Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)
Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)
Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)
Ebook321 pages7 hours

Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars

5/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Book Five in the Primani Series. This darkly intense story is a standalone in the urban fantasy romance series.

Finally freed from a century in purgatory, former-wild child Aisling just wants to raise her son and live as a normal human again. Her taste of freedom is cut short the moment her past comes searching for her. There’s one reason she was exiled, and his name is Cain. With him, there was only darkness, and the angels help her, she liked it that way. Now he’s back, and his commands are simple. Stay away from Sean. When he threatens to take her son, she turns to the one man who can save them both. Sean.

Sean is sick and tired of his baby mama’s hateful attitude. Her mood swings give him whiplash, and he’s seriously thinking of strangling her. But when a brutal old enemy shows up to destroy everyone Sean loves, he discovers Aisling is hiding more than her feelings for him. When the ice finally thaws, he’s stunned to realize how she calls to the darkness within him.

Joining forces to protect their son, Sean and Aisling set out on a journey that leads them from the city streets of Manhattan to the elegant hotels of Vienna to the final terrifying showdown in Rome.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 5, 2015
ISBN9781311961563
Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)
Author

Laurie Olerich

Laurie Olerich is the author of the Primani and Demons After Dark series. Part romance, part paranormal, part adventure...Three things she can’t live without! Laurie spent most of her life in the Northeastern United States and in Western Europe. She now lives in San Antonio, Texas, with her son and Dalmatian muse Rambo. In an attempt to re-live her wild and crazy younger years, she lives vicariously through her characters by setting their adventures in her favorite city, New York, and the mountain forests of New England as often as possible. Before diving into a writing career, Laurie dedicated 20 years to her country by serving in the United States Air Force. Much of her time was spent around men with guns and cool toys...this explains her obsession with both.

Read more from Laurie Olerich

Related authors

Related to Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)

Titles in the series (7)

View More

Related ebooks

Paranormal Romance For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five)

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
5/5

1 rating1 review

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I have loved this series. It has been the best read for me ever... So much love, mystery, suspense, and of course humor. Loved it????

Book preview

Darkness Calling (Primani Series Book Five) - Laurie Olerich

Darkness Calling

(Primani Book Five)

Smashwords Edition

Copyright 2015 Laurie Olerich

Discover other titles by Laurie Olerich

The Primani Series (includes the Lost Soul Trilogy and standalone titles):

The Lost Soul Trilogy:

Primani

Call the Lightning

Stone Angels

Standalone Titles in the Primani Series:

Broken Souls

Darkness Calling

Saol Mates

Daddy’s Little Demon Slayer

Demons After Dark Series:

Vanek

Benn

Koivu

Derick (Coming in 2018)

This book is available in print at most online retailers.

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.

ad infinitum: endlessly, forever, without limit

Prologue:

THE DARKNESS WAS ABSOLUTE.

The humid air stank of the crumbled bones of Christians who’d waited in vain. Once flesh and blood and tears, they were powdered into nothing now, settled onto the shelves and forgotten. He’d no sympathy for them. They were fools. They would have no day of glory, no rise to Heaven. Instead, they moldered in these catacombs until the earth reclaimed them completely. Idiots.

Straightening as a draft of air slipped across his neck, he allowed a triumphant smile to unfold. Perfect. She was here. He felt her, sensed her, with every fiber of his being, every drop of his blood. Even through the volcanic rock of these walls, her scent washed over him, touching him, setting his blood to a simmer. He fought the urge to close his eyes and simply breathe her in. Unlike the dead, he was no fool.

Calling like a siren, her heartbeat rang out in the unbroken darkness as she panted for air just to his left. His woman hid with one hand on her useless silver blade and the other clutching the wall. She was petrified with fear. He drank her in for the last time, grimacing as she squeezed her eyes shut against the fear. It saddened him to see her like this. Yes . . . sadness was the right word . . . the right emotion. After all they’d been through, it came down to this. She ran tonight. She would always run from him, from what they had together, from her darkest needs. He wasn’t ready to say goodbye just yet. Shaking his head to clear such distracting thoughts, he let his gaze expand to roam across the slant of her cheek, the full curve of her mouth, one more time. Even now, panicked and nearly destroyed, she was almost too beautiful, too perfect. A small movement drew his eyes to the Primani blade clutched in her fist. Too lethal. It was time to end this. Peeling away from the wall, he yanked her against him, crushing her knife hand until she screamed and dropped the blade at his feet.

Why do you run? You know you cannot hide. I will find you wherever you go.

Chapter 1: Ties That Bind

Manhattan, New York, Present day June.

