Read Lycan on the Edge: Broken Heart Book 13 Online
Authors: Michele Bardsley
world-between-worlds. She will never be free.”
Chills darted down Meckenzie’s back and
lodged like arrows in her guts. She was sick of
Ena and threats, and she was worried about more
than her own ass this time. “Let Ren go, and I’ll let
the other Alberich into Broken Heart.”
Ena dropped Meckenzie to the ground, but
Meckenzie wasn’t free. Ena easily pinned her to
the concrete with her stupid, evil magic. Ena lifted
her palm, and Ren was jerked up from the floor.
His face was bloodied, and he was so constricted
with magic, it looked like he was wearing a black
Snuggie. Not even his considerable powers could
break the dark sorcery of Ena.
What chance did Meckenzie have now? How
would she save Ren and her mother’s soul?
“How will you open the gates to this
godforsaken town?” demanded Ena.
Meckenzie tried to hide her fear. Her mom’s
soul being on the line, that she was used to, but
handling the life of a dude she hadn’t even kissed
yet? Holy crap. She swallowed the knot clogging
her throat and affected a bored tone. “I know
where to turn off the force field,” she lied. “One
flick of the switch and Broken Heart is all yours.”
“Take me to the switch.”
“Oh, no. You don’t get what you want until I get
what I want first.” All Meckenzie needed to do
was to get Ena off balance. If the magic weakened,
she could escape long enough to claw out Ena’s
black eyes.
It was a helluva risk.
Meckenzie wanted nothing more than to free
her mother’s soul. She deserved peace. But she
would not be happy if she knew that Meckenzie
had sacrificed a living creature to free her. The
dead are no longer concerned with earthly matters.
Life is for the living, Meckenzie, so live well.
Besides, she couldn’t let Ren get hurt. He’d
protected from the moment she tricked him into
letting her inside Broken Heart. She owed him.
“Well?” Meckenzie pretended to yawn. “You
want revenge or not?”
“You’ll take all three of us to the switch. I’ll let
him go if what you say proves true.”
“Deal.”
Ena snapped her fingers and freed Meckenzie
from the magical bonds. Meckenzie rolled to a
sitting position and rubbed the back of her neck.
Slowly, she climbed to her feet.
“You’re wasting time,” spat Ena.
“You’re right.” She snap-kicked Ena hard in
the crotch, and the witch screeched and bent over.
Meckenzie kneed her in the face, and she collapsed
onto her side.
Meckenzie only had seconds. She kicked Ena
in the stomach, forcing the woman onto her back
and then she kneeled on Ena’s chest. Wow, she had
no boobs. Maybe giving her an A-cup was
somehow karma’s way of matching her tiny,
blackened heart. Blood spattered the witch’s
creamy white complexion and wheat blonde hair. It
was so not fair she didn’t even have any warts or
scars. But no, she was all beautiful and shit. Well,
until she went all crazy with the snarling and
spitting and eye-narrowing—then she was one ugly
bitch.
Meckenzie punched her in the face. Ena’s head
snapped back, and she yowled. More blood
spattered, this time splashing on Meckenzie. Her
knuckles throbbed, but she ignored the discomfort
and gave Ena an uppercut. The witch’s head
smacked hard into the concrete.
Oh! Good idea.
Meckenzie grabbed her hair and banged her
skull against the ground.
“Enough!” screamed Ena.
Meckenzie was airborne before she’d realized
what had happened. Ena’s cry had gone up two
octaves … um, probably because Meckenzie had
two handfuls of blonde hair that she’d ripped out
as she was thrown. She landed hard on her side
and groaned as pain jolted up her spine and down
her legs. Ouchfuckingouch!
She scrambled to her feet. Okay, she listed to
her feet and wobbled around to face a very, very
pissed-off witch.
Her plan hadn’t worked.
Ren was still tightly bound, his gaze on
Meckenzie’s. His expression was pure rage. She
mouthed, “Hang on.” He shook his head fiercely,
but it was too late to back down now.
“Meckenzie!”
She looked at Ena and felt her entire body go
ice-cold. Ena had created a soccer-sized ball of
black, nasty magic.
And she lobbed it straight at Meckenzie.
THE FIFTH TIME Sophie went for the weakened,
but unfortunately, still fighting Alberich, she
launched herself at his leg and bit into his gnarly
flesh.
Light imploded behind her eyes and it felt like
a thousand stars rained down on her. She was
tossed backward like a discarded ragdoll. Her
head smacked into a tombstone, and she sank to the
ground, every inch of her throbbing with pain.
Then Trent was there, gathering her into his
arms and he, once again, siphoned away her agony.
He shuddered under the onslaught of her pain.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
He kissed the top of her head. “You did it,
Sophie. Look.”
She felt rejuvenated every time Trent used his
gift to heal her. Now, was no different. She lifted
her head and stared at the Alberich. His gravel-
crunching cries slowly faded as he fell backward.
The entire graveyard shook from the massive
impact. Then there was a cracking sound.
The Alberich’s body took on a grayish-brown
cast, his flesh and clothes cracking as though it was
clay drying, and then everything collapsed inward.
He was gone.
Sophie got to her knees, and turned around,
wiping the sweat from Trent’s brow. “Are you all
right?”
“You’re alive. The rest will sort itself out.”
“That’s not an answer.”
He smiled, but she could see the effort. “I will
be.”
