Read Accidentally...Over?: Accidentally Yours 5 Online
Authors: Mimi Jean Pamfiloff
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Erotica, #Vampires, #Paranormal
“Wait! Where are you going?” But he was already gone.
Ashli stared at the water expecting Máax to resurface, but several minutes passed. Then five minutes. Ten minutes. Twenty minutes.
“Ohmygod.” She paced along the edge of the enormous pool, biting her fingernail. Why hadn’t he come out? Why?
She peered over the edge again. Maybe something had gone wrong? Maybe he’d gotten hurt? “Máax? Máax?”
There was no sound apart from the squawking toucans above.
Okay. She could go for help, but she wasn’t really sure where to go. She didn’t speak Spanish—or did she? She wasn’t sure. And they were in some crazy Mexican jungle. She pivoted on her heel and looked around. Dammit. What was she going to do?
A few random pockets of air floated to the surface of the cenote, making a strange
glup, glup
sound.
Oh no. What if he’s stuck down there?
“Oh, gods.” She had to help him.
Without giving it any thought, she pinched her nose and jumped. Her body immediately reacted with hard shivers.
Brrr. Cold. Cold. Cold.
She pushed the wet strands from her face, and sucking in a giant breath, she dived straight down into the murky water.
Within a matter of a few feet, the sunlight faded. The air in her lungs immediately felt saturated and heavy. She needed another breath. She started to kick her way back to the surface, but hit her head on a ceiling of solid rock.
Shit! No!
The air in her lungs turned to poison. She reached and clawed at the jagged rock, but she was trapped. A scream escaped her mouth, and the water flooded inside her lungs. She fought to gasp and hack, but it was no use.
She. Was. Drowning.
Ashli’s mind broke away as if beckoned to some unknown place, a place of comfort and without pain.
Am I dead? Is this what it feels like?
Her body or soul—she didn’t know—rose from the water into the air. Like a runaway balloon, she floated up through the tree canopy into the crisp February air, higher and higher, disappearing inside a big puffy cloud. Where was she going? She didn’t feel afraid or panicked; she felt at peace.
Then a small burst of warm air enveloped her body, and she found herself sitting in the sand, looking out across turquoise waves.
“Oh, for heaven’s sake, Ashli, why do you keep coming here? We told you not to come back.”
Ashli looked up at the woman with the deeply tanned skin and long, thick black curls much like her own standing next to a man with short dark brown hair. Both wore white linen suits that seemed to flow over their lean bodies.
“Do I know you?” Ashli stood quickly.
The woman and man exchanged glances. “We’re your parents. And you are in big trouble, young lady.”
Máax had chosen this particular cenote because it was the most powerful of the portals when it came to creating a human form. Unfortunately, that also meant he’d be slammed into his new body. Not that he would know, but he guessed it felt similar to hitting a brick wall at one hundred miles per hour. Most deities avoided this cenote for that very reason, a small price to pay given his urgency to return to Ashli. He needed to find a way to mend her memory, to make things right for her.
With his new human form complete, the cenote spit Máax out into the dark, cold water. He kicked his way to the surface and noticed a form floating facedown.
Ashli?
No!
He reached the water’s surface and immediately flipped her onto her back. Her face was bluish as were her lips. “No. No. No.”
With her in tow, he swam to the side of the pool and
gripped a small ledge. He heaved and tugged with all his strength, but he was weak and would be for several hours until his new body fully absorbed his light. “Dammit, no. She can’t be dead! Ashli!”
Doing his best to balance her body against his in the water, he propped her head in the crook of his arm and began blowing into her mouth. “Wake up! Ashli! Wake up!” Why was this happening? He’d given her the light of the gods, made her immortal. As long as her form wasn’t destroyed, she would live forever just as a vampire might. Something wasn’t right.
Then he remembered; his powers had been returned to him! Yes, not only had he been the God of Truth—or love, as he’d discovered—but he had many, many other gifts. To name a few: the ability to know when a person lied, to control people’s actions with his voice, and to heal the sick, and the ability to enter another’s body. He rarely did so—it was really disturbing to walk inside the mind of another—but perhaps he could will Ashli’s heart to pump and lungs to move again. He closed his eyes tightly and felt his essence sift inside her. He felt nothing. No sign of Ashli. An empty shell.
He willed her immortal body to work again and soon felt her body warming and breathing on its own, but still no Ashli. Where had her soul gone?
Máax exited her form and stared down at her beautiful face. “Please come back, Ashli. Please?”
There was no response. Horror and despair filled every molecule of his being.
Why, after everything, is this happening?
Hadn’t he paid his dues to the Universe? Why was he being punished? “Ashli! I command you to return.”
Once again, there was no response.
Then I will go back in time and undo this.
Yes, he’d get a hold of another tablet and find a way to stop this. Even if he had to again defy his brethren and do so without their permission.
“I will never let you go, Ashli. Never.”
Máax positioned Ashli’s petite frame over his shoulder and began the arduously slow climb from the water.
Ashli could not believe the insane story she’d heard from these two people claiming to be her parents. It wasn’t that she didn’t believe them, she simply didn’t remember.
They went on to explain that whether she or anyone believed it, the Universe was always there, listening to everyone’s innermost thoughts and intentions, helping them shape their lives. Some people focused on hate, fear, or whatever they lacked, and found their lives filled with anger and conflict. Others, who focused on love and gratitude, found their world filled with joy even if they faced life’s tragedies. In Ashli’s case, she focused on her sense of loss.
