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The Elementals Collection

Page 31

by L. B. Gilbert


  Despite being the junior Elemental, Logan’s never had to worry about failing a mission before. Not until an overgrown and annoyingly attractive shifter comes along.

  Being an Elemental is in Logan’s blood. Hers is the gift of Air, a vast power she’s still struggling to control. Then a Were named Connell hunts her down. His wolf is missing, and he blames her.

  A den of werewolves is the last place Logan wants to be. The testosterone alone is enough to make her choke. But she has a mystery to solve. She will find out who is stealing wolves even if kills her.

  Unfortunately, that’s exactly what the enemy has planned…

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  Prologue

  Two months ago

  Logan hummed softly, trying to distract herself from the unpleasant task she had to perform tonight. Her voice blended with the winds as they whipped around her on the way to the Burgess estate.

  A few days ago, she had left her sister Diana with the intention of taking care of this particular errand right away. But the Burgess family hadn’t gathered with the sitting patriarch, Gerald, until now. And he, most of all, needed to hear what she had to say. Hillard too, but mostly Gerald.

  She let the wind carry her to the Georgian mansion the Burgess clan called home in the English countryside near Somerset. Normally, the trip would have taken hours, but up here in the currents, it was a matter of minutes. She paused when she sighted the house, counting the number of cars outside. Judging from the crowded state of the drive, both Gerald and Hillard were inside. The winds confirmed her hunch, so she looked around for an opening. Spotting an unlit chimney, she plunged inside.

  Logan materialized on top of a formal dining room table laden with crystal and fine china. Her high-heeled boots rested on a silky-looking tablecloth.

  Glad I opted for leather pants instead of that miniskirt I was going to wear.

  Pants had been the better choice, considering how many pairs of eyes were on her now. Each expression ranged from shock to startled discontent. One young man sat with a spoon frozen halfway to his mouth.

  They were only on the soup course, which was good. It would have been far less intimidating if she’d materialized over a roast or leg of lamb.

  “Hello, Gerald,” Logan said, addressing the austere, grey-haired man at the head of the table.

  Gerald Burgess slowly lowered his spoon. He met her eyes with a steadfast composure she reluctantly found impressive. As far as she knew, he’d never met any of her kind before, but his steady grey eyes didn’t betray a hint of surprise. He didn’t know why she was here, but as the head of one of the seven families, Gerald had seen a lot in his day. Enough that he was able to school the shock he must have felt at having a six-course meal interrupted by an Elemental.

  “Hello,” he said in a cultured British accent. He leaned back in his chair. “To what do I owe this pleasure?”

  The other family members didn’t move. Diana was right about the head of the clan. He had seen to their education. They knew when they were outmatched.

  “I’ve come about your granddaughter,” Logan said.

  She almost felt bad about it. Unlike some of the other family heads, Gerald cared about all of his grandchildren and great-grandchildren, even the illegitimate ones. Why Hillard hadn’t chosen to inform his father about the product of his affair was a mystery. But it wasn’t her problem.

  The youngest girl at the table made a whimpering, choking sound when Gerald turned to her with a surprised expression.

  “Not that granddaughter. And it’s not the one in the States either. You haven’t met this one. And you never will. Her name was Sage. She became…a problem. One you don’t have anymore.”

  Gerald swallowed. His expression grew cold and remote. Power crackled in the air, surging forward in her direction, but Logan chose not to take offense. The old man was agitated, and she hadn’t pulled the punch.

  “I see. And was it necessary to rid me of this problem?”

  “She broke the covenant and killed a child. She was going to take the life of a second one when she was stopped.” Logan’s voice was implacable, her usual exuberance subdued—buried under the coldness of the Air Elemental.

  There was a smattering of gasps as a little shockwave swept over the small group. Logan studied the expressions on the ring of faces surrounding her. Diana’s guess was right. One of those shocked expressions was fake. But Gerald’s was genuine. He lifted a weathered hand to his head. The tremor that ran through it was almost imperceptible.

