Forever Wicked (Castle of Dark Dreams) Read online

Page 4


  He blinked at her and then nodded.

  “Okay, you didn’t get all that. But we’re going to rename you right now.” She sat and thought while he ate three more sandwiches along with two bags of chips. Mede had never bought into the whole healthy eating thing, and he was passing his genes on to the next generation.

  Finally she sat back and smiled. He’d stopped eating, probably because there wasn’t any more food on the table. “I have your new name.” She always carried around a few good names in her head, ones she thought would irritate Mede. This was the first chance she’d ever had to use any of them. “Your new name is Orion.”

  He offered her a “huh” look.

  “Orion was one of the Titan gods, a mighty hunter and the son of Poseidon. Orion is also the name of a constellation.” Too bad he couldn’t truly grasp her brilliance. “Mede will hate your name. Ganymede is only a puny moon of Jupiter while you’re a whole freaking constellation.” She leaned across the table. “You won the name sweepstakes, my hot young friend. You can thank me once you’re able to communicate your undying gratitude and endless appreciation.”

  “Orion.” He tried out the name and then smiled. “I’ll keep.”

  “Great.” Sparkle beamed at him. “Now I’ll tour this amazing house, maybe make a few little changes and—”

  Without warning, her chair tipped over, dumping her onto the floor.

  Orion looked down at her. “Spirit of owner lives here. Doesn’t want things changed.”

  Sparkle stared up at him. “What?”

  “Ghost is sorceress. Doesn’t like you.” Then he grinned. “You look funny.”

  “Ha, ha.” Sparkle scrambled to her feet. She glared around the room. “You want war, bitch? Bring it.” She took a deep breath, checked her nails for chips, and tried to pretend nothing had happened. She’d deal with the house’s resident ghostly magic-maker later when there were no young, impressionable minds to witness the epic takedown.

  “And while we wait for Mede to return, I’ll teach you what you need to know.” She paused to look him over. “Tomorrow we’ll get you some new clothes, ones that’ll do credit to your future power and budding charisma.” The kid was lucky she’d come along. If not, Orion would’ve had to trudge through life wearing dull clothes and answering to a dreary name. An uncharitable thought intruded. Maybe that’s what Mede had intended. Ben in boring clothes wouldn’t be any competition for her golden god in his black leather and with his exotic name.

  She had one other question. “Why are you sticking around now that the wards are gone? You could walk out the door and not come back.” Oops. Maybe he hadn’t realized the wards were down.

  He narrowed his gaze, and for the first time she saw the cosmic troublemaker he would become—dangerous and not-to-be-messed-with.

  “Ganymede has my…power. I want my booms back. I can…wait.” Then he smiled. “Besides, want to be here when he sees you in his house.”

  So do I, Orion, so do I. “So why is he keeping you here?”

  Orion frowned. “Says he’s starting school for kids like me.” He looked puzzled. “Don’t know why.”

  Interesting. She washed the dishes and Orion dried them. She was busy putting the silverware back into the drawer when, without warning, one of the steak knives whipped out of the drawer, flew across the room, and embedded itself in the far wall.

  Sparkle wrestled her racing heart back to a walk before strolling over to yank the knife from the wall. Never show the enemy weakness. “Temper, temper. Not very creative. We’ll have a nice long talk later when you’re ready to communicate in a civilized manner.” She hoped there’d be a later. She had to find a way to keep Mede from throwing her out. “And I guarantee you don’t want to make me mad. So get over yourself.” She placed the knife back in the drawer and then took the promised tour of the house.

  Days passed. There were moments when she almost forgot about Mistral and his mission. She had enough to keep her busy putting her personal touch on Mede’s new home and his captive newbie troublemaker while tossing insults at the former owner, who had grown a lot more creative.

  Almost forgot, but never completely. Only the thought that if something horrific had happened Mistral would have contacted her kept her worry from blossoming into panic.

  Damn it to hell, he’d had enough of this sneaking-and-peeking crap. Ganymede had spent weeks searching for newly born troublemakers in Asia, Africa and Europe. But he’d had shitty luck because they’d all scattered as soon as their portal spit them out.

