Dusk Unveiled (Ravenwood Coven Book 2)
Page 1
Dusk Unveiled
A RAVENWOOD COVEN NOVEL
CARRIE ANN RYAN
Contents
Dusk Unveiled
Dusk Unveiled
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
A Note from Carrie Ann Ryan
About the Author
Dusk Unveiled
A Ravenwood Coven Novel
By Carrie Ann Ryan
Dusk Unveiled
A Ravenwood Coven Novel
By: Carrie Ann Ryan
© 2021 Carrie Ann Ryan
eBook ISBN: 978-1-950443-53-6
Paperback ISBN: 978-1-950443-54-3
Cover Art by Sweet N Spicy Designs
This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person or use proper retail channels to lend a copy. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return it and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
All characters in this book are fiction and figments of the author’s imagination.
For Heather.
Thank you for all you do.
Praise for Carrie Ann Ryan
“Count on Carrie Ann Ryan for emotional, sexy, character driven stories that capture your heart!” – Carly Phillips, NY Times bestselling author
“Carrie Ann Ryan’s romances are my newest addiction! The emotion in her books captures me from the very beginning. The hope and healing hold me close until the end. These love stories will simply sweep you away.” ~ NYT Bestselling Author Deveny Perry
"Carrie Ann Ryan writes the perfect balance of sweet and heat ensuring every story feeds the soul." - Audrey Carlan, #1 New York Times Bestselling Author
“Carrie Ann Ryan never fails to draw readers in with passion, raw sensuality, and characters that pop off the page. Any book by Carrie Ann is an absolute treat.” – New York Times Bestselling Author J. Kenner
“Carrie Ann Ryan knows how to pull your heartstrings and make your pulse pound! Her wonderful Redwood Pack series will draw you in and keep you reading long into the night. I can’t wait to see what comes next with the new generation, the Talons. Keep them coming, Carrie Ann!” –Lara Adrian, New York Times bestselling author of CRAVE THE NIGHT
"With snarky humor, sizzling love scenes, and brilliant, imaginative worldbuilding, The Dante's Circle series reads as if Carrie Ann Ryan peeked at my personal wish list!" – NYT Bestselling Author, Larissa Ione
"Carrie Ann Ryan writes sexy shifters in a world full of passionate happily-ever-afters." – New York Times Bestselling Author Vivian Arend
“Carrie Ann’s books are sexy with characters you can’t help but love from page one. They are heat and heart blended to perfection.” New York Times Bestselling Author Jayne Rylon
Carrie Ann Ryan's books are wickedly funny and deliciously hot, with plenty of twists to keep you guessing. They'll keep you up all night!” USA Today Bestselling Author Cari Quinn
"Once again, Carrie Ann Ryan knocks the Dante's Circle series out of the park. The queen of hot, sexy, enthralling paranormal romance, Carrie Ann is an author not to miss!" New York Times bestselling Author Marie Harte
Dusk Unveiled
NYT Bestselling Author Carrie Ann Ryan continues her magical paranormal series where a town keeps its secrets, but an aging curse might just be their downfall.
The Christopher curse is one of legend—so old that every new generation knows they will be touched by it. With every spell muttered, every magical pull needed to save her town, Laurel Christopher knows she’s one step closer to burning to ash and leaving those she loves behind. She’ll fight with all she has to protect her people—and the man she loves—but she might not have enough strength remaining to save herself.
Jaxton Dark lost his best friend to the necromancer attacking Ravenwood but refuses to lose his mate to a curse that could take them both. He’s well aware of the loss calling them, but before he can stand up for those he loves, a betrayal cuts him to the core.
Sacrifice was always an inevitability when it comes to the curse that threatens their fate. Yet it’s only when the darkness makes a subtle and surprising move that star-crossed lovers, Laurel and Jaxton, will truly find out the meaning of who they could be and what they must give up to survive.
Chapter
One
Laurel
The gravestone was more of a placard, really, one that shone under the fading sun and didn’t mark a grave but more a remembrance.
Trace wasn’t buried under my feet. His body wasn’t here. His ashes had been spread to the wind. One of my best friends, the man I had thought would be my everything—or at least I had deluded myself into thinking would be my everything—was long gone. The only thing that remained was this placard his parents and the pack had wanted to use to remember him by and the memories that currently cascaded through my brain.
Trace was dead. Faith, a necromancer and dark witch, had killed him.
I still couldn’t quite believe that I wouldn’t hear his laughter again—that big belly laugh that warmed me from the inside out. He always made me smile, even if he made me growl more often than not. Since he was the bear shifter, he had constantly rolled his eyes and proceeded to show me exactly how I was supposed to growl instead of the weak little baby growl that escaped my human-witch lips.
