: Chapter 20
The Wicked In Me
Taking cover behind a cluster of trees, Wynter skimmed her gaze along the men stood around the clearing. She counted eleven, in total. There were all tall, armed, and powerfully built.
âDo you recognize any of them?â whispered Delilah.
âYup,â Wynter replied, her voice just as low. âTheyâre keepers from Aeon.â Even if she hadnât known each face, sheâd have identified their origins by the distinctive insignia on their swordsâmost of which also sported runes, courtesy of her magick. Her monster easily recognized the men too and, not a fan of how theyâd treated Wynter over the years, it was not at all happy about their presence.
Anabel sidled closer, hugging herself and biting her lip. âKeepers are like enforcers, right?â
âTheyâre mostly executioners,â said Wynter. âBut theyâll also act as enforcers, messengers, or bodyguardsâwhatever the Aeons want them to be.â
âSo minions, basically,â Anabel surmised.
âAssholes, too. Especially the one with the crew cut and the scraggly beard. He used to harass the hell out of my mom. He acted like a real prick toward her when she refused to date him.â Fort had also flashed Wynter several seriously creepy smiles over recent years, commenting on how she looked so much like Davina.
Xavier licked the front of his teeth. âItâs a pretty small force, so I doubt theyâre here for war.â
Wynterâs thoughts exactly. âThe Aeons wonât have sent them here to start a battle. It would be senseless. Such a low number would never survive it.â
âOh, what a spectacular behind,â Hattie whispered, ogling a keeper whoâd bent over to wipe his boot.
Delilah gently bumped the old womanâs shoulder with her own. âNot sure if youâre paying attention to the conversation weâre having here, but these are very bad men.â
âOh, I know,â said Hattie with a small wave of her hand. âI do love a bad boy, though. Admit it, we all do.â
Delilah frowned. âNot goddamn executioners, Hattie.â
Xavier raised his hand for silence. âAnd we have yet another keeper, apparently.â
It would seem so, because a burly male who Wynter also recognized stalked into the clearing. She felt the corners of her eyes tighten. âCletus,â she bit out.
Xavierâs brows met. âIâm getting the feeling I should loathe Cletus. Why should I loathe him?â
âHe likes to take from women what they donât want to give,â she fudged.
Fort turned to fully face Cletus. âWell?â
âNo sign of Wynter anywhere,â replied Cletus. âI told you itâd be a waste of time. The Ancients will be keeping her in their underground city.â
Fort rubbed at his bearded jaw. âDid you find a way to get down there?â
Cletus shook his head. âIâm not even sure where the entrance is.â
Fortâs brother and fellow asshole, Milos, propped his fists on his hips. âWe could try and pay off a local to lure her out here to us.â
Fort dismissed that idea with a puff of sound. âThey wonât do us any favors. Not for any amount of money. Itâs best that we lay low and remain undetected.â
âWe donât have to say weâre from Aeon,â said Milos. âWe could claim to be bounty hunters or something.â
âA lot of people here are probably on the run, so I doubt hunters would be welcome in a place like this.â Fort scratched at his head. âLailah did warn us it wouldnât be easy to find Wynter, so I donât think we need to worry that sheâll lose her mind if we return without her. Not as long as weâre successful at mapping out the town as best we can. She said she wants the location of every nook, every cranny, every blind spot.â
Delilah softly cursed. âThe Aeons are preparing to invade the town, huh?â
âLooks like it,â said Wynter, listening as Fort barked orders to each of the keepers. âAnd these bastards are gonna simplify it for them. I canât say Iâm down with that.â
Xavier looked at her, his eyes bright. âCan we kill them?â
âItâs that or let them run back home with information that we donât want the Aeons to possess so, yeah, we can kill them,â said Wynter.
He flashed her a slow grin and conjured his sword. âJust what I wanted to hear.â
Looking similarly pleased, Hattie and Delilah shifted into their animal forms. The crow settled on top of the monstrous cat, who flexed its iron claws. Both women could also fight with magick, but they preferred using their animal forms since it meant that their senses, reflexes, strength, and speed were enhanced.
Wynter lifted a brow at Anabel. âAre you joining the fight or waiting here?â
A sword materialized in the blondeâs hand, which answered the question.
Wynter called to her own blade and then placed her mouth near Anabelâs ear. âMary, Mary, please come out,â she quietly sang.
The blondeâs demeanor changed in an instant, switching from nervous to eager as her eyes took on that familiar not-so-sane light.
