Read Lycan on the Edge: Broken Heart Book 13 Online
Authors: Michele Bardsley
visits. She was a fae, like Zerina, although a great
deal less prone to revenge magic. Zee was well
known for changing people’s hair colors—or
removing the hair entirely in the case of one
particularly persistent werewolf—if she got
miffed.
“I love you, Bri. But there is no brunch on this
earth grand enough to make me get out of bed.”
“You’re impossible.” Brianna heaved a
melodramatic sigh. I’ll be there tonight at six sharp
so we can get all dolled up.”
“Okay.” Dolled up? Crap. “Wait. Remind me.”
“You forgot.”
“I did not.” She bit her lip. “I’m nursing a
sleep hang over. Brain’s fuzzy.”
“I put together a magical soiree once a year,
and you can’t even bother to mark your calendar?”
“It’s been a difficult year.”
“I heard, sweetie,” said Brianna. “And I’m
sorry. What happened to you was awful. But I will
not let you sit around on your cute werewolf ass
and miss
my
party.”
Sophie knew there was no way she’d get out of
the fae’s annual Halloween bash. This was the first
time that Brianna had hosted it in Broken Heart,
and Sophie had promised, eight months before, that
she would attend.
Besides, she didn’t want to risk Zee’s ire and
suddenly have fur the color of an Easter egg. “All
right. Six tonight. I’m all yours.”
“That’s my girl. Smooches!”
Sophie hung up the phone and lay her head
back down on the pillow. She would rest her eyes
for a little while longer, she told herself. But just
as she drifted back to sleep, the sounds of
hammering bolted her awake.
THE SHOE HIT him in the head. Trent stopped
hammering and looked down. Sophie was a sight
to behold. Her long white T-shirt nightgown read,
“Mornings Suck.” She wore no bra, and he saw the
faint outline of her panties. Her hair stuck up as if
it were trying to leap off her head. She had the
other shoe in her hand, ready to lob at him. She
looked bleary-eyed, puffy, and he wanted to kiss
her again.
“Not a morning person, huh?” he asked.
“I hate you.”
He grinned. “Well, if it helps, there’s only two
hours of morning left. It’s after ten a.m.”
“I’m aware. Do you have to fix the staircase
now?”
“I guess I can risk breaking my neck a few
more times.”
She sighed and grabbed the previously thrown
shoe from the ground. “Are you feeling okay?”
“Fully recovered. And I slept well.”
“I did, too.” She paused. “Thank you. For
taking my pain.”
“You’re welcome.”
“Do you need any help?”
“If you want to help, go to the kitchen. I think
your grandmother’s cooking breakfast in the wok.”
She groaned. “Not the wok.”
“Afraid so.”
They stared at each other for an endless
moment before he cleared his throat. “I heard there
was some kind of party tonight.”
“Yeah. Are you going?”
“I might. If you’ll go with me.”
He saw a flash of disappointment in her
expression.
“I’m going with the host,” said Sophie, regret
evident in her voice.
“Save me a dance?”
She nodded. “It’s a fae party. Be prepared for
glitter.”
“Noted.”
“Guess I’ll save breakfast.” Sophie stepped
back, turned, and walked away.
Trent watched her walk into the house. Last
night, it had taken him a couple of hours to deal
with the pain and panic he’d siphoned from
Sophie. He knew more of her struggle now, and he
was more determined than ever to help her.
Even if he had to go to a fae party to do it.
NANA WAS NOT in the kitchen. The wok was in
the sink. Considering the nostril-burning stench
wafting from the disposal, Sophie guessed
breakfast had not been a success.
She found her grandmother in what Sophie
dubbed the “Shopping Channel Rejects” room. It
used to be the sewing room, but the sewing
machine had long since disappeared under the
growing pile of junk: Elvis prints, neon-glow
blankets, flower-shaped candy bowls, and
something called The Atomizer. Nana claimed the
pretzel-shaped contraption strengthened thigh
muscles. Afternoon sunlight streamed through the
blinds, giving a rosy hue to the crap crowding into
every available space. Nana pawed through a
bright purple trunk, muttering as she tossed out
random items.
A neon yellow high heel barely missed Sophie.
She moved back to avoid getting whacked by
tennis racket and a bag full of yarn. “Nana! What
are you doing?”
“I gotta find my lucky bingo marker. Betty Lee
is picking me up so we can go to Ultimate Bingo.”
“What’s Ultimate Bingo?”
“Big prizes. Shiny trophies. Free drinks.” Nana
continued her frantic search.
A curling iron sailed through air, followed by a
large stuffed teddy bear wearing a glittery red tutu.
Wow. She needed to cancel the cable. Her
grandmother was addicted to buying useless
products.
“Ah-ha!” Nana triumphantly held up the large
green bingo marker. She rose to her feet, holding
her prize.
Sophie
watched
as
her
grandmother
straightened the rest of her outfit—a mauve
pantsuit, short-sleeved white blouse, and low-
heeled white pumps. She wore her pearl necklace
and earrings. Her grandmother looked charming
and fragile—someone right out of a Hallmark card
commercial.
Nana burped. “Wow. Breakfast is really doing
a number on me.”
Scratch the Hallmark moment.
