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River Cast: Part Two in the Tale of Lunarmorte

Page 17

by Samantha Young


  “Yeah. Because of what happened to him. What he couldn’t prevent from happening. He was strong, don’t get me wrong, but he was always just a family man. However, he loved Caia’s father, respected him a great deal. Rafe was a Rogue Hunter and a great one at that. But for the most part I remember Rafe being the guy that everyone turned to, you know. He was a good guy. A truly good guy. I remember my dad defending him when he let Adriana into the pack. A lot of people back then were already sore from Mikhail’s stupidity and betrayal. When Rafe fell for Adriana’s lies only a few stuck by him. People left. Of course Magnus and your dad were two who stuck by him, so was Lucien’s. And my dad. Jeez my mom would rag on Rafe so badly, which would just end in an explosive argument between my parents. My dad would take me and Aidan aside and tell us quietly that mom was just upset, but not to listen to the pack’s tales about Rafe. Or Caia. My dad was really fond of that kid.”

  Jaeden quietly placed her hand on his chest, feeling it thud quickly into her palm.

  “That’s why he was there when Adriana came back for Caia. He was at their house; he told Rafe to take Caia and run, he would hold her off.” He cleared his throat, and she hurt for the way it still hurt him now. “My dad was a brave guy and strong, and he did a heroic thing. But he wasn’t trained to fight. And he especially wasn’t quick enough to fight a magik.”

  “So you became a Rogue Hunter.”

  “So I became a Rogue Hunter. So I could fight and give myself a better chance of staying alive in order to keep protecting the people I cared about.”

  “That’s why you’re so protective of Caia.”

  He nodded, clasping her hand tighter to his chest. “My dad didn’t die for nothing, Jaeden. He died to keep her alive. She’s here for a reason and I trust that. I’ve come to trust her.”

  “So you’ll fight for her?”

  “Yeah, I will.”

  Jaeden felt an overwhelming amount of respect for him in that moment, a feeling so strong it actually took an unyielding grip on her chest. “I said I would fight with her. But I trust you. So I guess I’ll fight for her as well.”

  She felt his smile without looking for it.

  ***

  “Why don’t you just give him the tools tomorrow?” She asked in a ‘guys have no logic’ kind of tone.

  Ryder shrugged. “I’m trying to stay on his good side.”

  “Getting me home at a decent hour would accomplish that.”

  He rolled his eyes and jumped out of his truck. “Come on, I’ll just be one second.”

  With that Jaeden hopped out of the passenger side and came around to meet him as he began walking towards the main door of his apartment building. Having just remembered the tool box Dimitri had asked to borrow as he was driving Jae home from their unbelievable night together, he thought it prudent to do everything he could to be a dutiful son-in-law to her father. Jaeden was still teasing him as he put the key in his door and pushed it open. Immediately he felt something unfamiliar in the air, and his arm flew out without thinking, pushing Jae behind him, shushing her with a quietly placed finger to his lips.

  She nodded, telling him she understood.

  Slowly, they crept down his hallway and turned to gaze into his sitting room. In the dark, they could make out clearly with their wolf eyes, the two figures standing huddled together by the window. Their body language didn’t suggest menace. Curious and furious at the same time, Ryder hit the light switch on the wall and flooded the place in light, eliciting a high pitched squeal from the girl. The boy blinked at them in fright, holding the girl closer.

  “Who the hell are you?” Ryder growled, hoping to scare the truth out of them. Jaeden seemed to sense what he had – they weren’t a threat - and pressed a halting hand on his arm.

  The tall boy edged a little closer, seeming to draw some strength from somewhere as he straightened his shoulders back, bracing himself. “We’re from the Centre. Caia sent us.”

  Well, that he hadn’t been expecting.

  “What?” Jaeden asked for him.

  “I’m Vilhelm, this is Laila.”

  They were Scandinavian or something by the look of them, and by the accent the boy spoke with. Ryder glowered, completely bewildered by their appearance here tonight.

