Read Blood Trinity Online

Authors: Sherrilyn Kenyon,Dianna Love

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Contemporary, #General

Blood Trinity (38 page)

Holding the stone in her hand, she could read the mantel clock that had belonged to her granddad. Not quite three in the morning yet.

Vyan was still there and more dangerous looking than earlier with his beard now starting to grow in. The pink cast was strangely beautiful on his Mediterranean-dark skin, which she wouldn’t have been able to see if not for this magical rock she clutched in her fingers. The Sunday she’d found it seemed a long time ago, but today was only Tuesday.

Two days of having her vision back.

But now she had this man who actually knew about the rock.

And he’d stepped in front of her to protect her from that lightning-bolt-throwing guy. Why would he risk his life for her like that?

Being the brave dog he was, Brutus padded his way over to the inert man, circling him to sniff at his shoulder.

She squatted down and waved her hand to call Brutus back to her, but he had selective eyesight and ignored her. When she hissed at him to come back, the man’s eyes opened and he turned his head to face her.

Dear Lord. He had two pupils in each eye.

Breathing became impossible.

She should have stayed in her room with the chair jammed under the knob.

“Hello.” His dry voice had a funny accent. She’d noticed something Middle Eastern–sounding in the park, but now she also picked up warm and friendly.

She tried out her voice. “Hello.”

Brutus had lain down next to the man’s side and was currently getting his back rubbed.

The man continued to stare at her until she felt pressed to say something. “Who are you?”

“I am Vyan of the Kujoo.”

Watching him for any signs of aggression, she asked, “How’d you end up here?”

His eyes smiled, as if he’d been asked an easy question she should have been able to answer. “You brought me here.”

“No, I didn’t.”

“The stone you hold brought me here with you then.”

That could have been the case. She’d been standing in Piedmont Park with this guy lying across Brutus’s leash, which she’d been holding when she’d said she wanted to come home. Everything had blurred. She’d felt as though something had been sucking her down a wind tunnel, then all motion had stopped and she was sitting here with Brutus and this guy.

With an injured Vyan. She brushed her tongue over her parched lips. “Who was the guy that hurt you?”

“His name is Tristan.”

“Why were you fighting him?”

“He wants the rock you have and will harm you to get it.”

The thumping in her chest should be loud enough to wake the neighbors. She’d been searching the creek in the park to see if she could find any more glowing rocks when she’d encountered Vyan, Tristan and a strange woman, none of whom seemed to be friends. “Why does he want this rock?”

“You know the answer to that.”

Okay, she did realize that
anyone
would want a magical rock, but she wasn’t giving it up and losing her vision. She
was
happy to have someone she could talk to about this rock. “What does he plan to use the rock for?”

“For evil reasons that you may not believe.”

She made a rude sound from deep in her throat. “If this had been two days ago, I might agree, but I’m holding a rock that gives me perfect vision and transported me home. This was
after
you pulled a sword on that Tristan guy, who had the power to throw lightning bolts at you.
And
a woman stepped in to stop him with some invisible power that made a force field of some sort. And your eyes aren’t exactly normal. What makes you think I won’t believe anything
you
have to tell me?”

He laughed, and the room filled with the pleasure of his happiness. “You are correct. I had not considered your experience with the Ngak Stone.”

“Nak stone?”

“Yes, the Ngak Stone.” He studied her eyes. “So you are blind?”

She flushed with self-conscious embarrassment. “Not yet, but I’m losing my eyesight.”

“You must find another way to regain your sight. This stone is dangerous to keep. I will protect you as long as I can, but that time is limited and I will soon be outnumbered.”

How many more people like Vyan were floating around Atlanta? She should have realized finding a magic stone would come with fine print. Standing up, she made a decision. “I guess you’re not going to rape and murder me if you haven’t yet.” She almost
laughed at the horrified look on his face until his expression changed to anger.

“I have
never
harmed a woman and
never
forced myself on one.”

“I didn’t mean to insult you.” She lost her smile. “I was just thinking out loud. It’s not smart for single women to bring strange men home.”

His brow crinkled with thought. “I sometimes do not understand your language. You were joking, correct?”

“Yes, I was joking … as long as you really aren’t here to harm me.”

“I will not harm you.”

The sincerity in his words touched her. He’d protected her earlier, and Brutus liked him. She ran out of ways to judge his character at that. “If we’re going to talk, I’d like a cup of tea. Want some? I don’t have anything stronger, like alcohol.”

“Tea would be good, but I must find a place to wash my face first.”

“Oh, yes.” She pointed down the hall. “Last door on the right.”

He pushed up to his elbows and gritted his teeth. His nice skin tone turned ashen.

She hurried over to help him before common sense jumped up to warn her about getting too close to the guy. “Take it easy. I’m not a doctor. I don’t have a car or I’d take you to the hospital.”

“No doctors or buildings. I will heal fine.” He gained his feet, stood for a moment getting his balance, then took slow steps down the hallway. The worn jeans fit his body nicely.

It had been a long time since she’d noticed any man. Chuck the Thief hadn’t interested her in a romantic way at all, but any woman would notice this Vyan in a crowd of men.

Especially bare-chested. Much as she hated to cover up that gorgeous body, she told him to wait a minute then ran to find one of her granddad’s old T-shirts. “Here you go.”

“Thank you for your kindness.” He accepted the simple gift as if she’d handed him something of great value. Then he gifted her right back with a smile that would forever be framed in her mind.

Now, if she could just get her heart to stop beating as if she were still in her teens.

