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Chapter 2

  • He ran and ducked behind the next tree in his path. There was no time to pause and rest. Blowing out two deep breaths, he lurched back around the tree and stabbed the spear through the man’s midsection. Using his foot, he braced it against his body and pulled the wooden weapon free. If he didn’t die soon, it would at least slow him down. Turning, he ran in the other direction, not caring about the pain in his bare feet or the branches scratching his uncovered legs.
  • The phone going off jolted him awake. He rolled over and answered it.
  • “Abraham.”
  • It was his dad, who had ‘died’ when he was fifteen and returned to reintroduce himself when Abe was in his thirties. “Dad.”
  • “Where are you?”
  • He opened his eyes and looked around. Checking your location was a habit he’d never break. “My bedroom in the underground chambers.”
  • “Oh, good. Your brother said you were off checking on our properties. You know your uncles have people who will do that, right?”
  • Abe sat up and winced as his muscles disagreed with moving. His uncles Rafael and Michael had not been easy on him with training. “I know, but unlike Rena and Ellis, I like going back over. There’s something oddly comforting being back there.”
  • “I understand that. It’s hard to simply forget about something that was our lives for so long.”
  • “Something like that.” It wasn’t that at all, but after almost two hundred years, he still couldn’t figure out how to tell him that he searched for the reasons for the pictures in his head. They weren’t memories, Abe wasn’t old enough for them to be, but they were still there, and he needed to know why. “Why were you looking for me?” He hoped it wasn’t related to the wall of screens and monitoring all the cameras they had set up everywhere. He’d worked his magic and set up the controls and computers to make it simple enough for a monkey to operate. He was not a furry primate and was bored out of his mind sitting there. The pictures in his head drove him crazy when he was idle too long.
  • “The prince from Veiltide is coming over, and I thought you’d want to be in on that meeting.”
  • Abe stood up and looked around. Meet someone from another realm? Hell yeah. He’d seen some of them but hadn’t actually met them. “Yeah, I’d like that. Does this have to do with what Uncle Arius found out from the prisoner about the talking water?” Family meals were always a highlight with his many aunts and uncles, a regular episode of the bizarre and strange facts that were now his life.
  • “Yes. I don’t understand about Veiltide, but as we may be working with them, so I thought we should be there.”
  • Abe nodded and looked around for his clothes. A telling sign that the things inside his head were getting to him was the mess in his room. Normally everything would be tidy and in its rightful place. “Where are we meeting?”
  • “The summit room.”
  • “Where?”
  • “The meeting room at the palace.”
  • Abe smirked, as he did any time the word palace was mentioned. “When? I need to grab a coffee.”
  • “There will be refreshments there, as always.”
  • “Perfect. I’ll see you there shortly.” Tossing the phone on the bed, he surveyed his room. Clothes on the floor, empty dishes on the dresser, and he was afraid to look in the bathroom. Haunting visions or not, he was fixing this disaster after the meeting. At least he didn’t have to worry about the cleaning staff being stuck with it. Abe preferred to do all his own cleaning. He might be part of a royal family, but he had a particular way he liked things done.
  • He blamed his siblings, having spent a few hundred years cleaning up after them. Now he had to have organization. That had been his part in their strange little family, erasing them from existence as they moved around and rotated locations. He was part of a race from another realm. He grinned and shook his head because that wasn’t odd at all. Later while he cleaned, he needed to assess this latest dream. Why was he basically naked and fighting with a handmade wooden spear? The bare feet and nakedness bothered him far more than a sharp stick, and someday he needed to know why his head did this to him. His life was finally making sense, well, maybe that wasn’t the right word, but he knew what he was, and the mystery of why he had to bite people to live was solved.
  • Abe settled in the chair with a large mug of coffee and a handful of the little biscuits Mitz never seemed to run out of. He loved the stupid things, may even have a box or two of them stashed in his room—because it was still hard to accept he wasn’t going to have to pack up and move on fast at any given moment.
