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 afountain playing in the center.

“Weather working is the simplest gift and the most F o r g o t t e n s e a 1 19

common,” the castle warden lectured in his deep, burredvoice. “The first to come and often the easiest to master.”

The boys sprawled on the bench and on the courtyardgrass, watching the clouds, bored with a lesson they’dheard too many times before.

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

The fog swirled. White lights pierced the gloom.

Yel ow lights, coming toward them.

A blare of sound. A horn.

The wheel jerked in his hands as Lara grabbed it and the Jeep shuddered and straightened. The oncoming truck roared by in the opposite lane.

Shit. His hands shook. He eased his foot from the accelerator, sweat breaking out on his forehead.

“Pul over,” Lara ordered.

“What happened?”

“You blacked out.”

“No, I . . .” He inhaled, wil ing his hands and his stomach to settle. “Maybe.”

“What else could it be?”

The Jeep’s tires rumbled onto the shoulder and coasted to a stop. He clicked on the blinking hazard lights: warning, warning, warning.

“Flashback. I thought I remembered . . .” But the vision was gone, lost in the mists of his brain. “It’s nothing. One too many knocks on the head.”

“Miriam said you’d had a concussion before.”

“From the shipwreck.” He struggled to pul himself together.

“At least, that’s what the freighter captain thought.”

1 2 0

V i r g i n i a K a n t r a

“So maybe the second injury shook things up.” Her voice soothed, talking him down. Her hand touched his knee, giving comfort. “Maybe that’s the reason you’re starting to remember.”

“Could be.” He blew out his breath and faced the truth.

Every spark of memory, every jolt of power, had fol owed some contact with her. The touch in the bar. The kiss on the cel ar stairs. The embrace on the riverbank. Maybe she had been sent to find him. Maybe she was meant to save him.

He recal ed the oncoming semi.

And maybe his returning memories would get them both kil ed.

“Iestyn?” Her fingers tightened. “What is it?”

“It’s you,” he said. “You . . . affect me.”

“You think I’m helping you to remember?”

He met her eyes. “Not only that.”

Whether he wanted it or not, whether he left her or not, he was tangled up in her, snared by the way she made him feel. When they touched and when they didn’t. When she moved. When she breathed.

Christ.

He put his head down on the steering wheel, feeling like he’d slammed into the semi after al .

After a moment’s silence, she got out of the Jeep.

Good. He listened to the sound of her footsteps as she rounded the hood. He needed a moment. He needed . . .

She nudged his shoulder through the opening on the driver’s side. “Move over. I’m driving.”

“Pushy, aren’t you.”

“I never have been before. It’s you.” He raised his head to look at her. Her clear eyes were dark, uncertain. A smile trembled on her mouth. “Apparently you affect me, too.”

F o r g o t t e n s e a 1 21

She took his breath away. “Lara.” He stopped, unsure what came next.

“Over,” she said.

He dragged his sorry ass into the passenger seat and watched her fumble with the seat, the mirror, the ignition.

Careful, control ed, the kind of woman he usual y had nothing to do with. When everything was adjusted to her satisfaction, she pul ed back onto the freeway.

And almost immediately put on her turn signal.

“What are you doing?” he asked as they rumbled into the exit lane.

“Finding a place to spend the night.”

“You’re wasting our lead. We could be miles away by morning.”

“You need to rest and I’m freezing. We need a hotel.”

He wanted to argue with her. But the truth was, they both needed sleep. If Axton’s crew caught up with them, they were in no shape either to fight or to run.

“Not a hotel. A motel. The cheapest, sleaziest motel you can find.”

“Don’t we have money?”

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