Lunar Marked (Sky Brooks Series Book 4) (2 page)

BOOK: Lunar Marked (Sky Brooks Series Book 4)
11.78Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Just like his brother, Josh wasn’t unaware of his looks. Some described them as a quiet beauty—I had to disagree. They practically screamed, “You’re welcome.” But arrogance didn’t accompany them the way it did in his brother. Ethan was
very
aware of his looks.

“What’s the matter?” he finally asked, without looking up from the notepad that contained the spells that we had translated. For months he had tried to find a pattern in them, hoping to translate them without the third book. Samuel, a powerful witch who wanted to use the Clostra to rid the world of magic, had that book in his possession. It was a source of frustration for Josh but I was content with Samuel having it. I couldn’t wait until Joan, the Alpha of the South, came to pick up one of the two we had. The books were dangerous and as far as I was concerned should be in different parts of the world and never in the same room again, like they were when we removed my death curse, which also removed every curse that had ever been performed. We still didn’t know the extent of the damage that single act had done. I knew we had released the Tre’ase and they now were unrestricted by the ward that had kept them isolated in their homes. I lived with the guilt that we—the pack—had irreparably changed the world to help me.

“Nothing,” I finally said.

He frowned as he appraised me. “So you look like you’re carrying the weight of the world just because you think you look sexy brooding?” he asked, the glint in his eyes and kink in his lips a simple reminder of why the witch was just as charismatic as he was powerful.

I squeezed my own lips together in a duck face, narrowed my eyes, and slouched into a silly pose, arching my back and contorting my body. “You mean this isn’t sexy?”

He laughed and pushed the notepad aside, running his fingers through his hair, which probably was the closest it came to being combed or styled today. Josh had always been a get up, shower, and go guy. “Seriously, what’s wrong?”

“Everything,” I admitted, but I wasn’t ready to talk about Steven moving out because there was a part of me that hoped this was just a fight that went on too long. Hopefully, he would soon make the decision to stay. “We removed curses—I am not convinced that there will not be some consequences. Do you ever wonder how we changed this world? And Samuel, why has he been so quiet? People like him, who have a dogmatic agenda like his, just don’t fade quietly into the night. They plot, plan, and wait for an opportunity to strike. Why hasn’t he struck?”

“You were his plan. I don’t think he had anything else. And we haven’t been able to fix the Aufero, so the witches whose magic it’s holding will not feel an obligation to become his allies because there isn’t anything in it for them,” he said.

I looked over at the Aufero, its odd coloring tarnished by magic from Ethan. An object that had endless potential, but Marcia had used it to harshly punish witches for minor infractions to ensure that the Creed were the most powerful among them.

“You think he’s just at home wallowing in his failure?” I asked skeptically.

“Honestly, we have no idea what he’s doing. He’s disappeared,” he said.

Someone like Samuel didn’t just disappear into the night never to be heard from again. He was always steps ahead of us, so the fact that he had disappeared and we couldn’t find him heightened my concerns. You don’t want a powerful witch on the loose with an agenda to remove magic from the world—stopping were-animals from being able shift to their animal form, divesting elves and witches of the ability to use magic, and killing all vampires. Samuel believed that magic made people evil, and he was ready to execute his version of misguided vigilante justice to save us from ourselves. We should know the whereabouts of someone like Samuel at all times.

We needed to be on the offensive and figure out his next move. And we knew his next move. He wanted the Clostra. It didn’t make me feel good knowing that we had two of the three in our possession in the same location. They needed to be separated.

They had a ward that prevented just anyone from reading them—that was good. Each spell was divided between the three books—that was also a good thing. But the spells could be performed by anyone strong enough to wield its magic—that was a bad thing. We didn’t know if the books had to be together to work—and that was another bad thing.

Josh shrugged, but the stress of the question lingered and burdened his features. His brow furrowed and he started to bite into his nail bed, his “tell” that he was uncomfortable or nervous. He continued to look at his notes, perhaps thinking the same thing I was. Liam, the leader of Makellos, and Marcia were now allied, making things very complicated. The Makellos were considered the elven elite, a self-proclaimed title, because they were all “pure” and untainted by interbreeding with other groups in the otherworld or with something even worse—humans, which they considered the worst dilution.

