Chapter One
Two months of self-defense classes, mixed
martial arts, and weapons training did not make it hurt any less
when I was thrown over my opponent’s shoulder and slammed into the
ground.
Yes, I should have tucked and rolled. Would have
too, if he hadn’t kept hold of my arm and twisted at just the right
instant to knock my balance off and make me sprawl like a dead
jumper waiting for my chalk outline.
“Give up?” he asked.
My right wrist still locked in his grip, I
stretched out my left hand and grabbed his ankle, leveraged to pull
down, and twisted. I broke his hold on my wrist and rolled up onto
my feet. I got off the mat and out of arm’s reach quick.
“I’ll take that as a no, then?” Zayvion Jones
asked. He was a little sweaty, a lot relaxed, standing halfway
across the mat from me. Barefoot, he had on a pair of jeans that,
if there were any justice in the world, would not let him flex and
move and stretch the way he did in a fight, and a nice black
T-shirt that defined the muscles of his chest, his thick, powerful
arms, and his flat, hard stomach.
He was every kind of good-looking in the
dictionary.
“Take it as a hell no,” I said sweetly.
That got a grin out of him, his teeth a flash of
white against his dark skin, his thick lips open enough that I
suddenly wanted to drop this whole I-kill-you/you-kill-me act and
kiss the man.
Instead, I rolled my shoulder to make sure my arm
was still in its socket—Zayvion Jones played for keeps—and tried to
come up with a game plan to tip the fight to my advantage. He might
have bendy denim on his side, but I had something better. I had
magic in my bones.
My shoulder sore but still attached and
functioning, I stepped back onto the mat.
I could use magic on him. It might be worth ending
up in bed with a fever just to take Mr.
Superpowerful-Guardian-of-the-Gates down a notch during a practice
match.
The void stone necklace, a chunk of rock caught up
and caged between silver and copper whorls and glass beads, rested
against my sternum and made the magic in me lazy and slow. I could
still use magic, but it took a little more effort when I was
wearing the stone.
If I’d known about void stones, I’d have found a
way to steal one months ago. Not that they were common knowledge.
The Authority had lots of tricks up their sleeve that they didn’t
like the common magic user to know about.
“Is there a particular way you’d like to end up on
the floor this time?” he asked as he shifted his stance and waited
for me to attack. “Or do you just want me to surprise you?”
“Gee, if I get a choice, how about if I end up on
top this time?” I gave him that slow blink-smile combination that
always got him into bed.
He licked his lips, and a flash of uncertainty
narrowed his eyes. “I thought you said you wanted to fight.”
I strolled up to him and paused. Out of arm’s
reach—I’m not dumb. “I thought you were asking me how I wanted this
to end.”
Zay studied me, his brown eyes just brown, no hint
of the gold that using magic always sparked there. As far as I
could tell, he hadn’t been using magic for the past couple months.
Ever since my test to see whether I could become a part of the
Authority, and the craziness with the gate between life and death
opening right in the middle of the test room, things had been
quiet.
And I mean quiet. I’d Hounded only a couple magical
crimes for Detective Paul Stotts. My dead father, who had taken up
residence in my head, seemed to be so distant, he mostly appeared
in my dreams. And my training—both physical and magical—with
members of the Authority had been exhausting, but a long way from
life threatening.
Things were actually pretty good. I liked that.
Liked not having to worry whether I’d survive the day. And it
wasn’t just my life that was better for the downtime. Over the past
several weeks I’d watched Zayvion change from a somber, tightly
controlled, dutiful man, to someone a little surprised he was
enjoying life.
Time off from his duties with the Authority looked
good on him. Sexy.
“I wasn’t talking about ending this,” he said, and
it took me a minute to remember what we were talking about. Oh
yeah, the fight. “But we can call it a day. Since you’re
surrendering and admitting you lost. Again.”
As if I’d give up that easily. I glared at
him.
Light poured in through the windows, casting warm
coffee-colored shadows beneath his high cheekbones and jaw. His
hair was always short, but he’d recently buzzed his dark curls,
which somehow only enhanced his beautiful eyes and strong, wide
nose. The look of worry that I only occasionally glimpsed through
his Zen mask had been absent for weeks. He smiled more. Laughed
more.
