The Hunted Soul
Page 1
The Hunted Soul
Miranda Brock
Rebecca Hamilton
Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
About the Authors
Copyright
The Hunted Soul © 2019 Miranda Brock & Rebecca Hamilton
All rights reserved under the International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Names, places, characters and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any actual persons, living or dead, organizations, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
Warning: the unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. Criminal copyright infringement, including infringement without monetary gain, is investigated by the FBI and is punishable by up to 5 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.
Chapter 1
Sweat rolled down my temple and stung at the corner of my eye. I squared up my stance and threw my arm forward. My fist impacted the heavy punching bag with a force that reverberated up my bones.
“Is that all you got, Perez?”
I wiped damp hair from my face and turned to look at the bear of a man behind me.
When I said bear of a man, I meant that literally. Aidan was a bear shifter, and head honcho at the gym owned and operated by the Paranormal Intelligence and Tracking Organization. He was tall and broad and wrapped in thick muscle that made him look like a UFC heavyweight champion.
I shook my arms in an attempt to ease the burning in my own muscles and stared up at Aidan. “What? You want me to try it on your face and see how I’m doing?”
Disapproving murmurs hummed through the room, but a wide smile cracked the bear shifter’s face. “You’ve got spirit, I’ll give you that.”
“Spirit won’t necessarily keep her alive,” a voice grumbled behind my left shoulder.
Kael Rivera strode up from where he had been lifting weights on the other side of the gym. My mouth went a little dry at the sight of the man who had partnered with me to chase a dark mage across the world.
He didn’t have the physique of the bear shifter, but his broad shoulders and hard, lean, almost cat-like muscles were just as impressive. Appropriate for a jaguar shifter.
Sweat trickled down his chest, and it wasn’t until I was staring at his abs that I realized what I was doing and pulled my gaze from him.
What was wrong with me? We’d spent time laying together in the wilderness for God’s sake—I’d seen him naked on more than one account when he’d had to shift to his jaguar form. Over the past month, though, I’d found myself staring at him more.
“I’ve managed to keep myself alive well enough so far,” I pointed out.
He stood beside me with a disapproving frown, as if he hadn’t noticed my ogling. “For one thing, you shouldn’t speak to Aidan like that, especially in front of the others.”
Mortifying. The last person on earth I wanted a lecture from was Kael.
Most of the other occupants in the room had gone back to their workout routines and sparring. Some still stared at me with obvious distaste. So as much as I hated to admit it, Kael was right.
Every single person in the gym was a shifter. I had been unsure about training here, especially given the unfortunate encounter with the rogue wolf shifters in England, but Kael had assured me it was safe. Aidan had been the only one that had welcomed me openly. If any of the other shifters had a problem with it, they’d yet to voice it. Perhaps they were afraid of a reprimand by Aidan.
I crossed my arms and turned my attention to Kael, keeping my gaze firmly on his face. “Aidan doesn’t care what I say to him.”
“And secondly,” Kael said firmly, “you’re standing wrong.” He grabbed my hips and twisted me so my body wasn’t completely facing the heavy bag. Instead, I was slightly angled away from it. He kicked my heels. “Get on the balls of your feet. How do you expect to make a good hit if you’re glued to the floor? A powerful hit always starts with your feet.”
I lifted my wrapped hands and took a breath. I twisted from my feet, up through my body, and snapped my right fist in a crossing strike. My fist struck the bag in a powerful hit that I could feel was much improved.
Aidan let out a low whistle. “She learns fast. I’d hate to be on the other end of that.” He winked at me.
“She’s still sloppy.”
I dropped my arms and turned to scowl at Kael. Would a compliment kill him?
“Why are you making me train so hard here, anyway?” I asked. “I can use magic, remember?”
True, I hadn’t really been practicing with that supernatural part of me. For the past month, since leaving my home to come with Kael to his headquarters in Charleston, South Carolina, I’d only tapped into the magic humming beneath my skin a handful of times. Part of it was the fear of losing control. The other was lack of proper space. I couldn’t exactly use it in the city around others, and the hotel room I was staying at already had a burn mark on the wall from an incident where I’d misjudged my own strength.
Kael stepped around me and fixed me with an intense gaze. I hated when he stared at me like that, if only because it made me want something more. Images flashed through my mind of tangling my fingers in his dark hair, breathing in his unusual citrus and petrichor scent, lifting myself up to press my lips to his.
No, I reprimanded myself. He was my friend. Nothing more. Heck, maybe even something less. There were times I felt we were friends, but most of the time, I still felt more like I was his responsibility and his mission. Once all of this was over, would he ever even talk to me again?
