Through time frankie, p.1

Through Time-Frankie, page 1

 

Through Time-Frankie
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Through Time-Frankie


  THROUGH TIME-

  FRANKIE

  BY Claudy Conn

  By Claudy Conn

  http://claudyconn.embarqspace.com/

  Copyright © 2013 by Claudy Conn

  All rights reserved

  Contents

  Copyright

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Epilogue

  Excerpts

  About Claudy Conn

  Copyright

  Excerpt from Hungry Moon-Quicksilver

  Copyright © 2013 Claudy Conn

  Excerpt from Lady X

  Copyright © 2013 Claudy Conn

  Excerpt from Shadowlove-Stalkers

  Copyright © 2013 Claudy Conn

  Love is the master key that opens the gates

  So sayeth Oliver Wendall Holmes

  Chapter One

  FRANKIE SAT ON the grassy edge of a precipice overlooking a green patchwork valley. She had her knees pulled up and her arms wrapped tightly around them. At the moment, her life was a bit of a mess.

  As she looked over the edge of the sharp cliff, it occurred to her that she was at the edge all right, physically, mentally, emotionally.

  This had always been one of her favorite places in the Grampian Mountains of Scotland, overlooking the neat green valley below.

  The sky was blue but neat shapes of billowing clouds gently made their journey. They felt so near, almost near enough to reach out and touch. She smiled to herself before releasing a long sigh. A hawk flew by, dove and came up with something in its mouth and Frankie thought how once she had wondered what it would be like to swoop and sail in the air on her own power.

  So much was happening to her and in such quick succession, that it had all been more than a little difficult to handle, but she did. She could, because she had been handling everything anyone had ever thrown at her since she was eleven years old and lost her first adoptive father, and then her mother. Those days in Ireland seemed so far away.

  However, what was happening now—in particular, what had happened to her now, was way different than anything she had ever experienced before.

  She had never wanted to be defined by her physical attributes, but there was no getting away from this. She had been sick with apprehension, and confusion. How was she going to handle what she had become?

  She had always known she would never be normal—never be like other Fae. After all, she had always been a Fios and was able to see the Fae. She was able to shield herself from most Fae Magic, but she was also Daoine Fae, the highest caste of Fae. How confusing was that? And then to top that was the fact that her dear da, her biological father was respected above most even though he was not actual royalty. He was known to all, which made taking on a low profile and hiding herself in a corner, impossible. Not that it was her style, it wasn’t.

  It had been a shock to learn that the man she had known growing up in Ireland, the man she had mourned as her father, had not been her ‘real’ father. Her Fios mother had kept that secret hidden.

  It had been a thrill to discover that Deimne the Daoine Sluagh was her da. He was ultra magnificent, haughty, but very good at it. Picturing him, she smiled wide and then again sagged into a sigh.

  She had not realized what having him as her father would mean. It had never occurred to her that all things might one day change.

  Very little of her human was left.

  Daoine Fae was who she was. Fios had quietly taken a backseat, but she was pleased to find that she still had a very human heart. Her heart beat in a Fae body, and with that heart, the human in her brain still whispered human philosophies so very unlike Fae philosophy. Fae lived forever and viewed the world from a different vantage point. She was torn between the two.

  Physical changes had rushed through her, overtaken her in sudden sweeps, over the last few weeks. The first change had been to her hair color.

  She awoke one morning and looked in the mirror to find that her rich gold streaked auburn hair was pitch black and that the gold streaks were nearly platinum.

  What was she going to tell her friends? That had been her first thought after the initial shock. Her friends admiring her new ‘do’ believed she had dyed her hair to achieve the new ‘look’. Why—why had her hair turned black?

  Her eyes changed as well shortly after that. It wasn’t only the fact that they became completely Fae, an iridescent shade of hazel, but the sharpness of her ability to see long distance had increased. Fae eyes stared back at her when she looked in the mirror now. Her da had said that from what he could remember, she had taken his mother’s coloring. That had pleased and saddened her, for she saw so little of her mother in her looks now.

  Glamour—human Glamour was something she wore now all the time. She had expected that her eyes would change as she reached her majority. She had known the Fae changes would come. What she hadn’t known, what she hadn’t expected, was the fact that something dark inside of her had grown as well and now competed for a voice. Although she had managed to keep that dark power caged and suppressed, she knew it had strengthened over the last six years and wanted out.

  When she peered at herself in a mirror and brushed her long black hair she noted the white gold streaking its long waves, it was as though a stranger looked back at her.

  She had celebrated her eighteenth birthday with her dear ones at her side. Her father, Deimne, Trevor of Lugh, and his mate, her beloved mentor and closest friend in all the world, Jazmine Decker.

  She had reached a Fae milestone and her body had changed seemingly overnight as a living witness to what she actually was—what she actually had become, and human seemed so very non-existent in her these days. Human—being human was a distant dream.

