CHAPTER
TWENTY-TWO

NADINE COWERED IN the bushes with her heart pounding, afraid to move until Raoul and his friend had walked through the yard and into the art gallery.

When the door closed, she let out the breath she was holding, then rushed back into the alley and headed for home.

Home.

That was a house owned by Raoul.

Now what the hell was she supposed to do? Go back there and pretend she hadn’t been here? Or maybe she should make a break for it. Because she wasn’t that good an actress. When Raoul saw her face, he’d know something was wrong. Because she’d heard him talking about murder.

Not just of chickens. The murder of a man.

If he could kill some guy he’d never met, what would he do to her when he got angry?

It sounded like she’d better start thinking about her options. Like, was there a quick way to get the hell out of Dodge?

She had more than enough bread for a plane ticket, but Raoul had spies at the airport. If she tried to buy a ticket, he’d know about it. And nobody on the island would hide her from him. She was stuck.

As she stood in the dark, trying to figure out what to do, an idea came sneaking into her mind.

That priest—Joseph Hondino. He’d said he would help her. Maybe in exchange for some information, he’d help her get away.

Or was it better to go down to the docks and see if any new boats had come in? Maybe she could pay someone to take her to Jamaica. Even that was risky. But she was thinking that she’d better chance it.

She clenched her hands into fists, trying to decide which way to jump.

 

ZACH woke with a feeling of well-being, which he understood was strange, since he knew the instant he opened his eyes that he and Anna were stranded on a deserted island somewhere in the Caribbean.

But her presence next to him on the makeshift bed made all the difference. She was warm and totally relaxed, her posture telling him of her utter trust in him.

That gave him a small twinge. She trusted him. But he couldn’t let go of the nagging doubt about the other guy who kept barging into their relationship.

If she didn’t want him there, would he really be able to interfere?

He hated himself for asking the question. But he’d learned not to trust easily. Not after his own brother had made his life hell for years. Craig had been jealous of him from the time he was born. At least the way his mother told it. And maybe he’d even caused some dangerous accidents when Zach had been just a toddler.

Zach couldn’t prove the early incidents. But he sure recalled being pushed off an outcropping of rocks.

And he remembered his father’s reaction. Dad had called him clumsy. And Craig had walked away with a smirk.

Shoving the past from his mind, he turned his head just enough so that he could see Anna’s face. She was still sleeping, with her lips slightly parted and her lashes very dark against her pale skin.

They’d been through a terrible ordeal the day before—then celebrated with hours of lovemaking. He knew she needed to rest, and he lay very still, trying not to wake her.

After they’d made love, they’d talked—not out loud, but in their minds. He now knew more about her than about any living human being. And she knew as much about him.

Maybe to prove how much she trusted him not to make fun of her, she’d shared some of her worst memories.

Like the terrible embarrassment when she’d gotten her first period in the middle of gym class.

And he’d let her see the awkward scene when he’d seduced a girl in his college class because he was embarrassed to still be a virgin.

Then she’d told him how much she hated riding the school bus, wondering who would sit next to her.

As he kept his gaze on her, he saw that her eyes were moving back and forth under her lids.

Rapid eye movements. He knew what that meant. She was dreaming.

About what?

And could he join her in that dream? A couple of days ago, the thought would have been incomprehensible. But the first time he’d met her was in a kind of waking dream. And after he’d made contact with her, they’d reached toward each other in ways that a normal person would never have thought of—or even believed possible.

Still, there were avenues they hadn’t explored. And things they hadn’t done to strengthen the connection between them.

What if he joined her in her dream? Would that cement their relationship more tightly?

Or was he looking for excuses to spy on her?

He didn’t like the image of himself as a man who had to control his lover’s actions and her thoughts. But at the same time, he wanted to know about the other man. The man she said was named Raoul San Donato.

Would San Donato try to reach her in her dreams? Or would Anna’s subconscious reach out to him?

Or maybe she couldn’t control what she was dreaming. She could be having a nightmare. And if so, he could change the equation.

Once again he questioned his own motives. But that wasn’t going to stop him. He wanted to know where her subconscious had taken her. And he was going to find out—if he could.

Physical contact had been the door to mental intimacy between them. As they lay on the bed she’d made from the sofas, he was snuggled up against her, her hip and shoulder wedged against his—very intimate physical contact. The right kind of contact to get into her mind.

He’d done it many times now when they were both awake and she was reaching for him at the same time. He hadn’t tried it while she was sleeping.

Should he close his eyes to concentrate? Or should he watch her face because that was yet another kind of bridge to her spirit?

He opted for the latter, his fingers pressing against her hip as he reached toward her sleeping thoughts, not even sure what he was doing. Or if she would stay sleeping while he tried to probe her mind.

Hoping he wouldn’t wake her, he strove for contact on the very deepest level. He couldn’t explain the process he was using—even to himself. But he figured he was on the right track when the room around him went away, much like when he’d first been standing on the street in front of the poster of Magic Anna.

