: Chapter 11
The Wicked In Me
Azazel leaned back against the wall of the solar room the next morning as he said, âHer story checks out. My source confirmed what she told us about her past, her mother, and why both were exiled.â
Cain turned away from the window overlooking his garden. âYou thought she was lying?â
âI expect everyone to lie to me, because I lie to everyone else. Our kind live a lie.â Azazel frowned, pensive. âPlus, she has this unfamiliar vibe about her. I donât think sheâs all witch. Maybe sheâs a hybrid of some kind. She never mentioned her father. It could be that he isnât a witch. My source isnât sure who he is, only that he never came to Aeon with her old coven.â
âDo the Aeons suspect sheâs responsible for the landâs deterioration?â
âYes, though they donât know how.â
âDid you tell your source thereâs a curse at work?â If so, Cain would be pissed.
âNo. Thatâs a need-to-know thing. He doesnât need to know.â Azazel tipped his head to the side. âSo, you took her home with you last night.â
âYes, and Iâd like to get back to her before she wakes up and disappears, so are we done?â
Blinking, Azazel pushed away from the wall. âWait, sheâs still here?â
âYes.â
âWhere?â
âMy bedchamber.â
Azazel squinted. âAs in your personal chamber, or one of the rooms you use for women you bring home?â
âThe first,â Cain carelessly replied, going for aloof.
âDonât act like thatâs nothing, Cain. Our monsters donât easily accept other people in their den. Especially for an overnight stay. Your creature didnât fight you on it?â
âIt likes having her where it can see her. Which is more about control than anything else. It wants to be able to see for itself that no other man is near her.â
âSo itâs possessive of her?â
âIt insisted on me plugging her.â
Azazelâs lips parted. âYouâre serious?â
âIt isnât prepared to share her. If I hadnât done what it wanted, it would have done the deed itself. Then it probably would have ended up killing her, though not necessarily on purpose.â
âDoes she know sheâs been plugged?â
âShe believes itâs simply a barrier. Obviously, I canât explain the situation to her.â
Azazel puffed out a breath. âI donât even know what to say. I canât relate at the fuck all to your situation. I know our monsters are territorial by nature, but mine has never wanted me to plug anyone. Is this normal for you?â
Far from it. âThere have been times when mine has wanted me to plug other women, but itâs never insisted on it before. So the most it has done is sulk for an hour when I refused to act on what it wanted. Itâs never been prepared to take the matter into its own hands before. I donât know what it is about her that has it acting out of character.â
âItâs not the only one acting out of character. As far as I know, youâve only allowed one other woman to enter your personal chamberâthat was Ishtar. That didnât end well. And I donât just mean your relationship with her.â
No, he meant that Cainâs creature had grown to feel so much distaste for her that it had hated having a den sheâd âsoiled.â That was how the monster had seen it. Cain had eventually had to switch chambers.
âIf your creature decides it wants to keep Wynterââ
âIt wonât,â said Cain. âIn a few days, itâll be bored of her.â
âBut if it isnât, if it does want to keep her â¦â
âSheâs fucked,â Cain finished with a sigh.
Azazel gave a slow nod. âYeah, sheâs fucked.â
*
Walking through the stone corridors of the Keep, Wynter shook her head at herself. God, sheâd actually passed out after sex. Like some kind of swooning maiden. How embarrassing.
Cain, being a person who seemed amused by other peopleâs discomfort, would for sure find her embarrassment hilarious. As such, sheâd been kind of relieved when she woke to find he was gone.
After sheâd dragged on her clothes, sheâd exited the chamber to find Maxim waiting outside. Heâd informed her that Cain was in a meeting with another Ancient. She wondered if it was Ishtar but then shoved the matter out of her mind. It wasnât Wynterâs business.
Cain apparently also hoped sheâd wait for him to return. Nu-uh. She had shit to do. And the more time she spent around that beautiful bastard, the more threatened she felt as a woman. Because with the power he could wield over her body and soulâbringing her a pleasure that no other man ever had or ever couldâheâd set up a craving in her.
After thanking Maxim for escorting her to the exit, she left the Keep and headed home.
She walked into the living room to find Delilah organizing her for-sale cosmetics near the window.
