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Authors: Kresley Cole

BOOK: A Hunger Like No Other
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E
mma raised her face to the warmth of the rising moon as it filtered through the trees. She and Lachlain sat on opposite sides of a small fire he'd built to warm her further. The breeze that wisped through the great forest of Kinevane was chilly.

She knew others would enjoy such a romantic situation—two people alone, a fire crackling in the Highlands—but she was on edge and Lachlain clearly was as well. His gaze was locked on her every movement, no doubt scrutinizing her for a hint about what she'd dreamed.

She would love a hint, too.

Near sunset, she'd shot up in bed with hot tears streaming down her face and the entire castle
quaking
under an onslaught of lightning. Face drawn with panic, Lachlain had clasped her arms, shaking her and yelling her name.

Yet she didn't remember the dream. Nïx had told her that people couldn't remember what they couldn't handle. So what had been so bad that Emma had almost toppled a castle with lightning, then wiped it from her memory? All night, she hadn't been able to shake an underlying feeling of dread. Just how heavy was this other shoe she sensed was about to fall?

“What do you think of that makes your expression so serious?” he asked.

“The future.”

“Why no' relax and enjoy the present?”

“As soon as you let go of the past,” she countered.

He exhaled wearily and leaned back against a tree. “You ken I canna do that. Can we no' speak of something else?”

“I know you won't speak of the . . . torture. But how did Demestriu come to capture you in the first place?”

“Demestriu faced my father in the last Accession and slew him. My younger brother Heath could no' handle the rage he carried. He obsessed on the fact that Demestriu took our father's life—and then stooped to steal his ring, which had been passed down since metal was first forged. Heath told us he'd rather die than feel that way. He set out for Demestriu's head and that damned ring, uncaring if we followed or aided him.”

“He wasn't scared? To face him alone?”

“Emma, I believe in times of adversity there's a line that is sometimes drawn, a line that separates your old life from your new. You cross the line, you'll never be the same. Heath's hatred made him cross the line, and he could never go back. He'd sealed his fate to one of two outcomes: Kill Demestriu, or die trying.”

His voice went low. “I searched everywhere for him, but Helvita is hidden mystically, like Kinevane is. I used everything I'd ever learned about tracking, and I believe I got close. That's when they ambushed me.” His eyes were faraway. “Like a nest of vipers they rose up, attacking, then tracing, so I could no' retaliate. There were too many.” He ran a hand over his face. “I later learned that they had no' taken Heath alive.”

“Oh, Lachlain, I'm so sorry.” She sidled over to kneel beside his outstretched legs.

“It's the way of war, I'm afraid,” he said, tucking her hair behind her ear. “I'd lost two brothers before Heath.”

How much pain he'd endured, most of it at the hands of Demestriu. “I've never lost anyone I've known. Except Furie. But I can't believe she's dead.”

He stared past her to peer into the fire.

“What, Lachlain?”

“She might wish it so,” he finally said, but before she could speak, he asked, “Is Furie the one who burned your hand?”

She gasped, staring down at it when he cradled it in his own. “How did you know someone burned it?”

He ran his fingertips over the back. “It seemed to explain the pattern of scarring.”

“When I was three, I almost ran into the sun.” Emma supposed she hadn't learned her lesson as well as she'd thought. Every day here, she secretly returned to a hidden shaft of light and exposed her skin to it. Did she plan to book a cruise to St. Tropez anytime soon? No, but each time she could withstand it longer, and maybe in a hundred years she could walk in the twilight with him. “Furie ordered it done.”

His face turned hard. “They could no' have found another means to teach you? The day a child is hurt so in this clan will be a day of reckoning.”

Emma flushed, embarrassed. “Lachlain, the Valkyrie are . . . different. Violence doesn't affect them like others, and their beliefs are not like yours. Power and fighting are what they revere.” She left out shopping, suspecting it might detract from the point she was trying to make.

“Then why are you so gentle, lass?”

She bit her lip, wondering why she kept letting him think she still was. No longer. Tonight she would tell him about the dreams, and of her new decision . . . .

