: Chapter 14
The Wicked In Me
Setting down her chopsticks, Wynter briefly squeezed her eyes shut, hoping none of the other patrons were paying any attention to their conversation. âHattie, can we talk about this later? Or maybe, like, never?â
Hattie let out a pfft sound. âDonât be all prudish, just tell me what it means. If Iâm going to get back in the saddle again, I should know these things.â
Xavierâs mouth slowly curved into a wicked grin. âGeorge is gonna get lucky, is he?â he asked, referring to the old womanâs âgentleman caller.â
âAt some point, yes.â Hattie notched up her chin, looking mighty pleased with herself. âHeâs a very nice man, and heâs not past his prime yet. I donât want to embarrass myself by looking confused when he makes suggestions in bed.â
Wynter massaged her temple. âI really donât think heâll suggest a spit roast.â
Hattieâs brow creased. âWhy not?â
Jesus Christ, she was gonna have to say it, wasnât she? âIt would mean heâs also suggesting that you include a third party.â
âOh, I see. So would be it two men and one woman, or one man and two women?â
Wynter took a swig from her glass of water. âThe first.â
âI think I can guess where each man would position himself. Does the âspitâ part mean sheâs not supposed to swallow? I donât know why youâre groaning at me, Wynter, itâs a perfectly logical query.â
âI hate to interrupt your wacked conversation but can we please leave soon?â Rubbing at her upper arms, Anabel glanced around the restaurant. Located on the surface of Devilâs Cradle, it served supremely good ethnic food and was highly popular. âThere are too many people here.â
Hattie lifted her glass. âWe said weâd come out and get some D, remember?â
Anabel did a double-take. âDick?â
âVitamin D.â Hattie pointed at the sky. âFrom the sun.â
âItâs seven p.m.; the sun has set.â Anabel again scanned the room, paranoid. âWe really should go home. Iâm telling you, weâre not safe.â She started clawing at her nape. âI can feelââ
Delilah pointed her chopsticks at the blonde. âDo not start harping on about deathâs breath again. Iâd tell you to get a handle on your neurosis, but I donât see that ever being possible.â
Anabel scowled. âIâm not neurotic.â
âYou believe death pants on your goddamn neck.â
âBecause it does!â Anabel looked at Xavier. âYou believe me, donât you?â
âOf course I do,â he assured her. âNow come on, girls, weâre supposed to be relaxing. Chilling. Celebrating how good things are going for us right now.â A charming smile graced his lips as a member of staff appeared to swipe the empty glasses. He looked at her nametag. âMona,â he drawled in a deeply Southern accent. âPretty name. Iâm Coltonââ He cut off as a male hand landed on his shoulder.
âYou telling lies again, boy?â asked Elias, amused.
Stiffening, Xavier twisted slightly in his chair to toss a glare at the Alpha standing behind him. âDonât call me âboy.ââ
âYour infractions are building up,â Elias told him, lowering his voice. He bent and put his mouth to Xavierâs ear. âBut thatâs okay. Daddy wonât mind paddling that ass.â
Xavier stared at him like he was crazy. âYou get high a lot, donât you? It explains so much.â
Elias let out a rumbly chuckle, squeezed Xavierâs shoulder, shot Wynter a subtle wink, and then stalked off with some of his pack members.
Xavier met Wynterâs gaze. âCan I kill him now?â
Stifling a smile, she said, âHeâs just trying to unnerve you, stop letting him.â
Hattie patted her chin. âI wonder if heâs any good with a paddle. Do you think he really is a Daddy Dom? He doesnât strike me as the type to be interested in age-play.â
âWhat do you know about age-play?â Delilah asked her.
âI read about it.â Hattie sipped at her water. âI find the lifestyle fascinating. I can see the appeal in it.â
Delilah tipped her head to the side. âYouâre thinking about being Georgeâs Little, are you?â
Hattie adjusted her blouse. âIf heâs partial to it, well, a person should try everything at least once. And, given my age, Iâll be in diapers soon anyway.â
âI tried the Little thing once,â said Xavier.
Delilah lifted her brows. âReally?â
âNo, not really,â he replied.