Taking in the sight of Wynter, Delilah smiled. âWell, well, well, someone looks awfully well fucked. Had a good night, Priestess?â
Wynter shot her a droll look. âDonât call me that.â
Snickering, Delilah glanced toward the kitchen. âYou got those potions ready yet, Anabel? Customers will be coming soon.â
âIâm almost done!â Anabel shouted.
Delilah snorted. âYou said that half an hour ago.â
âYou canât rush genius!â
Rolling her eyes, Delilah turned back to Wynter. âQuick warning, Anabelâs all in a tizzy.â
Wynter frowned. âWhy?â
âDiego sent her flowers. He doesnât seem to have realized why Anabel switched from a Nervous Nelly to a bloodthirsty bitch in the gauntlet, but it would seem heâs happy to roll with it. She isnât sure how to handle the attention or acceptance, though. Given Cain all but dragged you out of the arena while giving you sex eyes, Iâm pretty confident in assuming that he wasnât put off by your vicious performance last night.â
âVery good guess. In fact, he seemed to get off on it.â
âI got that impression.â Delilah sobered a little. âThink heâd be able to handle what you are?â
âHeâd handle it. Itâs the way heâd handle it thatâs the problem.â
âHe doesnât strike me as a person whoâs easily fazed.â
âItâs not that I think heâll fear me, Del. Iâm not even sure itâs an emotion he can feel. But heâll want me dead all the same. Every single one of the Ancients will. At the very least, theyâd toss me out of Devilâs Cradle.â
Delilah stood up a little straighter. âIf they did, you wouldnât be heading off alone. Weâd go with you.â
âI wouldnât ask any of you toââ
âWeâd go with you,â she repeated, her voice hard. âWould you stay here if one of us was kicked out?â
âFuck, no.â
âThen you get it. Now letâsâHattie, youâre not supposed to be reading right now, weâve got stuff to do,â Delilah called out, looking toward the kitchen yet again.
âIâm not reading,â came Hattieâs reply.
Delilahâs lips thinned. âWoman, I can see you looking down at an open book.â
âIâm just admiring the font.â
âYouâre talking out of your ass is what youâre doing,â Wynter cut in, turning to look at her.
âSpeaking of asses, thereâs an anal sex scene in here,â said Hattie. âWhy would he tell her to push out as he pushes in? Thatâs risky business. I mean, she could fart.â
Wynter closed her eyes. âIâm sorry, I canât have this conversation. Stop laughing, Del, it ainât funny. Now I have just enough time to go shower and change, Iâll be back soon.â
The day seemed to drag on, though Wynter couldnât explain why. It wasnât like it was a bad day. Plenty of customers came and went, and some products were so high in demand that Delilah had to take orders.
As usual, they were tired by the end of the workday. Hattie, though, was more chipper than usual as they ate a late dinner. A knock at the door had her hazel eyes going wide with excitement. âOh, this could be him,â she said, standing.
âHim? Whoâs him?â asked Wynter. âAnd why do you look all happy and flushed?â
âHattie has a âgentleman caller,ââ explained Xavier, smiling.
âA fellow witch,â she added, patting her hair.
âDonât worry, heâs not trying to lure her away from us or anything,â Xavier told Wynter. âHeâd simply like to get to know her better.â
There was no âsimplyâ when they were dealing with someone who handled betrayal and heartache by whipping up poisonous teas. âJust donât marry him, Hattie. Thatâs all I ask.â Providing there was no walk down the aisle, the guy should be safe.
Hattie waved that away and hurried out of the kitchen, humming to herself. When she returned, she didnât have a strange male at her side. No, it was Maxim.
Wynter blinked. âOh, hey, Maxim.â
His expression serious, he said, âCain would like you to join him at the manor. Your old coven is here.â
Well, fuck me sideways.
*
Standing in the grand foyer with Azazel, Cain turned as he heard two sets of footfalls heading their way. And there was his witch. She looked remarkably calm and casual, given the situation. In fact, she seemed more interested in the décor than why sheâd been called to the mansion. Which was probably why Maxim kept casting her curious glances.
