Read Lycan on the Edge: Broken Heart Book 13 Online
Authors: Michele Bardsley
“You’ve got some big ole lady balls, I’ll give you
that.”
What had she been thinking, going straight into
a nest of vampires and other parakind? She’d had
no choice. Thanks, Ena, you evil bitch. Maybe if
Brigid could help her, she could reverse what
she’d done to fulfill her part of the bargain. Fix it
somehow. She sipped and sipped because she
didn’t want to talk. No, she didn’t want to lie.
Memories flashed. In the forest. The camper
parked at a jaunty angle. Sitting on a worn log.
Staring at the fire in the pit, enjoying the last of
their dinner, laughing at old jokes. Shadows
surrounding them…
“Run, baby! Run!” Her mother’s voice.
Screaming. She took off. She was fast. Had
always been fast. They broke off, chasing her,
screeching. Then they dissipated, like smoke …
then reformed to wiggle away into the forest. She
circled around, returning to the campsite.
She would save her.
She would save her mother.
They danced, their warbling metallic cries
tearing at her like claws. In the middle of their
wavering shapes, she saw Mom. Collapsed next
to the dying fire like a tossed rag doll, her throat
had been ravaged. Her glassy eyes stared at
nothing, her mouth open in a final silent scream
… and her blood, bright as spilled rubies,
flowing, flowing…
“Meckenzie?”
The French-tinted voice snapped to her mind
into the present. She was breathing hard, tears
gathering, and heart racing. Ren stood next to her
chair staring down at her. Hmm. Was that concern
lurking in his golden gaze? She couldn’t deal with
more guilt, more regrets. She put her empty mug on
the coffee table—on a coaster, of course. She
wasn’t a complete heathen.“When did you get
here?”
“Just now,” he muttered. He glanced at his
brother and sister-in-law. “We think someone has
infiltrated our borders.”
Mackenzie didn’t break eye contact. As
vampires, they no doubt heard her increased heart
rate and her slight intake of breath. Adrenaline
started pumping, and she felt her hands curl into
fists.
His expression went cold. “You let them in.”
She kept her gaze on Ren, but wouldn’t,
couldn’t, answer.
His jaw clenched. “You do not deny that you
allowed someone else into Broken Heart. This Ena
perhaps?”
I didn’t have a choice.
But she couldn’t say the
words. Excuses, lies, justifications. Her gut
clenched. She hadn’t much cared about the way she
lived after her mom died. She’d been in survival
mode.
She
wasn’t
interested
in
forming
relationships. Caring about people meant risking
loss, and she was too much a coward to put her
emotions on the line.
“Ena is the witch?” asked Patsy.
“I call her Ena the Evil. She pretty much
sucks.”
Ren looked like he was trying to stare holes
through her. “How did you do it?”
Meckenzie reached into her pocket, drew out
the vial, and put it on the coffee table. “A fairy
wish.” She licked her lips. “If it makes you feel
better I only let one Alberich in.”
The silence fell like an ax.
“And did you intend to hand over Brigid, too?”
The queen’s eyes flashed red.
“No. It’s why I need her. She can stop Ena.”
Tears of frustration welled. “I’m trapped, damn it.
If you would just tell me where she is we can end
this whole thing and I’ll get out of your fur.”
“She’s not here. She’s a goddess and pretty
much does whatever she wants. But I know
someone who can get in touch with her, and I’ll
contact him,” offered Patsy.
Meckenzie felt the tension emanating from Ren
as well as from Patsy and Gabriel. She could
almost taste their fury. It surrounded her, pummeled
her. She deserved everything they’d throw at her.
She had willingly placed herself at the town’s
border. Maybe she could’ve walked away, or
changed her mind but Ena had sent the shadows
and made sure she’d followed through.
“I can’t have you wandering around Broken
Heart causing a ruckus,” said Patsy.
The blood drained from my face. “Are you
going to kill me?”
“It’s an option. Right now you’re getting locked
up in our paranormal prison until we handle the
situation with your bitchy witch and that werewolf-
killing machine you let in. Then we’ll deal with
you.”
She snagged Ren’s gaze. A muscle ticked in his
jaw, and his gaze flashed with ire. He nodded
slowly, his eyes narrowed. “I’ll take her.”
Meckenzie stood, resigned to her fate, and Ren
clamped a hand on her shoulder. As they exited the
house, she heard Queen Patsy say, “We need to get
Sophie and Trent back here STAT. Call everyone.
It’s all hands on deck.”
The chilled air hit them like a fist, and she
sucked in a shocked breath. She’d forgotten how
cold it was outside.
“Meckenzie. Betrayer!” screeched a familiar
woman’s voice. She barely had time to register
Ena’s pissed-off visage before the knife entered
her left shoulder. The tiny blade lodged just below
her collarbone. She wrenched it out. Pain whipped
through her, but she gritted her teeth against the
stinging waves.
“Ena,” she said, tossing the knife into the air
and catching it by the handle. “You’re early.”
