Authors: Parker Blue,P. J. Bishop,Evelyn Vaughn,Jodi Anderson,Laura Hayden,Karen Fox
Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy, #Paranormal, #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Futuristic, #Anthologies & Short Stories, #Paranormal & Urban
“Well, I took one and was able to do this.” She touched her cheek in
indication.
Before she could react, David snatched the bottle from her hand,
flipped off the top and dumped the pills into his hand, squinting at them
through the darkness. He had the audacity to taste one. “Here’s your answer.
It’s not Glue. These are the sugar pills.”
“You’re lying,” Jon growled. He grabbed David’s wrist hard enough for
her ex to yelp in pain.
“Cool your jets.” David dumped the pills back into the bottle, capped
it, and tossed it back to Serenity. “No lies. They’re sugar pills.”
Serenity stuffed the bottle back into her pocket. “Why would those be
stored in the safe?
“Simple. We had some placebos made up so we could convince the
girls that one pill wasn’t enough and they needed to take a double dose of
Glue and be even more dependent on us.”
“But . . . that means . . .” Her head whirled with impossible
possibilities.
David supplied the answer she couldn’t bring herself to say aloud. “You
have the trait. It manifested sometime after my accident. Maybe it was the
emotional trauma.” He shrugged. “Whatever. You’d shift in your sleep, and
I’d wake up next to a strange woman, then I’d realize it was you. Quite the
turn-on, if you think about it.”
She bit back a stronger retort. “You’re lying.”
He actually laughed. “Think about it. Subconsciously, you were so
desperate to get out of the marriage, you turned into someone else. I’m not
the only one who changed, baby. And now that you met a shapeshifter and
know about Glue, it makes sense that you’d credit it instead of your own
abilities.”
“You’re crazy.” As disbelief crept into her thoughts, her face began to
tingle, and she felt the bones and muscles moving on their own accord.
David pointed to her face. “And here comes good ol’ Serenity, back
again. Doubt can be a real downer, can’t it?”
His flippant comment angered her so much that she closed her eyes
and repeated to herself
If I can change, then change!
After a few repetitions, her
face tightened in response, and she embraced the tingle that soon magnified
into a flare of pain.
As she concentrated, she heard Jon from the driver’s seat. “You knew
all this time? And you never told her?”
David dismissed the questions with an explosive sigh. “Sheesh! Like
she would have believed me. We weren’t exactly on good terms.”
Serenity straightened, now assured that the return to her borrowed
features was now a deliberate action. It made a perverse sort of sense now.
As their marriage went south and David grew abusive, she made a slow but
measured change, becoming more aware, less tolerant of his aggression, and
getting enough courage and conviction to throw him out. Instead of
changing outside, she’d changed inside.
Now she could do both.
It also explained the instantaneous connection she made to Jon.
They were two of a kind.
She opened her eyes and smiled. “You’re right. I would have
never
believed you. But I had no problem believing Jon.”
“Oh. So it’s
Jon
now. How cozy. Well, about that . . .” David reached
into his jacket, and before the gun barrel cleared the edge of his coat, Jon’s
fist rocketed out, catching David on the chin, snapping his head backwards
into the glass. Then with a speed that was almost inhumanly fast, Jon caught
the gun falling from David’s loosened grasp and slammed on the brakes,
skidding into an empty parking lot.
Once her ex recovered from the speed and ferocity of the attack, he
gaped at both Jon and the gun now aimed at him. “How in holy hell did you
do that?” he asked, rubbing the spot where his head had slammed into the
window.
When Jon grinned, his entire face lit up, eradicating the air of noir
grimness he wore most of the time. “King of the shapeshifters. Remember?
I can be anyone I want, including someone really, really fast.” He nodded
toward the door. “Out.”
David made no effort to leave. “But the formula . . .”
“. . . is staying with us.”
“But Iceman.” True panic began to reflect in his eyes. “And what about
Tanaka?”
“I bet both are really pissed at you right now and into the foreseeable
future. Tanaka because you don’t have the formula and Iceman because he
knows someone wearing your face stole it. If I were you, I’d get out of town.
I hear Rio is nice this time of year.”
David turned to glare at her. “I’ll never sign those papers, now, Sere.
Never.”
The sound of Jon’s laughter ricocheted around the car. “You won’t
have to. I’ll sign them for you. As you.” He pointed the gun at David. “This
is the last time I’m saying this. Out.”
David bristled. “You wouldn’t.”
The gun roared as Jon calmly shot out the passenger window, just
inches from David’s head. As Serenity held her aching ears, she watched her
ex-husband throw himself out of the car and sprawl across the glass-littered
pavement.
When Jon glanced back at Serenity, his look of solidarity filled her with
a buoyance she hadn’t felt in years. She knew who she was now. Who she
really was. Who Jon was. That somehow, they belonged together. Any
lingering fears she had about David complicating her life evaporated.
She reached out and touched Jon’s cheek, savoring the sensation and
strength that flowed between their contact. Then she turned, looked out at
David, and smiled.
“You’re finished, David. Finished with me,” she said. She started at the
top and worked her way down. Hair, eye color, facial structure, even skin
tone. “Because you’ll never find me again.” This time, she knew she wasn’t
just pretending not to be scared of him. She
wasn’t
scared.
And she’d never be scared again.
Jon followed her lead, shifting into a completely different person. “You
cause either of us any problems, and you’ll never see us coming. I might be
the person standing next to you in the line at Starbucks. Or she might be
sitting behind you at a restaurant.”
“You wouldn’t.”
Jon aimed the gun at David again. “Seems to me I’ve already proven
myself once tonight. Care to try me again? Or shall I give her the gun? Of
course, her aim might not be as good as mine, and she might accidentally hit
you.”