YOU SON OF A BITCH! Aisling jerked him around by one arm, eyes shooting daggers through his face.

Whatever. Blah. Blah. Blah. Sean peeled her claws off and stepped away. I’m not in the mood for you right now. In case you haven’t noticed, I’m trying to work. His position was totally blown, but that wasn’t the point.

Not ready to let it drop, she followed him down the sidewalk, voice dropping to a hiss that only he could hear loud and clear. I’m not done talking to you. Don’t walk away from me!

She was damn lucky he was surrounded by humans. He was seriously thinking of dematerializing and leaving her to bitch at the sound waves he left behind. They’d been arguing about this for months. It was getting old. Parting a sea of people like good ol’ Moses, he rounded the corner onto 44th Street and yanked her into a doorway. Stumbling, she huffed with indignation and glared up at him. (Up being a relative word—she was nearly as tall as he was to begin with, and the four-inch fuck-me shoes she wore brought them eye to eye.)

He jammed his nose to hers, and ground out with the very last remains of patience, "Woman, I am sick to fucking death of fighting with you over this. Why can’t you just let it go? I’m his father. I have every right to spend time with him as much as you do. Raphael and Gabriel both agree. Our custody agreement spells it out. You’re just being a bitch, and I’m sick of it."

Her cobalt eyes burst into low flame as her anger threatened to push her to the edge. It was nice to see she trusted him enough to let all her supernatural power jump right out. Too bad she really wanted to light him on fire with it. Clutching his bicep, she sneered, You’re right. I’m being a bitch. It’s what I do best, isn’t it?

Rolling his eyes, he practically bit his tongue off trying not to snap even uglier things. How the hell had things gotten so bad? They’d never been close, but this past year they’d gone from tentative parenting allies to hostile enemies. Her mood swings made his head spin. He couldn’t keep up. A few months ago, she’d shared a bottle of wine with him when he brought Sean Michael home on Sunday. They were both mellowed out for a change, and the night ended with a kiss that left them both hungry. The next day? She’d shut down completely. Told him to fuck off and started doing everything she could to piss him off. Mica was sure it was a defense tactic. He snorted at the memory of that convo. Yeah. Not. His baby mama was a pain in the ass bitch. Pure and simple.

"For the last time, Sean Michael needs training. I’m his father. I’m training him whether you like it or not. I have to go. I have an appointment with a douchebag demon who owes me a favor. I’m picking my son up at 4:00 tomorrow for my six weeks. I strongly suggest you stop interfering and have him packed and ready to go." He met her angry eyes with fury of his own. She didn’t blink.

Aisling Andersson refused to back down. She couldn’t afford to. Sean O’Cahan was under her skin. In her skin. Everything about him made her want to unravel—the intensity in his eyes, the faint Irish lilt he tried to hide, even the way he moved. God, how he moved! Like sex in motion, all smooth rolling muscles and coiled power. If she let her guard down for one minute, she’d remember the feel of his hands caressing her skin, his mouth on her neck. It might have been seven years ago, but the haunting memory of the fire between them unfolded in her mind every time she saw him, which unfortunately, was every other weekend since they shared custody of their only child.

She tried to avoid looking at him. It was safer that way. He wasn’t perfect, but he was the kind of man who turned heads. She’d love to say she was immune but that would be a flat out lie. No one was immune when he switched on the charm. Not that he was trying to be charming . . . he’d stopped trying to be nice years ago. With spiky black hair, finely-carved cheekbones, and vivid blue eyes that saw into a person’s soul, he was fine. More than fine—he was wicked sexy.

Which was exactly why she was such a bitch.

Long story . . .

Those stunning eyes narrowed into slits as he stared her down. Sean was supposedly one of the good guys. He was one hell of a Primani and had sacrificed more than any of them for the greater good. Kudos for his bravery. They had a past though, and that was a problem for her present. Seven years ago, the universe had literally dumped him on her doorstep. Looking back, hindsight and all that, it was clear they’d been tossed together by someone higher up on the food chain. He’d been scattered—obliterated physically and spiritually—and she’d been ready to help him get himself back together. He’d lost his entire life; his lover, his world, and his Primani powers; all he had was her. Despite her need to keep him at a distance, his heartbreaking struggle had clawed at her soul, defrosting the ice, letting her feel again, forcing her to feel for the first time in more than ninety years. After spending nearly a year tiptoeing around one another, they had one night together before he vanished into thin air. One night of achingly beautiful sex that had left her raw, exposed, aching with the pain of loss—and pregnant.

