H , breath sawing in and out of her mouth. As sheâd predicted, the glass shard she held had already sliced through skin, blood dripping to the floor. She barely noticed the sting or the loss.
Without her there to cushion him, Micah hit the mattress face-first and grunted, but she paid him no heed. She couldnât. Not if she wanted to get him out of this fortress alive.
And shit! This showdown couldnât have happened at a worse time. Desire still pumped through her veins, thick and heavy, dulling her reactions and making her limbs feel weighted with rocks. Her chest felt hollowed out, and her muscles ached. Perhaps she could have dealt with those things, but her mind was as clouded as if sheâd popped a dozen different pills, a mix of sedatives, stimulants and aphrodisiacs.
She could only blame Micah. His kisses had been CPR to her soul. Heâd made her come alive. Split apart. Forget everything and every one. Common sense had abandoned her. So had survival instinct. Sheâd never ignored her survival instinct before. All sheâd been able to think about was him. His touch, his taste. His tongue lapping between her legs. God, she could fly apart simply thinking about that heady caress. In seconds, heâd reduced her to an animal state, where nothing had mattered but sensation.
Now isnât the time, remember? The doorway was open, offering a straight shot into the hallway. Either she or Micah could run, but not both. One of them had to deal with the demon.
Hopefully Micah would understand what she wanted him to do.
âNot smart, coming in here on your own,â she said to taunt the Lord into an emotional response. What sheâd learned about him during their time together? He was always quick to anger, and that anger made him easily distractible. âYou ready to die?â
For once, he didnât react. His gaze darted from her to Micah, Micah to her. He radiated a mix of rage, concern and disbelief.
Micah didnât move.
Why wasnât Micah moving? Damn it. If he would move, she could attack. Defeat would have to fight her. Micah was simply too weak to see to the battle himself.
She opened her mouth to challenge Defeat but closed it with a snap. Sheâd challenged him a few times during their trek. Bet you canât catch me if you let me go. Heâd let her go. And heâd caught her, pissed beyond imagination. Bet you canât just stand there while I stab you. Heâd let her stab him. And rather than pass out from blood loss, as sheâd hoped, he had then returned the favor. Heâd stabbed her thigh to keep her from bolting while he healed.
Heâd then stitched her up, shocking her. Still. His determination to win every challenge gave him strength, more so than usual, and she couldnât have him stronger than usual right now. Not while she battled the fog. So, as they stood there facing each other, both deliberating how to handle the coming fightâand there would be a fightâshe was very careful not to issue another challenge. Not even a challenge to lose the fight.
Sheâd made that mistake only once.
Bet you canât lose a fistfight to a girl.
He had allowed her to punch him, and he hadnât fought back. Therefore in his mind, he had just lost a fistfight with a girl. Sheâd run off while heâd struggled to breatheââcause yeah, sheâd gone for his tracheaâand heâd had to track her down. When he finally caught her, heâd trussed her up like a Thanksgiving turkey, gagged her and started drugging her.
And if she had tried to speak past her gag, he would have removed her voice box. No question.
âWhat the hell did you do to him?â Defeat repeated, dark, deadly.
âWhat did I do to him?â She assumed attack position: legs apart, knees slightly bent and ready for her leap. The cold, already so much a part of her, seeped out, sheened her skin. With every exhalation, mist created a cloud in front of her face. All the while, she mourned the loss of Micahâs heat.
She still didnât know why she froze like this. Still didnât know how. All she knew was that the ability manifested with her emotions, sometimes strengthening her, something weakening her. Today, she felt empowered.
âMe?â she went on. âWhat the fuck did you do to him?â
âIf you hurt himâ¦â A muscle ticked below his dark blue eyes, and he finally kicked into motion. If she hurt him? What a joke! âThis is gonna be fun. Iâve been craving a go at you.â One step, two, she moved toward him, determined to meet him in the middle.
No!
In a sudden blur of motion, Micah sprang from the bed and flew past her, tackling the demon-possessed warrior and sending both men toppling to the floor. Grunts and groans soon echoed. Slashing arms and vicious kicks ensued. They rolled, they struggled, they assaulted each other ferociously.
Sheâd never seen Micah fight so dirty. He went for the eyes, the throat and the groin, biting and ripping flesh, fists hammering. Defeat, though, merely deflected each of her manâs blows. He never tried to cause harm. Why? Something else sheâd never seenâa Lord of the Underworld backing down. And this one, Defeat⦠Something was wrong. Had to be.
Haidee stood there, numb, watching the bloodbath, sick to her stomach and unsure what to do. Apparently, heâs not too weak after all. Like him, she didnât run from the room. God help her, she wasnât leaving without him.
What should she do? If she threw herself into the fray, she might cut Micah instead of the Lord. They were moving so quicklyâ¦twisting and turning, flying apart, springing back together. And if she accidentally delivered Micahâs death-blowâ¦
Damn it. What the hell should she do? she wondered again, no closer to an answer.
