Nefarion
Page 1
EMBRACE OF THE KEEPERS BOOK 2:
NEFARION
by
Olivia March
TORRID BOOKS
www.torridbooks.com
Published by
TORRID BOOKS
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An Imprint of Whiskey Creek Press LLC
Copyright © 2018 by OLIVIA MARCH
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Names, characters and incidents depicted in this book are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of the author or the publisher.
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ISBN: 978-1-68299-286-9
Credits
Cover Artist: Kelly Martin
Editor: Dave Field
Printed in the United States of America
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Helion: Embrace of the Keepers Book 1
Dedication
This book is dedicated to my husband, who has offered limitless encouragement during this process. Also, to my two little girls, who inspire me and give me a reason to strive every day. And last, but not least, I dedicate this to my readers, who have waited so patiently for Nefarion and Annabelle to have their day.
Prologue
All in the camp was quiet. Helion walked among the tents in silence, thinking and brooding. It had been a chaotic week as his men and Melithan’s had combined and begun campaigning together. Many Scourge had died, and each night he’d been welcomed back by the soft kisses and hot embraces of his mate. The war was proceeding apace, Scourge dying in droves and losing their hold on the planet. With these successes and his newfound love of Gwen and his children, one would think he’d be brimming with contentment. And he was. But he also…wasn’t.
Always thoughts of Mithrain came back to haunt him. He’d failed his friend, and his conscience would not let him forget it. Mithrain’s body had still not been found. Helion had sent out scores of scouts, but the traitor had been thorough indeed wherever he took Mithrain. Helion missed his friend sorely and longed to do him the honor of a proper burial. He knew he wouldn’t be at ease again until he could do at least that much for his friend. Well, that and finding the scum that killed him. Helion would make sure that the traitor’s end was slow and gruesome.
But while he looked for the traitor and fought Scourge, Helion needed someone to take over the search for Mithrain. Someone with special…skills. Which was the purpose of this midnight sojourn. He could have had the Keeper he wanted summoned to his tent, but Gwen and Evelyn were deeply asleep, and the Keeper he had in mind liked to be contrary just for the sake of arguing with him. He’d kill the annoyance, but his skills were very useful on campaign, not to mention the diplomatic issues it would cause back on Arthaneas.
When Helion came upon the tent he sought he entered without bothering to announce himself. Courtesy was wasted on Nefarion, and the Keeper would have known he approached in any case. Few beings in the galaxies had the sharp sensory skills a Keeper possessed.
“Commander, to what do I owe the pleasure?” came a languid voice at the far side of the tent.
Helion tracked Nefarion to the back of the tent. It wasn’t always easy to locate him immediately. Nefarion was a Shadow Keeper of Balruin. He could blend seamlessly with the shadows until his form disappeared entirely. The Shadow Keepers preference for the dark had caused them to develop extraordinary night vision as well, making them true predators of the dark. As for Nefarion…as a prince of his people, as Helion was for his own, his skills were even more enhanced than the common run.
“There is a matter I must discuss with you Nefarion,” Helion replied finally, eying the daggers Nefarion was polishing at his table. The Keeper had laid them down and stood respectfully at Helion’s entrance. Exquisite pieces, there were at least three dozen daggers of remarkable workmanship displayed. Daggers were a shadow Keepers weapon of choice. They liked to get in close for a kill, aided by their ability to shadow themselves until their targets saw the threat too late.
“Not a complaint on my performance surely. Commander Melithan’s sensory keeper was alive and well when I left him a short time ago. The Keeper relieving me seemed a capable enough sort.”
His voice sounded bored but Helion wasn’t fooled by him. Nefarion was on high alert, more than a little curious about this visit.
“No complaints, you’ve done your duty well. And as much as I’d like to keep you on this assignment, there’s something more pressing I would like you to handle. Your unique set of skills makes you ideal for this mission.”
There was a pause, no reaction showing in Nefarion’s dark eyes. He merely maintained a watchful silence, his body completely still. Helion in fact admired this about Nefarion, even as the Keeper annoyed the hell out of him. Nefarion was a magnificent predator, still as death until it was time to strike. Then his body moved like mist over water; impossible for most to anticipate, glorious to observe.
“You’re aware our efforts to find Mithrain have been unsuccessful to date. I’ve spared as many Keepers as possible to the search, but they’ve found no sign of him. The bastard traitor was very thorough in his disposal. Though you’re much needed here for the campaign, I want you to seek out Mithrain. He was a loyal Keeper, and he deserves the dignity of a proper burial. Your mission is to find his body and return him to us.”
Nefarion was silent a moment, then replied, “And my assignment to protect Keeper Xandir?”
“Indefinitely suspended until your return from this mission. I’ve spoken to Commander Melithan, and we’ve found suitable replacements. We will reevaluate when you return.” Helion paused, then added, “The two of us hardly ever see eye to eye on anything, as you well know. But when it comes to our loyal comrades, I hope you see the importance of what I’m asking. It’s a risky assignment, but I believe you among all my men have the skills needed to be successful.”
