Read Lycan on the Edge: Broken Heart Book 13 Online
Authors: Michele Bardsley
important to intervene, then it was obviously
something she needed. But it didn’t mean she had
to like it.
Sophie felt Trent’s gaze on her, but she
concentrated on the sandwiches. She spread
mustard on the bread slices and unwrapped the
ham. “What did you do before becoming a
handyman?”
“Lots of things. I was born in 1790.” An
emotion flickered in Trent’s eyes as he took the
sandwich Sophie offered him. She couldn’t quite
define it. Guilt? Grief? Worry? Hmm. She opened
the refrigerator and took out a couple of sodas. “In
a glass or straight from the can?”
“The can is fine, thank you.”
“I was born in the 1980s. So you’re what, more
than two-hundred years older than me?”
“In werewolf years that’s nothing.”
“True.” She handed him a can, and they sat
down in the breakfast nook. The windows looked
out onto the rolling green fields edged by forest.
Nature called to her on so many levels.
“It’s beautiful out there,” said Trent. “You want
to go for a run?”
Shifting and taking a nice, long run sounded
good. But she’d rarely taken her wolf form since
the Alberich had tried to kill her. She’d been in
wolf form then, too. The few times she shifted, she
felt strange. It scared her.
Memory flashed.
The beast came at her screaming, wielding a
terrifying weapon. She felt the imprint of the
doubly curved blade on her back. She howled in
pain, and instantly, there were a bright light and
a thousand stars raining down on her.
“Sophie?”
She swallowed the knot in her throat. “No,
thank you” she said softly. She excused herself and
left. The only way to get rid of the shakes and the
feelings of impending doom was to occupy herself
so thoroughly she didn’t have time to contemplate.
She went into the basement, feeling better the
minute the fragrant smell of earth and its gifts hit
her nose. She set her mind on finishing the herbs
for drying and tried not to think about her wolf,
about the Alberich, or about Trent.
Yeah, right.
CHAPTER THREE
“I’LL TAKE THE cuckoo clock and the punch
bowl set,” Nana said into the phone. Her gaze was
glued to the TV, specifically the shopping channel
as Hubert enthusiastically endorsed everything
from cutlery to dog beds. “Give me one of those
wind chimes, too.”
Trent watched in fascination as Virginia
Lennox ordered a potato peeler and a cubic
zirconia ring. Earlier, she’d invited him to join her
in the living room, and he’d accepted because he’d
hoped to get more information about Sophie. He
needed something, anything at this point, to get
female werewolf’s cooperation.
Virginia occupied the comfy pink wingback to
the left of the equally pink couch, where Trent
stretched out. Sophie, however, had spent the rest
of the day avoiding him and continued to do so.
“Ooh,” squealed the old gal. “I need the extra
large dog bed.” She glanced at Trent. “You like tan
or green?”
“I’m partial to green.”
“The green one, please.” Satisfied with her
purchases, she hung up the phone.
“Virginia, did you just buy me a dog bed?”
“Consider it a wolf bed.”
He smiled. Then he ventured, “You’re not a
werewolf.”
“Nope.” She glanced at him. “I married one.
Henry was a single dad, and he had a two-year-old
daughter. Her name was Alice—that was Sophie’s
mom. I couldn’t have children with Henry, but I
considered that baby girl mine.”
“Do you know anything about Alice’s mother?”
“Henry never talked about her.” Virginia’s gaze
went distant. “They died together, you know.
Henry, Alice, and her mate, Mark. We lived in
northern California. They’d gone off to howl at the
moon. Died in a forest fire. All three of them.” She
paused, her voice heavy with grief. “Sophie had
just turned five. It’s been her and me ever since.
She wasn’t around her own kind that much. When I
heard about Broken Heart, it was a no-brainer to
move here.”
“Has she talked to you about what happened in
Oregon?”
“Not really. She’s good at avoidance. But that’s
why you’re here isn’t it? To get her talking and
dealing with it so she can move on with her life.”
Unease skittered up his spine. Virginia didn’t
know the full breadth of his job here. He wanted to
help Sophie, that most of all, but he also needed to
get her ready. She had a gift. Like his. Together,
they were the only ones who could stop the
Alberich from killing more werewolves.
“I know Sophie’s been prickly, but she’ll come
around.” Her sharp brown eyes studied him.
“Something happened to her. I don’t just mean the
attack. Something else. I think her keeping
whatever secret she’s carrying is eating away at
her.”
Trent agreed. “I wish there was a way to get
her out of her comfort zone.”
“Good luck with that. She hasn’t been out of
Broken Heart since she came back. Hell, getting
that child to go into town is like pulling cow
teeth.”
“Why would you pull cow teeth?”
“You wouldn’t. That’s why it’s hard.”
Trent didn’t understand the allegory, but maybe
that was the point.