Her eyes met Cainâs and ⦠no, there was still nothing there to suggest that she was feeling anything besides blasé. If he hadnât known how much the Moonstar coven had fucked her over, he might have bought her indifferent act. His creature, too, wasnât so convinced that she was fineâit knew exactly how good she was at showing people only what she wanted them to see.
âRight on time, little Priestess,â said Cain, resisting the urge to touch herâthat could wait.
She nodded at both him and Azazel. âMaxim says my old coven is here.â She glanced around. âWhat room are they in?â
âTheyâre outside,â Cain told her. âAfter what they did to you, theyâre not welcome here. They were told to wait at the gates. I will go out there first to talk with them. You and Azazel will follow soon after.â
She stared at him for a long moment, looking as though she might object, but then she briefly inclined her head. âAll right.â
âSo careful to keep your expression neutral,â he said. âI hope you donât have it in your head that Iâm about to make a deal with these people. Iâve assured you that I will protect you. I meant it.â
Not giving her a chance to respond, Cain stalked out of the manor and down the driveway. The iron gates swung open with a faint creak, but he didnât step out of them. None of the dozen witches moved forward. They stood very still, eyeing him warily.
Finally, the woman in the center gave him a placid smile, her lips trembling slightly. âGood evening. My name is Esther, Priestess ofââ
âYes, I heard,â he said, sure to sound bored. âWhat do you want?â
She slowly inhaled, clasping her hands in front of her. âThere is a rumor that a stray member of my coven is under your correction. I have come to take her home, where she belongs.â
âHave you now?â
âHer name is Wynter Dellavale. I have it on good authority that she is here. If you would be so kind as to summon herââ
âNo one would ever describe me as kind.â
Someone from the slowly gathering crowd snickered, drawing the attention of the coven. These witches werenât the first people to come searching for an outcast, and they wouldnât be the last. The residents often enjoyed watching such people be turned away just as they were once turned away by those who mattered to them.
âWhat do you want with her?â Cain asked.
âTo take her home, as I said,â replied Esther. âShe is ours.â
Was she fuck. âYours?â The word almost came out on a growlâa sound that would have come from Cainâs creature. It really didnât like hearing another refer to Wynter as theirs. Like him, it wanted this bitch gone. âYou didnât seem to feel that way when you chose to cast her out of your coven.â
Esther licked her lips. âThat was a mistake. We will make it up to her.â
âHmm now, see, this is my problem ⦠I donât believe you. I donât believe you give a whisper of a shit about Wynter. Of course, I donât expect you to admit that to someone whose protection she is underâit would be unwise of you, to say the least. What I do expect is for you to leave here without drama.â
âButââ
âThe bounty hunters did pass on my message to the Aeons, yes?â
Esther cleared her throat. âYes. They claimed she is now your property. Your kind protects what belongs to themâI know that. But you have no real idea of who she is or what she is capable of. If you did, you would not be so eager to keep her at Devilâs Cradle.â
âI know everything I need to know.â
âBut Wynter is the source of that information, and she cannot be called a reliable source.â Esther sniffed. âIâm sure she told you that her magick is tainted because she was killed as a child. That is a lie. Her death was an accident. She was not tortured as she claims. She invented that lie so that she would not be held responsible for what she did to the boys who accidentally ended her life. Ten years old, and she murdered two teenage boys. Hacked their bodies with that dark magick of hers.â
âSounds like my kind of girl,â said Cain, hiding his surprise at the latter revelation. There was every chance that the Priestess was lying, of course. Sheâd certainly lied when claiming that Wynterâs death had been an accidentâheâd heard the note of deceit in her voice. But that note had been absent during her latter claim. He needed to have a talk with his little witch for sure. âIâm pretty sure Iâd have done worse.â
Estherâs face tightened. âHer magick isnât merely dark, it is death itself. She has ruined the land at Aeon. You think she will not do the same to your town?â
âSince I donât intend to exile her as the Aeons did, no, I donât think sheâll make any such attempt.â Cain heaved a bored sigh. âIâd say weâre done here.â
âProtecting her would be a mistake,â Esther blurted out.