  “Sit down,” he ordered, ignoring Jaeden’s continued attempt to make him be nicer to their ‘guests’. Obediently, the two fell on to his sofa, and he felt a twinge of regret at his tone when the girl physically cowered from him as he strode towards them.

  “Why would Caia send you here?”

  The boy looked quickly between the two. “You are Ryder?”

  “Yeah.”

  “Caia said to come here. That she trusted you.”

  “That doesn’t answer why you are here.”

  “She’s a Midnight.”

  They all swivelled around at the voice and Ryder narrowed his eyes suspiciously.

  Reuben.

  “What the Hades are you doing here?” He snapped.

  Even Jaeden gazed at him warily. “Reuben?”

  The vampyre moved fluidly from the hallway to stand by her. “I came to speak with Ryder.”

  “Maybe we should leave.” The boy abruptly stood, his eyes now wild with fear, his grip on the girl white with intensity.

  “No.” Ryder gestured them back and then glared at Reuben. “What do you mean she’s a Midnight?”

  “Please,” the girl whimpered.

  Ryder’s heart was thudding like crazy, his mind whirring. “Reuben?”

  “I can feel it.”

  “I thought only the Head of a coven could feel trace?” Jae interjected.

  The vamp shook his head. “I don’t have trace; I can’t find supernaturals. But I can feel whether one is a Daylight or a Midnight when I’m in the room with them.”

  “How freaking old are you?” Ryder snapped, not for the first time.

  Reuben shrugged, his gaze fixed on the young couple. “I don’t think she means any harm.”

  Jae turned to him in as much bewilderment as him. “Why would Caia send a Midnight to you?”

  The boy shook. “She told us not to tell you Laila was a Midnight... but now that you know,” he threw a sceptical gaze at Reuben, “I will explain.”

  What followed was a tale Ryder couldn’t believe he was hearing. Caia rescued this girl from a Daylight prison because she believed the Midnight was good? Were they kidding?

  “You expect me to believe this?”

  Vilhelm held strong. “She should have been following us soon, but I got the impression before I left to get Laila that something had happened. I swear I’m telling you the truth. Caia just wanted you to keep us here hidden until she gets back.”

  “To hide you from the rest of the pack?” Jae asked askance.

  Vilhelm nodded. “For now.”

  Ryder growled. They all seemed to have forgotten one thing. “And what about Marita? Surely she would just follow your trace to here?”

  However, the magik just shook his head. “She will not know it was me until they scour the Centre. It would take enough time for Caia to get back.”

  “But Marita would still find you here.”

  “Caia intended to protect us from her.”

  WHAT!

  He felt a rush of inexplicable fear, fear that something beyond his belief and capabilities was occurring.

  “Does this mean... ”Jae whispered, “Is Caia... is she turning against Marita?”

  That’s exactly what I want to know.

  “Caia is good.” Vilhelm shook his head vehemently. “I’m a Daylight, and I believe what Marita did was wrong.”

  “But she’s a Midnight!” Jae spat out, glaring at the girl, despite how weak she appeared.

  The boy twisted his face in disgust at her outburst. “And that gives you all the right to condemn her?”

  “But, but... ” Jae spluttered, mirroring Ryder’s own feelings of turmoil. It was like they were on the high seas, being rocked violently from side
to side, waiting for the boat to completely overturn.

  “How do we know it was really Caia that sent you here?” Ryder threw out in desperation.

  Vilhelm nodded, as if expecting that question. “She said to remind you of a conversation only you and she know you had. She had just started working for your Alpha in his store, and you sat with her in the showroom. You told her about your friend, David, who mated with a faerie. She hadn’t known some supernaturals could mate out-with their own race, and you told her all about it; you told her all these other stories about hunting, about a faerie who tricked you three times.”

  Dread settled throughout every inch of his body. It seemed the boy might be telling the truth.

  Goddess, he hoped Lucien knew what Caia was up to; that Caia knew what kind of fire she was playing with.

  Wearily, he nodded. “I believe you.”

  “I could hide them,” Reuben suddenly offered.