Virginia looked thoughtful. After a brief
moment of quiet contemplation, she skewered him
with a suspicious gaze. “You sure that whole
getting-out-of-her-comfort-zone thing would help
Sophie?”
He thought about his answer, going over the
pros and cons. He nodded. “Yes.”
“Okay then.” She stood and stretched. “Time
for me to turn in. You want the remote?”
“No, thanks. I think I’ll turn in, too.”
She turned off the TV, reached down, and
patted Trent on the shoulder. “You do right by my
girl.”
“I will. I promise.”
After Virginia had left, the room seemed
unbearably stuffy with the weight of his burden. He
only hoped he could keep his word. He wanted to
do right by Sophie, but he worried. Despite
knowing, or rather believing, that she was the key
to ridding the world of Alberich once and for all,
he hadn’t expected the overwhelming attraction.
He couldn’t stop thinking about her, the way she
looked, the way she smelled, and the way she
made his pulse race. No, he hadn’t expected the
intense chemistry when he’d pulled into the old
farmstead, but Sophie made him feel like a teenage
pup in the bloom of adolescence. For a werewolf
his age, he should have better control. Even when
he said things to her meant to help her, even to
himself, he could hear the double meaning.
He walked through the kitchen, exiting out the
back door. Chirping crickets greeted his entrance
onto the enclosed porch. The screened door
leading outside screeched loudly, and Trent
winced at the echoing noise. Stars winked at him
from the night sky, and a spring breeze teased his
senses with the faint scent of honeysuckle. He
thought of Sophie and his promise to her
grandmother.
I’ll help you, Sophie. No matter what.
TRENT ROLLED TO his side and plumped the
goose down pillow. The bedsprings squeaked, and
he grimaced. The quiet dark of the room engulfed
him, and he stilled, looking out the open window at
the clear night. He was tempted to shift and run off
he excess energy building within him. He’d
absorbed more of Sophie’s stress and fear than
he’d intended. She had a surprising way of getting
through his barriers. It was just another sign that
she was the other half. His other half, he supposed.
The ability to heal, to take her pain, was part of the
gift he had been granted. When they went against
the Alberich, she would need him for healing, for
energy, as she prevented catastrophe.
All the same, he couldn’t let her, however
unintentionally, steal his energy. He’d need every
bit of his strength and ability to help her. Her
trauma was deeply embedded, mind, body, and
soul. He’d have to go slow with her, absorbing her
pain a little at a time until she was strong enough to
handle the truth. And the ominous task before them
both.
The werewolf queen, Kelsey, was the only
person who could understand his ability and the
toll it could take. Thanks to her heritage as a
changeling, she had empathic abilities. She’d
accidentally learned how to absorb emotions from
others. Her talent was different from his. She was
more powerful, especially after becoming a
werewolf, and she’d been born with her gift. His
had been bestowed. The power had been had
absorbed at the cellular level—magic and genetics
binding together. And he only had empathic
abilities with one person. Sophie. It was further
proof that she was the one.
He knew well the terror and struggle of dealing
with his demons. It was why he identified so easily
with Sophie. So, he needed to control the fierce
yearning for the lovely werewolf. That longing
was almost a living creature within him, devouring
his good intentions bite by bite. His cock reacted
to the mere image of Sophie with her soft pink lips,
her wide brown eyes, and her silky blonde hair.
No, no. Don’t think of her.
He sighed, adjusted himself and tugged at his
now uncomfortable boxer-briefs. Sophie. The mere
thought of the bewitching woman disturbed his
very core. He’d never reacted to a woman so
immediately and with such...intensity. Not even his
wife. She’d been fierce and strong, and he’d loved
her. They had volunteered to be the weapon, and
she had given her life for the pack. It had taken him
a long time to stop feeling the acute pain of her
loss, and the guilt that he’d been unable to save
her. With Damian’s help, he’d managed to keep
going. To keep living. But now that he’d met
Sophie, he wondered if he’d been living or merely
existing?
What’s wrong with you?
When they’d fallen into the puddle, he’d been
jolted to his core. Even with mud spattering her
face, he’d seen the freckles on her nose. Her
blonde hair had been drawn into a ponytail. He
wondered how she’d look with it down around her
bare shoulders. Trent reigned in his thoughts. Don’t
go there, he warned his libido. He would not think
about how close her luscious mouth had been to—
damn. His blood stirred, pure lust claiming him.
Red underwear, sassy lips, and those secretive
dark eyes should not be enough to justify the raw
heat coursing through him.
Trent cursed as his cock hardened to full mast,
poking against the thin barrier of his underwear.
Think ice. Glacier. North Pole.
Antarctica.
The
whole concept of freezing cold did nothing to cool
his ardent response to the image he had of Sophie.
Stop it, Trent. You can’t help her if you think only
of having sex with her.
He waited, emptying his mind of other lurid
thoughts, allowing the tepid breeze to wash over
his body. Maybe he just needed a cold drink with a
hundred ice cubes. Maybe a two-day cold shower.