What the hell. This wouldnât be the first time sheâd been used as a conduit for messages. Best to relay it and get on with her life. Otherwise, the wisp or spirit, or whatever that thing was, would keep appearing in some form or another until it had its way.
âIt said you were in great danger and to trust no one, not even in your inner circle. That thereâs a betrayer in your ranks, and if you were ever his true friend you need to find the betrayer, so he can be released.â
She didnât think it possible the manâTombiâcould look fiercer, but he did. He let go of her and shook his head.
âNo. I donât believe you.â
Annie hitched her shoulders and raised her palms. âFine. But thatâs what the thing told me.â
âDid it have a name?â
âBo.â
* * *
Ringing flooded Tombiâs ears. Thereâs worse things than witches. Much worse.
âWhat did Bo say?â
Annie recoiled, and he realized he was shouting. With great effort, he lowered his voice. âTell me what he said.â
âHeâs trapped inside a wisp and wants you to free him.â
Guilt and anger heaved in his stomach. âIâve been trying to find him for weeks. Why didnât he come to me? I was his best friend.â
Bo. His blood brother and childhood comrade. Always reliable. Always quick with the jokes and the laughter. And the only man who could make Tallulah laugh. His sister hadnât smiled in months. Not since Bo died. Sometimes he wondered if she ever would again.
âWas your best friend?â Annieâs eyes rounded. âWhat happened to him?â
Tombi gritted his teeth. Oh, she looked innocent enough. Standing there in her flower-print T-shirt and drawstring pajama shorts. Brown hair tumbling in waves down to her hips. At first glance, sheâd appeared a mere slip of a girlâskinny and all legs.
His eyes shifted to the fullness of her breasts and slight swelling of her hips. Definitely a woman. A very sexy woman. Not that it mattered. Evil spirits roamed in many guises.
âHe died. Snakebite.â He watched her closely, checking for signs of guilt or glee.
She shuddered. âThatâs horrible.â
âDied right where I found you tonight.â
Annie crossed her arms and looked downward apprehensively. âI hate snakes. Was it a rattler or a water moccasin?â
âRattler. He died alone out there in the woods.â How many times had he imagined Boâs horrible death? Imagined him feeling the rapid, burning spread of venom in his veins, knowing he was doomed.
Tombi drew a rasping breath. âHe shouldnât have had to die alone.â
âNobody should,â she agreed. âHowâhow did he get trapped in a wisp?â
âYou really donât know?â he asked sharply.
âNo.â She squared her shoulders. âIâve only been out here a few weeks visiting my grandma. Lots of weirdness down here, even more than usual this summer. Stuff Iâve never seen before. Or heard.â
âAbout what you heard...what did Bo say exactly?â
âI told you. Thereâs a betrayer in your ranks. He wanted me to warn you of danger.â
A likely story. Wasnât that the way evil sank its fangs into people? It insinuated and manipulated fear and mistrust where none existed. Until you became paranoid and relied only on your own wits for survival. Heâd seen it so many times over the past few years.
âI donât believe you.â
She shrugged. âSuit yourself. Donât shoot me, Iâm just the messenger.â
âYou always go around hearing voices?â he sneered.
âYes.â
Her quick, short response surprised him. âYou do?â
âYou already think Iâm a witch, soâwhat the hellâyes, I hear things. Not voices usually. I hear music around people.â
âMusic?â He snorted. What kind of strange magic was this?
Her lips compressed in a thin line. âItâs what drew me to the woods tonight. I heard the most beautiful musicâit sounded like fairy bells.â
Tombi considered Annieâs words. âDid you smell anything?â
âHmm? No. Not unless you count the constant smell of the ocean. Do the wisps have a certain smell?â
âThey can. Will-oâ-wisps appeal to different people different ways.â With him, they tried to mask their foul odor under the clean, sweet scent of balsam fir. Heâd learned not to be drawn in by it.
âYour turn,â she said, casting him a curious look. âWhat are you doing running around the woods in the middle of the night?â
âChasing shadows.â A half-truth.
Annie scowled. âNot fair. I answered your questions.â
As if there were anything fair about life.
The silhouette of an old woman appeared at the cottage window. Impossible to see her facial expression from this distance, but the prickling of his forearm skin alerted Tombi that she watched. Somehow, through distance and darkness, the old ladyâs eyes clamped upon them.
Witch.
And this Annie girl was Tia Henriettaâs direct descendant. She was a perfect target for the dark spirit ruler and his host of creatures, potentially more valuable than a normal human who possessed no sensory power whatsoever. Had she been tainted yet by evil? Despite her scowl and crossed arms, she looked as harmless as a kitten with her big, wide eyes and skinny arms and legs.
Donât be fooled by appearances. Tombi met her challenge with evasion. âThereâs evil and dark shadows in the bayou that youâve never imagined. If youâre not part of it, best you donât learn.â
She cocked her head to one side and stilled, as if listening to something he couldnât hear.
âWhat is it?â Tombi asked sharply. âDo you hear something?â
She nodded. âItâs faint, but distinct.â
Could this girl really hear othersâ auras? Tombi shifted his feet and concentrated on containing his energy. The only sound in the night was the constant rolling of distant waves and the eternal screech of insects.
âItâs gone now,â Annie said. âBut I heard your aura. Finally. Iâve never run across someone that I couldnât.â
An undertow of intrigue tugged his mind. âWell? What do I sound like to you?â
âDrumming. A deep bass note. Steady as a heartbeat.â
He studied the delicate features of her face, the heart-shaped chin, small nose and wide brown eyes beneath arched brows. Air charged between them, an unexpected sexual energy that rolled over him. The jackhammer beating of his heart exploded through his normal wall of self-control. The darkening of Annieâs brown eyes said she heard it. Her gaze dropped to his lips, and Tombi leaned in...
âAnnie?â