And it made me realize how hard I’d fallen for him.
I didn’t want what we’d had for the past few weeks to change or
disappear. But I’d lost too many people in my life, and too many
memories along the way, for me to think things would always be this
easy between us. The idea of losing him made it hard to
breathe.
I tried to push that fear away, but it clung like a
bad dream.
“Allie?” Zay was no longer smiling. “Are you hurt?
Your shoulder?” He came closer and put his wide, warm palm on my
shoulder.
That touch gave me the faintest hint at what he was
feeling: concern that he’d torn my arm out on that last flip,
which, yes, he could have, but no—I wasn’t that fragile.
And that reminded me of what this little
get-together was all about. Fighting. Training. Becoming strong
enough to hold my own against anyone. Even the legendary Zayvion
Jones.
I knew I shouldn’t do it. But hey, a girl has to
take what opportunities present themselves, right? I had my game
plan.
I stepped into him and turned my hip, sweeping his
foot out from under him. He went down, rolled, but I was there, got
in close, getting his arm back, my arm through it, and the other
over his throat.
“Give,” I said. We were in close contact, but I was
too busy staying on the winning side of the tussle to have brain
cells left to concentrate on what he might be thinking.
“No,” he grunted.
Even though I am a tall woman, Zay still had me on
sheer muscle. He flexed and managed to break my hold, twisting over
and onto his back, his legs scissoring to catch mine.
No way I’d let him do that.
I followed him, using his momentum to roll over him
and then behind. I huffed out air, got to my knees, and tried to
keep his arm pinned.
He shifted, rolled. I ended up kneeling with him
beneath me. Boo-ya! I was on top.
I had one knee planted beside him and the other
foot braced on the opposite side. Forget about his arm—I wrapped my
hands around his throat, knuckles at his windpipe.
He pressed his palms flat against my hip bones and
tilted his hands inward so his fingers stroked upward beneath my
T-shirt. I glared at him as the heels of his hands slid over the
bullet scar on my left side and the smooth skin on my right. Then
up and up. His thumbs tracked slower than his fingers over my
stomach, pausing to dip and press at my navel. Then he fanned his
hands outward, upward, and rested them beneath the curve of my
breasts, supporting the weight there.
I raised an eyebrow. “You do notice I’m choking
you?” I squeezed a little harder in case he thought I was kidding
around.
He grunted.
I most certainly was not kidding around.
He shifted his grip. Tried to pull me down and
rolled one hip to throw me. No chance. I braced my heel to stay out
of the roll and pressed harder.
“Mercy,” he whispered.
I relaxed my grip. “Say I win.”
“I win,” he managed.
I retucked my thumbs against his windpipe. “What?
You win? Is that what you said? I must not have heard you
correctly.”
“Draw,” he whispered.
“Oh, sweet hells, Jones. You have got to be the
most stubborn man I know. You lost.”
“I agree,” he said.
Huh. I hadn’t expected him to give in that easily.
I pulled my hands away, rested them against his chest.
“I am the most stubborn man you know.” He rubbed at
his throat with one hand. Grinned at me.
I smacked his other arm. “My honor’s at stake here.
You lost. I won. If you can’t admit that, I’m not sure our
relationship will survive.”
He snorted, grabbed my shirt, and pulled me fully
on top of him. His fist, in the valley between my breasts, was a
hard pressure between us.
“Nothing’s going to get in the way of our
relationship.” His gaze searched my own, and the slightest fleck of
gold sparked there. “So long as we want this, nothing can stand in
our way.”
Damn. Could the man get any more romantic?
I tipped my head down and caught his lips with my
own, soft, thick, hungry. He instantly responded, then licked
gently at my mouth until I opened for him. He tasted of deep, warm
mint, and his pine scent, peppered by sweat, carried the memory of
the countless times we had touched, loved.
I explored the textures of his lips, his mouth,
savoring him slowly, and he did the same, his tongue stroking a
delicious heat through my body. I moaned softly and gave in to the
liquid fire burning through me.
I wanted him. And it was very clear he wanted
me.
He flattened his fist and released my shirt, then
wrapped his arm around me, holding me tightly, as if he were afraid
I might disappear.