  “What do you mean?” more than ever he didn’t trust this guy.

  “I can hide them so that Marita doesn’t follow them to the pack.”

  Before he could jump on this, Jaeden stiffened and turned to regard her friend in annoyance. “And how can you do that? She would come after you.”

  Reuben merely smiled arrogantly. “I’ll be fine. I’ve been around, I have my ways.”

  “No. You’re being an idiot,” she snapped.

  As much as Ryder was glad to see Jaeden jump aboard the anti-Reuben bandwagon (even if it was out of some misplaced sense of concern), he had to settle with the boy and girl. “We’ll discuss that later. For now, they stay here. Caia entrusted them to me and to me alone.”

  Visibly trembling, Jae approached him, her hand reaching for his. “Ryder, what’s going on? What is Caia doing?”

  He shook his head. “I don’t know.”

  She sighed and looked at the girl, a mixture of sympathy and fear in her gaze. “She saved me, too.”

  “What?”

  “Caia,” she groaned. “She saved me, too.”

  “Still trust her?”

  “Do you?”

  He chuckled humourlessly, looking back at the magiks who were listening intently. “Call me crazy but... yes, I still trust her.”

  “OK,” she agreed.

  “I guess I’m not needed then,” Reuben muttered sardonically from behind them.

  “Hey.” Ryder stopped his departure. “You have to keep your trap shut about this.”

  The vampyre sneered. “I’m not the gossiping kind.” And with his usual stealthy regality, he left.

  Ryder looked down at his soon-to-be mate. “That means you, too.”

  Jaeden shook her head. “This is going to be virtually impossible. My dad isn’t a wolf, he’s a freaking bloodhound.”

  “Just channel pre-me Jaeden.”

  “Oh har-de-har-har.”

  17 - Soldier

  The last meeting had dispersed and Caia stood in the main reception hall waiting for the others to join her. The Centre was buzzing with anticipation. Even though the students didn’t know exactly what was going down, they knew it was something big; the hype level was helping to agitate an already nervous Caia. She was thankful for Marion, who stood close by her side, watching as the others arrived. She was barely aware of Mordecai and the five magiks he had chosen from his unit to help take out the spies watching the MacLachlans. Her mind unfortunately was all over the place. One, she was terrified their carefully strategized plan would fall apart in action, and two, she was worrying how Vilhelm and Laila were faring with Ryder. Caia was supposed to have returned home almost immediately where she would put her now fully formed plan into action. When it became apparent that the battle was back on with Du Bois, she forced herself to remain confident that it would still take Marita at least the length of the battle to figure out it was Vilhelm. For a start they were focusing their investigation on the idea that a Midnight had somehow infiltrated their facilities to break Laila out (that was sending them into a massive panic). Because of this assumption, Vilhelm wouldn’t even be a suspect as of yet, not to mention he was a Traveller, a magik without the kind of power needed to do the glamour she had done to disguise him as Vanne. She wasn’t stupid, eventually someone would report Vil gone, but by then she was hoping she would be back with the pack and there to take the heat off him.

  She sighed heavily, watching as Michael appeared around the corner, his tall figure strapped with guns and knives. Behind him were the four other vampyres he had selected, who were to be partnered up with a lykan to take out the four Midnight guards who Du Bois was placing in a sort of rhombus formation around the edges of the forest. Moments later, Anders got out of one of the elevators with nine other lykans from his unit. Four of them would take out the guards. The five others would be attacking the spies sitting outside the MacLachlans. The plan was the MacLachlan pack would pretend to depart for their pack run. All of them would leave their houses and get into their cars and drive away from their streets. In truth, they would be heading towards Magic Fitness where a magik would be waiting to transport them through the portal to the Centre for protection. The spies watching the houses were to contact Du Bois as soon as the MacLachlans were off the street. Caia would be listening in on Du Bois, and once the spies had done this she would send in the paired lykan and magik to take out the spy. She had given each team the description of the car the spy would be in, and a description of the spy themselves and the element they used. The magik was to open the door to the car for the transformed lykan and cloak the vehicle whilst the lykan turned the Midnight into a chew toy. This way there would be no human witnesses wandering around. Once this was done, four teams of two consisting of one vampyre and one lykan, would take out each guard around the forest perimeter quickly and silently. Caia, Lucien, Rose, Phoebe and Anders would head in, in wolf form, along with Michael, Marita and Mordecai. Each had been given a magik to take out. There were situated towards the north end of the forest where the pack met in a clearing and changed before the run. Du Bois had decided to outflank the MacLachlans by encircling the clearing, ensuring his magiks could attack from all sides. Caia knew exactly what position each would take. To Caia’s chagrin, Marita had ordered that Mordecai take out Du Bois; she had wanted Pierre for herself, mostly because he was an extremely powerful water magik and she was afraid for the person who would be attempting to attack him.

