Soul Kissed
Page 23Sighing, I grasped his hand. “Well, now, that’s another story altogether.”
At his confused look, I led him to the bed and sat with him, telling him everything that had transpired since he had left Poseidon’s palace. When I was finished, he was left with his mouth hanging open. I reached over and gently closed it.
“Why are you so surprised?” I asked him wearily. “I’ve told you. In the world of the Olympians, nothing is ever what it seems. Not anything.”
His jaw tightened. “Your mother meant well, I’m sure. But…”
I interrupted him. “I know. She has inadvertently put me at risk. I told her. And I have told her to fix it. And I have faith that she will.”
“And in the meantime?”
I sighed. For the very first time in my life, I wasn’t sure what to do.
“I don’t know,” I admitted.
Brennan raised an eyebrow. “No?”
“No.”
“Well, I have an idea,” he suggested, slipping one arm under my knees and scooping me to his chest.
I laid my forehead against the warmth that I found there and sighed with contentment. Perhaps I shouldn’t be so happy to be here. I had brought nothing but danger to Brennan’s life. But I couldn’t deny it. There was no place else I’d rather be.
He sat on the edge of the bed and balanced me carefully on his legs. “Rest for a while, Emmie. You seem tired. You’ve been through a lot. You must be exhausted. Let me hold you while you sleep. I promise you, no one will get to you.”
I hadn’t realized how tired I actually was, how bone weary, until he pointed it out. But I was so tired that my legs were literally shaking. Even still, there were things we had to discuss. I resisted the urge to lean my head against him and close my eyes.
“Brennan, I don’t think you understand. My mother said that it is too dangerous for us to be together, that we can never be together. If that is true, what will become of us? I can’t stand the thought of being without you…but I can’t bear the thought of any harm coming to you, either.”
A tear slipped down my cheek and Brennan seemed bothered as he wiped it gently away with his thumb. His forehead was wrinkled in thought as he bent to gently kiss the spot where the tear had been.
“Emmie,” he began softly and my heart contracted at his voice. The very sound of it set me ablaze. “I don’t care what anyone says. You and I will find a way to be together. I don’t care what it takes, how long it takes or what I have to do. You belong with me. Got it?”
I nodded silently, finally allowing my eyes to close as I breathed him in… his strength, his scent, everything. He was right. I belonged to him and he belonged to me. I almost pitied the person who tried to tear us apart because I would take them down limb by limb.
“I keep forgetting you can do that now,” I answered sleepily. “I’ve got to be careful. I don’t want you to learn all of my secrets.”
He laughed, a gentle, low sound in the dark.
“I already know your secrets,” he replied confidently. “And I’m still here. So you see, I’m never going anywhere.”
I snuggled closer into his arms and allowed the darkness to overtake me as Brennan settled into the pillows behind us. But my sleep was interrupted before it had even begun.
“Empusa,” a calm voice said near my ear. I startled to attention and sat straight up.
Gaia stepped from the edge of the shadows and knelt by my side, her jewelry jingling as she moved. I sighed a breath of relief and Brennan grasped my arm.
“What is it?” he asked worriedly.
Gaia smirked. “He doesn’t know you can see me?”
I glared at her. “It’s not because I was keeping it from him. I just haven’t had the opportunity to share that particular thing.”
Brennan leaned forward and murmured into my ear. “Who are you talking to? Or do I not want to know?”
I met his gaze. “It depends. How do you feel about ghosts?”
He raised one blonde eyebrow. “Ghosts? Really?”
I nodded. “Definitely. One loud-mouthed ghost is perched on the edge of this bed. Her name is Gaia. She died in ancient Rome and she is one of my best friends in the world.”
Brennan sighed patiently, his hazel eyes flickering toward Gaia’s general vicinity. “And you know this how?”
“I’m over here, Romeo,” Gaia announced, making a circular motion in front of her face. I glared at her.
“As if he can see you.”
“And you can?” Brennan asked. He almost looked amused by this point, as though nothing surprised him anymore. I decided that was a healthy attitude for him to have and nodded.
“Ah, yes. The moon, witchcraft and all things dark?”
“Now you’ve got it,” I commended him laughingly. “All things dark.”
“And I come from all things light,” he mused. “It’s no wonder we’re supposedly incompatible.”
I shook my head. “Apparently it’s not that we’re incompatible. It’s because our combined energy would be too much for us to control or something like that. It’s hard to say if my mother was telling me the whole story.”
Gaia interrupted. “How exactly would your energy ‘combine’, Empusa?” I glanced at her to find her concealing an ornery smile.
