Read Immortal Promise Online

Authors: Magen McMinimy,Cynthia Shepp Editing

Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy, #Urban, #Psychics, #Vampires, #Witches & Wizards, #Paranormal & Urban

Immortal Promise (5 page)

BOOK: Immortal Promise
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Chapter Nine

 

 

Cree sat with narrowed eyes as he listened to Evan. The
vampire was on his last nerve. Too much was happening and the damn arrogant Master Vampire was holding back. While waiting to hear from Lothar, he was informed that Esperanza was missing. Now the vampire was telling him that yes, he’d spoken with Lothar, but that he had left with one of his vampires and was unsure of where they had gone. It was pure fucking bullshit that he had no time for.

“You want me to believe that Lothar flashed out of here with one of your
vampires, but you don’t know where they went?”

“That’s what I said. Now, can we get back to why I called you here in the first place?”

“I am guessing it has something to do with them.” He gestured towards Sergio and Syna.

“Yes, he made it clear that we needed to tell you about
Syna, and what we’ve been up to regarding the Dark Fae.”

“Regarding the fucking
drifters we’ve spent the last few months searching for,” Cree corrected.

Evan dipped his chin. And Cree suppressed a growl.

“To be honest, I am fed up with this shit. I want to know where my warrior is. Now,” Cree said dangerously.

Evan sighed. “I told you I don’t know where they went.”

“Not good enough—who did he leave with?” Cree demanded.

Evan didn’t want to mention that it was Holly, who apparently found a trigger for her flashing
power. Evan had tried to reach out to her, tried to call on the sire connection they shared, but as far he could tell, she had dropped off the face of the earth. Panic had briefly overwhelmed him when he couldn’t find her, but something told Evan he would know if Holly was seriously hurt, or worse... dead.

“It matters not who he left with, trust me.” That was a
flat-out lie, and Evan knew it.

“It matters to me,” a stern feminine voice called out from the entrance to Evan’s office.

All eyes fell to the beautiful Light Fae leader who stood royally in the entrance.

“Rowan?” Cree said her name with confusion. She wasn’t supposed to be here. She and the others were trying to track down where Esperanza had disappeared to.
“What are you doing here, love?”

Rowan smiled genuinely at her husband. “I want to know where Lothar is and what secrets Evan is keeping. I am tired of getting the
runaround. It seems our people no longer fear their leader. So let me make this very clear,” she said, pinning Evan with her steely gaze. “I and I alone decide if you and your coven stay here. If you don’t tell me what I want to know, I will send you back to the Middle World, in silver cuffs, for an extended stay in my dungeon. And if for some reason that does not strike fear in your heart, let me make one other thing clear… if anything happens to Lothar, I will gladly hand you over to Darion. The Light is done playing games and catering to the will of those who no longer respect us.” Rowan took a seat next to Cree as she finished and waited expectantly.

Evan seemed to see the resolve in Rowan’s features
. Turning to Sergio, he said, “Close the door, this stays between us.”

 

****

 

Sergio dropped into one of the tall barstools at Red Oasis, a bottle of top-shelf whiskey in hand. He hadn’t taken a sip yet, but he was sure the bottle would be empty by the end of the night. The meeting with Cree and Rowan had lit his fear over everything that was currently happening. Thankfully, the club was closed and he was mostly alone, aside from a few of his coven members, who flitted around preparing for the night. Sergio groaned as he felt Evan’s arrival, before he even heard the lightly accented voice call to him.

“Serg. What’s going on?”

Sergio reached over the bar to grab a bottle and two short glasses. He poured the dark whiskey and slid one of the tumblers aside as Evan took a seat next to him.

“You feel like talking about it?”

Sergio tossed a sidelong glance to his coven leader. “Not a lot to say.”

“There is plenty to say, Serg.”

“What the fuck are we doing to find her?”

Evan smiled. “I know you care a great deal for her, don’t forget that I do as well. But there is little I can do. I don’t know where she flashed to.
I can’t connect to her, but I do know that she is alive.”

“Could she be in the Middle World somewhere? Maybe her disappearance wasn’t her magic at all. What if Darion has her?”

Evan shook his head. “No, it was her. I felt the rise of her magic, I felt her panic, and it triggered her dormant power.”

“What if she’s in trouble?”

Evan shook his head before taking the half glass of top-shelf whiskey down in one swig. “You won’t want to hear this and I am sorry, because I know how deeply you care for her. But as long as she is with Lothar, she will be protected and safe. He loves her… and she has always loved him.”

