I grabbed the chance, plunging my blade between its eyes. As the Shadow Hunter screeched, Lannan reared back, driving his fangs deep in the flesh as he ripped open the veins. A fountain of blood bubbled up, spurting into the air, foaming over the side of the beast. With a throaty laugh, Lannan began to suckle from the wound.
I stumbled back, yanking my dagger out of the creature's skull, unable to look away. There was something primal, something feral and wild and passionate about watching the vampire feed. I wanted to reach out, to run my hand through his hair, to brush his lips with my own…
Ulean howled around me. Cicely! Watch your step—you are too close to the flame.
Shaking my head, I forced myself to turn away and brushed my hands across my eyes. Damn it. Ever since I'd drunk Lannan's blood, there'd been a bond between us that I did not want. Like it or not, it existed, no matter how hard I tried to deny it. I'd noticed, over the past few days, that I felt him when he was nearby, like a shadow creeping behind me, waiting. As much as I tried to hide the sensations from Grieve, I was afraid my lover had noticed.
Shaky, my knees weak, I turned to see that my father was back in his Fae form. He and Kaylin were finishing off their opponent. Wrath carried a curved dagger and he slit the man's throat quickly and quietly, stepping away as the Shadow Hunter clutched at his neck and went tumbling to the ground.
They lay there, silent bodies in the snow, as a pale stain of blood spread around them, dyeing the brilliant white with dark crimson. Lannan pulled away from the creature, which had reverted to its Fae form. He wiped his mouth on his hand, his eyes glittering. His shirt was stained with blood, and he fastened his gaze on me.
Stepping forward, he reached for my hand, and unable to look away, I let him take it. With a slow, sinuous smile, he lifted my fingers to his mouth, kissing them one by one with his bloody lips.
A shiver raced through me, a live wire that set me aflame. There was something about the blood splattered on him, about the savage way he'd torn into the Shadow Hunter, that set me off. As if he could sense my thoughts, Lannan's smile turned into a smirk, and he squeezed my hand so tightly I grimaced, then he slowly let go, dragging his index finger against my palm.
My wolf growled. I pressed my hand to the tattoo on my stomach. Grieve could sense my feelings, and he wasn't happy. I quieted him, even as Lannan leaned close to my ear.
"I can smell your arousal," Lannan whispered. "I'll fuck you right here if you want me to, baby." But then Wrath called to us, and he backed away.
I turned to find Kaylin staring at me, but he said nothing. Instead, he motioned to the house. "We should get in there and see what we can find before any of their kinfolk arrive."
Not trusting my voice, I nodded. The back of the house had been the most damaged, and I wasn't sure how much I trusted the roof over the kitchen. Most of it had burned away, but there were still patches held up by support beams that had survived the inferno, albeit heavily damaged. The front of the house looked much more stable.
"We go in through the front door," I finally said. The others followed me, Kaylin first pocketing the obsidian knives from our enemies. We hurried back around the house and up the front steps.
The house is clear?
Ulean shivered against me. Yes, the house is empty, but do not tarry. The woods are alert tonight. The hunters are awake and active. They are searching for you and Grieve. And all who helped him escape.
"We have to hurry, Myst's people are out in full force and we don't have a lot of time." I jogged up the stairs and pushed open the door. We hadn't even had a chance to lock it when we were rushing to escape.
As I entered the living room, it hit me just how much had happened in the past few weeks—and how much we'd all lost.
My name is Cicely Waters and I'm one of the magic-born, a witch who can control the wind. I'm also part Cambyra Fae—the shifting Fae. Uwilahsidhe to be precise, which means I can shift into an owl. On that front, I only recently learned about my heritage and in no way have honed my abilities. But in a few short weeks I've learned to love being in my owl form, and I've found a freedom I'd never before experienced. Flying, soaring over the ground, has offered me an escape I've never before felt. I always felt like a part of me was missing. Now, I feel whole.
When I was very young, Grieve—the Fae Prince of the Court of Rivers and Rushes, and his friend Chatter—came to my cousin Rhiannon and me and taught us how to use our magical abilities. It was Grieve who bound me to Ulean, my Wind Elemental, telling me I would need her help. In a sense, he was foreshadowing my life to come.
When I turned six, my mother, Krystal, dragged me down the stairs of the Veil House, and we headed out on the road. My aunt Heather and the only stability I'd ever known vanished in the blink of one afternoon.
I learned early on how to survive on the streets. I'd longed to return to the Veil House, but Krystal—a meth head who used booze and drugs to dim her own gifts—wasn't capable of surviving on her own and so I stayed with her until she died in the gutter, a bloodwhore who'd serviced one bad trick too many. Until that day, I'd kept us going, using my ability to hear messages on the wind to stay one step ahead of the cops and the drug runners.
And now my mother was dead, and I'd finally returned to New Forest, Washington. But too little, too late. My aunt had been captured by Myst, and my cousin Rhiannon was terrified for her life. Myst holds the town in her icy grip, and she's out to spread her people throughout the land, to conquer the vampires and use the magic-born and yummanii—the humans—as cattle.
In a past life long, long ago, I was Myst's daughter. And Grieve had been my lover then, too. We'd defied our families to be together, rampaging through the bounty hunters and soldiers who sought for us. We'd hidden behind rock and tree, snared them in traps, and I'd torn them to shreds, reveling in the blood.
Grieve and I had fought for our love, killed for our love, and—at the end—when we were cornered and couldn't escape—died for our love. We had bound ourselves together forever with a potion designed to bring us back together again in another life.
Now, we're back, and we've found one another again. Once again, we're caught between the Cambyra Fae and the Vampiric Fae. Only this time, Grieve is the one bound to the Indigo Court. Myst turned him into one of her own. And now, the vampires are playing into the equation. I'm tied to Lannan's shirttail by a contract that he insists on enforcing.
Some of our allies have chosen to betray us, so we're in hiding, on the run, fighting against overwhelming odds. Only this time, it will be different. Neither Myst nor the vampires will win. Grieve and I will weather the storm. We have no other option.
Once we were inside, I flipped on a pale flashlight. The living room had survived the fire, with soot and smoke damage, but the weather was creeping in through the caved-in roof in the kitchen, and I shivered at the ravaged state of the room. Myst's people had been through here, that much was apparent. The upholstered sofas were shredded as if by wild dogs. Holes marred the walls, the beautiful old antiques had been scratched and broken.
I slowly walked over to my aunt Heather's desk. She'd never sit here again, writing in her journal. The sight of the injured wood made me glad that I'd come, and not Rhiannon. It was bad enough to lose her mother to the enemy, but to see how many of the memories of her childhood had been destroyed? I wasn't about to put her through that. As I ran my hand over the hand-carved oak, now dented and scratched along the polished surface, my heart ached.
"I'm sorry." Kaylin's voice echoed softly behind me. "Can I do anything to help?"
I turned, gazing into his smooth, unlined face. Kaylin's soul had been wedded to a night-veil demon while he was still in his mother's womb and he hadn't ever been fully human. Gorgeous, he was Chinese by descent, with a long ponytail trailing down his back. Lithe and wiry-strong, Kaylin Chen was over one hundred years old and had seen more than his share of sorrow. So when he lightly touched my elbow, I knew he understood.