Free Read Novels Online Home

The Darkness in Dreams: A Calata Novel (Enforcer's Legacy Book 1) by Sue Wilder (38)

CHAPTER 38

Seattle, Washington

Lexi was floating in a sea of sparkling light surrounded by darkness. Memory lines unfurled as she drifted. Faces appeared. She stared at those she didn’t know, let them pass with unseeing eyes. But others caused her heart to pound and brought her closer to the surface. Light shimmered in aqua waves and she looked around, seeking the face of a man, the voice that was always present, calling for her, using different names. Soft names. Foreign names. Familiar names. She heard the voice clearly, heard him asking where she was, but he was so far away she let him go and drifted onward until she slept.

The next time Lexi woke she found herself in a room. Someone was with her, sitting in a chair and silent as stone. It was an alien presence different from Six, yet similar, combining an odd mixture of observations, more curious than concerned. It took more than a few seconds for Lexi to orient herself.

The room was decorated in tones of beige and moss green. The furniture was modern with a hint of Scandinavia. Someone had placed her on a couch and she was wearing her own clothes, a loose cotton shirt and jeans. For a moment, Lexi remembered the battle and thought the clothes should be bloody. But they were clean and soft against her skin. Music drifted in the background, Nesum dorma, which Lexi remembered meant “None Shall Sleep.” The aria was from an opera by Puccini. It had been one of her favorites.

“You’re near Seattle,” a cool voice remarked. The woman sat in a cream-colored upholstered chair. There was something regal about her posture and the pale hair swept back from a patrician face. Her hands were folded precisely. An opal-colored silk blouse and tailored pants reinforced the image of quiet authority.

The woman's eyes, though, were dangerously silver. She waited while Lexi pushed upright on the couch.

“You were in Zurich,” the woman continued as the music faded. “In a converted building Six maintains. I brought you to Seattle two days ago. I’ve allowed you to sleep because you needed to heal. And I needed to decide what to do with you.”

“Why must you do anything with me?”

“That was inelegantly phrased.” The woman lifted her hand, but the gesture was lost in the brilliant light streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows. Water shimmered across the bay, and in the far distance, Lexi could see the distinctive skyline. “I am Three. You are safe here, Gaia.”

“My name is Lexi.”

“You were Gaia when we first met. I will always think of you as Gaia.”

Lexi shifted on the couch, felt her muscles protest. All the tiny cuts Six had inflicted were gone. The only trace of the battle was the pink scar across her palm. Lexi glanced at the Calata member who’d kept her asleep while deciding what to do. The immortal was sitting with absolute calm, watching her.

“What is it you wish to know?” the woman asked.

“Why I’m here.”

“They attacked you in Florence.”

“Not just me.”

“True. The enemy attacks you in the alley, and when he loses he makes it worse by doing something stupid, like attacking the villa. It is the way of things.”

Immortal things?”

The woman nodded. “You understand that Six is my enemy?”

“Yes.”

“He started this war.”

Lexi glanced around, not entirely comfortable in the woman’s presence. This was Three, the immortal who had forced Christan from the Void, who believed he belonged to her. A woman involved with the Agreement that took away the choice. Lexi could feel the power radiating through the air when the woman moved and realized the immortal was exerting a subtle intimidation.

Lexi would not be intimidated. She held the immortal’s steady gaze and waited.

Three, however, merely smiled. The opalescence of her clothing reflected the colors in the sky as she crossed one knee over the other and readjusted her hands.

“Who provoked whom?” Lexi asked.

“He provoked me.” The immortal shrugged. “I provoked him. That’s how you ended up in Zurich.”

“I thought I ended up in Zurich because of Christan.”

“You did,” Three said, watching Lexi carefully. “Six knew I wouldn’t bring Christan back while you were here unless there was an advantage. I knew the same thing. Six should have figured it out before he compelled Christan to Zurich.”

“You wanted Six to take Christan?”

“Yes, if it was necessary.”

“Why, for god’s sake?”