To our favor, we were secretly allied with elves. Last month Gideon had taken the position as leader of the elves. I’d openly showed my disgust but couldn’t ignore or take comfort in the knowledge that the alliance between the Makellos and the Creed would soon be severed because of collusion between Sebastian and Abigail, Gideon’s sister. She almost guaranteed that she would incite a civil war in an effort to bring them under one leadership, her brother’s. A war of any kind would leave them fractured, and Sebastian was aware that Marcia would not maintain an alliance with a fractured power and would quickly sever ties once they were of little use to her. It was convoluted and calculated manipulation on Sebastian’s part, and it made me realize that he was more than just compact and robust physical power but cunning as he worked the system to do whatever necessary to protect the pack and keep us strong.

Sebastian’s stratagem was to be allied and have a leader of the elves indebted to him, for one reason only—to change their covenant regarding dark elves. Ethan was part dark elf and upon the death of his grandmother he inherited her magic. Based on the covenant, Ethan was supposed to be killed. We used the Aufero to divest him of the dark eleven magic, but since then, the Aufero had been too dangerous to use. If I used the magic from the Aufero and erected a protective field, the air would be siphoned out, suffocating the very person the field was supposed to protect. If touched, it pulled out your breath, and hammered your heart into arrhythmic behavior, which was why Josh and I were in the library trying hard to find a spell to correct it.

Josh had split his attention between trying to fix the Aufero and interpreting the remainder of the Clostra.

The Aufero was placed on the table, a burnt orange and pulsing in light beats, recovering from another spell that hadn’t worked. Whenever Josh neared it expelled a burst of magic, as though it recognized Josh’s power and wanted to protect itself.

“I can’t believe you knew what my brother was before I did,” Josh mumbled, glancing at me, as he stood a couple of feet from the Aufero. A combination of pain and anger managed its way to the surface. Ethan kept secrets. Lots of secrets. He and Sebastian seemed to take on the roles of not only Alpha and Beta but also guardians of the secrets and protectors of the skeletons that were effectively hidden in our closet. And when it came to this pack there were tons of both secrets and skeletons. Everything was on a need-to-know basis, and as far as they were concerned, most people didn’t need to know. It was to protect the pack and its loved ones, but I believed that secrets caused more harm than good, especially between Josh and Ethan.

In an effort to assuage his feelings of betrayal, I said, “He was trying to protect you. You know the rules, if you knew, you were required to expose it. We all are or would be in violation of our covenant. The situation was supposed to be contained.”

I hated that word,
contained
. It was their nice word for saying
murdered
. They contained dark elves because of their ability to kill someone with a mere touch. No one knew how to control their ability; consequently, an agreement was made by the leaders in the otherworld that dark elves would be destroyed. I felt it was a cruel act until Ethan nearly killed me during an argument just by touching me. I realize it might not be as malevolent as I thought if even Ethan couldn’t control it. Something as casual as a touch could be the end of someone they loved, and part of me sometimes played with the idea that it might have been more of an act of benevolence than malice to end a life that had to be more misery than pleasure.

Josh’s scowl didn’t change. In fact, he looked troubled, which made me feel more uncomfortable about the other secret Ethan and I shared. I stared at the myriad of markings that formed a tapestry of sleeves on both of Josh’s arms. But I concerned myself with the one on his leg that he thought was a birthmark. It was the only thing keeping him alive.

He was cursed, as punishment for something his mother had done. Ethan and Claudia, their godmother, had found a way to circumvent the curse. Now that we had removed all curses, I was sure he didn’t have to worry about it. But I still wished Ethan would tell him. He asked that I keep his secret, but I only agreed after he promised he would tell Josh himself. I wished I had given him a specific time frame, because I’m sure Ethan’s okay with holding on to it until he’s on his deathbed.

“You have a birthmark, don’t you?” I clamped my mouth shut the moment the words came out.
Why did I ask that?
I knew why—I wanted to tell him.

His half smiles always had an air of deviance. “Of course, you’ve seen it,” he teased. Of course I had. Like his brother, he thought clothing was more of a hassle than he cared to have. Countless times I’d come to his home to practice magic, only to find that his clothing of choice was a pair of boxers and maybe a t-shirt. He would have stayed that way if I hadn’t refused to come in until he was dressed.

