Our feet cross into the Alaskan wilderness twenty-four hours later after my first feeding. Her daughter wasn’t fulfilling in the least, and Theo procured a donation from the hospital to satiate his thirst and mine.
But now we’re in the territory where my brother-in-law reigns as Alpha of Alphas with Tero, Meera, and Marcia, who’s back to normal. For years she suffered because I couldn’t finish the words needed to bind her spirit to her human form, leaving the animal as her only choice of survival. A whisper, my hand over her chest, and Marcia walked on two legs again.
“Ready?” I ask Marcia, my knees on the ground beside her body. We’re in my backyard and everyone is ready to leave, but I refuse to do so without doing something a century too late. “Give me a nod, and I’ll say the words.” The movement is subtle, a small tear spilling from her eyes as I place my hand on her body and mouth against hers. “I’m sorry it took so long, sweet friend. Ligatus ad vescendum carnes.”
At once, her form slightly trembles as she retakes her human form. There are hisses from her that turn into screams, her shiny scales receding into human flesh while she gives into the pain. I know it hurts. Bounding her and then freeing her soul took a lot from me, too, but I continue to feed her my energy until I look into a set of eyes I haven’t seen since my death.
“Gabby,” she whispers, voice rough from disuse while I simply hug her. Cover her slim body with a blanket I’d brought out with me. “Please tell me my lessons are done?”
At that, I laugh, head thrown back as my frame shakes. I’ve missed her sass. “In my opinion, you’ve graduated and surpassed Tero, Marcia. I’m proud of you.”
“And I’ve missed you, My Queen.”
Cupping her cheek with my hand, I place my forehead to hers. “Not queen, Marcia. We’re sisters.”
“Are you ready?” Theo asks from beside me.
“I am.” He knows I’m a bit sad, but I also understand. They’re not here—my sister and her mate—having left to deal with a problem on the East Coast with a pack, but he left his Beta, Cain, to help us.
At one time, werewolves and vampires didn’t mix; hurting your mate is a sin, something you don’t do at any costs, and both races understand that. I’m a Queen. My sister is the Luna Supreme.
Two women whose destiny changed the supernatural world.
“Beta Cain,” I say, extending a hand out in greeting, which he takes. He’s gawking at me a bit, not in lust but surprise, and beside me Theo growls. “Stop it.”
“He’s staring.”
“You look so much alike. Not identical, but the resemblance is shocking when—”
“I know.” And I did. My death hurt more than Theodore and those of our kingdom, but my sister and brother—the races they oversee. “But it’ll wear off the more you see of me. I miss my sister.”
“And she’s lived in hell without you,” a soft voice calls from behind the Beta, and the warriors standing behind him move out of the way, letting the owner pass. At my first sight of her, a sob gets caught in my throat, tears that don’t fall gathering at my eyes before her warm body slams into mine. Isabella is stronger than before, the mark on her neck altering her slightly.
“Sister,” is all I can manage to choke out, holding her to me while she cries into my neck, hugging me back just as tight. “How? I thought—”
Pulling back, her blotchy face smiles at me. “If you thought I wouldn’t be here for this moment, you’ve become stupid in the last hundred years. Nothing could keep me from you.”
“Things change.”
“I don’t.” Raising my hand, she intertwined our fingers the same way we’ve done since we learned about our powers. She fed from me and I from her, exchanging our feelings and energies through touch. And right now, her aura is glowing with love and excitement, an exact mirror of my own. “By blood and by pact.”
“We are one.”
“We are one,” she repeats and then gets a devious look in her eyes that has gotten me in trouble many times in the past. “Now—we have someone to kill. Any preference, or are we going in there, guns blazing like the wonder twins we are?”
“Christ, I forgot how cheesy you can be?” I snort, which causes her to laugh. “That was bad.”
“Oh hush, just because I’m older doesn’t mean I’m out of touch with the youth here.”
Another presence makes itself known a moment later, and I’m not surprised as one never moved without the other before. “Alpha Xadiel, how have you been?”
“Her joy matches my own, Gabriella. We are all happy to have you back.”
The sincerity in his eyes brings tears to my eyes that will never fall. “Thank you, brother.”
“Okay…” Isabella claps her hands, winking at her mate and mouthing the words I love you. “First, did you push the meeting back?”
“I did,” my sister’s husband answers without pause.
“God, I love you.”
My eyes shift to Theo, who shakes his head. We are not that bad, pretty girl. It’s the part dog thing that makes them cheesy. I’m not going to respond to his mind link, choosing instead to turn back into the conversation my sister is leading. “And two?” I ask.
“Two, I know where she is. No one steps onto our land without us knowing.”
The small cottage Elise ran to is deep in the Alaskan wilderness and right near the border of Xadiel’s land. It’s far enough to not draw too much attention, while still being within the territory. It blends into the scenery, a little dilapidated, but enough for one person to hide.
I can hear her heartbeat from where I stand.
She knows we’re here, too.
The moment she sensed our presence, she panicked, the cadence of each heartbeat rising, and her breathing followed. Funny. For someone who’s the daughter of a proud general, she sure tucked tail and ran. She never did the dirty work, but involved her own offspring, lying to each to manipulate her narrative.
I also wouldn’t be surprised if she’d procreated with a human, knowing they’d be weaker—easier to manipulate than that of a full-fledged vampire/hybrid union.
“And she says I’m the weak one,” I say loud enough for her to hear and those around us laugh. “Come out, Elise. Don’t make me go after you.”