This is so cool, lifemate,she answered. Her rapidly beating wings lifted her into the air. The light mist was already passing overhead. The air was warm and heavy with the promise of moisture, but she soared high, reveling in her ability to do so.
Gregori’s larger, stronger body dropped over hers, close and protective, guiding her in the direction of the bayou. As high up as they were, the sharp eyes of the raptor could spot the smallest of movements below. Details were vivid and clear. Even colors were different. Infrared vision, heat sensors—Savannah wasn’t certain what it was exactly, but the way she perceived the world was a different and unique experience.
She dipped beneath Gregori and soared away from him, turning sideways and circling high above him. In her mind she could hear him swearing. As always he sounded arrogant, elegant, Old World, completely in command. Laughing, she caught a thermal and rode it up over the river. The male dropped down to cover her with his huge wings, fencing her in. Spoilsport!she accused him, her touch in his mind a whisper of lightness, of invitation to join in her fun.
You are in a great deal of trouble, mafemme. He knew the threat was empty when he made it; he would give her the world. But why did she have to be such a little daredevil all the time?
Anyone choosing to live with you would have to have a sense of adventure, don’t you think?Her soft laughter played over his skin like music, like the gentle breeze blowing from the mountains in their homeland.
Even within the bird’s body, he stirred to life, need and hunger rising to become a part of him. Relentless. Demanding. Savage in its intensity. It was more than simple lust. More than hunger. More than need. It was all of it merged together with a tenderness he had never conceived he could feel. When she was at her most outrageous, her most defiant, that was when his heart melted. What I think is, you had better do things the way I want you to do them. Shape-shifting is no simple thing.
Everybody else does it,she objected, darting out from beneath him.
The male raptor dove at her, coming in fast and as straight as an arrow, plummeting toward her out of the night sky. Savannah, inside the female’s body, gave a little shriek of fright, her heart pounding at the unexpectedness of the attack. It came out a strange caw, startling her so that for a moment she forgot what she was doing and nearly shape-shifted back into her own body.
Savannah!His voice was a soft command, hypnotic, impossible to ignore or defy. He held the vision of the bird in her mind, completely merging his mind with hers so that they were one. The male bird of prey once more flew in to cover the female’s smaller body, guiding her over the city and canal to the dark bayou.
It was your fault for scaring me,she proclaimed.
Beneath them moss-covered cypress trees stood in the water. Dense reeds rose out of the marsh. The bayou was teeming with life, with sounds of insects and birds and frogs. Turtles shared the fallen, rotting logs with young alligators, and snakes slithered or wound themselves, sated and drowsy, along branches. The male bird prodded the female, and they soared above the beauty of the night for a time, watching the ever-changing scene below them.
Gregori sent a call into the night, seeking the one who would fulfill Savannah’s wish. She wanted a guide, one who had been born and raised in the area and who could answer all her questions. A boat moved up through the waters in answer to his summons. He had been particularly strong in his command, urging the man to answer immediately. Land on the rock below, Savannah, and shape-shift as you do so. I will hold the image with you.
For a moment she was afraid. The rock was not particularly large, and the marsh was treacherous. Trust in me, mapetite. I would never allow anything to happen to you,Gregori reassured her gently. She could feel the comfort of his strong arms surrounding her, even in the form of a bird.
The extent of Gregori’s powers always astonished Savannah. He certainly was legendary. All Carpathians spoke of him in whispers. She had believed he was powerful, but she had not conceived of the things of which he was capable. She felt unexpected pride in him and an astonishment that he would want someone so inexperienced in Carpathian ways, in the essentials of their training, as she was.
I will teach you all you need to know,chérie, and I will enjoy the teaching,he whispered softly in her head. She could feel the fire instantly moving through her blood at the whisper of his voice.
The small bird’s talons aimed down and sought purchase on the boulder even while her slender form shimmered in the humid air. As hers solidified, the male bird of prey found a small patch of stable ground nearby to land on. He glided in smoothly on two feet, his muscular frame dwarfing Savannah’s. They could hear the steady drone of the boat’s engine as it chugged toward them. Laughing, Savannah jumped from her precarious perch on the boulder into the safety of Gregori’s arms.
He caught her, crushing her against his chest, sheer elation, exhilaration, rushing through his veins. To feel again was beyond his comprehension, to feel like this, to have such joy in him, was totally unbelievable. He whispered to her in the ancient language, words of love and commitment that he could not find a way to express in any other language. She was more than she could ever know to him; she was his life, the very air he breathed. You worry about the most ridiculous things,he said gruffly, burying his face for just a moment against her neck, inhaling her scent.
“Do I?” she asked aloud, her eyes dancing at him. “You’re the one always concerned I’m going to do something wild.”
“You do wild things,” he answered complacently. “I never know what you are going to do next. It is a good thing I reside in your mind, ma petite,or I would have to be locked up in the nearest asylum.”
Her lips brushed his chin, feathered along his jaw, then nibbled enticingly at the edge of his mouth. “I think you should be locked up. You’re positively lethal to women.”
“Not to women, only to you.” Gregori stopped her teasing mouth with his own, taking possession despite the fact that the boat was almost alongside them. He was helpless in the web of her spell. She was magic, beauty, fascination.
Her laughter was bubbling up again, her fists curling in his shirt. “We have company, lifemate. I presume you sent for him.”
“You and your ideas,” he growled, gliding across the spongy surface to the boat.
The captain of the vessel didn’t appear to notice that Gregori’s feet never quite touched the swamp. His eyes were on Savannah in genuine awe. “You’re the magician, Savannah Dubrinsky. I’ve been to three of your shows. I flew all the way to New York City to see you last year, Denver a few months ago, and San Francisco this month. I can’t believe it’s really you.”
“What a compliment.” Savannah flashed her famous smile, the one that brought those curious silver stars to the centers of her eyes. “You traveled all that way just to see me? I’m flattered.”
“How do you do that? Disappear like you do into mist? I got as close to the stage as I could, and I still couldn’t figure it out,” he said, leaning forward, extending his hand. “I’m Beau LaRue. I was born and raised right here in the bayou. It’s a privilege to meet you, Ms. Dubrinsky.”
Savannah slipped her hand into the captain’s, a brief touch only as Gregori put her feet firmly on the boat’s floor. He was already pulling her back into his arms as he did so, successfully removing her from the captain’s grip. “I am Gregori,” he said in his soft, gentle way, the voice that enthralled, that captivated. The one that purred with menace. “I am Savannah’s husband.”