"Your daughter needs me, Great Mother," Dylan said respectfully. His chest heaved as he tried to catch his breath.
The goddess's gaze was sharp. "Are you saying that you feel her need, merman?"
Dylan's fist closed over his heart. "As if it were my own."
Gaea's eyes warmed. "Yes, I can see that. You and Christine are linked. Your souls have found their match. It is a rare and wondrous thing, but it is a double-edged sword. Her pain is yours, as yours is hers."
"I would have it no other way."
"What is it you wish of me, Dylan?" she asked so softly that the merman had to strain to hear her.
"Grant me human form!" he said in a rush of words. "Allow me to go to her and comfort her."
Gaea tapped one slender finger against the driftwood as she considered the merman's request.
"My father was of the land. That must bind me to you in some way," Dylan beseeched. "I ask only for a temporary form. Allow me the remainder of this one brief night as a human man."
"It is true that you have a tie to the Earth. But this bond is mortal, as was your father. If I gift you with the form of a human, it will strengthen the part of you that is mortal. The cost could be high, Dylan. You may age. You certainly will become more vulnerable to injury, especially if you are wounded by an immortal." Gaea's beautiful voice was sad.
"Christine needs me."
The goddess sought and held the merman's steady gaze. She read clearly there his love for Christine. And she could feel Christine's soul, too, as it yearned for the respite only her lover's arms could provide.
"I am ever weak when faced with true love." Gaea spoke more to herself than to Dylan, but her words made his face blaze with joy. The goddess held up her hand in a gesture of restraint. "Listen well, Dylan. The spell will last only a short length of time. You must return to the waters before the light of the new day touches the land. If you do not,"—she added power to her words which raised the hair on the nape of Dylan's neck—"you will be trapped. You will belong to neither realm—the land or the sea. You will perish, and your soul will roam without rest for eternity."
The merman nodded gravely. "I will not forget, Great Goddess."
"See that you do not. My daughter would be most displeased."
Dylan smiled. "As would I."
Gaea tried unsuccessfully to keep her lips from turning up. "I am beginning to understand why my daughter chose you, merman."
"She simply showed the discerning wisdom of her Great Mother." Dylan bowed gallantly.
The goddess's laughter glittered around her as she motioned for the merman to swim closer so that she could begin casting her spell.
CC decided the night was never going to end. Her body ached and her mind wouldn't shut up.
"Wine," she said to the silent room as she lit the candle next to her bed. "That monk outside my room has to be good for something. I'll just act all regal and send him off to get me some wine." She spoke to the sputtering wick. "A couple cups of that thick red stuff I had the other night should do the trick."
Isabel had left her a fresh woolen robe, and CC wrapped it around her like a cloak. Satisfied the transparent chemise was well covered she walked quickly to the door, wincing at the cold of the stone floor against her bare feet. Mentally she made a note to stoke the fire to take the chill from the room.
She opened the door slowly, not wanting to startle the Brother. He was sitting with his back resting against the wall beside her door. His cowl was pulled up, and she couldn't see his face.
CC cleared her throat.
The monk didn't move.
"Urn, excuse me, Brother," she said.
"He sleeps." The deep voice came from the shadows. The sound of it made her heart leap in response.
"Who's there?" CC asked.
"Do you need to ask, my love?" Dylan said as he stepped toward her.
"Oh!" CC pressed her hand against her mouth, sure that she was hallucinating, or that Sarpedon was playing a horrible trick on her.
Dylan touched her face. "Am I so very different, Christine?"
Her eyes darted from the strong lines of his familiar face down his body. He was wearing a monk's robe, but peeking from beneath it were two very human, very bare feet.
"I… you… but how?" Had she dreamed him?
"Let us call it a gift from a goddess."
His smile convinced her. He couldn't be a trick. Sarpedon wasn't capable of using such joy as a masquerade. She grabbed his hand and pulled him into her room, closing the door carefully behind them.
"The monk will not awaken. Gaea has seen to that." Dylan's eyes were sparkling. Then he looked around with open curiosity. 'This is where you spend your days?"
"Well, not exactly," she said, surprised at her sudden nervousness. "I mean, I change my clothes here, and I sleep here, but I spend most of my day out there." She jerked her thumb in the direction of the door and ordered her mouth to quit babbling.
"It is…" Dylan hesitated. "… very gray," he finally concluded. Then he nodded at the narrow bed. "And that is where you rest your body at night?"
"In theory," CC sighed. "I don't seem to be having much success with resting lately."
Dylan turned to her and took her face in his hands. He noticed the dark circles under her eyes and the sallow tinge of her skin. He kissed her forehead and then gently kissed her lips. Her eyes fluttered shut.
"I have come to help you rest," he said.
Keeping her eyes closed, she leaned into him. "Now that you're here, I'm not tired at all."
She could feel the chuckle rumble through his chest.
'Then perhaps you would be willing to teach me something of this human body. It is an odd thing to have legs."
His kiss cut off her laughter. When they broke apart Dylan's eyes had darkened with desire. CC took his hand and led him to her bed. First, she dropped the robe from around her shoulders. Then she let the chemise fall from her body. She tugged on his robe, and he bent so that she could pull the rough woolen fabric over his head.
"Look at you," she said breathlessly. He was tall and had the build of an athlete. "Thank you, Gaea."
Dylan smiled. "I make an adequate man?"
CC raised one eyebrow as her gaze flicked down to the flesh that already stood erect between his long, muscular legs.
Her face warmed as her cheeks flushed pink. "Oh, yes. You make more than an adequate man."
Dylan pulled her into his arms. "Teach me how to love you as a human man loves a woman."
CC looked up at him and felt the restless pain within her loosen its stranglehold. "It's the same, my love. In any form you and I were made to fit perfectly together."
They sank down onto the bed, lost in one another.
Dylan knew that he hadn't banished the ache within her, but he had soothed it and made it bearable. She had needed him, and he had responded. No price was too great to pay to be with her. They would belong to each other for an eternity.
Chapter 20
The screech of a seagull woke him. It was such a normal sound, a sound he heard every day of his life. He had almost drifted back to sleep when the gull screeched again.
"Make it go away," CC mumbled, and snuggled more securely against his chest.
Dylan's eyes shot open, and he was instantly awake. His heart pounded painfully in his chest until his mind registered that the room was still cast in the darkness of predawn. He forced his panic to subside.
The gull screeched again.
CC's eyes cracked open. The bird was perched on the window ledge.
"What is it doing?" she grumbled. Then she kissed Dylan's chest and nuzzled him.