mythean arcana 06 - master of fate (2 page)

Read mythean arcana 06 - master of fate Online

Authors: linsey hall

Tags: #Fate, #Fantasy Romance, #sexy paranormal, #Paranormal Romance, #adventure romance, #Iceland, #hot romance, #Happily Ever After, #Happy Ending, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Time travel, #Werewolves, #demons, #Series Paranormal Romance, #scotland, #Series Romance, #Witches, #worldbuilding

“Hey, sis.” Aurora tried to banish any shakiness from her voice.

“Why the hell did you try to sleep with the lights off?” her sister demanded. 

Aurora scowled. Esha must have seen the magical light in Aurora’s tower window.

An irritated meow echoed in the background on the other end of the line.
Must be Chairman Meow.
Her sister’s familiar would feel Esha’s irritation, as Esha felt Aurora’s own fear of the dark. 

Because that’s all it was. Pathetic fear of the dark. It spurred the nightmares. Aurora flopped back on the bed, the phone gripped tightly in her fist.

“Did I wake you up?” Aurora asked.

“Of course you did. Felt like you were having a heart attack.”

“Good description.”
Since she’d met her sister a year ago after escaping the aether prison, Aurora had begun to feel a hint of Esha’s strongest emotions and vice versa.

“Don’t dodge the question,” Esha said. “Why the hell are you suddenly an idiot? Sleep with the lights on, moron.”

At least Esha remembered she hated being handled with kid gloves. “Got a reputation to maintain. Can’t have everyone thinking I’m a wimp who leaves her lights on all the time.”

Aurora didn’t care if the rest of the residents of her new home at the Immortal University liked her, but she sure as hell wanted them to stay afraid of her. She and her sister Esha were soulceresses, a type of witch who could manifest her every desire. The only catch? She had to steal power from other Mytheans to fuel her magic. Her own soul couldn’t absorb magic from the aether, so she had to take power from Mytheans whose souls could. 

They kind of hated that. 

For centuries, they’d hunted soulceresses. Things were different now—more civilized—but Aurora still liked to use fear to keep them from even thinking of attacking her.

“Did you call just to see how I was?” Aurora appreciated it, but didn’t like the reminder of how different she was now from the woman she’d once been. Three hundred years alone in prison would do that to a girl. Before, Esha would never have needed to worry about her mental state.

I’m out. I’m free.
She repeated the mantra in her mind.
I’m out. I’m free.

“Yes,” Esha said. “But if you’re awake and don’t think you can sleep, there’s something I have to talk to you about. I was going to wait ’til morning, but if you want a distraction...”

Aurora jumped at it. “Yes.”

“You might not like it. But then, you don’t really have a choice.”

Aurora frowned for a second. Whatever it was, it was better than where she’d been. If it didn’t take Esha or her freedom away from her, whatever her sister had to tell her was no big deal.

“You’re not going to tell me I need therapy again, are you?” Aurora asked.

“No. You know I think you have PTSD, just like I know you won’t do anything about it.”

Duh. Aurora had only lived in modern time for a year. The last time she’d been a free woman, it’d been 1705. Therapists and post-traumatic stress whatever did not exist back then. She wasn’t going to start worrying about them now, no matter how a little darkness made her feel.

“So what did you want to talk to me about?” Aurora asked.

“Can I come over?”

“Sure.” Aurora hung up the phone and reverently placed the little device back on her bedside table. When she’d been rotting away in prison, she’d never imagined such a device. Hell, she’d never imagined indoor plumbing.

Now she lived amongst such amazing inventions. 

Aurora climbed out of bed and threw on a silky robe. Over the year since her escape from prison, she’d been quick to adopt every convenience and luxury she could get her hands on. Mouse had done the same.

The cat looked at her with gleaming yellow eyes and meowed. 

Food. No question. Mouse wanted her to open a specialty can of tuna. She’d been insatiable ever since they’d left the aether prison. Mouse didn’t need to eat to survive—familiars weren’t real cats—but she sure did enjoy it.

Her familiar’s sleek black fur glinted in the light of the magic Aurora had used to illuminate the bedroom. She flicked the light switch, then held out her hand. The ball of magic light she’d thrown toward the ceiling dispersed. She’d need to replenish her power soon, but she’d worry about that later.

