Read Timeless Vision Online

Authors: Regan Black

Tags: #Paranormal, #time travel, #paranormal romance, #Romance

Timeless Vision (20 page)

Tara resisted Nick’s attempt to drag out her of the way. She didn’t know what she could do, she only knew she wouldn’t let Wayne and Sterling handle this bitch alone. Not after she’d hurt him so badly after the fight in the pub.

She stepped forward, drawing the witch’s full attention. “Give me back my dagger.”

“Oh, but darling, I’m not finished with it yet.”

“You’re a thief,” Tara accused. “Worse, you’re a coward forcing others to steal for you.”

Collette’s eyes flashed, her lips moved voicelessly, and Wayne swung his sword in an arc, blocking whatever spell the witch aimed at Tara.

“Give up your quest,” Wayne said, advancing. “You will fail now that I’ve found you.”

“Have you found me, then? I think the reverse is far more accurate” Her gaze darted to the man thrashing to get free of his restraints. “What have you told them?”

“Nothing, my lady.”

“Good boy.” Her attention returned to Wayne. “It’s a shame I must destroy you before we have a chance to catch up.”

“You are Collette Fairchild,” Wayne declared in a low voice filled with power. He swung the broadsword in a circle over his head. “You are playing with a darkness you cannot fathom.”

“I fathom just fine, my gallant foe.” Collette raised a hand to toss another spell at Wayne. Sterling and Tara moved as one to brace him, protect him, and the witch’s blast shifted at the last second to a different target.

The gap-toothed man smiled blissfully as Collette’s spell killed him.

“His blood is on
your
hands, Miss O’Malley. Name calling is deadly in my world.”

Wayne lunged to attack as Collette retreated in a cloud of smoke. Sterling blocked him while Nick and Tara grabbed at his arms.

“Live to regroup,” Nick said quietly as the dust settled around them.

“What about the man with the gun?” she asked Nick.

“Likely dead as well,” Nick replied. “By suicide or cult leader, it hardly matters now. Let’s get out of here.”

Nick, Wayne and Sterling surrounded her as her cousin led them first to the hotel garage and then drove a long, circuitous route back to the brownstone. No one spoke, giving her too much time to relive and analyze the gap-toothed man’s death.

Why would Collette put that murder on her? Knowing it was a mind game didn’t alter the fact that it was working. Tara felt responsible. She’d crossed a line, baiting Collette that way. Wayne had been managing without her help.

Damn it, the dagger was her responsibility and it was up to her to recover it. “Were we followed?” Her voice trembled as Nick parked the car at the curb. “She has that place a few blocks away.”

“Doesn’t matter,” her cousin replied softly. “She can’t get in. Go on.”

She tripped as she stepped out of the car, and her knees wobbled, giving out. “I’m cold.”

Wayne scooped her into his arms. “Inside, now.”

“Was she hit?”

“I think…”

“Can we…”

Tara’s head swam and the voices faded into a blissful darkness where the world wasn’t shaking and a demented witch wasn’t blaming her for murder.

Chapter Twelve

 

Wayne knew a terror he’d never experienced while he sought to bring Tara out of the darkness Collette had cast her into. For the better part of two days, he and Nick had argued and studied and stood vigil in turns. Both of them understood modern medicine would do no good, yet neither of them knew who else to consult. For two days straight, Sterling spent every possible minute at her bedside, his silver-blue head on her pillow next to her vibrant red hair.

Tomorrow was the winter solstice. He’d fought with Nick repeatedly over which man would strike at Collette and where and how it should be done. They only agreed they couldn’t let her raise Morgana. Wayne sensed wisps of his aunt’s power each time he stepped outside with the dog.

Would killing Collette tomorrow be enough to stop Morgana and save Tara?

If he’d replayed that terrible scene in his head once, he’d done it a thousand times since her collapse. And a thousand times more with Nick. They had picked apart every word, every action and reaction in that horrible room.

No matter what they tried, Tara slept like the dead, her heartbeat sluggish and her breath shallow.

“Any change?” Nick asked from the doorway, returning Sterling to the room after a short walk.

Wayne shook his head and scratched at the whiskers on his chin. He flung out a hand and the books on the floor skittered further from him. “I read it all again. Nothing explains this.”

“Have you tried kissing her?” Nick asked.