  He’d managed to catch two of them, but only because they had lost control of their powers badly enough to make the news. All of the people in a small Chinese town had suddenly gone crazy, screaming about a demon that terrorized them in their dreams. Ganymede had found Jill there. Blue Bunny was busy organizing an army of jungle animals for an assault on an African village when he’d stopped her.

  His maker had seriously messed up, though. Jill was tall with great-looking red hair and the amber eyes that all cosmic troublemakers had. Reminded him a little of… Nope, he wouldn’t think about her. Anyway, Jill wasn’t doing a great job of blending in with the local Chinese citizenry when he’d grabbed her. Then there was Blue Bunny. She was short with long blond hair. Definitely not a local. But his maker’s mistake was all good for Ganymede. It had made the girls easy to spot.

  Now it was time to wrap this baby up and fly home with his catch. Ireland would be his last stop. He couldn’t afford to leave Ben alone any longer. The kid needed supervision. Besides, a trusted source had given him a heads-up. The Big Boss had finished searching for him in North and South America and was headed across the Atlantic. That meant Ganymede had to take his act back to Jersey. Maybe they could wave to each other as their planes passed going in opposite directions. The thought amused him.

  But first, he had one more prize within his grasp. A huge one. He had sensed this kid’s immense power—stronger and more intense than the others—as soon as he’d climbed from his car. Impressive since he was almost a mile away from the Hill of Tara where he figured he would find the teen. Had his creator tossed the kid into the world from the energy portal here? If so, why had the kid stuck around this long?

  With a brief warning to Jill and Blue Bunny in the back seat not to draw attention to themselves, he set out for the hill. The wind had suddenly picked up and whipped his hair into his eyes. Impatiently, he swept the strands aside. Sparkle had always liked it long. Maybe he’d get a buzz cut when he got back to Cape May. But then he forgot about his hair.

  Now that he was almost there, his excitement built. He couldn’t ID what the kid could do, and that intrigued him. It kept him focused, too. With so much power, this child could be one that might eventually rival him. Not likely, but still possible.

  He grinned. The Big Boss would do lots of teeth gnashing if Ganymede managed to scoop up this prize. Right now Ganymede felt defiant enough to piss off the BB. After all, his boss couldn’t want him any more dead than he already did, so Ganymede had nothing to lose. Dead was dead.

  Finally, he could see the kid—a boy—standing in front of the Lia Fail, the Stone of Destiny. He’d managed to get clothes somewhere. Ganymede knew he had the right one because the kid’s power was like a strong pulse pushing at him. He had his back to Ganymede. Good. Not so good was the crowd of tourists milling around the area. He’d have to get the kid back to the car without a lot of fuss. While Ganymede thought things over, the boy turned around.

  As soon as the kid’s gaze touched him, Ganymede realized the boy had sensed him coming. The newbie was ready. He could see it in the narrowing of the kid’s eyes, the tensing of his muscles, and the intent in his gaze. Ganymede wrapped himself in a protective bubble a second before the boy released his power.

  The force of the kid’s energy surge rocked Ganymede back on his heels at the same time it knocked all of the tourists on their butts. They lay there gasping. What the…? It was almost as though… Ganymede abandoned hi
s bubble and tried to take a deep breath. Nothing. Not one freaking breath of air. The boy had somehow sucked up all the oxygen. Ganymede might have almost endless power, but he still had to breathe. Time to take this kid down. Fast. He hit the boy with the same power he’d used on Ben. The kid didn’t even blink.

  Ganymede started to do some gasping of his own. He was out of options. He’d have to ramp up his power and take the chance of destroying the new troublemaker, because if he didn’t, there’d be lots of dead tourists. And dead tourists generated mega interest from the press. The Big Boss would be all over it. Besides, Sparkle frowned on needless human deaths. Not that he cared what she thought.

  But before blowing the kid out of the water, he’d try one more thing. A long shot because the newbie probably wouldn’t be able to understand him. He reached out mentally to the boy. “Stop. You’re killing everyone. I won’t hurt you.” A lie. “I’m like you. I can teach you what you need to know, but you have to pull back your power.” The truth.