Now she was back among the living and things between them were . . . complicated. Yep. Complicated. She couldn’t lie to herself. She was attracted to him. He had more good qualities than bad. The angels knew he was a loving father in spite of his unreasonable expectations for the small boy they called son. Aside from that, he was a brilliant strategist, and one of the most successful Primani of recent history. Between him and Killian, they had vanquished thousands of demons. He was temperamental and brooding. He was goddamn sexy as hell. Exactly how she liked her men—or it would be if she was allowed to have one.

Another long story.

And with that thought, a chill brushed the back of her neck. Damn him! Not now! A shadow shifted across the street. Blinking hard, she searched the scaffolding that hid most of the storefront. Empty.

En slavita a Irku. Ad infinitum.

The words whispered through her mind, drifting away before she could fully understand them. Familiar but . . . not. Deja vu?

Aisling!

Pissed off and ready to choke her, Sean was so tightly coiled a tic jumped in his jaw. Closer to demon than angel half the time, he called to something broken inside, making her want more despite the danger. Unconsciously taking a step forward, she froze when an odd play of light caught her eye. Not again! Whipping around, she held up both hands to protect herself. An unexpected gust of wind bounced her into him. Catching her arms, he steadied her with a glimmer of concern in his eyes.

You okay?

Wrenching her arm away, she snapped, Don’t touch me! I’m fine.

The flash of concern evaporated. His face darkened with anger, and he held up both hands in surrender. Touching you is the last thing I want to do. I’m out of here.

She had nothing to say to that. Instead of tossing out another snarky comment, she watched him stalk down the street until he was swallowed up by the sea of people. He was gone. Again. Closing her eyes, she shoved the familiar hurt into its battered cardboard box. She knew better than to think such things.

The elegant Gramercy Park penthouse was a disaster area. Worse, it reeked of sick dog. Possibly several sick dogs. Someone had scattered newspaper across the black and white marble foyer. Much of it was now unreadable. Several piles of puke and poop dotted it like noxious landmines. The new leather couch was shredded.

Holy shit!

Enter at your own risk. Sporting yellow rubber gloves, a gas mask, and a backwards baseball cap, Dec glanced up from gingerly stuffing the disgusting newspapers into a trash bag. Heartbroken sobs drifted from the back bedroom.

Aisling frowned. Casualty?

Yeah. The runtiest little dude was just too sick. He couldn’t recover. Gesturing with his chin, he said, Thor and Loki are with Rori in the spare room. She’s got them holding down food now. The vet thinks they’ll be all right. Parvo is nasty shit. We’re lucky we saved the two. One of his famous dimples made an appearance as he asked, You in the market for a puppy?

That explained the newspapers, but not the couch. It looked like a pack of wolves used it for a chew toy. She fluttered a hand in its general direction. Doubt it.

Yeah, the couch is a loss. Rambo freaked out so we ended up doping him. He’s a little, um, skittish.

Skittish? More like homicidal. The dog in question peered around the corner, shiny black ears laid flat, eyes narrowed with suspicion as he sniffed the air. She offered her hand, which sent him backpedalling so fast his rear paws hit his ears. The slick tile didn’t help his escape. He fell on his doggy butt with a pitiful yowl before vanishing in a clatter of nails.

You named him Rambo? Are you kidding me?

Dec finished cleaning the rest of the trash, closed off the bag, and set it in the hallway. Stripping off the gloves and mask, he grinned at her expression of total disbelief. Seriously, dudette. This is the first demon dog I’ve ever seen that was terrified of its own shadow. It’s going to take some work to get him trained. Crouching nearly horizontally, he whistled for the Dalmatian.

Rambo slinked around the corner, stared reproachfully at her, then oh-so-cautiously tiptoed sideways to Dec who ruffled his ears. There’s a good boy.

He’s been like this since we pulled him out of that basement. Some asshole used his head as an ashtray. Poor baby. I’ve never seen such an abused dog. Rori’s normally sunny smile was nowhere to be seen.

Moving slowly to keep from panicking the pooch, she followed Rori into the kitchen. After snagging a glass of water, Aisling perched on a stool, and waited for Rori to finish washing her hands. She wanted some girl time, but wasn’t good at asking for it.

Rori lifted herself to the counter and crisscrossed her legs. "Not that I’m not happy to see you, chica, but it’s not like you to drop in. You hate the city."

You have no idea how right you are. Too many demons, too little peace. I hate this place, but I was stuck running down a lead for Alex so I met Sean for coffee to talk about summer vacation. She scowled into her water and sighed. We had a fight.

That’s a shock. What happened?

Same ol’, same ol’. I don’t want to talk about it. Let’s change the subject.

