaín became aware of the hard ridge of his cock against her, the minute tremors coursing through him.
“A lesson first,” Eamon said on a husky laugh, easing away and making her aware of the glow coming off her skin. Like sunshine. Thick and golden like the rush of it she’d been caught up in, returning her to life.
Her heart skipped a beat then knocked in rapid succession when Cathal’s mouth found her ear, lips capturing the pointed tip. Desire streaking downward, causing the violent clenching of her channel.
Eamon traced a quick sigil on the back of her hand. It was a dousing spell he’d mentioned the night before but hadn’t taught her because there’d been no need then and she’d been exhausted.
Her magic blocked his until she mentally made the sigil her own. Elven luminescence faded, but not Cathal’s desire. Nor Eamon’s.
Her need matched theirs though curiosity had her rolling up her sleeve. The visual change to her tattoo turned Eamon’s face into a smooth mask.
He caught her hand, examining vibrant entwined strands of gold and emerald green anchored in the ink on her wrist then traveling up her arm, the sigil she’d drawn in the sand writ now on her skin. “Alliance,” he said. “An irreversible magical bond.”
Peordh. Predestination. Possibility fulfilled. A promise kept.
Cathal rolled up his sleeves to reveal the changes to the tattoos. The bond forged by Eamon’s magic had locked shades of red and blue and gold in them. Now emerald green streaked through the center of every black line, glittering like Dragon scales caught in the sun’s rays.
“Sire?” Myk said, question in his voice, concern, a reminder that they still had an audience.
Eamon shook his head. “The ink remains inert.”
His tone was cool, unconcerned, but Etaín’s throat closed, tightened by the pain of what his answer meant.
He didn’t resist when she unbuttoned his shirt, parting it and pulling it off one shoulder. The band encircling his upper arm was ink and unhealed skin. Unchanged, though because it was hers, because of her gift, she felt the low hum of magic, a connection she shared with hundreds of others, not the same as the one she shared with Cathal.
“Why didn’t it…” The answer came before the question could be fully formed. Because of the sigil she’d offered the Dragon, the bond created in that surreal time between human death and Elven birth had taken the place of what she might have had with Eamon.
She met Eamon’s eyes, hers damp with sorrow, with loss, her heart aching for him, for her, for them. “I’m—”
He silenced her with a kiss, lips tender against hers, vibrating with echoes of pain. His tongue a soft stroke against hers, eloquent strength in the face of disappointment, exclusion, the poignancy of it freeing her tears.
“Stop, Etaín,” he said, brushing them away. “The meaning of the tattoos is unchanged by the lack of a magical bond. This is a time for celebration, not sadness or regret.”
His hand cupped her side. His mouth went to her ear, tongue darting into the canal, before lips captured the tip. Desire returned in a molten rush. Streaking downward so her cunt clenched and she reached for Cathal, pulling him into the embrace.
His phone rang.
He ignored it.
Hers rang until it went to voicemail.
His rang immediately afterward.
“It’s a conspiracy,” Cathal said, but icy foreboding had already gripped her.
She answered when hers rang again, desire chilled at hearing Quinn say, “We’re ten minutes out and on our way there. Derrick’s hurt. It’s bad. Really bad. External and internal. Tell Eamon he needs a healer. Tell him Cage will arrive with us.”
He hung up before she could ask more. “I heard,” Eamon said, and Myk was already making the call on his lord’s behalf.
“Fuck,” Cathal whispered, tension running through his voice and his body where it still touched hers. “Fuck.”
Guilt nearly bore Etaín to the ground. This was her fault. She’d known, she’d feared for Derrick when there’d been no sibilant promise of safe, my gift as there had been when she hugged Jamaal.
Why! She screamed at the Dragon. Why!
But there was no response despite the waiting quality that resonated through the bond, signifying awareness.
Cathal stepped away from Etaín, not willing to use the physical contact to mitigate the admissions he needed to make. “I’ve met Cage. Today’s attack wasn’t the first one.”
Eamon’s focus sharpened while added tension tightened Etaín’s already strained features. “This is because of the drawings?” she asked, her oblique way of alluding to the boys who’d drugged and raped Brianna and Caitlyn, and his father and uncle’s response to it.
“Yes. There was a gangbanger waiting for me outside the club last night. Hispanic. It was meant to be a hit. They used a grenade launcher on my house before the garage door could get all the way down. I think we can be fairly sure this doesn’t have anything to do with what happened in Oakland.”
He’d tell her about Mirela later. Considering he might never see his sister again after what she’d seen and experienced made it an unimportant detour compared to getting this said and out of the way.
“My father was here before you arrived. He said this business is done. He made some calls. He’s gotten assurances. The last of it will be wrapped up at Aesirs tomorrow.”
“It had better be, or I will see it handled,” Eamon said.
“Understood.”
“Cajeilas,” Eamon prompted. “Cage.”
“He approached me as I was leaving the club. If not for him I’d have died.”
Eamon grimaced. “A debt he’ll no doubt present me with. Or more likely, Etaín.”