A little too tightly. Claustrophobia tickled the
back of my throat. It was suddenly hard to breathe.
I exhaled and pushed back enough that he knew to
loosen his grip. I lifted my shoulders and chest and took a deep
breath. There was plenty of room here, plenty of room for us to be
this close.
He drew his arms off from around me, his hands at
my ribs instead, helping me stay half raised above him. My right
hand on the floor next to him did the rest to support my
weight.
With his free hand, he tucked my hair behind my
ear, a gesture that was becoming habitual and endearing.
“Okay?” he asked quietly.
I nodded. Just that much space, that one deep
breath, cleared my head and pushed the claustrophobia away.
I wove my fingers between the thickness of his and
pulled his hand out to the side. I eased back down on him and
caught his other hand, and drew it outward too, so that we lay body
against body, spread wide upon the floor. My breasts, stomach,
hips, thighs, melted into the length and hardness of him beneath
me. I wanted more of him. All of him. I kissed the side of his
neck, bit gently. His hands clenched, and his body responded to my
unspoken invitation.
I sucked at his neck while his heartbeat grew
stronger and faster beneath my breasts.
“Allie,” he begged. Electricity rolled through me,
and I caught my breath.
It had been two months, and it still felt like I
couldn’t get enough of him.
I want you, he whispered in my mind. We
kissed again, his tongue tracing the edge of my bottom lip. I felt
his desire burn through me like a hot wind, making my skin prickle
with tight heat.
Soul Complements, they say, can cast magic with
each other, matching and blending exactly how they use magic, work
magic. Soul Complements, they say, can become so close, they hear
each other’s thoughts. Soul Complements, they say, can become so
close they lose their sense of identity and go insane. That made
Soul Complements an unmeasured power, a combination that could
change magic, break magic, make it do things it should not
do.
Zay and I could hear each other’s thoughts when we
touched. We hadn’t cast magic together, which was a little strange.
I thought the Authority would have wanted to know what kind of
strength or liability we could be for them. But Sedra, the leader,
refused to allow us full testing.
We hadn’t pushed for it. Maybe we were both worried
it would feel too good. Would make us need it too much. Maybe we
were afraid if we got too close, we’d never be able to let go, no
matter the price.
Yeah, that last thing was pretty much it.
But what they didn’t say was that sex, when you
could feel your partner’s pleasure, when you knew exactly what his
body craved, was awesome.
I rocked my hips against his and nipped at his
earlobe.
Ask me real nice-like, I thought.
Zay paused, swallowed. I pulled up, gazed down at
him. His eyes held more gold than before, as if he was resisting
the need to use magic. He slid one leg between mine. “Or what?” he
asked.
Didn’t he know I couldn’t ignore a challenge?
I propped my forearms on his chest and tried to
look unconcerned.
“Or we could call it a day and go get lunch.”
“Hmm.” He brushed my hair back again, tucking it
behind my right ear. He traced the whorls of magic that started at
the corner of my right eye and flowed like metallic ribbons down
the edge of my cheek, jaw, neck. I shivered at the cool mint that
licked behind his touch.
His finger stopped at the pulse point at my throat,
even though the marks of magic continued down my arm to my
fingertips.
“Are you hungry?” he asked.
I was. But not for food. “Yes.”
A rock hit my arm.
I twisted, my palms up, ready to cast a
spell.
Zayvion was way ahead of me. One elbow braced
beneath him, he rolled, putting me partially behind him, his right
hand already outlining a glyph in the air, though he didn’t pour
magic into it yet.
Another rock, a wet rock—no, an ice cube—hit my
hip. More ice hit Zayvion’s shoulder, clattered down his chest to
the mat in front of him. Ice rained down around us in
handfuls.
Shamus Flynn stood at the door halfway across the
room, a bucket of ice tucked between his arm and chest, and a grin
on his face.
“Thank God I got here in time.” He tossed another
volley our way. “You might have gone up in flames. Burst into sex
at any minute.”
“Shame,” Zayvion warned. “Put the ice down.”
“Like hell. No need to thank me. It’s what friends
are for.” He tossed another cube at Zayvion’s head. Zay didn’t even
blink as it whizzed past his ear.
