To Love a Shifter: A Paranormal Romance Boxed Set (130 page)

Read To Love a Shifter: A Paranormal Romance Boxed Set Online

Authors: Marian Tee

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Anthologies & Literary Collections, #General, #Short Stories, #Anthologies, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Anthologies & Literature Collections, #Genre Fiction, #New Adult & College, #Demons & Devils, #Werewolves & Shifters, #Romantic Comedy

 

“You really know him then?”

 

“Let’s just say we know each other from way back.  Now, listen.  I want you to conserve your energy.  Dyvian and I are close—”

 

I jerked against my bond, realizing belatedly what his words signified. 
“You can’t come here!  It’s too dangerous if there’s only the two of you.”

 

“I have a plan—”

 

“It’s not going to work.”

 

“Do you trust me that little?”

 

I love you that much—
I bit back the words, smart and wary enough not to share them with him. 
“I have my own plan,”
I lied.
 “So, you don’t need to come here.”

 

“Really now?  Good.  Tell me what it is.”

 

“Well—”

 

“I rest my case.”

 

“You just can’t come here.  I forbid you and Dyvian to come here.”

 

“Deli—”

 

“No.” 
I gazed at the icy reflection before me and everything about it promised their deaths.  Lucian and Dyvian were more powerful than most Evren, more experienced in battling Zekans, but there were just the two of them.  How could they ever survive against a regiment of armed and poisonous half-snakes in a freaking ice factory?

 

“Please tell me you’re at least using some modern gadgets, electronic whatchamacallits to even the odds.”

 

“Nope, sorry.” 
Lucian actually sounded cheerful.

 

I wanted to strangle him.
 “Be serious.”

 

“I am serious.  I’m going to save the girl I love.”

 

“Lucian,”
I wailed.

 

“Don’t burst into tears.”

 

“Then don’t tell me you love me.”

 

Lucian was silent. 
“Can you tell me something?”

 

I didn’t say anything, not sure if I wanted to hear his question.

 

But he asked anyway,
“You used to want me to say I love you all the time.  But now you hate hearing it.  Can you tell me why?  Is it because you hate me?  You can’t forgive me?  Do you love someone else?  Does it make you feel awkward?”

 

I knew how much it had cost him to ask.  The door to his mind was also open, and his feelings shone through.  He loved me.  He really did love me.

 

But I could never be sure, could I?

 

He could still be hiding some of his thoughts, thoughts that might let me know he just
believed
he loved me or that his love was born from guilt.  And there was always a chance his feelings would change.  Even if I loathed Angelica with all my heart, I couldn’t deny she suited Lucian better as a girlfriend.

 

“Was my question so hard to answer?”

 

My eyes drooped closed.  Too much thinking had zapped most of my strength.  But I had one last thing to do before losing consciousness.

 

“I don’t think I love you anymore,”
I lied. 
“I don’t want to see you again, so much that I’d rather stay here than be saved by you.” 
It wasn’t much, but it was the only thing I could think of to prevent him from his suicidal mission.

 

I’m sorry, Lucian, but I’m selfish and weak.  I’d rather die than see you die.

 
Chapter Seventeen
 

 

 

When I was human, silly, and oh-so-killable, no one had attempted to murder me until that fateful day my parents had been taken away from me.  But now that I was Evren, supposedly immortal, and not-so-silly, everyone seemed to be after my blood.  Could an early grave be the price I had to pay for getting rid—mostly—of my silliness?  It made me wonder how I’d die.  A knife in the back?  A poisonous bite on the neck?  A gunshot to the head?  But of all my worst imaginings, none of them included giving up my life for the guy I loved.

 

 

 

“Wake up,” someone whispered in my ear.  “Wake up, Deli.”

 

I did my best to ignore it and sink deeper into sleep.

 

“Wake up,” it insisted and shook me a little.

 

“I don’t want—” I started to mumble in protest but the rest of my words were cut off as someone pressed a hand to my mouth.