“Do you want to see it again?” He winked.

“He actually has two birthmarks. But I don’t think it is necessary for you to see them.”

I looked over my shoulder at Ethan. I was met with an intense gunmetal gaze that I could feel on me even after I had turned back around. “Hi, Ethan.”

He walked in and the smirk had eased; a challenge. “Did I interrupt anything?” he asked Josh, but his eyes shifted in my direction several times.

“Nope. Just working.” Josh was short with Ethan, more than usual. I’d finally gotten used to their dynamics. Ethan was a powerful were-animal, the Beta of one of the strongest packs in the country and in any other pack he could easily be the Alpha. If he ever challenged Sebastian, I wasn’t sure of the results. Ethan exuded a confidence, power, and primal grace that commanded compliance and subjugation, except when it came to his brother. They were always in a battle of wills over who was going to be the Alpha in their two-man pack. I wish I could say they dealt with it nonviolently all the time. Their sibling dynamics were often the source of entertainment for most people in the pack. “I called you several times,” Ethan said, his eyes narrowing as he watched his brother, who was noticeably distant.

He shrugged. “Sorry, I must have left my phone at home.”

Both Ethan and I looked at his phone on the table just a few inches from the notepad.

“Really.” Ethan reached for it, picked it up, and displayed it for Josh to see.

Defiance shaded Josh’s face, and his lips twisted into a moue that was the clear giveaway of his position as the younger brother. It wasn’t an adult tantrum, well not really, but if there were such a thing, it was a man-pout. He might as well have stuck his tongue out after touting, “You’re not the boss of me!”

Ethan inched closer to the Aufero and his brother, but the Aufero belched another violent burst of magic as it formed a cloudy field around itself, which it maintained until Ethan had moved several feet from it. Josh and I watched with interest.

“What?” he finally asked after noticing Josh continued to watch him.

Josh shook his head. “I needed a break,” he said as he grabbed his jacket and headed out the door. Josh had taken a lot of breaks today, usually taking a ride on his Ducati, a guilt present from Ethan he gotten about two weeks ago. He accepted the gift but hung on to the anger.

Ethan sat down in Josh’s chair, perusing the notes, only taking a break to look over at the Aufero which hadn’t dropped the protective field it had formed around itself. There was always something off about Ethan, and the more I discovered about him the more there was to find out.

He sighed. “What is it, Skylar?” His tone was as sharp as the edges of his jaw. His defined features never seemed to soften, and I can’t remember the last time his eyes were their natural vibrant cobalt color.

“Nothing.”

“77 BPM.”

Ugh, I hate when he does that.
“Stop that!”

“I will when you start being completely honest with me. Don’t tell me something isn’t wrong, when something is.” He rested back in his chair, his cool gaze boring into me.

“Really?
You
are giving me the ‘you should be honest lecture’?” Ethan and Sebastian were liars by the strictest definition of the word and often did it to protect the pack. But of course they would never call what they did a lie. No, they considered it “getting people to see the reality you wish them to believe.” Although the motives behind them doing so were understandable, the ability to detect lies by listening to the changes of the body, everything from the deviations in your respiration to the light uptick of your heart rate, were things that most were-animals had the ability to do. Ethan and Sebastian were masters at it. Which in turn gave them the exceptional ability to get you to “see the reality they wish you to believe” without anyone detecting otherwise. And no matter how they spun it,
that
was the behavior of a psychopath. Often I had to brush aside my rigid ethics and accept that the behaviors I hated about them were the very ones that had kept me alive. I had to learn that somethings in the otherworld was gray.

“I don’t like that you are keeping information from your brother, and I hate that I am part of it. You have to tell him. After a long pause, I added, “Or I will.”

Other books

For the Love of Physics by Walter Lewin
Untitled by Unknown Author
Chasing Superwoman by Susan DiMickele
A Note in the Margin by Rowan, Isabelle
A Killer Past by Maris Soule
Marrying Off Mother by Gerald Durrell
Thrown by Wollstonecraft, Tabi
Flirting With Danger by Suzanne Enoch