Warrior Reborn Read online




  Book Description

  How far would you go to save the ones you love?

  Having successfully hidden her abilities from humans for two hundred years, Briet applies her Guardian gifts to help patients in need. Until she meets her human soul mate, Jason Ballard, who holds the reins to the Briet's patients' cancer protocol. Can she trust a man all too human and grounded in his world to understand hers? Yet, when a deadly threat targets her patients, he is the only one she trusts to help stop an evil that only the Guardians can fight.

  Rules delineate every facet of Jason's professional and personal life. The last thing he expects is to find temptation in the new spitfire doctor on his latest test team. Especially as she starts stirring up issues. Dangerous issues. Issues flagging jeopardy for the lives of the children in the test. Issues his employer, would prefer be ignored. Honor forces Jason to walk a dangerous line between job and conscience as he joins with Briet to ferret out the twisted scheme in time to save her patients. In a final life-altering decision, he will risk every careful plan he's ever made for the woman he values more than life.

  THE GUARDIANS OF EDEN:

  A race of beings created in a Sanctum at the far edge of Eden. Co-existing with mankind, they safeguarded human souls and the promise of eternity--until a virus killed all over the age of eighteen. The surviving children fled to the Sanctum for protection, children raising children without the full legacy of their history and knowledge. Two hundred years of solitude have produced a race of semi-immortals fortified with powers and intellect but lacking the mates who will make them whole and allow them to fulfill their covenant with mankind.

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  BOOK DESCRIPTION

  COVENANT

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  CHAPTER 19

  CHAPTER 20

  CHAPTER 21

  CHAPTER 22

  CHAPTER 23

  CHAPTER 24

  CHAPTER 25

  CHAPTER 26

  CHAPTER 27

  CHAPTER 28

  CHAPTER 29

  CHAPTER 30

  CHAPTER 31

  CHAPTER 32

  CHAPTER 33

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  BOOKS BY KH LeMoyne

  WARRIOR REBORN

  The Guardians of Eden Book 2

  By K.H. LeMoyne

  Published by Digital Crystal Press

  GENRE: Paranormal/Fantasy Romance

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would 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 please return and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locals, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental. (vC)

  WARRIOR REBORN – The Guardians of Eden Book 2

  Copyright 2011 by KH LeMoyne

  Published by Digital Crystal Press

  Cover Art designed by Robin Ludwig Design

  ISBN: 978-1-937080-03-7

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENT:

  Thank you to the following people.

  To my critique partner Linda, because this book wouldn’t be here without your push to try something new, your enthusiasm, and your diligence in reading and giving me feedback on every page.

  To my editor, Jennifer, my proofreader, Cora, and my very talented cover designer, Robin.

  To my better half, because you bring patience and sanity to my writing process when I need it most.

  The Covenant

  And humans were cast from the Garden of Eden

  To work the lands far from their blessed origins

  To survive outside the comfort and glory of God’s original design.

  Mankind came to know both good and evil

  To suffer under the consequences of free will.

  For their salvation, God enacted a covenant with other beings of His creation.

  Beings whose convention and purpose would be the release and healing of souls

  unto mankind.

  Beings empowered with select skills to guide humanity from the perils of their own making.

  Beings birthed in the far edges of Eden’s Sanctuary.

  Though not God’s chosen people, these wardens would be gifted for their service.

  Bonded in time with those who would match them in commitment

  Gifted with one mate and rewarded with the sharing of one soul for eternity.

  CHAPTER 1

  Feel the air. Isolate your surroundings. Air in. Air out.

  The staff swung and flipped from one hand to the other, around Briet’s back to her front. A quick click connected at every hit.

  Clarity of mind. Fluidity of motion. Focus for…Damn it.

  She let the staff in her hand dissipate, bent forward to suck in air, and rubbed the rib she had left exposed to Tsu’s attack as she glared at him from under her bangs. Someday she would surprise that calm, tolerant look right off his face. Okay, probably when she could blow snowflakes out her ass. It wasn’t the most respectful way to treat her teacher. But Tsu encouraged all of his Guardian pupils to use whatever mental images they could muster to inspire precision. If she had no hope then what was the point?

  “I’m leaving my left side open.”

  “And?” He waited, head tilted. His own staff rested in his hands like a walking stick, planted on the stone floor between their bodies.

  She rolled her eyes and sighed. “And I’m not focusing.”

  He glanced over her shoulder, remaining quiet.

  “And?” At the sound of her brother’s deep voice, she let out an audible snort.

  “And between the two of you, I’m never going to make it in time for the Clinical Trial launch.” Fists on her hips, she looked Ansgar square in the eyes.

  He didn’t give an inch. “If you don’t get better at deflecting an opponent you aren’t going to survive long enough to finish the Trials with the humans.”

