Stone Passions Trilogy (80 page)

Read Stone Passions Trilogy Online

Authors: A. C. Warneke

Her body was lost as Rhys found the most exquisite nerve and played it until she broke. Her eyes slid closed as her body tightened and her back arched, as she came with Rhys’s mouth on her sex. As she lay trembling, he smoothly moved up her body, entering her in one powerful thrust, setting off another, deeper orgasm.

He buried his lips against her next, breathing raggedly as he moved within her, “I love you, Jenna. I’ve always loved you.”

Tears slipped down her cheeks as his words wrapped around her and entered her soul. She was meant to be with Rhys. Forever.

Chapter 20

 

 

The plane landed at the Minneapolis/St. Paul airport a few days later at one in the morning, plenty of time for Jenna to get home and have Rhys return to the castle with his brothers in tow. Jenna could not believe how much she had lived in just a few short weeks. It was already April, Ferris’s birthday was quickly approaching, and in her time away she had lived a lifetime. Literally, in the case of her trip to the alternate reality.

She had such an amazing time as she delved deeper into the mythological world, as she got to know Medusa. It was painful to say goodbye to the beautiful woman, to leave her behind as her last three sons left home. Medusa had stood beneath the stars with a smile pasted on her lips even as her eyes swam with tears. Watching her hug her sons, Jenna felt an ache in her chest, a pang of sympathy for the woman who had no choice but to let her children go. Medusa had waved madly as the small group picked their way along the rocks to the harbor that held a dinghy that would take them out to their boat.

Since they didn’t make a stop at any of the islands, they made it back to the mainland before the sun rose, arriving at the villa with a few minutes to spare. Leander, Eryx and Orion were passed out, their bodies entwined with the naked bodies of several nymphs. Sleepily, they had come awake and welcomed the newest gargoyles into their fold.

That evening, they took off from the airport around eight in the evening but because they were travelling westward they had a lot more time to spare and they were able to take a direct flight to the cities, something that Rhys hated but suffered through all the same.

With the extra passengers the plane ride home had been less sexy but no less exciting. Michael, Leo and Raphe had loved flying as much as Rhys loathed it. They asked a million questions and kept their eyes glued to the window as the plane took off and landed. While their enthusiasm was contagious, Jenna was more concerned with Rhys, who was only able to handle the flight if his head was in her lap. It wasn’t a hardship.

But coming home was bittersweet and as she unlocked the door to the dark and silent house she felt as if she were returning from a fantasy that she wasn’t sure had even been real. The abrupt change back to normalcy was a weight that settled so easily on her shoulders. She tried to shake off the depressing feeling but it was just… there, as oppressive as a cold, dead weight. It was as if the previous weeks hadn’t happened and nothing had changed. As if it had all been a marvelous dream, one that she had never wanted to waken from but then the alarm sounded and when she tried to recapture the fantasy it was just out of reach.

Pasting a smile on her face, she turned to face Rhys, determined to remain cheerful until he left. He had three boys to deal with so he didn’t need to deal with her strange mood, too. “Thank you, Rhys, so much. This trip has been incredible.”

“Jenna,” he breathed, his eyes searching her face, seeing more than she wanted him to see. But that was Rhys: he saw so much because he loved her. “Are you okay?”

“Of course,” she said brightly, feeling the darkness seeping in through the cracks and fighting desperately to keep it from spreading further. “I’m just tired.”

His nostrils flared but he didn’t refute her. Brushing his thumb over her lips, he looked at her with regret, “I hate to leave you.”

“I know,” she said, the smile not quite as false but still brittle. She glanced at the car where three sets of eager young eyes watched in fascination. “But you have to go.”

“Jenna.” Longing filled his chocolate eyes but now was not the time.

Motioning towards the car with her head, she held his gaze and murmured, “You have to get your brothers home.”

“I want you to come with us.”

“You know I can’t. I have to go to work tomorrow and make up all of the work I missed,” she sighed, letting the smile fall from her face. This was Rhys and he knew her. “I plan on coming over on the weekend with Ferris. She will love having kids her age to play with and I am looking forward to seeing Melanie.”

