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Naughty Karma kc-7 Page 21


  Rodriguez shouted, dragging at her shoulders, but Karma wasn’t in the physical world anymore. She unleashed the power she’d denied her whole life and crashed through the wormhole into the netherplane, chasing the nebulous thread that was her internal tether to Prometheus.

  Her first impression was of a vast sense of space, but it was layered on top of itself—no laws of physics applied here. A thousand objects could occupy the same space at the same time. It was like being inside a universe on the head of a pin. Her regular senses were useless. She was blind and dumb, relying entirely on the sixth sense she’d always tried to cage. She clung to the tether, as much as she could cling without hands or eyes.

  Even her sense of self was distorted, emotions blurred and dulled until the sharpness of her desperate grief and need for Prometheus was hazy and soft. Was there really any hurry? She could float here, drifting along, and things would right themselves eventually.

  A burn started against her sternum—but she didn’t have a sternum, no body here—intensifying until the pain penetrated her pleasant, floaty inertia. The protection charm. Prometheus’s yin-yang. It was still around her neck, rubbing against her sternum. Warning her.

  The lethargy wasn’t natural. Someone or something was slipping her a metaphysical mickey, trying to slow her down and keep her from Prometheus. She pulsed her power around her, the angry surge burning away the fog until her real emotions flared back full force. Pain. Desperation. Fear. Prometheus. She reached for that internal tether, tracking him through the layers of nothing and everything.

  What she found at the other end of their link was barely identifiable as a person. It was barely a spark, more an idea of existence than an actual life, but it was him. At the most basic level, the inviolate core that had been at the center of all that wild energy. His soul. And it wasn’t free.

  Someone or something had bound him there, trapped in a net of power that gleamed silver against her inner eye, and Karma had a pretty good idea who was responsible. Hang on, Prometheus. I’m gonna get you out of here. She began to tease at the moorings of the net holding his spark in place, operating on instinct and hope. This had to work. She’d free him, bring him back and he’d be fine. Alive. She hadn’t been able to resuscitate him with her power because his soul was missing, but if she brought it back, it would work. Please let this work.

  The first of the slick silver moorings came loose and his spark stirred, thrashing itself against the net—that’s it, fight for me—even as the edges tried to reseal themselves. His cage had a consciousness and it wanted to stay closed. By the time she released a second and third mooring, the first had reattached. It became a race to stay ahead of them—a race she was steadily losing. Prometheus’s spark stopped shifting and twisting inside the silver net, falling dormant again.

  No no no. She would get him out. She tried pouring energy through the tendril that connected them so he could fight his way out from the inside, but to no avail. She could try slicing her way through the net, but she wasn’t exactly a precision machine with her powers. What if she sliced right through and hurt him? Too risky.

  If only she was inside, with him, she could burst them both out. She was sure of it.

  As soon as the idea took root, she set it into motion, pouring herself down the thread connecting her to Prometheus, she slipped beneath the net and the edge of her soul brushed against his, causing latent instincts to screech out a warning. No going back from this. If you link to him fully and he stays here, you stay here. But Karma was already wrapping her amorphous self around his spark. They should have fit together like two puzzle pieces, but his piece had shrunk and she had to puff up her power to fill in his blanks. The link locked into place with an ominous finality.

  Karma turned her attention to the net, slicing without mercy, and it fell away. They floated free—too easy, that devil bitch would never let it be so easy—and Karma began dragging him toward the surface of their reality, like swimming through pudding. Prometheus’s spark still lay dormant. Come on, you bastard. I know you’re in there.

  Another presence erupted into the netherplane, yanking on Prometheus’s soul so hard it ripped half-free of Karma. She hissed with pain and clung. A thunderous message crashed into her consciousness on a tide of heat. “He belongs to me.”

  Deuma. Only then did Karma notice the other tether attached to Prometheus. If the one linking Karma to him was a delicate silken thread, Deuma’s was a steel-core cable.

  “I won’t let you take him,” Karma replied, hanging tight to her silken thread.

  “Oh? Try to stop me.” Deuma jerked his spark again and Karma could only fly along with him, holding on for dear life, as the devil hauled them back to the glittering silver net. The cage was alive again, rebuilding itself, wrapping around them with liquid, tensile strength.

  Karma tried to keep it from reaffixing, but it was stronger now and the more she fought, the stronger the cage seemed to get, feeding off her struggles. The futility of it seeped to her core. They’d lost. She’d come here to save him and only wound up damning herself.

  “No.” It was so soft she almost didn’t hear it, a whisper, not even words really, but a faint scratch at the back of her mind, so deep it couldn’t possibly be real. Then she heard it again. “No. My Karma doesn’t give up. She’s invincible, if she would let herself be. She can Hulk-smash the hell out of that puny demon bitch one handed.”

