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Authors: Sherrilyn Kenyon

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BOOK: Unleash the Night
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“Not really,” Dr. Alexander said. “Let's just say that I have firsthand knowledge of my subject matter.”

That made her head swim. No wonder Dr. Alexander was so impressive in his knowledge. It would be a lot easier to teach a subject you'd actually experienced, which meant the man was probably several thousand years old. It was enough to boggle the human mind.

Marguerite watched the traffic pass by as they headed off toward the Warehouse District. The world outside the car looked normal, and yet nothing was the same as it had been five days ago. She wondered how much of what was out there wasn't what it seemed. Heck, for all she knew, the bar they were passing right now could very well be owned by demons or some other freaky Were-Animal. For that matter, gargoyles.

But that wasn't really what concerned her most. Right now her thoughts were on one particular Were-Beast. “Tell me Wren's going to be okay.”

Bill turned to look at her over his shoulder. “At this point, you should be more worried about yourself, Marguerite. If the ones after Wren ever learn that you know they exist, they'll come for you.”

She scowled at him. “I don't understand that. You know they exist. Why don't they go after you?”

“I have a vested interest in keeping their existence quiet. You don't.”

“Don't I?” she asked, her voice heavy with her fear and anger. “The last thing I want is for Wren to be locked in a government lab someplace.”

Bill smiled approvingly. “Good answer.”

Marguerite sighed as she fought off the tears that were stinging her eyes. “I can't believe they're trying to kill him because of me. Can't he just tell them that he won't see me anymore?”

Bill frowned at her. “What are you talking about?”

“Wren said that they're after him because they don't want him involved with a human. If we don't see each other—”

“I'm afraid it's too late for that,” Bill said in a sympathetic voice. “This isn't about you anymore, Marguerite. This is about big business. Wren's family has been aching for a chance to kill him for years now. As long as he had the protection of Sanctuary behind him, they couldn't touch him or his money. Now that he's been thrown out, there's nothing to stop them.”

But that didn't make sense. “I'm completely confused. Sanctuary is just a bar, right?”

“No,” Bill said, his voice laden with gravity. “It's more like an animal shelter where people like Wren can go and not be hunted by those who want to kill them.”

“Can't he find another sanctuary?”

Bill shook his head. “They don't exactly grow on trees for his people. Not that it matters. Right now the Omegrion has him marked for death. Until they lift that sentence, no one can take him in and protect him. If they do, they die, too.”

She frowned. “What's the Omegrion?”

“It's the governing council for his people,” Dr. Alexander said as he turned right. “Kind of like their version of Congress.”

She hoped their Congress was a little more effective and had more cooperation, especially since their decision determined whether Wren lived or died.

“How do we get them to lift the sentence against him?” she asked.

Bill sighed. “You have to prove he's not a danger to his people.”

“And how do we do that?”

Bill gave her a hard stare. “
We
don't. Basically Wren is going to be hunted down eventually and killed. All we can do at this point is delay it and keep you alive until they determine that you're not as much a threat as he is.”

That was so unfair. How could this be?

A single tear fled down her cheek as Bill's words went through her like daggers.

“Wren doesn't deserve this. Man or animal, he's the gentlest soul I've ever known.”

Bill's eyes widened as Dr. Alexander made a sound of disagreement.

“You're the only one I've ever met who said that about him, Marguerite,” Dr. Alexander said. “Wren is about as wild and dangerous as they come.”

Maybe to them, but he wasn't like that with her.

Marguerite closed her eyes as she imagined Wren the way he'd been the night they met. He'd been so shy and bashful. He'd kept himself to the shadows, only coming out to speak to her.

Then her thoughts turned to the way he'd held her while they made love. The way he'd been when he fought off her muggers. They were right, Wren could be dangerous. But he wasn't out of control. He had never attacked anyone without provocation. That didn't make him a threat. It just made him not a wimp.

“We have to save him,” she said to the men. “Tell me how to kill the things after him.”

