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Arik was
fascinated by the bristled texture of the blanket on
Teddy’s bed. It was scratchy and irritating. Why
would anyone want that next to their skin? Even the
pillowcase wasn’t what he’d thought it’d be. In
dreams, these items were as soft as air and they
slid against his skin like warm water.
But here... he shivered.
This was a strange world mankind lived in. No wonder
they lived to escape into dreams.
And he was tired of being here without Megeara. She
was proving to be even more elusive in person than
she’d been before. He didn’t know where she was, but
it was time he found her.
He’d just reached for the door when it swung open so
fast he felt the rush of air against his skin.
A warm, sweet emotion went through him as he saw
Megeara. At least it started out that way until he
noted the look of anger on her face.
“What?” he asked, wondering why she was so vexed
now.
“Solin Catranides is an only child.”
Arik laughed at the ludicrousness of that statement.
As a Dream-Hunter, Solin had thousands of siblings.
Literally. “I assure you, he is not.”
She gestured to the man behind her. “Tell him,
Brian.”
“I called a friend who knows him. She assured me
that Solin has never mentioned a family of any
sort.”
Arik gave them a sardonic smile. “I’m sure he
wouldn’t mention our family to a woman when it’s
none of her business. Get him on the phone for me.”
Geary glared at him over the commanding tone of
voice he used. One thing she knew about Brian, he
didn’t take that tone any better than she did.
Brian’s eyes flickered with contempt. “I’ve already
made my inquiries.”
“And they were wrong.”
Brian tossed the phone at him. “You make your own
calls, buddy.”
“I don’t know the number.”
“Then you’re screwed.”
“Brian,” Geary said in a gentle tone, trying to
diffuse their prickliness. She took the phone from
Arik and returned it to Brian. “Can you get Solin’s
number for me? I want to speak to him myself.”
He curled his lip at Arik. “It’s his brother.
Shouldn’t he know the number?”
“Brian, please. He could call any number in Greece
and the person who answers it could be anyone
pretending to be Solin. I want to make sure that I’m
speaking to the right person.”
His features softened as he saw the sanity of her
request. “Fine.” He took the phone and dialed it.
After a few minutes, he pulled a pen and paper from
his pocket to jot down the number. He hung up and
handed it to her.
“You’re sure this is right?”
“It’s the only Solin Catranides I know of. Whether
or not it’s his brother remains to be seen.”
“Okay.” She dialed the number and waited while Arik
passed a smug look at both of them.
After the sixth ring, a man with a deep British
voice answered in Greek.
Geary kept her eyes Arik who was watching her back
with a blank expression on his handsome face. “Is
this Solin Catranides?”
“No. Kyrios Catranides isn’t available at the
moment. If you would like to leave your name and
number, I will add your message to the others.”
Could he have possibly said that in a snottier tone?
Really, the man should teach haughty butler school–
advance studies. “This is a bit of an emergency-“
”They always say that, thespeneice. No offense. The
master has no desire to be disturbed this afternoon
by anyone.”
She narrowed her eyes on Arik, waiting for him to
slip and show her if he were lying or not. “Not even
for his brother?”
“I beg your pardon?” The snottiness was vacant now,
replaced by incredulity.
“I have a man standing in front of me who claims to
be his brother.”
Now his tone was completely flat. “The master has no
brother, thespeneice.”
Before she could respond, Arik pulled the phone from
her hand and spoke something in a language she
didn’t know. It sounded as if it were Greek based,
but it was something else entirely.
Arik passed a smug look to Brian, then to Megeara.
He was getting tired of her mistrust– not the he
didn’t deserve it. It was merely causing him
aggravation– an interesting emotion that. He didn’t
like it. It was too... aggravating. “He’s coming to
the phone now.”
Two seconds later, Solin answered in a peeved tone
of voice. “Is this a joke?” he asked in the language
that only the gods knew.
Arik answered in kind. “No, Solin, it’s not. I need
your help.”
“If you are what you claim, and since you’re using
my native tongue I have no doubt that you are a
relative, you don’t need my help.”
“Yes, I do. I’m trapped on the human plane for two
weeks without my powers and I need your assistance
until I can go home again.”
“I–“
”Don’t you dare deny me,” he said, clenching his
teeth. “Because of you I turned Skoti. You fail to
help me now and I can promise you that you’ll never
again sleep in peace. I’ll spend the rest of
eternity synched only to you. Every time you close
your eyes, I’ll be there... beating the shit out of
you.”
