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His earlier warning echoed in her head. “Once I line up another berth, another job, I’m gone.”

It was more than a sailor’s excuse this time, she thought.

Simon warned that the children of the sea were changeable as the tides, fickle and unsteady.

She bit her lip. “I don’t need you to stay. I just need. ”

What? “A chance to prove myself,” she said.

“To Axton?”

“To Simon, yes.” And to myself. She shrugged and slid him a sideways glance. “Of course, if you insist that I go back to him. ”

Iestyn made a sound very like a growl. “Fine. We better get moving, then.” He stood, looking down at her. “Unless you plan on waiting for the fire truck.”

It wasn’t an invitation. It was a dare.

She scrambled to her feet, her heart pounding in her chest.

She’d won. For now. She was leaving Rockhaven—

not for a brief mission in the company of a Guardian, but truly leaving—for the first time in thirteen years. The thought was liberating. Terrifying.

She trudged after him, her shoes squelching and slipping in the mud and grass. At the top of the bank, he waited and offered his hand.

She didn’t need his help to get up the slope. She must not depend on him. They were as different as. as air and water.

But they were al ies now. She would help him find his people. And maybe in the process she would find herself.

She grasped his lean, strong hand, a flutter in her chest like hope.

* * *

“Where are we going?” Lara asked.

Good question. Iestyn took her elbow to help her over the ditch at the side of the road.

Right up there with “What happened to your sealskin?”

And What the hell was I thinking bringing her along?

He glanced up the long, curving driveway flanked by stone columns — the kind of driveway that promised a big house at the end. No gate. But this close to Rockhaven, he was taking no chances. “You know who lives here?”

She shook her head.

“Then that’s where we’re going,” he said.

He could tel from the look on her face that she had more questions, but she kept them to herself. Maybe she realized he didn’t have any answers. Or maybe she was out of breath.

She pul ed her arm free. “I’m okay.”

His jaw tightened. “You look beat.”

She was soaked and shivering, the angles of her face too sharp, her lips too pale. But for the past three miles, she’d put one foot in front of the other without complaint like the angel she was.

He’d heard sirens tearing up the night ten minutes ago.

He should have left her on the riverbank to be rescued by some gung ho fireman. Some smitten volunteer who’d wrap her in blankets and take her back to Rockhaven. Back to that cold, control ing son-of-a-bitch Axton and a lifetime of cleaning out birdcages.

He felt his lips pul back in a snarl and adjusted his expression.

Not his problem, he recited silently. Not his responsibility.

She was a grown woman. Barely. She could make her own choices.

And she’d chosen him. He just wished he didn’t feel so damn good about that.

She pointed to a circular sweep of brick and concrete, where skinny trees in black pots were placed at intervals like sentinels around a castle wal. “Don’t we want to go that way?”

“Nope.” He steered her down a gravel path off the main drive. “Big house in the country, probably has a security system. What we want is. ”

The smel of mulch and gasoline. A low roof-line against the trees.

“There,” he said in satisfaction.

An open-sided shed sheltering tools and a wheelbarrow, a riding mower, and a rusting ragtop Jeep. He leaned in the open side, searching for keys. In the glove box, under the floor mat, over the visor.

The keys jangled as they fel onto the driver’s seat.

He held them up to Lara. “Magic.”

Her eyes widened before she caught herself. “Guesswork.”

And then, “How did you know they were there?

That any of this was here?”

He shrugged. “Owners usual y like to hire somebody else to do their dirty work. This is probably the caretaker’s Jeep.”

“And we’re just going to take it?”

He slanted her a look. “Unless you want to drive the lawn mower.”

The engine chugged to life. He checked the gas. Half a tank. Good enough.

Lara’s teeth chattered as she climbed in beside him.

“Are you okay to drive?”

He had the mother of al headaches, his magic choker burned like a son of a bitch, and if he didn’t lie down soon, he was going to fal down.

“I’m good,” he said, trying to sound confident and cheerful instead of insane. “You?”

Her eyes were bruised with exhaustion, her pretty lips blue with cold. She squared her slim shoulders. “I’m fine.”

“You’re amazing,” he said honestly.

She smiled and ducked her head.

The Jeep bumped onto the road, picking up speed as they hit the asphalt. He fiddled with the controls, swearing as a blast of cold air shot from the dashboard.

“Heater’s broken,” Lara observed.

Figured.

The long dark road was going nowhere. At the next intersection, he turned right, relieved when a gas station appeared and then a route sign. The Jeep leaned around a ramp and rattled onto a highway. Rol ing hil s and country estates were broken up and swal owed by train tracks and subdivisions, strip mal s, and overpasses sprayed with graffiti.

The white mile markers flashed by. Lara huddled in her seat, hugging her arms. At this speed, the Jeep’s rag top and open sides didn’t offer much protection.

“Pul that tarp over you,” he ordered. “It’l cut the wind some.”

She twisted around in her seat to drag the tarp from the back. The heavy canvas released the sharp scent of bark, which mingled with the lingering smel s of smoke and river mud. Lara wrinkled her nose as she adjusted the tarp around her. Mulch trickled from her shoulders to the floor.

She plucked a fold from her knee. “There’s enough here for us both.”

He shook his head. “I don’t get cold.”

She looked at him sideways. “Is that a guy thing?”

“A selkie thing. Warm blood,” he explained.

Webbed feet. No pelt.

His smile faded.

“At least it stopped raining,” she offered.

“We didn’t need it anymore,” he answered absently. “Al it takes is one good downdraft to cut off the moisture flow.”

Lara left off fussing with the tarp. “Weather control? Is that a selkie thing, too?”

His skul pounded. His head split like a tearing curtain, revealing.

Mist. Gray stone walls with the damp running down, and a fountain playing in the center.

“Weather working is the simplest gift and the most common,” the castle warden lectured in his deep, burred voice. “The first to come and often the easiest to master.”

The boys sprawled on the bench and on the courtyard grass, watching the clouds, bored with a lesson they’d heard too many times before.

“It is the water you cannot see that creates the rain and clouds,” Griff droned on, “that cools and warms the earth and sustains all life. This is the water you must know and control if you want to work the weather.”

The fog swirled. White lights pierced the gloom.