The Barrier Between (Collector Series # 2) Read online




  ALSO BY STACEY MARIE BROWN

  Darkness of Light

  (Darkness Series #1)

  Fire in the Darkness

  (Darkness Series #2)

  Beast in the Darkness

  (An Elighan Dragen Novelette)

  Dwellers of Darkness

  (Darkness Series #3)

  Blood Beyond Darkness

  (Darkness Series #4)

  City in Embers

  (Collector Series #1)

  The Barrier Between, Copyright © 2015 Stacey Marie Brown

  Smashwords Edition, License Notes:

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook 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 recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination and her crazy friends. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. It cannot be re-sold, reproduced, scanned or distributed in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the author.

  All rights reserved.

  Cover Design by Victoria at Whit & Ware (http://main.whitandware.com)

  Developmental Editor Jordan Rosenfeld (http://jordanrosenfeld.net)

  Edited by Hollie (www.hollietheeditor.com)

  Formatting by www.formatting4U.com

  Table of Contents

  Also By Stacey Marie Brown

  Dedication

  The Barrier Between

  Thank You

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Sneak Peek, Octavian’s Undoing

  About Airicka Phoenix

  For you.

  ONE

  Run.

  Sweat dripped down my spine, soaking my top. Adrenaline pumped through my veins, escalating the panic already contracting my heart. My lungs ached as I desperately sucked in the thin air spinning around my head. The high altitude altered my equilibrium, and I stumbled.

  A large hand shot out and caught me, keeping me from plummeting to the ground. The six-foot-three male Viking next to me seemed immune to the vertigo which twisted my head and stomach. But I had no time to be sick. “I’m okay.”

  Ryker looked skeptically at me before letting go and increasing the pace. Our boots hit the unevenly paved road in tempo, tearing through the streets packed with tourists. It felt like we were in an old game of pinball, bouncing from body to body. The bag against my hip thumped in rhythm with my steps. Sharp chirps told me Sprig was awake and not having a good time in there. I was pretty sure I heard him swear when he crashed into the video camera and my Art of War book with which he also shared his space.

  “You now stopping...” a policeman cried out in broken English. After eight times in Spanish, he was trying to see if we would respond to what he thought was our native language. He could have screamed out in Swahili; it wasn’t going to stop us. No matter what country I was in, running for my life and freedom was becoming my norm and priority.

  “This way.” Ryker grabbed my elbow and yanked me down a narrow lane. Colorful woolen bags, blankets, and ponchos hung from racks lining the merchants’ row. It didn’t take me long to figure out where we were in Peru, South America. Images of Machu Picchu covered every T-shirt, postcard, and coffee cup with nauseating abundance. And Aguas Calientes was the village nearest the ancient ruins. It was an area I dreamed about visiting for a long time but not running from the local police.

  With another jerk on my elbow, Ryker swerved us around a group with precision, pushing past the sightseers enjoying their day shopping for trinkets. The late afternoon sun exacerbated the moisture clinging to the steep rainforest mountain ravine surrounding the village. Humidity soaked beneath my jacket, leggings, and heavy boots. Less than an hour ago it had been morning and cold.

  In Seattle.

  Only this morning we had been in the Pacific Northwest, and I had been a normal girl. Okay, not normal, but now I was some freak science experiment running around in South America.

  And how did we find ourselves in a remote village in Peru?

  Me.

  Because an extreme fae-caused electrical storm last month transferred Ryker’s powers to me, I now had the ability to jump wherever I wanted in a split second. The problem was I didn’t have the whenever down and not the precise wherever. None of it worked at my beck and call, which would really be handy right now.

  “Fucking bartender,” Ryker grumbled. “He had to call the cops on us.”

  Not sure I blamed him. We magically appeared out of thin air and crashed into his pool table. Think I would have freaked out too.

  I was curious what claims he would make against us. We didn’t break anything, except for the case of beer he had dropped when he saw us appear. We weren’t going to stop and ask the cops.

  “Alto,” another policeman shouted out. I glanced over my shoulder. Four of them trailed close behind us, working their way through the crowds.

  Shit.

  Warmth buzzed through my muscles, an odd feeling I had begun to experience recently. My body wanted to jump.

  “Ryker.” I wrapped my fingers around his hand. He looked over his shoulder and saw something in my expression.

  Pressing his lips together, he gave a quick nod. “Think of somewhere safe.”

  I relaxed into the humming sensation, trying to think of a sheltered location. Funny when I needed to think of one, nothing came. It wasn’t like I had a ton of places I considered safe. Seattle was the only home I ever knew, and it certainly didn’t make me feel secure.

  Jump, Zoey! I yelled at myself.

  Nothing happened.

  “Dammit,” I swore under my breath.

  The cop yelled at us again, progressing closer.

  A growl came from Ryker, frustration clenching his mouth. A nerve danced along the edge. He ducked into a backstreet, pulling me with him, and slipped us through a maze of alleyways. Clothes hung from webs of cords tied across the back alleys.