Sergio studied Evan before finishing off his drink and then settling his gaze back on the bottle.

“I’m sorry, Serg. Do what you need to do to deal with this, but I need you back at the compound and back as the vampire I have always valued as my second in command.”

Sergio nodded. “Give me this night to drown my pathetic ass in whatever the bar has to offer.”

Evan cupped Sergio’s shoulder, but remained silent as he squeezed it in what he hoped gave some semblance of reassurance. Evan watched as Sergio poured another glass of some of the club’s best liquor, swirled the dark liquid, and then took a long gulp. Evan left knowing there were no words that would make either of them feel better. He flashed back to the compound and threw himself back into the work that awaited him.

Chapter Ten

 

 

“Look,” Holly yelled over the wind that whipped her hair into her face.

Lothar dropped lower to eye the massive waterfall. It was the first real break in the foliage they’d seen. Taking that as a hint that there were likely no answers to be found from above, Lothar glided to the soft ground just beyond where the waterfall filled a large pool with clear water
, which eventually moved on to the ocean by way of the slow-moving river.

Holly pushed her hair from her face and grinned at Lothar
. She had no doubt she looked a mess. Closing her eyes, she took a deep breath. Her hair smoothed and pulled back into a long, wavy ponytail. Her clothes changed from the tight and wet jeans she’d been wearing while working at the club to a pair of shorts. Her plain black tee morphed into a pale pink halter-top. Lothar studied the strip of perfect skin that was left exposed by her choice in clothing; a small, silver belly ring glinted in the sun. The small piece of body jewelry had him wondering what else she was hiding. Her content sigh had his gaze lifting to her face and her still-closed eyes.

“Much better
,” she hummed and finally graced him with her beautiful, amethyst eyes.

Lothar grunted as he stared at her.

“What? It’s hot and wet jeans are uncomfortable.”

Yes, because
that
was why he was grunting.

“I know,” Lothar said bemusedly, running with her train of thought.

“I can try conjuring you up something else to wear.” She smiled as she eyed him.

Lothar shook his head. “Save your magic. My clothes are nearly dry.” He pulled at the still
-damp fabric of his long-sleeve Henley before shrugging and pulling it over his head. It was nearly dry, but the island was muggy and made him feel uncomfortable.

Holly watched the movement as Lothar grasped the hem of his shirt and began pulling it up his torso
. The fabric had been tight to begin with, but the water had made it cling to his sculpted frame. Holly was caught in the golden skin that met the sparse rays of sun. His skin glistened, and his muscles flexed with every movement. A throat cleared, and Holly lifted her eyes to meet Lothar’s amused gaze.

“Did you hear a word I just said?”

Holly grinned at him. “I was distracted.”

Lothar chuckled. “Then let’s try this again… Based on the
sun, I would guess we’ll be spending the night. We need to find some shelter.”

“Yeah about that, are you sure you can’t fly us back to civilization?”

Lothar shook his head. “I don’t know where we are, so I don’t know which way to go. We could end up hundreds of miles off course, and I can’t fly that far while carrying you anyway.”

Holly bristled at the comment. “Well, that carried some rude implications.”

Lothar laughed at her. “Well, you are crazy if think I was implying that you are too heavy because that was not what I meant, and I have a sneaking suspicion that you know that.”

Holly smiled. “Well, yeah, but seriously, you should not say shit like that to a female. As an empath, I would think you would know better.”

“Perhaps if I wasn’t blocked to you, I might have
known better
,” he mocked.

Holly smirked. “Perhaps. Well, we should check behind the waterfall.”

“Why?”

“Because
, in all the books and movies, there is always a cave behind the waterfall that ends up providing protection and shelter to the weary travelers. Can you handle the load that is my frame and fly us up there to see if we can find the mysterious cave?”

Lothar shook his head and grabbed her
. He then proceeded to throw her over his shoulder and head for the face of the waterfall.

 

****

 

Jelena burst through the door of the archives in her and her sisters’ home. Meriah and Acacia’s eyes lifted from the death scrolls, panic falling from the jade depths they all shared.

“Who is it?” Jelena demanded.

Meriah shook her head. “It’s changing every second.”

“What’s happening?” Acacia asked.

“Moirai was breeched—someone has found the Island of the Fates.”

“It’s not possible
.” Meriah’s denial was adamant.

“Of course it is,” Jelena chided. “It’s been foretold.”

Acacia’s eyes widened. “It’s not time. It can’t be.” Tears began to fill her eyes as she stared at her sister.

