Chapter 15
Zane landed in a war zone: barricades, vampire special forces, so many guns pointed at him, he couldn’t focus. The Realm had quickly prepared for his return. Slowly, he set Janie onto her feet and pushed her behind him.
She tapped his shoulder. “They won’t shoot me.”
Maybe. Maybe not.
The demons had spies in the vampire organization, and Zane had no doubt one would take the shot if possible. “Just stay back,” he said, blocking her the best he could.
Barricades parted to allow for Dage and Talen Kayrs to stalk his way. Fully armed and wearing combat gear, they allowed no expression to lighten their hard faces.
Zane relaxed his stance although his mind reeled. He needed to know that Sam and Logan were all right. “Where are my brothers?”
The two vampires came to a stop.
“Janie?” Talen asked.
Janie peered around Zane. “I’m fine, Dad.”
“Walk this way, please,” Dage said evenly.
Janie stepped to Zane’s side. “I’d really rather you didn’t shoot Zane.”
Zane nudged her toward safety. The hulking vampires wouldn’t let anybody harm her, and it was too difficult to concentrate with so many weapons pointed her way. “Go to your family.”
“If I go to my family, there’s a good chance you’ll get shot,” she muttered under her breath. “Kidnappers don’t get much leniency from the Realm.”
“I understand. Now go.” He had to get her out of the line of fire. There hadn’t been time to fully recuperate from the previous day’s jumps, and today he’d already teleported three times. His strength was subpar at the moment. He focused on the king. “Where are my brothers?”
Talen stepped up. “Release my daughter.”
“I’m trying to.” Zane nudged her again.
She sighed. “I don’t suppose Garrett or your brothers broke the news to my family?”
Doubtful. The young soldiers were all too smart to be the messengers of bad news. “No.” Zane angled to the right to prevent a clean line to Janie, hoping the vampires crossed to the left. “Please get out of the line of fire.” Every instinct he owned pushed him to grab her and toss her to her family, but if he moved too quickly, somebody would shoot. He couldn’t risk her safety.
Rioting red hair came into view as Moira Dunne Kayrs shoved her way past a barricade. “Where the hell is my cousin?”
Zane frowned. Dark circles marred the pale skin under the witch’s furious eyes. “Which cousin?” he asked, a weight sinking into his gut.
“You know what cousin.” Moira pressed her hands to her hips, electric blue energy gathering on her arms. Her mate, Conn Kayrs, jogged up behind her, fury darkening his expression.
Shit. Zane was about to take a plasma ball to the face from a pissed-off witch. “For the sake of argument, let’s pretend I don’t.” He kept his voice calm and his stance nonthreatening. “Which cousin?”
She swallowed. “Simone Brightston.”
Zane huffed out a breath, his mind reeling. The witch Nickolas Veis had gladly risked exile to help. “Did Suri take Simone?” Zane asked quietly, his gut churning.
“You know he did,” Moira spat. She turned to the side and sneezed.
Did witches sneeze when angry?
Zane closed his eyes. Okay. He needed to think. “Get me a phone and I’ll see what I can find out.” If Simone had been taken to influence Nick, then Suri would know Zane had betrayed him. For the witch, Nick would’ve talked. Time was counting down too rapidly. “I didn’t take your cousin.”
Talen growled, the sound vibrating through the tense air. “Kidnapping’s your specialty, right?”
“No.” Zane eyed Janie’s father. At over three centuries, the soldier was in fighting shape. Incredible fighting shape. “Get your daughter to safety, and we’ll talk.”
“I’m not leaving you,” Janie snapped.
“Now, Janie,” Talen ordered.
The hair bristled down Zane’s neck. “Don’t yell at her.” Then he gave her a small push. “Go.”
Janie dug in her heels, exasperation escaping on her sigh. “Everybody calm down and listen. Dad, let’s go inside and have a discussion . . . with Zane.”
Talen’s eyes morphed into a glittering gold. “Not a chance. Get inside, Janet.”
Janie faltered and scanned the bristling weapons surrounding them. “We really need to talk privately.”
“Okay. Go inside and wait for me,” Talen said, his gaze never leaving Zane.
Zane shook his head. Talk about stubborn, and he could see where Janie got it. “Would you please go inside so I can talk to your father?”
“It’s a little late for that talk, isn’t it?” Janie shot back.
Talen’s chin lowered. Slowly. “What does that mean?”