“You know exactly how,” I mumbled. “We’d probably have to… well, we’d have to…”
“You’d have to have sex?” she chirped impishly, knowing full well that this topic made me uncomfortable, particularly with Brennan next to me. I swatted at Gaia, my hand swiping fruitlessly down through the air.
“Yes,” I answered clearly and defiantly. “In order for our energy to combine, I think we’d have to have sex.”
Brennan’s head snapped to attention, his eyes twinkling.
“Really?” he asked hopefully. “Then perhaps we should test that theory out. There’s no way to rule it out unless we perform an experiment. I’m up for it,” he offered. “Just so you know.”
I shook my head and rolled my eyes toward Gaia. “Mortals.”
Brennan laughed, a sound so delicious that even Gaia paused to appreciate it. She cocked her head and studied him thoughtfully.
“He’s sexy, Empusa,” she declared. “I’ll give you that. But I do think that you’re mother might be right. There’s a chemistry between the two of you. I can feel it in the air, even when you’re sitting here doing nothing. If you did anything…er, else, I’m afraid Hecate might be right. Your energy would be too hard to contain.”
“First, it’s not polite to talk about someone when they can’t hear you,” I told her. “Second, it’s very possible that we might have a problem outside of the bedroom as well. I think that as Brennan’s powers further develop—that fact itself might cause a problem for us. Our powers might be contradictory or something. I only just now thought of that when you pointed out the electricity in the room right now. I feel it too and it’s stronger now than it was before.”
Brennan nodded seriously in agreement. “I feel it too.”
“It would be impossible not to,” Gaia grumbled. “It’s practically making my hair stand on end.” She needlessly smoothed her neat long hair as she spoke. “I think you might be right, Empusa.”
The more I thought on it, the more convinced I was that I was right, as well. And it wasn’t a comforting thought. I wanted Brennan to improve upon his abilities. I wanted him to master everything he was capable of. But at the same time, the thought terrified me now. The stronger he became, the more danger we posed to each other. How unfair was that?
“Crap,” he muttered.
“Yikes! Crap is right!” Gaia exclaimed, digging in her cloak as though she’d forgotten something. I watched her curiously.
“What is it?”
She found what she was looking for and extended her hand to me. I opened mine and she dropped my Moonstone bracelet into my waiting palm. My eyes widened immediately as Brennan took a sharp breath behind me.
“What the hell? How…”
“Your mom sent me with it,” Gaia answered proudly, obviously impressed that my mother trusted her enough for this sort of important mission. “I was supposed to give it only to you. She also sent this.”
Gaia handed me a small rolled papyrus, tied with a soft crimson cord. I tugged the cord free and unrolled the missive. My mother’s flowing hand spilled onto the page.
I do hope that this is proof that you can trust me, daughter. I love you more than life. Protect the moonstone until we set everything to rights.
I looked up at Gaia, my eyes wet with tears. “How did she get it back from Poseidon so quickly? Why didn’t she bring it herself? And how did she know to give it to you?”
Gaia stared back at me. “Your mother knows far more than you give her credit for,” she answered carefully. “She knew that you wouldn’t want to see her right now, even though apparently she could have used the Moonstone to find you. It is what led me to you, as a matter-of-fact. And I don’t know how she got it back from Poseidon. I think she had leverage of some sort.”
“Well, obviously,” I answered absently. “And knowing Poseidon’s nature, I’m sure he’s given her plenty of ammunition for leverage throughout the years.”
“No doubt,” Gaia agreed, her eyes glittering in the dark. “Now what, princess? Your mother has gone to the Spiritlands to discuss this situation with Zeus. You’ve got to keep yourself away from your father until everything is resolved and you’ve got to avoid internally combusting over this guy.” She gestured toward Brennan.
“I’m not going to internally combust,” I replied, reaching to grasp Brennan’s hand. He rubbed his thumb in a circle over mine, a familiar, comforting gesture. “But we’ll have to be careful. I just wish I had more information to go on. My whole situation is so strange. If only…” My voice trailed off as an idea popped into my head.
“What is it?” Brennan asked curiously. “What have you thought of?”
“Harmonia,” I answered slowly. “She’s the only one who even comes close to knowing what I feel like. She was cursed because of a stone- the Bloodstone. It ended up being because Zeus’ blood was embedded within it, which eventually saved all of the Olympians from the Fates. But Harmonia didn’t know that until everything was finished. That Bloodstone controlled her for thousands of years. I want to talk to her about it.”