  There. He’d done his duty. Ganymede started to count. When he got to ten he’d blast the boy with enough power to incinerate his ass. He was on eight when suddenly he could breathe again.

  The humans around Ganymede started to revive and struggle to their feet. Time to get out of here. He didn’t want to be around when they began asking questions.

  Ganymede strode toward the newbie, but the boy didn’t back away. “I know you don’t understand everything I’m saying, but we have to leave. Now. I’ll take you to a place where you’ll be safe and can learn to control your power.” He only hoped the boy got the general idea that he was here to help.

  The boy stared at him from cold, amber eyes for a little too long before nodding. Ganymede’s tension eased as the kid followed him away from the Hill of Tara. But something bothered him. The boy didn’t look confused or panicky. No newbie should be this calm. Ganymede pushed the puzzle away. Time to explore that thought later.

  Ganymede talked all the way back to the car. The more human speech the kid heard the faster he’d learn. “Interesting place. That tall pillar was an inauguration stone for the ancient kings of Ireland.”

  If Sparkle were here, she’d make Ganymede take a picture of her with her arms wrapped around the giant cock. Because the Lia Fail was one amazing phallic symbol. And she was all about erotic symbols. She’d look at him from those sensual amber eyes, throw out a few sexy comments about his cock, and then they’d go back to the motel and make love. He started to smile then stopped. She wasn’t here.

  “Legend says it was one of the four treasures brought by the Tuatha Dé Danann—fairies to most people. I’ll explain later. Anyway, back then everyone believed if the true king touched it, the stone would roar loud enough to be heard all over Ireland. It was originally… Never mind, here’s the car.” He pulled the passenger door open so the boy could climb in. Ganymede hoped the kid wouldn’t freak out when he started the car. He didn’t want to go through the no-air thing again. Speaking of uncontrolled power…

  While the kid checked out the girls in the backseat, Ganymede quietly tried to put a leash on the boy’s power. But the newbie must’ve sensed something because he whipped around to glare at Ganymede.

  “Don’t touch my power.”

  Ganymede narrowed his eyes. “How much do you understand?”

  “Everything.” The kid leaned back in his seat. “I listened to people talking, and now I can talk too. It’s simple.”

  “Your power, control it or I will.” He stayed ready for action in case the boy got aggressive. Ganymede had confidence in his ability to follow through with his threat, but he didn’t need a battle that would destroy the car and bring the Garda down on their heads.

  The kid nodded. “That was a mistake back there. I thought you’d come to attack me.” He glanced behind him again. “Who are the girls?”

  “Jill and Blue Bunny.” Ganymede had a lot to think about. “Oh, and you’re Jerry.”

  The boy didn’t look happy with his name, but Ganymede didn’t care. Right now all he wanted to do was to reach his hired jet, manipulate a few human minds, and fly home.

  By the time he got everyone onto the plane, listened to the screams of excitement from the girls when they took off, and settled into the transatlantic flight, he was ready for his home-sweet-home, the pink palace, aka Ganymede’s Academy for the Wickedly Inclined. He had lots to plan. His first class might be small, but he had every intention of adding to it as soon as possible. That meant he’d need teachers and other staff. He’d also need a way to ensure that the Big Boss didn’t catch on to what he was doing, at least not until Ganymede had a plan in place to deal with him.

  He glanced at Jerry. The boy could be a problem. He wasn’t like the other three new troublemakers. Ganymede didn’t trust him. The kid was too self-contained—no smiles, no talking to the girls or him, just nothing. For the whole flight, the boy stared out the window and remained silent. But the kid’s power tempted Ganymede. If he could mold this child into his own image…

  Ganymede took a deep breath. He could just imagine what Sparkle would say to those thoughts. “So you want to create someone in your image—an ice cream eating, TV watching, blows-things-up cosmic troublemaker? Great freaking goal, Mede. Turn the boy over to me and I’ll teach him things worth knowing.” Ganymede didn’t doubt she could. Luckily they were landing, so he didn’t have to think about Sparkle anymore right now.

  Once he had picked up his car, Ganymede only interrupted the drive to their new home long enough to buy the kids clothes that would allow them to blend with the general population. He also bought himself some things to wear that definitely would not blend with anything. Hey, he was the leader of this gang, and he had to dress like a leader.

