Harbored in silence, p.1

Harbored in Silence, page 1

 

Harbored in Silence
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Harbored in Silence


  Harbored in Silence

  ASPEN PACK

  BOOK FOUR

  CARRIE ANN RYAN

  Contents

  Copyright

  Praise for Carrie Ann Ryan….

  Harbored in Silence

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  A Note from Carrie Ann

  Also from Carrie Ann Ryan

  About the Author

  Harbored in Silence

  An Aspen Pack Novel

  By: Carrie Ann Ryan

  © 2022 Carrie Ann Ryan

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-63695-186-7

  Paperback ISBN: 978-1-63695-187-4

  Cover Art by Sweet N Spicy Designs

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person or use proper retail channels to lend a copy. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return it and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  All characters in this book are fiction and figments of the author’s imagination.

  Praise for Carrie Ann Ryan….

  “Count on Carrie Ann Ryan for emotional, sexy, character driven stories that capture your heart!” – Carly Phillips, NY Times bestselling author

  “Carrie Ann Ryan’s romances are my newest addiction! The emotion in her books captures me from the very beginning. The hope and healing hold me close until the end. These love stories will simply sweep you away.” ~ NYT Bestselling Author Deveny Perry

  "Carrie Ann Ryan writes the perfect balance of sweet and heat ensuring every story feeds the soul." - Audrey Carlan, #1 New York Times Bestselling Author

  “Carrie Ann Ryan never fails to draw readers in with passion, raw sensuality, and characters that pop off the page. Any book by Carrie Ann is an absolute treat.” – New York Times Bestselling Author J. Kenner

  “Carrie Ann Ryan knows how to pull your heartstrings and make your pulse pound! Her wonderful Redwood Pack series will draw you in and keep you reading long into the night. I can’t wait to see what comes next with the new generation, the Talons. Keep them coming, Carrie Ann!” –Lara Adrian, New York Times bestselling author of CRAVE THE NIGHT

  "With snarky humor, sizzling love scenes, and brilliant, imaginative worldbuilding, The Dante's Circle series reads as if Carrie Ann Ryan peeked at my personal wish list!" – NYT Bestselling Author, Larissa Ione

  "Carrie Ann Ryan writes sexy shifters in a world full of passionate happily-ever-afters." – New York Times Bestselling Author Vivian Arend

  “Carrie Ann’s books are sexy with characters you can’t help but love from page one. They are heat and heart blended to perfection.” New York Times Bestselling Author Jayne Rylon

  Carrie Ann Ryan's books are wickedly funny and deliciously hot, with plenty of twists to keep you guessing. They'll keep you up all night!” USA Today Bestselling Author Cari Quinn

  "Once again, Carrie Ann Ryan knocks the Dante's Circle series out of the park. The queen of hot, sexy, enthralling paranormal romance, Carrie Ann is an author not to miss!" New York Times bestselling Author Marie Harte

  Dedication

  For those who asked.

  Dara righted the wrong.

  Harbored in Silence

  A witch on the run who could save the world–or destroy it with one touch

  I am who they fear.

  The Harvester Death Witch.

  The one who holds the power of their fate in my hands.

  Or at least…that’s what they whisper.

  The coven has fallen. The vampires are circling our den. And if we don’t find new allies, our Pack won’t be able to fight much longer.

  On my Alpha’s orders, I must find others who hide beneath the shadows for not only our protection, but theirs as well.

  Only I’m not alone on my mission.

  I brought Cruz back from death once before, and though I know the goddess forbids it, I’d do it again.

  Because he’s my mate.

  And my ending.

  Chapter

  One

  Dara

  Black smoke billowed in my face, the explosion ringing through my ears as I tried to suck in a breath, only to cough as inky tendrils of possibly poisoned gas wove its way through my nostrils and down my throat.

  I fanned the air in front of my face, choking, as I grasped the edge of my workbench, trying to turn on the exhaust fans. Witchcraft and technology didn’t always go hand in hand, but an overhead exhaust fan for your witches’ brews really was the only way to go.

  Especially since I wasn’t an air witch that could do that on my own—I worked in something a little darker.

  I shuddered, turning for my water bottle as I wiped the soot from my eyes. I knew I would need to shower again before I headed out.

  This had been my last-ditch effort, one try until I went to my hands and knees once again and begged. Because I would beg. At least try—getting anything really hadn’t work out for me.

  I pressed the button on the top of my water bottle and chugged it back, grateful for the coolness down my throat. I coughed and sputtered as I choked again and spit into the sink, annoyed with myself.

  Well, that looks like tar.

  What exactly had I just inhaled?

  I washed my face in the sink, drank more water, grateful when the smoke began to dissipate. I looked at my cauldron.

