by Cane, Laken
Bold Mercy
Kait Silver book 3
By Laken Cane
Copyright © 2021 Laken Cane
All rights reserved.
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Table of Contents
Playlist
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Review Link and Newsletter
About Laken Cane
Playlist
THE NIGHT WE MET—Lord Huron
CAGES—Needtobreathe
LOVERS DEATH—Ursine Vulpine & Annaca
FOREVER ON YOUR SIDE--Feat. JohnnySwim: Needtobreathe
MULTIPLIED—Needtobreathe
AIN’T NO GRAVE—Hidden Citizens ft. Adam Christopher
IN THE END (ft. Fleurie and Jung Youth) Tommee Profitt
ANOTHER ONE BITES THE DUST--Hidden Citizens
WARRIORS--League of Legends, 2WEI, Edda Hayes
Chapter One
I stood at my door and waited for the alpha to kiss me.
It hadn’t been a real date, exactly—we’d run through the woods under a full moon and had done things no human would ever have done, like chasing, catching, and eating our food raw, for instance. Afterward, when the moon drifted away and the sun came, signaling an end to the most amazing night I’d ever imagined, I’d showered and brushed my teeth at Shadowfield before Jared had brought me home.
It felt like the end of a date, and though it’d been a long damn time since I’d dated anyone, I was pretty sure a kiss at the end was the thing to do. At least, I was hoping it was.
My heart was bursting with the joy of the previous night, and I was so happy I was giddy. It didn’t matter that my body was exhausted. I’d never felt better. I’d finally gotten my first full moon shift, and there wasn’t anything better than that. That night had changed me, and in only good ways.
And before the harsh realities of my world intruded, I wanted a perfect ending to that perfect night. Jared knew that.
His eyes crinkled at the corners as he smiled down at me, and I returned that grin, my breath catching. The alpha was a beautiful wolf, and an even more beautiful man.
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen you looking so happy,” he said, his low voice rumbling into the chilly and foggy dawn. “You look…carefree.”
I thought about and then discarded several replies, because none of them accurately represented what I wanted to say. How I felt. How full my heart was. Finally, I simply said, “Thank you, Jared. For…” I tapped my chest. “For everything.”
If not for him, I’d still be a hobbled, crazed wolf, unable to shift, full of agony, running from the moon. He’d saved me. He knew I was beyond grateful for that, and he didn’t seem inclined to take advantage of that situation, damn him.
He was a good guy, and I was full of complicated emotions. It didn’t help that he was the hottest man in Jakeston, that he was my alpha, that I was as physically aroused as I’d ever been in my life.
I lifted my face, my breathing shallow, my stomach tight. One damn kiss. That wasn’t going to hurt either of us, right? But he only stared down at me, his eyes glittering, and his mouth didn’t move any closer to mine.
Fine. Tired of waiting, I stepped in. I moved my hands up over his chest and to the back of his head, then stood up on tiptoe and slid my lips against his. His entire body stiffened, and though he didn’t actively participate, he didn’t resist, either.
My wolf woke up purring, stretching and languid, her head full of alpha. God, he smelled good. He tasted good. We wanted to devour him.
And finally, for all of a few seconds, he pressed his hand against the back of my head and took control of that kiss. Almost before I could process that he was kissing me, he gripped my shoulders and set me away from him. He half turned and ran his hand through his hair.
I stared at him, just a little dazed.
“Kait.” He gestured, almost angrily. “You’re high, exhausted, and…”
“Horny?” I said helpfully. I didn’t know what had gotten into me. I was behaving more like Lucy than myself.
His laugh whooshed out of him. “Vulnerable. Last night was significant. Everything you’re feeling right now is because of who I am to you and your first full moon shift.”
“Last night was the most important moment of my life,” I said. I took a step away from him, a little embarrassed. I understood that he believed I was still confused and didn’t know what I really wanted. And he saw me as one of his wolves, not someone to have casual sex with.
Unfortunately.
Perhaps later I’d be relieved and grateful for his restraint. Right now, I was just aggravated. I mean, he was right—did I want the complications that would come with screwing the alpha and the pain and problems that would cause?
Well, yes. Right now, I did. But right now, I wasn’t myself.
When I started to open my door, he shot out a hand to grip my arm. “Kait.”
“It’s okay, Jared. I’m…” I shook my head. “I need to get some sleep.” I glanced at him, smiling slightly. “I’ll blame my wolf. She’s still bouncing off the walls, half feral and full of...”
Need. Sex.
“The moon,” I finished. “Goodnight, Alpha.”
But he wasn’t done. “When you are truly ready for me,” he murmured, his voice dark and low, “I will know.”
I stood frozen with my hand nearly touching the doorknob, my heart pounding, my entire body throbbing as he—and his voice—brought something to the surface inside me. And it wasn’t all good. There were tendrils of fear and hints of resistance, and he was right. He was fucking right.
I was not ready for it. For him.
