Read Blaze of Secrets (Asylums for Magical Threats) Online
Authors: Jessie Donovan
Tags: #To avoid persecution, #the Feiru will do anything to keep their elemental magic a secret from humans—even lock away their children for life. Few know about the experiments going on inside the prison system for magic users, #but that is about to change…, #FICTION/ Romance / Paranormal
To stay awake, Kiarra started pacing again. If no one showed up at the door, the only option she had left was to contact Neena, which could end up being no help at all. The next time this happened, she’d make
sure she was better prepared.
The next time.
Kiarra stilled. Yes, she wanted there to be a next time. The thought of leaving Jaxton in a few months was no longer an option. She needed to keep his stubborn ass in check.
Someone knocked on the door and Kiarra’s eyes widened. As much as she wanted to hope, she wasn’t
stupid, so she walked to the door and looked out the peephole. It wasn’t Jaxton, but she knew the face.
Stunned, she opened the door and said, “Neena.”
Neena walked in, dressed all in black except for a dark blue scarf tied over her hair. Kiarra closed the door, and Neena placed a hand on her back and steered her toward the bed. Kiarra frowned. “Why didn’t
the woman on the phone just tell me it was you?”
Neena grinned. “Because Aislinn spoils me and knows how I like to surprise people.”
Kiarra vaguely remembered the name. “Aislinn, as in the other DEFEND co-leader?”
“That’s the one.” Neena sat down on the bed, patting the space next to her. “Now, do you want to hear
my plan or not?”
“We don’t have time for niceties. Just tell me what we’re going to do to help Jaxton.”
“My, my, someone’s starting to sound just like their trainer.” Neena tilted her head to the side, studying her. “But by now, I think he’s more than a trainer to you. Am I right?”
Kiarra kept her face impassive. She finally understood Jaxton’s impatience with this woman. “Either
help me or get out. I don’t have time for this.”
Neena winked at her. “There’s the Fire Talent leader I’ve been waiting for.” She patted the bed beside
her again. “If you truly want to help Jaxton, then you need to take a nap.”
Kiarra blinked. She hadn’t seen that coming. “Talent or not, I don’t have super dream powers like you,
so how is that supposed to help him?”
Neena raised an eyebrow. “Questioning me again, Kiarra? Tsk, tsk. You should know by now not to do
that.”
“Someone has to.”
Neena laughed. “I like you more and more Kiarra Melini.” She reached into one of her pants pockets
and pulled out something wrapped in a cloth. “But if you aren’t going to obey me willingly, there are other ways to make it happen.”
Kiarra stepped back, unsettled by the gleam in Neena’s eye. Wasn’t Neena supposed to be on her side?
Whatever was going on, bluffing was all she had left. She straightened her shoulders and said, “My
elemental fire is back. Don’t make me use it against you.”
Neena rose and took a step toward her. “Fairly convincing threat, my dear, but we both know that you’ll
burn out if you call on your elemental fire right now, especially without your Conduit.”
What the hell is a conduit?
Kiarra eased toward the small desk and chair behind her, ready to use them as weapons if it came down to it. Neena was right about her being close to burnout, but even if her gun
were tucked into the end table by the bed, she would still fight with whatever she could find. Jaxton would expect it of her.
Neena sighed and lifted the cloth-covered bundle, still concealing whatever lay beneath. “Let’s hope you learn your lesson after this. I really do abhor punishing my own people, especially the clever ones.”
Neena’s words confused her, but without any other options, Kiarra grabbed the chair behind her and
swung it around. But before she could make contact, Neena tackled her to the floor until Kiarra was
facedown, with her hands wrenched behind her back. She bucked, trying to get free, but then she felt a
prick on her hip before Neena said, “You’ll thank me later, my dear. Have a nice sleep.”
You’ll thank me later
. Those were the same words Jaxton had said earlier.
Her consciousness started to slip as whatever had been in that syringe started to take effect. Her last
thoughts were that Neena had betrayed her and that the man she’d finally learned to trust might die because of it.
James Sinclair walked into the meeting room and went to the head of the large rectangular table. His
bodyguards were right behind him, and once he sat down, they took protective positions on either side of his chair.
