Read Lycan on the Edge: Broken Heart Book 13 Online
Authors: Michele Bardsley
The air temperature dropped, and cool wind
rushed through them, ruffling hair and chilling skin.
Flying. We’re flying. Meckenzie clutched Ren’s
arms. She had seen—and done—some weird shit
in her life. But shooting along the star-strewn sky
in the arms of a beautiful devil? Not even she
would’ve believed it possible. They slowed to
stop, hovering several hundred feet above the
ground. Meckenzie’s heart climbed into her throat
and pounded there, a throb of fear and wonder.
“You will not fall,” he said. “I will not let you
go.”
“Okay.” She swallowed the knot in her throat.
“Why can you fly?”
“I am part
sidhe
.”
A fairy? She almost laughed. That would
explain the Marchands’ ethereal beauty. When
Meckenzie was a little girl, her mother had
introduced her to a fairy—a beautiful woman with
fiery red hair and forest-green eyes.
Her name was Brigid.
Below them stretched the small town of Broken
Heart, Oklahoma. Nestled in a little valley
surrounded by rolling green hills and pockets of
dense forest, it was just a square of big and small
buildings
crisscrossed
by
streets.
Other
neighborhoods, with small houses and tiny lawns,
dotted the outside of Broken Heart.
“We gonna stay up here all day?” She crooked
her neck to look up at him.
His gaze glittered, and the left corner of his
mouth quirked, but he said nothing.
She couldn’t get a bead on this guy.
“Broken Heart seems nice from this view,” she
said. “I’ve never lived anywhere for long. You
start liking a place and crap starts piling up. Too
much to carry around.”
“What I need to carry,” he murmured, “I carry
in my heart.”
Meckenzie wanted to tell him that those silly
lines only worked in romantic comedies starring
Sandra Bullock, but his sincerity could not be
denied. And his words sounded so much like what
her mother might say that she accepted them as
truth.
He tilted his head in a manner that suggested he
was listening to something in the distance. Ah.
Vampire telepathy. She watched moonbeams
dapple his handsome face. The lunar light
shimmered in his gold eyes, and she felt her heart
leap at their beauty. At his beauty.
He grimaced. “We must hurry.”
This time, guilt fluttered on razor wings, cutting
at her.
Ren’s arms tightened around her—a warning or
a comfort, she didn’t know. His gaze drifted over
her face. “You are safe, Meckenzie.”
The hell I am.
And if Ena the Evil had her way, no one would
be safe again.
VIRGINIA AND SOPHIE’S rapt attention made
Trent uncomfortable. He’d eaten some toast, but
the buttered bread sat like a lead weight in his
stomach. He tugged on the collar of his T-shirt.
Jeez. Why did it feel so tight all of a sudden?
That’s when he realized his fingers were
trembling. He flattened his palms against his thighs
and cleared his throat.
Sophie had poured herself another cup of
coffee, and Virginia was on her third piece of
bacon. He blew out a breath. Okay. Here goes
nothing.
“How much do you know about the Alberich?”
he asked.
“They attacked werewolves a hundred years or
so ago. They were defeated, and no one has seen
them since,” offered Virginia.
“Until I found one,” added Sophie. “Or rather
it found me.”
He nodded. “The Alberich were creations of
Tyr—the Norse god of war. There was a wolf, a
wolf like no other—and certainly not like us—
who’d been prophesied to kill Odin. So, Tyr and
others sought to bind this wolf. His name was
Fenrisúlfr. The problem was that they couldn’t
catch him. So Tyr took elf magic and created the
Alberich—nearly unstoppable beasts that would
track Fenrisúlfr.”
“The Alberich are elves?” Sophie looked
skeptical.
“They were made with elf magic, but they are
creatures right from Tyr’s imagination. Once they
caught Fenrisúlfr, Tyr returned the Alberich to the
earth. They were made with clay, you see, and
should’ve dissolved entirely.”
“Why’d they pop up a hundred years ago?”
asked Virginia.
“We don’t know why they rose again. Or even
how they were released from was what supposed
to be an eternal slumber. What we do know is that
they were vicious, relentless, and harbored a deep
hatred for all wolves. A dozen Alberich were able
to ravage werewolf populations throughout
Europe. They killed humans and other paranormals
without mercy. They have no conscience and no
concept of collateral damage.
“We researched every ancient text we could get
our hands on, and eventually discovered a spell
that could defeat the Alberich.” He paused. “The
ability to destroy an Alberich could be given to
one person, but the toll of such a power would
consume and potentially kill the one named
destroyer. That’s why there was a second part of
the spell. Another person needed to accept the gift
of healing. The healer absorbed the pain and
suffering of the destroyer so that he or she could
kill the Alberich.”
Trent saw Sophie make the connection, and the
shocked look on her face opened a pit in his
stomach.
“You’re the healer,” she said.
“Yes,” said Trent. “And you’re the destroyer.”