Rori tossed her a knowing look, but changed the subject as requested. You colored your hair, didn’t you? I like it. Why the change?

Re-living history? Finding herself? Longing for her humanity? There were many reasons for the change, but none she was willing to share. Those wounds were scabbed over nicely. Sharing her secrets, speaking the words, would just add pain to the aches she already lived with.

So instead of baring her soul, she explained (more or less frankly), This is actually my natural color. I’ve been a brunette for more years than I can count. Alexandyr suggested it a long time ago. He thought I blended a lot better as a brunette. Since I’m not undercover anymore, I don’t need to worry about blending. Letting her lips relax into a smile, she ran her fingers through the curling mass of strawberry blond and shook it so it bounced over her shoulder blades. I finally found a stylist who could match my natural shade.

Dec strode in a few minutes later with a scowl between his eyes and his cell phone to his ear. Sean’s voice bellowed through the tiny speaker. Great. Here it comes. After hanging up, Dec considered her for endless seconds before finally sighing hard. As Sean’s wingman, best friend, and Primani brother, he kept getting dragged into their drama; kicking and screaming, but dragged nonetheless.

Steeling for another lecture, she calculated the distance between her ass and the nearest exit.

You just can’t help yourself, can you? You have no idea how hard he’s trying to be civil, but you tear down every bridge he tries to build. Why can’t you meet him halfway?

It was her turn to sigh. He’s not perfect, Dec. Your partner can be a real dick. He doesn’t even have to try too hard. Surely you know that by now? How many years have you been fighting together? More than fifteen-hundred?

He’s bent over backwards for you! How can you be so cold to him?

Oh, please! He doesn’t give a shit about me. If I wasn’t Sean Michael’s mother, he wouldn’t even talk to me.

That’s because you’re such a bitch!

Launching herself to her feet, she cried, I’m so sick of being called a bitch!

Then stop acting like one!

Rori squeezed Aisling’s arm and gave her boyfriend a pointed glare when he opened his mouth. Stop! Both of you! Dec, out—go do something for a while. She squeezed Aisling’s arm again. "And you settle."

After much grumbling, Dec snapped a leash on Rambo and stalked out the front door, dragging the poor dog behind him. Taking a deep breath, Rori said, I know you don’t know me very well, but I like to think we’re sort of friends now. We’ve both been sucked into the Primani life. I think I get where you’ve been. Maybe you’ve got your secrets—maybe you’re just really private—either way, I’m a good listener, and they say confession is good for the soul. If I’m crossing some invisible line, just tell me to shut the hell up, but what’s going on with you and Sean? He’s brilliant. He’s fine. He’s Sean Michael’s father. Wouldn’t it be nice to be a family? Why don’t you give him a chance? I’ve seen you two together. There’s chemistry.

Chemistry’s overrated.

Sure, they had chemistry.

The explosive kind that would get them both killed. The kind she’d only felt one time before.

She’d exploded then too.

Chapter 2: Chasing Oblivion

Rome, Italy, May 1925.

IS HE DEAD?

The messenger stood with hands jammed into his jacket pockets, fingering the butt of his weapon. Built like a dock laborer, the man was stocky and coarse, a throwback to the early days of humanity perhaps. His breath came in quick puffs as adrenaline kicked in, excitement from the kill coursing through him. The idiot’s blood flowed close to the surface. Irku could smell it— rich, sweet, heady. A lesser demon might lose control, might sample the temptation in front of him. After all, it was dark, and they were alone in the alley. But he wasn’t just any demon. He was known by many titles. His personal favorite was Keeper of the Apocalypse, but he was content to be feared, regardless of title. He had no need for blood at his age. Blood was nothing to him. Not anymore.

Instead of responding to the inane question, he fixed his eyes on the man beside him. American. Italian. He didn’t care which. It didn’t matter one way or another. The human had a purpose, and it was done. Irku drew a silver watch from his pocket to check the time. Midnight. Time to go.

Hey! I’m talking to you. Did you hear me? The man toed the stiff lying between them, spitting coarsely before adding, Dead. Huh. I thought he’d last longer. Squatting for better access, he emptied the corpse’s pockets, coming up with a handful of lire and a key. Holding it up, he went back to searching even after Irku took the key.

I’m afraid longevity is overrated.

The human peered up with a confused half-smile. What do you mean?

Your time is up.

Aisling! Damn it, woman. Stop! The big and powerful Alexandyr Talanov threw himself forward into a low roll that let him slide just under the knife she’d thrown at his gut. Diving behind a wooden fence post, he took a minute to catch his breath. A crow landed on the crooked rail, just a few inches from his head. Her sparring partner hissed and waved his blade in its direction. Twitching its tail feathers, it pooped with a snide sound before tucking its beak under a wing to preen. She bit her lip to keep from laughing.

