
The Realm
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Natalie Le Roux
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926K
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Chapter 1
Book 1: Revelations
ISABELLE
Heâs going to kill me.
Izzy knew confronting her husband about his adultery would be difficult, yet in sixteen years of marriage he never laid a violent hand on her or their children.
The broken glass from the coffee table beneath her formed a bed of crippling pain. She could feel the acid fingertips of the glass all across her back and the wetness of her own blood.
She tried to breathe, but the stabbing pain in her chest assaulted her.
She coughed involuntarily, unable to fill her lungs, and with the gruesome pain that made her head spin, Izzy tasted blood in the back of her throat. Heâs punctured my lung.
She lay there, gasping for each precious breath, wondering what Peter would do to finish her off.
Maybe heâs gone for another drink. Maybe heâll drink so much heâll pass out, she hoped. At least the boys are with Mom. Iâm never going to see them again, but theyâre safe.
Fresh tears escaped, making her vision blurry. The destroyed lounge wavered in and out like being underwater. She needed to move, but her broken tibia protruded through her dark-blue jeans.
Yet she wanted to live. Be a mother for her boys, see them grow up.
The television turned on by itself and flickered with static for a moment, bringing the moonlit room into stark relief. She felt her thoughts quicken and the fear that paralyzed her recede.
No one is coming to save me.
She took in as much air as she could, gripped her leg and sat up, suppressing a scream and hearing the glass not embedded in her back fall softly to the carpet.
She looked down at a large sliver of sharp glass that shone in the light of the flickering television. She used her teeth to pull her sleeve over her palm and grabbed it.
Coughing again, Izzy clenched her jaw against the pain and heard blood inside her lung bubble. Her head spun, and her eyes grew heavy. Whatever Iâm going to do, I need to do it before I pass out.
She looked up at the sounds of banging from upstairs and knew what Peter was up to. On a high shelf, in their bedroom wardrobe, lay her grandfatherâs World War II service revolver, and fresh fear enveloped her.
Across the room in the corner sat her black handbag where heâd thrown it.
My phone is in there. No one will get here in time to save me, but I know Amy will make him pay.
With her broken leg, it might as well be on the other side of the galaxy.
I have to try.
A moan escaped her as she rolled to her stomach, and using her good leg, pushed herself with agonizing slowness, as the sounds from above continued and the television flickered providing enough light to see her path.
Heâs trying to open the lockbox. He doesnât have the key. Câmon, Izzy, you can do this.
Inch by inch she moved, leaving a trail of blood until the leather bag sat within reach. She dropped her impromptu glass dagger and pulled the bag to her, scrounging inside for the phone.
Retrieving the device, she swiped, leaving blood on the screen, and hit recent calls. Please pick up, Amy.
âIzzy?â
Izzy opened her mouth to speak and nothing but a bubbling cough came out, leaving a sticky froth on her lips.
She tried again, and it felt like the hardest thing sheâd ever done, as she heard Peterâs footsteps come down the stairs.
âPeter isâŠgoing toâŠkill me, Amy,â her voice came out so soft and weak she didnât recognize it. She pressed the volume button until Amyâs panicked response dwindled to nothing and hid the phone back inside the bag.
Sheâll hear everything. He wonât get away with it, she thought with macabre satisfaction.
She rolled over and saw Peter enter the room from the light of the flickering television, the old gun held in his hand. He looked at her, his lips thin with anger and jaw clenched, before raising the gun to point at her head.
She opened her mouth and blood bubbled up, silencing her.
She couldnât speak with her lung filling with blood, so in one last act of defiance, she raised her right hand with her middle finger extended and saw his eyes follow the movement.
With her other hand, she reached down for the glass shard and grabbed the tip between her fingers. She flicked her arm forward and watched as it embedded in his leg. Fuck you, Peter.
At his roar of anger, she closed her eyes, and the gun exploded.
***
Izzy jerked awake, eyes wild, wincing as the motion pulled at her ribs.
She had only survived because the old gun, with its equally old ammunition, misfired, blowing out a chunk of shrapnel that struck Peter in the head.
By the time he regained consciousness, Izzy could hear the wail of sirens and at the sound, the bastard had fled.
Was it only three weeks ago? she thought, pressing a hand to her side. Ten years of happy marriage and six living as half of herself, trapped in a loveless marriage and going through the motions for the sake of the children.
It only took one offhand comment from her fifteen-year-old son, James, to make her realize that her suspicions involving Peterâs infidelity were correct.
The only good thing about that day was that she sent James, and his eleven-year-old brother, Lucas, to visit their grandmother, before confronting Peter. They werenât there to witness their father become a monster.
Izzy swung the heavy black leg support that held her broken bones together off the couch and reached for her crutch. A sharp pain shot from her wrist and ran up her arm.
âShit!â she cried as the fumbled crutch slid to the floor.