He narrowed his eyes. âNow that almost sounded like a threat.â
She swallowed, her eyes flickering nervously. âThe Aeons asked me to pass on a message.â
âThis ought to be good,â he muttered.
âThey wish me to remind you that they gave you mercy all those years ago. They could have killed you; they didnât. You owe them for that, they said.â
Anger coursed through him and put a rock in his gut. âOwe them?â he echoed, his tone silky smooth. âDo you hear that, Azazel? We owe them.â
The porch floorboards creaked and then ⦠âYeah, I heard.â
Estherâs eyes flew to something behind Cain. âAh, there you are. It is time to come home, Wynter.â
âAeon isnât my home,â Wynter said, no inflection in her voice, as she and Azazel moved to flank Cain.
Estherâs eyes flared. âIt will be no oneâs home if you do not fix what you have done.â
Wynter snorted. âYou canât tell me that the big, bad Aeons are struggling to handle a little environmental erosion, surely.â
She scanned the sea of faces, taking in the hard expressions, marveling at howâdespite all theyâd doneâit still hurt that theyâd so easily banded against her. But then, sheâd been an outsider to them since she was ten years old. It was now simply official. Rafeâs absence did lessen the sting slightly.
She cocked her head. âDid you know that the exiled are killed before they can even reach the border?â
Surprise rippled across many faces, including that of Esther.
âAh, you didnât. Well, let me tell you ⦠thereâs no memory-wipe process. Theyâre paralyzed and then thrown over the falls.â
âThat is a lie,â Esther insisted.
âNo, itâs not. The banished die.â
âIf that were true, you would not be alive.â
âIf it wasnât true, Iâd have no memories. But I do. I live because I managed to escape Wagner.â And then ⦠well, she was pretty sure her monster ate most if not all of him, but that was a whole other story. That same monster was currently watching Esther closely, entertaining the manyâand very creativeâways it would make her suffer.
Esther shook her head, dismissing Wynterâs claims with ease, and said, âI have no time for this. I do not know what you did with that death magick of yours, but you need to come home and reverse whatever spell you cast.â
Wynter pursed her lips. âYeah, nah.â
âYou will return to Aeon, and you will do so immediately.â
âItâs like youâve forgotten that youâre not my Priestess anymore. Weird.â
âWynterââ
âThe only way Iâm leaving Devilâs Cradle is if I have no choice but to go. And the only person who can force me to leave is Cain.â Feeling like a cold fist was wrapped tight around her heart, Wynter met his dark, currently unreadable gaze. âDo you want me gone?â If he said yes, he was so dead.
His brow inched up, imperious. âYou and I have a deal, remember?â He cut his eyes back to Esther. âWynter stays here.â
And the cold fist released her heart.
The Priestess gritted her teeth. âThe Aeonsââ
ââare not who you think they are,â Cain told her. âNotice that they didnât come here themselves. This is a dangerous place. You are their people. But they insisted on you facing the danger, not them.â
âThis is unhallowed ground,â said Esther. âThey cannot step foot on it.â
Cain felt his lips twitch. âIs that what they told you?â
Azazel chuckled. âSuch story spinners.â
Cain dismissively flicked a hand and half-turned away from the coven. âReturn to your rotting home. Tell the Aeons that Wynter will remain here.â
âYou cannot possibly be willing to risk their wrath over this,â Esther insisted. âShe is a mere witch. No one important. Her magick is impure, twistedââ
âMore powerful than yours, which I suspect is your real problem with Wynter,â Cain finished.
Estherâs mouth snapped shut. For a moment. âI implore you to reconsiderââ
âNo imploring,â said Azazel. âThis is tedious enough as it is.â
Oh, Wynter couldnât have agreed more.
When the Priestess again went to protest, Cain clipped, âNo, we are done. You will leave, or you will die. The choice is yours.â
Esther clenched her fists. âShe will ruin your town. Sheââ
âLeave, or die,â Cain ordered.
Wynter crossed her metaphorical fingers that the bitch would be dumb enough to push him. But, her cheeks flushing, Esther pivoted on her heel and stalked away with her coven members in tow. No such luck.
The crowd whoâd gathered smirked and poked at the witches, spouting taunting comments like, âThatâs it, run along.â
Cain glanced from her to Azazel and then tipped his chin toward the manor. In silence, they headed inside.