*   *   *

In tiger form, Wren crept through the upstairs of Sanctuary, seeking out Nicolette. He had no doubt who had turned on him, and it was time to end this. It was one thing to come after him, but to put Maggie in harm's way … that was another story.

The time had come for them all to realize that solitary didn't mean pushover. This tiger had teeth and he was more than ready to use them.

“Shit!”

He turned to find Fang in human form standing in an open doorway behind him. The wolf wore nothing except for a pair of jeans. Even his feet were bare.

Crouching low, Wren prepared himself to attack.

“Get your ass in here,” Fang snapped. “Now!”

Wren started away from him.

“Listen to him, Wren. Please.”

He froze at Aimee's voice. In human form as well, the bearswan was standing behind the wolf. One side of her face was red and her lips were swollen, as if she'd been necking with Fang in his room.

Damn, the two of them had even bigger problems than he did.

Before he could move, another door opened. Aimee dashed out of sight as her younger brother Etienne froze in his doorway. Tall and blond like the rest of his brothers, the bear was only a few decades older than Wren but didn't appear any older in human form.

Etienne instantly flashed to his bear form.

“There's no fighting in Sanctuary,” Fang said, closing his door to protect Aimee as he moved to stand between them. “You both know the Eirini Laws that govern us.”

“He is marked, wolf. Stand down.”

Wren turned at the sound of Aubert's voice and flashed himself to human form to confront the famed Papa Bear, who only took orders from Nicolette. “I did nothing wrong. This is bullshit and all of you know it.”

“You've gone mad,” Aubert said. “You've threatened my cubs and my mate.”

Wren narrowed his gaze at the bear. “No, I haven't. But you can tell your bitch that I'm here for her now.”

Aubert ran at him.

Fang put himself between them and caught the bear as he lunged. Wren tensed, expecting Aubert to break past the wolf, but to his amazement, Fang held his own.

Roaring, Aubert knocked Fang aside and came at Wren.

Wren flashed to tiger form and launched himself at Aubert, who transformed instantly to a bear. Wren caught the larger animal about the throat as Etienne attacked him from the back. He hissed as Etienne threw him against the wall and laid one leg open with his huge claw.

Dazed, Wren sprang back to his feet only to have his wounded leg buckle as pain lacerated him. His wounds were still too fresh, and these new ones were taking their toll on his stamina. Not that he cared. He'd come into this knowing they would most likely kill him.

But he was planning on getting some satisfaction out of this before he died.

The bears reared before they started toward him.

They'd only taken two steps when a bright light flashed in the hallway.

Wren backed up, ready to fight, only to pause as he saw Vane and Fury in the hallway now.

In human form, Vane took one look at Fang's bleeding shoulder and growled low in his throat. “Aubert? Have you lost your mind?”

Aubert flashed back to human, while Etienne remained a bear. “He is marked for death,” Aubert snarled. “We took you in, wolf, when you had nothing. Is this how you repay us?”

Vane's green eyes were blazing. “No, Aubert. I haven't forgotten my debt to you or Nicolette. But I will not stand by and see this happen to an innocent. Wren has no clan to back him. Therefore I offer him mine.”

Wren was completely stunned by the offer. It was suicide to stand by him now, and he couldn't believe that Vane would even consider such an action.

Aubert was every bit as incredulous. “You would back him against the Omegrion's decree?”

Vane didn't hesitate with his answer. His face was grim and deadly. “You damn straight.”

Wren saw the flash of panic on Fang's human face as he looked past Wren's shoulder.

“No!”

They all turned to see Aimee in the middle of the hallway behind them. Only Wren and Fang knew whose room she'd been inside.

She swallowed as she looked from her father to Fang. “Papa, please. Don't do this. This is wrong and you know it. Wren poses no threat to us.”

“Are you insane, Daughter? He's here to kill your mother.”

More doors were opening now. More animals were coming out to investigate the disturbance. Dammit, Wren would have to run through them all to reach the one animal he wanted a piece of.…

Even after Vane's bold words, Wren didn't really expect anyone to side with him, so when the three wolves formed a barrier between him and the others, he was shocked.

“You'll never make it out of here alive,” Aubert said in warning. “None of you.”

