~ Covered in a cold sweat, Penny woke up from her nightmare. It took some time for the ghastly images to clear from her mind, and for her eyes to adjust to the dim light streaming through the windows into the room. This was not her apartment. She looked down where she sat on a bed that was not hers, wearing a shirt that was several sizes too big to be her own. Penny froze where she sat, panic tightening her chest. She moved nothing but her eyes now scanning the room, most of which was in shadows. To her left, the shadow shifted. Penny sat there staring into the darkness; she felt it staring back. Two eyes, the shade of pure gold, came from the shadows walking towards the bed.
What she saw confirmed that it had not been a nightmare. The whole thing had been real. He had been real. Penny was up and off the bed, running through the door that had been left ajar. Down the hall, down the stairs, and through the front door. Out into... the woods? Penny stood in the small clearing in front of the house spinning in circles. Overhead the clouds shifted, allowing more light to come streaming down. She was definitely in the woods.
Black came to the door of the massive log house and sat there. Cast in shadows, dim light at his back, all she could see were the glowing orbs of his eyes. He didn’t make a single move to come towards her, but she took a step back. From her right, the man emerged from among the trees. One step, two. Penny came up short when her back collided with the trunk of a tree.
Lochlan stepped out into the open, pushing the sleeves of his shirt up to his elbows. Penny noted his walk was strong. There was not a single scratch or bruise on his face. Maybe it hadn’t been his blood. Penny had an internal debate concluding that it had to be. Some of it at least. He had been hurt, and badly.
“You’re— alive.” Penny was not sure if that boded well for her, or not. So far she was still alive so she took that as a positive.
“So are you. How are your legs feeling?”
Penny looked down at her toes curling them into the moist earth. Gasping, she looked up at him. “I was paralyzed.”
To her response, he only smiled. “Come inside, it’s about to rain.”
He turned walking towards the door. As if on cue a drop of rain landed on her nose. Penny looked up as one drop became a steady drizzle. Setting aside the question of ‘how’, Penny spread her arms out, her face turned up as she laughed, the rain washing over her. It was the first time she had ever been so happy to see the rain. To be able to stand in it.
Drenched, and slightly shivering, she went into the house. Black sat up from where he had been sleeping beside the plush, cream sofa to look at her. She paused, not closing the door completely. Slowly she turned the knob, pushing the door to close it. Now she was locked up inside of a house out in the woods with a wolf and a werewolf. He hadn’t forced her to stay, not exactly. She wasn’t a prisoner— which was debatable. If he did tell her to leave all she would have been able to do was wander around the woods until she became a meal. And with her luck, she wouldn’t have to wander far.
The light was coming through an open archway to her right leading into another room. To get to it, she had to pass the wolf. Soaked, Penny started to feel chilly. She hugged her elbows keeping her position at the door.
“You’re not going to hurt me, are you?” she asked of the wolf.
Black tilted his head to the side, his eyes never leaving hers. Penny hoped that was a no. Hugging herself tighter she walked towards the opening to the other room. As she walked past Black he got up walking beside her. The archway opened up to a massive dining area that flowed into a spacious kitchen. It was all hardwood, muted colors, and chrome. She jumped, a startled sound escaping before she could stop it as Lochlan draped a towel over her shoulder.
“How are you feeling?” he asked as he walked to the other side of the island that was smack in the middle of the kitchen area.
“I-I’m ok.” Penny furrowed her brow frowning at the back of him. He seemed to be making a sandwich. “How - how are you?” She had to swallow a lump that was forming in her throat. All she could think of was that this had to be the most awkward situation she had ever been in.
Lochlan sent her a look over his shoulder just in time to see her wrap the towel tighter around her body. He could see that she was slightly shivering.
“I’m much better, thank you.”
Lochlan kept his back to her though he was finished with the sandwich. He wasn’t sure what to say, or how to handle the situation. Penny was still afraid of him. Added to that she would have questions he wasn’t sure he could answer in a... light manner considering the trauma she had gone through. The truth was not naturally very light. There was a reason some chose to live with their heads in the sand, and why others killed to keep it hidden.
“Excuse me,” Penny said in a small voice.
Lochlan faced her, resting back on the counter. Arms folded, ankles crossed, he gave her his full attention. Penny looked away, clearing her throat. He could tell his attention made her - uneasy.
“You have questions.”
She looked back at him. “But I’m not sure I want the answers.”
“It’s up to you,” he said calmly. Waited.
Penny hesitated before she said, “Those — those men.”
“They took you,” his voice came out sharper than he had intended.
“Y-yeah, but why?” She took two steps forward. “I haven’t done anything. Nothing that I am aware of at least. Why did they—where are they?”
Lochlan tilted his head to the side, “You already know the answer to that.”
