Authors: Katie Reus
treating him like this?
Sticking to the shadows, she sprinted
down the driveway and out onto the road.
Careful to stay hidden, she hurried down
her street, only stopping to hide in the
bushes in her neighbor’s front yard.
When she saw the lights from the SUV
swing out of her parents’ driveway, she
ran into the street, blocking it.
Immediately the vehicle jerked to a halt.
Kiernan was out and pulling her to him
before she could tell him she’d heard what
he’d done for her. Scooping her up, he
hurried back to the SUV and slid into the
backseat, keeping her on his lap.
He was covered in blood, and his dark
hair was a mess. Reaching up, she gently
cupped his cheek. “Are you okay?”
“This isn’t my blood,” he said in a
rough voice, his eyes unreadable.
The vampire from the driver’s seat
snorted. Dark hair, dark eyes, similar
muscular build to Kiernan. She’d tried
looking up pictures of the Doyle coven
online and it had been damn near
impossible to find any, but she had no
doubt this was one of his brothers.
The other vampire gave her a cursory
look, one filled with mistrust and dislike.
Kiernan growled at him. “Drive and don’t
look at her like that.”
Despite the situation, she nuzzled her
face against his neck. “Is he your older
brother?” she whispered even though the
other vampire could hear her.
“Yes.” Kiernan’s grip around her waist
tightened. “Ronan, this is Melina,” he said
to his brother.
A grunt was all the response she got.
Well, that and another dark glare from him
in the rearview mirror.
“I think older siblings must have that
protective death stare down pat,” she
murmured, just as quietly as before.
A small, muted rumble came from
Kiernan’s chest.
Carefully she stroked her fingers down
one of his arms. His leather jacket had
been shredded by what she guessed were
claws, but his skin was unblemished.
“This
is
your blood,” she said accusingly.
“It doesn’t matter,” he said soothingly,
stroking his hands down her back and
arms, touching her everywhere he could.
It did matter but he had a stubborn, pure
male expression she didn’t feel like
battling. She just wanted to savor his
embrace. Leaning against him, she laid her
head on his shoulder. Her family was
going to be so pissed once they
discovered she was gone but she didn’t
care. Kiernan had protected her when
every instinct he possessed must have told
him to do the opposite. “So, the Mazzoni
pack wanted to kidnap me and paid you to
do it?”
“Yep. And I have a feeling Uberto
Mazzoni will be dead within the hour.”
She shivered, knowing it was true.
“Thank you for what you did.”
He grunted and she figured that was the
only response she’d get. His fingers
lightly strummed on her spine, up and
down in a soothing rhythm. The vehicle hit
a pothole, but she barely felt it. She had no
idea where they were going, and she
didn’t care. Being in Kiernan’s protective
arms was all that mattered.
Finally he spoke, his quiet words
cutting through the quiet of the vehicle. “I
tried calling you today.”
“I know. My brothers took my phone.”
She hadn’t memorized his number, so
she’d had no way to contact him. “Where
are we going?”
“We can’t go back to the condo, but I
have a place we can hide out,” his brother
said after a glance in the rearview mirror.
He took a sharp turn into a residential
neighborhood she recognized.
Without either of them telling her, she
understood he was making sure they didn’t
have a tail. “I need to call my pack and let
them know I’m okay.” She hadn’t wanted
to take the time to leave a note in case
anyone found it before she’d escaped.
Kiernan slipped his cell out of his beat
up, ripped jacket pocket. “Here.”
Hesitantly, she took it. “They might be
able to track me with this.”
Both Kiernan and his brother chuckled,
the sounds so similar it startled her.
Kiernan shook his head. “All our phones
are encrypted. The number will show up,
but they won’t be able to trace you.”
The certainty in his tone put her at ease
as she dialed her mother’s cell. She
picked up on the first ring. “Hello?”
“Hey, Mom.”
Her mother sighed. “Are you safe?”
“I’m with Kiernan.”
“Your father and brothers are very
angry.” At least her mom didn’t sound
mad, probably because she understood.
Her mother’s parents—Melina’s long-
deceased grandparents—hadn’t approved
of Nevada in the least. Times had been
very different back then, when males
actually fought to the death for the right to
claim a female. From the stories Melina
had heard, her father had fought tooth and
nail for her mother. Despite his victory,
her grandparents had still disapproved but
her mother hadn’t cared.
“I figured.” She could just imagine the
state they were all in at the moment.
Her mother sighed again. “Are you sure
he’s worth it?”
Kiernan was looking straight ahead but
she knew he could hear her mother. She
answered without hesitation. “I think his
actions tonight speak louder than anything
I could ever say.”
Underneath her, Kiernan relaxed a
fraction. If she hadn’t been wrapped up in
his arms she wouldn’t have noticed it.
“Can I contact you on this phone?” her
mom finally asked after a long beat of
silence.
When Kiernan nodded, she said yes
then quickly wrapped up the conversation.
She shoved away her guilt at leaving her
pack’s house when she knew they only
wanted to protect her. While she loved
and appreciated them, she couldn’t stay
away from Kiernan. He needed to know
that she was on his side and hadn’t been
intentionally avoiding him today. Settling
against Kiernan’s chest, she traced over
his muscles with her fingers. “Am I still in
danger?” He might have killed those
shifters earlier, but there might be more
after her. The thought terrified her.