David scrambled to his feet and disappeared into the shadows.
Putting the car in gear, Jon pulled away from the curb. They said
nothing until they parked in front of her apartment. When he climbed out of
the car, she saw he’d changed back to his normal face as had she.
At least she thought she had.
He opened the door for her then held her arm to steady her. “Are you
going to be okay?” he asked in a low voice.
Her answer surprised even her. “If you stay with me. Teach me.”
His smile was a little bit rueful and a whole bunch attractive. “I’ve never
taught anyone before. Up to a couple of days ago, I thought I was the only
person in the world who could do what I do.”
She squeezed his arm, more to reassure herself than him. “You’re not
alone anymore.”
He cocked his head, and his smile grew. “I guess I’m not. That’s a
change that it’ll take getting used to. What about you? How many impossible
things have you faced in the last twenty-four hours?”
How many indeed. “A couple . . . dozen. Sometimes life changes when
you least expect it.”
“People, too.”
He held out his hand, and without hesitation, she slipped her fingers
into his, letting the powerful sensation flow up her arm and into her heart.
“Where do we start, O, King of the Shapeshifters?” she asked.
He shrugged then ducked his head, hiding his grin. “At the beginning, I
guess. Lesson one . . .”
The End
DESTINY RISING
Jodi Anderson
Jodi Anderson is enjoying a life-long love affair with books and loves
creating happily-ever-afters for readers.
CELESTE SORAYA knew killing her lover had been inevitable, but that
made it no less devastating. Knowing Erik forced it, wanted it, threatened to
obliterate her every day. For nearly three hundred years she’d lived with that
knowledge.
Lightning exploded, and thunder crashed again, shaking the crumbling
walls of the estate. The storm centered overhead. Focus and discipline
honed by desperation kept her from flinching as mortar fell from between
the stones of the keep’s walls.
Tonight. It had to be tonight. The last chance to set all right. To grasp
what she’d lost . . . destroyed.
Reliving the sounds, horrific visions, and smell of his spilled blood for
three lifetimes had only sharpened the pain of the oozing wound that had
replaced her soul for so long.
Peace, rest, and forgiveness
. Did these things truly
exist?
Speak, damn you, speak
.
But the skull mocked her with its screaming silence. Death’s muteness
had cloaked it for two centuries gone. Darkened eye sockets mocked
Celeste. The gaping mouth on the skull filled with echoes from the past.
Blaming.
Condemning.
The hell of it was Celeste knew her three lifetimes of torture was
deserved. Still, a hardened shell of guilt kept her from surrendering if there
was any chance of salvation to be had. If she could not complete the triad
this time, if she did not get it right, not only would she have killed Erik
forever, but he would be condemned to the abyss from which there was no
escape, no hope, and no light. Condemned to the death of his soul’s essence.
No
.
If Celeste met failure again she would destroy herself completely. There
would be no fourth lifetime. She would use a method steeped in magic to
ensure she did not return again. Death’s embrace would be preferable to an
eternity in the arms of this anguish.
Eternal darkness bound the dead unless she found the right key,
released the tumblers that imprisoned their light. The key required a
combination of purity of purpose, symbols that portended the time was
right, and evil’s darkness. A combination as elusive as it was deadly.
Designed to resurrect Erik or annihilate him for all time.
“Now, m’lady?” Rose’s whispered words broke the silence punctuated
only by the hiss of candles burning too long and too short.
There could be no modern lights, no trappings of the present time. All
had to be as it had been on
that
night.
“Nearly. Hold steady, Rose. The time is upon us.” A hidden piece of
Celeste softened. Why this woman returned each lifetime to help in this
quest, she didn’t know. Rose would not say other than she was bound to
Celeste, to her quest.
Celeste welcomed the company, the genuine friendship offered without
reserve. Rose was family in all ways but blood. All the ways that mattered
most.
Rose shuffled closer, laying a hand gently on Celeste’s shoulder. “No
matter the outcome, I will be there in the next. No matter the outcome, you
will go on. You must, or all will be lost.”
The energy flowing into her arm enabled Celeste to stand taller, to raise
her chin, and to believe. She never understood why this bond existed but
hoped she offered something to Rose. “I know. And I’m always grateful,
but—”
“It is not for us to question, child, only to accept.” Rose moved away to
light more candles as some died with a last frantic leap upward. “You will
know when you will know.”
It seemed the old woman sensed Celeste was at the end of her hope,
suspected she planned to end the agony if this failed. Celeste said nothing.
What could she say?
In the midst of the torrent raging outside, silence suddenly cloaked the
anteroom, oppressive in its unexpectedness. They were in the center of the
storm, the eye of calm around which all energy centered . . . good and evil.
Celeste raised her gaze to meet Rose’s calm one, feeling again the flow
of energy given to her from the other woman. With a small nod, Rose set a
goblet on the podium and pulled the dark hood forward to cover her silver
hair, leaving only the shadow of her profile exposed. Celeste covered her
own hair in the same manner before stepping to the open book on the
podium.
Rose raised the goblet, prepared with lamb’s blood and a white feather,
and walked counter-clockwise around Celeste and the book. She sang the
ancient chant low then allowed it to swell. The eerie notes lifted to fill the
space.
Celeste steadied her heart and focused, threw out all doubt, and spoke
the first word of the invocation. Hating the name but knowing they needed
it. “Victor!”
Lightning flashed. But thunder did not follow. He was present.
Keep your thoughts pure, Celeste. No judgment. No fear. Don’t let him know
.
Dislodged mortar sprinkled about them though no thunder shook it