âWhat the fuck is going on?â Defeat demanded between punches. âStop. Amun, you have to stop.â
Amun?
Sheâd heard the name before, knew it belonged to one of the Lords, but she couldnât connect the name with a face. And because she had memorized all the names and faces of her enemy, she knew that could only mean one thing.
There was one immortal warrior the Hunters had never been able to photograph or even sketch throughout the years. Not that they hadnât tried. Theyâd snapped pictures, but those pictures had never turned out, had always been blurry. And when theyâd drawn what theyâd thought was his face, theyâd later realized theyâd done nothing but scribble on the page.
Amun was also the Lord most people forgot the moment they walked away from him. He was the immortal the Hunters knew the least about. Maybe because Amun was possessed by the demon of Secrets.
All the Hunters really knew about him? He had dark hair and dark eyes, and he was tall and muscled. That little bit of information had been acquired through centuries of observation.
Had this Amun died, his demon given to Micah? Did Micah now carry Secrets inside him? Was that why the Lords had chosen Micah? And he was demon-possessed. She no longer had any doubts about that. Those red eyesâ¦peering down at herâ¦hungryâ¦cravingâ¦raging⦠She shuddered, then scowled.
This was another sin to heap on an already mountainous pile. Another crime to hate the Lords for.
Had they wanted someone with the same physical characteristics as their friend Amun? Probably. How amused they must have been, using a Hunter to house one of their disgusting demons.
Donât think about that, either. Get yourself in the game, woman.
Haidee shook her head, clearing her mind, thankfully thinning the fog. The two men were on their feet now, throwing punches, falling backward into the walls, causing dust and plaster to waft through the air, then reconnecting and tossing each other into furniture. They were a blur of motion, brutal, like wild animals fighting over the only snack in the jungle. Wood chips were scattered across the floor, some even swimming in little pools of blood.
Blood, a river between her mother and her father. Both helplessâ¦dead.
Again she had to shake her head, dislodging the memory.
âAmun,â Defeat snarled. âFor godsâ sake! Iâm your goddamn friend. What the hell are you doing?â
In the next instant, Micahâs thoughts hit her. Must kill. Must safeguard.
The words were sluggish, lower in volume than the ones that had come before them, and she realized he was weakening. His wounds were opening, seeping, dripping all over the room.
âSheâs a Hunter,â the demon continued in that outraged tone, âand sheâs my prisoner.â
Mine! blasted through her head. Not yours. Never yours. Mine to safeguard.
Could Defeat hear him? Probably not. Otherwise, he would have been backing out of the bedroom and running for his life. There had been barbwire in Micahâs tone, the tips laced with poison.
But then, Micahâs thoughts switched direction. I have to stop this. Why am I doing this? I love this man. Confusing, wrong, but again, those thoughts switched direction. Must kill. Must safeguard.
Micah snarled low in his throat, the sound rumbling through her mind as he punted Defeat into the already crushed vanity. More wood chips scattered. Red sparked in Defeatâs eyes, a gnarled mask of bone and scales falling over his features.
He was turning, she thought with dread. From immortal to demon.
âWin,â he growled now, and there was another voice fused to his. One that was guttural, raw. Determined.
Shit. She knew that determination. No longer would he pull his punches or deflect Micahâs. Now he would fight to win.
He closed the distance and threw his meaty clubs around, a jackhammer of lethal purpose. Not once did he miss. Micah weakened further, wobbling on his feet, his eyes beginning to swell shut as his head whipped left then right, alternating as Defeat switched fists.
The fact that Micah had lasted this long was astonishing, proof of his own determination, but he wouldnât last much longer. He couldnât. Not at the rate Defeat was delivering blows, and not with the already ravaged condition of his body.
She had to risk hurting Micah, she decided. There was no other way. Which meant she had to put herself in front of him, probably take a few blows before she was able to strike. No problem there.
Better she die than him, even though he was now tainted. He was tainted, yes, but he wasnât evil. That kissâ¦no, he wasnât evil. And if she was killed this day, she would come back; she would remember him. Not the kiss, that had been too good, and all her favorite things were always wiped, but this fight. She would recall the blood, her fearâ¦her despair. But if Micah died, he would be gone forever.
Haidee stiffened, preparing to jump, waiting for the perfect moment. A thought suddenly hit her and she hesitated. If Micah turned his sights on her or even struck her accidentally⦠Oh, God. If she died, she wouldnât remember why heâd done so when she awakened, only that he hadâand she would come back to kill him just as she planned to come back and kill the others. If he survived this, they would be enemies.
Defeat landed a particularly vicious blow to Micahâs side, causing him to wheeze.
Worth the risk, she decided in the next instant. He was teeteringâ¦fallingâ¦
At last Haidee jumped forward, hooked her arm around Micahâs waist and threw him with all her might. Iâm sorry, baby. As he stumbled to his kneesâaway from the actionâshe used her momentum to spin and duck, swinging her right fist at Defeatâs groin. Contact. He doubled over, oxygen bursting from his bleeding lips. She used her other hand, the one clutching the fragment of glass, to slice across his stomach. No mercy.