* * * *
Nefarion held Helion’s gaze steadily for a time, gauging his sincerity. Helion had always been a fair commander but had never singled Nefarion out for any praise. To hear it now was unexpected and…heartening. Shadow Keepers weren’t the most trusted in Arthaneas. Many other Keepers were disdainful of the way Shadow Keepers kept to the shadows, striking without warning. Shadow Keepers were the best assassins of their world, which provoked fear and even loathing. To have the prince of the Light Keepers in front of him now praising the skills that others despised was unusual but welcome.
“I will bring him home Commander. I will not fail in my mission, no matter where it leads.” Nefarion bowed to Helion, who returned the gesture and wished him a safe and successful journey before leaving to return to his mate. His pregnant mate.
Nefarion had been assigned to keep an eye on the human, before the Commander had claimed her. He’d been reluctantly fascinated by the little female. Her devotion to her child was always so present in everything she did. Even running away from Helion had been an act to protect herself and her daughter, silly and pointless as the act had been. A part of him had wished there’d been some sexual attraction to the girl, but she’d never roused his interest in that way. Plus, the Commander would have skewered him with his own blades had h
e attempted to touch the lady.
But now she was pregnant. The Commander had shown through her that Keepers and humans were not only sexually compatible but breeding compatible. The news had sent shock and desire running rampant through the Keeper ranks. Keeper males outnumbered the females by a large margin. Some males went centuries without finding a mate, and many died without ever having offspring. The Commander had lain with the human only a handful of times before she’d ripened with his seed, which had turned the normally placid Keeper camp into a boiling cauldron of desire.
Nefarion distanced himself a bit from the idea however. He felt the same curiosity as the other males, wondering if he could have the same success as the Commander. But Shadow Keepers did not make easy mates. His people were brutal, and possessive. They dwelt in shadows, which were beautiful to them, but held terrors for those from outside of Balruin. Nefarion didn’t fool himself that he was an exception. Indeed, he was the rule. Nefarion was the only son of the king of Balruin. One day in the future he would take his father’s place in commanding some of the most secretive and rebellious Keepers in Arthaneas. As such he needed a strong Shadow Keeper female for his mate. A puny human, no matter her fertility, couldn’t hope to survive in Balruin.
But enough of that. He had a mission to complete now, and there was no time to waste. The midnight hour was upon him, and Shadow Keepers operated best in the night. Nefarion methodically strapped all three dozen blades on his person, packing a few other supplies as well before heading out into the darkness. Indeed, he became the night. Slipping into the shadows as effortlessly as breathing, he began his hunt.
Chapter 1
It was a beautiful night, so beautiful that Annabelle couldn’t resist taking a little risk to view some of the magnificence. Ninety-nine percent of the time she was logical and understood the necessity of staying below ground in her little hidey-hole. She’d managed to pack it with enough homey items for it to feel almost cozy at times. There was a palette with a cozy quilt, a cheap Van Gogh print rigged onto one dirty wall, and plenty of candles to give ambiance to the room and allow Annabelle to see well enough to reread the few paperbacks she had ad nauseum.
But the astronomer in her loved the night and hated being cooped up. Only a matter of life and death could keep her in that hole for days at a time. And that’s what the invasion by the Scourge was. It was the threat of death every time she stepped out of her hole. To keep her body alive, she had to sacrifice her soul, because that’s what astronomy was to her. Before the invasion, she could always be found on her rooftop with a telescope, just taking in the wonders and mysteries of space. It was overwhelming, and beautiful, and vast.
Unfortunately, she now knew that it was also deadly. And not just a random meteor might hit Earth and destroy life deadly, but in your face deadly. The Scourge race had popped Earth’s extraterrestrial cherry with a ruthless brutality that still numbed Annabelle with horror. Savage, indiscriminate killers, the Scourge had swept across Earth like a tidal wave of relentless death and suffering. Overnight, Annabelle’s life had changed, and she went from being a starry-eyed nerd who loved the stars to being a scared rabbit, going to ground in a basement concealed by the house that had collapsed on top of it. She’d found it by pure chance, noticing a set of stairs mostly concealed by debris when she’d been on the run from advancing Scourge forces.
Luck had been with her and the basement had been unlocked. Annabelle had pulled more debris around the opening in the ground and rushed into the basement to huddle like a coward. It was not her finest moment for sure, but she’d never been exposed to violence in her whole life. She was from a middle class, academic family. Her parents were teachers and she’d been cossetted and protected from some of life’s harsher realities for all her twenty-three years. Her parents had scraped and saved to send her to private schools and helped her get through college. Annabelle had always been a good child, and a good student, but a hero? No.