Wren cocked his head as he saw something strange pass between Fang and Aimee. He knew they were speaking telepathically.

A heartbeat later, Fang grabbed her into his arms, manifested a knife in his hand, then held it threateningly to her throat. “Don't you dare follow us. I'll kill her if you do.”

Fang turned to look at the three of them. “Fury, Vane, get Wren out of here.”

Wren started to protest, but before he could, Vane grabbed him by the neck and flashed him from the hallway into a room he'd never seen before.

It was dark, with no windows anywhere. The only light came from two dim lamps on two tables at opposite ends of the room. He looked around, wondering where Vane had brought him. The modern furnishings were chic and high-tech, not to mention the walls were made of dark gray steel.

By those walls and the rolling motion of the floor, he could tell they were on a ship somewhere.

Hissing in anger, Wren flashed to human form to confront the wolf. “What the hell are you doing?”

“Saving your life.”

He curled his lip at Vane. “I didn't want you to save my life, asshole.”

Fury, Fang, and Aimee flashed into the room beside Vane. Aimee threw herself into Fang's arms.

“Have you two lost your friggin' minds?” Vane asked them. “Between you and the tiger, we're so screwed.”

“No, you're not.” Wren tried to flash himself back to Sanctuary to finish this, only to learn that he couldn't. “What the hell?”

“I've got you locked down,” Vane said.

Wren knew better than to go after Vane—the wolf was too powerful to take down—but it was taking every bit of his self-restraint not to at least try to kill him. “Lift it.”

“No,” Vane said firmly. “I didn't just jeopardize my entire clan to see you commit suicide.”

“This isn't your fight.”

“Yes, it is. I'm not going to sit by and watch an innocent die because some asshole got greedy.”

Wren scoffed at Vane's heroism. “Well, thank you, Mr. Altruist, but the tiger doesn't want your help. So sod off.”

Someone started clapping. Wren turned his head to see the Dark-Hunter Jean-Luc entering the room from a door on his left. A pirate in his human life, the immortal vampire slayer still retained much of his old look. With a small gold hoop flashing in his left earlobe, he was dressed all in black in a pair of leather pants, a silk button-down shirt, and biker boots. His long, straight black hair was pulled back into a queue that emphasized the sharp angles of his face. His eyes were so dark that not even the pupils were discernible, and those eyes were dancing with amusement. “Nicely put, tiger.”

“Shut up, lapdog, this isn't your fight, either.”

Jean-Luc sucked his breath in sharply at the insult. “Boy, you better counsel that tongue before you find yourself without it.”

Wren took a step toward him, then froze as Maggie came through the door behind the pirate. The relief on her face held Wren immobile.

She rushed to his side and threw her arms around him. “I'm so glad they got to you before it was too late. You weren't really going to do something stupid, were you?”

“Oh no, hon, we were too late,” Fury said snidely. “Tiger-boy done pissed down the wrong honey tree and got all the bees, or in this case, bears, going wild.”

Fury glanced to Fang. “Then again, knowing the bears, they'll be gunning for wolf before tiger. Good move, Fang. Making time with their only daughter. Real swift. You know chocolate is lethal to our kind. I'm thinking if you want to commit suicide, that's the much less painful way to go about it.”

“Knock it off, Fury,” Vane said, moving over to where Fang and Aimee were standing. “We have to send her back. Now.”

“I know,” Fang said.

Tears glistened in Aimee's eyes. “I don't want to leave.”

The two of them stared pleadingly at Vane, who looked sick to his stomach. “And I thought my relationship with Bride was doomed. Dammit, people and animals, this shit sucks.”

Fury snorted. “You're the leader, Vane. Lead.”

Vane looked up at the ceiling and sighed. “If I had any brains at all, which obviously I don't, I would never have gotten involved in this. I would hand my brother and Wren over to the bears and just take my wife and go find a nice, quiet place to raise our children.”

He swept them all with an irritated glare. “But obviously, I am truly the dumbest man on the planet.”

BOOK: Unleash the Night
10.11Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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