“No. I mated Jase Kayrs.” Just saying his name spiraled heat into her abdomen.

“Bugger that.” Henry sighed loudly. “Well, your only hope now is not to allow the power in. It would’ve been fun to discover your abilities.”

Hope lifted her chin. “I can block the overload?”

“Sure. Especially since you’re probably already gaining strength from mating a Kayrs. You have to block the power now. So sad.”

“Wait a minute. My sister is an enforcer—she contained my errant plasma balls yesterday.” Brenna wondered where Moira had gone—they needed to talk.

“One witch won’t be able to help you. Either a mate who can quickly sync with your powers, or a whole barn of witches . . . maybe. That might not even be enough.” Henry clicked more keys. “I’m emailing you all the research I’ve done on the comet and your birth. I wish you had listened to me. Who knows what we could’ve done on the solstice.” The phone clicked.

“Henry?” The damn witch had hung up on her. A second later, her email dinged. Figured he’d have her email address. Her private email address. She opened the document and started scanning.

The front door opened and Jase stepped inside. He glanced down and then stomped out a smoldering tile. “How’s it going?”

“Great.” She perched her glasses up her nose, irritation swirling through her that she still needed them. When would her eyesight return? “I’m learning about the comet and the solstice.” Now was not the time to talk about the amazing orgasm he’d forced on her before deserting her.

His eyebrows rose. “Great minds think alike, apparently.”

“What do you mean?”

“I’m not sure, but if you’re going to have incredible powers for a night, I thought we could find a way to locate Garrett.” Jase frowned at the ocean as dawn slowly arrived. “What happened to my window?”

“You pissed me off.” Old news. They had more pressing matters to deal with. “How might I locate Garrett?”

“I’m still working the idea out. What have you learned?”

She’d learned that if she tried to harness the comet’s powers, she’d probably short-circuit her heart and die, and that was the best-case scenario. Worst case—she’d let off an atomic bomb wherever she stood. “I’m still compiling data.”

“Good.” Jase sat on the floor and popped his neck. “Can I help?”

“Maybe.” The guy was strong and used to have amazing powers. Perhaps he could help her contain the altering matter. She held out her hand and re-formed the oxygen into fiery plasma. She trembled with the effort of containing the matter, but she was finally relearning control. “Can you snuff this out?”

Jase frowned and eyed the weapon. “With my hands?”

“No. With either your own plasma ball or by harnessing the oxygen in the room.” If her powers were returning, it seemed likely his would, as well.

He shrugged and zeroed in on the ball.

Nothing happened.

He grunted. “Guess not.” Irritation showed in his copper eyes. “There’s a chance I’ll never regain the ability, Bren. Sad but true.”

Yeah, but she needed him to regain it soon. “I won’t be able to contain all the power from the comet.”

His eyebrows rose. “How so?”

“Too much, too fast.” She sighed.

“There wasn’t a problem when you were born.”

“I know. But I didn’t try to harness the comet’s power when I was born. I’d like to try now.” Without safeguards, she couldn’t put the entire world in jeopardy. Who knew? A month ago she was frailer than a human, and soon she might hold humankind in her hand.

The plasma ball zinged toward Jase.

He ducked.

The fire left a fist-sized hole in the front door.

Brenna gulped air. “Oops.” Humankind was in for a burning if she failed to learn to control her powers. “Some of the research I read makes it seem like my lack of control isn’t merely due to being without power for a decade. Some of this craziness is because the comet is coming closer.”

Jase eyed his damaged door. “That makes an ironic kind of sense. Does the research say how you’re supposed to contain this new power?”

“Only that my mate should be able to help, if my mate is a witch.” She frowned, wanting to give him the full truth. He deserved honesty. “You’re not a witch.”

“No shit.” He pushed off from the floor. “I’ll go talk to Conn to find out if he has any tips.”

Good plan. “If we can’t figure something out, I’ll need to go home for the solstice.”

“You are home.”

She shook her head. “No, I mean closer to the members of the Coven Nine. They’re the most powerful witches in existence, and if anybody can help me contain the power, they can.” That way maybe she could still try to find Garrett before it was too late.

Jase’s chin rose. “We’ll discuss the matter after I speak with Conn.”

“You can discuss all you want. Talking doesn’t change the facts.” Ignoring the stubborn vampire, she turned back to the research. There had to be a solution somewhere.

Just as Jase opened the door, Emma Kayrs stepped inside with a sheaf of papers in her hands.

Brenna stood up to meet the queen. “Are those the newest results on my blood?”

“Yes.” Emma’s eyes widened as she took in the destroyed room and glassless wall of windows. “Your blood is the same.”

Brenna coughed. “That’s impossible. Look at what I’ve already done.”

“I can’t explain it.” Emma stepped gingerly over a chunk of ash.

“The planekite is just as present in your blood as the poison was five years ago.”

Well, that explained the still-crappy vision. “How is that possible?”

“The power from the comet and the solstice,” Jase said grimly. “Apparently Pagurus is a bigger deal than we thought.”

Darn it. She should’ve paid better attention to Henry and all of his claims. “Does this mean after the solstice, I’m still going to die?”

“No,” Jase growled. “This just means it takes time for a vampire mating to take full effect. You’re going to live to see thousands of years. I promise.”

That was a promise the vampire couldn’t make or keep. “We both were injured, both damaged, when we mated. Maybe we’re unable to save each other.” She sat back down amongst her papers, her mind spinning. What if on the solstice she could save him for good? If Kane was correct and she would be able to alter matter and unbind a virus, maybe she could somehow help Jase. Help unbind whatever was constraining his natural gifts. Return his powers to him?

Of course, she’d need to heal him without blowing up the world.

Emma sighed and handed the papers to Jase. “I’m still hopeful the mating will help you both. Sometimes it takes more than a couple of days, you two. Give it time.”

Time was exactly what they lacked.

Brenna nodded. “I agree.” She dusted off her hands. “How are the repairs on headquarters coming along?”

Emma shrugged. “I’m sure they’re fine. I’ve been in the infirmary patching up wounded vampires—who are all cranky but going to mend.” Lines of stress darkened the circles under her eyes. “So far nobody has an idea of where Garrett is.”

“We’ll find him,” Jase said softly.

“I know.” The queen kicked a piece of ceiling tile out of her way. “I’m going to go check on my sister. Cara isn’t holding up very well right now. Understandably.”

“Neither is Talen.” Jase rubbed a hand through his hair. “Well, shit, none of us are. We have to find

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