CHAPTER TEN
VIRGINIA AND SOPHIE’S rapt attention made
Trent uncomfortable. He’d eaten some toast, but
the buttered bread sat like a lead weight in his
stomach. He tugged on the collar of his T-shirt.
Jeez. Why did it feel so tight all of a sudden?
That’s when he realized his fingers were
trembling. He flattened his palms against his thighs
and cleared his throat.
Sophie had poured herself another cup of
coffee, and Virginia was on her third piece of
bacon. He blew out a breath. Okay. Here goes
nothing.
“How much do you know about the Alberich?”
he asked.
“They attacked werewolves a hundred years or
so ago. They were defeated, and no one has seen
them since,” offered Virginia.
“Until I found one,” added Sophie. “Or rather
it found me.”
He nodded. “The Alberich were creations of
Tyr—the Norse god of war. There was a wolf, a
wolf like no other—and certainly not like us—
who’d been prophesied to kill Odin. So, Tyr and
others sought to bind this wolf. His name was
Fenrisúlfr. The problem was that they couldn’t
catch him. So Tyr took elf magic and created the
Alberich—nearly unstoppable beasts that would
track Fenrisúlfr.”
“The Alberich are elves?” Sophie looked
skeptical.
“They were made with elf magic, but they are
creatures right from Tyr’s imagination. Once they
caught Fenrisúlfr, Tyr returned the Alberich to the
earth. They were made with clay, you see, and
should’ve dissolved entirely.”
“Why’d they pop up a hundred years ago?”
asked Virginia.
“We don’t know why they rose again. Or even
how they were released from was what supposed
to be an eternal slumber. What we do know is that
they were vicious, relentless, and harbored a deep
hatred for all wolves. A dozen Alberich were able
to ravage werewolf populations throughout
Europe. They killed humans and other paranormals
without mercy. They have no conscience and no
concept of collateral damage.
“Damian and his brothers researched every
ancient text they could get their hands on, and
eventually discovered a spell that could defeat the
Alberich.” He paused. “The ability to destroy an
Alberich could be given to one person, but the toll
of such a power would consume and potentially
kill the one named destroyer. That’s why there was
a second part of the spell. Another person needed
to accept the gift of healing. The healer absorbed
the pain and suffering of the destroyer so that he or
she could kill the Alberich.”
Trent saw Sophie make the connection, and the
look on her face opened a pit in his stomach.
“You’re the healer,” she said.
“Yes,” said Trent. “And you’re the destroyer.”
“THANKS,” SAID MECKENZIE as she accepted
the coffee from Queen Patricia Marchand. Its
delicious taste settled her and made her feel human
again. The queen leaned back on the couch they
shared and looked at her. She was still assessing
Meckenzie.
Am I worthy? Am I not?
Questions she fought
with daily.
They sat in a plush living room filled with
warm colors—gold, bronze, dark green, the
occasional splash of red. The bottom half of the
walls were paneled with burnished cherry wood
while the upper portions were painted dark
yellow. The fireplace was cherry wood, blending
into the paneled portions of the wall. It wasn’t in
use, even though it was October. She supposed
vampires didn’t get chilly.
“This is a gorgeous room,” Meckenzie said.
“Those paintings … Monet?”
Patsy glanced at the paintings on either side of
the fireplace. “Hell, if I know. Some hoity-toity
interior designer came in and decorated the hell
out of this place. Except for the rooms upstairs.
Those were mine.” She grinned, flashing her fangs.
“He said my taste in furniture was vulgar, my color
schemes unrefined, and my lack of vision
interfered with the flow he was trying to create for
the house.”
“Where did you bury the body?”
The queen chuckled.
“Meckenzie,” said a familiar French-tinted
voice. “We retrieved your car. It’s outside.” She
put the cup on the table in front of her then stood up
and turned. The person talking to her was not Ren
though he looked nearly the same. “Is there a
cloning plant around here?”
The man’s eyebrows shot up. “We are triplets.
I am Gabriel Marchand. You’ve met my brother,
Ren, and my sister, Anise.”
Ren had airlifted her to the front door of this
house, newly constructed by the look and smell of
it, and then took off—by bursting into a bunch of
gold sparkles. Because apparently in Broken Heart
that was normal. She’d taken the opportunity to
remove the tiny vial filled with a single fairy wish
from her jacket pocket, dumped out the contents,
and said the words she knew she’d regret forever.
Gabriel rounded the couch and sat next to his
wife. So, he was the lucky consort of the queen of
lycans and vampires. He looked a lot like Ren, but
there were subtle differences. She decided being
bunched up together on the sofa with two powerful
paranormal beings was a bad idea. So, she picked
up her coffee and grabbed a chair to the left of the
table. She sat down, pretending a casualness she
sure as hell didn’t feel and sipped the coffee.
“Why do you need to see Brigid?” asked the
queen.
“I didn’t realize you were her secretary.”
Her brows rose to her hairline. “I could pluck
the answer from your mind,” said Patsy. “Or
glamor you and make you tell me.”
“Sounds fun. Go ahead and try.”
She stared for a long moment then she laughed.