  “Prometheus?”

  But there was no reply. Only Deuma’s taunt as the last of the net’s moorings slid into place. “Two-for-one special. I hadn’t pegged you for such a fool.”

  Had she imagined him? Hulk-smash the hell… Was there really still a part of him alive enough to believe in her? Invincible, if she would let herself… Karma stopped struggling, falling down into herself to that deep, dark place, the wellspring of her powers that had always scared the everloving shit out of her. She’d pulled down her walls, but she’d left this dam in place, too terrified to contemplate letting the power truly have free rein. But fear had no place here. Prometheus believed in her—even if it was a hallucination of him. It was time she started believing in herself. She looked with her inner eye to the angry red energy of Deuma. “You can’t have him. This soul is mine.”

  The dam exploded.

  She was power. She was light. She was particles and chain reactions. The net evaporated. No bounds could contain her. She launched herself upward, cradling Prometheus’s spark protectively, but the steel-core cable was still there, dragging him back. Oh no you don’t. She reached through the two tethers, through Prometheus and down the cable until she felt Deuma’s power, the wild, foreign pulse of it, slippery and dark. It was insidious and corrupting, but she didn’t fear power. She was power. Deuma shrieked and thrashed, but Karma dug her hooks in deep and she pulled. All that power, stolen from thousands of vulnerable souls over a millennia of double-edged contracts, it poured along the cable, into Prometheus’s spark. That sliver of him swelled, gorging on the feast of energy, growing until it was the perfect puzzle piece again, then continuing to grow, feeding. The devil tried to cut the cable, struggling to be free, but Karma wasn’t feeling merciful. She left the she-devil with as much energy as the bitch had left Prometheus. Just a spark. And she buried that spark beneath layers of silver nets, blankets of them. Then she, Karma, snapped the cable with a final promise. “You will never touch him again.”

  There was no response. There wasn’t enough of Deuma left to respond. Karma didn’t care. She was power—and so was her lover. With the wellspring free and the riot of energy flowing through her, returning them to their bodies was the work of a thought.

  Karma gasped in a breath, feeling like she’d been underwater a hundred years. Sprawled on the floor beside her, she heard Prometheus do the same. He’s alive.

  “Madre de Dios, ellos viven. They’re alive. They woke up. I’ll call you back.” Rodriguez came into her field of vision, swearing in Spanish. “You were dead,” he said when he was capable o
f English again. “First him, then you. You stopped breathing. You fell over dead. What the fuck?” His accent thickened the words and then he fell into Spanish again.

  Her body felt thick and slow after the faster-than-thought lightness of the netherplane and she was so exhausted she could barely form a thought. Then a hand brushed hers, long fingers seeking, and a swell of relief broke over her. Prometheus. Karma turned her head to find those black hole eyes looking back at her—but they weren’t pure black anymore. It was small, and if she’d been farther than a few inches away she might not have seen it, but now there was another aspect to the darkness of his gaze. A star. A small, white, spark of a star.

  He blurred as tears flooded her eyes. He looked pretty damn amazing for a dead man. “Hi,” she whispered.

  His brow furrowed. “What happened? Are you all right?”

  Karma swallowed thickly and smiled. “I’m amazing. You’re alive.”

  “You were dead,” Rodriguez snapped, reminding them that they weren’t alone. “You both were.”

  Prometheus sat up, groaning, and the two men helped Karma do the same. “How long?” she asked her exorcist.

  “A minute, maybe two. I couldn’t remember the CPR so I called Brittany. Longest goddamn minute of my life.”

  Karma smiled wryly. “Mine too.”

  Prometheus put an arm around her shoulders and she sagged against him.

  Rodriguez’s next words were cautious. “Ah, Karma? Did you know you guys are glowing?”

  She looked down at her hands. So they were. She could feel her magic shining through her veins. She’d have to learn how to rein that in or she’d freak people out in the supermarket. Prometheus could probably teach her. He was already dialing down his own glow, now that Rodriguez had mentioned it. She felt the wild, extravagant tangle of his power pulling in and dialing down until it was just a lingering hum beneath his skin. She still had a lot to learn about being a demigod—if that was what they were now.

  But all that could wait for later. She laid her head on Prometheus’s chest and closed her eyes, hearing the slow steady beat of a heart. Strong and constant. Mine.

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Drugging the In-Laws

  “Relax. They’re going to love you.”

  “You should have let me bespell the wine with adore-me-approve-of-me charms.”

  “Under no circumstances are we bespelling my parents to trick them into liking you.”

  “We would drink it too. Think of it as an icebreaker.”

  “Prometheus.”