  Tsu backed gracefully away and left Briet to take on her brother alone.

  “I can’t treat everything like a threat.”

  “You can’t afford not to.” Ansgar wrapped his arms across his chest and stared down at her.

  Intimidation wasn’t going to work on her. He may have raised her, but that was all the leeway she would give. Just because she came only to his chin and had the misfortune to have been born second, did not make her a coward.

  “I looked out for myself for the last two centuries. I didn’t have any problems before and I won’t now.”

  Ansgar’s brows pulled together until they formed one long, reddish blond line. “You are in Salvatore’s playground now, Briet, not safely hidden any more. I won’t be there to watch out for your ass all the time. Since you insist on interacting in the human world, he will have every advantage over you. You need to be prepared.”

  She closed her eyes, took a breath, and then opened them again. Yep, he was still there in her face with worry etched in lines around his mouth and the edges of his eyes. She wished she couldn’t see his fear, but he was her brother, her blood.

  “I’m
working on this. Ask Tsu. Even so, I’ll never evolve into you and some things just take time.” Her hand grasped his arm. “Training isn’t the only thing in life. If I let Salvatore suck all the purpose from my existence, then he wins. His intent was to keep us from aiding humanity, remember?”

  The tension between his brows eased, but not the worry lines.

  “Besides, it’s not like you aren’t five steps away from me all the time. Or are you going to let me have a life now?” She tried a smile on for size. It seemed only to deepen his frown.

  “She has improved.” Tsu’s comment floated over her shoulder. It had no impact on Ansgar. “If she continues to practice daily...” Briet winced at his pause. “…and spars a few times a week, repelling singular assaults will become instinctual.”

  Ansgar shook his head. “He won’t come after you alone. You could only be so lucky to have him launch a predictable attack.”

  Gripping his arms, she stepped closer. “I know you’re worried about me, but I’m not reckless. I take precautions.” She tried another tactic, a more honest one. “The trial is all children, terminally sick kids, Ansgar. I will make the difference for some of them. A difference their human doctors can’t. That is worth the risk to me. This is what I need to do. Please.”

  When he closed his eyes and pulled her against him, she knew she’d won. Then again, he had always supported her choices.

  As a victory, it was a bit hollow. He was right. Salvatore had spent the last several decades weaving a fabric of deceit, murder, and fear around their people—a path no leader should have ever taken. He had succeeded. He’d killed Maitea and her child and driven Maitea’s mate, Xavier, insane. He’d killed Isa and her mate and drugged the rest of the warriors to quell the natural call of their matings. Their race was small and damaged. Each individual killed accounted for another unique skill lost forever and ensured hundreds of human souls would never be healed. All for Salvatore’s goal of domination and greed.

  He hadn’t gone quietly, and Briet had been one of the most outspoken against him before he’d fled for his life. She understood the risks and credited Ansgar’s fears as fact. It still wasn’t going to stop her.

  His cheek rested on top of her head with a sigh. “I’ll go with you to the hospital campus, Pip.”

  She smiled. “Give me twenty minutes.”

  Ansgar watched her walk out of the training chamber with more vigor in her stride than he’d seen in the moves during her session and frowned.

  “She has improved.” Tsu’s quiet voice didn’t penetrate the cloud of concern. “But she shouldn’t be alone. We can cover her activities and provide her additional safety.”

  “She’ll know.”

  “She’ll understand. It is a valid point she raises.”

  “It always is.” He glanced back to Tsu with a sad smile.

  Tsu looked at the floor as he moved the tip of his staff across the stone in patterns. “She won’t find her mate sequestered here, either.”

  Ansgar let out a growl at that thought. “Have you seen what passes for human men these days?”

  “I’ve seen Turen with his mate, Mia. Compared to many women, human or otherwise, she seems exceptionally worthy. I trust Briet’s mate will embody similar qualities.”

  “He damn well better.”

  Tsu had turned his head, but Ansgar could see him bite back a smile at his expense.

  CHAPTER 2

  “Dr. Hyden.”

  Briet nodded an acknowledgement to her project leader at the presenter’s table. “Dr. Sanyu.”

  She took a seat in the front row of the amphitheater near the other clinical trial doctors and ignored the scowl on the team leader’s face. She wasn’t late. Her team would be responsible for interfacing between the patient groups and the Welson Labs’ analysis team.

  The lecture hall used for these briefings held two hundred seats. Enough room to accommodate all the university medical and lab personnel, as well as the representatives of Welson Laboratories. The amphitheater was already three quarters full.

  Dr. Sanyu continued his presentation, only to pause and wait with obvious irritation for the two new additions to settle. “Dr. Thurmont. Dr. Morgan.”

  The man seated to the far end of the platform frowned at the clipped rise in Dr. Sanyu’s tone. As his gaze met Briet’s his expression cleared, but he focused on her with an intensity she found uncomfortable.