 

My brain cells reluctantly began to work.  The first thing I focused on was waking up.  It took long minutes to shake myself from the warm, clinging arms of sleep.  My mind was fuzzy, my body heavy, and my heart exhausted, beating at an absurdly slow rate, making every breath I took a challenge.

 

“Wake up, Deli,” the voice said again.

 

I recognized it this time. 
Lucian. 
And the memories flooded back.  I was still tied up, hanging in the air from a stupid hook.  If I had still been human, my arms would have been torn out of their sockets by now.  But I wasn’t and, by some miracle, Lucian was also here next to me.

 

“What are you doing here?  Didn’t I tell you I never wanted to see you again?”

 

“And you won’t,”
he assured me,
“just as soon as I get you out of here.”

 

I fell silent because I hadn’t expected him to answer like that.  Memory brought back his earlier words but even now, I still couldn’t make myself believe him.  I wasn’t even certain if I still loved him, if we still had a chance…  There were so many things to wonder about, but I told myself to stop.  Right now, I had to focus on both of us surviving this ordeal alive with every limb intact.

 

Battling every second to stay conscious was even a greater struggle than breathing. 
“What’s that awful smell?” 
It was almost as foul as Aure-something’s scent.  There seemed to be some kind of uproar as well.  The Zekans nearest me were muttering, complaining about the odor.  Talk about hypocrites.

 

“Garbage.” 
Lucian sounded strangely…
gleeful. 
It was hard to imagine Lucian’s beautiful and expressionless face gleeful, but that was the only way to describe his voice.

 

Blinking several times, I tried to clear my gaze from the cloudy effects of sleep. 
“What’s happening?” 
The gate was half open and I could see a garbage truck outside.  As far as I could tell, none of the Zekans seemed worried about its presence.

 

“Dyvian and I drove a garbage truck here.  It smells more awful than usual because we had to, err, modify the truck’s contents to effectively conceal our scent.”

 

“Modify?”

 

“Dead rats, animal manure, sewage water—”

 

“Forget I asked,”
I interrupted him hurriedly.  Sheer disgust at the images his recital evoked eliminated the remaining effects of slumber.  Even if I did still feel pathetically feeble, at least I was as conscious as I could be.

 

“How did you get in?”

 

“I waited for some Zekans to come out and argue with Dyvian.  He’s still out there, speaking in French and demanding they allow him to dump all the garbage here.  It was ridiculously easy to slip in here.”

 

“Of course,”
I agreed sarcastically, as if staying invisible in sub-zero conditions was the simplest thing to do for an Evren.

 

“And your plan?”

 

“Simple but effective.”

 

“The thing is, Lucian, you have to remember not everyone’s perfect like you.  What you can do isn’t something we—”

 

“Relax.  It’s all planned out, Deli.”

 

“I just think it would have been safer if you had cool gadgets with you,”
I grumbled. 
“Think Batman.  Or James Bond.”

 

“Better make up your mind,”
he advised in that mild voice of his. 
“Do you want me to be a superhero or a super secret agent?  Mind you, I’m against wearing tights though.  I don’t like tuxes all that well either, but I suppose they’re better than wearing my underwear in public.”

 

I couldn’t believe he could even think of teasing me. 
“Don’t you see what kind of danger we’re in?  There are a hundred—”

 

“You exaggerate.  There are just ninety-seven.  I counted.”

 

“Whatever.  They’re still ninety-five more than your team—”

 

“Nice mathematical skill you have there.  See?  That’s what I love about you.  You’re incredibly smart.”

 

“Lucian,”
I snarled in warning.  Of all the times for him to shed his serious image, why did it have to be when our lives were hanging in the balance?

 

He chuckled. 
“Oh, ye of little faith,”
he murmured, cupping my chin. 
“I have everything under control.  Trust me.  I won’t take the slightest risk where you’re concerned.”

