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thick and soft, had me resisting the urge to slip my shoes off so that my toes could sink into it.

      “Just one minute, Sparrow,” I demanded distractedly, forcing my gaze away from the sliding glass doors leading out onto the room’s private balcony. “Are you telling me that some stupid words I spoke to myself in a moment of…uncertainty…were enough to bind me to some crazy contract just because Balthus overheard them?”

      I was going to say ‘moment of weakness’, but settled on ‘uncertainty’ because it irked me to add to Sparrow’s obviously low opinion of me.

      “You must have meant it when you said it,” he insisted, his attention now focused on a thorough search of the bedroom.

      “Oh, come on!” I threw my hands up in exasperation. “That’s crazy. I was talking to myself, for Goddess’ sake. Do you honestly mean to tell me that you’ve never voiced a thought, in a moment of anger, or grief, that you didn’t really mean?”

      I watched him and waited for him to deny it. If he did, he was either lying or he wasn’t human…which, considering the experiences of the evening, was a frighteningly plausible possibility.

      He paused in his search and eyed me in a considering manner. “Are you Wiccan?”

      “What? No…what does that have to do with anything?” I asked in baffled annoyance.

      “You said, ‘For Goddess’ sake’—an unusual turn of phrase for most humans. I wondered if you were Wiccan. It might explain Balthus’ attraction to you, especially if you have an aptitude for spell craft.”

      “No,” I shrugged uncomfortably, “I don’t follow any particular religion. It’s just my way of balancing things out. I’ve never found much creditability in the popular assumption that the creator of the universe is a man.”

      Sparrow’s lips twitched, the twinkle in his eyes making him appear genuinely amused. I found that I was smiling back at him in spite of myself.

      “What do you mean when you say it’s a weird thing for ‘humans’ to say? Does that mean you’re not human?”

      “I’m half human, half sidhe,” he answered, turning to continue his search of the bedroom.

      “She?” I repeated in confusion.

      “It’s Gaelic: s-i-d-h-e, pronounced ‘she’,” he explained. “We’re a race of human-sized faerie folk from Ireland. I wouldn’t expect you to know of us—few people do, especially outside of the homeland.”

      An unrestrained smile of wonder stretched my lips. “There are really faeries?”

      Sparrow straightened from his perusal of a drawer to smile grudgingly at my excitement, “Is it so outlandish after seeing a djinn get sucked into a lamp? Yes, Sydney, there are really faeries.”

      I couldn’t help it. I giggled. I’d always loved faeries.

      “That’s awesome. But I’m pretty sure you were about to tell me how Balthus could have overheard me talking to myself and turned it into a contract to take possession of my soul.”

      “Persistent little witch, aren’t you?” He curled his lip at me, but his eyes held barely restrained laughter.

      “I just told you I wasn’t a witch.” I snorted.

      “Alright, Sydney, you win,” he conceded with a helpless chuckle. “Balthus is obviously a criminal. Maybe it’s not such a stretch that he didn’t play fair. But the fact remains that, although he may not have followed the spirit of the law, he was most definitely bound by the letter of it. Even if only for a moment, deep within your soul, you had to have meant to wish for death.”

      His words knocked all of the wind out of my sails. The defeat must have shown in my eyes, because he looked at me with the first hint of sympathy I’d seen from him. “I’m sorry, Sydney,” he said quietly.

      Dejected, I wandered over to sit on the side of the bed. It wasn’t just beautiful—it was the most comfortable thing I’d ever felt, like sitting on a cloud. “What are you looking for, anyway?” I asked morosely.

      “Any objects that were magically tied to Balthus,” he replied, his voice muffled by the door of the walk-in closet. “Such things can be dangerous to unsuspecting humans who find them. It’s just a precaution—I doubt there’s anything here,” he continued as he stepped into the bathroom and flicked on the light switch. “He only checked in today.”

      After a moment he reappeared and took one last appraising look around. Then he strode over to gracefully lower himself onto the bed beside me. He sighed, his muscular arms distributing his weight as he tested the tension of the mattress. “Quite comfy, isn’t it?”

      His proximity sent awareness cascading through me, and for the first time I noticed just how attractive he was. His eyes were an incredible shade of deep blue, and they radiated warmth and kindness when he smiled. His tanned skin glowed with health, his dark hair looked touchably soft, and his broad chest appeared toned beneath his white shirt.

      He smelled good too—a warm and woodsy scent that stole over me and set all my senses tingling.

      Stubble roughened his features and the edge of a tattoo peaked from beneath the sleeve of his sports jacket, hinting at a ruggedness beneath his polished appearance. And that Irish accent of his definitely wasn’t a turnoff.

      Sparrow rubbed a hand wearily across his shadowed cheek. “Listen Sydney, I know you’ve had a rough night here. And I’m sorry if I made it worse by being hard on you earlier. You didn’t deserve it. Is there anything I can do for you before I take off?”

      I dismissed the absurd vision of him suddenly taking flight over the balcony railing. I hesitated to ask, but I needed to know—“What would Balthus have done to me if you hadn’t shown up?”

      Sparrow studied me before answering, a shuttered look dimming the warmth that brightened his eyes. “He would have claimed ownership of your mortality and your soul. You’d have died a mortal death and returned as an immortal slave, at Balthus’ beck and call for eternity. If you had a talent for spell craft, he may have used you for that purpose.”

      Sparrow’s gaze pierced mine as he continued, “But seeing as you claim no connection with that discipline, and judging from the interplay between you this evening, his interest was probably more…sexual in nature.”

      I blanched, visions of being forced into an eternity of sexual slavery filling my mind.

      “That doesn’t seem like much of a deal to me,” I mumbled. “Three wishes and then I get to spend eternity wishing I was dead? How is that ‘granting a death wish’?”

      Sparrow exhaled harshly. “You make a good point, Sydney, and an objection that has been put forth many times. However, I believe that the implied death is that of your mortality and the accompanying loss of your soul. The granting of your additional three wishes and the gift of immortality is considered a fair trade.

      “Not to mention that it becomes the responsibility of the djinn in possession of your soul to keep you in relative health and comfort, if only to protect his assets—an arrangement that some find preferable to the uncertainties of mortality, believe it or not. Granting of wishes aside, souls are valuable commodities. The death djinns’ contract to gain them is ancient and cleverly worded.”

      I snorted. “Sounds convoluted and dishonest to me. And I still don’t think Balthus should have been able to interpret what I said as a real wish.” I couldn’t help wanting to avoid the unsettling fact that, apparently, some part of me had truly wished to die tonight.

      Sparrow placed a hand on my shoulder, his eyes glowing with a curious intensity. “I, for one, am glad you didn’t really intend to wish yourself dead this eve,” he replied, sincerity whispering through his lilting brogue.

      My entire body shivered to life at his touch. His voice and his nearness were doing wicked things to my libido, and I mentally chastised

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