“It’s possible, but I’m sure your pack
will get all the information they need from
Uberto,” he murmured against the top of
her head.
Considering Kiernan had hand-
delivered the treacherous shifter, Melina
felt perfectly safe with him. More than
that, she wanted to be with him, not locked
down with her pack when she had no
doubt Kiernan would keep her safe. A
little self-conscious that his brother could
hear them, but not caring enough to stop,
she reached up for Kiernan again, cupping
his cheek so that he looked at her. “Thank
you for . . .” She struggled to continue,
how to voice what she wanted to say.
Somehow she found the words. “You
risked a lot by going after those shifters
and coming into my father’s territory.”
His eyes practically smoldered with
lust and need as his hand tightened on her
hip. The grip was territorial, possessive.
“I’d do it again.”
She swallowed hard, unable to tear her
gaze away from his. “I know I left before,
but it was only to protect you. I didn’t
want my brothers to hurt you.” And she
wasn’t leaving him again. She desperately
wanted to explore what was between
them.
His hard lips curved up into a half-
smile. “The only reason I let you go is
because they were your family. If it had
been anyone else, they wouldn’t have
walked out of that condo alive.” There
was a dark truth to his words that made
her shiver.
“What about the feud between our
families?”
“Fuck it. I’m not walking away from
you for
anyone
.” Before she could
respond he covered her mouth with his,
pushing, teasing, taking. The man lit her
body on fire and the only thing stopping
her from ripping off his clothes and
straddling him right there was his
brother’s presence. Soon enough though,
he was going to be all hers. And she
wasn’t letting go or walking away this
time.
Chapter 7
Kiernan wasn’t surprised his brother had
a place their coven didn’t know about. It
was just the way Ronan operated. He kept
secrets from everyone, including their
father. Kiernan didn’t mind, especially
now that he had Melina all to himself.
Ronan had left them ten minutes ago,
telling Kiernan not so subtly that he could
have a few hours alone with Melina
before he’d be back. Kiernan planned to
make use of all that time as soon as he
finished showering the blood and grime
off.
The jets pummeled against his
shoulders, the hot water streaming over
his body. Thanks to his age and strength,
he’d already healed. Even if he hadn’t, he
wouldn’t have cared. Tonight, he was
finally going to sink himself inside Melina
again. To taste what he’d been missing,
fantasizing about for too long. He hadn’t
been lying when he’d told her he wasn’t
walking away from her for anyone. Not
his brothers, his father, no one.
She’d awakened a primal urge to
possess and protect in him he hadn’t
known had existed. For someone who
lived as long as he had, a year wasn’t that
long, but it seemed like an eternity not to
have made love to her.
When she’d left her pack tonight,
coming to him of her own free will
despite the issues it would cause with her
family, it had stirred those territorial
feelings he was just starting to get a grasp
on and made them go haywire. Before
Melina he’d never felt such a possessive
need about anyone. Sure, he looked after
the members of his coven, especially his
female cousins. But the desire to watch
out for her was a different kind of need. It
was a hunger. She was so sweet and
giving, and even though he’d been
annoyed she’d gone to the homeless
shelter to help that kid when she’d been in
danger, he’d found himself proud of her.
As he started to twist the shower knob
off, he heard the quiet snick of the
bathroom door opening. Then he scented
her. That sweet honeysuckle scent that
was so distinctive, he knew it had to be
Melina.
Silently, he waited as he heard a rustle
of movement—hopefully Melina getting
undressed—then the jingle of the shower
curtain being drawn back.
Delicate fingers lightly raked down his
back before her hands slid around to his
front to rest on his abdomen. His muscles
clenched as she pulled him back against
her naked body in a tight hug.
The feel of those soft breasts pressing
against his back was almost enough to
make his brain short circuit, but her next
words stopped him from turning around
and taking her up against the wall fast and
hard like his body wanted.
“What happened between our families?
Why did my brother . . . kill yours?” Her
voice was soft.
Kiernan closed his eyes for a moment,
letting in memories he’d long since
banished. His parents had been enraged at
the Rodriguez pack, but what Miguel had
done had been justified. And there was no
way to sugarcoat it. “My brother Corey
went mad. He started killing humans—
young couples—after the woman he loved
left him for someone else. She’d decided
she didn’t want to be turned into a
vampire after all, that she’d rather be with
a human and live a short, mortal life.”
To say his brother hadn’t handled it
well would be an understatement. Unable
to understand why the woman he claimed
to love would choose another over
relative immortality with him had been
beyond Corey. He’d gone on a bloody
rampage. The members of Kiernan’s
family were bloodborns—born vampires,
not made—which was why their coven
was so powerful. But every decade they
changed a few humans into vampires.
Births among vampires were rare, and to
keep their species strong they changed
those who were willing.
“And my pack got involved?” She laid
her cheek against his back, her grip around
him tightening.
He laced his fingers through hers,
savoring the feel of her body pressed
along the length of his. It comforted him
that she wasn’t pulling away in horror.
“Yeah.” Back before the leaps in
technology and before civilization had
spread, shifters, vamps, and fae had all
guarded their territories with a vengeance.
That meant anyone living in those areas
fell under their protection. “My brother