“My, that’s some threat you’ve got going.”
“No threats. Only promises.”
Solin paused before he spoke again. “For the record,
I don’t take such promises lightly.”
“And I don’t give them lightly. If you doubt me or
my skills, ask M’Ordant who I am and what I’m
capable of. I’ve come a long way from the numbed
Oneroi you turned. I want your help, Solin. I know
helping someone goes against your grain, but suck it
up and assist me.”
There was a few seconds of silence as if Solin were
thinking. “If you’re here, I assume you have the
backing of a god. Who is it?”
There was no need to hide that from him. If he
really wanted to know, it wouldn’t take him long to
find out. “Hades.”
Solin snorted. “You bargained with Hades? Are you
insane?”
“I was definitely sane and in control while I was
Oneroi. Then someone changed that. What I am now is
anyone’s guess, even my own.”
More silence greeted him.
“All right,” Solin said at last. “I don’t make this
a habit, but you’ve made me curious. What do you
need from me?”
“I need permits for an American archaeologist to
excavate Atlantis.”
Solin burst out laughing. “I know you’re insane now.
Have they really found the site?”
“Does it matter?”
“On this plane of existence, yes. You start poking
there and you’ll piss off people best left alone.”
“Since the human’s days are numbered, I don’t think
that’s going to be a problem. Let her have a bit of
a thrill before she dies. What’s the harm?”
Solin sucked his breath in sharply between his
teeth. “No, you didn’t.”
“Didn’t what?” Arik asked.
“Promise a soul exchange with Hades. You do have
nerve, I’ll grant you that.”
He wasn’t sure if impressing his brother was a good
thing or not, but at least Solin sounded a little
more agreeable.
“Aside from the permits, what else?”
“That’s it. She wants to meet the official who
grants them to make sure they’re not forgeries.”
“How soon do you need this?”
“How soon can you do it?”
Another brief pause. “Give me an hour to arrange it.
I have a few government friends who owe me. I just
have to decide who I want to intimidate or
blackmail.”
Arik looked at Megeara and spoke in English. “He
needs an hour to set the permits up. Can you meet
him then?”
Her jaw slackened before she nodded.
“She can be there,” he told Solin.
“Good. I’ll pick you up.”
“Why?”
“Because I have to meet the god who’s this arrogant
and foolish face to face.”
Arik wasn’t sure if he should be flattered or
insulted. Perhaps he should be a little of both.
“Then I’ll allow the good doctor to give you your
directions.” He handed the phone to Megeara who was
still gaping.
Geary couldn’t believe what she was hearing. Was it
really that simple? Could nothing more than a phone
call gain her the elusive papers she needed? “Hello?
Kyrios Catranides?”
“Yes, and you are?”
“Dr. Geary Kafieri.”
“Nice meeting you, doctor. As my brother said, I’ll
be needing directions on where to pick the two of
you up so that we can procure your permits.”
Geary still was a bit reserved. It wasn’t in her
nature to trust people and especially not after all
the years she’d been trying to accomplish what they
two of them seemed to be able to do in one hour. “I
thought you were an only child.”
Solin didn’t hesitate with his answer. “Yes and no.
I have a number of half siblings. One of which
happens to be Arikos. Now if you’ll be so kind as to
give me your address.”
She did even though she kept expecting this to be a
joke.
“Very good,” Solin said once she finished giving him
the address and directions for the marina. “I shall
see the two of you in about an hour.”
“Thank you.”
He hung up.
Geary ended the call, then handed the phone to
Brian. “He’s getting us the permits. Do you think he
can really do that?”
Brian shrugged. “If anyone can, he can. Solin
travels in the highest of circles. Even those I
can’t ascend to... which tells you exactly how much
money he has.”
She 1`to Arik whose face was completely stoic. “And
he’s your brother?”
“Yes.”
She frowned at him. “Then care to tell me why the
brother of such a man was floating in the sea?”
“It was grave misfortune, I assure you.”
Brian cleared his throat. “Well, if you get those
permits, I’ll reconsider my backing.”
That meant a lot to her. Without his backing, they
wouldn’t have any choice except to pack up and go
home. “Thank you, Brian.”
He inclined his head to her before he left them
alone.
Arik offered her a seductive smile. “Are you happy
now?”
“I don’t know if happy is the right word. I’m still
suspicious of you and your motives.”
He clucked his tongue at her. “After all this, how
can you continue to mistrust me?”
