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idge threw back his head and roared again as his orgasm pulsed in liquid fire. The pounding intensity of it made him shudder and gasp.

Until at last he collapsed, wrapping himself around Kat in exhausted, desperate gratitude.

A thought penetrated his dazed lassitude. We’re going to have to do this again. Takes three, maybe four times to activate the Gift. Thank Merlin.

It came to him that the edge of the tub was probably digging into her butt, so he rolled over with her, draping her across his body. “Damn, Kat,” he said, half-laughing as he lifted his head to look down into her face. “You’ve kicked my . . .”

He broke off. Her eyes were wide, unfocused, her expression blank. He jerked upright in alarm, but she only lolled limply in his arms. “Kat! Kat, what’s . . . ?”

“Mom,” she whimpered. Not exactly the word a man wanted to hear from his new lover. Then she blinked and snapped into focus, her eyes widening in terror. One small hand clamped onto his shoulder, nails digging deep. “Ridge! Ridge, there’s something wrong with my mother!”

SIX

Kat scrambled out of the bath, naked, wet, bubbles streaming down her luscious backside. Ridge would have been entranced by the view, had it not been for the panic in her eyes. He levered himself out of the tub and handed her a towel as she looked around in panicked help lessness. “What did you see?”

Kat took the towel automatically. “Just a flash of her face. She looked asleep. But I felt a sense of terror, like there’s something horribly wrong.” Fear and doubt warred on her face in heartbreaking combination. “Maybe I just imagined it.”

“You saw this just as you came?” He strode toward the bathroom door, drying his shoulders with the towel he’d snatched off its rack.

“Yes.” She padded after him, her clothes bundled in her hands. “Does that make a difference?”

“Yeah. You haven’t come into your Gift yet—we haven’t made love often enough—but many Latents get visions the first time. If you saw it, it either has happened or is about to.”

Kat’s face paled, and she swayed. Seeing her stagger from the corner of one eye, Ridge turned and caught her elbow.

“My mother’s suicidal.” Her eyes looked huge, and she pulled away from him to begin dragging on her clothes, though foam still clung to her wet skin. She hadn’t taken the time to use that towel. “Mama’s battled clinical depression for years, but it’s worse in the Christmas season. She’s attempted suicide twice, but I always got to her in time.”

Ridge cursed, a rolling string of gutter Latin he’d picked up from Arthur.

Kat met his gaze and swallowed, obviously fighting to control her panic. “We’ve got to get back now, Ridge.”

He nodded sharply and headed for the wrought iron staircase. “There’s no time to fool with the car. I’ll get Grace.”

idge found the cell phone where he’d left it, upstairs on his dresser. It was not, of course, a real cell phone—such a thing wouldn’t work in the Mageverse—but when Ridge spoke the word “Grace” into it, the magical device nonetheless chirped obligingly.

He was acutely aware that Kat watched him anxiously, damp but dressed.

“This had better be good,” a male voice growled.

“Your daughter thinks your old lover just attempted suicide. That good enough for you?”

Lance’s reply was a single pungent curse. “Grace?” he said. “We need to get over to Ridge’s now.” There was a gratifying urgency in that “now.”

The air rippled into a gate just as Ridge pulled a shirt over his head. Grace and Lancelot stepped through.

“Where’s your mother?” Grace demanded of Kat, the gate still rippling the air behind them.

“In her bedroom, I think. She looked asleep, but I have the feeling there’s something wrong. Really wrong.” Kat took a deep breath and balled her hands into fists, obviously working to get her fear under control. “Fatally wrong.”

Without another word, Grace turned, gesturing. The gate rippled again, now revealing a bed with a woman lying in a fetal ball under an embroidered quilt.

“Mom!” Kat lunged through the gate, and Ridge followed, Grace and Lance at his heels. Ridge was barely aware of the ripple of magic surging over his skin as he dove through the dimensional door.

at’s stomach rolled itself into a quivering, ice-filled ball as she plunged into her mother’s bedroom. Mary appeared deeply asleep, and Kat found herself hoping she’d just scared the hell out of everyone for nothing.

But when she grabbed her mother’s shoulder and shook her with a loud “Mom!” the still form did not respond.

“She’s alive,” Grace said grimly. “Barely.” The Maja reached past Kat, putting one slim palm in the center of her mother’s chest.


Tags: Lora Leigh Breeds Paranormal