“Jenna,” he murmured, bending his head. His lips touched hers in a light kiss and anything she might have said became tangled in her throat. “Dream of me tonight.”

“Always,” she promised, opening the door to her house and disappearing inside before he could see the tears fall. Leaning against the closed door, she listened until she heard the car drive off and just like that her adventure was over. She was home.

“Mommy?” Ferris’s small voice whispered through the darkness and Jenna opened her eyes. There was just enough illumination from the nightlights to let her see her daughter standing in the entry staring at her with wide eyes. Memories crashed through Jenna as she looked at Ferris and more than anything she had to hold her daughter, to make sure she was real.

“Ferris,” she breathed, dropping her bags and falling to her knees in front of her daughter. Taking Ferris by the shoulders she simply drank in the sight of her daughter for a long moment before enfolding Ferris in her arms and hugging the child until she thought her heart might break. “Oh, Ferris, I missed you.”

Little hands patted her back as Ferris returned the hug, “I missed you, too, mommy. But I had so much fun with Aunt Mellie and Vaughn and Mr. Armand. And I got to go to Florida….”

Ferris chattered on, making Jenna laugh even as tears slipped down her cheeks. They sat in the hallway for a long time because Jenna was afraid that if she moved she would wake up to discover that everything was wrong, that this life had all been a dream and the other life was the one she had chosen.

Leaning back, pushing Ferris’s dark hair out of her face, Jenna asked, “What are you doing awake? It’s so late?”

“One of the imps told me you were home,” she said as if having imps informing her of her mother’s whereabouts was a normal, everyday event. Shrugging her slender shoulders, she smiled, “This time they were telling me the truth.”

Jenna scowled at the thought of the imps lying to her daughter. Touching the amulet Melanie had given Ferris a lifetime ago, she asked, “Have they tried to hurt you?”

Ferris shook her head no, “Of course not, they are my friends. They have even pinky-swore never to try to injure me.”

“But you said they lie,” Jenna murmured.

“Not when they pinky swear,” Ferris countered. She looked over Jenna’s shoulder and grinned broadly, “There’s Ajreis. He’s my best friend. The others are okay but they like to fade away; Ajreis never disappears on me.”

Jenna glanced over her shoulder and saw the gray-green fellow standing there with its wide mouth full of sharp teeth and its large pointy ears twitching. It was the same type of creature that had handed her a phone a few days prior. As he looked at her with large, muddy gray eyes that pleaded for her acceptance she found that he was so ugly he was almost cute. Almost.

“We’d never hurt Ferris,” the little creature said, his voice scratchy and a little eerie. “My brothers and I regret what happened with Melanie and our brother Vaughn.”

“Mmm hm.” Jenna wasn’t sure what else to say. Her brows pulled together as the imp just continued to stand there watching her with those muddy eyes. Standing up with Ferris in her arms, keeping an eye on the unpredictable imp, she made her way up the stairs to her old room. The creature followed, keeping close to Ferris as if she were precious to him. It was a scary thought.

Laying her daughter on the bed, she kissed Ferris on the forehead, “Good night, sweetheart.”

“Good night, mommy,” Ferris whispered, her eyelids heavy and a sleepy smile on her lips. “I’m glad you’re home.”

“I’m glad I’m home, too,” she whispered, brushing the dark hair from her daughter’s face.

“Love you.”

“Love you, too, baby,” Jenna whispered, sitting on the bed until Ferris fell asleep. After kissing her daughter’s forehead one more time she turned to the imp and sighed wearily. The imp obviously wasn’t going to go anywhere and had probably been standing guard over Ferris as she slept for several weeks. Maybe it wasn’t such a bad idea to move into the castle with Rhys. At least then she knew the gargoyles would keep the imps in line, just in case. “What’s the deal?”

The imp’s long tongue slithered out and licked his lips in an oddly nervous gesture, his eyes darting to the sleeping girl on the bed. “Omari was very angry with us after the fiasco and he threatened to banish us if we did not straighten out. We have no desire to be banished. He also ordered us to protect young Ferris with our lives and we are most eager to do so for she has become most important to us.”

