by Susan Hayes
His heart hammered against his chest, and the world was still gray and distant when he gathered her close, folding her into his arms. Her head fitted into the crook of his shoulder and he could feel her breath on his skin. When she eventually lifted her head, there was a smile on her lips.
“If I didn’t know better, I’d think you were trying to bond with me again.” Her inner muscles pulsed once around his cock to emphasize her point. “No protection again. Good thing I’m on the pill. I’m not ready to go on maternity leave just yet.”
“I’m sorry I forgot, sweetheart. You make me lose my mind.” He leaned back against the headboard, a new thought swirling around his brain. “So, no maternity leave just yet, but maybe, someday?”
“Definitely someday. We have a family business to continue, after all.” He felt her snuggle deeper against him.
He sighed, already knowing the answer to his question. “So that means you want to be a hunter?”
“Do you even have to ask? And before you tell me no, your mom already offered me the job. Best you accept this, lover. Where you go, I go, always.”
Epilogue
They remained with the Brotherhood while Kyra’s wounds healed. Staying with so many kind, caring people was a new experience for her. By the time she was fully recovered, she felt like she was part of the family. Gareth’s parents welcomed her, and Moira had taken it on herself to start Kyra’s education. She wasn’t allowed to fight, yet, but she studied tactics, legends, and lore every day.
She had taken to reading in the evenings, curled up in the library where the smell of old books and the crackle of well-tended fire made it easy to forget what century it was.
“I thought I’d find you in here. If you keep studying like this, you’re going to know more than I do about my job.” Gareth gestured to the massive collection around them.
“Our job.” She corrected him, setting aside the massive tome of vampire lore she’d been reading.
“Not until you finish training.”
“Your mom says I’m a natural. She figures I’ll be ready to hunt with you in less than a year.”
He dropped into the chair beside hers and groaned. “Yeah, she told me. She’s enjoying all of this far too much. When I mentioned that, she just smiled this terrifyingly sweet smile and said vengeance is a dish best served cold.”
Kyra laughed. “I love your mother.”
“She feels the same way about you. Which is why she’s asked Anya to do something she doesn’t often do for hunters.”
“Anya? That’s the fae little redhead that never seems to wear shoes, right?”
Gareth snorted. “That fae redhead is one of the most powerful psychics in the world and a friend of the Brotherhood. She can foresee critical events and warn us about what’s coming.”
“And what has Moira asked for her to do, exactly?”
“She’s asked Anya to do a reading…for us.”
“Oh, no. I don’t want to know when or how I die, or when you do. Can we decline?”
“Of course you can decline, my dear. But before you do, let me explain what it is I do.” Anya’s soft tones announced her presence.
Kyra winced. “Sorry, Anya. I didn’t mean to give offence. I’m just not comfortable with the idea of knowing my future.”
Anya nodded and came closer, moving so silently it was a little spooky. “My gifts sometimes show me such information, but it’s not common. Moira has asked me to read you both and determine if there are any critical moments you should be prepared for. Hunting is dangerous work, and like any mother, she worries.”
Anya surprised her by taking a seat on the floor, her flowing, multi-coloured dress spread around her like a field of flowers. “Would you permit that?”
Kyra considered for a moment, then nodded. If she’d known about Dracula and Gareth, she would have known who to trust from the beginning. “I’ll do it if Gareth agrees.”
“Forewarned is forearmed, as my trainers were fond of telling me.” He took Kyra’s hand, then nodded. “I’m game.”
Anya looked at Kyra, and her eyes took on a distant, unfocused look. She stayed that way for less than a minute, and then she was back in the present with a smile on her face. “You will be a fine hunter, Kyra. You will save lives and give birth to a new generation of hunters. One day, your daughter and the son of another dhampir will…” She stopped speaking, but her smile widened. “Let’s just say the future is in good hands.”
“Daughter? We’re having a daughter?” Gareth’s voice cracked with what sounded like pure panic.