The chill in her fatherâs old log cabin sent a shiver down her spine, and she needed to start a fire, soon.
Freezing to death in the Canadian wilderness didnât make it on her to-do list, but the immediate urge for coffee and painkillers outweighed the inevitable necessity for warmth.
âI guess this is my life for now,â she said, talking to the stupid crutch lying just out of reach.
Such a change from her regular day as a paramedic. She was used to helping others. A life of service she gladly chose, to people in their gravest hour of need, and her injured state grated on her.
She knew she should still be in the hospital. She knew enough doctors who would happily have kept her âunder observationâ while her bones knit back together.
But the sterile hospital room sheâd woken up in made her feel claustrophobic. Then again, maybe it was her pride or the feeling she needed to hide from Peter as he continued to successfully evade the police.
Yet she hated feeling helpless, and Amy drove her up here to rest and heal in familiar surroundings. When sheâs not hunting the bastard.
She dragged her leg carefully behind her as she hobbled toward the kitchen, using anything within reach for support.
Most of her body itched from the healing, the bruises fading to a mix of dull green, blue, and yellow. Yet six pins held her broken leg together, and like her ribs, they would take much longer to heal.
With stubborn determination, she moved into the kitchen to fiddle with cups and prepare coffee.
She stared at the steam for a second before pouring herself a glass of water and swallowing a concoction of antibiotics, painkillers, and muscle relaxants, then headed back to the lounge.
She pushed the door open with her shoulder and held the steaming cup in her busted hand. She held the door frame with her good arm to support herself.
As she entered, her gaze lifted into the room, and she stopped in her tracks.
âWhat the hell?â tumbled out of her mouth at a roaring fire in the iron fireplace.
Her heart sank. The warm room felt cold as she quivered, her mind frantic. Peter! Heâs back to finish me off.
She placed her mug on the end table and stood silent and shivering, listening for any sounds in the cabin that were out of place.
The wood popped in the flame. The snow fell gently against the window outside. It all sounded normal until the floorboard above her head groaned.
Thatâs in the bedroom, she thought. SHIT! She pulled her phone out of her pocket and dialed the first number on her contacts list.
âHello?â Amy answered with a tired voice.
âThereâs someone in the cabin,â Izzy whispered.
âWhat? Who?â Amy asked, her voice filled with instant awareness.
âI donât know. I can hear someone upstairs. Oh God, Amy, what if itâs Peter?â
âIz, get to the kitchen. I left a gun in the drawer, second one down, left side of the sink.â
As a police detective in the Vancouver Violent Crimes Unit, Amy held an unhealthy obsession with guns. An obsession Izzy felt thankful for now.
âHang on.â She shuffled backward on unsteady feet, trying to be as quiet as possible. Every slow step caused the wooden floor to creak. She backed into the kitchen, her focus glued to the stairs.
Amy said on her phone, âYou got it?â and Izzy turned into the room and froze.
There, in her kitchen, standing by the sink with a confident stance and a twinkle of amusement in a set of astonishing blue eyes, stood the tallest man sheâd ever seen.
The reason for his confidence, aside from a body that looked like it could break her in half with a good sneeze, rested firmly in his right hand.
The gray steel of Amyâs gun almost blended with his dark hair and clothes, like some kind of fashionable accessory for a muscular Pierce Brosnan.
Those hypnotic blue eyes focused on her own chestnut-brown ones as if examining her very soul, and she swallowed through a throat tightened by fear, willing her obstinate body to move.
But she didnât, she just stood there in shock like some useless piece of broken furniture.
Amyâs voice called to her from the phone again, and she wanted desperately to scream out to her friend for help, but the weapon in the manâs hand scared her too much to risk that.
Instead, she blurted out, âWho are you?â as her heart pounded in her ears and adrenaline surged through her. The man stepped forward, and Izzy stumbled back.
âDonât come near me. Why are you in my house?â
The man said nothing as he tilted his head and ran his gaze over her body.
Oh God, thatâs all I need now. âPlease, donâtâŠ,â she whispered.
As she stared at the manâs eyes, impossibly, they began to change. The stunning blue was consumed by a deep, rich red.
His hand went white-knuckled on the gun and he dropped his head, glaring at her from under his brow, his lips set in a thin line.
Tears dripped off her lashes. âNo, please, donât,â she begged as they rolled down her cheeks.
The intruder moved the gun, using two fingers to hold it by the barrel and placing it on the counter to his left. Not that her trespasser being unarmed made any difference. His head almost touched the eight-foot ceiling.
As he lowered his arm, she could see the play of his enormous muscles sliding like greased silk beneath the matte-black clothing he wore.
His upper arms were the size of her thighs, with an equally muscled chest and shoulders. He looked like a bodybuilder or steroid user. He can do whatever he wants to me without breaking a sweat.
âDo not be afraid. I will not hurt you,â he said. His deep voice sounded like honey and cigar smoke echoing in the silent kitchen.
