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Authors: Shannon Mayer

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BOOK: Shadowed Threads
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Ugly.

But it was easy to break into and easier to start, seeing as the keys had been left in the visor. Maybe someone didn’t want the piece of shit car anymore and had left it out to
be
stolen; that I could believe.

Alex piled in, all two hundred pounds of him, awkward limbs and seemingly endless tongue. There were mere inches between us, hardly enough room to breathe. The engine started after I pumped the gas pedal several times and begged it to turn over. With a sputtering cough, it revved up and we were off. Not as stylish as a Porsche, not as fast, but less likely to run into trouble along the way.

“Stinky,” Alex said, about an hour into our drive.

What was he talking about … the stench of dog fart filled the small space in a matter of seconds. I gagged, frantically rolling the window down. “Warning, you have to give me some warning.”

“Sorry.”

With the window down, I did my best to ignore the steady stream of gas erupting out of the werewolf. What the hell had he been eating? Nothing I’d fed him smelled like that. Unless you count in the milk and cheese. Shit on a stick, I was never feeding him dairy again.

Tracking O’Shea, I finally got a bead on him. He was even further north now, which could just have been because we were so far south. But I knew better—he was moving steadily further away from me.

“Just stay where you are, O’Shea,” I whispered.

“O’Shea stay.” Alex whispered back to me.

I could only hope that the man left inside of the wolf O’Shea had become would hang on just a little longer.

Stay with us, Liam, just a little longer. I’m coming for you.

Chapter 12

T
he wolf slept
easy, the taste of witch blood thick and sweet on his tongue.

Tonight, his dreams bled red with vengeance, soothing the beast raging inside him. More than wolf, less than man, he only knew that to kill those who had chained him would bring him peace.

The crack of a twig snapped his head up, a distant memory recalling a woman with dark hair and green eyes sneaking up behind him. When he’d been weak, when he’d still let the man rule his actions.

His eyes narrowed as he watched a figure approach. He lifted his nose to the air and breathed deep. Not a witch; something else.

Something more dangerous than a witch; a rival for his territory. Steel grey hair floated on the breeze and golden eyes stared down at him. Lean and wiry, the old man—who the wolf somehow knew was like him—stared at him from the shelter of the trees where he stood.

“Wolf, you hunt the witches, but do you know what you are?”

His lips curled back in a snarl, a rumbling growl warning the old man to back off.

Grey hair came forward, though, not back as the wolf had expected.

Closer with each step, the old man came to within leaping distance. A single leap and his throat would be in the wolf’s jaws. Crushed.

They assessed each other, and finally the old man gave a slow nod. “You must go. The witches come in a force even you won’t be able to stop. You endanger us all. Go to the north. Your mate will come for you there. She will save you. But, the witches will destroy her if you bring them together. Her death would be on your hands.”

His words stirred something in the wolf, a buried thought, a broken memory. Tri-colored eyes, auburn hair and a sharp tongue that was sweeter than any witch’s blood.

Lover. Fighter. Mate.

He shook his head and the old man was gone.

As if he’d never been.

The wolf slowly raised himself up and stared to the north. There, she would find him. If the witches came, he would end them. But no longer would he taunt them, hunt them. Not if her life depended on it.

Turning his muzzle into the wind, he headed north.

 

We made it to Warsaw, Poland with very little problem. No Beast, no cops, seriously relentless wolf farts, but otherwise, we didn’t have much issue. Nearly eighteen hours on the route we’d taken and I was done in. I had to sleep, no matter how much I wanted to keep going.

The car stuttered to a stop in front of a mid-sized hotel. Good enough for me. I told the front desk Alex was a therapy dog. It had worked in London and seemed to go over well in Warsaw too. Perfect.

I checked into my room, glanced over it quickly. We were four stories up, and while I didn’t think it would stop the Beast, I still checked to make sure the window was locked.

The bed was lumpy, and I didn’t turn the sheets down, just crashed on top of them, Alex curling up beside me. I passed out in a matter of seconds.