All her anger from earlier had vanished before
the fight, and looking at him now, her head cleared
for the first time in months. Without a shadow of a
doubt, Sophie knew Trent was meant for her. She
loved him. The realization scared her almost as
much as the Alberich. With love, there was so
much to lose. As it was, there was too much
between them unsaid. “I need…I want…”
“Hey, kids.” Patsy and Gabriel popped next to
them, both looking like they’d gotten into a fight
with a convoy of Mack trucks. “We still have four
Alberich trying to get in. If they get bored, they
might decide to eat Oklahoma.”
“What about Ena?”
Gabriel and Patsy shared a look. “We’re still
hoping that works.” Patsy offered a grim smile. “I
know you’re tired. And I know this sucks. But we
really need you.”
“Of course,” said Sophie. She looked at Trent.
He nodded. “We’re in.”
“All aboard the vampire train,” said Patsy
holding out her arms. Trent went with the queen
and Sophie stepped into Gabriel’s embrace.
Sophie hoped she and Trent were up to the task
of taking four more Alberich. She worried that
Trent was going to collapse. He’d endured so
much suffering for her.
“Ready?” asked Gabriel.
“Yes,” said Sophie. And she hoped she was
ready.
ENA APPARENTLY KNEW jack shit about how
to throw a ball at a target. Meckenzie dropped to
the floor, and the nasty magic exploded against the
wall behind and disappeared in a cloud of stinky
smoke.
“I think you might need some Rogaine,” said
Meckenzie. “Or a wig.”
“You!” Ena gritted her teeth. “I’ll kill you with
my bare hands.”
The magic around Ren disappeared, which
surprised the hell out of Ena. He jumped to his
feet, his face half-morphing into a white wolf as a
low growl issued from his throat.
Ena reached behind her back and drew out a
long, thin curved blade. Where the hell had she
hidden that thing?
Ren didn’t stop growling, but edged backward,
his gaze on the sword.
“That’s right,” she practically cooed. “Pure
silver. I will take your head, blood wolf.” She
leaped forward and swung it, but Ren quickly
dodged the blade and went low, trying to sweep
out her legs. She jumped like some kind of fucking
witch ninja, and with her free hand unleashed
ropes of black glittering magic that went at Ren
like snakes. He pulled back, attempting to move
out of reach of the magic and Ena’s sword.
Then the magic grabbed hold of him; tendrils
wrapped around his wrists and dragged him
forward. Then more grabbed his ankles and his
legs. He was forced to his knees—and then his
head was stretched back, giving Ena a primo spot
to embed her sword.
The. Hell.
Meckenzie ran at her, screaming like a crazy
warrior woman. She had no weapons, no plan, and
no fucking sense. But she refused to let Ena the
Evil hurt Ren. The sword swooped down, but she
plowed into Ena like a linebacker taking down the
other team’s quarterback. Ena managed to keep
hold of the sword, but not her feet.
They landed in a heap, fighting for the blade,
but Ena was in full-on fury mode. Meckenzie had a
difficult time warding off the blows.
With Ena fighting for her life, she extinguished
the magic holding Ren. Meckenzie heard him
growling, and then Ena bucked her off and rose to
her feet.
Literally.
She floated in the air and zoomed toward the
Ren, blade raised.
Meckenzie had never moved so fast in her life.
One of the reasons she was a good thief was her
flexibility. She put on the moves and ended up
standing in front of Ren seconds before the blade
swooshed toward that beautiful neck of his.
Ena couldn’t stop the trajectory, but given the
look of hatred in her gaze, she wasn’t sorry when
the sword slashed across Meckenzie’s ribcage.
She twisted the sword and brought it up to her
stomach.
It felt like she’d been set on fire. Pain
exploded.
“Crap,” she muttered. Meckenzie crumpled to
the floor, unable to breathe. She felt her heartbeat
in her ears; it was slowing, a soft lullaby before
she fell into permanent sleep.
An unearthly howl echoed in the basement.
Meckenzie couldn’t feel her body anymore. But she
heard the growls and screams, and the thumping
and crunching.
Everything was getting gray, and going fuzzy
around the edges.
Ren knelt next to her, his expression ravaged,
his chest heaving with shuddering breath. Oh, and
he was naked and spattered with blood.
“Meckenzie,” he whispered.
She couldn’t get words to form, but she wanted
to say that she’d wished they had that kiss, and that
she could see him again—with more naked, of
course—and that—
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
SOPHIE AND TRENT had barely started playing
kill-the-monster tag with the four Alberich when
the creatures suddenly froze and tumbled to the
ground. Like the one they’d defeated at the
graveyard, they turned to dried clay and broke into
a thousand pieces.
A small crowd of tired Broken Heart citizens
came together, triumphant—and really fucking
tired.
“Ding, dong, the witch is dead,” said Patsy.
“And so are those assholes.” She glanced at Trent
and Sophie. “Go home, you two. We’re done
here.”
“What about Ren and Meckenzie?” asked
Anise.
“Don’t worry,” Gabriel told his sister. “Ren is
well.”
Patsy took Sophie and Trent’s hands and
brought them together. “Well, you two crazy kids,
you did good. Now, we can all get back to an
Alberich-free town.”
“Is that all?” Sophie asked. “You’re sure
there’s nothing more to do?”
Patsy raised a knowing brow as she looked
from Sophie to Trent then back to Sophie. “Love
each other, already. That’s a command from the
queen.”
Trent turned to Sophie, his dark eyes even
darker in the waning late afternoon sunlight. He
looked exhausted and thin. Had he lost weight
during the battle? She would feed him, and not
from Nana’s wok. She would feed him, and