Kim held her hand up. 'And when you're being attacked by vicious gastric pain later, remember I tried to stop you.' She turned back to Ash who made sure his ass was covered. Literally. 'If you two weren't being chased by homicidal loons, I'd order you out of here.'
Ash backed up another step. 'You're not going to hit me again, are you?'
'I ought to. If you were a couple of feet shorter, I'd take you over my knee.' Kim made one last sound of disgust before she left them alone again.
Pam shook her head as she met Ash's gaze. 'Want me to kiss your boo-boo and make it better?'
'Pam!' Tory snapped.
'Oh like you didn't have that thought, too. Relax both of you, I'm only kidding. Let me go calm down Nursezilla before she gets you two in trouble with your doctor.'
Tory sighed as Pam left. 'I am so sorry about my friends, Ash. I really did attempt to give them some home training growing up, but obviously it didn't take.'
Ash laughed at her words. Truthfully, he found the ease they had in his company refreshing. Most people were either intimidated or frightened by him. Only kids seemed indifferent and treated him like anyone else on the street. 'It's okay. I like them.'
She took one last bite of her burger before she wrapped it up. 'I better stop before I hurt myself. But it is good. Thank you so much for getting this for me.'
'There's a ham sandwich, pickles, chips and yogurt also in the bag.'
'What a sweetie you are. You really did get some of everything. You sure you don't want a bite?'
'I'm fine.'
She handed him the bag. 'All right then. How about I swap you the food for the journal?'
Ash hesitated. Since his name was all over it…
Shrugging his backpack off, he unzipped the top and pulled the journal out. 'Here.'
She opened it where they'd left off. 'Now where were we?'
'Ryssa was talking about her brother in Atlantis.'
She drew her brow together in confusion. 'Ryssa? How do you know her name was Ryssa?'
Ash tensed as he realized that his sister hadn't written her name anywhere in it. 'Uh… I don't. I just gave her a name. It seemed more polite than calling her 'hey you, ancient chick.' '
She wrinkled her nose up at him. 'FYI, I hate the word chick.'
'Then I shall delete it from my vocabulary.'
Smiling she put her hand on his arm and leaned against him. 'You're so accommodating. Was this the spot?'
It took him a full second to catch his breath at the casual way she touched him. At the way her lips looked so inviting and sweet.
'Yeah,' he said, forcing himself to look at the page.
She pointed to a line a few down from where he'd been reading. 'I miss him?'
'Yes.'
Her finger went to the next sentence. 'He was sent away?'
'You're an incredibly fast learner.'
'That's what my father used to say. His nickname for me was Athena.'
Ash was surprised by that. She was nothing like the Greek goddess. 'Athena?'
'You know, she sprang fully formed out of the head of Zeus. My dad used to say that I did the same thing and, like Athena, I gave my father a splitting headache.' She smiled widely. 'Show me a little of anything and bam, instant expertise. But this language is hard to learn. Beautiful, but difficult. Could you read in it for a moment so I can hear the way it lilts?'
Ash nodded before he obliged the request.
Tory listened to the inflections in his voice, mesmerized not only by how sexy it was, but by his intelligence. Before she could stop herself, she placed her hand to his jaw to feel the way his muscles worked while he spoke.
Ash paused at the tenderness of her touch and met her gaze.
'Don't stop speaking it,' she whispered. 'I love to hear your accent.'
Little did she know he'd do anything she wanted so long as she touched him like this. He swallowed before he spoke again.
Tory frowned at the words that seemed to come from his heart. 'What did you say?'
'That you are an inquisitive imp.'
She snorted. 'No you didn't.'
'Maybe, but you don't know for sure, now do you?'
She growled at him even though she enjoyed the fact that when he spoke in English, his accent was thick and lilting. 'You know when you use that accent of yours, you could get away with murder.' She pulled his sunglasses off, then folded them and put them in his pocket. 'I like looking at your eyes.'
'You're a very strange woman.'
Perhaps, but there was something about him that made her feel warm and safe. She brushed the pad of her thumb over his lips. 'Why do you hide from the world?'
'I don't hide from anything.'
'Yes you do. The clothes you wear… they're your armor that you use to keep everyone away. You like to look dangerous and rebellious… it's like there's a part of you that thinks, if you give people a cause not to like you, then, when they don't it's okay because you were the one who decided they weren't allowed to like you anyway.'
He started to pull away, but she stopped him.
'I would be a friend to you, Ash. A good one, if you'd let me.'
Ash looked away as he remembered Artemis offering her friendship to him. 'No offense, Tory, people say that with all good intentions. Unfortunately when the test comes, we inevitably fail it.'
'Have you ever failed it?'
'Yes, I have.' His sister had trusted him to protect her and he'd let Artemis get in the way of that. Nick had been the closest thing to a real friend and he'd cursed him to die.
As a friend, he sucked and he wouldn't wish his friendship on anyone.
'Well I haven't failed,' Tory said firmly. 'Not once. But the only way for you to know that is to trust me. And since I know you can't give me your trust, I'll forget we had this discussion.' She looked back at the book. 'What's this word?'
Ash hesitated as he saw his name in Ryssa's handwriting. He started to lie to her, but it caught in his throat. He wanted to trust her. He didn't understand it. But he couldn't help himself. With a deep breath, he did what he hadn't done in centuries. He trusted. 'It's Acheron.'
Tory looked at him intently. 'It's your name?'
'Yes,' he said, making sure he kept all emotion out of his voice. 'She had two brothers. Acheron and Styxx.'
'Named for the rivers of woe and hate? How morbid of their parents.'
'More apropos perhaps.'
'That would be worse, I think.' She turned the page. 'It's so weird reading this. She seems like anyone you'd meet today walking down the street. Her main concerns are pleasing her father and she misses her brother. She has the same fears as modern women-being taken seriously. Being listened to.' She let out a wistful sigh. 'Can you imagine the world she lived in? I wonder what kind of clothes she wore. What kind of bed she slept in…'
'I imagine she was a lot like you. Gentle and unassuming. Determined and protective of those she loved. And she probably annoyed both of her brothers from time to time.'
His words touched her. 'Is that what you see when you look at me?'
'No. I see a homicidal maniac who hates my guts.'
She laughed. 'Seriously?'
His teasing look sobered. 'Yes, Soteria. That is what I see when I look at you.'