She flapped her arms. âThen why say it?â
âMaybe your annoyance fills the empty spots inside me.â
âPeople, can we go back to relaxing, please?â Wynter cut in.
It really shouldnât have been so difficult to do that, but with Anabel panicking, Delilah and Xavier bickering, and Hattie asking Wynter one uncomfortable question after another ⦠yeah, there was no âchillâ vibe at the table at all.
Wynter excused herself and headed to the restroom. She was just finished doing her business in a stall when an otherworldly breeze fluttered over her skin, humming with warning. She tensed, her pulseâ
The stall door flew open, and a burst of magickâthick, cloggy, dirtyâbackhanded her. Pain exploded in her cheekbone, her vision swam, and the world spun around her. Oh, she was gonna hurl.
Her monsterâs head snapped up, and it would have taken control if that otherworldly breeze hadnât returned, ushering it to bide its time.
Dazed, Wynter would have fallen if strong hands hadnât caught her. Then she was being hauled out of the stall. A familiar male voice spoke to her. No, hissed words at her. She couldnât understand them. Couldnât focus. Couldnât really think.
She felt completely disconnected from the situation as the male huddled her against him like they were a couple, supporting her weight while walking out of the restroom and over to the side exit. She didnât want to walk alongside him, but her legs moved without direction. She didnât want to stay silent as he led her out of the door, but no words escaped her when she parted her lips.
Outside, he lifted her into a van and roughly dumped her on the vehicle floor before leaping into the van. Laying on her side, she saw someone further down the alley staring at her, looking stunned. Grouch.
Hope spiked in her chest, clearing away some of the fog in her mind. A smug little smirk twisted his mouth, and then he casually strolled through the side door of the nearby pub.
That motherfucker.
âGo!â ordered a voice, slamming the sliding door of the van closed, and then the driver peeled out of there.
Again, her monster went to rise in a fury. Again, the breeze urged it to wait.
Fuck waiting.
Wynter ground her teeth, anger coursing through her. Her âdazeâ was wearing off now. She knew whoâd taken her. Knew she was gonna rip off his cock andâ
Hands rolled her onto her front, making her face scrape along the rough floor. Ow. Cuffs were snapped onto her wrists, and she felt power buzz against her skin. They were bespelled to keep her from using her magick, she realized. Fuck.
Again, hands roughly dragged and shoved until, finally, she found herself plopped on her ass with her back pressed against the side of the van.
Squatted in front of her, the male whoâd snatched her smiled. âHello again, Wynter.â
Blanking her expression, she stared at the man who looked so much like one of the boys who put her through hell. âPhineas.â
Her monster stirred once more, impatient to act. She didnât really have a choice but to release it at some point. She couldnât use her magick, so there was only one way she was getting out of this situation. The monster would easily escape the cuffs. But it wouldnât move until the deity gave it Her permission.
âYour old coven thought youâd be hard to capture,â he said, cocky. âCanât imagine why.â
Darkness fell over them, and she knew they were now driving through the tunnel that led out of the town. She stilled as she heard the rumbling of more engines and the screeching of tires.
âThose three vehicles youâre hearing arenât driven by people coming to save you,â said Phineas. âNah, theyâre filled with people from Aeon. Each vehicle will head off in a different direction, which means anyone who tries saving your ass will have four trails to follow.â
Clever. Didnât matter, though. It was really all for nothing. Because neither he nor the driver would live much longer.