“Lachlain, if you leave on your quest without me, then know that I'm going to resume mine.”

He ran his hand over his face. “I thought you wanted to go to your coven.”

“I've realized I don't have to think of my life in terms of either the Valkyrie or you. I began something and I want to see it done.”

“Never, Emma.” His eyes flashed blue. “There is no way in hell you'll return to Paris—to search out a
vampire
—when I am gone.”

She raised her eyebrows. “Seems like you won't be here to have a say.”

He grabbed her arm and pulled her to him. “No, I will no'. So I'll do what men did with their women in times past. Before I go, I will lock you away until I return for you.”

Her lips parted. He was . . .
serious
? The time capsule was deadly serious. Two weeks ago, she would have made excuses for his behavior and placed herself in his shoes. She would have convinced herself that he'd been through so much and deserved some latitude.

Now, she cast him the look his words deserved, twisted from his arms to stand, then walked away.

*  *  *

Lachlain stared long after she'd gone, debating whether he should go to her. He sometimes felt like he crowded her, overwhelmed her even, and decided to let her be alone now.

That left him—and the fire. Though he was improving,
he was still uneasy every time he was near one. She could never know this. And so she could never understand why he couldn't allow Demestriu to live—

A loud groaning sounded. He leapt to his feet, every muscle tensed. The unfamiliar sound echoed again from miles away.

He stood, head cocked, trying to make it out. Then . . . realization.

Like a shot, he sprinted down the path, spying her just ahead.

“Lachlain!” she cried when he swooped her into his arms before racing for the castle. He was dragging her into their room minutes later.

“Stay in here!” He charged across the room, retrieving his sword. “Doona come out for any reason! Promise me.”

Some being trespassed on the grounds of Kinevane—and in a fit of groaning metal and screams had somehow taken down the massive gate to do it.

If it got past him . . .

“But, Lachlain—”

“Goddamn it, Emma. Stay here.” When she still protested, he snapped, “Did it ever occur to you that on occasion you'd be
right
to be afraid?”

He slammed the door on her shocked face, then tore off to the front entrance. There he stood tensed, waiting, clutching his sword—

The front door to Kinevane Castle was kicked down for the first time in history.

He looked at the kicker—a blond woman with glowing skin and pointed ears. He glanced at the fallen door, then back at her.

“Pilates,” she explained with a shrug.

“Let me guess. Regin?”

When she smirked, another Valkyrie passed in front of her, marching up to him, raking her gaze over him.
“Hubba, hubba,”
she growled with a wink. “Emma caught herself a wolf.” Her eyes zeroed in on his neck where Emma had drunk earlier, and she tilted her head. “Hmmm. You wear her bite like a badge you've earned.”

“And you must be the soothsayer—”

“I prefer predeterminationally abled, thank you.” Her hand shot out, ripping a button from his shirt, so fast it was a blur. She'd taken the one closest to his heart, and for a moment her face turned very cold. She'd made a point—she could have gone for his heart.

Then she opened her hand and gasped in surprise. “A button!” She smiled delightedly. “You can never have enough of these!”

“How did you find this place?” he demanded of Regin.

“A phone tap, satellite imaging, and a psychic,” she said, then immediately frowned. “How do
you
find places?”

“And the barrier?”

“That was some serious Celtic cujo mojo.” She jerked a thumb over her shoulder at their car. “But we also packed the most powerful witch we know, just in case.” A nondescript woman waved brightly from the front seat.

“Enough of this.” He stalked toward Regin. “You'll be leaving our home. Now.” He raised his sword, but a blur swept past him. He twisted around and found another one perched on the grandfather clock, having landed so gracefully that the chains were undisturbed. She had a bow pulled taut, an arrow trained on him. Lucia.

Didn't matter. He wanted these creatures gone—they'd come here with one objective. He charged the door. An
arrow tore through his sword arm like a bullet, exited with a rip, then buried itself a foot into the stone wall.