Janie held her ground. “You can’t shoot Zane if he’s my mate.”
“He won’t be if I kill him,” Talen said conversationally. “That’s not a decision you’re ready to make.”
Zane’s ears rang. “Okay. Everyone just calm down a little bit. How about I follow Janie inside, and then you can shoot me?” That way, at least he’d be able to cover her back until she reached safety.
“How about I shoot you right now?” Talen growled.
Enough of this shit. “Fine. Shoot me. But first make sure Janie is covered, damn it.” Zane had about had it with vampires. With the Kayrs family, actually. There were too many of them. “Get inside, Belle.”
She grabbed his arm, trying to slide in front of him.
To take a bullet meant for him?
Zane saw red. “Take your daughter out of the line of fire, Kayrs.” He couldn’t say it any plainer than that.
Talen took a step toward them.
Janie planted her feet. “I will not let you harm my mate.”
God. She had to quit saying that before somebody figured out they’d actually mated and started shooting.
Talen snarled. “He’s not your mate, and he won’t be if I cut off his head. Please go inside, Janie.”
She sighed and her shoulders went back.
Oh shit. She wouldn’t—
“We mated last night,” Janie said clearly.
The damn earth ground to a stop. A weapon hit the pavement a yard away. Dage Kayrs’s eyes widened, and Moira Kayrs gasped.
Zane sighed and focused just as a locomotive the size of Talen Kayrs tackled him midsection, throwing him ten yards and landing hard on his chest. Zane’s head crashed onto the asphalt. Stars exploded behind his eyeballs, and unbearable pain cut into his brain. He tried to concentrate, to say something, when a fist plowed into his face.
Unconsciousness was a fucking blessing.
Janie paced in front of the long window in the gathering room of the main lodge, her hands flailing. “And then Dad
hit
him.” Why did the vampires always hit first and then hit again? Forget
ever
asking questions. She turned toward the two women watching her with their mouths open. “Can you believe it?”
Her aunt Emma glanced sideways at Janie’s mother as they sat side-by-side on the wide sofa. “Um, no?” Emma whispered.
Cara didn’t move. “You, ah, mated.”
Janie paused. “Yes.” She studied her mother closer. “Are you okay?”
“Am I okay?” Cara asked, her voice rising two octaves. “Am I okay?”
Emma slid an arm around her sister’s shoulders. “I think maybe your mom is a bit taken aback, Jane. You know. With the mating and all.”
Frankly, Emma sounded taken aback as well.
Janie’s face heated. “Right.”
Emma, ever the scientist, leaned forward. “Only demons have markings, huh? Interesting, and it clears up a couple of questions I’ve had. Can we see it?”
Janie paused, embarrassment flooding through her. “Sure.” She turned and lifted her shirt.
Her mother made a sound similar to a cat being strangled.
Janie dropped the shirt and turned around. “I know this is, er, a surprise.”
“A surprise,” Cara said weakly.
Emma cleared her throat. “Are you okay, Janie? I mean, he didn’t force this on you, did he?”
Cara’s head jerked up, her blue eyes darkening. “Janie?”
Janie shook her head. “No, he didn’t force me. The marking took us both by surprise, but I, ah, fully participated.” Her blush actually burned her face. “I care about Zane—I always have. Please help me keep him alive.”
Emma swallowed and shoved dark hair away from her face. “Ah. Hmm.”
Cara nodded. “Yes.”
Janie frowned. Somebody needed to speak in a complete sentence. “Are you two all right?”
Cara stood. “I don’t know.” Emma tugged on her arm, and she fell back to the sofa. “Mated. To a vampire-demon.” She turned her gaze on her sister. “Mated. Like
mated
.”
Janie lifted her chin. “Wait a minute. You’re upset because he’s part-demon?”
Emma patted her sister’s hand. “I think your mom is overwhelmed by the thought of you mating anybody. It’s not like you’ve had dates, gone to prom, had your heart broken a couple of times.”
Yeah. She knew she was odd, with a heavy destiny. “So?” She’d gone from indignant to ready to defend Zane to plain old confused.
“Well”—Cara played with her hair—“mating is pretty heavy duty, well, you know . . .”
“Sex?” Janie asked, her face heating again.
“Beyond sex,” Emma snorted. “Waaaay beyond.”
“And before, you haven’t, I mean that you really haven’t, um . . .” Cara lifted her chin and squinted. “Have you?”