âPeople will realize youâre gone soon, but they wonât find it so easy to track you. Weâre going off-road and taking a little detour thatâll make it simple to lose whoever might follow. Weâve been driving around these parts for days familiarizing ourselves with the territory.â
Pausing, he cocked his head. âYouâre remarkably calm for someone whoâll be delivered to the Aeons soon. They are pissed at you. Were you this calm when you killed my boy?â
âI donât remember.â
âYou think I believe you were really in some kind of shock-induced trance?â He sneered, his eyes blazing. âYou killed him in cold blood.â
Her monster most likely didâWynter truly wasnât sure how it all went down. âThatâs kind of what he and his buddy did to me.â
âAnd what does that matter? Youâre nothing. A mere witch from a weak-ass coven. You canât be easy prey and expect predators to not come sniffing around. That ainât how it works. My son ⦠he was meant for great things. You took his future from him.â
âHe got overpowered by a ten year old girl, Phineas. Not so sure you can claim he was meant for greatness.â
The mage clenched his fist and raised it, but he didnât slam it into her jaw as sheâd expected. No, he just snickered like she was too pathetic to be worth the blow. âIt was your dark magick that overpowered him. Not you.â
âIt wasnât dark until he did what he did. When you think about it, he instrumented his own destruction.â
He squinted. âIâm going to enjoy watching you die. Thatâll have to wait a little while, though. The Aeons need you to fix your mess first.â
âThey canât even combat a little soil erosion, huh?â
âItâs not mere soil erosion. And only dark magick can fight dark magick. The Aeonsâ power is too pure to counteract it.â
She let out a scornful chuckle. âNow if it were true that their power is pure, said power would actually be the perfect antidote for the decay, wouldnât it? The Aeons arenât truly so lily-white on any level. But youâve already figured that much out for yourself, havenât you? You knew Wagner would toss me over the falls.â
âWhat did you do to him?â
âIâm not entirely sure what exactly happened to him. I just know heâs dead.â She stilled as a breeze touched her face in what felt like a âright, you can reign fresh hell on the fuckers nowâ message. âHe never had a chance to do your dirty work, if thatâs what youâre wondering,â she added, feeling her monster very slowly slink to the surface as it prepared itself to lunge.
âThatâs all right. I donât mind doing it myself. I wonât be dipping my dick in youânot inside the woman who killed my son. But everything else? Yes, Iâll enjoy doing â¦â He trailed off, his lips parting as black inky ribbons began to crawl over her eyes. âWhat in the hell?â
âYou shouldnât have come for me, Phineas. You see, this thing that lives inside me ⦠it loathes you. It always has. I managed to hold it back over the years, but only because I promised that it could one day tear you apart if the time was ever right. This moment, well, this feels kind of right. And Iâd be a twat if I went back on my promise so, yeah, you and your friend are now gonna die.â Her vision went black.
*
âI want to be able to shift,â said the male sitting opposite Cain in the parlorâs manor. âMy dragon ⦠I feel it inside me. I hate that itâs trapped. I want to be able to shift.â
Cain inwardly sighed. The majority of the time, those wanting to sell their soul requested something reasonable. Cliché, but reasonableâfame, fortune, power. But then there were those who really hadnât thought the situation through; who hadnât considered the downsides to having their desire granted. The male in front of him was one of those people.
âYou have no real idea what youâre asking,â Cain told him. âDraconian mages were stripped of their ability to shift because they were too destructive. Once they turned dragon, the mage stayed in that form and lost their humanity.â
âI donât believe that. Itâs just a story told to scare us. Dragon shiftersââ
âAre different. Youâre a mage with the suppressed capability to shift. You do not have a separate entity inside you, whatever you might think. It is the bestial magick that is trapped. It has no personality, no wants, no likes, no dislikes. It is simply power. Once unleashed, it would destroy who you are. You would become a beast.â
He licked his lips. âYouâre wrong. Look, I donât even care what will happen. Itâs my risk to take. I am offering my soul to you in payment.â
âYou havenât asked what exactly that would entail. Itâs not a small price to pay.â
âIt doesnât matter, Iââ
The door sharply opened, and Maxim stepped inside, his expression grim. âIâm sorry to disturb you, Sire, but itâs Wynter.â
Cain was out of his seat in an instant, assuring himself with one touch to her soul that she was in fact alive. Stalking out of the room, he clipped, âTell me.â
âShe disappeared from the ethnic restaurant above ground,â Maxim explained. âAn unfamiliar black van was seen speeding out of town, so people are concluding that she was taken. Her coven are in pursuit, but theyâre on foot; they asked someone to pass on the message to you. More of the townspeople have joined the searchââ
Cain didnât wait to hear more. He used the enhanced speed of his kind to rush out of the manor, through the town, and up to the invisible border a short distance away from the tunnel that would take him out of town ⦠if only he could fucking get to it.
