“What…what was that?” she asked. “What are you doing to me?”
His lips turned downward in a frown, and the colors that surrounded him seemed to darken, as if a shadow had passed overhead.
“Do not be afraid,” he said softly.
“I’m not afraid. I’m confused. I’m…” Overwhelmed. Intrigued. Tempted. Oh, so tempted. “What do I do?”
He reached toward her. Involuntarily, she stepped back. Only when she felt the tug on the GPS did she remember to check the device for new readings.
The screech was unmistakable—the coins were close. She scuttled around the pyramid and then determined that, in order to find her missing treasure, she had to go up. As with so many Mayan temples, slivers of stairs had been carved on all four sides. She took them three and four at a time, using her hands to ensure her balance, until she reached the very top.
She found the package she’d dropped out of her airplane nearly dead center, as if it were an offering to the Mayan gods. She snatched the pack, gave it a cursory kiss, then climbed back down slowly, attempting to keep her occasional bout with vertigo at bay. Once she was six or seven feet from the ground, she leaped the rest of the way, fell to her knees and unzipped the case to make sure she’d finally found the treasure.
Mariah couldn’t contain a whoop of triumph as the coins spilled from the packaging into her palms, perfectly asymmetrical, chunky and, since she’d polished them for delivery shortly after she’d stolen them, iridescent gold. She turned to show them to Rafe when a loud crack exploded from behind her, and the unmistakable sound of a bullet sliced by her ear.
Fifteen
Bullets tore through Gemma’s body, ripping her from her neck to her groin. She gasped and clutched at her stomach, expecting blood and pain.
There was nothing.
She scrambled to her feet. The flute she’d rested on her chest what seemed like seconds ago clattered on the hardwood floor and rolled away.
Paschal’s chair scraped as he pushed back from the table. “Gemma?”
She blinked rapidly, trying to make sense of the images she’d just witnessed. She must have fallen asleep. Or had she? Somewhere between dreams and reality, someone had shot at her. No, wait. Not at her. At a woman with a straw hat dangling across her back, dressed in khakis that rode low on her hips and a long-sleeved T-shirt, crouching beside Rafe Forsyth, who’d been engulfed by an eerie, otherworldly glow.
“How is that possible?” she whispered.
She dropped back onto the love seat, still staring at her uninjured chest and stomach. Rafe must have been hit. But in his insubstantial state, he was unharmed. Like her.
Paschal abandoned the collection of books he’d spread across the dining room table and limped over to her.
“What did you see?” Paschal asked.
Gemma concentrated, trying to reconstruct what had happened before she’d had the vision. Bored with watching Paschal work, she’d snuggled onto a love seat in the adjacent sitting room, twirling the flute in her fingers like a truncated baton. She’d watched the instrument roll over her knuckles, the tiny holes spinning, the ivory mouthpiece flashing white against an increasingly dark room. She had not drifted to sleep, but into a trance, and she’d seen Rafe Forsyth, the man Paschal claimed to be his brother, in some distant jungle with a woman who was not from the past.
Gemma glared at Paschal, suddenly realizing that there was much more to this story than the old man had told her. Much, much more.
“I just had a vision of your brother,” she snapped.
“Where? Where is he?” he asked, reaching for the flute on the ground.
Gemma kicked it away. “You weren’t anywhere near me. I wasn’t piggybacking on your power. I saw that scene on my own.”
Paschal’s mouth flattened into a thin line. After a long second regarding her with surprisingly hard eyes, he nodded. “I suspected this would happen.”
“Suspected
what
would happen?” She grabbed him by the shirt, balled the soft knit in her fist and dragged him up close. “What aren’t you telling me, old man? What have you done to me?”
He seemed utterly impervious to her attempt at intimidation. He merely arched a brow and gave her grip on his person a cursory glance. “There’s no need to beat the information out of me, my dear. You asked a valid question. I am fully prepared to give you an adequate answer.”
Rage and frustration shook her, not to mention fear. All the cool detachment she’d worked so hard to perfect peeled away from her body, sliced off by the magic she’d always believed belonged to others. Her grandfather. Her great-uncle. Her father. But never her. Never, ever her.