A few hours later, I woke up with a jolt, sitting bolt upright. I didn’t know what it was, but something woke me up. Blurry-eyed, fuzzy-brained, I acted on pure instinct. I rolled from the bed and landed on one knee as I pulled a sword free from its sheath.

A voice spoke from the darkest corner of the room. “You know, I could have taken your blood ten times over, you were so deeply asleep. And your wolf there, he isn’t much better.”

Faris stepped forward, the light from the city through the window illuminating him.

“Do you ever make appointments, you know, show up when you’re supposed to?” I didn’t lower my sword, though I suspected I probably could. He made a good point; if he’d wanted to kill me, he could have on several occasions, not just that night.

I couldn’t see it, but I knew he was smiling at me by the way his voice lilted as he said my name. “And would you make an appointment with me, Rylee?”

“Nope.”

“Well then, it seems that this is the way it must be done.” He continued forward, pulling the only chair in the room with him, sitting down in it.

“Are you aware that your Milly is pregnant?” He laced his hands together in front of him.

“Old news,” I said, wishing I could get to the light switch. Alex snored lightly, rolled over and burrowed his face into the pillows.

“Quiet, Alex sleeping,” he grumbled. What a guard wolf he was.

I shifted my stance, lowering the tip of my sword to rest in the thin carpet. “You know I have people trying to kill me because they think I’ve aligned with you. Now why would that be, why would they think I’m on your side?”

Faris stared at me, his eyes visibly blue even in the shadowed light, like they glowed in the darkness. The freaky-ass vampire.

“Am I wrong to assume you don’t want the supernatural world announced to the humans?”

Fuck, this was not how I wanted the conversation to go. I did
not
want to agree with him on anything.

“Don’t assume you know me.”

“Am I wrong?” He bit out the words.

I let out a huff of air, once more aware that my level of fear around the vampire had dipped considerably since the first time I’d met him. “No. You aren’t wrong.”

There. I’d said it. The words tasted a bit like bile, having to agree with him.

He spread his hands in front of him. “So whether you like it or not, we are on the same side. I do not want to have the world know about us, and neither do you. The Child Empress wants the world to bow to her. That is a fool’s way of thinking, one she learned at her parents’ feet.”

Again, I agreed, but I didn’t say as much. Since I had him here, I was going to see about getting some of my questions answered. Much as I hated to admit it, Faris knew a great deal—and much of it, I had no doubt, could help me survive. He was in the center of all the supernatural politics and I was barely on the fringes. Which meant I could use what he knew.

“Speaking of the Child Empress, what’s her beef with Pamela?”

Faris blinked several times and I realized that I’d caught him off guard. Score one for me.

“Pardon?”

So damn proper. “The Child Empress sent Doran after Pamela, why?”

“Did you kill him?” There was just a tad too much eagerness there for my liking.

“Never mind that. What beef would this kid have with Pamela?”

Faris pursed his lips, and his eyes dropped to half mast, cloaking the brilliant blue. “Perhaps jealousy. The Child Empress has been spoiled beyond belief, and now she is prepped to rule the world. Your Pamela, if my understanding is correct, once she matures, will put Milly to shame. That makes her a threat. What better time to wipe out a threat than when it is young and defenseless?”

My jaw tightened and I gave him a nod. “Point taken.”

Silence then, as he sat there and stared at me, and I stared back, not sure what exactly was going on.

“What are you doing here, Faris? I doubt you’re just stopping in to chit-chat.”

He answered me with a question of his own. “Aren’t you even the least bit curious how I found you? You are, after all, one of the last Trackers in the world; I’d think this would be of interest to you.”

I shrugged and leaned back on my bent knee. “Milly had some of my blood. I know she has the spells it would take, plus the strength to use them to find me.”

Faris leaned toward me. “I’ve tasted your blood, Rylee. I can find you anywhere now. Anywhere at all. A particular talent I’ve honed over the years.”