Ena’s black gaze burned with unholy light. She
touched the tiny silver daggers lining the belt
around her hips and smiled. Wow. Can you say evil
bitch? She’d planned to kill Meckenzie all along.
Figured.
“You think I can’t destroy all of Broken Heart
with just one Alberich?”
Nope. Hah.
“Fuck you.”
Ena threw a second knife, and Ren jerked
Meckenzie out of the way and leapt in front of her.
Ena’s second blade clattered to the porch.
Meckenzie pressed her hand against the wound,
hissing as acidic pain jolted through her. Terrific.
Those daggers were poisoned. She dropped the
blade and wondered how long the poison would
take. Knowing Ena, it would be a long and painful
death.
“What the holy fuck!” yelled Patsy as she
marched outside, shoving Meckenzie and Ren out
of the way. She lifted her hands and ropes of gold
magic unleashed.
The ropes looped around Ena, but the witch
only laughed.
“You’re dead, Meckenzie Braith.
Dead!
”
She easily shoved off the vampire queen’s
magic, and then, in a puff of acrid smoke, Ena the
Evil disappeared.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
SOPHIE STRUGGLED WITH the bombshell Trent
had dropped. “How is that possible?” she asked.
“What happened to the other destroyer?”
“My wife and I volunteered to be the weapon.
We vanquished the Alberich, but it took a toll on us
both. I survived, but Laura did not.”
He’d been married? To the first destroyer? She
pressed her hand against her stomach sure she was
going to vomit. The feeling roiling in her gut felt
too much like betrayal.
“You used me.”
“No.” Trent reached for her hand, but she
pulled away. “I care about you, Sophie. What
we’re building between us is real, I swear it.”
She shook her head, tears forming.
“This wasn’t part of the deal,” said Virginia.
Sophie turned toward her grandmother. “You
knew?”
“I knew he survived the Alberich, and that he
could help you.” Nana glared at Trent. “You
should've told me Sophie was some kind of
weapon. I’m gonna read Queen Patsy the riot act!”
“We weren’t sure,” said Trent. “We knew that
when Laura died, her power would pass on to
someone else. Once the spell is enacted, it always
finds hosts. Not that it mattered. We always
believed the Alberich had been defeated. But one
found you, Sophie. And you vanquished him.”
“And almost died,” yelled Nana. “Did you
forget that part?”
“This doesn’t make sense. How did a power
find me a hundred years after your wife passed
away?”
“I don’t know. I believe the power found you
because the Alberich have returned. Maybe
because you were the first of our kind to be
attacked by one since we drove them off so long
ago. It’s just a theory, but even if it’s wrong, it
doesn’t change anything. You are the destroyer.”
“So, just dumb, bad luck? Bullshit. Someone
did this to me, and I want it undone.”
“It doesn’t work like that, sweetheart.” Trent
stood up. “We need you, Sophie.
I
need you.”
“Sooner rather than later.” The new voice
sounded a lot like Patsy.
Sophie looked over her shoulder. Patsy and
Gabriel stood in their hotel room. Well, why not?
How had this day started out to be the best in a
very long time and then turned into the worst?
“We don’t have much time,” added Gabriel.
“There is already an Alberich in town. And four
others prowling our borders.”
“I don’t know how to be the destroyer,” said
Sophie. She hated that she sounded whiny. She
didn’t want to be that person. She wanted to be
strong and brave, but her previous encounter with
the Alberich had scared the crap out of her.
“I’ll help you,” said Trent. “We’ll do it
together.”
Somehow, the idea of facing the problem with
Trent eased her rising panic.
Get on your big girl
panties, Soph.
She nodded. “Okay.”
She would do this for her friends and the town.
But once the Alberich had been defeated, she and
Trent had a lot to discuss. If she decided she was
still talking to him.
REN HELD MECKENZIE’S upper arm and
guided—and by guided, she meant hauled—her
down a narrow hallway. He’d had the audacity to
handcuff her, and even though twelve ways to get
out of the cuffs had already occurred to her, she
hadn’t tried. With his werewolf strength and
vampire agility, Ren could totally whoop her ass.
They stopped in front of a transparent plastic
door. When he opened it, she noted the floor-to-
ceiling white interior and the single, narrow bed.
On the back wall, there was a closed door that she
hoped led to a bathroom.
“Way to hold a grudge, dude,” she said, laying
on the sarcasm. Deep down, her feelings were hurt.
The fact Ren had no reason to trust her (you know,
that whole lying and conniving she’d been doing)
was not the point.
But Ren was obviously not a leap-of-faith kind
of guy.
He waited, pinning her with his gaze, and she
felt her lungs slowly deflate. His nostrils flared.
His lips curled with just enough snarl to remind
her that somewhere inside him lurked a wolf.
“I can tell you why I did it,” she said.
“I am not sure that matters.”
“The why always matters,” she said, offering
another wisdom gem dropped by Mom. Mary
Braith had been smart and kind and deserved a
better daughter. She tried to be that but kept failing.
Yep. She was pretty damned good at failure.
“Go ahead. Tell me why.” Ren’s voice was
tainted with anger.
She flinched inwardly but held steady. “Ena