Authors: Katie Reus
situation. Placing a gentle hand on
Kiernan’s forearm, she lightly squeezed.
“I need to go with my brothers.”
His jaw clenched impossibly tight as he
stared down at her. So many emotions
swirled in those dark eyes, but she
couldn’t get a handle on any of them.
Before he could speak, Miguel
growled, “Get the fuck away from my
sister.”
Kiernan’s head snapped up. “Or what?”
“Or I’ll do to you what I did to your
brother.”
Kiernan hissed in a sharp breath of air
and his muscles flexed underneath her
fingers. He didn’t move toward her
brothers but she could feel the energy
pulsing off him in scary waves as the
flames flickering along the tiled floor
jumped about a foot.
Ignoring her brothers, she focused on
Kiernan. There was a raw energy, an
almost pained expression on his face she
wanted nothing more than to wipe away.
“What’s he talking about?” she whispered
even though everyone in the room could
hear her.
“Miguel killed my older brother about a
hundred years ago.” His voice was so
monotone, so devoid of emotion she knew
he was holding all of it in.
All the air sucked out of the room with
that one statement. Her fingers clenched
on his arm, his words punching into her
chest with an almost tangible force.
“What?”
Instead of answering her, he turned
back toward her brothers. “I’ll let you
take your sister, but if you ever come into
my place uninvited again, you won’t be
walking out.”
Melina clutched his arm, desperate for
answers, to understand what had happened
between their two families. But he
stepped away from her, severing their
connection.
The action pierced her like a silver
dagger through the heart. Though she
wanted to stay, to force him to talk to her,
she knew it wasn’t the time or the place.
She had to diffuse the situation with her
brothers before it reignited.
Shaking off the arm, Carlos—the only
one of her brothers who had been
completely silent except to shout her name
when they’d stormed the condo—tried to
wrap around her shoulders, she stalked
down the hallway that led to the front
door. “You’re paying for all these
damages,” she said under her breath as
she yanked the door open. At least going
downstairs didn’t require a biometric
scanner.
She couldn’t believe the assault her
brothers had just launched on Kiernan’s
place, but what really stunned her was his
admission about Miguel killing his
brother. The almost stricken look on his
face taunted her.
A hollow, bereft feeling settled in her
chest as she stepped inside the elevator.
As soon as she talked to her brothers and
worse, her father, she and Kiernan were
hashing things out. She might have run
from what he made her feel once, but that
was then. Now things were different. He’d
pursued her for months and he didn’t get to
make her want and feel and start
considering the possibility of letting him
into her life then turn away from her
because of her family and their stupid
vendetta. She refused to let that happen.
Chapter 5
Melina sat in her father’s study reeking of
smoke—thanks to those stupid flash bang
grenades—and, of course,
vampire
as she
waited for her Alpha to interrogate her.
She’d ignored her brothers on the way
home, even Carlos, which she felt a little
bad about. They’d always been closest,
but right now she was livid at her
overbearing pack. Worse, she knew they
were going to use the attempted
kidnapping to keep her under lockdown.
She was all for safety and precautions, but
she didn’t want her veterinary practice to
suffer and she didn’t want to live like a
prisoner. If she hadn’t used so much
energy using her healing powers before
she would have been better prepared to
defend herself. She might not be the
strongest in the pack, but her brothers had
taught her to defend herself.
The heavy oak door opened then closed
behind her. Melina didn’t turn from her
seat in the high-back chair in front of her
father’s desk, but waited for him to take a
seat across from her.
Surprising her, her father, all six feet
three inches of him, sat in the matching
brown high-back chair next to hers and
shifted her seat to face his.
His green eyes, so much like her own,
were unreadable. Finally he scrubbed a
hand over his face. “God thinks it’s funny
to have given me a daughter like you.”
For a moment, pain pierced her soul
until he looked up, a smile on his normally
hard face. Before she could speak, he
continued. “Are you trying to kill me by
going out with Kiernan Doyle? Or worse,
start a war?” There was a dark, serious
note in her father’s voice she usually only
heard when he was dealing with the rest
of the pack.
“We have more important problems
than me dating a vampire, Dad. Someone
—wolf shifters—tried to kidnap me
earlier tonight. I was really drained after a
few surgeries today and wouldn’t have
been able to fight off my attackers. If it
hadn’t been for a
vampire
, I wouldn’t be here.” She left out the part about drinking
his blood. Definitely not something he
needed to know.
Her father’s eyes narrowed. “Did you
ever contemplate that maybe Kiernan was
involved and only used the situation to get
in your good graces?”
She had thought of that for a split
second before completely dismissing it.
“He set two of the shifters on fire and
blew up their van. Besides, I don’t think
he’d ever work with shifters for
anything
.” If he wanted to do something, he was the kind of man who’d do it
himself, not depend on others. “And what
purpose would he have for fake-saving
me?” He couldn’t have known she’d be
leaving the restaurant early, and he’d been
stopping by her veterinary clinic every
Friday for the past few months. On many
of those occasions she’d been alone. He
could easily have hurt her if he’d wanted
to. She’d seen the way he lit up those
shifters. The sexy vamp was powerful.