Anya laughed. “And several sons who will do their best to protect their little sister. Don’t worry, Gareth, you’ll have help.”
“Thank the gods.” He started to slump, then sat up again with a jerk. “Wait. Which dhampir does this boy who is going to date my daughter belong to? Is he Brotherhood? He must be. Fuck, please tell me it’s not Aiden Doyle. I’m not letting my daughter get involved with the spawn of that Irish lunatic!”
“Says the man who drugged a cop and posed as a pizza delivery man just to get into my hotel room. I’m not sure you’re in any position to be calling other people lunatics,” Kyra pointed out between giggles.
“I’m not saying anything more about that,” Anya said, then turned her gaze on Gareth. Her eyes lost focus, and this time she stayed ‘gone’ only short time.
“Well?” Gareth asked once Anya returned from wherever her visions took her.
“Your legend will grow, dhampir. Your life will not always be easy, but if you stay the course and trust the ones who love you, then you and your beloved will have remarkable lives. As will your children.”
“Thank you.” He looked at Kyra with open adoration, and her heart sang in response. They were going to have good lives, free from the evil that had overshadowed their beginning. It was the best news she could imagine, and the most amazing gift that Moira and Anya could have chosen to bestow.
“Yes, thank you.”
Anya smiled and got to her feet. “You’re both welcome. I’ll see you again at your wedding.” She winked at Kyra. “You are – I mean you will be - a truly beautiful bride. For now, I must go. I’m needed in Seattle. A friend of mine is about to call and ask me to help him with an interesting problem.”
They watched her go, musing about ghosts, and hauntings, and charms as she left.
“So, we’re getting married?” She asked once they were alone again.
Gareth didn’t answer. Instead, he got out of his chair and knelt at her feet. “That depends on how you answer my question.” He reached into his jean pocket and pulled out a ring. The gold band was decorated with ornate scrollwork, and the channel-set gem at the center was pitch black.
“Is that a black diamond?” she asked, reaching for the ring.
He pulled the ring out of reach. “I’m asking the questions here, hellcat.”
She grinned. “Right. Sorry. Please continue.”
He held out the ring to her again. “Kyra Robinson, will you marry me?”
Kyra didn’t need Anya’s predictions to know her answer to that question. Gareth had been the man of her dreams before they’d ever met. She flung herself off the chair and into his arms. “Yes!”
THE END
Sneak Peek at Saving Michelle
Sneak Peek at Guardians #2
Saving Michelle
* * *
She hadn’t gone to the funeral. Funerals were for the ones in mourning, not the ones who felt nothing but guilt-ridden relief that the deceased was well and truly gone. Michelle definitely fell into the second category. There had been a time when she’d loved Robert Tanner more than anything else in the world, but that felt like a long time ago. That was before the threats and the jealous rages. Before he’d started hurting her.
Instead of attending the funeral, she’d gone running, hoping endorphins and hard breathing could quiet her memories and the accusing voice in the back of her mind. It was the voice that whispered that it was
her fault that Robert was dead.
“It isn’t my fault,” she reminded herself firmly and upped her pace once more. “He hit me again, I left, and he couldn’t handle it. That’s it, end of story.” Only it wasn’t. He’d left that damned note and made sure that even after he was gone she would be the one who felt guilty.
She yearned for the peace and freedom that running used to bring her. But it didn’t seem today would bring her that sense of calm. Sweat stung her eyes, and she wiped her brow as she ran, flipping her blonde hair back off her face for what felt like the hundredth time. It always slipped out of her sensible ponytail no matter how tightly she wound the elastic. She slowed down as she turned the last corner and her apartment complex appeared at the far end of the street. She walked the last bit, cooling down as much as she could in the sweltering August heat. She fished out her keys and let herself into the cool shadows of the lobby. She stopped to check the mail, sorting through the various envelopes. “Bill, bill, you could already be a winner—hello, what’s this?” She stopped sorting to look carefully at the envelope in her hand. The typed address was correct, but she realized there was no stamp and no return address, front or back. Very odd.