“You won’t always be able to rely on magic,” Kael said. “You can run out of energy, or face someone more powerful than yourself. Physical strength is necessary. So you need to work on improving your strikes.”
He was right, but I still ground my teeth. “Fine.”
Kael nodded, then glanced at a clock on the right wall. “It’s nearly six. I have a meeting with the boss.”
I started unwrapping my hands. “I’m going to head back to the hotel. It’s your turn to buy.”
This had quickly become an everyday thing for us after arriving in Charleston. I stayed at a hotel merely a block away from the massive building that held the PITO headquarters. Kael came over every evening, and we ate supper together, taking turns buying the food. I was thankful for the company, but I also knew the reason he ate with me, and sometimes fell asleep in the big red chair, was because he was keeping an eye on me.
I wiped sweat from my face and chest, careful to keep the two keys hanging around my neck tucked into my sports bra. One of the keys seemed to be carved out of bone. I had found it in Scotland in the hands of druid
s. The other key was an aged gold color and had been plucked from an ancient ruin in the Amazon rainforest.
It was also bound to my soul by an unfortunate magical mishap on my part.
If that key got into the wrong hands, the person possessing it would be able to control me...and my power along with it.
That had been the main reason Kael had brought me to Charleston, and why he insisted on this training. The dark mage, Vehrin, was still on the loose and still searching for something more important than myself and the keys I possessed. A daunting prospect. What could be more important to him than the keys, so much so that he didn’t care who found me?
I pulled on a T-shirt and jacket, then grabbed my bag from a nearby bench and lifted the strap over my shoulder. “I’ll see you later, Kael.”
He smiled and gave me a nod before he headed toward the locker room.
“Want me to walk you home?” Aidan offered.
I fought against rolling my eyes. It was nice of him to offer, I knew, especially coming from someone with such a high ranking in his organization, but I didn’t need a babysitter.
“No, thank you, Aidan.” I gave him a smile. “I can manage.”
Aidan crossed his arms across his massive chest. “He cares for you, you know.”
“Kael’s a good friend.”
The bear shifter smirked. “Yeah, a good friend.” The smirk faltered. “Seriously, you need to be careful.”
“I will be. See you tomorrow.”
“Later, Perez.”
I gave him a wave and walked away.
What the hell had that smirk been about? No doubt he’d caught me ogling Kael. I needed to get a better control on my irrational hormones.
The gym was large, and the exit was all the way on the other side of the room. I ignored the stares and murmurs, along with the occasional person naked from head to toe. That had taken some getting used to. The gym was always full of shifters who trained in not only their human form, but animal form, as well. I had seen bears, wolves, lions, eagles. All but that one horse shifter Kael had once told me he’d seen. Nudity was a common occurrence here as they shifted from one form to another, and it was not something any of them were shy about.
The nearly hostile muttering I caught on occasion was also something that had taken some getting used to in this place. I was an outsider here, though it was hard to pass myself off as a mere human when I had the abilities of a mage. The shifters here were very closely guarded about not only themselves, but their training as well. I was let in on certain battle tactics and intelligence passed to me from Kael with permission of his superiors.
At least they seemed to trust me, even if the other shifters were wary. What did they think I was going to do? Run to the mage despite the fact that I had fought against him? Hadn’t I proven myself enough already?
I let the gym doors slam closed behind me with a loud, metallic thud. Fresh air hit me that smelled like salt from the Atlantic only a few blocks away, and I pulled in a deep breath. I’d always enjoyed the ocean. Every morning I jogged along the beach, usually with Kael, though my heart still yearned for dense, humid jungles and adventures in dangerous, but rewarding locations.
A few cars passed quickly as I made my way down the sidewalk. Most people were heading home after work, or going out to eat. Kael told me that, in the summer, the place was packed with tourists and vacationers, but in late November, there weren’t too many about.
I pulled a ten-dollar bill from my bag and headed into a small shop that sold smoothies halfway between PITO headquarters and the hotel. I grabbed my favorite green machine smoothie and stepped back onto the sidewalk, taking a big gulp.
As a chill tingled up my spine, I glanced behind me.
I could have sworn I felt someone watching me.
At first, I thought perhaps Aidan had decided to accompany me regardless of being told it wasn’t unnecessary. When I looked, though, I saw no one except a couple pushing a stroller with a sleeping toddler inside. I shrugged it off and continued, though the itch never truly left.
