The Beloved – Black Dagger Brotherhood Read Online J.R. Ward

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Fantasy/Sci-fi, Paranormal, Vampires Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 145
Estimated words: 138274 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 691(@200wpm)___ 553(@250wpm)___ 461(@300wpm)
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Rahvyn. It had been Rahvyn, coming in from wherever the hell she had been, hitting Caldwell’s soil—and his fucking life—like a bomb.

He wasn’t surprised that nothing had grown in the soil after her impact. Nothing had grown in him, either—until Nalla. And he really had to nip that shit in the bud, especially given his new exit strategy.

“Who are you letting go?” she whispered.

Shut up. Shut up. Shut— “Not a who. A what.”

“So that sweatshirt smack-talked your mama?”

He crooked a smile. But couldn’t hold it.

“I’m burning a dream.” He crossed his arms over his chest, the holsters of his weapons pulling at his shoulders. “Not a person, a dream. And how stupid is that.”

“That’s not stupid at all.”

This time, when he looked at her, it was properly. Standing just off to the side of the impact pit, she was in the parka from last night, but had a red scarf and buff-colored trail pants that were new. Her hair was pulled back in a ponytail, as usual, and her face was arresting in the firelight, her features coming alive.

But as he tested the air for her scent, he smelled a different shampoo and fabric softener.

“You didn’t go home last night, did you.” As she recoiled a little, he blamed himself. “Do you want me to go talk to your father again?”

“Why would I ask you to do that?”

“Did they kick you out because of me?”

Nalla’s frown was a reminder that she wasn’t looking to be rescued. “No, and even if they did, that’s my problem to deal with, not yours.”

Bingo, he thought.

“And as for the dream you’re burning?” she continued. “You’re not being stupid or sentimental. Dreams are even harder to give up on than any reality. What we want, what we imagine in our heads, is a fiction that lives and breathes even though it doesn’t actually exist. When we recognize that it’s not real and we have to let it go? We give up a tender part of ourselves along with the fantasy. It hurts.”

He had to look back at the fire because he didn’t want her to see into him.

But like she hadn’t already?

“You trying to psychoanalyze me,” he murmured.

“No, I’m just sharing an observation.”

“So you’ve given up on some dreams, too, huh.”

“Worse.” When he glanced over at her, she shrugged. “I’ve always been too scared to have any. I’m a coward like that.”

“You’re no coward. No fucking way.”

There was a period of silence, nothing but the crackling from the fire making noise between them. Well, that and some owl half a mile away who was talking into the cold darkness.

“Do you feel better now?” she asked.

He kept staring at the flames, thinking about all the things that could be consumed by them. And all the things that couldn’t.

With a shrug, he replied, “With what I’ve burned? Not really. With pointing out you’re a good fighter? Yes.”

Nalla laughed a little. “I think you’re biased for reasons I can’t fathom. Whatever, though.”

As she stood there, he wanted her to leave, but not because he didn’t like having her with him.

“The sweatshirt was over thirty years old,” he remarked. “It was in perfect condition because it’s been in a drawer all this time. I used it as an excuse to go somewhere and see someone, and it’s time to say goodbye to all that.”

“Letting go of things can be healthy. Even if it’s hard.”

How am I going to say goodbye to you, he thought.

On that note, if he was starting down this path of see-ya-laters that Rahvyn was sending him on, he might as well begin with the hard ones, right? Rahvyn herself, with that stupid sweatshirt he’d left at the worksite at Luchas House—just so he could force Shuli to go back with him, just so he could maybe, hopefully, run into that female.

In burning the damn thing he was shutting the door on that ridiculous fantasy he’d created about her. So following that theme, how about he did himself a favor, now that he was warmed up with romances that went nowhere, and stage-left’d it with Nalla?

Right here.

Right now.

“Your fire is going out.” Nalla nodded at the sticks he’d gathered. “Do you have other things to let go of?”

“Yeah. You.”

As her eyes flipped up to his own, he cursed himself. But there was a serious no-take-back on that shit.

There was a long silence. Then she said in a low voice, “What if I don’t want you to let go of me.”

“Then I’d say we have a problem.”

“Do we?” she countered.

He nodded his head. “But it’s up to you.”

Her answer was in the way she moved: With slow, deliberate steps, she came forward, stopping when she was toe to toe with his shitkickers. She was not as tall as he was, and he liked the way she had to look up at him, because it exposed her beautiful throat.


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