here, water and land. Iâll find out more.â
âYou spoke of both land and sea,â Bran pointed out. âOf songs and sighs.â
âLike when we were flying.â
âWhat?â
âNot flying,â Annika said to Sawyer. âWhat it feels like to fly, or what I think it would feel like to fly. The traveling. The songs and the sighs when you brought us here.â
âWhat songs and sighs, Annika?â Branâs dark gaze arrowed to her.
âYou didnât hear them?â
âNo.â He glanced around the table. âI donât think the rest of us heard anything.â
âAll I heard was the tornado.â Though she watched Annika, Riley continued to eat. âIâve been through a few, and thatâs what traveling Sawyerâs way sounds like to me. But you heard singing and sighing.â
âOnly for a moment. It was so beautiful. Itââ She pressed a hand to her heart, then cupped it out. âIt made my heart big. There was the wind, and the colors and light. Itâs very exciting. Then the songs, just music with words I couldnât hear all the way. And sighs, but not sad onesâor not all sad. Sweet, but with some sadness. A little sorrow with the joy. Is that right?â
âMermaid ears, maybe?â Riley speculated. âWater Star, mermaid. Interesting.â She took another bite of pasta, smiled. âWeâre going to need another boat. Iâll get on that.â
L ater, when the house was quiet, when all her friends slept, Annika stepped out on the terrace outside her new room. The sea drew herâshe was of it, from it. She wished she could fly down to it, wished she could swim inside its heart for a little while.
But the sea must wait.
She had the legs, and she prized them, though now that sheâd told the others what she wasâsheâd had no choiceâher time with them was a ticking clock.
So she wished on the moon-slice over the sea that she might singand sigh inside Sawyerâs heart, in the time she had left. She wished he might feel what she felt, if only for a single day.
Duty came first, and she would never shirk it. But she could hope inside her heart that she would do her duty, fulfill her legacy.
And know love before she returned to the sea forever.
CHAPTER TWO
I n the morning, Annika woke early. She chose one of her pretty dresses that swirled around her legsâa lovely reminder she had themâand hurried straight down to the kitchen.
She wanted to make the coffee. Sheâd learned how in the villa on Corfu, and liked doing things ordinary people did. But this new house had a different machine, and would take some time to figure out.
She liked figuring things out, too.
Today she wanted real flowers for the table, so she wandered outside and down toward the garden. And saw the pool. The pale blue water under the first soft beams of sunlight.
The sea was too far for a morning swim, she thought, but this. Well, it was right here. Trees flanked the yard, making a kind of green wall. In any case, she didnât understand the human fuss about bodies. They were as natural as hair and eyes, as fingers and toes, and no one made a fuss about hiding them.
Besides, she longed for the water, and saw no reason to go backto her room and find the suit to swim in. Instead, she pulled off the dress, tossed it onto a chair. And dived in.
The water embraced her, gentle as a mother, sweet as a lover. She skimmed along the bottom, her sea-green eyes open and lit with pleasure. Delighted, she swam the length of the pool, back again, then, pushing off the bottom, let her legs spear up into the air and sun.
And slice down into the water again as a tail.
Sawyer, a cup of coffee in his hand, stopped dead on the skirt of the pool.
Heâd come out to see who was up, whoâd put the coffee on. Heâd known it was Annika the instant her legs had come up and out of the