Stars of Fortune (The Guardians Trilogy, #1)

“You’re deliberately making me nervous.”


“You should be nervous. Be a little afraid as well, of what the man you drew is able to do.”

“You won’t hurt me that way, and I’m not helpless. Not anymore.”

“You’ve never been. My choice? That’s what you’re asking?”

He took her mouth, hard and fast, trapping her against the door with his body, letting his hands mold hers. “That’s my choice. That’s been my choice since you came knocking on my door, eyes dream-struck. It’s not your dreams binding me. It’s you.”

His lips came back to hers, but this time she held on, this time she poured herself into the kiss. “I’ve wanted you since before I met you. I want—”

She broke off at the pounding on the door. “We’re rolling!” Doyle called.

“All right.” But he kissed her again. “We’ll be finishing what we’ve started here, fáidh.”

“Yes.” The laugh fluttered up from her heart. “We will. But now you have to open the doors.”





CHAPTER ELEVEN




It didn’t look like an inflatable boat. As Sasha’s imagination had formed a big yellow life raft with paddles, seeing an actual boat with motor, covered cabin, benches—and one that remained reasonably steady when she stepped on board—flooded her with relief.

Until she saw the diving equipment.

“Buck up.” Riley slapped her shoulder. “You’ll do fine. What about you, Irish, and the bit about sorcerers not being able to cross water?”

“It’s not can’t so much as would rather not.” He took a small vial from his pocket, downed the contents. “I’ll do fine as well. Who’ll be piloting this thing?”

Riley hesitated, then glanced over at Doyle as he checked over the equipment in the wheelhouse. “Can you handle it?”

He shrugged. “Sure.”

“I’ll give you the bearings. That way I can go over the equipment and basics with the novices.”

“Meaning me,” Sasha said. “Shouldn’t someone stay with the boat? I could stay with the boat.”

“That’s what anchors and buoys are for. You’ve dived?” Riley asked Bran.

“A few times, yes.”

“And you?”

Sawyer nodded. “More than a few.”

“I know this,” Annika put in before Riley asked.

“Okay, grab wetsuits, and I’ll get us going.” She walked to the wheelhouse.

Sasha might have been full of doubts, but she reassured herself. She was a good swimmer, a strong swimmer, so if worse came to worst . . .

She stripped down to her bathing suit—a simple black tank, and a far cry from Annika’s microscopic bikini—and busied herself slithering and tugging herself into a wetsuit while Doyle eased the boat out of its slip.

“It’s fun,” Sawyer told her as he zipped up his own. “A whole new experience.”

“It feels like I’ve been having whole new experiences daily since I got to Corfu.”

He grinned, turned to the tanks to check them. “That’s what makes it fun.”

When she saw him lift a harpoon, examine it, she thought he—all of them—had to prepare for more than fun.

“Okay.” Riley walked back on deck, opened the top of a long, low bench. “First dive site’s only a few minutes away. Masks, regulators, belts. We’ll go over all of it,” she promised Sasha. “Captain Bligh up there’s not too happy about it, but we’re going to start with a nice, easy dive. We’re not likely to find a flaming star waiting for us, but it’ll give everybody a chance to—har-har—get their feet wet. Visibility should be good, so let’s everybody stay together-ish—stay in sight. Standard buddy system.”

“I’ve got her, Riley.” Bran took his own dive knife out of his bag. “She’ll stop being nervous once she’s in the water.”

“Will I?”

“Trust me.”

“Let’s go over the gear.” Riley picked up a thick vest. “Your buoyancy control device—BCD. This will hold your tank, and help you maintain neutral buoyancy. That’s the goal. On the surface, you tend to float, so this, being weighted, will help your descent. The deeper you go, the less buoyancy, so it will regulate. You want the science?”

“I think no.”

“You’ve got clips here for accessories and necessities. Regulator gauge, depth gauge, knife. You want to keep everything clipped off and tucked.”

Riley started talking about drag, swimming “trim,” breathing techniques. All of it spun around in Sasha’s head as she stood and the various equipment being explained was attached to or loaded on her.

Doyle cut the engine far too soon.

“Let’s keep it at about thirty minutes, see how it goes.”

“A half hour? Down there?”

“It’ll go quicker than you imagine,” Bran told her as he competently saw to his own gear.

Doyle weighed anchor; Riley tossed out the marker buoy.