Forever (The Lair of the Wolven #2) Read Online J.R. Ward

Categories Genre: Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal, Romance, Vampires Tags Authors: Series: The Lair of the Wolven Series by J.R. Ward
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Total pages in book: 109
Estimated words: 103719 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 519(@200wpm)___ 415(@250wpm)___ 346(@300wpm)
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He should set his charges and leave to watch the light show from a peak across the valley.

And then he should rest his weary head.

Instead, he dematerialized farther away from Xhex and the wolven, to a point back by the rear of the blocky vehicle, and as he resumed his corporeal form, he narrowed his eyes to improve their focus—even though he could see just fine. The issue was that he was having a problem understanding what he was seeing: Daniel Joseph, Blade’s former soldier, was supposedly dead.

And from the looks of the guy, he might as well be.

The previously fit pain in the ass was sitting on the back of the SUV, looking like he was still recovering from some serious wounds, six months after the skirmishes on this very mountain. Except that wasn’t it, was it. As the wind shifted, the scent of the human man drifted over to him, and Blade flared his nostrils. When he caught what was on the air, he refused the conclusion outright. Except there was no denying it.

Daniel Joseph was in fact dying. The scent of the tumors inside of him was obvious—and it explained the withered state of his body.

Blade took a step forward. And another. And sure enough, as he intended, one of his boots landed on a dry stick and snapped it. In spite of his frailties, Daniel was on the sound, swinging that gun around as he carefully shifted off the back of the vehicle and onto legs that were clearly unreliable.

“I thought you were dead,” Blade said in a low voice.

Daniel’s facial expression didn’t change and he did not lower his weapon. He did weave a little in his boots, however, proof that he was affected by his surprise visitor.

“And it looks as if you’ve gotten yourself sick,” Blade tacked on.

Knowing that there was little time, that the females would be returning soon, Blade burrowed into the man’s mind and sifted through Daniel’s memories. One thing hadn’t changed. Of all the humans whose thoughts he’d intruded into, the soldier gave him the most resistance—

“You’re a patient then.” Blade laughed in a low purr. “I send you in to destroy the lab, and instead, you use it. Why did I not see this coming?”

The obvious answer was because he’d never caught the scent of the cancer before, but then he hadn’t been looking for it. Amazing how you could miss things when they didn’t fit into your confirmation bias: He’d been primarily concerned with Daniel betraying the mission. He hadn’t been aware there were any other fate vectors to manipulate.

And there was another now.

This human with the bad prognosis… was with the wolven. The love and the struggle with her were all over his grid, consuming him as much as the illness was, a different kind of cancer to eat him alive.

Plus her scent was on him.

Well, wasn’t this a night for surprises. And the simplest solution was to implant into Daniel Joseph’s mental chaos a clear and present imperative to blow the lab up, turning the patient into a Trojan horse. The man was the perfect ticking time bomb, accepted by the doctors and staff in the lab, and fully knowledgeable about the layout. Work of a moment.

Except… a mind under the kind of stress his was? Bad platform for instruction. When influencing a human, when getting them to do your bidding, stability in the receptacle was required. Daniel had been extraordinarily stable previously, tied to no one, with nothing but an amorphous need to destroy things and a fine shooting arm defining him. He’d been a weapon Blade had pointed at his will, and Daniel had never known the extent of the influence poured into his brain. Even when it became clear the weapon had fallen in love with a woman, Blade had thought nothing of it—other than using the emotional attachment to his own benefit.

As any symphath would do.

Except he had not known… exactly what it was that the man had fallen for.

A wolven. Who was utterly captivating.

“I have to go,” Blade lied. “I think you’ll agree it’s best for everybody that our reintroduction is something kept between ourselves.”

“Wha—”

Daniel Joseph, former operative, winced and put his hand to his head. As he did so, Blade cursed himself. Xhex had the ability to read those Homo sapiens minds, too. And if the patient was looking like he had a sharp stinger in his frontal lobe, there was a fair chance she’d probe the reason why.

And then Blade’s cover would be blown.

She had her own issues, however, so perhaps he would get lucky.

“Bye for now, Daniel Joseph,” he murmured as he stepped back into the darkness. “Rest assured, I won’t be far.”

* * *

Lydia returned to the SUV alone, the vampire having dematerialized off into the night—which was a little freaky to be around. Although given what Lydia was capable of? The fact that a person could just be somewhere one minute and gone the next shouldn’t have been that alarming.


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