I had loved Trace. Maybe not how others thought I should, not in the ways that would be forever and mean bonds and mates, but I had loved him.
He had been my friend first and foremost, and I’d thought maybe the fates would decide that we would be together, at least partially. Because I knew Trace wasn’t my forever. He’d had the potential, but he hadn’t truly been mine. And he wouldn’t have been even if the world had allowed him to live. If Faith and the revenants hadn’t taken him from me. From his family. His pack.
He had been my growly bear, my best friend, the one I could lean on when I thought the world might crash around me. He was the person I ran to when things got too complicated. When I had to hide from my family, my past, my curse, and...my hawk.
I frowned, wondering why I was so melancholic. No, that wasn’t it. I knew. Because there was nothing good happening anymore.
“I miss you, Trace. I’d say it should have been me, but maybe it will be soon.” I winced as I moved, the motion tugging on the new burn marks on my flesh. “It might be me soon if this curse has anything to say about it.”
I rested on my knees in front of the placard, alone except for the forest’s non-magical inhabitants. The bears of the Ravenwood den gave me time to speak to Trace. Some had assumed he would be my mate. Others just knew that we had been friends and wanted to give me peace.
I hated that I hadn’t been strong or fast enough to save him.
As the curse currently working through my system reminded me repeatedly, I wasn’t
fast enough for many things. Because Trace had died, and I was following him.
Every time I used my magic to protect this town, myself, and my friends, the fire within me burned.
Every time I used my fire magic, the element that was closest to my soul, it killed me a little. I was one day closer to death, one step closer to the eternal torment that awaited me because of the curse on my family.
One that hadn’t only affected me but also my sibling. Though my affliction was far different than my older brother, Ash’s.
I was a fire witch, one of the Ravenwood coven. And I was broken.
Every time I used my fire, the flames licked up my body, scorching me from the inside out. I knew that one day, I would do one too many spells, and I would be gone. I would lose everything. And perhaps I deserved it.
I didn’t know exactly what I had done, but I didn’t have the strength that Rowen, my best friend and leader, had. I wasn’t Sage, the new member, the water witch. The innocent who had come to our town so recently.
I loved them both; they were my sisters in everything but blood, but they would have to find a way to defeat the darkness without me. Perhaps Rowen would finally allow Ash to join the coven in truth, and he’d be the third to anchor the circle.
I knew I wasn’t going to live much longer. The burns on my side and across my soul were evidence of that.
I needed to get back to town to work in the bookshop but I didn’t want to leave Trace behind.
Only, he wasn’t here. I had to remember that. He was gone. This plaque was only a place for those left behind to mourn and grieve. He wasn’t here.
I stood, ignoring the painful stretch and tearing of my skin as I did. I straightened my shirt, making sure to cover the scars and burns. Nobody needed to realize the pain I was in or see how close I was to my end.
The only person I thought truly did was Jaxton—though I wasn’t sure it was safe for him to know anymore.
Still, Jaxton always knew.
And that was why I pushed him away. Why I had clung to Trace when both of us knew we weren’t each other’s forever.
“You doing okay?” Ariel asked, and I turned, knowing the woman was there since my magic had alerted me to her presence, but I did my best not to flinch or show any signs of weakness. Ariel was the second in command, the beta of the Ravenwood bear pack. Rome, Sage’s mate and a badass bear shifter, was the alpha. Ariel had been newly titled as beta.
Once Trace died, and Alden, the final triplet of the three bears also passed, Ariel stepped in.
I held back a growl, trying not to think about Alden. The traitor. The one who had wanted power so much, he’d gone to a necromancer for it. He had caused Trace’s death. And the demise of so many others. I would never forgive him.
“From the look on your face, you’re either thinking about Alden or Faith. Or this Oriel,” Ariel said as she tilted her head, staring at me.
I held back a sigh. “A little bit of all of those. But mostly Alden.”
Ariel’s eyes glowed for a moment before she let out a breath, her bear at the surface. “I can’t help but wonder if he would have changed if I had taken him out earlier. Forced him down the hierarchy in the pack. Maybe it would have been enough.”
I shook my head, ignoring the tug on my skin as I moved towards the other woman. “No. You might have always been stronger than him and deserved to be third after Trace and Rome, but defeating Alden would have only pushed him closer to the edge sooner. Who knows what he might have done if given the chance.”
“I know you’re right, but I still hate what he did to our pack. To Trace.”
I nodded, pressing my lips together. “Same here. But we can’t take it back. There’s no going back.”
“If only there were time witches.”
I snorted. “I don’t think that’s how magic works. But who knows? Maybe you could ask Aspen.”