When the bathroom door clicked shut, she hurried to the kitchen to make tea. The pot of water was whistling by the time he stepped into the kitchen and dropped into one of four scarred chairs sitting around a small table. She’d planned to do more with this house when she’d moved in a few years ago, once she started growing her art sales. The house wasn’t much to look at right now, but it had potential.

True potential if the rock allowed her to continue painting her giant pots and marketing them on her
own. Since finding the rock, she’d been painting the last few pieces of pottery she had ready, but she needed to make more and needed two hands to handle the giant pots. Today’s project was supposed to be figuring out how to do that while holding the rock.

Not entertaining a man with magical power.

But he’d put his life on the line for her … and was still trying to protect her.

She stepped over to the table and leaned down to pour tea in the cup next to him. He smelled of the outdoors, as though he slept under the stars at night.

He waited quietly while she placed a dish of oatmeal cookies on the table. What did you feed men who fought lightning bolts with a sword? “Want anything in your tea?”

“No. You have a fine home.”

She looked around to see if she’d missed something about her home, then sat down. Maybe he saw the same potential. “Thank you. Now, explain to me about Tristan, his evil reasons for this Ngak Stone and how you fit into all this. Maybe I need to tell the police.”

The twinkle returned to his eyes. “Your police can do nothing to help you.”

She was afraid of that, but she sipped her tea so he could continue.

“Perhaps the best way to explain is to tell you where I come from.”

“I didn’t think you were from here, but we do have a large ethnic community, so I wasn’t sure.”

“I am from Tibet.”

“I figured Middle Eastern,” she said, having no clue where Tibet was.

“I don’t know of this Middle Eastern, but did you
figure
that I came from eight hundred years ago?”

She put her tea down. Her head spun, so she grabbed the table.

“Are you sick?”

“Not yet, but that’s probably coming next. Eight hundred years? As in you came forward in time?”

“Sort of. I have been living in immortal existence beneath Mount Meru for all these years.”

She thought she was ready to accept anything this man said, but
he’d lived under a mountain for eight hundred years?
How had he ended up here? “Did Tristan come from the same place?”

Vyan’s face tightened with a scowl. “No, that dog is of this era.”

“How do you two know each other?”

“My warlord escaped Mount Meru two days ago with eight more soldiers, then we went to South America to free Tristan from a spell-bound cage.”

She swallowed, trying to keep up with the story he was sharing and ask the right questions. “Why was he in a cage?”

“Because he changes into a beast that kills humans.”

The tea churned in her stomach. “Why did you free something like him?”

“Because my warlord believes Tristan can get the Ngak Stone we need to send our tribe back eight hundred years to live in our time again.”

“Why did you come forward in time if you want to go back?”

Vyan smiled. “It does sound strange. I will explain. Our entire tribe was cursed to live beneath Mount Meru as immortals eight hundred years ago after battling with the Beladors. We want to go home to our lands and live as natural men again, and the Ngak Stone is our only hope.”

“Beladors. What are those?”

“That woman tonight is one. They are our enemy. In my time, the Beladors murdered our families. We have been forbidden to battle them by our god Shiva or we’ll be further cursed.”

“Okay, wait.” She rubbed her temple to ward off the headache building. “You and your warlord and some of his men came to my time to find this rock, but you need Tristan to get the rock that he’ll use to send your people back in time. Is that correct?”

“Yes.”

“But the Beladors are here and they’re your enemy, but you can’t fight with them but Tristan can? Are the Beladors in this era evil people?”

Vyan broke his eye contact, letting his gaze sweep
the room before coming back to her face. “They are my enemy.”

She let that go to focus on the question that mattered most. “How does Tristan plan to get this rock?”

“You could give it to him.”

“I hear an ‘or’ at the end of that.”

“He can kill you and take it.”

Fine print warnings had never been that dire in the past. What was she going to do? Then it hit her. “What if
I
send your tribe back eight hundred years?”

“I don’t think you possess the power to control the rock at this point if you couldn’t send me away earlier.” He smiled.

“You heard that?”

His smile widened, so sexy it turned her mind to mush.

She’d be fanning herself soon if he kept that up. “Sorry, but I didn’t know what to do with you.”

Vyan’s worried eyes met hers. “Tristan is not the greatest danger for you.”

“You don’t think getting killed by something that changes into a beast is bad enough?”

“You have until sunrise tomorrow morning to give up the stone or it will bond with you permanently as its master.”

“That doesn’t sound so bad. Maybe I
want
to be the stone’s master.”

“It is not so easy as it seems. This stone is as old as the earth itself. It has passed through the hands of many masters, all of whom are dead. The stone has always gone to a powerful being who could control the stone’s powers. On Wednesday morning when the sun touches the spot where you found the rock, energy will fill you. This stone chooses its own destiny and may have chosen you because you are human.”

This was as bad as listening to the evening news, full of death and disaster, except it would be
her
death and disaster. “What do you mean? Why is being human not a good thing?”

Vyan drew hard on a breath and took his time answering. “If the stone’s energy does not kill you when the power hits your body, the stone may take over your mind and turn you into its slave to commit whatever actions it decides. It could choose for you to do good in this world … or to destroy everything and everyone in sight.”

She released the stone she’d been clutching inside her pants pocket and suffered the loss of vision.

Live in a world of darkness forever or risk the future of humanity and her sanity?

THIRTY

The interior of the windowless panel truck bouncing over every bump on hard rear springs smelled of male perspiration and dedication. Evalle doubted she could say a thing to Laredo Jones, the mountain-size leader of these men, that would change their minds about delivering her to Isak.

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