  He let it drop, returning to hover over the vegetarian chili he’d whipped up since Karma’s mother didn’t eat meat. Maybe he could sneak a little acceptance magic into the pot while Karma wasn’t looking. He’d never met parents before, but he was certain he wasn’t what anyone wanted near their darling daughters. Especially fathers with law enforcement backgrounds. There was a reasonable chance he was bulletproof after all Deuma’s magic had been pumped into his system, but Prometheus would rather not put it to the test tonight.

  He didn’t remember anything after the world went white. No afterlife memories for him. One minute he was staring death in the face and the next his heart was beating in his chest for the first time in nearly twenty years. Karma said she wasn’t sure herself how he’d gotten his heart back, that she’d been wholly focused on stripping Deuma of her powers and funneling them back into him, but somehow she’d done it. Fitting, he supposed, that she’d saved his heart, since it was hers anyway.

  It was still a little disorienting, being in love, but he figured he would apply the same ruthless determination to making her happy that he’d brought to everything else in his life and it would work out.

  She came up behind him, looping her arms around his waist and resting her cheek on his shoulder. “They really are going to love you. I love you.”

  Just words. He’d never put much stock in words, but those three words held a weight and magic all their own. They made him hers. They coated his fragile, newly restored heart in the protective steel of her love. She made him safe and he made her free. Magic.

  Karma squeezed his waist. “If conversation lags, I can always ask my mom about my biological father. That should liven things up.”

  He turned, tucking her against his chest and inhaling ginger and jasmine. She put her ear over his heart—it had been two weeks, but neither of them could seem to get used to the sound of it. “Are you sure you want to know?”

  “I’m sure. I’m not afraid of knowing who I am anymore.”

  “You’re the same Karma you’ve always been. A demigod among mortals.”

  “Why do I get the feeling you don’t mean that as a metaphor?”

  “Maybe I don’t. What are gods anyway except those who create life and isn’t that what you did to me? Brought me back to life? Made my heart beat? For all we know you made me immortal.”

  “Don’t go testing your immortality anytime soon, okay? I don’t think I can take it.”

  “I won’t.” He had too much to live for.

  He traced a path down his favorite spot at the back of her neck, savoring the silken softness of her skin and the barely audible catch in her breath. Tipping her chin up, he laid a kiss on the mouth of the woman who made his heart beat, who had flown in the teeth of her fears and thrown herself into the chaos of her powers to save him. He pressed his magic against her skin, the answering flare of her own heating his blood. He fed his reaction along the tether that had connected them ever since he woke up on the floor of her office, and she moaned.

  She pulled away. “You only want me for my magic.”

  He caught her wrist, tugged her back. “Maybe,” he teased, pulling her in for another kiss that left them both breathless when she finally broke away.

  “My parents are in the parking lot.”

  “Then I guess I’d better be good.” He forced himself to release her and turned to check the chili for the millionth time.

  “Don’t bother being good. Just be you. They will love you.”

  “The more you say it, the less I think you believe it, sweetheart.”

  “I don’t have to believe it. I’ve seen it.”

  He looked over his shoulder at her, frowning. “You had a vision about tonight?”

  She flashed him a smile. “Trust me. They love you.”

  “Are you lying to me?”

  “Would I lie?”

  He grimaced, turning back to the chili. “I’ve been a bad influence on you. Poor Karma. She used to be so virtuous.”

  “Not too virtuous.”

  “You’d tell me if your father was going to shoot first and ask questions later, wouldn’t you?”

  “I thought you believed you were immortal?”

  “Everyone’s immortal until they find the thing that kills them. That’s the adventure in life.”

  She grinned. “You’re all the adventure I can handle.”

  The elevator doors opened and his heart sped up as he turned to greet Karma’s family. Maybe they would love him. Maybe she was lying and they would hate him on sight. He didn’t know what the future held. All he knew was that he had a future for a change, and one way or the other, Karma was going to be in it. He was a ruthless, unscrupulous bastard and he was keeping the girl. The rest of the world would just have to adjust.

  Karma called out a greeting and, as soon as her back was turned, Prometheus sent a jolt of adore-me-approve-of-me into the chili. Maybe they would have loved him without it, but when it came to Karma, he wasn’t taking any chances. He came forward as she hugged her mother and she caught his eye, rolling hers. He hadn’t expected to get the spell past her, her powers were too tapped in now, but she just smiled and shook her head as she introduced him to her parents.

  She knew exactly what she was getting with him and she loved him anyway. Unconditional.

  That was some strong ass magic.

  About the Author

  An Alaskan born and raised, award-winning author Viv
i Andrews still lives in the frozen north when she isn’t indulging her travel addiction by bouncing around the globe. Whether at home or on the road, she’s always at work on her next happily-ever-after. For more about her books or the exploits of a nomadic author, please visit her website at www.viviandrews.com, stop by her blog viviandrews.blogspot.com, or email vivi@viviandrews.com.

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