“What?” Wayne felt guilty enough for the kisses they’d shared and worse for reliving them when he should be searching for a cure. There had to be help in one of these dusty old books.

“It’s a fairy tale thing,” Nick said. “The prince kisses the maiden, she wakes up, and they live happily ever after.”

“I’m not a prince,” Wayne groused. “And tales of fairies rarely end well for humans.” He wouldn’t be fit for anyone’s happily ever after, even if he could be sure he’d stick with this century once all threats from Collette and Morgana were eliminated.

“Nevermind. I’m just desperate,” Nick admitted. “Collette had you in her sights and diverted the spell to kill her own man.”

“She would have killed him anyway.”

“I know.” Nick came in and leaned against the foot of the bed, reaching out to rub Tara’s foot under the covers. “I can’t figure out how Tara got hit with anything.”

“The bitch lost control. It’s the only explanation.” Wayne stared at Tara’s still form, wishing Nick away so he could try kissing more than her hand. Maybe that was the key.

Sterling bumped up against him, then hopped onto the bed, gingerly nestling his long back to Tara’s side. Once more, Wayne was jealous of his hound.

This was his fault for not keeping the O’Malley heir out of harm’s way. “I never should’ve let her near Collette.”

“To be fair, we didn’t expect the witch to show up in person.”

“Of course we did,” Wayne countered. “Neither of us said the words but we knew it was possible. I suspect Tara knew it was possible.”

Nick grunted. “There’s a solution,” he insisted. “I gave you my account,” he continued, “I know you’ve seen it with Sterling’s eyes. What about searching from Tara’s view?”

Wayne recoiled. “Such a thing is beyond me. Trying it might make matters worse.” His powers were rooted in vision and sight. His training had been limited to what he and his hound could achieve in battle. His studies had been intense and sporadic until he’d entered Avalon for the sole purpose of learning to defeat Morgana.

“Try. We’ve got nothing to lose.” Nick picked up a book and thrust it at Wayne’s free hand. “I’ve been prepped for this my whole life, Gawain. I’ve had the luxury of studying your past with the wisdom and advice of my elders and the advantage of hindsight. You were careful and specific with your binding spell.”

“What are you saying?”

Nick’s face reddened. “I know damn well you wouldn’t have woken up unless your blood was invested as well. She’s the current heir.”

“And here, Collette cannot use her. She’s safe.”

“Try, damn it!” Nick shouted.

Sterling’s head came up, his ears perked, but he didn’t make a noise.

“Stalling won’t save her if you get killed tomorrow.” Nick swiped at the tears on his cheeks. “You know, she’s had dreams of the past, of you and
your
time since she was little. My dad documented it all in there.” He tossed a more modern book onto the bed. “Read it if it helps, but by all that’s holy, Gawain, grow a pair already and do what you can before we lose her.”

Wayne shook his head.

“Shit.” Nick yanked Wayne to his feet and plowed a fist into his jaw. “That’s it, isn’t it? You don’t want her to wake up. You want her to die so the spell is broken at last.”

Wayne took another punch, knowing he deserved far worse for even thinking such a thing. He’d been sent into the world to save innocent lives, not sacrifice them as Collette or Morgana would. Nick was wrong. Wayne had no intention of letting Tara die to break the binding spell, he just didn’t know how to get around Collette’s stronger magic.

“Deny it! Tell me that’s not what’s happening.” Nick pounded on Wayne, his voice cracking with grief. “You’re
better
than this. Find the solution.”

Wayne let the next hard shove and a wave of guilt push him back into the chair. He picked up Tara’s hand and squeezed it hard. He had nothing but the prayers of his desperate, broken heart to offer her.

With another colorful oath, Nick grabbed the modern notebook and flipped it open. “If you’re going to be a bastard, you’re going to know just what kind of treasure you’re refusing to save.”

“I won’t take a chance that will make things worse.”

“Shut up.”

Wayne leaned forward, elbows on knees, head in his hands while Nick read from the journals his father had kept on Tara’s life. It was agony. Nick’s voice drew a picture of a young, clever girl with a rare combination of grit to balance her fanciful nature. She had started dreaming at an early age and not of vague images blossoming from bedtime stories. No, her dreams were specific and a bewildering, inexplicable account of his last years in his time.

He reached for her hand, the fine bones dwarfed by both of his, as he tried to make sense of it. Make use of it. How could a woman centuries removed from his time and world, have such an intimate connection?