If she’d been a hero, she’d have tried to help people. When she’d heard rushing feet and the sound of screams, she would have tried to save some people, to bring them down to hide with her at least. But she hadn’t. Months later the shame of it still overwhelmed her. She’d cowered in her hole, too scared to move, listening to the dying and the suffering above her and hadn’t done a thing to help. Logically she knew she’d probably have died for the attempt, but she wouldn’t have lived in the shame she did now.
So, on nights like this, she took a small risk just to see the stars. It made her current existence somehow more bearable. Annabelle could look at the vastness of space and comfort herself. Because though she knew now that monsters came from space, horrible monsters who killed without mercy, she also knew there were real heroes out there. Heroes known as Keepers. Annabelle had seen them battle the Scourge, their golden armor gleaming like a shining beacon of hope. She’d never approached them, not sure if the enemy of her enemy was really a friend. But she had to admire the efforts of those trying to wipe out the monsters.
Annabelle had a small radio in her hole that occasionally imparted news. The governments of the world had reluctantly accepted Keeper aid, and they seemed well capable of ridding Earth of the Scourge plague. But Annabelle was still skeptical. Perhaps it was their inhumanly good looks or the deadly precision and skill they showed in killing, but Annabelle didn’t think it was a large leap to assume that once the Scourge had been dealt with, the Keepers might want to make Earth their own conquest. They might look like angels, but even the most beautiful people could harbor rotten souls.
The smart money was on avoiding them. Annabelle had been successful at that so far. Occasionally she had made short forays into nearby shops, looking to bolster her supplies. The basement she’d hidden in had been surprisingly well-stocked with provisions, shelves and shelves of canned goods, pantry foods and hygiene products. But Annabelle had no idea how long she would have to hole up in this basement before the Scourge were dealt with. And on these infrequent trips into the scary world Annabelle had seen many frightening things. Scourge fighting Keepers. Scourge massacring humans. Humans slaughtering humans. The carnage was beyond imagining. Even once the Scourge were defeated, the world would never be the same again.
Tonight was one of those times she felt she should stay close to her hole, but she just couldn’t do it. It was a clear night and the weather was crisp and lovely, but it was a false beauty. Annabelle wasn’t superstitious or even very intuitive, but there was a certain menace about tonight. That feeling made her extra cautious as she lifted the covering over her basement hole. She peeked through and looked all around, searching for any hint of Scourge, Keeper, or human activity but seeing nothing.
Logic was telling her not to risk it tonight, to just stay inside with her books and her candles and eat an indulgent can of pasta. But she was going crazy inside. It had been over a week since she’d ventured out, she needed a breath of fresh air and a glimpse of those stars. She crawled cautiously out of her hole, edged back against the wreckage of the house, lifted her gaze up and let the lovely breeze and beauty of the night sky envelop her.
* * * *
Nefarion had been sliding through the shadows, following a faint scent of Mithrain when he noticed the movement off to his right. He’d stilled immediately, allowing his shadows to fully conceal him as he crouched beside a tall tree. The movement stilled for a time, but he knew he’d seen something in the remains of a dwelling. His keen eyes missed nothing, and he patiently waited for the movement to come again. And eventually it did, but what emerged from the rubble was not what he expected. For this was no Scourge scavenger, or even one of the human males who’d turned on their own kind after the invasion. What emerged was…a tiny human female.
She was very furtive, looking around cautiously before slowly emerging. And the more he saw as she emerged, the more surprised Nefarion was that this tiny slip had even stayed alive in the few months since the invasion began. She was smaller than a Keeper youth, just over five f
eet was his guess, and her bones looked delicate, breakable. Her hair was covered by some sort of wrap, and her eyes were too dilated for him to see the color. He’d have thought she was a child, except her form showed what promised to be a magnificent pair of breasts.
Nefarion watched for a time, wondering what the girl was up to. But she didn’t do much, just backed herself against a wall and stared at the sky. He wondered what it was she saw there, or what it was she wanted to see. The humans of Earth were so primitive they hadn’t even known other races existed across the vastness of the galaxy. Now they knew it for a fact, but they’d only scraped the surface. The Scourge were the parasites of the universe, but there were so many more species out there. Personally, Nefarion didn’t think the humans would last long in this new world they were now in. The Keepers would battle back the Scourge, but they wouldn’t be here to save the humans from all the predators in the galaxy.
Nefarion was strangely reluctant to leave the girl, she seemed too young and vulnerable to be on her own out in this place. But he had a mission to accomplish. Mithrain deserved to get his due, and Nefarion didn’t want to lose his scent. He took one last look, memorizing the girl’s face and breathing her unique scent into his nose, a heady combination of vanilla and lavender he was tempted to examine much closer. But instead he stood and left, focusing back on his duty. But perhaps he’d come check on the girl again one day. Now that he had her scent there was nowhere she could go that he couldn’t find her.
He wasn’t even a few miles away though when he realized he’d made a mistake. He’d been so obsessed with scenting the girl that he hadn’t noticed the other faint scent on the breeze. It was the smell of unwashed human males. At least five of them. And blood.