Vehicle after vehicle drove through the tunnel fast. He knew the people inside them would search for Wynter. Meanwhile, all he could do was stand in that very spot. It was as far as he could go. Literally.
Anger rumbled through Cain like a thunderstorm, and his hands balled into tight fists. Wynter was gone. Taken. And there wasnât a single fucking thing he could personally do to bring her back. Nothing.
His creature went ballistic, thrashing inside him, wanting out; wanting to hunt and track and annihilate whoever took her. It took everything Cain had to contain the monster.
Azazel materialized at his side, his jaw hard as granite. âI heard what happened. Sheâll be found, Cain. Whoever kidnapped her wonât get far with her. They donât know this land like our people do, theyâll be caught.â
Cain didnât speak. Couldnât. A roar had built in his chest. He knew it would escape him if he opened his mouth.
âSheâs not dead, right?â Azazel asked.
Cain only shook his head.
âThought as much. In my opinion, her kidnapper wonât kill her. If that was their intention, they would have done it there and then rather than snatch her.â
But that brought Cain no comfort, because it meant they likely planned to take her to the Aeons, and those fuckers would eventually kill her if they got their hands on her. Azazel knew that as well as Cain did. If someone didnât get to her beforeâ
Movement caught his eye. He watched as Delilah and Xavier walked out of the tunnel, their faces hard as stone.
âI didnât say it was your fault,â Delilah said to him.
âWell, it feels like youâre tossing the blame at my feet,â clipped Xavier.
âThatâs not what Iâm doing, Iâm just saying I was distracted by you and Elias having yet another snarky encounterâthatâs on me. I should have been more alert. We all should have been. Instead, Hattie yanked out a small paperback and got lost in the story, and Anabel started having a meltdown likeââ
âHey, I warned you we werenât safe, but you wouldnât listen,â ranted Anabel, walking out of the shadows of the tunnel ⦠with a crow on her head and Wynter at her side.
Relief slammed into Cain, making him draw in a sharp breath. Then he frowned. She was covered in blood spatter, brain matter, and all manner of things. She should have looked a mess; should have seemed sheepish and awkward when she laid eyes on him. But no, she somehow managed to look regal as a queen.
âHate motherfucking mages,â spat Xavier.
âI hate them more when theyâre smart.â Delilah looked from Cain to Azazel. âBastards came in four vehicles and took off in different directions to confuse anyone who might follow. Hattie here flew around until she spotted a van that had crashed into a tree and then she led us to it. Wynter had already taken care of shit by then.â
Wynter gave Cain a half smile ⦠like she hadnât just been kidnapped and evidently engaged in a battle of some sort. There were no cuts on her, no bruises, not a single injury. His creature settled slightly, but it wouldnât be happy until she was in their den.
Azazel cleared his throat, staring at her. âI think you have bone fragment in your hair.â
Utterly dignified, Wynter swiped blood-soaked bangs away from her face. âIt is highly possible.â She went to walk past them.
Cain slid into her path. âWhat happened, Wynter? Who took you? And where the fuck are they?â
âMages from Aeon came for me,â she said. âTheyâre probably dead by now.â
âProbably dead? Why probably?â
She went to answer, but then the crow plucked brain matter from her shoulder and spat it on the ground. She offered the bird a smile of thanks and then both of them went to town on the bits of gore, dumping them on the ground.
âLong story,â Delilah answered on Wynterâs behalf. âShe set them on fire.â
Azazel blinked. âThat wasnât a long story at all.â
âIt was more that Wynter set the van on fire while the mages were inside it,â Anabel explained. âSo, yeah, theyâre most likely goners at this point. The screaming was dying down as we left the scene.â
âI still say we should have waited for them to take their last breaths,â said Xavier.
Wynter rolled her eyes. âOnly because you wanted to reanimate their bodies.â
âAnd that would have been so terrible?â he asked.
âNo,â replied Wynter. âBut you would have made them chase Anabel at some point. You always reach that point.â
âShe likes to feel deathâs breath on her neck.â
Anabel whirled on him. âI donât like to feel it, I just do. Itâs a curse.â
âItâs a fucking delusion,â he said.
She gasped. âYou said you believed me.â
âI lied. Thatâs what I do.â