His eyes fell to her lips as she started to chew on them anxiously. Of course, she knew what had happened to them. She would have heard it all. She had seen him covered in blood; first as a beast, then as a man. Lochlan could see that she wanted to ask more, but there was an internal debate going on. Penny had a lot to take in, and though he didn’t want to rush her he figured she should know.
“Some of them escaped,” Lochlan added.
Penny couldn’t explain the unease she felt that some of her attackers were still out there. For her to be bothered by that more than the knowledge that men had lost their lives... Her hand went up to her cheek. She had been slapped when she tried calling for help. They had bound her hands, her feet, and eventually, they gagged her. Left her to lie on the bare floor of the van crying, leering at her. They had spoken to each other in a language she still couldn’t place. One minute they were driving and the next her body was being thrown around the inside of the van. Colliding with the men, limbs tangling, detangling. Her body slamming against the cold metal interior of the van.
The pain was hard to forget. Bones breaking, jagged pieces of metal digging and tearing into her skin. How was she even alive right now? Standing there, breathing. No pain, no scars, or bruises on her skin. She wasn’t the slightest bit sore. Penny felt like none of it had happened. But it had. She had seen things, heard things. Her mind started to unravel, real panic grasping hold.
“Breathe.” He was surprised his voice was so calm when his insides were shaking. Lochlan had to fight the urge to go to her. Penny stood there, looking at him with eyes wide with shock and questions. He could almost see the ghost of her memories playing over inside her eyes. He could have taken it all from her. Why hadn’t he?
“W-why am I here?” Penny hugged the towel around her tighter. “What’s g-going on?”
The questions. The ones he didn’t know how to answer. If he gave her the truth it would only make matters worse. Penny was strong, holding on to her sanity, he was sure, by a thin thread. But he couldn’t lie to her. Not outright. This was too important.
“You must be hungry.” Lochlan took the plate with the sandwich shoving it over to the other side of the island closer to her. He went back to his position leaning on the counter. Penny stared down at it. She was hungry, he could tell, but she was frightened.
Instead of taking the sandwich she only hugged herself tighter. “Thank you for saving me,” as she was sure he had no matter what he was. The question she didn’t want to ask was—did he save her to set her free or did he save her to keep her for himself, “but I should be getting home now. It’s late. I have work in the morning.” Penny braced for his response, her heart thundering its way up to lodge in her throat.
Penny was out in the middle of nowhere with a man who was a man, yet not. Who had a wolf that was much larger than the average she was sure from the ones she saw on television. Black was sitting a few feet away, his eyes intently watching her. There was nowhere to run. Not likely anyone close enough to hear her scream. Please be the good guy, Penny chanted to herself. But an inexplicable tincture of danger hung in the air.
~ “Penny.” He called her name several times before she came out of her thoughts. Her forebodings persisted.Tears streamed down her face. She stood there before him, unable to stop the sudden outburst of sobbing that shook her body. Penny crumbled to the ground and just wept. The images she had tried to block from her mind all came tumbling out of the closet, jumbled and frantic.When he came over to her, holding onto her shoulder, trying to comfort her, she didn’t push him away. “Listen to me.” Penny didn’t notice the slight change in the timbre of his voice. Using a finger, he lifted her chin, leveling their eyes. “Calm down.”Instantly, she did. Her hysteria died down to a mild fit of sobbing. His eyes, pure gold, held hers until the sobs died out completely. Hands
~ It was just her luck being a pure heart. Some endangered subset of humanity everyone was searching for. And willing to kill for. Penny didn’t feel particularly special that she was in high demand. Naturally overt to attention, she was none too pleased that two different species were locked on to her. The sensible thing would be to go to the police, seek protection, but how sensible was it to tell anyone what she knew. They would be laughing their heads off while they dragged her to the nearest psych ward. Penny rolled over onto her side looking at the picture of her parents, and her brother sitting on her nightstand. She missed them. More than anything in the world, she missed them. They had been her everything and after they—left, she had nothing. Penny had resigned herself to a quiet, nondescript, predictable life without danger, and or excitement.