  A Welson project lead, no doubt. He stood out in the mix of people in lab coats and penniless-student wardrobes. The immaculate suit, powder blue tie, and crisp white pinpoint shirt gave him away. His clothes accentuated broad shoulders, his wavy brown hair, and light blue eyes. All contributed to his subtle, but unmistakably strong presence.

  Briet finished her quick assessment and turned her attention back to Dr. Sanyu’s screen presentation of the timeline for the trial. She couldn’t shake the impression that Welson had chosen well for their representative, a quiet manipulator to influence a positive result for their latest drug. For the children’s sakes, she hoped the drug produced all the results Welson touted.

  “The patients have undergone the first phase of testing and review. The ones divided into the current protocol groups have completed screening. The high-level data will only reflect the time elapsed since the disease’s inception and assign a rating based on the aggressiveness of its progress. Doctors have briefed all the parents. The necessary consent and waiver forms fulfill our initial legal disclosure requirements. Our goal is to assimilate results for the next three months, compile the data simultaneously with the treatment, and make a final determination of which groups will progress to the final phase by week eight.”

  Briet narrowed her eyes at Dr. Sanyu’s delivery and then focused on her hands folded in her lap. His comments were no surprise. It was still an unwelcome thought that her patients might not progress to final treatment for eradication of their cancers based on lack of clinically documented response in the short term.

  To some degree, it was always a luck-of-the-draw in these trials. That was why she was there, to even the odds. She glanced up to find the Welson representative’s gaze back on her. He held eye contact for several long seconds, as if trying to bore into her brain. Almost locked in place, she felt a reticence to break the connection. Then he averted his gaze to Dr. Sanyu.

  She tried to shrug off the residual sensations from his look, but the man’s attention hadn’t been casual and lingered with her.

  Sanyu finished his presentation and turned to the man in the suit. “From Welson Labs, we have Mr. Jason Ballard. He will interact with the teams to facilitate any administrative, financial or public relations issues. He will interface with the department heads relating to these areas as well. All results and personal extrapolations of data for Welson should be funneled through your team leads or myself.”

  Orders all wrapped up with a glossy bow, the assembled group rose to leave. Briet let out a breath of relief as a hand touched her arm. “Are you heading over to the hospital?”

  She glanced over her shoulder and smiled with a nod. Her associate, Dr. Sheri Arnault, was a pediatric oncologist with staff privileges at several of the hospitals in the area. Briet had become acquainted with the woman at a conference sponsored by Welson Labs last year. Given she spent most of her time covering her tracks and eluding the limelight, it was amazing she’d struck up a friendship with anyone. However, Sheri had been persistent in her pursuit of their camaraderie. She’d shared her experiences and knowledge in a manner both open and forthright. It was a professional relationship Briet found easy to embrace.

  “I have two groups of parents coming in for a final overview.”

  Sheri pursed her lips and gave a slow nod. “A difficult step for them, forgoing conventional methods for, perhaps, gambler’s odds.”

  Briet suppressed a smile at her friend’s undisguised French accent and no-nonsense expression. “Have you had an opportunity to review the drug in the lab?”

  Sheri glan
ced toward Dr. Sanyu standing with Jason Ballard and shook her head. “I’ve only read the preliminary detail.” She shrugged. “What strikes me as odd is the small size of the test groups vs. the disproportionate influx of capital and attention for this drug. It makes me wonder.”

  The two women moved out of the amphitheater and along the glass enclosed bridge that spanned between the university halls and the teaching hospital. Cabs, buses and traffic passed beneath, the noise muted by the structural girth and design.

  “However, our patients have every opportunity for success,” Sheri added, almost as if it were an afterthought.

  “I’m counting on it.”

  “No doubt. For someone who doesn’t sustain an ongoing practice you have quite the track record for success, my friend.”

  Briet glanced out the glass at the overcast skies to avoid Sheri’s underlying question. “I just pick the optimum candidates and the ideal situation.”

  “Let’s hope all these participants encounter your good luck, but one of us is invariably the control group.”

  Yes, thought Briet, there was that. One unlucky set would only receive the placebo after waiving the option for traditional treatment. “Tell me again why Welson discounted using the data from previous tests as a control basis instead of using this option of a control group with no treatment?”

  Dr. Arnault shrugged. Her face held the same measure of discomfort Briet was feeling. “They are reluctant to waste time with assessment of the statistics. It lends an uncomfortable feeling to this first phase, yes? Last I heard, there was still some debate over who makes the ultimate decision for the final groups.”

  “Let’s hope we have some ability to influence the outcome.” They were on the same page here. “This is too heavy a burden for these families to take on without hope.”

  They arrived at the bank of elevators. Two headed down to the patient levels of the working hospital, one headed up to the administration offices.