Ariel beamed. “The leader of the fae does have some magnificent powers. Who knows? Maybe he can turn back time. He’s seen many years of it, after all.”
Aspen was the enigmatic fae leader in our tiny little town. There were fae, witches, humans, shifters, and other magical creatures living within the town’s wards.
And everybody had secrets.
Ravenwood was special. It always had been.
I nodded in thanks and said goodbye to Ariel as I moved towards the town center, needing space. Ariel seemed to understand that. She must’ve been on patrol, protecting the lands around the den. I was grateful for it. The bears and other shifters guarded Ravenwood, just like the witches used their magic to clean up any messes, hide the existence of the paranormal from the rest of the world, and keep the wards surrounding the town limits stable and steady. We needed the magical boundaries to preserve the secrecy and to keep Oriel—and whoever else was in that darkness—out.
Only, we didn’t seem to be strong enough, and I only had myself to blame. Sage was new, and she was only just now coming into her power after a curse had kept her away from us for so long. Now, she was mated to the bear alpha and learning her abilities to help Rowen keep the town safe.
I was the liability.
I nodded at Frank, an older jaguar who had come to Ravenwood years ago and hadn’t left. He had once been faster than any other shifter within the town limits, but now he was a little older with arthritis in his hips. Still, he was so fast it was awe-inspiring to watch him move sometimes.
He tilted the brim of his hat towards me and then went into the small bakery that Sage owned and operated.
I smelled the yeast and bread in the air and groaned, my stomach growling. Sage was a fantastic baker and had brought beautiful things to our town. Before, we only had a little Italian place. It had some bread, but nothing like what Sage made and infused with her magic.
It was incredible. She was a great asset to the town.
I was just trying to be and do the same. I looked up at the bookstore sign and felt a slight twinge in my heart as I did. Sage’s aunt, Penelope, had owned this bookshop. She had created it and had put her soul into it.
When the revenants and Faith killed her, it had left a gaping hole in the town and my soul. I had loved Penelope like my own family and had worked at the bookshop for as long as I could remember.
Yes, I still worked with my brother’s business to help with real estate and other finances around the country and the globe, but now my primary source of work was the bookstore itself.
After Penelope’s will had been read and the bookshop was split between Sage and me, I had cried. I had let others see my weakness and tears. I’d always thought of Penelope as family, and to know that she’d felt the same had staggered me. Sage had been the one to tell me that I should run it. She’d even tried to sign her half over to me, but I hadn’t let her.
“She was your family. I should be the one letting you have it,” I had said.
Sage had merely shaken her head. “No, if you won’t let me give you my half, then we’ll both keep it. I’ll run the bakery, you run the bookstore, and we can bring Penelope’s memory and magic to this world.”
I had only nodded, touched beyond measure. Now, I did my best not to ruin the place that had brought me so much joy for so long.
The town was like any small town in Pennsylvania. Mom and Pop places lined Main Street, each with its own unique hand-carved wooden sign and colonial building that had likely been a home at one time. There were also minor roads with newer businesses that catered to more magical things than the books and pastries we offered on Main Street, where most of the businesses were located. Rowen’s witchy antique shop was in a league of its own right on Main Street.
I loved the bookshop that brought me so much peace and joy, but I hated that part of me felt as if I would always miss Penelope. Because she wasn’t here, and I was left to make sure her legacy didn’t die.
My powers called to me, and I ignored them, knowing I couldn’t even tempt fate with a minor spell. The bookshop needed me to be whole. A fire w
itch who couldn’t control her powers without killing herself, surrounded by shifters, didn’t always mix. I took a deep breath, but before I could step into the shop, I frowned and tilted my head as I listened.
There was a cry in the air, a hawk’s screech, and I looked up to see Jaxton, the wing leader of the Ravenwood wing, and the man I couldn’t let myself think about. He flew overhead, and I gripped the hilt of the sword behind me before moving forward and past the bookstore. I used a small spell to hide the sword from view, but because I couldn’t use my powers and couldn’t use spells that might kill me, I’d had to learn how to use the weapon.
And while within the town limits of Ravenwood, everyone knew of magic and the darkness and the powers that be, passersby weren’t allowed to know. We used spells to conceal that, and Jaxton and Rome—as our fixers and cleaners—hid our existence from those who weren’t part of the town.
Only it was a losing battle, and we all knew it.
However, I couldn’t think about any of that. I had to remember the reason Jaxton had called us.
Sage and Rome ran out of the back of the building, the big bear ready to shift, his claws ripping through his fingertips, and his grizzly hump rising. I didn’t know if he’d shift fully while still clothed, but he held power within him to partially shift—something not all shifters could do.