A quick glance at the people sitting at the table confirmed that Geoffrey Winter had kept up his end of
the bargain. The
Feiru
liaisons from France, Greece, and Spain sat in front of him.
Etienne Mercier, the liaison from France, spoke up first. “Why are we here, Sinclair?”
In a way, Sinclair had always respected Mercier’s work ethic; he was one of the few Sinclair could
never blackmail. “You three represent countries with the highest number of
Feiru
rebels in Europe, and the biggest rebel group of them all, DEFEND, is gaining power.”
Gisela Cruz, the liaison from Spain, said, “Yes, yes, this is nothing new. They try to find ways to free the first-borns, but they are harmless and without much power. We’re keeping a close watch on them.”
Mercier added, “But Sinclair wouldn’t bring up DEFEND unless he knew something.”
Sinclair smiled. “Gold star for the frog.” He leaned back in his chair. “Now, let’s cut through the bullshit. DEFEND is developing some illegal weaponry and once it has been tried and tested, they plan to use it to support their cause.”
Hector Mitsotakis, the Greek liaison, jumped in. “Impossible. I have someone deep undercover, and this
is the first I’ve heard of it.”
Sinclair eyed the Greek. “Are you willing to risk another uprising in Greece? You have enough trouble
with financial problems, and adding violence to the mix would only make things worse.” When the Greek
said nothing, Sinclair continued, “The
Feiru
High Council can’t act until a majority consensus can be reached amongst the human governments and the
Feiru
local councils. That is a long way from happening, and as you’re all familiar with the glacial pace of bureaucracy, I’m taking initiative, working outside the red tape, and giving you three a heads-up. You’re in a better position to direct your own liaison offices and find the concrete evidence we need to convince the others of the threat.”
“What’s in it for you?” Mercier asked.
Sinclair knew Mercier would be the only challenge in the room. Cruz and Mitsotakis would scurry
home and hunt for DEFEND attacks and weapons caches, hoping to be the first to gain recognition and a
possible promotion. Mercier, on the other hand, would take his time, fine-combing information and
analyzing Sinclair’s leads. The frog was one of those rare people who didn’t seek out fame or fortune,
rarely doing anything for his own gain.
Mercier was a gamble, but Sinclair couldn’t leak information to Greece and Spain without including
France, which was the European country with the greatest number of rebels outside the UK and Ireland.
Sinclair only hoped his staged attacks and abandoned weapons labs were convincing enough to lead them
back to DEFEND. Fear was necessary to help along the next stages of his propaganda campaign.
Sinclair focused on Mercier. “We’re all members of the EU, and if one of your countries falls, it will
bring down the UK with it. I have no desire to see my investments crumble while various governments
bicker over who is to blame and what should be done.”
A beat of silence before Mercier said, “I’ll take the information if there are no strings attached.
Otherwise, I’ll rely on my own resources.”
Clever lad. “I’m not trying to trade favors.”
Mercier raised an eyebrow. “That’s a first.”
Sinclair ignored the needling. “But if you do find information that could be helpful to other
Feiru
liaison offices, I only hope that you’ll pass it on.”
Mercier continued to stare at him, but Sinclair didn’t fret. He knew when to speak and when to keep
quiet.
Mercier finally nodded. “Fine. Deliver the information to my office and I’ll see what I can find out.”
The other two murmured similar sentiments before Sinclair stood up. “You’ll have it within the day, and
I’ll make sure to update you with new information as it comes across my desk.”
As he left the room, his two bodyguards walking on either side of him, he noted the frown on Mercier’s
face and the paleness of the other two. Cruz and Mitsotakis would leak the information to other countries in the EU, maybe even to America, within the day. Both of them wanted to take point on this issue, but that would only happen to the person who had the most information. Sinclair had no doubt the pair would fuck
up, as they had with every other tip they’d received in the past. He didn’t care what those two did; he was anxious to see what Mercier would discover.
Sinclair’s staged attacks were just an excuse to find real disturbances. If enough first-borns were freely using their elemental abilities, Sinclair could finally threaten to leak that information to the human press.