~ As he had told her, Lochlan was outside waiting for her after work. By Thursday, the guilt of what she had said to him was unbearable. “Look, Lochlan, about what I said the other day.” “Don’t worry about it,” he said, stopping at a red light. “Just listen to me, please.” He glanced over at her then back on the road. “It was a jerk thing to say. You didn’t make me a pure heart. And you’ve been going out of your way to keep me safe. If it wasn’t for you I’d either be dead or a vampire right now. I owe you.” He shifted the car into gear as the light turned green. He made a right turn. “You owe me nothing, Penny.” She sat back in
~ It started as a regular day. Regular in the sense that Penny went to work pretending as if all was well. Jumping at every random sound, looking over her shoulders, being paranoid that everyone who glanced in her direction was watching her. That was her regular day now. One cloaked by a sense of dread with a healthy dose of paranoia, however, justified. The seriousness of her situation didn't hit home until one night she came out of the business complex where her office was located, and there was no Lochlan. She had stood just inside the glass doors, waiting for him, thinking that he had been late, but he never showed. That left Penny to decide between braving the streets alone or staying at her office. She chose the latter. She had a change of clothes there. None would be the wiser. With him gone, she brought a change of clothes with her every day in
~A piece of splinter left a shallow cut on her cheek. Penny jumped, unable to stop her shocked gasp. There was a smashing of glass, then the fist disappeared. A loud commotion broke out. Penny didn't consider what that could all be about. Whatever had happened had provided a distraction she intended to take full advantage of. Keeping low, she made her way over to the bank of elevators. If they had come for her, it stood to reason that there was no actual fire, and that was simply a diversion to get to her. How would they have known she would have been separated from the flock was beyond her, but it didn't matter. Penny froze on her hands and knees as a body landed on the floor in front of her. Head tilted at a crooked, impossible angle, Penny watched as life ebbed away from the man, leaving his eyes an icy blue glass. He was a vampire. He would not stay that way for long.
~ Lochlan scooped Penny up out of midair. He landed on the balls of his feet, holding her tightly against his chest. Her death would have to wait for another day. "I got you." Lochlan wasn't sure if it was his heart or hers that was beating out of control. He had been on a run when she had tried to call. By the time he had gotten back to his things, he had ten missed calls and a text message. It was a good thing he hadn't been too far away. Penny took a second before opening her eyes to look at him. Lochlan was looking up at the roof. There on the ledge, the three men looked down at them. They could have made the jump with ease, but they did nothing. The one who had killed the woman gave the other two orders she couldn't hear, and they walked off. A second later, so did he. Grabbing on the front of his shirt, she told him everything that had happened inside. She wanted to go back to help the others. Lochlan knew that would not be possib
~ Lochlan stood holding the knife in his hand, knowing what he had to do and dreading it. The flesh around the claw marks had festered, turning a sickly black. It smelled like dying flesh. He had to remove it. All of it. That meant skinning eighty percent of her back. That percent rose with every minute he stood there, unable to get it done. Penny was still unconscious and would remain so until he woke her. To be sure she would feel none of it, he sent her into a deeper sleep. A kind of coma. Taking his time and being thorough, he removed every inch of infected flesh, sometimes having to take out chunks of muscles that had gone bad. There was blood everywhere, as the procedure was a messy one. A tedious one that took hours. In between, he had to wake her partially, feeding her his blood while holding back the pain from registering to her. It took a toll on him as well. The healing would be painful. Penny would feel every muscle regenerating, he
~ For days, Penny wandered around the house in a fugue state. She spent hours sitting in one place, staring at nothing in particular. She barely ate. Only came out of bed when he carried her. It was painful watching her punish herself. Her back was healed, but the wounds went deeper than that. Deeper than he could reach to heal. This she had to do on her own. At night Penny laid awake, staring into the darkness of her room. Heavy drapes at her window blocked out the sun by day, and the moon at night. What it couldn't block out were Black's mournful howls. Or the screaming in her head. Lochlan did all he could to comfort her. He could stop the dreams that had her fighting herself awake at night He could numb the guilt that rode her hard. But he couldn't erase what had happened, not really. He could compel her to eat, to forget, but he couldn't give those families back the loved ones they had lost. Penny knew she could ask Lochlan to make the pain go away. He would do
~ Marx stood looking at the carbonated lump that used to be four people he knew. Four people he loved. Ava, Lochlan, Zack, and Dempsey. Around him, the grass had grown again. The earth showed no signs of the battle that raged there. Mother earth had healed, but he had not. None of the others had. The world was safe, but a gap remained in their hearts that could never be filled. Around the base of the carbon memorial, laid fresh flowers. Every day for the past six months, Martha came with a new bouquet. Today was no different. He arrived as she did. “You came,” she had said to him when she saw him. In her hands, she had more than a dozen bulbs of tulips. Her summer dress fluttered in the breeze, strands of her now brown hair escaping her ponytail. The smile she gave him out shunned the sun, and Marx, for the life
~Marx was leading the last assault; one meant to be a distraction. Ava moved her palm away from the wound on her side. Bleeding still felt strange to her. Martha was the only one with whom she could go into details about her plans. “Penny has the last rune. All she has to do is plant it on him. When she does, we have only a few minutes to get our part done,” she said to Martha. “What is our part?” “I’m going to use you like an amplifier. I know how it sounds and yes, it is dangerous. For me more than you.” “Then we can’t do it,” Martha said. “If you’re going to get hurt—” “I have a contingency for that as well.” “Ava—” She
~Rea and Cale launched direct attacks on Kunz while Ava tried to unravel his protections. Each layer she pulled apart revealed another was more entrenched and more intricate than the one preceding it. She almost got another layer undone when she heard Cale shout— “Look out.” Ava had enough time to react, the death rune crackling through the air towards her. She split the force in half, saving herself by a hair. In the duel that ensued, Cale made the ultimate sacrifice. Rea tried to stop him as he ran straight for Kunz. Ava threw up a rune between Cale and the King; it was too late. Like dust, Cale disappeared. A self-satisfied smile lifted the side of Kunz’s lips. “Come now Avana. You cannot hope to defeat me. Even with all the knowledge at your disposal, I have spent years perfecting my craft.”