Was he serious? “Can you blame me? I still don’t
know you and here you are making grand gestures for
no reason. Why would you be willing to help me?”
“Because I find you fascinating. You were so
passionate in grad school, and now you’re on an
impossible quest, just as I am. One has to admire
that. Not to mention the small fact that you saved
my life. Helping you with the permits is the least I
can do.” There was something in his eyes as he spoke
that glinted and glowed. She felt like a snake with
its master charmer who was luring it from its basket
to the highway for it to be run over by a mack
truck.
“What do you want from me? Really?” she asked.
“Just a simple smile. Nothing more.”
“I find it hard to believe something so small would
satisfy you.”
His grin turned wickedly warm. “It would at least
tide me over for a bit.”
Geary wasn’t sure what to make of him. On the one
hand, he was helping her out in a way no one else
could. He didn’t owe her anything at all and yet...
“Okay, Arik. I’m sorry I’ve been a little irritable
to you. I just don’t trust people as a rule,
especially those I don’t know.”
“I understand and we did meet under extremely odd
circumstances.”
A tiny smile spread across her face as she
remembered hauling him on board. “True.”
His features softened to the most seductive look
she’d ever seen from any man. “Shall we start over?”
He held his hand out toward her. “I’m Arik
Catranides.”
She shook his hand. “Geary Kafieri and I still want
to know how you ended up in the sea.”
He lifted her hand to his lips so that he could
place a whisper of a kiss to her knuckles. “And I
promise you that one day you will learn the answer
to that.”
She wasn’t sure why, but the hairs on the back of
her neck lifted as an eerie chill went down her
spine. It was followed by the memory of her dreams
where Arikos had bathed her in chocolate whip cream
that he’d licked off her body slow and easily. But
this wasn’t that man who’d seduced her.
Was it? Could it be that somehow her subconscious
had held onto his memory all these years and it was
only now that she needed him that she’d remembered
him?
It didn’t seem feasible. Yet how else could she
explain his presence here on the boat and the fact
that he’d been in her dreams these past weeks. She
must have remembered him.
And now that she was more relaxed, there was
something about him very calm and peaceful.
Something that soothed her.
Except for his eyes. They spooked her. They seemed
somehow omniscient and powerful. Probing and deadly.
“So where exactly do you live?”
He didn’t answer. Instead, he moved behind her and
wrapped his arms around her. It was what her dream
lover had done a thousand times.
She stiffened in his embrace. “Who are you, Arik?
Why are you really here?”
He rubbed his cheek against hers so that his
whiskers sent chills over her. “You want Atlantis,
yes?” He all but purred that into her ear as desire
burned through her.
“Yes.”
“Then what else matters?”
The heat in her body for one thing. It was unlike
any she’d ever experienced before. All her life,
she’d been forced to prove herself to others. And
since her father’s reputation had so impugned her
own, she’d gone out of her way to not allow the fact
she was a woman make the more elitist scholars
disregard her. She’d focused her entire life on
being a serious scientist to the exclusion of all
else.
But with Arik, it was different. He treated her as a
woman and he wasn’t repelled by her protective
barbs. He saw her as desirable. The novelty of that
alone was titillating.
She wanted to close her eyes and lean back into him.
To reach up and lay her palm against his whiskers so
that she could feel the muscles of his jaw work. It
was what she’d do in her dreams.
But this was reality and Dr. Geary Kafieri didn’t
have time for such play. Even though all she wanted
to do was stay where she was, she pulled away. “I
need to work.”
Arik ground his teeth in frustration. But then it
was the power of her that had lured him to her in
the first place. I want you to stay...
The thought had no sooner gone through his head than
she turned on him with a vicious glare. “And I told
you I have things to do.”
He frowned at the anger in her tone. “Excuse me?”
“You said you wanted me to stay and I can’t do
that.”
He cocked his head. “No, I didn’t.” He’d only
thought it.
“I heard you loud and clear.”
“But I didn’t speak.” How could she have heard him
when he didn’t have his powers?
She duplicated his scowl. “What are you?”
He pulled her hand to his chest so that she could
feel his very human heart beating. “I’m flesh and
blood. Same as you.”
Geary didn’t know what to think. Something wasn’t
right about this. She could sense it. She needed to
get away from him until she could sort through this.
Without so much as a goodbye, she left him and
headed topside so that she could get a breath of
fresh air and clear her thoughts. |