  Finally, he steered the car onto the road leading to his house. “Get ready for your first look at your new school, guys.”

  In the back seat, Jill and Blue Bunny almost thrummed with excitement, eyes wide and fixed on the road ahead. Beside him, Jerry never took his gaze from Ganymede. His eyes were cold and hard, his lips drawn into a tight line of warning. He didn’t speak. Not a big deal, since he hadn’t said two words since they landed. No questions, no interest in anything, only that silent brooding threat that enveloped the car in his own personal dark cloud. What the hell was the deal with this kid? Ganymede sensed that eventually he’d have to have it out with Jerry.

  The house came into view. Ganymede blinked. He stared. Then he blinked again. But that didn’t change the fact his house had changed. It was still pink. It still had white trim. But the green was gone. Flowers lined the driveway. Shrubs dotted the lawn. Worst of all? A white picket fence surrounded the whole mess. Damn. Oh, and don’t forget the cheesy pink flamingo beside the steps with a sign dangling from its beak. It said: Restful Haven. Restful Haven? It sounded like a freaking funeral home.

  He parked in front of the house, then gave an order before climbing from the car. “Stay where you are until I figure out who’s been messing with my place.” Ganymede stood staring at the front door. Someone had gotten inside. Who? Not the Big Boss. He wouldn’t care about sprucing up the place while he waited for Ganymede to return. Only one person that Ganymede knew would think that doing a remodel on someone else’s home was a good way to pass time. He took a deep steadying breath as the front door opened.

  She stepped onto the porch. She met his gaze. Her long dress buttoned all the way to her neck and almost skimmed the floor. Beneath the dress he could just see the bottoms of her old-fashioned lace-up boots. She’d pulled her red hair back into a tight bun and wire-rimmed glasses perched on the end of her nose. She held a ruler in one hand and a bell in the other. Without breaking eye contact with him she rang the bell.

  “School is now in session.” Her sensual gaze suggested all kinds of things they’d learn in her class. She turned and swayed her way back into the house.

  She was the sexiest thing he’d ever seen. He couldn’t breathe, he couldn’t think, he couldn�
��t believe she was actually here.

  “Umm, can we get out of the car now?” Blue Bunny had rolled down her window and was leaning out.

  “Yeah.” Move. Do something. Yell. Throw her out of your house. He managed to breathe again. He’d save all the other stuff for when he got inside. “Bring your things.” Then he stormed after Sparkle Stardust.

  4

  It was like seeing Mede for the first time all those thousands of years ago on the shore of that ancient sea. The local villagers had called her a goddess. She’d believed she was all that back then. Black clouds had coated the horizon warning of a massive storm on the way, and the people had begged her to ask the storm god to spare them. She had to go. That’s what goddesses did. She thought perhaps she should consider a career change.

  But when she reached the shore, she forgot about everything except the man facing the raging sea. He’d shed his clothes and stood naked with his hands raised and his head thrown back. She could only stop and stare. This, then, was the storm god. She could feel his power—a thousand times stronger than hers—driving the towering waves to white froth as the gale shrieked around him. She had savored the moment, enjoying emotions she rarely felt in her village kingdom—excitement, fear, and yes, lust.

  Sensing a presence, he’d swung to face her. The wind whipped his long blond hair into a tangled glory while sea spray turned his perfect body into a glistening temptation. And his face…

  Harsh male beauty—strong lines softened by intriguing shadows, a sensual mouth, and amber eyes like her own. Wickedness lived in those eyes.

  Her heart had hammered, and she’d been breathless with anticipation. She had known then that a thousand years could pass and she would still want him with the same hunger she felt at that moment. Sparkle had been right. Millennia later he remained her golden god even if he didn’t believe it.

  He was an angry god today, though. Sparkle tried to slow her heartbeat to match the sway of her hips. But that took concentration, and concentration was in short supply right now. Her heart continued to gallop on ahead of her hips. She’d wanted to project cool, unaffected, and the ultimate in tempting sexy female. Probably useless anyway. Mede had always been able to read her. He’d know she was playing him. Well, to hell with him. She lifted her chin and kept going.