She released him. “Start talking.”
He pursed his lips. “Where to begin?”
“I’d say at the beginning, but I don’t have all day while you recount more nonsense about the eighteenth century. Start with what just happened and work your way back.”
“I hear suspicion in your voice,” he noted.
“Do you blame me?”
Up until now, Gemma had accepted Paschal’s story. She’d been raised on the possibility of a great magic that could transcend time and space, so his claims to be an eighteenth-century member of the British peerage seemed, comparatively speaking, reasonable. According to Paschal, a powerful curse set forth by her ancestor had trapped him in an enchanted mirror until the end of World War II and had since then given him the excessive vigor he now enjoyed despite his advanced age.
Even the fact that he could mentally travel into the past had not entirely surprised her. What shocked her, from the start, was her ability to experience his vision.
But this time, she’d had a psychic episode on her own, and she wanted to know why. And how.
“Sit down,” he instructed. She glared, prepared to argue, but he gave her shoulder a shove, and she teetered back into the love seat. “You are a mimic,” he said.
She leaned forward, assuming she’d misheard. “A what?”
“A mimic. It’s a rare psychic ability. It allows you to absorb the preternatural skill of someone you come into close contact with.”
“That’s ridiculous.”
“Is it? Tell me about your father.”
“He was an asshole who ignored me because I was a girl. What else do you need to know?”
“You are certain your gender alone explains why he continually kept you at arm’s length?”
She attempted to stand, but he pushed her down again.
“What do you know about him?” she demanded.
“Nothing more than what you’ve told me. But you’ve left out the more relevant details. From what I’ve been reading,” he said, gesturing toward the stacks of papers on the dining room table, “the grand apprentices of the K’vr all possessed some psychic powers. Clairvoyants, mostly. Or at the very least, clever con men. What could your father do?”
Gemma frowned until her face hurt, not really wanting to remember the man she’d called Father—a man she barely knew. When he was home—which wasn’t often—he expected a cursory visit from her in the morning to give his instructions for the day to her nanny, and a sometimes longer audience during dinner, particularly when they had guests. Even then, she sat at the opposite side of the table in the space normally reserved for her mother—at the farthest distance from the man she both admired and hated with all her soul,
Outside these scheduled interactions, Gemma saw her father only when she secretly watched him from one of the many hidey-holes in this house. And as Paschal suspected, she’d seen and heard a great deal during that time. Secrets she’d told no one—not even Farrow. Particularly not Farrow.
“Lies,” she answered begrudgingly. “He had the uncanny ability to root out lies. Neither Keith nor I could ever get away with anything. Never mind the people he worked with every day. He just knew when people weren’t telling the truth.”
Paschal arched a brow. “How did he use this to increase his wealth? That is one of the key tenets of the K’vr, yes?”
She nodded. The search for the source of Rogan’s magic wasn’t cheap, and descendents of Lukyan Roganov had never lost the taste for living high on the hog. “Blackmail. He’d watch politicians and public figures on television or would meet them in person at black-tie affairs in New York or Washington. When he sensed a lie, he’d do some digging. Invariably, he’d find the truth and exploit it. He made millions.”
“And how long have you shared his talent?”
“Not long enough,” she quipped, always suspecting that she had inherited her father’s ability, but she was never entirely certain.
Her father had always refused to hear a single question about it. Then he’d died, leaving a permanent wedge between his children and the organization that had been his only legacy. Or had it?
“I certainly had no idea you were nearly three hundred years old,” she said.
“Ah, yes. But I never once lied about my age,” he countered. “I always claimed to be
more
than ninety…and you rarely believed even that much.”
“You old dog,” she replied, realizing that, despite her gift, he had indeed found a way to fool her.
From the first time she’d met Paschal, she’d known he was keeping a secret. Trouble was, no amount of research on her part into the supposed university professor’s life had revealed that he’d been born in the seventeen hundreds and had survived the centuries because of exactly the black magic she’d spent her life searching for.
Her father’s ability was not to know the truth—only to recognize the lie. And that much she’d done.