As she straightened, she landed a hard right to his chin. His head jerked backward, and he grunted, blood and teeth spewing. She aimed the glass at his throat, but only managed to slash his shoulder as he pivoted.
His narrowed gaze landed on her. He could have hit her just then. He didnât.
Firm hands suddenly gripped her waist from behind and tossed her. Through the air she soared, flailing for an anchor, wondering what the hell had just happened. The makeshift weapon flew from her clasp, then she was bouncing on the bed, realization setting in. Micah was aware enough to know who she was, aware enough to want her out of harmâs way. Sweet of him, but that wasnât going to stop her. Heâd done his part. Now she would do hers.
Before the bouncing stopped, she was throwing her legs over the side of the bed and straightening, once again intending to knock Micah out of way. Only, she saw that he had somehow tackled Defeat and now straddled the warriorâs prone body, punchingâ¦punchingâ¦
Between whaling fists, Defeat groaned and babbled. âLostâ¦lostâ¦no, gods, noâ¦lostâ¦â
For several moments, she could only blink, watch. Micah had done it. Despite his injuries, heâd won. Against an immortal. Thatâs my man.
Seriously? Youâre going to victory lap now? Haidee forced herself into motion and rushed to Micah. She latched onto his surging elbow. He could have shrugged her away, batted her off, could have swung at her with his other arm, but he didnât. He faced her. What she could see of his glowing red eyes locked on her, tormented, agonized.
Didnât want to hurt himâ¦couldnât stopâ¦couldnât let him hurt youâ¦. Why couldnât I let him hurt you?
The words echoed in her mind. Didnât want to hurt him. Why couldnât I let him hurt you? Courtesy of the demon? Was the demon trying to convince him that he liked the Lords? Didnât matter, she supposed. Theyâd deal with it. Later. Along with everything else.
âCome on. We donât want to free his demon right now.â She tugged him to his feet, and God, he was heavy. âWe have to leave before the others come.â Theyâd be pissed when they saw what had been done to their friend. She didnât want Micah punished for that. And they would punish him. She had no doubt. Even though he was currently part of their group.
She ushered him to the doorway but had to pause there to wind her arm around his waist. He was stumbling, barely able to remain standing on his own.
âYou can do this, baby. Come on.â
Where areâ¦weâ¦going?
âIf weâre lucky, no one will be around and weâll find a way outside.â Dragging him through the doorway left her shaking and ice-sweating. He was bleeding all over her, giving her more and more of his massive weight. How she maintained her grip, she didnât know. What she did know after taking two steps to the right?
They werenât lucky.
Her eyes widened as she stumbled to a halt, Micah moaning, nearly falling. She held tight. They were surroundedâbut not by the demons sheâd expected. Robed warriors filled the entire enclosure, wings of white and gold outstretched. Scowls lined every single one of their faces, but even still those faces were glorious, radiant. So beautifulâ¦so majesticâ¦dazzling her. She couldnât look away. No matter how hard she tried, she couldnât look away. Exquisiteâ¦
Angels. These men were angels.
Maybe she and Micah were lucky. Maybe Galen had sent reinforcements to rescue them.
âHelp us,â she beseeched. âThe demons captured us, and weâre trying to escape.â
A lovely dark-haired male stepped forward, hard gaze pinning her in place more forcefully than any of the others.
âWe were told to wait out here.â His voice was just as thrilling as his face. A sensual breeze, an exotic caress. âWe did so. We were told not to interfere with what happened inside the room. We did not. But now you have come to us. Now we interfere.â
Realization cut like a knife. The angels hadnât been sent by Galen. They were helping the demons. Horror barely registered before Micah was ripped from her grip. Sheâd never seen the angels move, had been too riveted by the one in front of her, but losing her man snapped her from that lost, dreamy haze.
With a scream of outrage, she kicked the angel in the chest. He stumbled backward only a few steps. She spun, reaching for Micah. Her voice must have snapped him out of his pained, weakened stupor, because, as two angels dragged him down the hall, farther and farther away from her, he blinked open his swollen eyes.
When he spied the distance between them, he roared. Loud and long and ragged, but only she seemed to hear him. No one else paid him any attention, no one else cringed. As she elbowed her way to him, the angels attempted to grab her. She twisted and squirmed for freedom.
All the while, Micah fought his captors. Soon, the two holding him werenât enough. Soon, she wasnât pegged as the biggest threat. The angels turned their attention to the warrior, all but one needed to subdue him.
Haidee! Haidee!
Before she could reach him, the one that had remained behind caught her, strong arms banding around her and squeezing tight. Breathing became a thing of the past. Still. Her struggles never ceased.
Micahâs didnât either, she noted as she was at last carted out of the hall. âIâll come back for you,â she screamed. âI swear Iâll come back.â