The Problem with Promises

BOOK: The Problem with Promises
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For Katie’s kids: Bob, Susan, and Melanie

 

Contents

 

 

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Dinner at the Trowbridge Manse

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Acknowledgments

Series card

Praise for Leigh Evans

About the Author

Copyright

 

Dinner at the Trowbridge Manse

Approximately two hours after I sent my brother to Merenwyn—

Robson Trowbridge pushed away his dinner plate and knuckled his red-rimmed eyes. There wasn’t much left on the chicken carcass. The bones had been picked clean.

He ate a whole bird. On his own.

I poured another measure of maple syrup into my bowl. Not too much, just enough to coat the bottom of it. I was saving some space for the white chocolate macadamia nut cookies that sat on the counter.

“You need to sleep,” I said quietly. My mate was all cheekbones and blue eyes now that he’d lopped off his dreads from hell. It made his skin look thin and taut, and only served to emphasize the blue smudges under the line of his thick black lashes.

Despite his exhaustion, he was still utterly beautiful.

Trowbridge nodded. “I will after I—”

“Uh-huh,” I cut in. “After you’ve battened down the hatches. Set the picket lines. Shored up the defenses. Got all that. But anyone could see that you’re about to do a face-plant into your plate. You might want to talk fast.”

I’m hell with the love talk. But we were both exhausted, even though it was only eight
P.M.
It was taking everything I had not to crack my jaw into a yawn. I wouldn’t mind going to bed even if it meant lying flat on a mattress and going “ah.”

Gorgeous sat up straighter. “I don’t need much sleep.”

I licked at the spoon, tasting the sweetness of the maple syrup. Damned if Trowbridge’s gaze hadn’t shifted to the point of my tongue. A little flicker of a single blue comet did a quick circuit around his widening pupil.

I gave him a faint smile before my gaze drifted to the black felt bowler sitting on top of refrigerator. I’d done very well not looking at my twin’s hat through the meal, but now its presence could not be ignored.

My palm went from warm and safe in Trowbridge’s grip to a trifle damp and sweating.

I slipped it free.

Goddess, spare me. I’m going to Merenwyn to rescue Lexi.
Where, according to the few facts I’d chiseled out of Trowbridge, there were no four-lane highways that had service stops every hour or so, where you could pee, and buy some coffee, and order a sandwich. Nope. Apparently, the Fae rode horses. And they shot arrows at people they didn’t like. Silver-tipped. Who does that? An arrowhead piercing your spine had to hurt worse than a bullet. Hell, just shoot me and get it over with. Having something stick out of you and bob with every one of your breaths? I’ve done that. It sucks. I don’t ever want to do that again.

If the Fae don’t get me, the wolves will.

I’d demanded to be there when the Old Mage destroyed the Book of Spells. And I’d made a pledge to myself—yeah, we all know how well Hedi sticks to pledges—that I would destroy the old wizard’s soul, and in so doing, free my twin’s.

Sounds noble. Until you deconstruct the act. Take it down to a step-by-step event. First, I had to summon the Gates to Merenwyn and travel to the Fae realm. Usually, calling the portal to this world posed a real problem for me (as in hah-hah-impossible), but now, finally, Hedi Stronghold Peacock Trowbridge had the means to call the gates. All because last night—
Goddess, was it only last night?
—a man named Knox tried to kill me. He’d been sent by the NAW (the Council of North American Weres) to call me on the carpet for a blatant case of treaty-breaking plus two counts of murder.

For the record, I only killed one person and she totally deserved it. Though on reflection—and I try so hard not to waste time doing that—I don’t think my guilt or innocence really mattered. There had been a whiff of kangaroo to the trial that had followed.

The outcome of that inquiry hadn’t ended well for my accuser, Knox.

He’d died. I lived.

C’est la vie.

But before he was dispatched with a one-way ticket to the happy hunting ground, the fool had actually captured the Fae portal’s materialization—from the first notes of the summons all the way to the end of the big event—on his cell phone. With his last breath, he’d hit send, and a copy of the video had been delivered to his girlfriend’s e-mail address.

I’d seen the tape. Trowbridge had played it for us once during dinner. In the last frame the Gates of Merenwyn hovered over the fairy pond like something out of a Disney movie. All myst and lights and magic.

What had seemed like a sour lemon last night—just who the hell was Brenda Pritty and what damage could she do to us?—had turned into big glass of sweet lemonade. Now, thanks to the video, all we had to do was hit Replay. The song would be sung, compliments of the recording, and the portal would appear. Trowbridge and I would step through the gates
(whoosh)
, then take a stroll through Merenwyn’s countryside
(Who me? Sure I belong there)
to find my twin
(no sweat)
, and somehow maneuver to be in the right place
(beside Lexi)
, in time to watch the Book of Spells being destroyed
(tadah!).

Following that, I planned to effortlessly transport my soul to Threall where I would tear the Old Mage’s soul free from what remained of my brother’s and earn freedom for all.

All of which would be doable if I wasn’t Hedi, the mouse-hearted.