  “It’s not our fault! Whatever this child did, we can’t be held responsible,” Hillard shouted.

  Logan turned to him. Hillard’s thin aristocratic face was contorted in indignation and fear.

  “That’s where you’re wrong. Your child was your responsibility. You knew that. You knew, and you let her make her own way in the world without you. Well, she did. Left quite an impression too.”

  All heads turned to Hillard. Gerald shot him a dark look filled with disgust. Though this situation was news to him, Logan guessed this wasn’t the first time his son had been a disappointment. She turned to the woman seated next to him. Hillard’s wife was sitting there with a fixed, frozen expression. Logan almost understood why she had done it. Almost…

  Logan knelt down in front of her. Stephanie, the wind whispered.

  Yes, that was the name Diana had mentioned. “You know the consequences of what you’ve done, Stephanie. I’m here to render judgment.”

  “What is going on here? What has she done? It’s Hillard who should be punished,” Gerald said in surprise.

  Hillard sputtered incoherently in his own defense, but Logan ignored him and answered Gerald.

  “He will be. But so will she,” Logan answered. “Stephanie knew about her husband’s mistress and the child. She fed Sage secrets. Things that should only be passed down to those worthy of keeping them. Both Hillard and Stephanie broke the covenant, one through neglect, and the other for revenge. I’m here to strip them of their magic. By rights, Hillard’s entire line should be treated to the same, but I’m willing to be lenient in this case.”

  Hillard found his voice. “You call that lenient? I’m to be punished because I didn’t know I had another child?”

  His voice didn’t fit what she knew of him. It was rich and deep, the voice of a politician—one meant to be a great statesman.

  “Don’t bother. I know you’re lying,” Logan said. “It’s useless to even try. It was your duty to take all of your children in hand. Even those whose existence you wanted to bury. You’ll be stripped of your magic, but I’m leaving your line intact. Your other children get to keep their talent, so count your blessings. It’s more than you deserve.”

  Logan turned to Stephanie. The elegant blonde met her eyes and said nothing. But apparently, Gerald was fond of his daughter-in-law.

  “Stephanie wouldn’t have done what you’re accusing her of,” he protested. “She knows better.”

  Logan sighed. “That’s sort of the point. She did know better. But her anger over her husband’s affair got the best of her.”

  She knelt on the table. “Stephanie, give me your hand.”

  Stephanie adjusted the sleeve of her fine cashmere sweater and rose gracefully to her feet. She put a fine-boned manicured hand in Logan’s. “My children are innocent in this. They didn’t know about their sister.”

  This one definitely has class. It was a pity she’d let her rage and disappointment in her husband overcome her good sense.

  “I know,” Logan said in a low voice as Stephanie’s son and daughter exchanged a quick, startled look.

  Reaching deep, she called the wind and silently invoked the Mother’s name in the language known only to her kind. Other ancient words followed. The wind picked up as if someone had opened a window during a storm. It passed over Stephanie and Hillard in a sweeping rush. In her mind’s eye, she could see the undefinable little something she associated with magical talent disappearing
from their auras like sand being blown off a hill.

  It was over quickly.

  “You can’t hold me responsible for the actions of a child I didn’t know was mine!” Hillard shouted, unaware Logan had already finished carrying out his sentence.

  She was tempted not to answer him. She had met his type before. Men like him, born into privilege and power, expected the world to bend around them. Most of the time, it did—at least in the human world. But among Supernaturals, when push came to shove, a legacy would only get one so far. A person had to have intelligence and talent, a lot of it, to rise to the top. And Hillard was not Gerald.

  “But I do hold you responsible,” Logan answered. “And so does the Mother, or I wouldn’t be here. There are rules to this world, and a price to pay for the ability to use magic,” she added, irritated by his refusal to accept responsibility.