The reaction brought confusion along with a spike of familiar frustration and anger, because obviously things weren’t what they seemed, but then he was only—
Bullshit. He was not going to revisit that cesspit of self-pity. Maybe he was going to have to buy himself a T-shirt with I am human, hear me roar.
The thought kicked one corner of his mouth up. Not imagining himself in it, but Etaín wearing it.
Since Etaín’s survival was no longer in question, he spat out the most relevant part of his interaction with Cage, without placing blame. “He offered sanctuary for Etaín and me in Seattle and I was tempted not just by the prospect of having her to myself. It seemed reasonable to think you might want me dead.”
“The result of a human-on-human crime. The origins of it unattributable to me, so Etaín would not hold me responsible,” Eamon said, filling in the blanks with uncanny accuracy. “A reasonable assumption for Cajeilas given the lack of a bodyguard accompanying you. My failure. It didn’t occur to me to offer one at your departure.”
Relief was a warm spread through Cathal’s chest. “You were kind of busy at the time.” His eyes met Eamon’s, both of them looking at a memory, a naked Etaín in desperate need of the magical lessons that might well be the reason she was with them now.
“So I was,” Eamon said. “Cajeilas is neither my enemy nor my ally.”
It was only when Quinn’s car pulled into the estate that it occurred to Etaín to wonder how he had known where she was, or that such a thing as a healer existed, and seeking one out would be preferable to going to the hospital. But the moment he emerged from it, she knew he’d become what the ink she’d put on him to cover the AB tats foretold, the Dragon’s yesss little more than a ripple preceding the soul-deep anguish at seeing Derrick.
Minutes became a crawl of agony encompassing the hurried trip to the bedroom where the healer waited, the horror of Derrick’s clothes being cut away and the damage beyond what had been done to his face exposed.
Tears escaped unchecked, her sense of helplessness intensified at seeing the shattered bones in his arm and leg. But when she would have offered comfort with a touch, the healer gently denied her saying, “No, Lady, your magic might interfere with my ability to help him.”
Cathal and Eamon took her hands, smoothing out the fists they’d become, nails digging ruthlessly into the eyes at the centers of her palms, while on the opposite side of the bed, Quinn hovered and Cage stood at his back, an unnecessary guard. Dragon.
He noted her regard, and amusement lurked in his expression, eyes flicking quickly at Liam then downward to her exposed arms, and she sensed Eamon’s shadowy assassin was the true target of the barb when Cage said, “You’ve been my dam’s pretty bauble all along.”
Eamon’s free hand flashed in instant command for Liam to go no farther than the step he’d already managed. “You’re here at my sufferance,” he told the Dragon.
Cage merely opened his arms to encompass the scene in front of him, including Quinn and Derrick. “The ink your new Elf wears suggests I might be hard to get rid of. The affection she holds for the mate of my new brother surely means you’ll be seeing more of me.”
“Sire,” Liam growled, eliciting a wide smile in Cage.
“Who did this to Derrick?” Etaín asked, the need to understand allowing her to push aside grief and guilt.
Derrick whimpered and moaned, eyelashes fluttering as though he tried to fight through pain and unconsciousness in order to answer. “Lie still,” Quinn murmured, allowed to touch Derrick where she hadn’t been.
Her throat closed even though she knew from experience with the healer, that in the end, Derrick would be made whole. She braved the damage done to him, gaze going to the small Dragon she’d put on him years earlier. Not her gift to see the endpoint of magic according to…Cage’s dam if he was to be believed, and yet…
Seer’s daughter. Seidic’s daughter. Some pairings are a threat to those in power. It was followed by urging instead of a hijacking of body, her focus shifted to Quinn. The first righting of old wrongs.
Oh shit, she thought, snagged on the word first until finally the conversation around her burst the bubble of her inattention with Eamon’s asking, “And the bodies?”
“All four incinerated,” Cage said, with no small measure of satisfaction. “I had to occupy myself while my brother Quinn rediscovered his human form.”
“You searched them first?”
Cage snorted, emphasizing the reaction with flame and smoke. “No. They possessed no treasure of interest to me.”
“We would have valued their identities,” Eamon said, projecting the smooth of a calm ocean though inwardly he raged. He wanted this human business done, behind them.
“They are dead,” Cage said, slanting a glance at Cathal. “They are of no concern though I recognized one of them from outside of Saoirse.”
Both Cathal and Etaín went rigid, taking the blame for this upon themselves, but if there was blame at all, it was equally shared. He’d allowed the events set in motion by the Dunnes to play out. He had believed that, in the end, they would serve him, driving Etaín more fully into his arms.
“Derrick will be able to tell us what we need to know,” he said, a subtle reminder that this would be set to rights.
His hand tightened on Etaín’s, a gesture of reassurance for her and a battling of the sorrow that threatened to well up inside him. The unhealed tattoos on his arms were a raw wound piercing heart and reaching soul.
It changes nothing, he told himself as he’d told her. She would still be his consort-wife, her gift used for their people.
Her ink, visible on the bare-chested Quinn, a man who’d been human days earlier, served as harbinger to a great deal of change. If this was one of the abilities of the seidic then it added another cause for assassination. Dragons had always symbolized chaos for the Elven, and threat, because they were magical beings his kind couldn’t sense.