“I needed you to perform the blood bond. You would only do it if you thought you were saving Christan’s life.”

Lexi thought about the attack on the villa, the barking dog, a woman’s scream. Broken hands and a pool of blood on a concrete floor. It took a moment before she could speak. “Why didn’t you just ask me?” It was only blood. She would have agreed.

Three turned her head slightly to the left and said, “Christan would have refused if he’d known.”

Lexi swallowed once and glanced around the elegant room. “You did it behind his back?”

Three remained silent, not a good sign.

“How could torturing Christan possibly benefit you?”

“He was never in any real danger.”

“You didn’t see him.”

“I didn’t need to see him, I know what he is.”

Lexi tried to be calm. “People died at that villa.”

“You say that with such shock,” the immortal said. “But Christan has belonged to me much longer than he has belonged to you. I understand him better than you. I made a decision rather than arguing about it.”

Lexi turned her head to stare through the large windows toward the glittering water beyond. There were differences between human and immortal perspectives that couldn’t be explained. When she glanced back at Three, the woman was watching as if daring judgement.

“The answer is yes,” the immortal said.

“About what?”

“I appreciate a need for blood when necessary. But I am not evil. What I did had to be done. When we created warriors, we knew the alchemy was not an exact science. There was a risk.”

“What kind of risk?”

“That our characteristics would dominate and the warriors would become totally ruthless and amoral.”

“And ruthless, amoral warriors might be inconvenient?” Lexi asked.

Three ignored the sarcasm. “You’ve encountered Kace on multiple occasions. You tell me.”

Lexi didn’t answer.

The immortal said, “No one has survived more than Christan has, nor paid a higher price, but he’d stayed too long in the Void. I needed him more human and the blood bond was the fastest way.”

Lexi stared at a shaft of sunlight on the floor.  Her eyes blurred.

“Why?”

“Blood bonds are transformative.”

“And you needed him transformed?”

“Any Enforcer can destroy, Gaia. But an Enforcer with the capability of destroying completely, who can also wield vengeance and justice—that man can be terrifying. And I need Christan to be terrifying.”

A well-dressed man entered the living room. He was tall with short brown hair. Lexi noticed he wore red suspenders beneath his suit jacket, and he was carrying a tray with a white ceramic carafe and two cups on delicate saucers. He set the tray silently on the table. The impression he made was that of an academic, perhaps an advisor, but Lexi suspected he was something quite different. It was in the way he moved.

The music had stopped, and the weight of silence became oppressive. To distract herself, Lexi studied the bookshelves that lined one wall. Artifacts from several centuries were displayed, bits of black and red pottery, bone fetishes. Small antlers were tied with red woven cords, reminding Lexi of the driftwood, tied with red thread, which she’d kept at her cottage before it was destroyed.

Beside the antlers were books with bindings that appeared old and authentic. The dry scent of leather was tangible in the air.

“Do you like books?” Three asked.

“I see you have several on alchemy.”

“I was one of the original alchemists.”

“Christan said he was created.”

The immortal nodded “The theories were mine, as was the Agreement. The magic was Two’s area of expertise.”

Three reached for the carafe. From the aroma, it was coffee and the immortal poured two cups, asking if Lexi desired cream or sugar. Yes, to the cream, Lexi nodded. No to the sugar. It was all quite civilized. The woman handed over the cup and explained how the murder instilled fear in the Calata and they’d demanded some means for self-protection. But it was risky magic, Three said as she lifted her cup to her lips. The alchemists were creating a new species, half-immortal and half-human. They were careful with the knowledge. Lexi remembered Marge saying the magic was too dangerous to be left in the world.

“Did you destroy the magic, or is it hidden?”

No answer.

“Surely you can fight with human weapons and mercenaries. You don’t need warriors.”

