I wasn’t sure how I knew it. I could feel deep in my soul, that he wasn’t human. He wasn’t one of the undead or a demon either. He had a pulse, one that had kicked up right alongside mine as he’d gotten close to me. I planned to make him my business, and figure out exactly why he was here, and what he wanted.
I moved back to the funeral and stood silently beside my mother, who turned and smiled at me as I looked across the casket, to where Lucian stood. His eyes were locked on mine, and a cocky grin was plastered across his full lips. One I planned to remove right along with him and his club. This town wasn’t for sale, and I’d make sure I got that message across to whatever the hell he was.
*~*~*
The funeral and ceremony went off without a hitch, and Todd was returned to the leyline, where his soul was freed to give the coven power, as well as to be reborn if it was meant to be. I wasn’t sad that he was dead, which bothered me, but I didn’t have time to dwell on it either. I kissed my grandmother and mother goodbye as I joined Kat in her car with a few of our other friends.
We headed out to the abandoned church that was about two miles outside of town and got out of the car; my mind couldn’t shake the niggling feeling that I knew Lucian, but I didn’t have the first clue as to where I knew him from.
“Are you having second thoughts?” Kat asked, her crystalline eyes held mine as she watched me.
“No, are you?” I asked, countering her and turning it back on her.
“No, demons are real and we have to protect the coven. I’m all in.”
“Good,” I said, watching as the others who had been awakened with us, filed into the empty church. “It’s time to train.”
“You think the coven is on to us?” Dexter asked, his eyes moving from me to Kat. “Your mother hasn’t seemed to notice, but your grandmother, she’s smarter than most.”
“Blackstone and his men are here for a reason, and Carolina and Brian were attacked by demons less than forty miles away from our home. No one in the coven believed them except us and that’s weird. Normally word of demons freaks them out and this time it’s like they’re all hiding their heads in the sand. No, now is not the time to sit down and let shit happen. We all have holes in our memories and I for one want to know what is missing up here,” I said as I tapped my head. “It’s time to protect the coven as our ancestors did in the times when it was needed. We protect our own, at all cost. Even from themselves when it’s needed. If we’re under attack, we need to be prepared to strike hard and fast, and it will take more than just magic to send them a message. If the demons are here, or coming for us, we’ll be ready for anything they try.”
Cries of agreement went up and I smiled as all of us gathered into a circle, held hands, and recited the spell from the grimoire Alden had given me. Along with the lessons in control, he had been passing along things the elders of the coven had kept hidden from us. He didn’t have his head in the sand as the others seemed to be inclined to do, and I was thankful. The old man had even brought in a select few of his own coven to train us to fight, to prepare us for battle should a demon come to our doors. If demons were closing in on our coven, we’d be ready. I had no intention of meeting them unprepared or without skills to defend those I loved.
It was time for our coven to start fighting back, instead of waiting to be slaughtered or running. Too many lives hung in the balance, and too many times, the bad guys won the battle. Things weren’t adding up and the older witches of the coven seemed oblivious to what was happening around us. We’d told them of demons, they’d ignored it. We gave them details of the attack; they’d brushed us off as if we had been spinning tales instead of stating facts. No more.
I looked around the circle at the nervous witches, and smiled reassuringly as the pages of the grimoire started turning on their own. Eyes widened, and power moved through the circle. The fire crackled and the clouds moved to reveal the full Harvest moon. It was time to unite this coven, and make it a force that monsters feared.
Whatever we faced, we’d face it together…Head on. In the last few weeks we’d come a long way, and we would only move forward. There was no looking back, not now, not ever. There would be no more running, no hiding from the enemies of old, for this coven. This was our time, and we would be prepared for whatever came looking for us.
~The End For Now~
About the Author
Amelia lives in the great Pacific Northwest with her family. When not writing, she can be found on her author page, hanging out with fans, or dreaming up new twisting plots. She’s an avid reader of everything paranormal romance.
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Chapter 1
It’s cold tonight.
But not just any kind of cold. The kind of cold that seeps into your pores and leaves a dusting of frost on your bones. The kind that chills your blood, making it congeal in your stiffening veins.
I’ve walked the same route to work every night, saying silent prayers for safety. Dope dealers and prostitutes scurry from the flickering harshness of broken streetlights like cockroaches, dodging undercover cops and the prying eyes of passersby. No one speaks to each other unless they want something, and even then, they settle for swift words in clipped tones. I’m invisible here. No one wants anything from me. And even if they did, I have nothing to give.
“Watch it, bitch,” an asshole in an ugly green parka barks out as he nearly mows me down, loud enough to drown out the hip-hop music blaring from my earbuds. It’s begun to snow, and instead of focusing on his steps, he’s resorted to walking through anyone who stands between him and warm, dry shelter and his next drink.