âNo drinking blood,â Wynter told her.
Anabel/Mary nodded, a feral smile splitting her lips. âUnderstood.â
Conscious that she couldnât allow her monster free rein right now, Wynter silently assured it that the keepers would die, relieved when it didnât push for supremacy.
âFortâs mine,â Wynter told her crew. âOkay ⦠now.â Pumped full of anticipation, she rushed out of the woods with the others at her heels.
Taken off-guard, it took the keepers a moment to react. But, highly trained as they were, they sprung to attention fast and raised their weapons.
She made a swift beeline for Fort, but freaking Cletus came at her from another angle, forcing her to turn to him. She blocked the sword that swung her way, and their blades clanged.
Sneering, he danced backwards. âIâve been looking for you.â
âClearly not hard enough,â she said. âI found you first.â
They parried and thrust over and over. She didnât need to worry about the Ancients or townspeople watching her fight, so she didnât check her speed; didnât hold back magickly or otherwise. He staggered backwards under the pressure, unprepared for the rigor with which she flew at him. He fell on his butt, and she wasted no time in skewering him with her sword.
Milos came into view and sent balls of blue light sailing at herâone clipped her shoulder, the other smashed into her chest. Pretty they might be, but they also hit like a goddamn hammer, bruising her for sure.
She retaliated with her own magick, hurling dark smoky spiked orbs right at his fucking headâorbs he annoyingly managed to evade. Swords raised, they went at each other. They ducked and twisted and deflected, cursing and snarling.
Around her, her crew battled hard. Dead keepers were up and running, fighting the live keepers. Roars, cries, grunts, squawks, the clashing of steel, and the insanity-laced giggles of Anabel/Mary filled the air.
Wynter hissed as Milosâs blade stabbed her smarting shoulder. His brows snapped together when the runes had no effect on her. Yeah, well, there was something he didnât know, and she saw no need to educate him about it.
Although a wet warmth pooled on her skin and soaked her tee, she didnât look at the wound. She kept swiping out with her sword, aiming for every weak spot, ensuring her every strike was precise.
He twisted his hips and kicked out at her stomach. Missed. Growled. Charged.
She ducked and came up on his side, thrusting her sword deep. He stumbled, his lips parting in both shock and pain, and then dropped to his knees. She swung her sword, beheading him ⦠and smirked at Fort as she did so.
Screaming in fury at the death of his brother, Fort yanked his blade out of a reanimated keeper. He didnât look good. At all. Sweat beaded his forehead, and his tee sported several scarlet stains.
He rushed Wynter with another loud cry of anger, his nostrils flaring when she parried the blow. âYou bitch,â he said. âIâm going to enjoy this. I didnât get the privilege of tossing your thou-art-holier-than-thou mother over the falls. Iâll pay that bitch back by impaling her daughter on my blade, and Iâll avenge my brother in the doing of it.â
Anger flooded her at the mention of her mother, but Wynter kept it in check. âYou were honestly surprised she rejected you? Come on, Fort, you make ogres look good.â
He lunged with a roar. His blows were precise and powerful. The tall bastard had a long reach, and he used it well. Sadly.
Knowing to go for his exposed legs, Wynter swung her hips and slammed the flat of her foot on his thigh, loving his subsequent grunt. The piece of shit waved his arm, sending a gust of magick at her. The weight of it sent her skidding back several feet, but she managed not to fall. Liking the surprise flickering in his eyes, she grinned and then lashed out with her magick.
Growling as deep welts sizzled to life on his face and neck, he retaliated with a swipe of his sword. She blocked it, and then they were at it again.
Around them, chaos raged on. But she could sense that the numbers of keepers had dropped. And beneath the sound of Anabel/ Mary singing âMighty Morphin Power Rangersââwhatever the fuck that was aboutâthe distinctive noises of battle had dimmed.
Wind came at her again, belting her in the face and stealing her breath. She stayed on her feet, but it meant throwing out her arms toâ
Pain blazed along her chest as the sword sliced through cloth and skin. âMotherfucker.â His taunting laugh only fueled her anger. She struck at him with magick, and he cursed as whips of dark power zapped their way along the ground and crashed into him.
The bastard rallied fast and rushed her again, thrusting and parrying, his breathing rapid and shallow. He was running out of steam, and they both knew it. Maybe that was why he began to strike out wildly, desperately, like death itself was hot on his heels.
Well, it was.