“What the hell happened to your hair?” Nana
poked at it with her bingo marker.
Sophie batted away Nana’s hand. “Stop it.”
Poke. Poke. Poke.
“Nana!”
“You are such a grump in the mornings.”
“I know. How long will you be gone?”
“What are you, my mother?”
Sophie arched an eyebrow.
“Oh, ignore me. I’m just overly excited.” Nana
kissed her cheek. “I love you, honey. Now wish me
luck!”
“Good luck.”
A car horn beeped, and Nana waved, her smile
wide. “That’s Betty Lee. I’m outtie.”
She clacked down the stairs and slammed the
front door shut.
Well. Okay, then.
AT A QUARTER till six that evening, Sophie
opened the front door. Brianna entered, carrying at
least four shopping bags. She dropped them and
hugged Sophie so hard her spine cracked. The fae
wore a white skirt, white calf boots, and a
beautiful green silk shirt, which matched her eyes.
“So happy to see you! We have much work to
do.”
“But you’re already dressed for the party.”
Brianna laughed. “No, sweetie. This is the
outfit I’m wearing to doll you up. Then I’ll switch
into my fabu party dress.”
“Hey! What’s wrong with me?”
“Your hair, your make-up, and your clothes.
Did I leave out anything?” She grinned impishly,
revealing dimpled cheeks.
“What are in the bags?”
She looked expectantly at her. “The Sophie
make-over kit.”
Brianna worked her magic, and an hour later,
Sophie stared at a stranger in the mirror. Her
blonde hair was pulled up in a Grecian style. A
gold band glittered from the top and long curls
draped her neck. Brianna had applied her make-up,
giving her sultry eyes, slimmed-down cheeks, and
pouty lips. The outfit, however, skirted the edge of
decency. The filmy light green material of the dress
swirled in layers at her mid-thigh. The top hugged
her curves and gave her an amazing amount of
cleavage. A jacket made out of the same filmy
material draped her arm. Dazzling gold heels,
dangling gold earrings and a gold bracelet twisting
up her right arm completed the ensemble.
“Wow, Brianna. I don’t recognize me.”
“Oh, this is you, honey. We just had to peel off
the rough layers, is all.” Brianna clapped her
hands. “My turn!”
PATSY ROUNDED THE corner of the one-of-a-
kind oak desk, walked past the chrome bar that
housed expensive wines, dodged the mini-
conference table with its plush chairs, and rounded
the corner of the massive desk. She rarely used her
office located in the Consortium’s compound.
Being the queen of the vampires, and mom to four
blood wolves and a human, was a lot of damned
work. Good thing she was getting better at
delegating. Her office on the second floor with its
large windows had scenic advantages, and she
stared at the darkened land that stretched out
before her. The night called to her. She wanted
nothing more than to shed her human skin and enjoy
the wild. Especially if she could do so with
Gabriel.
Her husband planned to meet her at the fae
party. Tonight, she’d take off the crown of the
werewolf king and wear instead the mantle of
wife.
Patsy sat down at the desk and leaned back in
the brown leather chair. Propping her feet on the
cherry wood desk, he scanned
The Broken Heart
Banner
. After, she stared at the stack of files in her
inbox.
When had being the vampire leader been
reduced to paperwork and meetings?
Patsy sighed.
How much damned adulting was a blood wolf
supposed to do in a day?
She heard the click of the doorknob turning.
Gabriel entered purposively. The expression on his
face had Patsy straightening in her chair.
“We’ve sighted a group of Alberich.”
“Where?”
“New Mexico. Humans have been reporting
sightings of Bigfoot across the state. We checked it
out. It’s confirmed. The Alberich are headed in our
direction. They travel at night, and for the most
part, have kept themselves hidden. They’ve got the
protection of someone very powerful.”
“How many?”
“Five.”
“Five is plenty enough to destroy Broken Heart
and everyone in it. Hell, it’s enough to ravage
Oklahoma and beyond.” She shook her head. “We
need to find out who’s controlling them.”
Gabriel flopped into one of the wingback
chairs that faced the desk. “I told Damian and his
brothers to stay in Germany.”
“How’d that go over?”
He shook his head. “Not well. I had to call in
Aufanie and Tark.”
“You
told
on him to his mommy and daddy?”
“Desperate times call for desperate measures,
my love.” He captured her gaze. “We can handle
this, right?”
“Hell, yeah.”
“Should we call off the party?” he asked.
“No need to panic everyone just yet. Besides,
Brianna would have both our pelts if we dared to
cancel it.”
Gabriel chuckled. He sobered quickly, though.
“Will Sophie be ready?”
“Trent’s
working
with
her,
but
she’s
traumatized. She doesn’t understand why she
survived. And her memory is patchy.” She stood
up, rounded the desk, and sat in her husband’s lap.
She smoothed his brow. “We need to tell her.”
“Let’s give Trent a little longer. If we try to
force Sophie’s memories, it could do more harm
than good.” Gabriel wrapped his arms around his
wife and kissed her.
“We may not have a choice,” said Patsy.
“I know,” said Gabriel. “Let’s hope for the
best…”
“…and plan for the worst.”
CHAPTER FIVE
THE BARN, LOCATED on an abandoned farm on
the outskirts of Broken Heart, had been