  It was more of a pot really, one that anyone could make soup in, but I called it my cauldron. That’s what a witch did.

  At least some witches.

  My friends from the other Packs who held power were earth witches and fire witches. Water witches and air witches. I even knew a spirit witch, one who could commune with the dead, and bring forth magic from a knowing and hidden place.

  But I was not that.

  No, I was a harvester. A death witch.

  One who saw and spoke to death and, if the legends were true, could twist fate and scream into the winds of that goddess-less place.

  I was their reckoning, their ending, their doom.

  But currently I was covered in soot, had burned part of my hair, and my entire place smelled like rotten eggs.

  Good job, Dara, you are the one they all fear. The witch of endless witches.

  I rolled my eyes at myself as I cleaned up, knowing that desperation meant I didn’t have time to feel sorry for myself.

  My people were dying, my Pack wasn’t safe.

  And if I didn’t find a way to stop vampire magic from seeping into our wards, from hiding from us and from killing us in droves, it didn’t matter that I might end up killing myself.

  All the strength that I held within my bones wouldn’t matter, the magic etched within the calcium deposits that had once been lively and full of hope, none of it would matter. Because I would die right alongside my people, and no one would even whisper my name in the end.

  I pushed away those thoughts, including the memory of who had been at my house the night before, who had raged at me and spoken truths better left unsaid.

  I wouldn’t think of him.

  I hadn’t spoken to him, hadn’t answered the questions that needed to be answered.

  I had done nothing. Instead, I had broken down when he left, and I knew this was the ending.

  Cruz was right.

  And I hated that I had to admit that.

  There was a knock on the door and I stiffened, worried once again.

  It wouldn’t be Cruz. He wouldn’t be returning. Not after he left, derision and confusion within his eyes.

  He knew. He knew the answers to his own questions, but they weren’t ones that we wanted to speak of, weren’t ones that would make everything better and would save the Packs and make warmth and rainbows shoot out of his ass.

  No, none of that would happen.

  I was going to pretend. Because it was what I was good at.

  The doorbell rang and I winced, the sound echoing within my ears. I hadn’t even realized I had a headache, probably because I always had one these days.

  The magic of the wards was draining me, and I was exhausted.

  Everybody knew it, but they didn’t say it. They just gave me pitying and hopeful looks. Because they were putting themselves into the wards too. The wards just happened to be fighting me a little bit more.

  I opened the door to two of my best friends. The two people who were going to help me, at least that’s what they said. And I wanted to believe that they could. That they would.

  But I didn’t know if they were going to be enough.

  “You look horrible,” Wynter said as she shook her head. She reached forward and gripped my hand before leaning to kiss my cheek. “And you taste like soot.” She scrunched her cute little nose and wiped her lips.

  I loved Wynter. She was a human living within the Pack, for her own reasons, and while she had a day job, and e

ven had a place outside the den, she also had one within the wards. She fought with us, was part of us, and had a connection to the Pack just like I did.

  We weren’t wolves or one of the other types of shifters, but we were Pack nonetheless. She had bright blue eyes that held knowledge that I didn’t quite understand. She was human, and yet I felt like her soul was far older than anyone else’s on this earth.

  Or maybe that was just my headache speaking. Her honey-brown hair billowed around her face, and she looked gorgeous and fragile.

  She could be hurt far easier than all of us, and only had a weapon in her hand to protect herself. No claws, no strength beyond her human mortality, and no magic.

  Beside her stood a lynx and one of my other best friends.

  Wren scowled at me and held out her hand. “Okay, give me your hand.”

  “You know it doesn’t work well with me. I just end up taking your energy.”

  “And you think I care? We have bonds. And you’re going to let me help. And then you’re going to shower because dear goddess, you need it.”

  I snorted, a smile playing on my face, and it was exactly what the Healer of the Aspen Pack wanted. She latched onto my distraction, pouring her healing warmth into me.

  Magic sizzled up my skin and I sighed, taking in the life that she sent.

  I was death, the Healer was life, two opposing forces that shouldn’t be friends, but all of it was a circle. There was no ending or beginning when it came to life and death, they were one in the eyes of the goddess.

  Wren smiled, squeezed my hand, and I sighed with a warmth that I rarely felt.

  “Thank you. That helped the headache.”

  “Not anything else, but we both know I’m trying.”

  I shook my head and pulled them both into the house. “You should stop trying. It just weakens you, and we need all of your strength. Especially if I can’t get these wards fixed.”

  We had patched the wards that protected the den from outside forces repeatedly. They had fallen in battle more than once, leaving the innocent unprotected and frightened. It didn’t matter that every time we found a new way to protect ourselves, vampires, humans, or other rival Packs took them down.