“Humans have become quite imaginative with their killing,” agreed Three. But warriors possessed unique talents that couldn’t be replaced with robots and drones. Enforcers like Christan were essential. They kept the peace in an immortal society notoriously difficult to control. Without control, Three explained, there would be chaos. Since the beginning, there had been those who wanted power. Enforcers were required to put the rebellions down. No other beings possessed the power, other than Calata—and even then, there was some question now that the blood bond had been performed. The explanation was given with the bite of winter lost in an interim world. Lexi found it unnerving.

“You always anticipated needing Christan to be more powerful than he was.”

The immortal nodded. “The threat is complex and simple at the same time. Power is balanced on the Calata, but I realized the day would come when one member would want more power than the others. You understand the Agreement is weakening. We believe these attacks on the girls are designed to draw out our Enforcers, to destroy them.”

“Wouldn’t that be an attack on all the Calata?”

Three made a dismissive gesture. “Not all warriors mated, particularly those serving the male members of the Calata. They felt it wasn’t advantageous.”

“Then these attacks are aimed directly at you?”

“One has also suffered attacks. I believe even Two’s girls have been attacked. I couldn’t protect them all and fight a war without bringing Christan back. The only question was whether you were worth the risk.”

“Because he hated me?”

“Because you look too much like Gemma. You remind him of something that is not true, yet he believes it as fiercely as he denies every argument I make. I knew he would never agree to anything if you were involved. I took the risk that your guilt over what Gemma did would drive you to make amends, to the extent of saving his life.”

Lexi glanced down and brushed one finger across the new memory line. Gemma’s line, entwined around the others. “You used me.”

Three nodded. “When I forced Christan to commit to the Agreement, I was using you. I did the same thing after forcing him from the Void. I’m using you now by keeping you here and I’ll continue to use you if necessary. I’ve used all the girls.”

“Do you even consider what Christan wants?”

“I’m quite fond of him.”

“You’ve asked him to do horrendous things.”

“He has always accepted the necessity.”

The immortal replaced her cup on the tray and rose to her feet. She walked to the windows. Beyond the thick glass, the water in the bay reflected moving shards of silver light. The weather was changing. Clouds were massing on the horizon. Seabirds cried in the distance.

“You believe he now seeks redemption?” Three asked. “For these sins I’ve forced him to commit?”

“Why did Christan go into the Void?”

“He has not told you?”

“I’m sure he wouldn’t even if I asked. You, however, don’t have any qualms.”

Three’s posture remained elegant, thoughtful, but Lexi could read the tension in the woman’s back.

“After Gemma’s death, Christan had a blood debt against Kace. He would have collected if I hadn’t intervened. Such an act would have caused a Calata war, but that is not why Christan put himself in the Void.” Three paused, as if considering her words. “I asked him to do something, and the result was so horrendous he believes he is no longer the man he once was—or could ever be again.”

“What did you ask him to do?”

“Something that is now immortal myth.” Three made a slight negative movement with her head. “It was easy enough. An immortal killed innocent women and children. I found the crime grotesque. I demanded justice and embedded a one word for vengeance so deeply into Christan’s mind he will never be free. Then I ordered him into the jungle. Ordered him to extend the execution for twenty-three days, one day for each victim. I told him to break each bone, wait until the immortal healed and break the bones again. Strip the flesh until the files swarmed. When Christan asked to extend mercy in the form of a quick death, I denied him. Compelled him through the one word to continue as I had asked. They call it the eighteen days of dying. That’s how long it took me to realize what I’d done. But I waited too long. Christan had given up too much of himself and I almost couldn’t pull him back.”

Three was quiet. Then she turned and put her back to the light. Her tone was suddenly bitter.

“I chose his life for him,” she said. “I damaged him in the process. But you, Gaia—you destroyed him in that lifetime. When he came out of that jungle he needed you more than he ever needed anyone in his long life. You were the one person who could have convinced him of the truth. Offered him redemption. And your answer was to turn your back and ask his greatest enemy to kill him.”

But the immortal was not finished. When she spoke, the words were stones laid heavily on Lexi’s heart.