Jelena nodded
—she wasn’t ready for it either. She wasn’t ready to fade to the abyss. What became of her and her sisters upon their deaths was beyond her scope of knowledge. All she knew was that if the Middle World fell to the ice, she would fall to her destiny.

She
and her siblings were born of the Fates. They took their place as overseers of the afterlife and caretakers of destiny—which really meant they sat back and left free will reign. When Olympus fell and the Fates faded, the Immortal Three and their brothers rose to power, taking the Fae in their care and giving over the Middle World to their
children
. Some of the ancients still remained and fell under their supervision as well, but the Gods were long gone, having given in to time, and were reborn into the Fae. The parting wisdom the Fates gave was a warning of loss and pain—that after the battle of the Middle World was blanketed in white, taken by ice and snow, the Immortal Three would become two—the eldest of the triplets would succumb to her destiny.

 

 

Chapter Eleven

 

Bain surveyed his childhood home. Nothing had changed much in the hundred years since he’d last stepped foot inside its hallowed walls. There were sacred memories hidden inside. Memories that had once made him smile, but since losing his little sister, he could simply bear them no longer. Even when Rowan took the throne as leader to the Light, Holly had refused the invitation to follow them in their move to the palace. She wanted to remain where she could still find pieces of their father. Bain got that; their father adored Holly. Sighing, Bain grasped the door handle that led to Holly’s room. Pushing it open slowly, he was met with the room of a child—still young and innocent. This room had served as hers until she was around twelve, at which point Rowan had left to live with Cree and had offered up her room to Holly. It had been a fight with their mother. She seemed to strive to make sure Holly received the bare minimum. He smiled slightly at the memory of Rowan putting their mother in her place.

“I fail to see why it matters
. Is it not still my room?” Rowan had asked.

“Don’t be ridiculous, of course it is.”

“Then as such, I decide what happens with it. Holly is a growing girl who you do very little for. She needs something other than a lavender room filled with stuffed animals and flowers.”

Esperanza had glared but dropped the subject then.

“The past can be a nagging bitch when it rears up on you,” Kale said, a knowing hitch to his tone.

Bain turned and nodded. “She was just a kid”

Kale chuckled. “In your eyes, yes, but most of us saw her for what she truly was.”

“And what was that?”

“A young woman desperate for something meaningful.”

“She had her family.”

Kale shook his head. “No, she had a cruel mother, a very protective brother, and a busy sister.”

“She’d still be alive if I had truly done my job as her brother.”

“I doubt that. Ask Lothar, he was the one who truly knew her pain. I think he even loved her.”

Bain nodded solemnly. “I know he did… I was the ass who told him to keep his fucking hands off her.”

Kale laughed, “Like I said, very protective. For what it’s worth, as far as I know, he did keep his hands to himself.”

“I protected her from the wrong man and sent her running into that bastard
vampire’s arms.”

“You can’t do that, big guy
. What happened with Holly was not your fault.”

“It sure feels like it.”

Uriah entered the front of the house then. He looked worse than the last time Bain had seen him but at least he had left his room, which was a pretty big surprise.

“Hey man, what’s going on?” Bain asked, finding a lighter feeling come over him. Uriah was out of his God damned room.

“Rowan left for Vegas. She asked me to come see if I could help.”

“You up for it?” Kale asked.

Uriah nodded. “I am of little use hiding in my room. There were vampires here.”

Bain growled
. Why was it vampires? Every time he turned around lately, it came back to fucking bloodsuckers.

Uriah almost smiled, his lips on the verge. “If I had to guess, they flashed Esperanza out of here, but to
where, I don’t know.”

“Or if she went willingly,” Bain added.

“You think she hired them to get her out of here?”

“Wouldn’t put it past her.”

“What do you want to do now?” Kale asked.

Bain shook his head. There was little he could do at this point; there was no trail to follow, no signs of a break in, no neighbors to have seen anything.
Esperanza was in the wind somewhere.

“Head back and see what Rowan has to say.”

They left the house, and Kale and Bain both freed their wings. Uriah stood but made no move to follow.

“You coming?” Kale asked.

“I think I’ll walk,” he said as he passed them and headed down the dirt road. “It feels good to be outside.”

“We’ll walk with you, brother.” Silence fell over the three brothers as they made their way to Rowan’s study.

Entering the castle, they made their way straight to Rowan’s study. She lifted her gaze to their entrance and stood. “What happened?”

“Vampires,” Bain answered. “And I think it’s time to have a word with Darion.”