  With her human majority of eighteen, she had attained the height and most of the attributes she would always have as an immortal being. She was five foot six, and looked older than eighteen, but she would continue to show some aging until she was twenty-five. She already felt twenty-five. After all she experienced, how could she not?

  Life had become so much more complicated than it had been only months before.

  Suddenly she was inundated with secrets about herself she had to keep well hidden, if she was going to be able to maintain the wonderful human friendships she had attained over the last six years.

  She thought of her da and how thrilled he had been with her changes. But then he was always thrilled with her.

  He had lived thousands upon thousands of years, eons, while she had only eighteen to her name, and wondered how it was possible to live so long.

  Her thoughts wandered aimless in her head, but she realized she was not unhappy, quite the opposite. Life with Jazz and Trevor and her da had been completely beautiful, exciting, and full of love. She didn’t know what she would have done without their support, especially during the recent changes she had gone through, especially this last painful transition.

  Her da had been ecstatic about this latest transition, but it was the one thing she was having the most difficulty dealing with. She wished it had not happened to her and how could she confide in him about that? She couldn’t, it would hurt him. He would see it as a rejection. Jazz understood.

  They were all spending the summer in Scotland, doing a tour of the Highlands as this would be their last year living together in Charleston, SC.

  She would be off to study at Trinity in Dublin, come the fall. Their home in Charleston would remain just that, their home, their refuge. She knew that Trevor and Jazz had decided it was time for Jazz to give up her job as a marine biologist and spend her days with Trevor in Faery, the Isle of Tir.

  Jazz was like that. She knew Trevor had given up his duties on the New Council that the Queen had formed. It would give Jazz the human life, Trevor knew she needed, a human life that had been cut short. Now Jazz felt it was her turn to do the same for him.

  Life was continuing to change so fast.

  Suddenly, she got to her feet. She felt a shiver of anticipation travel through her body.

  As always Frankie felt him, before she saw him.

  She didn’t know how it was, but from the start, they shared a connection she had never been able to explain to herself.

  She turned, as he came into view. She felt her entire body tremble with pleasure as a smile flittered over her face. Why did he have such an affect on her?

  He had always hovered about her life.

  He had always stood back, and yet, she knew he was a friend, one that would never desert her. Her father had forbidden him her company, but Frankie always had a mind all her own, and she had not given him up. How could she? He seemed to be a part of who she really was.

  She needed him. He had been there for her in these last six years; in and out, never intruding, never taking, and

only giving little bits of wisdom. He was bolstering her when she was down, always encouraging her to go to Jazz with her problems. He stood strong like an unseen protector.

  Softly she said, “Graely.”

  She was always mesmerized by his height, by his breath and style. His massive chest with the Celtic cross tattooed near his left shoulder and a band of Celtic knots around his biceps.

  His black silky hair fell in layered sweeps around his exquisitely handsome face. His dark amber lit eyes always seemed impenetrable and she never failed to see the light deep in their depths.

  He was a Dark Prince and had darkness in him, a darkness she knew he was attempting to dislodge. A Dark Prince, but he was nothing like his wicked brothers.

  Trevor and her da told her that they did not trust him. They told her he was an abomination, created outside the Wheel of Being. Jazz withheld her opinion, but was ever watchful.

  Frankie knew they could not be objective. They had fought a bloody war with the Dark Princes and the monsters that inhabited the Dark Realm. Their opinions were clouded by that life experience, but Graely was not a part of that.

  She looked at him now with the eyes of a woman and realized what she was thinking. Gosh he was hot, so damn hot. She knew she had something of a crush on him. She had known for some months now that Graely was taking over all her thoughts, but he always treated her like a child.

  “Frankie,” he said and nodded. “What are you doing here alone?”

  “Thinking about things,” she answered. She could always be herself with Graely. Her human friends, well, she had to be human with them. With her da, she had to be a daughter, with Trevor, much the same. With Jazz, she could be honest and open in all things, except about Graely. She couldn’t confide in Jazz about Graely because it would disturb her, and she might think it her duty to tell Trevor or her father. However, with Graely she could be all things—anything.

  “It is time, you know it is time,” he offered quietly with that beautiful old Danu accent, something like an Irish brogue, deeper, more pronounced than her own.

  “I am uncertain, Graely. This is not what I wanted,” she answered.

  “Uncertain, of what? Whether you want it or not, there isn’t anything you can do about it. Besides Frankie, don’t you see how absolutely and completely mesmerizing you are…how beautiful you look?”

  “I am uncertain of what I will feel when I finally give in to it. What it does is make me feel different than all other women—not beautiful, just so strange. Can’t ye see that, Graely?” she answered solemnly.

  “Frankie, you will always be who you are. What I see in you is perfection. It isn’t a question of giving in to it--it is a question of accepting the wonder of what you can do because of who and what you are. This,” he motioned with his hands, “This is wondrous. It is a good thing, not something awful you have to repress. It is a gift. You are your father’s daughter. This was a beautiful inevitability.”