~They came through using three portals. Cale and Rea helped Ava to create one large enough to transport all of their forces. On the other side, they emerged on the field of battle in Hedgewood. The ground was scarred black. Trees toppled over and uprooted. It looked like a nuclear weapon went off, turning black everything in its path. The familiarity of the scene had an itch running down Marx’s spine. This place was either where they would claim victory or where he would walk over the corpses of the people he loved. He brushed his somber thoughts aside. Victory was their only option. To Ava, who stood on his right, Marx said, “Your handy work?” “I may have caused a patch here and there.” She bobbed her head from side to side. It was such a human gesture Marx found he had an urge to smile. He allowed his amu
~ Storming Hedgewood had to wait. Ava’s ‘problem’ required a second’s more thought. So close to the end, Marx was growing impatient. They needed to strike while they could and delays after delays were shifting the advantage square into the enemy’s hands. He folded his arms across his chest, keeping his face void of his emotions as he listened to Ava. “He has layers of protection wrapped around him like a shawl,” she was telling them as they stood inside the lobby of Anax Corp. Having the conversation on the outside felt too open. While they conversed, the last of the civilians and the injured were being ushered to the safety of the Mountain. Those left behind were there to fight. Marx found he was itching to fight. Ava continued. “We got through three of them before we had to retreat.” “Kunz spent years perfectin
~The sky was a battlefield. Above Pentorium, spreading out for miles, the shadows fought amongst themselves. Those made from the spirits of dead vampires clashing against those created from werewolves. Marx had control of the latter. It was surreal watching it all unfold. Anabella came to stand by Marx as he stood gazing up at the result of his power. Power he would never have dreamed of having. Explaining to the others what he could do would have paled compared to the scene unfolding over their heads. “This is what Sven wanted from her,” Anabella said about Sven and his sister, Marx’s mate, Celeste. “And when he couldn’t take it, he planned to break the seal on the portal.” “I can’t imagine having that man’s thoughts inside my head,” Marx said. “I rather
~Vescovi’s head throbbed as if a drummer band was marching across his forehead. Making his way through the tunnel with his men, a blast came out of nowhere, knocking them down and rendering them unconscious. He woke up in a crumpled heap with his men, all in various stages of recovery. It took him several tries to get to his feet and stay there, the drumming in his head growing louder with each movement. Walking straight was a task, but it was urgent that they get to Xavier and the others. They were delayed enough as it was getting the remaining civilians under Anax Corp ready for transport to the Mountain. Pentorium was under an evacuation order. He paused when he saw that the panel leading out of the tunnels was open. It was plausible that Xavier had left it like that since it was their way in and out, but Vescovi could not ignore the prickle at
~Martha moved to run to Nico as a shadow took possession of his body. Four steps in his direction, she stopped. Nico faced her direction, his eyes twin pools of swirling mist. The thing inside of him had his lips turn up in a smirk. With hot tears streaming unchecked down her cheeks, Martha clutched her fingers into tight fists. The words came from the pits of her stomach. The ground under her feet undulated, rippling with energy as she spoke them. Nico charged in her direction, his face twisted in rage. Martha held up her hand, palm open, continuing the chant, repeating it with fervor and a new understanding. Death fueled shadow magic. Hate. Anger. All the dark things that sullied the world. The spell was the most powerful she had ever attempted since Ava infused the revenant soul with hers. She had to release control to it. Allow the magic to ru
~Martha couldn’t breathe, her anxiety tightening her chest. Through her link with Nico, she could feel his growing distress. It urged her to move faster as she sprinted through the hidden tunnels leading down into the subway. Back at Anax Corp, Vescovi was assembling a team, a process that was taking longer than was comfortable with her. Nico and the others needed immediate help. Communications, already spotty, had gone dead. Not a single response, only the constant frying of static. Unable to stand around doing nothing while the man she loved probably laid gutted and dying, Martha snuck off when no one was looking. None of the others knew what she was planning to do. If they did, they would have tried to stop her. She was the passive one. The one who chose not to fight. For a werewolf, her reliance on that part of herself never went past her prim