“Ah, no.” Janie coughed into her hand. “I’ve been a bit busy for sex. You know?” God? Could this get any more embarrassing?
Emma straightened her shoulders. “Yes. I do know. So. Well. Um.”
For Pete’s sake. One of the most brilliant women in the universe was spitting out nonsense words. Janie sank into an overstuffed chair. “I liked the sex.” Wasn’t she supposed to?
Cara coughed out a garbled expletive.
Emma sighed. “That’s actually good, right?” She turned toward her sister. “If she’s having sex, we want her to enjoy it. To have a good experience.”
Janie buried her face in her hands. This was unbelievable.
Cara cleared her throat and waited until Janie looked back up. “Sex is good and natural.”
Oh holy fuck. “I know that, Mom.” Janie rubbed her temples. “I don’t understand why you’re both so surprised. You had to know I’d end up with a vampire or immortal someday.”
Cara swallowed. “Sure, but to end up with a soldier, a warrior? It’s not the easiest of roads, sweetheart. No matter how much you love the man.”
“Although it is totally worth it,” Emma said.
“Yes.” Cara exhaled slowly.
Janie shook her head. “Who did you think I’d end up with?”
“A nerdy scientist,” they answered in unison, identical blue eyes flashing.
Wow. “Why?” Janie asked.
Cara wet her lips. “You’ve been surrounded by soldiers and war your entire life, and I figured you’d find somebody calm and mellow to love. A brilliant man who wasn’t deadly or so over-the-top dominant like, well, the Kayrs men.”
Emma nodded. “Yeah. What she said.”
“Huh.” Janie rubbed the still healing puncture marks on her neck. “What about Zane? You didn’t think fate brought us together?”
“Fate, schmate,” Emma muttered. “I figured Zane was a nice, sweet boy you met in dreams who’d always be your friend. Someday, I thought you’d move on.”
Cara focused on Janie. “Do you love him?”
Janie rubbed her chest. “I’m not sure ‘love’ explains how I feel.”
Cara nodded. “I understand that. What do you feel?”
“Too much.” The words popped out, and once Janie started, she couldn’t stop. “I thought he was safe and sweet, too. Maybe a lone shifter trying to protect a small pack, who’d give up war and live a gentle life. One who’d give me flowers, forget our anniversary, and do the crossword puzzles with me. And I loved him like that—who I thought he was.”
A dimple in Emma’s cheek winked as she grinned. “Sounds like a nice human life that goes on forever.”
“I know,” Janie whispered.
“And the reality?” Cara asked.
Janie inhaled and then let out the air. “He’s powerful and dangerous. Deadly and so damn wounded I just want to ease his pain—but he won’t let me. When he kisses me, the world makes sense, and when he orders me around, I want to kick him in the balls.” She plucked at a loose string on a pillow. “And more than anything, I want to be his everything.”
Cara sighed and smiled. “Yeah, that sounds about right.”
Janie relaxed. “I feel safe with him, and I don’t want to live this life without him.”
Emma grinned. “Nicely put.”
For now, she had to figure out a way to broker peace between her mate and her family. “Mom? You’re the only person in the universe who can deal with Dad, and I need him to accept Zane.”
Cara’s eyebrows arched up. “Where did they take Zane?”
“To the infirmary,” Emma whispered. “Talen knocked him out.”
Cara nodded. “I’m sure he did.” She shook her head like a dog with a face full of water. “Janie, do you have any questions? I mean, you know—”
“God, no.” Janie stood up. “We had the sex talk years ago.”
Cara coughed. “No, I mean about the mating. The actual process.”
Good. Science and biology. Janie stilled. She’d never really thought about it. “Well, other than being a little tired from all the teleporting, I don’t feel much different. What happens now?”
Emma leaned forward. “Your human chromosomal pairs will combine to form several more until you’re immortal, and you might even gain Zane’s gift to teleport.” She frowned and tucked a piece of dark hair behind her ears. “Vampire mates reach twenty-seven chromosomal pairs, but we have no idea how many demon mates reach. You’re unique since Zane is so different. There’s a chance you’ll get enough to be impervious to Virus-27, since it attacks at the twenty-seventh and winds down.” She stood. “I need to take your blood.”
It was just a matter of time until Emma pulled out a needle. Janie nodded. “I know. But first, I really need to see Zane.” To make sure his head was still attached to his body.