Boy had good aim.
Zay didn’t take his eyes off Shame, but he shifted
so that we were no longer tangled.
“Do you remember what happened to you the last time
you threw ice at me?” he asked calmly.
Shame shook his head. “Doesn’t ring a bell.”
“It had something to do with you not walking
straight for a couple days.”
Shame grinned. “Oh, you mean what Chase did to me.
That I remember. Girl’s got no sense of humor. And she kicks
like a mule. Bad combination.”
“The bucket?” Zay held up his hand where he still
held the glyph between ring finger and thumb. “Down.”
Shame pulled out a piece of ice and stuck it in his
mouth. He chewed it—noisily—as he strolled over to us.
I swear he had a death wish.
Shame did a fair job at that goth-rocker vibe.
Black hair cut with the precision of dull garden shears shaded his
eyes. Black T-shirt over a black long-sleeved shirt on top of black
jeans, black boots. Even his hands were covered by black fingerless
gloves. But behind all that black was a man who wasn’t as young as
he looked. A man whose eyes carried too much pain to be hidden by
that sly smile.
“That was your last warning.” Zayvion tensed, ready
to pour magic into the glyph.
“Do not burn your best friend to a crisp,” I said,
sounding more like a babysitter than a girlfriend.
Zay just kept staring at Shame. “He’s won’t burn
long. Not with all that water on him.”
Shame laughed. “Bring it on.”
“No one’s going to bring anything on.” I stood, and
took turns glaring at Zayvion and Shamus. “No magic fights in the
gym.”
Right. Like they’d do what I said.
Time to change tactics. “How about food? Zay and I
were just going to do lunch,” I said.
“Lunch?” Shamus said. “Is that what you kids are
calling it these days? Back in my day we called it fucking.”
“Shamus,” Zayvion said, “may I have a word with
you?” Zay let go of the spell and stood up in one smooth, graceful
motion that showed just how many years this man had spent
sparring.
Shame didn’t have time to answer because Zay closed
in on him, fast and silent as a panther. He wrapped his arm around
Shame. It looked friendly enough, but both of Shame’s arms were
pinned and Shame was tucked tight against Zay’s side.
“You want a word with me, or you want to date me?”
Shame asked. “’Cause if it’s the second thing, you’re buying me
more than lunch.”
Zayvion forced him toward the far side of the
room.
I shook my head. Those two acted like brothers,
even though they were physically about as opposite as they could
get. I glanced at the door, wondering if Chase, Zay’s
ex-girlfriend, might have come along with Shame. No one was
there.
My shoulders dropped. Chase and I were not exactly
friends, even though we’d had to work around each other the last
couple months. She wasn’t done hating me for what happened to
Greyson, the man she dumped Zay for. And I was more than done
explaining to her that I hadn’t turned him into a half-dead
beast.
What can I say? My relationships were
complicated.
I found the water bottle I’d left on the floor,
picked it up, and took a drink. Zay and Shame were far enough
across the room I shouldn’t be able to hear what they were saying.
But Hounding for a living meant I had good ears. There was a chance
I’d be able to spring into action if Shame needed me to save his
life or something.
“. . . ever throw ice at me again, I am going to
beat you with that bucket. Do you understand me?”
“Oh, please. Like I should take you seriously. You
haven’t raised a finger in two months.”
“Listen.” Zay paused, lowered his voice. “This is
different than Chase and me. More than . . . that ever was.” He
paused again. “I need you to respect what we have, or you and I are
going to have real problems.”
“Respect?” Shamus asked, just as quietly. “I’m
filled with envy.”
“Then stop being an ass.”
Shame snorted. “Better to ask the rain not to
fall.”
“Rain,” Zay said, squeezing Shame a little harder.
“Don’t fall.” He released his hold.
Shame got out of arm’s reach and shook his hand,
probably trying to get blood back into it. Like I said, Zay played
for keeps.
“Can’t remember the last time you and I had real
problems.” Shame stuck his hand in the ice bucket and dug out
another frozen chunk, popped it in his mouth.
“It’ll come to you.”
From Shame’s body language, I could tell it had.
“Yes. Well. Let’s not go there again.”