Lord, that seemed like a long time ago.

He hadn’t even met her in person then. But they had held each other and kissed for the first time in that dream.

This time was different. He could still see her lying next to him on the couch.

Then the image faded, leaving him in a twilight place with no sound and no sense of touch. He knew his hand was still pressing against her hip, but suddenly he couldn’t feel her warm skin. And then he couldn’t even see her—or anything else.

Before panic could bloom, everything changed again. In the space of a heartbeat, he stepped through a translucent curtain onto the sea grass at the edge of a beach. Very much like the beach where they’d washed up yesterday.

The sun was shining in a brilliant blue sky. A gentle breeze blew off the water. And the waves broke gently on the wet sand, each one with a curl of foam where it receded.

He scanned the scene, then took a step forward. The beach seemed to be deserted except for some plovers running along the edge of the waves, searching for crabs and other sea creatures.

He looked to his right, and elation surged through him when he saw that Anna was standing on the sand on a spot that was formed from recent waves. In bed beside him, she had been naked. In the dream she was wearing a South Sea island sarong made of bright flowered material. It blew gently in the breeze, as did her hair, which was dark and shiny around her shoulders.

When he took a quick look behind him, he could see the white walls of the house poking up through a tangle of vegetation.

So in the dream Anna was still on the island, but she had come down to the water’s edge and dressed herself in something comfortable but simple.

He was still as naked as when he’d awakened. But this was a dream, after all. And he grinned as he thought about what he might put on.

Not just clothing, but a whole persona. He could be anything in the world. He could come to Anna as a Greek god. Or a rock star.

He decided on being himself and wearing a pair of loose-fitting trunks with a random blue and white Hawaiian pattern.

He grinned again when they appeared on his lower body. Too bad he and Anna couldn’t stay here. Then they’d have everything they needed.

He thought about asking the god of dreams for a cup of coffee and a bagel slathered with cream cheese and apricot jelly. But that would only be a cruel joke when he woke up and had nothing to eat besides canned soup and protein bars.

Anna raised her hand to shade her eyes as she looked out over the ocean, apparently searching for something.

Barefoot, he walked lightly across the sand and came up quietly behind her. Before he reached her, she stiffened.

“Zach?”

“Were you expecting someone else?” he asked, unable to keep a gritty sound out of his voice.

“Of course not.”

When she tried to spin around and face him, he circled her waist with his hands and held her where she was.

She settled against him, then asked in a high, breathy voice, “What are you doing here?”

“You know that this is a dream?”

She hesitated for a moment, apparently considering the situation. “Yes,” she finally said. “It’s my dream, isn’t it?”

“Yes.”

“Then how did you get here?” She tried to turn again. “Are you really Zach? Or did I invent you?”

“It’s really me.” He laughed. “I wanted to see if I could join you. I mean I wanted to see if we could find one more way to connect with each other.”

“Always inventive.”

He caught the tension in her voice. “Is that a complaint?”

As he spoke, he pulled her more tightly against his body, then bent to skim his lips against her neck. “I like your outfit.”

She looked down and laughed again. “I guess it must be the right dress for a shipwreck survivor.”

“Plane wreck.”

“Oh, right. Maybe I don’t want to remember that.”

“What’s wrong?”

She looked around and shivered. “Someone’s watching us. I guess it’s him.”

Zach’s head snapped up, and he looked out toward sea, then to his left and right and finally behind him.

He saw no one.

“You don’t feel it?”

He didn’t answer, but he couldn’t stop a shiver from racing across his skin. The same shiver that had seized Anna.

 

YES.It’s me, Raoul thought with satisfaction. You can’t hide from me. Even in your sleep.

He and Etienne had gone out to ask questions, staying out late until almost nobody had been left on the streets. He’d gone home to bed for a few hours of sleep. Not with Nadine. He didn’t want the interference of Nadine now. So he bedded down in one of his other houses.

In the morning, he’d gone back to the shrine. He’d learned that Ibena was capricious. She was teasing him. Or maybe she was testing his loyalty. But he would let her know that he hadn’t lost his faith in her. And when she realized his dedication to her service, she would reward him.

He’d begun to pray again. And as he had knelt before the altar, he had stumbled into Anna’s dream.

She was standing on the beach, staring out to sea. At first he’d been elated to find her alone. He’d been about to contact her when the man named Zach had stepped into the scene.

“Damn you, you fish bait!”

As soon as Raoul muttered the curse, he struggled to calm his emotions. Emotions would get him into trouble. He wanted to lash out immediately. He wanted to hurl a thunderbolt that would shatter the peace of the dream. But he held back, biding his time, thinking about what he could do.

And as he watched and waited, he saw something else.

There were more people in the dream. Not just Anna and Zach. Another man and woman.

Blood fire!

 

“CAN you feel him?” Anna whispered, as though keeping her voice low would prevent someone else from hearing their conversation.

“San Donato?”