“Excuse you,” I sneer, glaring back at him from over my shoulder.
“Yeah, fuck you,” he spits, casting his middle finger to the heavens.
I feel it inside of me. The heat of his hatred. The blackness of his soul. His eyes are empty, glazed depths of sorrow and poison. His yellowed, clammy skin is merely a vehicle for the chemical waste wrapped around weakening bones.
I find the whispers flooding my mind before I can resist them, the voices so distinct that I can no longer hear J. Cole’s lyrical diatribe rattling my skull. I should fight them, but I don’t. I don’t want to. Not this time. I’ve been fighting pricks like this my entire life. At some point, you learn to fight back.
Electric synapses fire with the command, and my lips part to utter a single word.
“Fall.”
He doesn’t even see the patch of ice before the heel of his scuffed boot skates across it. Arms flail violently as he tries to regain his balance, but it’s too late. He’s airborne—suspended in time like the feather-light snowflakes swirling around us. And before a single, blood-curdling scream is ripped from his throat, he hits the piss-stained sidewalk with a deafening crack.
I exhale through the taste of metal in my mouth, and keep walking, leaving pain and chaos in my wake. I turn up the music as loud as it’ll go to drown out
the desperate cries for help.
I never said I fought fair.
***
“You’re here early,” Lily smiles when I enter the dingy corner store where we both work. Beautiful and blonde and bright, she’s much too angelic to be working in a dump like this.
I peel off my fingerless knit gloves and rub my palms together before stowing my earbuds in my coat pocket. Eduardo, the store manager and the owner’s nephew, is too cheap to turn up the heat. “Bored, and Sister had a date. Thought you could use the company. Busy tonight?”
Lily’s sky blue eyes scan the shelves and racks of chips and six packs. “Not really. But I’m glad you came in.” She smiles again. She’s always smiling, always ridiculously optimistic. And while that would annoy the crap out of me with anyone else, I genuinely enjoy her sunny disposition. It’s a welcomed change from the doom and gloom of our little slice of purgatory outside.
I step around the counter, halfway encased by bulletproof glass. Eduardo was also too cheap to spring for one that at least touched the ceiling, but some protection is better than none. “You here by yourself?” I frown. Even with the added security of cameras and an alarm system, working the night shift at any establishment in this part of town isn’t safe. Especially for someone like her.
“Logan is stocking in the back. I’m fine, really. You worry too much.”
I shake my head. I wish she worried more. Lily doesn’t know the horrors I’ve seen—the horrors I’ve created. To her, I’m just a troubled girl with a dark past that she wants to love and nurture. But in reality, I’m a troubled girl with a dark past whose thoughts and words are weapons. And while she is one of the only people I can call friends, she can’t know about me. No one can. Or else I’ll end up just like my mother.
I stash my coat and bag under the counter and slip on the ugly, maroon vest we’re forced to wear. It’s not doing me any favors over my black sweater and ripped, faded jeans, but somehow Lily still looks svelte and glamorous in it. I’ve asked what she was doing working in a rotted out neighborhood on the south side of Chicago—she looks like she comes from money, even though she swears she’s not. But something about her won’t let me believe that.
There’s a stain that poverty leaves on all it touches. It coats your palms when you’re cold. It bleeds onto your lips when you’re hungry. It paints your skin when you’re sick. You can try to scrub it away, but the result is always the same. You’re one of society’s forsaken.
Lily has never worn that stain. I would have recognized it if she did.
A bell jingles from the doorway, startling us both. I nearly gasp audibly when I see who it is.
“God, not this guy again,” Logan bristles behind us, holding a cardboard box full of Pop Tarts. Lily and I didn’t even hear him approach.
“What?” My voice is barely a whisper. The wind has been knocked out of me.
“That dude gives me the creeps,” he shakes his head, sending muddy brown curls dancing across his forehead. He drops the box and moves in closer, whispering, “I seriously think we should tell Eduardo about him. He comes in every night and buys the same exact thing…especially when you’re working.” He points his gaze at me.
“So? Maybe he works the night shift too?” I shrug.
“The night shift at a slaughterhouse. He could be a rapist or serial killer. You really want someone like that stalking you?”
I roll my eyes. “He’s not stalking me, Logan.”
“You don’t know that, Eden. He gives me a bad vibe.”
“Well, I think it’s cute. Romantic, even,” Lily chimes in, reaching up to ruffle Logan’s shaggy brown hair. I wish I could have warned her not to do that. His greasy mop probably hasn’t been washed in weeks.
“Whatever. The fucker is trouble. Just look at him.”
And as if some biological instinct hooks itself within muscle and bone, transforming me into a lust-strung marionette, I do.