Ah, fuck, that is not what I wanted to hear. But I acted like I didn’t care, though my heart tried to leap up my throat, making my next words come out a bit strangled. “Whatever, anything else? A particular reason you wanted to wake me up in the middle of the night in the middle of Poland? Maybe you came to apologize for setting Milly on me, to have her try and kill my friends?”

He stood and started toward me. I rose to stand, facing him. I refused to back down, to give him the pleasure of seeing him push me the way he wanted me to go.

“Rylee, Milly and I were partners—of a sort. What she did to you and yours was nothing I had anything to do with, though no doubt that is what she told you. I wish you could see things as I do.” He reached out, put one finger under my chin and tipped my face up. I batted his hand away, and he just chuckled.

“Spit it out. I have only a little more time to get some piss poor sleep before I have to leave.”

He nodded, his face suddenly drawing tight, as if he had bad news for someone he cared about. But that was ridiculous, because one, I knew he didn’t really give a shit about me. I was just a tool to him, and two, regardless of how bad things were for Milly, I wasn’t helping her.

“Are you aware that your sister is in mortal danger?”

That I hadn’t expected. My heart lurched hard, and sweat beaded up in an instant on my lower back. Every moment of my life since Berget had gone missing, I’d dreamed of going back in time and saving her. Of making right the one thing in my life I could never take back. Son of a bitch, even while my head explained that Faris knew that about me, if he knew nothing else: that my sister was the key to making me do what he wanted. Even knowing that, my heart was screaming at me to move, to get to her and save her, screw the rest of the people around me. With everything I had, I forced myself to hold still, to remember that it was Faris I was dealing with.

“You can’t know that.” I struggled to deny him, to get the words out, old fears waking up with a vengeance as his words hit me.

“But I do know it. Her death is scheduled. Tomorrow at sunset, her blood will be spilled into the canals of Venice.”

I fought to keep my legs from buckling under me. There was no way he was telling the truth. I Tracked Berget, felt her happiness and laughter, she was finding something very funny. Her life coursed through the thread that connected us once more now that we were on the same side of the water. A faint hint of uncertainty lay there too, but no fear. “You lie, I can feel her, she isn’t afraid. There is nothing that would—”

“She knows it comes and she believes it is a thing she must do. She believes it is for the best. That it will save lives.”

He reached for me again, and this time I didn’t pull away. Not because I wanted him to touch me, but because I literally couldn’t move. He had to be lying, there was no other answer. This was just a manipulation on his part. A way to make me do what he wanted. There was no way he would have come here just to help me—just to save my little sister. There had to be some angle, some benefit to him that I just wasn’t seeing. He was a vampire, not some gods-be-damned saint.

His hands settled on my shoulders. “You could stop them, stay the hands that would slay her. But you would have to come with me. We would have to leave now.”

Berget’s life danced inside my head. I felt her as surely as if she were standing in front of me. Faris could be lying—in fact, I was almost certain he was. This was a ploy, a way to get inside my head. A way to control me, to get me to do what he wanted.

Faris had never been straight with me, and he
knew
that Berget was a card I would have a hard time ignoring if he played it. Fuck, I couldn’t deal with this right now.

I took a deep breath and knew that I had to call his bluff, as hard as it was. “I don’t believe you.” I stepped back from him, watched the unexpected sorrow fill his eyes. Sorrow, not anger.

“Then your sister will die—tomorrow.”

Panic clawed at my throat. If I was wrong, I was sentencing Berget to death without even lifting a single finger. I closed my eyes and Faris spoke from across the room.

“I would save her, if I could. But I can’t. It is outside my abilities to stay a death such as hers, at least not without help.”

“Then what makes you think I can save her?” I opened my eyes, stared at him as if somehow I would gain the answers I wanted from him.

“Because you are the Tracker. The catalyst.” His eyes never left my face. “You will blame me for her death when it happens.”

“She isn’t going to die,” I said, finding the strength to push the doubts away. “This is a game, an elaborate fucking game to you. You think I’m going to Venice? You’re wrong. I’m not. I don’t believe you. Berget is fine.”

BOOK: Shadowed Threads
13.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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