Michelle headed for the elevator and carefully tore open the envelope. She unfolded the letter with an uncomfortable mix of curiosity and trepidation.
* * *
Dear Chelle,
* * *
I should be in the ground by now. I wonder, did you go to my funeral? I forgive you, Chelle. I know you didn’t mean to do this to me. You could never be so deliberately cruel. I will be watching you from the other side, waiting for us to have another chance together.
* * *
Eternally yours,
* * *
Robert
* * *
“Oh god, that sick bastard.” She crumpled up the letter, crushing it into a tiny ball as she stormed off the elevator and down the hall to her apartment. The one she’d moved into after she’d left him. He’d never been here. He shouldn’t have known the address, but somehow, he’d managed to track her down, again. She locked the door behind her, slamming home the deadbolt and the extra security chain she had installed the day she’d moved in.
She hurled the wadded letter onto the table and headed to the shower, her stomach in knots and her head whirling. As she stripped out of her running gear, she caught sight of herself in the mirror. She’d gained back a little of the weight Robert had insisted she lose while they were together, and she knew she looked better for it. He’d completely taken over her entire life when they’d been together, right down to controlling her weight and her wardrobe. He’d forbidden her to wear anything he thought showed too much skin or any shoe that made her taller than he was. Now, he was dead and he was still trying to run her life.
She uttered a muttered curse and turned on the shower. She left the water running at barely a lukewarm temperature, knowing she needed to cool off both physically and mentally. The letter’s arrival had set off an emotional firestorm, and she wished like hell she hadn’t checked the mail today.
The water was cool enough it was a shock when she first stepped under the stream, and she fought the urge to turn up the heat until her body adjusted. Sweat and road-dust were swept away by the soothing stream, and she tried to keep her mind blank. Just being, not thinking of anything. Not about his cruelty or his petty mind games. Damn it, I’m doing it again.
Michelle grabbed the shampoo bottle and squirted a fragrant measure of the liquid into her hand. It was her favorite brand, and she’d bought a bottle of it the day she’d left Robert. He’d never liked the fruity scent and had instructed her not to use it. Haunted by thoughts of her bullying ex-boyfriend, she started to wash her hair. She abandoned the impossible task of seeking calm on today of all days. It just wasn’t going to happen. She had barely gotten the shampoo rinsed out of her hair when she heard her phone ring twice, indicating she had a visitor at the door.
“Now what?” she asked aloud as she grabbed a towel and dripped her way over to the phone. “Hello.”
“Michelle? This is Nancy Tanner. I need to speak to you.”
Michelle’s blood turned to ice water as she heard Robert’s mother speaking on the other end of the line. She suppressed the urge to scream and managed to answer politely, “Mrs. Tanner, now isn’t a very good time. Perhaps tomorrow?”
“I insist, Michelle. I’ve just come from poor Bobby’s funeral and I must speak to you. Let me in please.”
She stuck her tongue out at the phone in her hand and rolled her eyes. Just what I need. “All right Mrs. Tanner, come on up.” She hit the number pad and heard the telltale buzz of the front door being unlocked downstairs.
“Clothes, I need clothes!” She dashed off to the bedroom in a panic and grabbed the first things she could find, a pair of well-worn jeans and an old, faded blue T-shirt she usually reserved for wearing on laundry day. Her hair was still dripping wet and she toweled it dry as best she could before scraping it all back into a quick bun just as Nancy knocked.
She took a deep breath and opened the door, trying to ignore the rivulets of water trickling down the back of her neck from her wet hair. “Hello, Mrs. Tanner, come on in.”
Nancy Tanner was the epitome of elegance, even in mourning. From her black Louis Vuitton shoes to the perfectly matched black pearls at her throat, her image was one of carefully crafted style. Her gray eyes took in Michelle’s appearance and a faint frown of disapproval creased her brow. “You certainly have let yourself go since you abandoned my son.”