The first time he came in, nearly six weeks ago, he scared me. It was after three in the morning, and I didn’t hear the door chime. At least I don’t think I did. I had been engrossed in a new paperback and my Kendrick Lamar playlist, and didn’t notice him until he was silently standing before me. No sound of footfalls or the rasp of his breath. He just stood there, watching me, waiting for me to notice him. I nearly shrieked and fell over from my stool.
The next night, I was stunned once again by his presence, but this time, the flavor of my curiosity was something different altogether. I actually let myself look at him, while silently praying that he couldn’t see me.
He was tall and built like someone who trained religiously. I thought maybe he played for the Bears or maybe even the Bulls, but the way he moved was almost too lithe and graceful to pin him as an athlete. Yet, there was something uniquely feral about it. And his face…hard and menacing, yet unquestionably pretty. Like he knew he was gorgeous, yet didn’t want to be. Still, even the dark scruff on his chiseled jaw seemed precise and elegant.
When he approached the register, I tried not to stare at him, but I wanted to see his eyes. I needed to know what darkness lurked behind this massive beast of a man. But he wouldn’t look at me. He simply slid his Arizona Iced Tea and pack of mints across the counter and waited silently for me to ring him up.
I couldn’t breathe. The air had been sucked right out of the room. I felt lightheaded and my fingers began to shake violently. The whispers began to snake their way into my skull, urging me to say the words. Look at me. Look at me. But my tongue had turned to lead that not even my mind’s compulsion could move.
I was grateful. I had a feeling his gaze could turn me to stone.
He came in everyday after, buying only his canned iced tea and wintergreen mints. Sometimes it was at the start of my shift. Sometimes toward the end. He never spoke, never met my eyes. I’d watch him from across the store and mentally record his movements and the way his dark clothes seemed to stretch around his body like a designer glove. Something about him was dangerous, but not in the criminal way. But in the way that made my senses hum with anticipation and fear every time I heard the entrance door chime. The way that made me afraid of myself.
Tonight is different though. He’s dressed in similar clothing. He goes straight to the back for tea and mints. And he doesn’t meet my eyes. That’s nothing new. But there’s something else…something off. I can feel it in the way the air seems to pulse with excitement around his frame.
It’s 10:40 p.m. I’m not scheduled until 11. How would he have known I had come in almost half an hour early? I look to Logan whose dark eyes are trained on the mysterious stranger/my would-be stalker.
The man approaches the register with unhurried steps, although I can tell that tension grips his shoulders like a vise. I make a move to the counter to ring him up like I do every night, but before I can take a full step forward, Lily darts into my path, beating me to it.
“I’ve got it,” she smiles sweetly. “Still my drawer and I don’t want to mess up tonight’s count.”
Right. Although, that’s never mattered before.
A voice echoes in my head, but I shut it down before I can make out the words.
Lily rings up the items swiftly without her usual friendly chatter. But just before the man can escape our intense scrutiny, she plasters on a smile and asks him, “Will there be anything else?”
I hold my breath as he slowly lifts his chin to face her, giving me a full view of the man who’s haunted my daydreams everyday for the past six weeks.
Gray. His eyes are gray, but the most stunning shade I’ve ever seen. As if they were plucked from the crying heavens, coated in stardust and cast in steel. His eyelashes are thick and dark, much like the hair that layers his chin and surrounds full, sensual lips. A marled charcoal beanie sits atop his head, allowing just the tips of his hair to tease me.
/> He’s too beautiful to be cold, but I know, without a doubt, he’s frozen solid to the core. Still, every cell in my body is engulfed in flames just by his proximity. I’m almost certain I could melt the bulletproof glass just by squeezing my thighs together.
He squints for one quick fraction of a second, and before I can even decipher the inflection, he turns and stalks out the store. I’m speechless…scared. But not of him. I’m scared of the way my body burns for this complete stranger who has never even spoken to me.
“I told you…totally psycho,” Logan proclaims after a long stretch of uncomfortable silence. “He’s probably that guy that called and asked for your schedule earlier today, Eden.”
I hear him. I just don’t want to. “What did you say?”
“Yeah. Eduardo answered. Some guy wanted to know what your hours were.”
I frown. “You sure he was asking about me?” I’ve never been the topic of interest. And I’ve worked damn hard to keep it that way.
“Pretty sure. He asked for the girl with the silver hair, tatts and a nose ring. You’re the only one around here that fits that description. We didn’t tell him anything, of course. But still… someone was looking for you.”
I touch my short, black polished nails to my dove gray locks reflexively. To the outside world, it’s a fashion statement. But the truth is, my once jet-black hair started losing its pigment years ago. It was just a few strands at first. But then almost overnight, I had the mane of an 80 year old.