  “I didn’t know about her,” he hissed.

  The winds whipped around him, calling him a liar.

  “Don’t you know better than to try to deceive me?” Logan asked, raising an ebony eyebrow.

  She decided he didn’t when Hillard drew himself up for a moment before launching himself at her. He hit the wall with a resounding crash, slumping to the floor in a graceless slide. No one seemed surprised but him, although most of the others flinched at the noise.

  Hillard groaned loudly, but he stayed prone on the floor as she hopped off the table, studying Stephanie carefully. The woman hadn’t moved in all this time. She looked like a statue, a brittle one that might fall apart in a strong breeze.

  Logan sympathized, but she remembered what the winds had told her. Stephanie watched Sage for a while. Long enough to learn that the young witch was well on her way in a downward slide. Faced with the concrete proof of her husband’s infidelity—again—she decided to help Sage along to the black. Stephanie had fed her husband’s bastard spells and information—dangerous things an inexperienced witch shouldn’t have had access to.

  The pain and shock on the faces of Stephanie’s children was hard to see. But it was part of the job. She turned away to face the fireplace that had been her entrance.

  Above it was a weapon she didn’t recognize. It was an odd, silver-black matte color. It had a hilt like a sword that curved up into a wicked curved blade with three sharp points—except the points met on the interior of the curve. The exterior looked dull.

  Not a very effective weapon…but, like the thing that had been used to stab her sister Diana, it wasn’t of this earth.

  Jesus, how many extraterrestrial weapons were lying around waiting to be discovered? Where exactly did the Burgess family come from?

  Logan frowned. The family’s origins were not her mystery to solve. She and her sisters had enough to deal with right now.

  The young woman at the table stirred. “It no longer responds to any family member,” she said in a small voice.

  Logan narrowed her eyes. The girl flinched and looked down. Truth, the wind whispered. And lie.

  She hesitated, tempted to filch the thing and make a break for it. But the covenant was clear on these matters. Practitioners got to keep their objects of power and their tomes of magic so long as they didn’t use them to harm others.

  She tore her gaze away from the piece and turned to give Gerald a nod of acknowledgment. It was to his credit that he was able to give her one back, although his gaze was still on his daughter-in-law. Logan dematerialized and whipped out of the room.

  In the air currents, her conscious mind processed what she’d done. She had never stripped anyone of their magic before. It was why Gia had agreed that she should do it, so she could gain firsthand experience. They hadn’t done a stripping for a long time. But that wasn’t because it wasn’t deserved in a lot of cases.

  It had been a lot easier than she thought. Physically, anyway. The act itself was simple. But the reality of it had been damn depressing. At least, it had been in Stephanie’s case. She didn’t feel that bad about Hillard. The winds had some nasty things to say about him.

  Logan coasted the currents a few minutes longer before deciding to hit a club. Maybe she would find a little company.

  There was that young actor she’d been hanging out with. Michel had asked her to meet him tonight. Of course, he did that every night. But after the scene at the mansion, she was suddenly up for companionship. Michel was always ready to drop everything when she called. And Logan was pretty sure he could distract her from tonight’s unpleasantness. A little mindless dancing with a cute guy would do wonders. Maybe more…

  She was still trying to decide whether to allow Michel to take her to bed. And unlike the other offers she’d gotten lately, she was giving this one serious thought. The actor was good looking, amusing, and basically harmless. Most importantly, her heart was not involved, which was exactly what she was looking for in a man right now.

  Logan didn’t need any emotional entanglements. Her position as the junior elemental was still relatively new, and it required her full attention. However, there was no rule that said she couldn’t have a fling. In fact, the actual rules were few and far between. She just wasn’t sure Michel was the right man to fling with.

  Well, staying away from him wasn’t the way to figure it out. Besides, he was a good kisser and she wanted to dance.

  Much later, when Logan had abandoned herself to the beat while dancing with her actor, she became aware of a new sensation. It was the feeling of being watched.