  • The room was buzzing with the usual chatter, taunts, and razzing of his uncles and their mates. It was better than any sitcom could ever be. His sister, Rena, came into the room with papers in her hand. She had that look on her face, the one that said someone was going to get a good scolding. Abe was glad it wasn’t him. Anything he did for the family was electronic and involved no paper.
  • Sipping his coffee, he watched Rena aim her displeasure at their father. Standing beside Dad was his mate, Kinsley, who didn’t hide her amusement from the child giving the parent what for. He liked Kinsley a lot. Liked that his father was finally happy. He’d watched him wander endlessly for too many years.
  • Whatever had been wrong was resolved quickly because Rena was now smiling. She rubbed her hand over her swollen abdomen, reminding Abe that he would soon be an uncle. Everyone else might think she was settled with things, but he knew differently. That haunted look was always present in her eyes. It still irked him that they’d been forbidden to go near the man responsible for the child. Even his Uncle Arius didn’t go near him, and he was the warden of the cells the prisoner was in. As far as Abe was concerned, the man’s life should have been forfeited.
  • Aunt Autumn came in and immediately went over to his sister and spoke to her. It was odd and amazing that the best fighter he’d ever seen would parent that baby. He couldn’t picture her coddling an infant. One thing was certain though, that child would be the safest one ever born. He grinned at the thought of some other kid harassing it on the playground.
  • “Hard to see, isn’t it?”
  • He turned to see Uncle Leone sitting down beside him. “Sorry?”
  • His uncle jerked his head in his sister’s direction. “Autumn as a mom.”
  • Abe shrugged, “I was thinking more like if anyone ever did that child wrong…”
  • “I don’t think that would end well for the offender.” His Aunt Bethany sat beside her mate.
  • Leone cringed. “No, any child born into this family will never have to worry about bullying at school.”
  • Statements like that made Abe wish he’d known his uncles when he was younger. It had been a trying time learning to navigate the world alone.
  • Rena nodded and then came over toward him. She smiled and pointed to her chin, “That looks good on you, Ace,” she smirked at the name he’d once used and regretted daily since.
  • Abe smiled and touched his new facial hair, “it’s just weird seeing my face when I look at my uncle.” They all glanced at Michael, “thought a little facial hair would clear that up.”
  • His uncle, King Chase, happened by at that second. He paused and perused Abe’s face for a moment and then touched his own goatee. “I’ve been told they make us irresistible,” he winked and then veered toward the coffee pot.
  • Abe rubbed his hand over his face. It wasn’t long enough to be called anything other than organized scruff at this point.
  • Aunt Crissy came over and knelt on the chair beside him. There were no words he could think of that described her. She was so unique that none fit. “I’m excited.” She set her notebook on the table and looked at him, “I’ve read about Veiltide and what they can do,” she paused, her expression blanking for a moment, then nodded and gave him a big-eyed look, “Do you think he’ll show us?”
  • “I don’t think he’s coming for show and tell, Crissy,” Leone said quietly.
  • Crissy looked at the floor beside the chair, “A well, that’s strange.” She looked at Leone, “I know, but it’s fascinating, so I hope he does.” She opened her notebook and leaned over it, pencil in her hand. She was still kneeling on the chair.
  • Abe had wondered if the pictures in his head were visions like his aunt’s, but when he’d asked her about them, she told him you couldn’t have visions in the past, only the future. The problem was they couldn’t be memories either, he wasn’t that old.
  • She stopped and looked at him like she’d just hadn’t a moment before. “Your face is very handsome that way.” She smiled, “there’s no water,” she nodded, “but the well is for you.” Grabbing her notebook, she hurried over to her mate, Uncle Victor, the scariest man Abe had ever seen.
  • “A waterless well?” Bethany asked.
  • “I don’t know what that means.” Abraham looked from her back at Crissy.
  • “We’ll catch her later and see if we can sort it out,” Leone said and motioned to the door as some of the others came in.