Deep inside, if I shoved away my wolf’s savage need and my gratefulness and awe and natural feelings for my alpha, there was conflict. I didn’t know why. I needed to be sure of something, and I wasn’t. Problem was, I had no idea exactly why I was so doubtful.
Maybe because I didn’t believe he saw me as his equal. I was one of his new pups. Or maybe I just didn’t trust him. Not completely.
“Fuck,” I whispered. I could not be casual with Jared, and he was right. It wasn’t time, and I wasn’t ready.
Finally, whatever he’d called from my wolf dimmed and settled, and I relaxed. The urgency of my lust gentled, and I took a deep breath. There was no hurry. My body might think otherwise, but the truth was, I didn’t know Jared. Not really. And he didn’t know me.
He slid the pad of his thumb over my lips, and I couldn’t help but shiver. “When it’s time,” he murmured, “You will know, as well.”
“And then?” I couldn’t help but ask, as breathless as a young girl with her first crush.
His smile was small and didn’t quite reach his glittering, fierce stare. “I will be waiting.”
Then he stro
de away, leaving me staring after him with my heart in my throat, uncertain of whether I was more turned on or terrified.
Chapter Two
The house was blissfully silent when I slipped inside—for about two seconds. Then Ash came barreling around the corner, sliding over the shiny wood, and slammed his wiggly little body against my legs.
“Hey, buddy,” I crooned. “First sleep, then play.” I was so tired my eyes were crossing. He followed me to my bedroom and waited for me to fall into bed before he jumped up on the mattress, then turned in a circle for what seemed like three days before finally, he flopped down atop my feet and fell immediately to sleep.
I’d only managed to take off my shoes before I went into my coma, but the instant I closed my eyes, my cell began to ring. I vaguely remembered it ringing as I’d fled with joyful abandon into the woods with my alpha and my pack, and I knew it would continue to ring until I shut it down. With way more effort than it should have taken me, I pulled it from my pocket and then peered blearily at the screen before putting it on silent.
I didn’t recognize the number, but something bothered me—maybe the fact that I hadn’t listened to my messages and something was quite possibly wrong. And maybe someone legitimately needed me…
So I answered.
“Kait Silver,” a man said.
I yawned so hard my jaws cracked. “Yeah?”
“My name is Saul. I am your handler. We need to talk.”
I frowned at the phone. “My handler.”
“Yes. I was assigned to you.”
“Oh. The council. Look, how about we call you my contact. Handler sounds distinctly…stupid.” I was a little cranky from lack of sleep. “Can you call me back in a few hours when I’m awake?”
“You’re awake,” he pointed out, “and I’ll brief you now. Frederick Axton—”
“Is dead,” I interrupted.
“—created a human servant named Avis Vine. She didn’t die with her master, which is both unusual and regrettable. Your task is to terminate her. Call me if you need something your friend Sixten can’t deliver.” His voice went dry and somewhat mocking, as though he were slightly contemptuous of my relationship with the odd Sixten.
As my muddled mind was sifting through his words and his attitude and my own immediate anger—and the fact that he even knew Sixten existed—he continued. “I will send all the information you need to your phone. Axton infused her with his own scent, of course, and it has twisted with hers to create a unique smell you will track. A box will be delivered to your home in four hours.” He hesitated. “Prepare for what’s coming. Avis Vine will not die easy, and you may lose people you care about before you can neutralize her. You can’t allow that to hinder you. You can work your job during the day and hunt at night. It is important that you find her soon, as she is already taking the lives of innocent humans.”
“Look, Saul. I—”
“You belong to the councils now,” he said calmly. “And you have been ordered to find and kill a very dangerous vampire. This is your purpose. You must not allow someone else to kill her. Do you understand?”
My anger woke me up. Despite the fact that there was something frightening in his voice, I was abruptly furious with every word he’d just spoken. “I belong to no one,” I told him, my voice hard. “And Axton’s human servant is a human servant, not a vampire. My purpose is to get some fucking sleep before my brain explodes. So fuck off, Handler.”
He was silent for a few seconds. “The council made a bad decision, but it was their decision to make. If you are not careful, Ms. Silver, they will show you how wrong you are, and believe me when I tell you that is not a lesson you want to learn.”
I tried to breathe, but my lungs didn’t want to function. As I attempted to absorb his words and their rather dire meaning, he continued.
“And Avis Vine was once human. Now she is simply a twisted aberration who will make you suffer before she kills you. If it were only you she focused on, we would allow you to handle it your way—but as I have said, she is killing innocents. We protect innocents. People are dying, and you will handle the situation.”
My phone chimed as a message came in from him, and then he was gone. I fell asleep with the phone clutched in my hand, worry gathering inside me like the heavy darkness from a looming storm.
I didn’t dream or even move until Ash’s incessant barking jerked me abruptly from my sleep. He didn’t bark a lot, and there was a tone to his voice that let me know he believed something urgent needed my immediate attention.
I grumbled, but I got up. “Ash. What is it, buddy?”