Had Ashli’s unwillingness to let her parents go really drawn Death to her? It seemed ridiculous that missing them, wanting to see them again, could do that. But according to her parents, Ashli had died. Numerous times, in fact. “So I thought Death was stalking me, but really, I was causing it?”
That was weird.
“It seems fitting,” her mother explained, “that you’re now the Goddess of Love. Your love for us was so powerful that you were unable to let go and move on.”
“I see,” Ashli said, nodding her head. “Maybe losing my memory wasn’t such a bad thing, then. Was it?”
Her mother brushed her arm. “Perhaps not. But if you ever want it back, all you have to do is ask Máax. He can heal you. He just hasn’t figured it out yet.”
“Really?” That was ironic. She’d been the key to undoing whatever trouble Máax had been in back in that circus slash courtroom. And now that he had his powers back, he was the key to undoing her problem? The Universe worked in mysterious ways.
“Yes,” her mother replied. “Really.”
Ashli gave it some thought. Whoever she used to be didn’t sound very happy, and maybe this was her second chance. How many people got to have one of those?
Hmmm, perhaps this would remain her little secret for the time being.
“As for us,” said her mother, “we’ll always be here, watching over you. And playing poker. Did you know the dead’ve got a game going 24/7? Yesterday, I played Texas Hold ’Em with a gladiator who died in 100 BC. Fascinating.”
Okay.
“Now,” said her father, his eyes filled with a calming love. “It’s time for you, our dear little Ashli, to return before your deity has a meltdown. He must be wondering where you are, and he’s waited a long, long time for you.”
Part of her wanted to stay and chat a little longer, but she knew they were right; it was time to go. She already felt the pull. To where? She assumed back to the real world, the world of the living. To Máax. That was the other part of their story she found unbelievable; Máax had been sent to save her, to teach her how to live again.
And you almost lost him. Dork!
She hugged her parents tightly. “Good-bye and thank you.”
“Until we meet again,” said her mother. “But not too soon.”
Ashli blinked and felt herself pulled through a dark tunnel. The noise in her ears at first sounded like a low hum, but then grew into an earsplitting roar. But it wasn’t an animal; it sounded like a man. A man cursing the heavens and life itself, vowing to do very awful things to everyone.
The sensation of her body returned. It was warm and cold all at once, and she had a piercing headache.
“Hey, could you keep it down?” The blinding light kept her from opening her eyes.
The man stopped screaming. “Ashli?” he whispered. “You—you are back?”
“Yeah. And it hurts like hell,” she groaned.
“Thank the heavens!” The man squeezed her so tightly he practically cracked her in half.
“Okay there, big boy.” Ashli opened her eyes. She lay on a bed of leaves with her upper torso cradled against Máax’s broad, bare chest. “You’ll never believe where I was. My parents were there, telling me I kept dying because I wanted to see them. They said you were sent to help me learn to live again.”
His smile stretched from ear to ear, and his eyes filled with unspeakable joy. “Did it work?”
“Oh my gods!” She was looking at him! With her own two eyes! “Máax? Is it really you?”
He placed his warm hand on her cheek. “Yes, my dear Ashli. It is I.”
The man, with the long wet strands of brownish hair,
staring into her face was a vision of heavenly, sinful masculinity. His golden-brown skin and full lips, his turquoise eyes with thick brown lashes, and his strong jaw were so sensual, so male. But that wasn’t what took her breath away. It was the way he looked at her and how it made her feel. Like being complete and loved. Like being at peace and set on fire.
“You are so way hotter than that chair.”
He smiled. “Wait until you see the rest.”
Máax’s lips were on her, and the heat of his kiss didn’t just warm her mouth; it shot straight through her center and ignited a crazed, raw hunger.
Máax lay her down beneath him on the bed of leaves and worked up her dress. She gasped as she felt his hand slide between her legs and push her panties aside. When she felt his hard shaft parting her soft flesh, her grip on his shoulders involuntarily tightened, nails digging in.
“Oh, gods, yes,” she panted in his ear.
He slowed for a fraction of a moment only to stare into her eyes as he thrust with one brutally sensual stroke, stealing the air from her lungs. She didn’t need to see his erection to know he was large. She felt every inch as he slid deep inside. The sensation was so delicious and sweet yet rough just like his kisses. And the way he grabbed her, held her in place, made her feel so, so, so… his.
He thrust again with a sharp, claiming motion. Then again. And again. Every movement was frantic and hard, uncontrolled yet deliberate. His tongue eagerly lapped away at hers.
Just a few more seconds, and she wouldn’t be able to stop the inevitable. “Ohmygod, Máax. Don’t stop. It feels so good.”
He stared into her eyes and thrust again. “I want to watch you”—he thrust again—“come for me.”
His words were enough to push her over the edge. Her entire body felt like a solid, immovable ball of pulsating, tingling nerves and then… she screamed his name as he pushed himself sharply forward, never breaking his feral gaze. With each pump of his hips she exploded, over and over again, in one relentless current of orgasms until Máax let out a throaty groan.
Finally, he slowed and smiled, planting one lingering, lazy kiss on her lips.
“That was amazing,” she said.
He nodded his head yes. “That was only a taste of what you’ll be enjoying for eternity.”
Lucky, lucky me.
He kissed her again, unhurried and tender. “You’re shivering. Let’s get you home. I arranged for a helicopter to pick us up near the lake a kilometer or so from here.”