  “In there!” He pointed at a tall woven basket holding laundry, tucked inside an open entrance to someone’s house.

  “Are you kidding?”

  The nerve along his jawline twitched again. Without ceremony he picked me up and shoved me down in the container, slamming the lid over me.

  “Feeling very Indiana Jones right now.” I curled down at the bottom.

  “Stay there and be quiet,” he grumbled, and then I heard his footsteps retreat.

  “You okay, Sprig?” I whispered, moving the bag so I didn’t squash him.

  “Not talking to you right now,” the little monkey mumbled through my bag. I patted it in response.

  The sound of feet clomping down the cobblestone froze me in place.

  “A dónde fueron?” One of the men asked where we had gone. His feet moved closer to the basket.

  Keep going. Move along. Nobody here. I felt like I was trying to perform a Jedi mind trick on them. If I could ever get the damn fae powers to work, now would be a good time.

  “Check every basket, bin, or corner,” another cop ordered in Spanish. The accent was different here than the Spanish I had studied, but I could grasp the basic meaning.

  I felt a hand hit the top o
f my hamper. My stomach sank. They would find me in a matter of seconds. Light came into the space as the top lifted up.

  Don’t see me. You don’t see me, I repeated over and over in my head.

  A dark-haired, older, heavyset man peered down, his dark eyes rolling over the insides of the basket. Our eyes connected. Sweat prickled down my spine and air halted in my lungs.

  His mouth dipped open to speak, his brows furrowed. The lid crashed back down on me. “Nothing in there,” he stated and moved away.

  A river of relief rushed through me. My head fell back, and my eyes closed as I took a deep breath of air.

  Holy shit! It worked.

  This was a good and a bad thing. The stronger Ryker’s powers became in me, the more they might not revert to him. His chances of getting them back were getting slimmer and slimmer. If we didn’t find someone soon who could help us, Ryker would lose them forever.

  In the last month, my life had turned a complete one-eighty. I’d been a Collector, hunting and capturing fae. I had a sister, a home, and a man I loved. I had also despised fae, but now?

  The top of the basket came up, the rays of light blinding me to everything except two electric white-blue eyes staring at me.

  Ryker...

  His solid hands came down, curling under my arms, helping me stand. He was gasp worthy, either out of fear or attraction. I still hadn’t decided. His face was striking and distinct, with defined cheekbones and a strong jawline. A dark blond scruffy beard covered his lower face, highlighting his full lips. A few scars ran through both eyebrows, setting off his white unnerving eyes. Tight braids lined either side of his head, his hair left loose on top, almost like a Mohawk. He was in jeans, a T-shirt, and heavy combat boots. With a battle axe strapped to his back, he seemed to have stepped off a Viking movie set.

  He was sexy, commanding, and dangerous. I bit down on my bottom lip, uneasy with his close proximity. We both had started out despising the other. Slowly over the month, it grew into tolerance, then to understanding, now to respect. I glanced away as he helped me out of the basket.

  A line dented the space between his eyebrows. “You used glamour?”

  I nodded, straightening out my clothes, peeling off the jacket and hoodie, and tying them around my waist. The tank top underneath was soaked with sweat, but the slight breeze felt good as it brushed my damp skin. “I didn’t think it would work, but I kept repeating, Don’t see me, in my head.”

  “Is this the first time you’ve done that?”

  Yes was on my lips, but something triggered a memory of trying to escape Garrett and his men one night at the Red Cross shelter. He was Vadik’s leader and muscle and wanted nothing more than to catch us and take the Stone of Destiny back to Vadik, an extremely powerful, dangerous, and wealthy man. That night one of the fae walked right by me and asked another man if he had seen me. At the time I chalked it up to luck and ran for it. Looking back I could see there was only one way I could have gotten out of the situation. I wouldn’t have gotten away so easily if it hadn’t been for glamour. I shook my head, my loose ponytail flicking over my bare shoulders.

  Ryker nodded, seeming to know the answer. “It was far too commanding for it to be your first time. The cop was intent on seeing you, but you still blocked him. Not newbie stuff.” He frowned again.

  “I’m sorry.”

  He jerked his head over to me. “Why are you apologizing?”

  “Because I know what it means.” I placed my hands on my hips, glancing at the ground.

  “We don’t have time for this. We need to get out of here.” He spun around, heading back the way we came. “Don’t apologize for something you can’t control.” He was angry. I could see the muscles in his shoulders drawn close to his ears. The frustration wasn’t at me but the situation. Still, I felt awful. If I could open my chest, take his powers out, and hand them over to him, I would. I didn’t want them. And it was even worse knowing at any moment I could die, and I would take them from him for good. We were working against an invisible clock.