Rowan looked to Kale and Uriah, who stood close to the entrance. “You two agree?”

Kale and Uriah both nodded.

Rowan shook her head. “Can you control your anger if I allow you to attempt an audience with Darion?” Rowan stared at Bain, her gaze never wavering as she questioned him.

“We’ll go with him, Rowan
,” Uriah offered.

Rowan lifted her gaze to Uriah. He was joining in without her
asking, and there was no way she was going to question that. “Good. Go to the forest border and see if you can get an audience with Darion to see if he has Mother.”

Bain turned to head from Rowan’s study.

“But, Bain?”

He looked over his shoulder and met her gaze. “Yeah, Ro?”

“Keep your cool. And report back to me as soon as you know anything.”

****

Bain, Kale, and Uriah stood at the unseen border that separated the Light lands from the Dark. Bain arched a brow at the three guards that were alerted to their presence when Bain stepped over said border.

“You have not been given passage.” As the ugly-ass
ogre spewed the words, the scent of rot flowed from his open mouth. Unfortunately, Bain could see the yellow teeth and bleeding gums that filled the lesser creature’s mouth.

Bain cleared his
throat, trying to clear the bile that wanted to come up at the smell of not only the ogre’s mouth, but the creature in general. “I want to speak with Lord Darion. Now,” Bain repeated again.

A pixie approached. Kale’s eyes narrowed at the creature who smirked at him in return. A growl resounded from Kale, causing all eyes to fall upon him.

“What is it?” Uriah asked, as he took a step closer to his little brother.

“That’s Darion’s errand boy. The one who met me at the lake
at Katarina’s place.” Kale’s voice had turned venomous.

“Ah, I made an impression.” The pixie chuckled. “Darion will not be taking any meetings today.”

“He plays a dangerous game, and tests my patience
,” Bain warned.

“I imagine he does. However, he did instruct me to tell you that
… You,” he looked to Kale as he spoke, “took many things that belonged to me. In return, I have taken something important that belonged to all of you.”

“These are not fucking possessions we are talking
about,” Kale roared. “They are people, his people, and one of ours.”

“Yes, he also told me to inform you that he is taking care of what he took from you.”

“Knock the cryptic bullshit off.” Bain narrowed his eyes. “Say it, say my mother’s name. Lady Esperanza.”

The pixie smiled and nodded. “As you wish, he said to send the message that Lady Esperanza is being well cared for
.” He slid his slimy gaze back to Kale. “He said to tell you that she is in the velvet room. He told me to make sure to emphasize that you should ask Katarina about the room… She can attest to the beautiful accommodations he is providing for Lady Esperanza…
for now
.”

“I will go fill Rowan in. You both need a few minutes,” Uriah said as they entered the castle once more.

Making their way to
the hole,
or common room, Bain slid onto a bar stool as Kale grabbed a few shot glasses and a bottle of Patron. Making his way back around the bar, Kale sat with Bain.

“You okay?” Kale asked as he filled the six glasses.

Bain grabbed one of the glasses and shot back the clear liquid. “Are you?”

Kale shrugged. “I feel a bit responsible.”

“Why should you feel any responsibility for this?” Bain asked.

“This is happening because of the
succubi, because Kat did what she needed to, a decision that I stand behind, but it’s what brought Darion to take Esperanza. I take the blame for that.”

Bain scoffed, getting up from his stool to round the bar and grab a bottle of Scotch. “By that
logic, I should blame Izzy. She’s the reason my mother went off the deep end and fucking landed herself in my childhood home.” Bain arched a brow as he poured a glass. “And you and I both fucking know better than to believe I would blame Izzy for any of this shit. So, no, you and Kat are not responsible for the choices that bastard makes. Got it?”

Kale snorted. “Yeah, I got it.”

A throat cleared and both warriors looked up to see Izzy standing at the door. “What did I miss?”

Bain shook his head. “We found out where my mother disappeared to.”

Izzy took a seat next to Kale, who slid a shot glass over to her. Izzy smiled and took the drink in one long gulp. “Darion’s got her.”

Bain arched a brow. “Yes, how did you know?”

Izzy pursed her lips. “It was a guess,” Izzy offered. She wasn’t about to tell Bain she’d been having odd dreams. When she had run into Cree the other day, she had siphoned a bit of the warrior’s gift, and she wasn’t sure how to tell a dream from a vision or a vision from what was possibly just her subconscious’ way of trying to explain the things that nagged at her.

BOOK: Immortal Promise
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