With the threat of human hysteria and pandemonium hanging over their heads, Sinclair would be able to
bring the remaining high councilors to his side on the first-born issue.
If Sinclair’s gamble paid off, Etienne Mercier—one of the least self-serving people he knew—would be
responsible for the permanent downfall of the
Feiru
first-borns. That thought made him smile.
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Go to the address printed below by 8 p.m. A woman dressed in
Feiru
traditional garb will greet you at
the door.
Kiarra looked up from the slip of paper to make sure she hadn’t missed her stop. It was already a little after 7:20pm and she couldn’t afford to backtrack if she got lost.
The alarm clock had gone off around 3 p.m., blaring heavy metal and scaring Kiarra out of her mind. A
quick check around the room had revealed that she was alone, but when she saw Neena’s dark blue scarf
thrown across the chair at the desk, Neena’s betrayal had come rushing back.
But then she’d remembered about the clue on North Berwick Law and would’ve bolted out the door if
not for the large sign taped over the peephole that read:
The clue is on the table, under my scarf.
Sure enough, the slip of paper had been tucked inside an envelope, along with a few other sheets of
paper.
Kiarra looked out the window of the double-decker bus one more time, but the slow crawl of traffic
told her that she had a while to go before she reached her destination. Kiarra pulled out the papers Neena had left her and reread part of what had convinced her to go through with this wild goose chase:
If I hadn’t drugged you, both Jaxton and his sister would be dead right now. Neither one of us wants
that, not that I expect you to believe me. I’ve included the clue from North Berwick Law with this note.
Follow my instructions if you wish to save all three of them. If you try to rebel, and ignore my instructions,
then not only will they all die, but your greatest fear about the first-borns will come true. Is that a chance
you’re willing to take?
Ultimately, no, it wasn’t.
Neena’s note had also mentioned saving three, not two, people. While she was learning to never
presume anything about Neena, Kiarra liked to believe the third person she referred to was her brother
Giovanni.
She still had reservations about what she was doing, but after Darius had mysteriously called the safe
house at 3:15 p.m., Kiarra had found herself with no other choice but to follow Neena’s instructions. The call had been short and to the point, but Darius had wanted her to trust Neena, assuring Kiarra that he
would be in Edinburgh soon to help get Jaxton back.
It’ll make it easier to trust the others later on.
Jaxton had been right; without her trust in him, she never would’ve gone out on a limb with anyone else. She did not trust Neena, but Darius had been nothing but kind to her and would never wish Jaxton harm. So, through a strange web of logic, she was now
tentatively trusting a woman who’d drugged her unconscious, hoping it would be enough to save the man
who now mattered most to her.
Still, if Neena’s actions caused Jaxton’s death, Kiarra would not cooperate with DEFEND, supposed
Talent or not. Revenge was not her style, but she refused to work with a person so careless with other
people’s lives.
At the thought of never seeing Jaxton again, Kiarra felt a tightness in her chest that she couldn’t define.
She’d only known him a little less than two weeks, but apart from her parents, no one had understood
Kiarra’s need to be pushed. Yet Jaxton had. Without him, she never would’ve had the nerve to try and save someone else’s life.
Dead or alive, she would find Jaxton. She owed him that much.
Kiarra tested her abilities and confirmed that they were nearly at full strength. At least as full as they could be without Jaxton’s touch. She still didn’t understand how or why he amplified her powers.
Her thoughts were heading down that path again, but she couldn’t afford to think about the way he’d made her feel, either emotionally or physically. She needed a clear head for this meeting.
She unfolded the second sheet of paper that Neena had put inside the envelope with the clue. It was a
photocopied page of a journal, which had seemed irrelevant at the time, but it might be the distraction she needed to clear her head. Neena had penned a sentence in purple ink at the top of the page and it read:
Thoughts and doubts from one fire user to another
.
Kiarra continued on to the handwritten journal entry:
March 29, 1918 – Yucatan, Mexico
Another day has passed, but the others have yet to arrive. I know that we are isolated from the world
here, but I wonder if something has happened to them. Even making allowances for war on the Continent,
they should have arrived here two weeks ago.