Back in the foyer, Azazel turned to her. âYour old coven is a joke.â
âYou wonât get an argument from me,â said Wynter.
Looking deep into those quicksilver eyes, Cain tilted his head as he asked, âWas what Esther claimed about the teenagers true?â
Not even a flicker of emotion crossed Wynterâs face. âThat they accidentally took my life? No. That I took theirs? Yes. I did mention that they were executed.â
âYou didnât say that you were the one who performed the executions,â Cain pointed out. It made him wonder what else sheâd left out of her story.
âPeople always give me weird looks when they learn what happened to the boys,â said Wynter. âAnd hey, I get it. But I donât like it. Surely thereâs stuff that you two havenât publicly shared because you know others will react in a way you wonât like.â
Unease tingled its way down Cainâs spine. âWhat makes you think that?â
âYou and the Aeons are all super secretive,â she reminded him. âYou let people draw their own conclusions, and you donât bother to confirm or deny any theories. It stands to reason that you simply feel some things are better left unsaid. And no, Iâm not asking for clarification on that.â She paused. âI would, however, like to know if you have any idea of who the Aeons might send next.â
What she wanted was to change the subject, Cain thought. And he had to admit she was smooth at easing a conversation away from one topic and onto another. He wouldnât call her on it now, though. Not when he sensed that the scene outside hadnât been quite as easy for her as sheâd like him to believe.
âI doubt theyâll insist your old coven returns,â he said. âBut someone will come. Keepers, perhaps. The Aeons will only come if itâs a last resort.â
Wynter poked the inside of her cheek with her tongue. âIs there an Aeon who youâd hesitate to hurt? That might be who theyâll send.â
Cain exchanged a look with Azazel. âThereâs one, but they wouldnât send her.â
âWhy not?â asked Wynter.
âBecause they prefer to keep she and I apart,â replied Cain. âAnd they would expect me to keep her here, which wouldnât suit them.â
Wynterâs brow puckered for the briefest moment. âAn ex of yours?â
âMy mother.â
Wynter slanted her head. âBut she sided against you in the war, right?â
âIt wasnât quite as simple as that.â
She parted her lips as if to question him further, but whatever she saw on his face made her instead choose to hold back her words.
Azazel turned to Cain, claimed he had somewhere to be, and then excused himself.
Finally, Cain crossed to Wynter and allowed himself to touch her. He smoothed her hair over her shoulder and palmed the side of her neck. âIt was hard for you. That scene.â
She averted her gaze. âIt shouldnât have been. Itâs not like I thought they cared about me or anything. I already knew I meant nothing to them.â
âBut you were hardly going to enjoy having a reminder of that, were you?â
âI suppose not,â she muttered. âCan we talk about something other than those assholes?â
Since he would much prefer to see the strain gone from her face, he didnât push. âWe can talk about how you were gone when I returned to my chamber this morning. I didnât like it.â He bit her lip in punishment, and her pupils dilated. âYou knew I wanted you to wait for me.â
âI would have been late for work if Iâd stayed.â
He cupped her hips. âI would have made it worth it.â
Her mouth curved. âProbably, but Iâm not going to allow you and your magickal cock to blind me.â
âMagickal?â
âI have responsibilities that I take seriously. And I know better than to give you your own way all the time in any case.â
Cain slid his hands up her back. âIf I had my own way when it comes to you, you would be tied to my bed all day every day, ready for whenever I want you.â
âNo, I really donât think you would. I mean, it would be pretty hard for me to use the bathroom, and I donât think youâd want me making a mess of your bed.â
âHmm, maybe I would instead put you in chains, then. Chains long enough that you could make it to the bathroom.â
She frowned. âI donât like how serious you look right now. I gotta say, itâs kind of freaking me out.â
âI doubt many things truly freak you out, little witch.â He kissed her softly, teasingly. âCome home with me.â
âHmm, whatâll happen if I do?â
âIâll make it worth your while in orgasms.â
âAnd soul-gasms?â
He felt his mouth quirk at the terminology. âThose, too.â
She splayed her hands on his chest. âAll right, Iâm in.â