Severed tendons and muscles in his arm made his hand go limp. The sword clattered to the ground. Blood seeped down to his wrist. He wheeled around and found her with three arrows notched at once, bow horizontal, aiming for his neck. To take off his head.

Regin said, “You know why we're here. So don't make this get ugly.”

Brows drawn, he followed her gaze down until he saw a razor-sharp sword inching up between his legs. Another Valkyrie that he'd never even seen enter wielded it from the shadows.

“Better hope Kaderin the Coldhearted doesn't sneeze with her sword like that,” Nïx said with a chuckle. “Kitty-Kad, do you feel allergyish? I dunno, you look twitchy to me.”

Lachlain swallowed, then chanced a glance over his shoulder. This Kaderin's eyes were blank, no feeling—only pure intent.

Lachlain had known they were vicious, but to see it, to feel it with an arrow through his arm and a sword tucked against him . . .

He would never let Emma near them again.

Just then, Cassandra crossed over the flattened door, warily eyeing the Valkyrie.

Lachlain snapped at her, “Why are you here now?”

“I heard talk of these . . . creatures cruising through the village, pumping bass and whistling at men on the street, before turning for the castle. Saw the gate
mangled
and thought you might need some help . . . .” She trailed off, eyes widening at the sword.

Regin said, “Where is she, Lachlain?”

Nïx added, “We're not leaving without her. So unless you want permanent houseguests of the destructive sort, just hand her over.”

“Never. You're never to see her again.”

“A lot of nerve saying that when you're about to bloody Kaderin's sword,” Regin said with a smirk. Then her ears twitched and her voice suddenly turned saccharine. “But what do you mean, you don't ever want us to see her again?”

“Never. I doona know how she became what she is after growing up in your vicious coven, but you'll no' get a second chance to twist her.”

Regin visibly relaxed at his words. Lucia dropped down and strode to the door, casually, as if she hadn't just
shot
him and as if she weren't mere feet from a Lykae itching for a kill and two seconds from turning.

“Lachlain?” Emma murmured from the stairs. He twisted his head around, saw her brows drawn. They'd wanted him to repeat his decree for her benefit. “Had you always planned to keep me from my family?”

*  *  *

“No, no' until I met them,” Lachlain explained, as though that made it better.

She surveyed the room, then her aunts. Just what had they done since that door had been kicked down? She could only imagine—

And what the hell was Cass doing here?

Emma spotted Kaderin behind Lachlain, sword in place. “Kaderin,” she murmured. “Annika sent you?” Kaderin was a deadly, skilled, and
unfeeling
assassin. A perfect killing machine, she didn't get dispatched on recovery missions. “Lower your sword, Kaderin.”

Regin said, “Come down, Em, and nobody has to get hurt.”

“Kad, lower it!”

Regin reluctantly nodded, and Kaderin retreated into the shadows. Lachlain immediately strode up the stairs, reaching for Emma, but she gave his hand a withering glare and shook him off. He appeared dumbfounded.

Regin cast Emma a guilty smile. “Annika just wants you away from him, Em.”

Emma marched down the stairs to point a finger in Regin's face. “So, Lachlain plans to forbid me from seeing you, and Annika plans to kill the man I'm sleeping with without even asking me if this is a good idea?” These people were treating her like the old Emma, with everyone jockeying for the right to control her. And that simply did not apply any longer. “I wonder what
I
plan.”

“Tell us!” Nïx cried breathlessly.

Emma glared at Nïx.
Rhetorical, here!
She had no idea what she planned—

“He seeks you,”
a vampire intoned from the doorstep, his eyes on her.

Emma's lips parted. The Valkyrie did not believe in coincidence, only in fate. And sometimes fate didn't even bother being subtle.

Lachlain leapt for the vampire just as others appeared. Cass ran headlong into the fight beside him. Emma watched it all as though in slow motion, feeling the vampire's red eyes returning to her again and again.

Suddenly her back met the floor, her legs kicked out from under her.

Lachlain had tripped her?
“Get back, Emma!”
he roared, shoving her away, sending her flying far across the polished floor.

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