Then Shame raised his voice, obviously talking to
me. “Aren’t you going to ask why I came by?”
I shrugged the shoulder that didn’t hurt. “You need
a reason to harass Zay?”
“Hell no. But I’m not here to talk to Zay. I’m here
for you.” He strolled across the room toward me.
Zayvion paced over to where he’d left his water
bottle. The man was so quiet that if I weren’t looking at him, I
wouldn’t think there was anyone in the room except Shame and
me.
“What’s up?” I asked.
Shame stopped and held out the bucket. “Ice?”
“We’re going to lunch, remember?”
“You were serious about that?” he asked. “Huh.
Well, you might want to eat quick. My mum wants to see you.” He
glanced at the clock on the wall behind me. “In an hour, the
latest. At the inn.”
“Did she say why?” I asked.
“Officially?”
“At all.”
“There’s a storm coming,” he said, all the joking
gone now.
Zayvion stiffened. I watched as the relaxed,
laughing man I’d spent the last few weeks with was replaced by an
emotionless wall of control, of calm, of duty.
“What kind of storm?” I asked, even though I was
pretty sure what the answer would be.
“Wild magic,” he said. “And it’s aiming straight
for the city.”
Dread rolled in my stomach. The last time a wild
storm had hit the city, I’d tapped into it and nearly killed
myself. Ended up in a coma. Ended up losing more memories than I
wanted to admit. Like my memories of Zayvion.
“And what does that have to do with me?” My voice
did not shake. Go, me.
Wild-magic storms were violent and deadly, and
messed with the flow of magic that powered the city’s spells. But
that’s why my father invented the Beckstrom Storm Rods. Every
building in the city was outfitted with at least one storm rod to
catch and channel strikes of wild magic.
“Maybe nothing,” he said. “She might just want to
go over details from your last session with her.” He nodded toward
the void stone necklace around my neck. “See that things are going
right with you and all.”
Lie. Lie. Lie. Shamus knew more. Knew what Maeve
wanted. Knew why I was being called upon.
I looked him in the eyes. Raised my eyebrows.
He just shook his head.
Okay, whatever it was, he wouldn’t or couldn’t tell
me. It was hard to remember that Shame was a part of the Authority
too. He reported to Jingo Jingo, and above him was Liddy Salberg.
They all used Death magic, which was unknown to the average magic
user, and for good reasons. Maybe Jingo had told him not to
talk.
More likely his mother had told him to keep his gob
shut.
I’d only taken a handful of classes with Shamus’s
mother, Maeve, but she treated me like a cub who needed protecting
from the other senior members of the Authority, people like Liddy;
Jingo Jingo; Zay’s boss, Victor; and especially the leader,
Sedra.
She was wrong to think I needed protecting. But
over the last month or so, I’d discovered the one thing the members
of the Authority had in common. They were all suspicious as hell.
Not a lot of trust going around for a group of people who relied on
one another’s discretion to stay in business.
“For that, you couldn’t just call?” I asked, trying
to lift the mood.
“What, and waste a perfectly good bucket of
ice?”
“Tell your mom I’ll be there in an hour.” I picked
up my gym bag and headed to the women’s locker room. “Zay, you
still on for lunch?”
“We have time. I’ll take you out to Maeve’s
afterwards.”
Shame followed Zay into the men’s locker room, his
voice drifting back to me. “Oh, what’s with the face? Mad your
vacation’s over? When was the last time you did any work, you lazy
git?”
I heard the muffled smack of a fist against flesh
and an “Ow!” as I closed the door.
I was the only one in the locker room, and Zay and
Shame were the only other people in the gym. The gym wasn’t
advertised—as a matter of fact, it was fairly hidden, and not by
magical means. It was located on the bottom floor of a fabric
store, and no one suspected there was a modern workout facility
here.
Zay had told me it was only one of several places
in the city set aside by members of the Authority for members of
the Authority. It was like they had an entire hidden city shoved
into the pockets and cracks of Portland. And no one got in those
pockets if they weren’t part of the Authority.
The whole exclusivity of the Authority was a little
odd to me. I still wasn’t one hundred percent down with the
I’m-on-their-team bit, because I wasn’t sure they were on my
team.