Alexi! Come out, you coward! I’m not going to wound you. She shifted her weight from foot to foot as a smile of victory teased her lips. She had him exactly where she wanted him—on the ground and at her mercy. It was a hard-earned win, and one she planned to enjoy. It had taken months of grueling drills and more than a few bruises to finally win a round. Alexandyr Talanov was renowned in the Primani ranks. Not many could beat him in a knife fight—or any fight for that matter. He was a force of nature.

Unfolding himself to his full intimidating height, he dropped his arms to his sides and scowled down at her. "Too late. You’ve ruined my favorite shirt. And stop calling me Alexi. It’s a child’s name."

Aisling ignored her trainer’s peevishness. Alexandyr was always scowling. It wasn’t a good day unless he had kittens over something. She’d only known him for a year, but felt as though it had been lifetimes. The kinds of things they did tended to bring people like them closer together. There was an intimacy to their secrets, to their killing.

"Oh, I think you’ll heal, and I like the name Alexi. It’s swell. So Russian." Jamming her throwing blade into its sheath, she walked away, dismissing him altogether.

In two strides, he was beside her, pulling her back around, mouth tight, eyes hard. Don’t walk away from me! We’re not finished.

Paling at his abrupt change of mood, she stepped back, tugging at her captured hand. Let go!

Clearly striving for patience, he sucked in a long, deep breath, grinding out, Why are you cringing? I’ve never hurt you. He peered into her glittering eyes, and demanded, Talk to me. What happened to you?

Aisling tugged her hand again, wanting nothing more than distance between them. God, didn’t he know how hard it was for her? Looming over her, he was making it hard to think, let alone come up with a rational lie for the fear. He’d never accept the truth. She’d never tell it to him. Instead of letting her go, he drew her nearer, reeling her in until they were only inches apart. The heat radiating from his powerful body tempted her, and she shivered. Not with cold, but with desire, with fear. If anyone saw them, it would be the ruin of them both.

I’m sorry, Alexi. It’s not you. It’s me. She groped for words he’d understand, believe even. I’m not good with people. Or Primani either, I guess. She gave a half-hearted shrug and batted her eyes, hoping he’d just let it go. They’d been over this a thousand times. He was determined to get to the truth. She was just as determined to keep it buried.

His eyes hardened as he watched her struggle to lie. He knew she was lying. He wasn’t stupid, but he had no proof, so she’d keep lying—keep throwing up the wall between them. Nothing good would come from letting him in.

Her heart pounded as he searched her face, holding her closer so she knew he felt the rhythm against his chest. You lie so well you’ve almost convinced yourself.

Ah, Rome. Aisling savored the last few golden rays of sunlight while the shadows grew longer, and the gaiety in the pizzeria beneath the flat grew louder. The lingering warmth nearly coaxed her into smiling. Nearly, but not quite. It was simply another day come and gone. Nothing to smile about.

Another day in an endless procession of days.

Another day in the endless procession of her life.

Immortality was overrated. Humans talked of it as though it was the key to happiness, but she’d only found pain and suffering. Her immortal life wasn’t much better than her human one. And that was saying something—her human life had been a living nightmare.

Immortality wasn’t a joy. It was a prison that there was no escape from. She couldn’t simply choose to die. Primani didn’t die. They didn’t cease to exist. No. As warriors for the archangels, they carried on as long as their services were needed. Their job, her job, was simple and never-ending. Technically on the side of good, Primani patrolled the earth, monitoring demon activities, breaking through their defenses, killing them off when they threatened mankind. Weak minded humans weren’t able to resist the call of darkness. Demons twisted desires into obsessions until people lost their way, basking in their power, their money, even their perverted sex games. Enchanted by false promises, they waltzed through seemingly charmed lives, believing they had won—until the last moment, when the demon pulled the mask away to reveal the beast beneath.

Sometimes the beast itself was so beautiful it was unrecognizable as anything but pure joy. Sometimes the beast was the lure, not the mask that it wore.

A trill of laughter snapped her from these melancholy musings, drawing her eyes to the street. She gazed through the throngs of Romans drifting along, not really seeing them, not really caring about them. Their existence washed over her like the evening breeze. The hum of voices, the shouts of greetings, the cadence of a city on the edge of change—she envied them their ignorance. They wouldn’t know what hit them.

Planning to jump? Dimitri Talanov filled the doorway behind her.

Dimitri was Alexandyr’s

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1