“Time for noms?” Aurora asked Mouse. Esha had shown her the cats on her computer. So obviously, Aurora had adopted
lolspeak
, the language of the millions of cats who ruled the Internet.

Mouse meowed and followed Aurora out of the cluttered bedroom. Aurora strolled across the circular space of her tower home. Plush red furniture was scattered through the living room and the kitchen was an open space with an island counter.

She was the only resident of the tower that sat at the edge of the university campus.
Outcast tower
, she called it, and she’d taken it from her sister when Esha had moved in with her mate about ten months ago. Though being an outcast had bothered Esha—it was the only thing a soulceress could be, really—it didn’t faze Aurora.

She whistled a tune as she pulled open the refrigerator—another magical device she’d grown to love—and pulled out two bottles of beer, which were way better than the swill they’d brewed when she’d last been a free woman.

Mouse meowed again.

“Hold your horses,” she said to the cat, who danced impatiently on little paws. Aurora pulled a can of cat food from the cabinet near the sink. As she was dumping it onto a plate, there was a knock at the door.

“Come in!” she called, knowing it was Esha. If it hadn’t been, the wards she’d placed on her tower would have fried the intruder. She called it the Crispy Chicken spell. It wouldn’t kill the trespasser, but it would knock them out and fry them like the chicken strips she’d seen on TV. They’d get over it eventually, but it wasn’t pretty.

Only Esha was allowed through her wards without consequence. There were a few other people at the university she was growing to like—sort of—but even they hadn’t been put on the No Fry list. Whenever they came over, she temporarily dropped the wards.

Mouse was lying on the floor playing dead by the time Aurora set the plate beside her. She popped up immediately and began scarfing down her prize.

“Hey,” Aurora said as Esha came in. She handed her sister one of the beers she’d taken from the refrigerator. 

“Thanks.” Esha popped the top off with her thumb and took a swig. Esha was her opposite—tall and pale with raven hair and red lips. Only their eyes—a weird gold color—indicated they were sisters. Likely half-sisters, though they weren’t sure, because neither had met their father.

“Want to sit on the roof?” Aurora asked.

Esha nodded, then glanced at her familiar, a scruffy black tomcat with a bruiser’s face. “You coming?”

He meowed without looking up at her. He sat half-hidden behind the counter and gazed longingly at Mouse. That was the only way Aurora could describe the look in his citrine eyes.

“Creeper,” Esha said. “He’s taken to lurking lately. I think he feels awkward around Mouse.”

“That, and Mouse has swatted him a few times.” Mouse was not interested in the Chairman’s affections. The normally stoic Chairman had lost any suaveness he’d had at his first sight of Mouse a year ago. Mouse was not impressed.

Aurora grabbed her beer and pictured the roof of her tower. The aether, that ephemeral substance connecting the earth and all the afterworlds, sucked her in and spat her out on the rooftop. The aether was like air, but full of magic. Most Mytheans, those creatures of myth and legend who kept themselves hidden from mortals, drew magical power from the aether with their souls. Though Aurora couldn’t do that, she could at least use it to travel. Esha appeared next to her a second later.

They sat on the tiles and sipped their beers. Since Aurora had joined Esha at the university a year ago, hanging out up on the roof together had become one of her favorite things to do.

“Why do we like it up here so much?” Aurora asked.

Esha shrugged. “Probably something about looking down on those who look down upon us.”

“Maybe.” Aurora sipped her beer as she gazed at the rolling hills, looming oaks, and stately stone buildings scattered across the campus of the Immortal University. Starlight sparkled down upon the scene that might have been enchanting if she hadn’t disliked the place so much. She had no idea how her sister had lived here for ten years. She was already chafing.

The Immortal University was more of a government organization than it was a learning institution, though it did teach a few classes. The university’s purpose was to keep the peace among the Mytheans of the United Kingdom and maintain their secrecy from mortals. A noble goal, until you ended up on the wrong side of it. 

Aurora scowled. “What did you want to talk to me about?” 

Esha sighed. “We have a problem at the soulceress city.”

Aurora’s whipped around to gawk at her. “In Iceland?”

“Know any other soulceress city?”

“Fair point.” There had only ever been one. Because soulceresses were nearly extinct, there was no one to build another. “We freed the souls that were haunting it. How could there be a problem?”

“Seems we weren’t completely successful. The portal you created when you were...”

