Zinnia

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Zinnia Page 31

by Jayne Castle


  “I see,” Ella murmured.

  Nick examined each face in turn. They all knew that the presence of the legitimate branch of the Chastain family at his wedding would set the seal on the acceptance of the bastard into both clans.

  “I’m glad to see that no one has a problem with that,” he said finally. “If there are no more questions, I have some business to deal with here.”

  “We’re on our way,” Stanley said quickly. He took Wilhelmina’s arm and steered her toward the door. “Business consultant, eh? That sounds interesting, doesn’t it, dear?”

  “It has a certain cachet,” Wilhelmina agreed. “He’ll be dealing with some very influential people in town.”

  Orrin snorted. “Business consultant? Hope you know what you’re doing, Nick.”

  “I always know what I’m doing, Uncle Orrin. I never work without a plan. By the way, I’ll want to see your five-year plan for the future expansion of Chastain, Inc. before I hand over the investment cash.”

  Orrin flushed. “Giving orders already, I see. I don’t care how much money you put into the company, I’m the CEO of Chastain, Inc., and don’t you ever forget it.”

  “Don’t worry,” Nick said. “The job’s yours, Uncle Orrin. All I want from you is to see your smiling face and the faces of all the rest of my dear relatives at my wedding.”

  “Now, see here, you can’t just go about making demands,” Orrin huffed.

  Ella took Orrin’s arm. “We will all be at the wedding,” she said in ringing tones as she marched him to the door.

  Nick watched them leave. When they were gone, he heard the soft whir of the secret panel mechanism. He turned to see Zinnia lounging in the opening, arms folded. He felt the now-familiar leap of happiness.

  “You heard?” he asked.

  “Everything.” She shook her head, smiling. “You’re amazing, you know that? I’m beginning to believe your plan just might work. Five years from now no one’s even going to remember that you once operated a casino and had no legitimate family connections. All anyone will care about is that you’re the wealthy business consultant who funded the Fourth Chastain Expedition.”

  He grinned. “Who says you can’t buy respectability?”

  Epilogue

  The scent of passion hung in the air of the darkened bedroom, hot and intoxicating. Nick inhaled deeply as he eased himself into Zinnia’s snug inviting heat. She wrapped her arms fiercely around his neck. Her leg shifted, pressing against his thigh.

  “Nick.” She kissed his throat and then set her teeth delicately against his bare shoulder.

  “I love you,” he said. “I love you so much.” The words that had once been incomprehensible to his logical matrix mind were now the most important in the language.

  There were other things he wanted to say to her, but they would have to wait. As always, when things got this intense between them, he could no longer think logically, let alone speak coherently. All he could do was feel.

  And what he felt was indescribably satisfying. For the first time the matrix of his life was complete. Zinnia was his true mate, the other half of himself.

  He sent out a questing tendril of talent. A perfect crystal-clear prism formed on the metaphysical plane. He hurled a wave of power through it at the same moment that he felt Zinnia’s body tightening around him.

  Psychic energy fused for an instant with physical energy. In that split second Nick looked into chaos and saw that there was a pattern there, after all. A fabulous, glorious, indescribably beautiful pattern. He would never comprehend it completely, but that no longer mattered. It was enough to know the design existed and that he and Zinnia had a place in it.

  The vision was gone in the next heartbeat. He did not try to recover it. He had glimpsed it and he would never forget it. He knew that Zinnia had shared it with him.

  Her passionate response brought him back to the pleasures of the physical plane with a sweet vengeance. Nick heard his own exultant shout echo in the moonlit room. He lost himself in the shimmering matrix of happiness.

  The phone rang half an hour later, just as Nick was about to drift off to sleep. “If that’s your brother wanting to talk about the expedition plans again, I swear I’m going to wrap the phone around his neck.”

  Zinnia chuckled and settled closer against his side. “Don’t worry about it. The machine can take the message.”

  Nick threaded his fingers through her hair. “I wasn’t about to answer it.”

  There was a click and a familiar voice came through the answering machine.

  “Mr. Chastain? Hobart Batt here. I understand you can be reached at this number. I want to let you know that we’ve got our match.”

  Zinnia sat straight up in bed. “What is that little twit talking about? If he thinks he’s going to set you up with an agency date, he can go jump in the bay.” Nick smiled. “Take it easy.”

  “You were absolutely correct about Zinnia Spring being a perfect match for you, Mr. Chastain. Per your request, I reactivated her old paperwork and there’s no doubt about it. The syn-psych profile harmonizes extremely well with yours.”

  “What?” Zinnia got to her knees and crouched over Nick. Her eyes gleamed in the shadows. “You never told me that you finished the registration process. And you paid Batt to reactivate my paperwork?”

  “Couldn’t resist,” Nick said.

  “There are always some unknowns when one is dealing with a matrix-talent, of course. We went with your own estimate of class-ten-plus for you. Most unusual. But our records show that Miss Spring’s form of paranormal energy is quite unique also. It was one of the things that made her impossible to match four years ago. From what I can tell, it appears that it will compliment your strong matrix attributes in some peculiar fashion.”

  “Peculiar.” Zinnia grimaced. “Well, I like that.”

  “Hey, I happen to like peculiar,” Nick assured her. “Especially in red.”

  “I hope you’re as delighted as I am that we’ve found you a suitable match, Mr. Chastain. I wish you the best of luck.”

  There was a discreet pause and then Hobart cleared his throat.

  “Can I assume that you are entirely satisfied?”

  Nick stretched out a hand and picked up the receiver. His fingers brushed against the set of gold cufflinks he had left on the bedside table earlier when he had undressed. The cuff links had been a gift from Ella. Each was inscribed with an elegant C and the initial B. “Your father’s,” she had explained.

  “This is Chastain, Batt. Consider your debt to Chastain’s Palace paid in full.”

  “Thank you, Mr. Chastain.” Gratitude and relief vibrated in Hobart’s voice. “You know, this is my second match between a very high-class talent and a full-spectrum prism in recent months. Most counselors don’t see even one such match in their whole careers.”

  “Is that a fact?” Nick stroked Zinnia’s thigh.

  “I’m starting to wonder if we’ve been functioning under some false assumptions concerning the synergism between strong talents and powerful prisms,” Hobart continued in a chatty tone. “The phenomenon of psychic energy in humans is so recent and it’s evolving very swiftly. We may have a lot more to learn than we realized.”

  “You may be working under some false assumptions, Hobart, but I know exactly what I’m doing.” Nick hung up the phone and started to pull Zinnia down into his arms.

  She splayed her fingers across his chest. “Hold it right there, Chastain. What would you have done if it turned out that my old marriage-agency records did not spell out a good match between us?”

  He smiled into her laughing, loving eyes. “I would have altered the records through the computer until they did show a perfect match. I’m a matrix-talent, remember? I’ve always got a plan.”

 

 

 
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