It wasn’t often that I felt the need to tap into my magic, but I did as I neared the hotel and the unnerving sensation of being followed persisted. I didn’t fully draw on the magic. It was more like touching it, ensuring myself that it was there and within reach. The power inside me was warm, for the most part, but there was also an alien sensation that hadn’t been there until after I had confronted the mage and bound my soul to the golden relic.
That was the part of my magic that made me afraid to use it—that wild, ancient power that didn’t truly feel like myself.
I pushed through the rotating doors of the hotel and nodded to the small woman behind the glossy front desk.
“Evening, Alice,” I told her.
“Hey.” She sighed. The woman didn’t bother to look up from her phone, a bored expression on her face.
“Long day?”
She pursed her lips and nodded. I gave up on cordial conversation and headed to the elevator. I glanced back toward the doors before I stepped in, but no one followed me into the hotel. I was probably just being paranoid. Kael’s worry was rubbing off on me.
Overprotective male.
I rolled my sore shoulders on the way up to the fourth floor and promised myself a nice soak in the bathtub before Kael came over. The elevator stopped, and I nodded politely at an older gentleman who stood aside to let me out. After passing several doors, I reached my room, dug the key card out of my bag, slid it into the lock beneath the handle, and, giving one more glance around, went into my room.
I dropped my bag onto the desk that was scattered with papers both Kael and I had pored over numerous times. Reports on the mage’s whereabouts, mostly, but also some information on mage magic in general.
I walked to the dresser that held my meager amount of clothing and pulled out a fresh outfit for after my bath. But when I turned around, my heart jumped.
There was a stranger in my room.
Chapter 2
The man stood in front of my closed door, wearing a dark blue hoodie that obscured his face. Had Kael sent him to be extra protection for me?
No, that’s not right. He had never sent other people here, and if he had, he would have sent Aidan.
Whoever this man was, he was definitely no friend. There was something incredibly off about him. His presence gave me a chill, as if leeching the warmth out of the room.
The stranger moved forward, and his steps rustled, like a snake slithering through leaves.
I retreated a step, and my back hit the dresser. The dark opening of his hood followed my movement, and finally, I got a glimpse of his eyes as my dresser lamp illuminated his face. His pupils were dark and narrow like a serpent. He pulled in a deep breath through wide nostrils and grinned, revealing a mouth full of sharp teeth.
What the hell was this guy?
Fae, perhaps? Renathe, my new fae friend who owned a ritzy club back in my hometown, had been filling me in on his kind over our chats on the phone. I knew that some had wings, or horns, or scales. Of course, there were those like Ren who looked just as human as myself. Whether this man was a fae or not, I could see the intentions in his stare, and they were anything but friendly.
My gaze flicked to my bag where I’d dropped it on my desk. By instinct, I wanted to get to my knife, only to remember I no longer had the weapon. During the altercation in England, the blade had been disintegrated when I stabbed a giant panther with it.
It was too soon for Kael to be arriving any second, so I would have to fight the strange man alone. I had no weapons…except myself.
Magic hummed and swirled beneath my skin, ready and eager to be released. The man took another step forward, and I shifted to the side. I could probably take him on, but there were others in the hotel, and they were innocent people. I didn’t want to risk anyone getting hurt.
The man charged at me. I grabbed the office chair to my left and wheeled it in front of me. He stumbled as it collided with him
, and I took the chance to go for my bag. If I could get to my cell inside of it, I could call Kael for backup.
Before I could reach it, the man leaped back to his feet and jumped onto the bed. He crouched there and leaned forward slightly. His eyes glowing with greed and excitement.
“Give me the key.”
His voice was shockingly normal. Given his appearance, I had expected something akin to rasping or hissing.
“What key?” Yep, I was going for the play dumb tactic to buy myself some time.
I inched another step toward my bag on the desk, but he lunged forward, and I stopped in my tracks.
He inhaled another deep breath. “I can smell the power within you. I can smell your magic-touched soul, and I want it.” His eyes dropped to my shirt, as if he was drawn to the keys beneath. More specifically, the one tethered to my soul.
I had no choice.
Energy swirled above my palms and caressed my fingers. It was still unusual to me, bringing forth the ancient magic that had been unlocked inside myself with a cursed key. Even more disconcerting were the flashes of a past life, my past life, it had brought with it. Sacrifice and blood and death, mostly. True, the dark mage Vehrin had been there, wreaking havoc on humanity, but the sacrifices still twisted my gut whenever the memory came to mind.
The man in front of me had stilled at the sight of the magic licking across my skin. It didn’t seem to be fear that had him holding his ground, though. His slow smile told me he was seeing a glimpse of the prize he thought he was about to win.