Her father’s face hardened. “To get you
into bed, to use you against our pack. The
options are limitless. And if he thinks I’ll
allow him to touch you—”
“Dad!” Right now she was talking to
her father, not her Alpha. “I so don’t want
to talk about that,
ever
. Whatever’s going on with Kiernan and me is our business.”
He thrust out a finger at her, driving his
point home. “It’s not your business if it
involves the pack.”
“Our pack attacked him, in his home.
He did nothing to us or me in retaliation,
though he had every right.”
“We didn’t know that and you weren’t
answering your phone. Instead you were
too busy healing thugs down at the
homeless shelter.” His head tilted to the
side a fraction, almost daring her to deny
it.
She jerked back, surprised by his
words.
His jaw clenched once. “Yes, I know
about what you do down there.”
“H-how?” She’d been so careful to
keep it a secret from him.
His green eyes narrowed ever so
slightly. “I’m Alpha for a reason.”
She bit her bottom lip and frowned. “So
if you knew I was moving around of my
own free will, you had to know I wasn’t in
any danger from Kiernan.”
“We knew no such thing.” But his
words didn’t ring true.
Her father wasn’t a fool, not at almost
three hundred years old. He’d wanted to
make a statement to Kiernan by invading
his condo, but he hadn’t been there
himself. If he’d truly thought her in danger,
he’d have led that raid, not sent her
brothers. And if he’d been there it would
have sent a clear message to Kiernan. By
staying back, it had been obvious he
hadn’t been declaring war.
Sighing, she decided to leave the topic
alone for the moment. They would never
see eye-to-eye on the subject of one very
tall, very sexy vampire and she didn’t
want to argue with her father. Not when
they had more pressing matters at hand.
But first . . . “Why did Miguel kill
Kiernan’s brother? I’ve never heard that
story.
Why
have I never heard that story?”
She’d planned to ask Kiernan about it
first, but her curiosity was killing her.
Her father was silent for a long
moment, his face contemplative. Finally
he spoke. “The war between our two
factions was over a long time ago, but they
were the ones who started it. It could have
been completely avoided if they’d kept
Corey—that was Kiernan’s brother—
accountable for his actions. I’ll let your
vampire friend tell you what his brother
did. If he tries to tell you it was our fault
or brush aside his brother’s actions, you’ll
know what kind of man he is. And you
know me, Melina. I wouldn’t lie to you.”
No, he wouldn’t. Knowing that was all
she’d get out of her father, she switched
topics. “Does anyone know I was in that
car accident?”
Her father nodded. “Other than your
brothers, Solon also knows but he won’t
say anything. He and Miguel both scented
your blood but didn’t want to alert their
superiors until they spoke to me first.”
She understood why. Solon might not be
part of their pack—as one of the last
remaining dragon shifters he wasn’t part
of
any
pack—but he still deferred to her father in many things even if it superseded
police regulations. If they thought she’d
been hurt or taken they wouldn’t have
wasted time dealing with red tape when
her pack would be doling out the
punishment to her kidnappers. “What
about the van and dead shifters?”
“The cops are running the DNA on them
but they scented at least two additional
shifters not part of our pack. Wolf
shifters.” A soft, deadly growl emanated
from him, filling the room and sending a
chill down her spine.
Her father rarely raised his voice and
she knew that the quieter he got, the
angrier and deadlier he was. In the past
shifters had gone up against him thinking
to make a reputation by killing an Alpha,
but they always failed. While he might
seem like a laid back Alpha, her father
moved like lightning and struck with the
viciousness of a sledgehammer. He hadn’t
claimed southeast Florida easily, but he’d
held onto it for a long damn time. When he
was in wolf form . . . she shuddered. It
was definitely best to stay out of his way
then. “Did they recognize them?”
“No.”
“Is this about business or one of Miguel
or even Carlos’s cases?” Since Carlos
was in the vice and narcotics division, it
stood to reason this could be about him
too. Though coming after her was just
plain stupid, and druggies and pimps were
all about survival. She found it hard to
believe this was related to Carlos.
“Don’t know yet but we’re going to find
out. I’ve got feelers out all over the city. If
anyone knows anything, we’ll know it
soon enough. Until then you’ll have an
escort to and from your clinic. No
arguments.”
Melina wasn’t about to argue. She
didn’t have a death wish. “Okay.”
Her father’s eyes slightly narrowed.
“Why do I feel like you gave in too
easily?”
Grinning, she stood and kissed him on
the forehead. “I’m not stupid. Someone
wanted to take me, probably to hurt you or
the pack. I want pack protection.” She just
didn’t want to be a prisoner, something
her father had obviously realized since he
was letting her work. If he hadn’t, it was
something she’d have fought tooth and
nail.
“I don’t want you to see the vampire
again.” A soft warning.
Her claws nearly unsheathed, her inner
wolf hating the order, instantly rebelling at
the thought of staying away from Kiernan.
She was surprised by the intensity of her
reaction. “The vampire has a name, and
I’m a grown woman. I can and will make
my own decisions about my love life.”
Her father rose. “Melina—”
The office door swung open and her
mother strode in, all five feet two inches
of her. “Nevada.” There was a warning
note in that single word. When her mother
said her father’s name like that, he usually
listened. Melina bit back a smile and
hurried out of the room, only stopping to
kiss her mom on the cheek. Her father
might be Alpha but he didn’t like getting