  As I tracked Ryker’s figure down the path, Sprig’s voice rose out of my bag. “Please, no more running. You’re lucky we haven’t eaten in a while or your bag would smell really different right now. And why the hell is it so hot?” His head popped up and took in the scene around him. “What in sprite-nuggets... where are we now?”

  TWO

  Life in Seattle was uncertain after the electrical storm, but it had been easy finding a place to stay

  as so many left the city to escape. Death and destruction made it a free-for-all, and squatter’s right became law.

  Aguas Calientes was a town near Machu Picchu. I had investigated this area, being strangely drawn to the mystery and beauty of the “Lost City of the Incas.” South America had always been at the top of my list to visit, and Machu Picchu was the place I wanted to see the most.

  The small town was full of tourists taking up the limited hostels, B&Bs, and hotels. The locals fed off sightseers by selling trinkets, offering “authentic” guided tours, lodging, and food. The town was financed from the tourism industry, and the persistence of the residents wanting to make a living off it was only intensified by the remote location. The town lay in a deep gorge below the ruins. It was fundamentally an island, cut off from all roads and fenced by stone cliffs, a towering cloud forest, and two rushing rivers.

  My dream for a long time had involved moving to South America with Daniel and Lexie to open a day camp for orphans and disabled kids. Now I was here, but neither Lexie nor Daniel would ever be.

  We crossed over a bridge to the other side of town where we found more local inhabitants, though even here you couldn’t get away from the infestation of B&Bs and rooms for rent to vacationers.

  It was one of these places where Ryker stopped when he spotted a room-for-rent sign. We had no money, but with two thieves who held glamour, we easily persuaded the clerk into giving us the room. He was short and on the skinny side with the dark hair, eyes, and deep tanned skin of a local.

  “We will pay him when we get money,” I whispered to Ryker as we walked up the two flights of stairs.

  He sighed but nodded. “Let’s deal with one thing at a time.”

  I was a survivor, always had been. I used to steal, fight, and cheat to get what I needed. Growing up in foster care could take away the right and wrong of things. When you had no consistent home and little food, you did what you needed to survive. Most people would stick their noses up at me, but they had no idea what it was like. To imagine it was far different from living it. But being a part of the Department of Molecular Genetics, DMG, and having Daniel and Lexie in my life changed me a lot.

  I tried to put my dark past behind me and become a new person, a respectful person. But when so many of us ended back on the streets after the destruction of Seattle, I realized the girl I had once been was not as hidden as I thought. She came out with a roar, almost killing another girl in a street fight. It terrified me. Ryker was the one who said I had to learn to accept all sides of myself, even the dark twisted parts. I learned early to play a part, be what people wanted, to keep myself in compartments, even with Daniel. I didn’t want him to know much about the “real” me, but in the short time I’d known Ryker, he had seen it all.

  Still, I didn’t like stealing from people who were doing their best to get by. If I were going to rob or not pay, it would be from the uber-wealthy.

  “Aquí lo tienes.” Here it is. The landlord unlocked the room and moved to the side so we could step in. “I rent it by the week or month. Whatever you decide, I need the money up front.”

  It was a compact room, with worn, creaky floors. A small, pointless rug sat at the foot of the bed too dingy to see its original colors. The walls were painted in a cream, chipping and peeling in the corners. Sheer white curtains covered two large windows which looked onto the street below. A wooden table and two chairs were stationed in front of them. One tall dresser sat between the bathroom door and a closet. A mi
niature refrigerator stood next to the table, an old TV sat on top of it, with a desk fan set on the TV. The center of the room was filled with a queen-size bed.

  One bed.

  I ignored the thought and walked over to the restroom. We had shared a bed many nights, but the last time was different. It was uncomfortable and tense, and it took me a long time to fall asleep. I peered into the bathroom. It had an old claw tub with a clear plastic hanging curtain, a pedestal sink, and toilet. Simple, but efficient.

  “We’ll take it,” Ryker spoke in Spanish to the clerk.

  He nodded. “There is also a community bathroom at the end of the hall. No kitchen, but there is a hotplate in your closet.”

  Of course. Where else would you keep a hotplate?

  “I’m Diego, and I live in the first apartment on the main level if you need me,” he said to us in Spanish, dropping the keys on the table before shutting the door. I hadn’t seen Ryker glamour him, but I knew Diego wouldn’t have left without payment.

  We both stood in silence for a moment. We were finally safe. For the moment anyway. Exhaustion pressed down on my shoulders, lowering me into the chair at the table. Everything I discovered in the past few hours crept into my head.

  “Soooo, what’s for lunch?” Sprig jutted his head out of my bag.

  “It’s past lunch here.” I unlooped the bag from my neck and set him on the table.

  He crawled out, squatting back on his hindquarters and looked at me with his huge brown eyes. “Then dinner?” His little face tilted to the side as he clasped his hands together in a hopeful plea. His long tail curled around his feet.

  “Sprig,” Ryker warned, crossing his arms.

  “What? I am hungry. You know how cranky I get if I don’t eat.”