Wayne stroked her silky red hair behind her ear as Nick read on. The man’s father had kept remarkably detailed notes. Wayne found himself smiling at her childhood antics, bursting with pride at her various accomplishments, and wishing he’d been here to shoulder the burdens as life started to weigh on her.

He kissed the back of her hand, the knuckles of each finger, once more wishing for her lips. Closing his eyes, he thought back to the service room, replayed it from his view, and then from Sterling’s.

Collette wasn’t yet as strong as Morgana, but she had a terrible, natural talent. What had she done? What had he missed?

As Nick droned on, Wayne knew he should try to connect with Tara through his powerful vision. He couldn’t give up without at least one gentle attempt. The fallout would be worth it if he uncovered the clue that would break Collette’s spell. “Shut up,” he said to Nick. “I need to concentrate.”

“Finally.” Nick snapped the book closed. “How can I help?”

“When we were at the pub office,” Wayne said, “she touched me while I was scrying the scene. It left her vulnerable, though she healed quickly.” And the same healing spell failed him repeatedly now.

“She touched you in the service room too,” Nick said. “When Collette aimed her death ray.”

“No. Sterling did that.”

“They both did.”

Wayne’s stomach bottomed out with abject fear. “Why didn’t you tell me?”

“I thought you knew,” Nick said. “She was touching
you
. What does it mean?”

Maybe nothing. Taken out of context, it could be a coincidence. Woven amid the journal and the other facts since his arrival in Times Square, it was significant indeed.

“There is a blood bond in the spell,” he confessed. “Mine and hers. It’s possible something deeper occurred that I could not have predicted. In her effort to protect me, touching me at that moment, she must have absorbed Collette’s attempt to injure me. No wonder the witch put the burden of death on Tara.” He seethed at that dreadful insult. “It’s a miracle, a testament to Tara’s strength that she’s lived this long.”

“Fix it. Heal her,” Nick pleaded.

“I will.” He’d do his best anyway. “There’s a better chance now that I know where to start.” He sighed. There was no way to know if his best effort would be enough. So far, his best had resulted in one failure after another. “An Avalon priestess would be a big help.”

“We’re fresh out,” Nick said. “You can do this.”

The man’s belief bolstered Wayne’s confidence. “It’s possible what I must do will be another beacon to Collette.”

“Let her try and get through me.”

Wayne thought way back to the day he’d asked for Peter’s vow, grounding himself there in that moment. Then he reached out and placed a hand over Tara’s eyes. The other he rested on Sterling’s shoulder. Hopefully the dog would be either buffer or bridge as needed.

Wayne began with the images from the journal Nick had read, searching for a connection within Tara’s earliest dreams. He felt the energy swell and pop, similar to releasing protective wards on the doors. With one small success, it was all he could do to take it slowly, seeking each place where her dreams had found him centuries after he’d lived those moments.

One after another, he worked his way closer to the present, feeling her breathing change as she came along with him on the strangest walk of his life. There, sharing her view of their fight with Collette, he saw the problem.

It was as if she’d been struck by lightning and here, as he gently cast a healing spell, he felt it working immediately. “I’ve got her,” he whispered to Nick.

“Thank God.”

Tara’s chest rose and fell on a deep breath, then another. Wayne focused on that, then her heartbeat as it gradually picked up a better pace.

Caught between him and his hound, her body shuddered. Her hands fisted in his shirt as her eyelids fluttered and opened. “Wayne?”

Her voice was weak, but she was back. “I’m here.”

“Are you okay?”

“Yes.” The one syllable scraped his throat as relief swamped him. At last, he’d done something right in his life. He heard Nick sniffle before the door closed. “And now you are too.”

“What happened?”

“Hush.” He eased away from her, soaking up the view of her beautiful face as the color seeped back into her skin. “Be well, my love. Rest now.” He pressed his lips lightly to her forehead.

“Don’t go.” She reached for him, her fingers clutching his sleeve. “I don’t want to be alone.”

“Sterling’s here.” He moved her other hand to the dog’s ear. “You’re not alone.”

“I- I want you.”

“All right.” He stretched out beside her, sliding his arm beneath her head. “Rest now.” No force on earth would part him from her. She burrowed into his chest and for the first time in this century, Wayne slept contentedly.

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