  Whipping her head around, she scanned the other dancers. But no one paid her any attention—no more than usual. She shook off the feeling when Michel wrapped his arms around her, pulling her in closer.

  1

  The heavy bass of the music vibrated through Connell’s body as he made his way through the shifting crowd. Instinct told him his prey was here, though he hadn’t laid eyes on her yet.

  He’d wasted the better part of a month hunting her in the expected places—the Underlife clubs of the U.S. and Europe. But there had been no sign there. He would have known if she’d been in disguise, something she was fond of doing when she moved among the Supernaturals.

  He’d done his homework when it came to the Air Elemental. Know thy enemy had been an internal mantra since this whole mess had started.

  The crowd shifted and swayed in time to the music in the dark club. He was pretty surprised that she chose to spend time in places like this, among so many humans. The rich and spoiled elite of the human world were here to drink, dance, and do drugs before indulging in whatever sexual thrills their kind could afford. In his experience, those weren’t much.

  He dismissed a beautiful girl who sidled up to him invitingly with a dark glance. She took one look at his forbidding features, the cold set of his lips and eyes, and wisely retreated.

  His enhanced hearing and sense of smell, still blessedly intact, were threatening to shut down against the onslaught of music combined with the scent of so many sweaty people. Under normal circumstances, he would have avoided this place like the plague, but where his quarry went, he followed.

  He threaded through the dancers on instinct, letting his senses guide him to the girl who had almost destroyed him.

  A tingling at the base of his spine guided him to the left of the bar. From there, he could get a clear view of the balcony that ran along three sides of the room. His skittering senses told him she was there. He didn’t know what she looked like, only that she appeared quite young. But that was the case for all of her kind. They took up the Mother’s mantle while in their teens or twenties, and then they stopped aging.

  He dismissed one woman after another until his eyes locked onto a figure moving high above. A thrill of recognition coursed through him, as well as surprise.

  She’s tiny, he thought, taken aback.

  He’d been expecting someone more physically imposing. But the Asian girl dancing in the corner of the catwalk was petite, barely five feet tall. And she was completely unaware of his intense scrutiny.

  Grateful
she couldn’t sense the danger she was in, he leaned against the wall, intent on his prey. The Elemental was wearing dark pants and a red corset tank with a black design on it.

  He watched her, transfixed, aware with some disgust that he was getting hard. His hatred was still a fire in his blood, but some of that warmth was swiftly being channeled in another direction. It made him angry, mostly with himself, but his enemy wasn’t what he’d expected.

  Shifting uncomfortably, he continued to stare, hyperaware there was something wrong with him.

  The problem was the way she moved. He’d never seen anything quite like it. She’d completely given herself over to the music, her fluid, rhythmic movements abandoned and free. She moved like the element she was supposed to embody—like wind whipping over a field of wheat.

  He hadn’t realized she would be so…sensual. She was keeping perfect time with the primal beat of the music. For a second, he forgot himself and pictured taking a fistful of her sleek, black hair, using it to force her mouth toward him.

  For fuck’s sake. He couldn’t even see her features clearly, and he was struggling for control.

  He recovered more slowly than he liked, but he was able to push the erotic image away. He had a plan and couldn’t afford to be distracted by inconvenient lust. The creature might be graceful, but she was also dangerous and possibly corrupt.

  The music changed, pausing between tracks. The momentary reprieve made him aware of how long he’d been staring at the sprite. By rights, he should be trying to rip out her throat. Reminding himself of his mission, he started up the stairs to the balcony with large, purposeful strides, his tunnel vision trained on his target. He skirted the shifting dancers, pushing them carefully out of his way as he went.

  His control was straining, the instincts of the wolf still alive inside him, but he didn’t want to alert his prey to the danger. Not until it was too late for her to escape. And now that he’d finally found her, there was no way she could get away from him. Not again.

 

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