  We changed the way things had been made, put new magics into them, but with a certain magical group holding back, they’d weakened once again.

  Hence why my friends were there, and why the trepidation that lay within me wouldn’t stop.

  “Go shower, and then we’ll go with you.”

  “I can go alone. You don’t need to go and witness this.” I rolled my eyes as I stripped off my shirt right in front of them, and continued to strip on my way to the bathroom.

  I wasn’t a shifter, didn’t need to get naked in order to shift into a different being. Shifters within the Aspen Pack were all fine with nudity. It was just something that was a part of them, and when you walked within the forest along the trails of shifters, you saw naked men and women often. You saw naked shifters often. You became immune to the nudity.

  I was used to it, and these were my friends, we had danced naked under the moon when I called magic. Wynter might be human, but she had joined in, and we had laughed. As a shifter herself, Wren was even more blasé about nudity than me.

  Wynter sighed and picked up my clothes behind me. I shook my head and jumped into the shower.

  I was quick about it, knowing we didn’t have much time if we wanted to get this over with.

  “I can clean up after myself.”

  “You just left a trail of clothes, so no, you can’t. I’ll start laundry.” Wynter mumbled around my house, picking up the messes I had made.

  I was normally a much tidier person, but recently I’d been devoting all of my strength toward finding magical ways to counteract the vampires’ poisons.

  My workspace, save for the new sooted area that would be cleaned up soon, was pristine. I knew where every part of my spells were, every ounce of every ingredient, but the rest of my house needed a good scrubbing.

  “I’m going to start on your dishes. Though you don’t have much here…” Wren began. “Which worries me because I don’t think you’ve been eating enough.”

  “I’m eating,” I said, rinsing out the conditioner from my hair. It was a quick job, and I knew that I was losing more hair than normal. But every ounce of my magic was being put into the wards, to protect our people, and it still wasn’t enough.

  It was never enough.

  When the vampires had first shown themselves, everything changed. For my entire life, and for the centuries that shifters had been secret, we hadn’t realized vampires were real.

  But a few decades ago, when a nearby Pack took down the demon threatening us all, things changed. Another demon, at least as far as we could tell, had created vampires in his own image. I still wasn’t sure how it had happened, or their overall goal, but they were trying to kill us. Trying to take out those magic users and shifters that didn’t agree with them, so they could rule the supernaturals. They wanted to pit humans against us so we were fighting amongst ourselves before the vampires took over everything. Or perhaps it was the demon who wanted to rule.

  I knew that vampires were made from humans who either wanted power or were forced into it. It took training, and the control of the higher-powered vampires in order to bring the mindless vampire hordes into submission. Once a vampire learned to control his power, his thirst for blood and agony, he could rule other vampires.

  They were just as strong as a shifter, sometimes stronger if they had their own vampire magic in their arsenal. They used to be able to damage our wards, and we had stopped them, and they pivoted to find another way.

  I was truly afraid that they had found a witch. That was what was always unsaid. That the witches had turned to the vampires’ side.

  Because the coven was no longer working with the shifters.

  Years ago, before I was even born, the witches had come together as a coven locally, and they ruled the entire Pacific Northwest.

  They came together and decided who was allowed to be a witch, who was allowed to have their power, and who had to be hidden.

  It was no surprise that as a non-elemental witch, I wasn’t allowed to be part of the inner circle. And over time they had pushed out anyone connected to Packs through mating or family. They only wanted those of pure blood, only those with power that they thought they understood. But even while they had done that, they had always worked with the Packs to ensure that the wards of every magical creature were safe. They were safe from the prying eyes of the human governments that wanted to control us, safe from humans who wanted to hurt us. Safe from other Packs. And witches were safe from those who were stronger than them, or who wanted their magic for their own gain.

  All of that with the council had occurred before I was born, and they had fought to protect all of us.

  But now the coven no longer worked with the council, and those magic users either had to hide who they were, or work in factions that didn’t have the power to organize or control.

  We were dying, and I needed to stop it.

  “Are you ready to go?” I asked as I ran my hands through my wet hair. I muttered a spell under my breath, using the small power of air that I held. It wasn’t truly air magic, but it was the opposite of life. Death and life were one, so I was able to use the power of world and energy to do small things. My hair dried instantly, and Wynter just rolled her eyes.

  “Seriously, you look amazing. I hate you.”

  Wren scowled at me, and I knew she saw the fact that I couldn’t hide the dark circles underneath my eyes, even with a glamour, and my cheekbones were a little more pronounced than usual.

  I knew Wynter saw it too, but we didn’t mention it. Not when there was nothing to stop it.

 

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