“Big lot of good this gift has done me so far,” Gemma said.
“You knew Farrow was going to dump you long before he had a chance to. You were able to make preparations so that you are still in the running for the leadership.”
“Only by staying alive.”
More and more, Farrow Pryce had teetered toward obsession in his quest to take over the K’vr. He already had mounds of money and, therefore, a shitload of power. She could never understand why he so desperately wanted to be in command. His family had amassed millions simply by working alongside the grand apprentices. Why did he need the title?
“Women know when they’re about to get kicked to the curb,” she reasoned. “Most just have too many romantic notions to get out before it’s too late.”
“Explain then,” Paschal continued, “how you knew the picture of the chalice you showed me back in my hotel room all those months ago was important to me, even when I claimed at first that it was not? Not to be a braggart, but I’m quite an adept liar. And yet you knew I was not telling you the truth.”
Gemma rubbed her cheeks, then her eyes and finally her arms. She’d always thought her talent for ferreting out lies was courtesy of her father, but only because she’d inherited his cynicism, not because she’d stolen some paranormal ability.
“So, being around my father, I just absorbed what he could do?”
“And you’ve done the same with me. After accompanying me on our little journey, you can now touch the flute and transport yourself into the past.”
“No,” she corrected, her hand involuntarily going to her stomach—to where she’d almost felt the bullets piercing her skin. “Not the past. The present. The now.”
Paschal calmly drew a chair across from her but she could tell his coolness was as much a lie as any words. “Tell me what you saw.”
Gemma considered keeping the story to herself, but she could see no purpose. If she truly possessed a paranormal ability—or two—her chance at the leadership of the K’vr had increased exponentially.
Unlike her, Paschal understood how this shit worked. He could guide her. Teach her. Give her the knowledge she needed to exploit this discovery until she had exactly what she wanted.
“Rafe was there, but he wasn’t solid. He was all…sparkly.”
Paschal’s brow furrowed. “I don’t know what that means. You’re sure it was him?”
“Pretty sure,” she replied. It was kind of hard to tell, since he had been, essentially, see-through. But it wasn’t her eyes that told her the being of light was Rafe Forsyth—it was something deeper. “And I saw a woman. Brown hair. Relatively tall. Dressed in khaki and standing in front of what looked like…” She searched her memory for a comparison. She’d seen a structure like that before, but not in person. In a book. On television. Maybe a movie. “Chichén Itzá.”
“Mexico?” he asked.
She shrugged. “Hell if I know. The place looked Aztec or Inca or Mayan. You know, one of those pyramids with lots of steps up the sides and a flat top. And old. Really, really old.”
“Perhaps you did see into the past again,” he said, finding the flute and, holding a hand across his lower back as a brace, bending down to retrieve it. “To one of the previous owners, before the K’vr took it back into their possession.”
He attempted to hand her the instrument, but she waved it away.
“No, thanks.”
“You are not drained,” Paschal insisted. “Not like before. You can do it again.”
Only a few days ago, their initial contact with the flute in the underground repository and the subsequent witnessing of past events had knocked them both out, though she’d been in decidedly better shape than Paschal. Now, she supposed she felt a little woozy, but nothing in comparison to before. That didn’t mean she wanted to take the risk if the payoff wasn’t worth it. What more could she see?
“Maybe I bounced back quicker because I’m younger,” she teased.
“All the more reason for you to try again,” he concluded.
“I wasn’t trying to transport myself anywhere. I was just playing with the damned flute. I don’t want to do it again.”
He continued to stare at her. She wasn’t one to back away from a challenge, but she needed a few minutes to come to terms with all she’d learned.
Paschal stood and began to pace, his hands hooked behind him. She watched him go back and forth until she thought he might hypnotize her into agreeing.
“Will you stop that, please?”
Paschal turned sharply on a heel. “Tell me more about the woman.”
Gemma cradled her chin in her hands and stared sightlessly at the lines in the floor, trying to re-create the images in her waking mind. “She was definitely from this time. She was wearing pants and had a backpack. She was holding something. A package. Something shiny.”