âWhat do you want from me?â
âTo take you from this world,â he said, gesturing with his strong hands toward the ceiling.
Izzyâs heart flipped again. âWhat do you mean?â she asked, backing away from him and bumping into the solid kitchen door.
âWho did this to you?â he asked, scowling again, his red eyes growing darker.
âNone of your damned business!â she fired back.
He took a step closer to her, his face twisted with anger.
Shit. Maybe pissing him off isnât the best idea.
Izzy cowered away from him as he took another step closer, invading her personal space.
She could smell the man, a strange citrus and cinnamon, but not quite. He stood close enough to touch her, yet his arms remained at his side. âWho did this to you?â he asked again, his tone gentle.
âMy ex-husband,â she confessed, craning her neck up to look at his face. The anger and violence implicit in that gaze sent a shudder through her. Fuck, fuck, fuck.
âWhere is he?â
Izzy frowned at that.
âHeâs not here, but my friend will be, soon. Sheâs a police officer, so maybe you should leave before she gets here,â Izzy said, hoping that would be enough to deter him from whatever plans he came here with.
But he just stared down at her, a muscle in his cheek flexing at whatever he thought about.
âPlease, just leave. I donât have anything valuable, maybe a few bucks in my purseâŠâ She gestured to her handbag on the bar stool at the breakfast nook a few feet away.
âI am not a thief.â His husky voice sounded loud as he straightened, and she couldnât help but see interesting things happen to the muscled torso in front of her.
âThenââshe tried not to think about what he wanted, if not moneyââwhat do you want?â she asked in a small voice.
âItâs complicated. I cannot tell you. Not yet.â
âAre you here to kill me?â Izzy asked, unable to stop a hitch in her voice.
âNo,â the man said simply, stepping back to gesture at her injuries with those large, strong-looking hands, âbut I will kill the man who did this to you.â
She shook her head to clear her muddled thoughts. âWhy?â
âBecause a man who beats a woman like that should not live, but also because he did it to you.â
To me? But heâs a stranger, why does he care what happened to me? Am I still asleep? Is this another fucked up dream?
With no violence from the man, she straightened, trying to divine his meaning from his expression.
âWho are you?â Izzy demanded. By moving as she did and not feeling the twinge from her ribs, she knew the painkillers were kicking in. She wondered if they gave her an edge of confidence.
He hesitated before answering and then shrugged as if it didnât matter. âMy name is Mikhlas. I am the Captain of the Koentra, a Royal Defense StarFleet destroyer.â
StarFleet? Oh great, heâs crazy.
She backed away again, the door behind her swinging open, and tried to keep her voice light. âOkay, Mike, maybe you should return to your ship. Iâm sure the Royal defense league needs you back.â
His eyes softened, blue once more as he smiled, showing perfect white teeth. âYou were right, she does not believe me,â he said.
âI did warn you,â another honey-and-cigar bass voice said from behind her.
She spun, and a second enormous gym freak dressed in black leaned against the wall, only two feet behind her.
She panicked and tried to step away, but her crippled leg wouldnât obey, and she stumbled. She expected to hit the ground, hard, and she shut her eyes.
Instead of the painful impact of the floor, two warm solid arms caught her. She opened her eyes and all she could see were the sapphire blue of Mikhlasâs eyes staring into hers, a cool ocean that filled her vision.
Her heart raced. She wanted to say something smooth and intelligent, yet words failed her as she stared into his unblinking eyes. So beautiful. Too bad they belong to a crazy guy.
Mikhlas held her for a moment then effortlessly lifted her and strode past the other man into the lounge room before placing her on her feet.
Izzy steadied herself with her hand on his shoulder, feeling the firm muscle then snatching her hand away as if burned and stared at the two men, eyes darting between them.
They could be brothers, they are so similar. The only difference I can see is the second man is a few inches shorter, and the dark circles under his eyes.
âWho are you people?â she asked, as the second man pushed off the wall and approached her. Backing away from him, her butt hit the dining table, and he stopped. His eyes were the same piercing blue as Mikhlasâs.
âAnswer me, dammit! What do you want?â she shouted at him, yet Mikhlas answered.
âI can explain, yet I need something first.â
âYeah, and whatâs that?â she snapped.
Mikhlas stepped closer to her, a strange look in his eye, and she smelled that citrus and cinnamon again.
She wanted to back away, yet the table stood right behind her. She couldnât run, not with her leg, and the second man looked ready to block her if she moved, a lazy sense of coiled readiness.
Mikhlas loomed over her, and she kept her eyes focused on the floor, her breathing ragged and shallow.
âYour DNA,â he whispered.
When Izzy raised her eyes in confusion, he bent further and placed his lips on hers. As she stood rooted in shock, his hand glided to the back of her neck and held her gently in place as the kiss deepened.
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