Oh, this is going to be fun. Michelle bit back an angry retort and gestured for Nancy to follow her to the living room. “I was just showering after a run, Mrs. Tanner. I wasn’t expecting guests. What is it I can do for you?”
“As if you didn’t know,” Nancy sniffed as she perched on the edge of a chair, her eyes full of malice. “You took my son away from me, and as if that weren’t enough, you’re taking everything of his. I have nothing to remember him by, nothing! What did you do to my sweet Bobby to make him do this to me?”
“What?” Michelle could feel her jaw sag open, and she closed it with an audible click of her teeth. “I don’t understand what you’re talking about, Mrs. Tanner. Robert and I broke up a month ago. His choices were none of my doing, and the only things I took when I moved out were the few things I had when I moved in.”
“He killed himself because he couldn’t live without you! You!” Nancy was babbling, but there was a bitter edge to her words. “He could have had any woman in the world, but for some reason he settled on you, a common nobody.” She removed a black silk handkerchief from her purse and dabbed at her eyes before continuing, “And now he’s given you everything. Everything! The house, the cars, stocks, and the money his father set aside for him, all of it.”
Shock stole Michelle’s breath away, and she felt the room sway and spin around her. “He left it all to me?”
“Don’t pretend with me, you hussy! You gold-digging tramp! You know he did! The will is new, less than a month old. You got it all!” The older woman pulled out a document from her purse and waved it in Michelle’s face. “You made him do this! I don’t know how, but you did this!”
Michelle’s hand flew up to protect her face from the flapping pages, and Nancy simply threw it at her. Her face was contorted into a mask of rage.
“My lawyer says it’s perfectly legal, but I am seeking other opinions. Enjoy it while you can. I will want every penny of it paid back when I prove this was all a terrible travesty of justice!” She got to her feet and dabbed at her eyes again, though Michelle couldn’t see any actual tears. “My poor, darling Bobby. I will never understand what he saw in you.”
“You’re grief-stricken, Mrs. Tanner, and I think you should leave.” Michelle managed to rein in her temper and stood, pointing down the hallway to her front door. “Right now.” Before I start telling you all the things your darling Bobby used to say about you, you horrible shrew.
> “I’ll see you in court!” was the last thing Michelle heard as Mrs. Tanner walked toward the elevator.
“Can this day get any worse?” she asked aloud and shut the door, relocking it carefully before heading back to the living room and the document sitting on the chair where she’d left it. “What the hell have you done now, you manipulative bastard?” She sat down and started reading, making small noises of horrified disbelief every few paragraphs. He’d left her everything, right down to his clothes. She was rich, and she didn’t want anything to do with any of it. Damn, she needed a drink.
It was nearly four in the morning when the voice woke her from a restless sleep.
“Chelle.”
Her heart slammed hard against her ribs, and she found herself reaching for the phone to dial 911 before she realized she was alone in her room. He wasn’t there. He couldn’t be there. Only one person in the world called her by that horrible nickname, and he was dead.
“You’re losing it, Michelle. Get a grip,” she muttered and tried to go back to sleep, but sleep wouldn’t come. Every shadow in her room took on some sinister aspect, and whenever she closed her eyes, she swore she could hear something moving around her room.
“I give up.” She finally abandoned any hope of getting more sleep and got out of bed, her eyes gritty and her mind still foggy from the lack of rest.
She padded out to her balcony in bare feet and leaned against the railing, breathing in the night air that was coming in straight off the ocean, cooling her down and clearing her mind at last. Another breath and she closed her eyes, rolling her shoulders to ease the tight muscles that had been present since she’d found out about Robert’s suicide. The wind blew softly against her bare legs. She’d forgotten her robe, but what did it matter? There was no one to see her right now, and the T-shirt she slept in more than covered what could be seen over the balcony railing anyway.