He sat before the front door, and only stopped barking when I walked up beside him and put my hand on his head. Then he gave me a dour look, wondering, probably, what had taken me so long. He put his serious stare back on the closed door and waited.
I peered through the fisheye, half expecting to see a demon on the other side. There was nothing and no one, so finally, I twisted the knob and opened the door. When I saw the plain box on the porch, I remembered that Saul had promised to deliver it in four hours. Ash growled and got up to watch me haul it inside.
“Come on, Ash. Let’s get this to the kitchen and see what’s got you so upset. Is there a severed arm in there? A tongue, maybe?” I was still feeling the effects of my first full moon shift, so I wasn’t overly concerned. Not with the box, Saul, or Frederick Axton’s human servant.
I yawned as I set the box on the countertop, then grabbed a knife to cut through the thick tape. I pulled the flaps back. “Are you ready, Ash?”
He barked eagerly, dancing a little as he waited for whatever was about to leap from the box. Unfortunately for Ash, it wasn’t anything exciting—most likely his growls and barks had been more about the delivery person than the actual box.
I lifted a piece of somewhat heavy fabric from the box. Black, tightly woven, and just a little shiny. It was a protective vest, resistant to blades, bullets, fangs, and claws. I could feel the magic twisted into the threads, especially potent where the fabric would rest over my heart.
Cool.
There was a slip of paper, as well. Do not leave your house without putting this on. This is not a suggestion. It’s an order. The other item is self-explanatory.
~Saul
Saul was turning out to be a bossy son of a bitch. I was surprised he hadn’t signed it, “Saul, your handler.”
The other item was a folded piece of cloth. When I unfolded it, I found, directly in its center, a spot of blood. I stared at it for five minutes before I was able to force myself to bring it to my nose.
I inhaled deeply, pulling in Avis Vine’s awful scent, and even when I had to fight not to gag, throw up, or pass out, I didn’t take the cloth from my nose. I had to get that scent so deep it wouldn’t leave for a very long time, and I had to give it to my wolf.
Avis smelled of old blood and the putrid scent of a dead animal left to rot in the sun, but she also smelled of the cold brisk wind of power. The ugliness wafted in on that wind, chilling me to the bone. Finally, I flung the cloth back into the box, then shoved it away.
I downed a couple of glasses of ice water to wash away the scent, but deep inside, where it mattered, the memory of that scent would linger.
Five minutes later, Ash gave an almost human squeal and raced from the kitchen, and in the next second Lucy yelled, “Who’s hungry?”
Not a question she really needed an answer to, as she knew I was always hungry—as was Ash. I poured myself a cup of coffee and sat down at the table as she walked into the kitchen.
“What’s up with your bad self?” she asked me, dumping three white paper bags on the table.
“You spend too much time around my mother.” I tore into the bags. Meat first, then sugar. “Where’s Zach?” I took a giant bite of a cheeseburger, then unwrapped a burger for Ash. I put the bun aside and cut the meat into small chunks as he watched impatiently, a look of fierce concentration in his eyes. “I woke up and everybody was g
one.”
“He left with Max—they didn’t say where they were going.”
I frowned. It wasn’t that I didn’t trust Zach, but just because Axton was dead didn’t mean Zach wouldn’t withdraw from his magic. And if he started having trouble, I didn’t know what he might do. Or who he might hurt.
Lucy sat down across from me. “Kait, listen.”
I cocked an eyebrow when she didn’t continue. “What am I listening for?”
She didn’t smile. “I have a bad feeling. My dreams…”
“About you?” I asked calmly, though my heart began to thud. I knew it was her. I had known for a while that Jakeston’s killer was going to go after Lucy—because I’d had a bad feeling too—though I hadn’t wanted to consider it.
“Yes,” she murmured. “It’s me. He’s going to take me, Kait. So we need to prepare.”
I shoved my breakfast away. “You shouldn’t have gone out for food. You can’t take chances, Luce. You’ll stay in, I’ll hire a guard—”
“My dreams don’t lie,” she said. “I’m going to be taken. It doesn’t matter if I hide or hire a bodyguard or lock myself in a tower…he’s going to take me.” She squared her shoulders. “So here’s what we’re going to do.”
“We’re not using you as bait,” I said.
“Detective Moreno—”
“Is unwell. He can’t help.”
“He has to help. He’s involved in what happens, as are you. I’ve seen it. We’re all in this killer’s sights, and he’s coming for us.” She leaned forward and narrowed her eyes, looking so unlike herself that it took my breath. She was…grim. And Lucy was never grim. “I’m not afraid. We’re going to catch this killer, Kait. Because if we don’t, he’s going to catch us.”
I knew she was right. I didn’t like it, but she was right.
We had to get him before he got us.
I nodded, then stood. “I’ll go talk to the detective.” Then I glared at her. “You don’t leave this house. Don’t open the door for anyone but me. If you end up with that bastard, it’s going to be because we hand you to him—not because he takes you.”