“Insane?” There was no other word for it. It hadn’t been her best moment.

“Yes. The portal you created has gone haywire. You didn’t close it and I didn’t think to, because of everything that was happening. It’s created an imbalance of power at the city that’s making it glow. Mortals will notice soon.”

“Glow?”

“Yep. Like there’s a rave in the middle of the glacier.”

“Shit.” A year ago, right after she’d escaped prison and when she’d still been insane, she’d created a portal to try to get Esha to come to her. She’d wanted to meet the sister she’d just learned she had. It had worked, and Esha had ultimately saved her from her insanity, but apparently forgetting to close the portal was a very bad thing. “I guess the university wants us to clean this up?”

Esha fiddled with her beer. “They want
you
to clean it up. The witches are lobbying for you to be thrown back in the aether prison and the university is listening. I got them to agree to let you live here, but you know you’re on probation. You did all that evil stuff because you were crazy, but they’re still wary of you even though you’re sane again. Fix the portal to prove you didn’t leave it in place for some evil reason, or they’ll throw you back in prison.”

A cold sweat broke out on her skin. “Shit.” 

She’d been afraid of this—that the university’s generosity wouldn’t last. She’d done some truly terrible things. She was criminal number one at the university, but she wasn’t as reformed as they thought. She
was
still a little crazy. Even Esha didn’t know it. She’d kept it a secret. Did the university suspect that she still wanted to steal souls? Well, if they thought they were going to throw her back in that prison—

Her breath dragged in and out of her lungs. The hand around her throat tightened. Blackness crept in at the corners of her vision.

“Hey!” Esha grabbed her shoulders. “Hey. Chill out.”

Aurora blinked and shook her head. “I’m fine. Totally fine.” She didn’t let her guard down around anyone, even Esha. But lately, it was beginning to crack.

“Sure you are.” The skepticism was rich in Esha’s voice, but she let it pass. “You can do this. They don’t want me helping because they think I’ll just cover for you. But I’ll talk to them about getting you some local help. Someone who knows the glacier and the soulceress city well. Just fix it and you’re home free. You’ll be off probation and they’ll no longer think of putting you back in prison.”

Aurora nodded. She could do this. She’d fix the portal and keep her desperate desire to collect souls a secret. This weird half-life she was living was worth it to be near her sister, and she didn’t want to lose it. She’d been desperately trying to build a life here, though she still hated that she didn’t feel complete. But it was better than the aether prison and there was no way in hell she’d let them get her and throw her back in. “So what about this power imbalance? The glowing?”

“The glowing is the least of it. That’s just a symptom. If the power imbalance increases past the breaking point, the city could collapse in on itself, tearing a hole in Iceland.”

“A hole?” She guessed it made sense. When she’d been insane from possessing so many souls, her magic had been immensely strong.

“Yes. A blank space in the aether. It could devour the entire glacier.”

“Mortals will notice.”

“No kidding. Not to mention, destroying Iceland’s biggest glacier will wreak havoc on the environment.”

Aurora gulped her beer and stared out at the peaceful rolling hills of the campus. This was very bad. Keeping mortals from noticing Mytheans and magic was priority number one for the university and any Mythean who didn’t want to end up on their bad side.

“Of course I’ll do it,” she said. She had to kill their suspicions of her. Three hundred years ago, she’d been thrown in prison because she’d stolen hundreds of souls, which had in turn driven her mad. A year ago, she’d escaped. Esha had hunted her down and freed the souls, thereby returning her sanity.

Or so she’d thought. 

Ever since then, she’d been plagued by a dark desire to steal the souls of other Mytheans. Like an addict, she was desperate for that high of immense power that didn’t fade. But it was so wrong. She’d been resisting, but it was getting harder. 

“Great. That’s what I was thinking. I just heard about this from Warren and have a meeting tomorrow. If I can go to the rest of the university council and tell them that you’ve agreed to take care of it, it’ll go a long way toward earning their trust.”

Aurora met her sister’s gaze. It was so like her own and their mother’s. After her rough period, Esha had helped her get back on her feet. Found her a job and a place to live. More important, with the position here at the university, Esha had ensured Aurora’s protection from other Mytheans who would want to kill her for being a soulceress. Just being associated with the university provided her with protection. As long as they didn’t figure out she was having a hard time fighting her worst desires, things would be fine. 

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