“Yeah.” Determined to make it clear that Anna belonged to him, Zach skimmed his hands up and down her sides, his fingertips caressing the outer curves of her breasts.

He was gratified to feel her instant response to him. Looking down and over her shoulder, he could see her nipples bead under the fabric of her sarong.

She arched against him, her bottom pressing to his erection, and he started thinking that he should throw some blankets on the grass so he could make love to her. That would show the bastard which man belonged in this dream and which man didn’t.

Yes, she whispered in his mind.

But before he could lead her off the beach, a movement out in the blue water caught his attention.

Anna’s mind must have been tuned to his, because she followed his gaze.

“What’s that?”

At first the object was far away and indistinct. Then he saw that it was a boat—speeding toward the island.

Anna made a small sound.

“It’s him! He’s coming here.”

 

CONFUSION swamped Zach.

But the thought uppermost in his mind was to protect Anna.

“Don’t run.” Keeping her close, he shifted her so that his body was between her and the beach.

Maybe San Donato had invaded their dream. But he didn’t think the bastard was on that boat.

But if not him, then who?

The craft was speeding toward them, and Zach dragged in a startled breath as he took in the shape.

He blinked. It was his boat. “What the hell?”

“What?” she asked.

“It’s the Odysseus.”

As he stared at the approaching craft, he could see a man and a woman standing at the rail, staring intently toward the island.

They both had dark hair. The woman was small and pretty. The man was taller and tougher. But they both looked determined—and also relieved. They stopped about thirty feet from shore, the boat bobbing in the waves.

Who are you? Zach challenged, deliberately asking the question in his mind—not out loud—to see if these people could communicate that way.

We’ve been trying to reach you, they answered together, the words echoing in his head—and in Anna’s, he knew.

You’re in danger.

Yeah. We know that. Who are you? he asked again.

Jordan and Lindsay. We helped the pilot keep the plane from crashing.

You! Anna exclaimed.

How do you know us? Zach asked.

We’ve been casting our thoughts outward, trying to locate other people like us.

Other people like us? Psychics?

Not just psychics. There isn’t time for a long explanation now. But we’re all the result of the experiment at Dr. Remington’s fertility clinic. He was trying to create superintelligent children. Instead he created telepaths whose powers are dormant until they connect with another subject from the experiment.

A fertility clinic, Anna gasped.

Your parents told you about it?

Yes, she answered.

But Zach shook his head. He’d never known that part of his personal story. Now he had a sudden insight into why his father had been so disappointed. He’d paid through the nose to have a child with his second wife. And he hadn’t been pleased with what he’d gotten.

The clinic was funded by a quasi-government agency called the Crandall Consortium. But the project went wrong.

Anna raised her head. Wait a minute. My powers weren’t dormant. I was using them to make a living.

We know about your psychometric act. We’re impressed that you could do that by yourself. But your powers have blossomed since you bonded with Zach, haven’t they?

Yes! she answered.

A man named Jim Swift is trying to kill as many of us as he can find. That’s why we changed our last name from Walker to West. He hired the thugs to get you on the plane.

They drowned, Zach said.

The woman breathed out a small sigh. I hope so. We’re trying to find out what happened to them.

We have another problem, Zach said. A local man who wants Anna for his wife.

But you’ve bonded with her. He can’t.

He’s trying, Zach answered. He’ll be happy if he can get me out of the picture.

The woman started to speak again, but her silent voice was cut off by a strange roaring noise. The ocean began receding from the shore, sweeping the boat farther from where Zach and Anna stood.

Wait. Come back, Anna cried out.

The woman shouted something, her voice drowned out by the the roaring water. Zach reached out a hand to them, but they were too far away for communication now.

“What’s happening?” Anna whispered.

Your Vadiana friend’s screwing around with us, Zach silently answered.

His gaze went from the receding water to Anna. She stood stock-still, staring in terrible fascination at the suddenly exposed sand and rock, where fish and other sea creatures flopped up and down on the wetly shining surface.

“How?” she breathed.

“I don’t know. But this didn’t come from your mind—or mine. He did it somehow.” As he grasped the implications, he grabbed her hand and pulled her away from the shoreline. “Run. Run for your life.”

 

JIM Swift—or Stone, as he called himself now—checked his e-mail again. Wild Bill should have checked in by now. But he hadn’t heard anything. That was bad news.

Had the woman freak gotten away? And the guy? And where the hell was Bill?

Afraid to check in because he’d screwed up?

Jim wouldn’t put that past the little bastard. But that left him in the dark and cursing.

Maybe he could find out if the plane had even taken off from Grand Fernandino—and if it had come back.

He opened an Internet window and started searching the news. A plane had taken off from the island and not come back.

So did that mean Anna Ridgeway and Zachary Robinson were dead? And what about Wild Bill and the freelancers?

If luck was running his way, something had happened on that plane. And the problem had taken care of itself.

But he wasn’t going to count on it for sure.