“Christan could have endured everything, except one thing. He was created to be an Enforcer, a man of justice and honor. But he could not protect you from Kace. When he saw you on that road, when—after the fighting was over and he found your broken body—he realized that he’d lost all sense of honor. He believed that he'd failed in his responsibility to protect you. That was the sin he could not forgive and it was not even his sin, Gaia. It was yours, when you hated him enough to run to Kace.”

The coffee cup clattered as Lexi returned it to the tray. All this time, she had believed asking Kace to kill him was the worst thing she’d ever done. But now she saw the depth of the destruction. Beneath her skin, Gemma’s memory line began to twist. Lexi gripped her wrist, trying to halt the pain.

Nothing helped. The images flared, burned: Christan, staring into the fire, hearing her voice. Turning his head, a look of such deep grief and pain. Guilt. Anger. Lexi bent beneath it. Gemma had looked at him—god, she remembered the disgust in the curl of Gemma’s mouth. The irritation Gemma felt over her own selfish hurts, the precise expression on her face when she turned and walked from the room.

Trembling, Lexi wondered how she could fight her way through those memories and still look at Christan. He said he’d forgiven Gemma, but Lexi couldn’t forgive herself. Not now. There was only one thought that was coherent.

“You keep calling me Gaia.”

“Because you are Gaia. You’re Gemma. You’re all of them.”


Lexi found it difficult to sit still. The look on Christan’s face was beaten into her memory. That night on a moon-shot road so long ago, when she’d thought the bitter condemnation on his face had been directed at her—it had been directed toward himself. He stood alone in the glow of silver as if he was disappearing into a cold black place from which he would never return—and she hadn’t even tried to reach him, answer him. He’d been destroyed, worse than anything she’d seen other than when he’d been bending over her in Zurich with his hands on her face. Her eyes were too blurry to see the skyline of Seattle, but she pretended a great interest.

“Where is Christan?”

“You mean where did he go after he destroyed a three-story building in Zurich?” The Immortal had returned to her chair. “He’s gone to war.”

“I’m not sure what that means.”

“It means he went back to Florence, and when he didn’t find you there, he did what he does best—he destroys things. Arsen and Darius are with him.”

Lexi shifted restlessly. “Only two warriors went with him?”

“You’re worried?” Three arched a blond eyebrow. “Don’t be. You’ve seen him fight when he was only annoyed. Now he’s angry and vengeful and he has a blood bond flowing in his veins. There was a reason why civilizations in Central America made blood sacrifices to keep him pacified. He abhorred the practice and retreated to Europe. He will send a much-needed message to Six, and then he will calm down and we will have a rational conversation.”

“Do you understand Christan at all?”

“I understand him quite well.”

“Yet you’ve manipulated every aspect of his life, forced him—by your own words—to do the things you require. Did you ever give him a choice? Or were all the repeating lifetimes with me simply a way to get him to do what you want?”

Three’s expression was impassive. “Your description lacks a certain flair.”

“And your actions reveal your total lack of understanding when it comes to human love.”

“Christan has always made his own decisions. He follows a code of honor, and you do him a disservice if you think I can manipulate him to such an extent. He wanted those lifetimes with you and I gave them to him. I manipulated the circumstances, but I also gave him options. He makes his own choices. But you, Gaia, you have surpassed my expectations.”

“In what way?” Lexi asked, oddly detached now that the shock had passed.

“You would do anything to protect him now.”

Lexi shifted her gaze slightly, caught by the sparkle of light reflecting through the windows. The bay had taken on the look of dented metal, and Lexi imagined her heart was as bruised as the water. It hurt, so damn much to realize every painful turn in every repeating lifetime was based upon options to achieve Three’s desired end. The enormity of that realization was crippling.

What had Renata said? “You are a used thing, not even in control of your own choices.”

And Katerina believed her entire life was a lie.

Perhaps that was Christan’s hidden truth, the secret he kept from himself, the sentiment he had tried to put into words when he told her not to hope for happy endings with someone as far from her as he was.