Yes, the members of the Authority had magical
knowledge up the wazoo, and used more magic in more ways than I
could imagine. Yes, I loved learning how to control the magic that
filled me. Not that I had been top of the class in the execution of
everything they tried to teach me.
But the price for all this knowledge was that I
could never speak of it outside the Authority, never abuse the
trust they placed in me, and never use magic in the hidden ways in
public. And the public included the police.
Which made my day job of Hounding illegal spells
for Detective Stotts a difficult combination of remembering what I
should know and, more important, what he should know I knew.
I shucked my T-shirt, and traded my exercise bra
for something I could breathe in. I didn’t look in the mirror until
I’d pulled on my jeans and boots. I dug the brush out of my bag and
did a quick once-through on my hair. My hair was dark and short
enough I could tuck it pretty easily behind one ear, and I did so
on the left side. The right I let fall free, hiding the metallic
whorls magic had marked me with.
Since it was winter in Oregon, there wasn’t a
natural tan in town, and I was no exception. My pale skin made the
glass green of my eyes look like chipped jade. I held my breath and
braced myself for the shadow of my father in my eyes. Nothing but
me staring back at me.
Good.
If my dad never spoke to me again—better yet, if he
faded away into death like a decent dead person—that would be fine
with me. I did not like being possessed.
I shoved my workout clothes into my bag, zipped
everything, and put on my hoodie before strolling out of the locker
room. Zay and Shame stood by the door. Shame cradled a cigarette
and lighter in one hand—neither lit.
“So, where to?” I asked.
“The River Grill’s on the way to Mum’s,” Shame
suggested.
“You’re coming with us?” I asked.
“Like you’re surprised. Free lunch, right?”
“Wrong,” Zay said. “It’s your turn to buy.”
I opened the door and stepped out into the hard,
cold air. The sun lent the day no warmth, but it was sunny and the
sky was a shock of blue that hit my winter-weary soul like a cool
drink of water.
Zayvion followed behind me. Shamus paused to light
up.
“You going to tell us the rest?” Zay asked over his
shoulder.
Shame exhaled smoke. Finally got walking.
“The rest of what?”
We’d made it to the car, and Zay unlocked the
passenger’s side and touched my arm before walking around to the
driver’s side. Shame, still smoking, paused near the back of the
car. He’d gotten here on his own—I assumed his car was in the
parking lot somewhere.
Zay turned and gave Shame a look that said more
than words.
One corner of Shame’s mouth curved upward. The wind
stirred his hair, pushing it closer over his eyes, and taking his
scents—cigarette smoke and cloves—away from me.
“Sedra called in the crew from Seattle.”
“Terric?” Zay asked mildly.
Shame just took another drag off the cigarette. His
shoulders were squared, tense, his free hand fisted. He looked like
someone who had more pain in him than he had breath left to scream
it out.
“Of course.”
“Have you seen him yet?” Zay asked.
“Nope. And if luck holds, I won’t see him at all.”
Maybe it was supposed to come out funny, but his voice dropped into
a growl, even though he was smiling. Whoa. There was a lot of fury
behind that smile.
“Come to lunch,” Zay said.
Shame tossed the cigarette to the damp concrete,
then clapped his hands together as if brushing away dirt, his
fingerless gloves muffling the sound. “Not going to talk about
it.”
“I know.”
Shame nodded, then strolled off to his car,
whistling a punk rock song from the nineties.
I looked over the roof of the car at Zayvion. He
watched Shamus with such intensity, it was like he could see the
man’s bones, his soul.
Who knows? Maybe he could. There were a lot of
things about both of them I didn’t know.
Shamus, walking away, couldn’t see us. Still, he
must have felt Zay’s gaze. He lifted his hand in a dismissive
wave.
Zayvion inhaled, his nostrils flaring. When he
looked back at me, he was calm. Zen Zay. Private Zay. Controlled.
Deadly.
“Vacation’s over, isn’t it?” I asked.
Zay shrugged one shoulder. “I think we have time
for one last lunch.”
“As long as lunch involves coffee, I’m on for it.”
We both got in the car, and at least one of us, namely me, wondered
how long it would be before the storm really hit.