“Stop thinking,” murmured Trowbridge. His hand lay lax on the kitchen table. There was an odd callus on top of the first knuckle of his thumb.
I should ask him about that,
I thought, studying the way his veins forked like warm tributaries.

Truth? I could stare at his tendons, scars, large knuckles, and oddly callused skin all night. To me, his paw was beautiful, even if the world deemed it ugly because it only had a thumb, a pointer, and an f-u digit left.

It was the hand that stroked my hair
and
killed Knox.

It was a very good paw.

The tap ran as Harry filled his glass. His white hair gleamed in the light as he tilted his head back for a long drink. Once finished, he used the back of his gnarled hand to wipe his mouth dry.

Biggs scratched his shoulder as he stifled a yawn.

“Close your mouth, Chihuahua.” Cordelia brushed past him, pen and notebook in hand. She’s big on lists, and sublists. She sat, adjusted her red wig, then put nib to paper. “What do we really need on this trip, Bridge? Can we take weapons across the portal?”

They shoot at people in Merenwyn. They trap wolves. And they’ve probably never met a six-foot ex–drag queen.
All right. That. Was. It.
I fixed her straight. “You’re not coming with us. It’s just going to be Bridge and me.”

“If this is about me being—”

“This is about the fact that I’m not losing any more people that I care about.”

Especially not another mother.
I stared her down. Gritty-eyed and stone-faced. I’d accepted that I couldn’t change the course already set for me and Trowbridge—our lives would always be irrevocably entwined. It’s the downside, the hidden clause to the wonder of the mate bond: if a Were dies, his chosen mate soon follows.

But their lives—Cordelia, Anu, Harry, and Biggs—would not be added to the butcher’s list. I wasn’t giving up another family member to satisfy retribution’s appetite.

I’ve lost too much, and I’m a very sore loser.

It took three “Mississippis” before my mother-who-wasn’t lowered her eyes.

Feeling a sweep of queasiness, and a general unwillingness to catch my lover’s penetrating gaze, I took refuge in the deep contemplation of the dregs of syrup coating the bottom of my bowl.

All hail, Hedi.

Queen Bitch of the Trowbridge kitchen.

*   *   *

This sudden need to assert myself—where’d that come from? Last week I’d been the slacker. Now, I was kept trembling on the edge of hear-me-roar-Hedi. Had some until now untapped portion of me finally realized the urgent and somewhat tardy need to haul ass?

Silence hummed in the room—appliances’ motors filling in the place where words should be spoken. Feigning calm, I picked up my spoon.

Don’t say anything, Trowbridge.

Let it be my decision.

I knew it must be mine, just like I recognized that I needed to catch up to everyone else in the worst way. Yes, Hedi had been a slacker; not doing much more than dozing over the last ten years. Okay, we’re talking figuratively now—I didn’t spend a decade lying on some posy-strewn bier, pale hands folded over my maidenly chest, eyes closed, lips sealed, whiling my way through a fairy princess’s enchanted snooze.

But nonetheless, I’d not been here either—participating in life like other people my own age, getting my requisite bruises, learning how to self-heal. I’d been both awake and asleep. You can do that—move through life in a dazed semicoma. Seriously. People do it all the time. They go to their job. They come home, watch television, or read a book. They eat, and drink, and shower, and do the laundry, and play who-gets-paid-now with the bills, and sometimes, they watch people from a window, wondering what it would feel like to embrace life again …

I traced a circle in the bowl with the edge of my spoon.

Yes. You can do all those things without being really here. Three-quarters asleep. Just doing the stuff you needed to do, while some part of you dozed and waited to be brought to life.

That sounds sad, and I’m not a sad person.

Biggs suddenly asked, “Do you think Whitlock doesn’t know that Knox is dead?”

“Oh dear God,” I heard Cordelia mutter. “The longer I’m around you, the less I’m convinced that you have anything between your ears other than the cheat notes for Skyrim. Do you really think the head of North American Weres doesn’t know that two of his men are dead? Of course he knows. Reeve Whitlock probably knows what we had for dinner.”

“I have thoughts,” said Briggs, clearly aggrieved. “Deep thoughts.”

I listened to someone pick up the liter of pop and give it a cautious shake.

“Anyone want the last bit of Coke?” asked Biggs.

I felt for the point of my ear, traced the sharp peak and felt absolutely no cessation of anxiety.

“There’s one more thing I have to do,” my mate said.

“What’s that, boss?” asked Harry.

“I have to call the Sisters.”

The silence that filled the room after that pronouncement was simply deafening.

 

Chapter One

Trowbridge’s belly button was kind of amazing—the tip of my baby finger fit perfectly in its shallow divot. Underneath it, the muscle was a hard slab. I stroked it again, marveling how two opposites could be such a good fit.

For instance, if you’re talking navels, I have to admit mine is deep. Only my Goddess knows exactly
how
deep. I’ve never stuck my finger in it to check, possibly because you don’t do that sort thing when you have an inner-bitch taking a snooze by your spine. She might bite it. Or worse—my Fae might grab it because she’s the type of ride-along persona given to doing “gotcha” crap like that.

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