 

I refused to feel flattered, cherished, or loved.

 

“What’s the plan?”
I growled.

 

“Simple—you turn invisible then you turn Evren, and we’ll burst through the roof and fly away.”

 

He was right.

 

It was extremely simple.

 

It was also impossible to do.

 

“I can’t,”
I said miserably.  
“It is a good plan, Lucian, but I’m too weak.  I’m not all-powerful like you—”

 

“You can do it.”

 

“It’s too cold.  It’s impossible.” 
I tried not to sniff pitifully.  Ah, what I’d give for just a minute of Sanger weather with the blazing Nevada sun and hot, dry desert air.

 

“I’ll help you.”

 

“You’ll make the sun shine here?”

 

“Ah, no, Deli, my love.  I’m flattered you think I’m capable of that, but I’m afraid that one is beyond my powers.”

 

I hadn’t heard the rest of his words.

 

Had he just called me “my love?”

 

“Lucian—” 
I almost gasped when his lips touched the sensitive skin of my nape.

 

I may not be smart, but in things like this, it was impossible to stay stupid.  Lucian’s method of making me warm was wicked, effective, and embarrassing.

 

“Oh, dear.” 
I gulped silently.

 

“Hush, my love,”
he murmured but that only made me feel like groaning more.

 

Lucian was careful not to make any movements that would draw attention.  His hands rested lightly on my waist before they climbed up to stroke my back slowly and softly.  There was nothing lewd in his actions.  In fact, there was a sense of reverence to his touch, and his hands on my skin humbled and thrilled me at the same time.

 

I swallowed and saw, in my mind, Lucian swallowing, too.

 

Even though I was wearing jeans, the heat from his touch burned through the fabric, making me feel almost like sweating.

 

I nearly groaned as he flew a few inches up to kiss my fingers, one by one.

 

By that time, I could only be thankful my arms were tied, keeping me upright when all I wanted to do was slide to the ground and sigh.

 

“I think…I’m…ah…warm enough,”
I choked out as Lucian flew back down.  He cupped my cheeks and began kissing my eyelids.

 

“I don’t think so,”
he argued and even the clinical tone of his voice was enough to make me shiver. 
“I think we need to make sure you’ve all the warmth you need to last the day.” 
His arms tightened around me as he twisted to kiss my cheek from behind.

 

“Don’t move,”
he ordered when I shivered involuntarily.

 

“Then stop kissing me.” 
I tried not to fidget as my skin prickled with heat.  Lucian hadn’t stopped nuzzling my cheek and I’d have given anything at that moment just to put my arms around him.

 

“I’m going to count to three, and I want you to turn invisible just as I cut you off.”

 

“Oh, God.”

 

“One.”

 

Lucian moved in front me and held me tightly to him, one arm around my waist while his other arm moved above my head to grasp the ropes.

 

“Two.”

 

My heart beat loud, hard, and fast as Lucian pulled the ropes free with ease.

 

“Three.”

 

He bent down and bit my lower lip lightly, and I gritted my teeth to keep from gasping, its electrifying effect on my body giving me all the additional energy I needed to turn invisible.

 

Lucian grabbed me to him as the ropes gave way completely, and we soared to the ceiling.

 

But the danger was far from over.

 

“The Evren,” a Zekan shouted.  “She’s gone!”

 

Chaos erupted.  I looked down just in time to see the ugly Zekan who had kicked me unconscious pointing straight at me.  “There she is,” he roared.  “Shoot at the rope flying in the air!”

 

My feet!  They were still bound and the range of my invisibility hadn’t extended to the ropes around my ankles.

 


Shit
,” Lucian said, a second before he turned Evren.  He was just as I remembered.  Enormous, frightening, and powerful, Lucian’s dragon form with its golden scales was an enthralling sight that struck joy in my heart and fear in our foes.

 

“You go, Lucian.  Kick some snake ass.”

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