  Even if that person was a treacherous man-whore.

  Speaking of which...

  She was sure she had caught a glimpse of familiar jet black hair on top of brawny shoulders. Squinting, she pressed gently against Marion to get the magik to budge a bit so she could see around one of the reception’s steel pillars.

  Her heart literally stopped.

  Rose was pressed flush against Lucien, who had his arms around her waist, and they were kissing... quite passionately.

  She felt sick to her stomach.

  Trembling, she pulled back so she didn’t have to look anymore. Gaia, how had her life gotten here? She flexed her hands, trying to force the trembling to subsist.

  “Caia, you have to forget what you just saw and focus. You have a long night ahead of you,” Marion whispered sympathetically in her ear.

  “I’m OK,” she assured her mentor.

  “No, you’re not. But you will be.”

  Surprised at her cryptic comment, she turned to gaze at the witch only to see her glaring at Lucien and Rose as they came into view. It almost made her smile. It was nice having friends who cared. Blowing out a troubling breath between her lips, Caia focused beyond ‘the couple’ and watched as Phoebe appeared behind them.

  That was everyone then.

  “We’re all here.” Marion nodded around the tactical team. “We’re all aware of our parts in this?”

  A lot of murmuring and head nodding confirmed this.

  “We all have a set of comms?”

  Caia nodded with the rest, hardly noticing the small ear-piece in her inner ear that would allow her to
communicate with the others.

  “Now remember, the portals that have been opened transport us out very close to the Midnights, so stealth is of the utmost importance. Unit One.” Marion turned to the magiks and lykans who were teamed up together. “You’ll each be taking a portal to the street your Midnight is on; it will open in a secure location where you are hidden from Midnight view. You all remember which team you are? Caia, do you?”

  She nodded, trying to ignore the sickening butterflies in her stomach.

  “Caia will prompt you when your Midnight has made the call to Du Bois and you go in, quickly and quietly.” Marion stared at them a few intimidating moments at a time, before turning to the teams of lykans and vampyres. “Unit Two, you’ll be going through the portal with us. You’ll take position near your Midnight and after the spies are out, Caia will send you in to take out the guards.” She smiled dryly and turned to Anders, Mordecai and the others. “Unit Three. You’re with me. We’ll head in once Unit Two confirm the guards are down. Everyone clear?”

  The back of the reception area had been sealed off, and shimmering against the wall were six portals. The colours and shapes they made up were merely a warped version of reality; it was the wall, but it swirled and glittered and pulsed invitingly.

  Caia looked on, barely listening as Marion directed each team of Unit One to the correct portal, and then began following the witch to the portal reserved for Units Two and Three. The others strode ahead and through them, the vampyres holding their weapons high just in case they encountered any Midnights on the other side. She could have told them they wouldn’t; she knew where every single one of them was and they had no idea an arsenal of Daylights were on their way to ruin their night.

  “Caia?”

  She started at the warm hand on her shoulder and gazed up into Lucien’s concerned face. Out of the corner of her eye she saw Rose glide past them with the others, her gaze washing over them as she did so. Lucien had obviously asked for a moment alone to talk to her.

 

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