Strangely, that wasn’t very reassuring. “Why?”

He shrugged his scrawny shoulders, his long fingers twisting together as he glanced at Ferris again, “She is the daughter of Rhys’s mate and the niece of Vaughn’s mate.”

Jenna thought that there was probably more to it than that but she doubted she would get anything more than the imp wanted to give. Ajreis turned his head and met Jenna’s eyes, “Besides, we like Ferris very much and even if Omari had not demanded it we would protect her.”

“Uh huh.” Out of all of the strange and wonderful things Jenna had experienced these past couple of weeks this conversation with an imp was perhaps the strangest. And she wasn’t quite comfortable leaving her daughter while the imp stood guard.

Sighing, she took her jacket off and let it fall to the floor. Keeping an eye on the imp, she slid onto the bed behind Ferris, wrapping her arms around her little girl and closing her eyes. Inhaling deeply, she breathed in the familiar wind-fresh scent of her daughter, painfully reminded of another little girl who smelled as sweet. Tears leaked from her eyes as she buried her nose in Ferris’s hair, needing to hold onto her daughter while memoires of another life replayed themselves in her head.

She could still remember how it felt to hold her two phantom children in her arms and she wondered if the guilt and sorrow would ever go away or if they were going to be another thing she had to pretend didn’t exist. She knew that she had asked to retain the memories she just hadn’t realized how vivid they would be once she returned home. How long was it going to take before she was able to forgive herself for making an impossible choice?

Her mind also raced with the other events of the last weeks and no matter how hard she tried she couldn’t shut off her brain and fall asleep. While she had been with Rhys it had been so easy to believe a future together was not only possible but simple to achieve. But she had a child, a job, she had responsibilities that she just couldn’t turn her back on. God, she hadn’t even been home for more than an hour and the doubts were starting to eat away at her.

She wasn’t like Melanie, able to take a leap of faith on no more than the promise of a possibility. Jenna needed more than the words whispered in the darkness, no matter how enticing those words were. Of course, the gods smiled upon Lenni, gifting her with immortality because she drank the poison without question. Jenna simply couldn’t do that, especially if she knew it was poison. It was bad enough that she was planning to imbibe a drop or two of Medusa’s blood every couple of weeks to remain young.

Did that make her a vampire? She shuddered at the thought, still not sure if it was such a great idea to be drinking blood at all. What if they were wrong about the dosage and she accidentally OD'ed? Maybe it would be safer to not take the blood and simply accept Rhys’s gift when she turned forty. As long as she kept herself healthy and in shape she should still look decent and only a little bit too old for the forever young Rhys.

She could hear the imp breathing. Reluctantly, she opened her eyes and flinched when she saw the imp standing there, just standing there. “Go to sleep, Ajreis.”

“We need no sleep,” he said in that creepy voice of his. “We guard little Ferris with our lives and we do not sleep.”

That freaked her out until she reminded herself that the imps were also the sons of Medusa and she had adored Medusa. As long as she remembered that… she would still be freaked out. “Can you do me a favor, Ajreis?”

“Yes,” he answered without hesitation, surprising her. Most people preferred to know what the favor entailed before agreeing to do it.

“Can you bring me a phone?” she asked softly, needing to hear Rhys’s voice. Maybe if she heard his voice she would remember how it was to be in his arms and have far fewer doubts. If she heard his voice maybe then she would be able to go to sleep.

A moment later Ajreis silently put the cordless phone in her hand and she smiled, “Thanks.”

He bowed his head in acknowledgment, which was old-fashioned and disconcerting. Punching in the numbers to Rhys’s phone, she hoped that there was someone there to pick up. As the phone rang, she watched the imp in the low light, his stillness just as eerie as his voice but his breathing oddly comforting, in a strange, welcome to the world of mythology way. He never took his eyes from Ferris’s face and Jenna wondered how her daughter could sleep with a nightmarish creature watching her.

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