  Frankie smiled at him and suddenly, even before she knew what she was going to do, she let go of her human Glamour and unfolded her wings.

  Her wings, she thought as she opened them wide in the breeze. Beautiful and graceful as they spread out on either side of her lithe form. Not her father’s wings, no, not his white silver tipped wings—hers were black.

  They were so black that they glittered with blue lights, each feather tipped with white, magnificent to behold as she allowed them to lift her high for a few moments before she soared up. She flew gracefully before she gently brought herself in for her landing and came to stand in front of Graely with a laugh.

  She saw the appreciation in his eyes and for a moment, for that moment, all she wanted to do was fold him into her wings, and hold him with her arms. She settled by putting her hands flat on his hard naked abs.

  “Graely…do I…well, do I look freakish?” she asked shyly.

  “Frankie, you are the most beautiful lass I have ever seen.”

  “That is what Jazz and Trevor say, but if my friends ever knew…”

  “They are humans,” he shrugged. “It is beyond their ken.”

  She saw him stiffen suddenly and then he whispered, “I must go.”

  Without another word, he was gone.

  She felt a sudden loss and emptiness. It was silly, but lately, each time he left her, the feeling of loss was stronger, as though…

  “Frankie?” Jazz shifted in only a few feet away.

  She adored Jazz, but she knew what was coming and said, “Yes?”

  “You know that I picked up his scent, right?” Jazz asked quietly.

  “I know,” Frankie answered softly.

  “Your father would be horrified to know you are still meeting with Graely.”

  “I know,” she said and sighed. “But ye can’t ask me to stop seeing him, not ye, Jazz…because ye know that it wouldn’t be right to ask me to cut him out of m’life. He is a part of it.”

  Jazz plopped down on the soft turf and patted a spot beside herself, “Come on baby, sit with me.”

  Frankie sat down beside Jazz, tucking her wings in further, and they playfully knocked shoulders. “Right then, Jazz, have at me.”

  “Is that what you think I want to do?” Jazz shook her head. “Nope, not doing that. You are grown, well, maybe not quite, because eighteen doesn’t really cut it in the world of experience,” Jazz smiled at her.

  “So what are ye telling me then, is when I have more experience I will cut out m’friends, because m’loved ones tell me to?” She shook her head. “It isn’t going to happen. And Jazz, when it comes to experience, ye can’t say I haven’t had m’share.”

  “Instead of fresh, that sounds so cute with your Irish lilt,” Jazz said trying to lighten the moment. “No, that isn’t what I was going to tell you. In fact, I don’t want to tell you a thing. I want to ask you a question.”

  “Fair enough,” Frankie agreed.

  “When Graely visits with you…what do you feel?”

  Frankie eyed her beloved Jazz and sighed, “In a word, free.” She laughed at Jazz’s expression and hugged her fiercely. “Oh, don’t look like that. Let me see if I can explain meself. I should have said, outside the family, I never am, ye know, free as a human…with humans, that is. I can’t be meself. And on Tir, and Daoine, I haven’t quite found a good fit. I’ve come to maturity in human years, not quite in Fae years and well--it is what it is. But with Graely, outside the family, outside m’friends, I can be meself. I can jest let go and be meself.”

  Jazz considered this, and Frankie watched as Jazz played with a strand of her long blonde hair.

  Frankie waited and it was a long moment before Jazz finally turned to her. She was full of understanding in her unmuted aqua lit iridescent eyes, for she too, was now all Fae. “Do you have…well, are you attracted to him? He is very handsome, and I could see that a young woman would find him well, no denying that he is definitely hot.”

  Frankie put up a hand, “Stop that, Jazz. I’m not ready for this, because I don’t want to lie to ye. I love ye, Jazz, and I can’t tell ye what I don’t know for sure. Aye then, he is—well he fills m’eyes he does, with his dark broody expressions, and his amber lit dark eyes and his…well, aye, so he is, attractive, as ye say.”

  “Are you, I mean…well,” Jazz seemed to stumble over the next question. “Getting in too deep?”

  “No, I haven’t gotten in too deep with anyone yet Jazz. But if ye are asking if I think about it? Well… if ye want the truth, I will tell ye, but for yer ears only. Not Trevor’s, not m’da’s. Don’t be going and pillow talking with Trevor about what I tell ye now.”

  Jazz crossed her heart, “No, this is girl talk, not meant to be repeated.”

  Frankie hugged her, “I know ye, and I know ye can only hold it from Trevor a short while. But, I will tell ye this, if I think about it, romance that is, I think it would be exciting to have Graely look at me like that, but he doesn’t. He never once treated me as anything but a child. Not even a friend, really, but a child. It is most insulting now that I am a woman. Now more than ever, he treats me like a kid that he must forever protect.”

  “Good, that raises my opinion of him a notch, which by the way, has never been that of Trevor’s or your father’s. I have seen Graely do…an exceptional thing during the war, and I can’t forget that or refuse to credit him for it.”

 

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