They stood on opposite sides of a moon-shot road with no way to reach across. He’d been tortured because Three needed him bound to a bond in blood he didn’t want. Lexi had taken away his choice as he had taken hers all those centuries ago. Not through love, or need, or even desire, but because human emotions had been exploited by an immortal who needed a weapon to fight a war.

Lexi could see how it played out, lifetime after lifetime. How she and Christan were irrevocably changed. There was nothing she could do to alter that, other than take away the leverage. Most of her life had been spent learning how to take away the leverage that other people had to hurt her. Her mother. Men who were not Christan. This was no different. She could put an end to this cycle that was slowly destroying their lives. Using her. To force Christan. Because Three had wars to fight.

Lexi stared through the windows, saw the boat dock beyond the deck, rising gently on the incoming tide. The clouds that danced like angels on the horizon. The stars she knew were hidden in that deep recess and would only be visible at midnight. She counted them, tears leaking from her heart.

Love, he had said, was for the angels, and he had never been allowed in heaven.

Time thinned out, buried in pain. But perhaps, in the end, the immortal had been right. Lexi would to anything to protect Christan.

“I would like to go home.”

“Back to Florence?”

“To Rock Cove.”

“He will find you there.”

Lexi refocused, directly meeting those strange silver eyes. “Not if you mask my presence.”

“I can certainly mask your energy, if that’s what you want—although you can do that for yourself, now. There were benefits to you, too, with the blood bond.”

“I don’t want them.”

“Unfortunately, they’re irrevocable.” Three folded her slim hands and rested them in her lap. “But I would ask first why you want me to do this.”

“If you must ask,” Lexi said quietly, “then you don’t understand anything.”

Three tapped an elegant finger against her silk-clad knee.

“Two said something to me before she went away. She said that it began with Gaia, and it would end with Gaia. What do you think that meant?”

“I have no idea.”

“You do surprise me,” Three murmured again. “I don’t think this will be the end between you and me.”

Search

Search

Friend:

Popular Free Online Books

Read books online free novels

Hot Authors

Sam Crescent, Zoe Chant, Flora Ferrari, Mia Madison, Alexa Riley, Lexy Timms, Claire Adams, Sophie Stern, Elizabeth Lennox, Leslie North, Amy Brent, Frankie Love, C.M. Steele, Madison Faye, Jenika Snow, Jordan Silver, Kathi S. Barton, Michelle Love, Dale Mayer, Bella Forrest, Mia Ford, Delilah Devlin, Sloane Meyers, Piper Davenport, Amelia Jade,

Random Novels

Mismatch by Lisa Lace

Body Heat by Piper King

Ghost in His Eyes by Carrie Aarons

A One Night Affair (Kissing the Boss Book 2) by Fionn Jameson

Chase Me by Award, Aidy

Long Lost Omega: An Mpreg Romance (Trouble In Paradise Book 2) by Austin Bates

Micah's Bride (All the King's Men Book 9) by Donya Lynne

Three Beasts: A Dark Fairytale MFMM Menage Romance by Dark Angel

Alpha's Prize: A Werewolf Romance (Bad Boy Alphas Book 3) by Renee Rose, Lee Savino

Drive by Kate Stewart

Infraction (Players Game Book 2) by Rachel Van Dyken

Royal Baby Maker by Nora Flite

Chasing The Night: Part 3 of Her Big Easy Wedding by Abby Knox

Don't Forget About Me: A Second Chance Amnesia Romance by Eva Luxe, Juliana Conners

Drift (Guarding Her Book 2) by Anna Brooks

Kinda Don't Care by Lani Lynn Vale

Paying The Debt (Innocence Claimed Book 3) by Madison Faye

His Million-Dollar Marriage Proposal by Jennifer Hayward

B.I.L.F.: A Brother In Law Romance by Dark Angel

The Billionaire From Seattle: A Thrilling BWWM Romance (United States Of Billionaires Book 17) by Simply BWWM, Tasha Blue