When the opening she was waiting for finally came, she kicked out at his knee with a snarl. His leg buckled slightly, and she took advantage. Lunging forward, she thrust the sword deep into his gut, twisted it sharply, and then withdrew it. After a moment, he slumped to his front, dead. Boom.
Wynter glanced at her crew. Delilah and Hattie were back in their human forms, and both had suffered only minor wounds. Xavier looked like heâd been attacked by an alley cat, so heâd likely been hit with skinwalker magick or something.
Anabel/Mary was lying among the corpses that were sprawled on the grass with their eyes open wide and their clothes soaked with blood. She wasnât dead herself. She wasnât even severely injured. But sheâd linked her fingers through that of a dead keeper and was chatting to him like they were a smitten, stargazing couple. But she snapped to alertness and sprung to her feet at the sound of people racing through the woods.
Tensing, Wynter spun to face the new threat. Not more keepers, she quickly realized. Nope, these were residents of the townâincluding Maxim. And as they took in the scene before them, their lips parted in surprise.
Wynter cleared her throat. âDonât mind us, we were just leaving.â
*
There was nothing pleasant nor unpleasant about the psychic space Cain found himself in. It was merely a rectangular room that was all white paint and gleaming white floor tiles. There were only two chairs. Lailah sat in one, her posture regal, her smile placid.
His creature eyed her with distaste. Even before sheâd played a part in imprisoning Cain, it had never liked her. It saw only weakness when it looked at her. A hypocrite. A backstabber. A person who would do anythingâfuck over anyoneâto obtain what she wanted and get where she wanted to be.
In that sense, she and Abel deserved each other. Like often called to like, didnât it?
âI wasnât so sure you would agree to speak with me,â she said, her voice soft. âWe were once friends but, well, that was a long time ago.â
Cain strode toward the empty chair that was positioned opposite her own. âA friend wouldnât have done any of the things you did, so Iâd say that was the wrong choice of word.â
Her smile dimmed. âYou left us no choice when it came to the banishment.â
Annoyance spiked through him. âDo not pin the blame for your actions on me. Own them. Or donât. But do not use me as your scapegoat.â
Her eyes briefly slid to the side, and she rested her clasped hands on her lap. âI did not ask to speak with you so we could rehash the past. The present is my concern, and it should also be yours. This woman you have given sanctuary to ⦠She is not what you think. Her old Priestess, Esther, told you that the land of Aeon is perishing, yes?â
Sitting, he gave a slow nod. âShe did.â
âNothing has been able to fight the blight. It continues to spread like a cancer. More, our people are continuing to fall ill. If it wasnât for our healers, I suspect that many would be dead.â
Cain said nothing. He simply stared at her, keeping his face blank.
âMy people managed to find someone who, like Wynter Dellavale, was brought back from the afterlife using forbidden magick. He examined the decay. He verified that, as weâd come to suspect, the land has been cursed.â
Cain forced himself not to tense.
âWe had hoped that the male witch would unravel the hex for us. He was not able to, however.â She paused. âHe said that his power was no match for it. That each attempt to snap the threads of the curse achieved only in stretching themâthey bounced back into place like elastic every time.â
Impressive. Unheard ofâat least for Cainâbut impressive.
âI asked how that could possibly be. He said that it wasnât simply dark magick at work. But he had no clue exactly what else is at work. He was certain of one thing, though. Her life-force is not tied to the curse. Her death would therefore not be enough to undo it.â
Cain was so taken off-guard that he must have betrayed his surprise in some way, because Lailah nodded and said, âYes, I think we now see what has become clear to me and the other AeonsâWhoever you are harboring is not merely a witch.â
âYouâre only just figuring this out?â Cain had sensed that early on. He just had no actual clue what exactly Wynter was. âThat was always your problem, Lailah. You never viewed mortals as a threat, so you paid no real attention to them.â
Her mouth tightened for a mere moment. âWhen I exiled her, she warned me that there would be consequences. It was such a casual warning. Very matter-of-fact.â
âAnd Iâm sure you dismissed it.â
âHaving never demonstrated any great displays of power, sheâd never given me any reason to assume I should heed her. It wasnât until it became clear that she is not a simple witch that I recalled how something else happened that day. There was a disturbance in the air that felt ⦠strange. Wrong. Alien. I cannot explain or adequately describe it.â
âAnd you dismissed that as well,â he guessed.
âI did,â she admitted through gritted teeth. âPerhaps I was right to do so. Perhaps it was nothing. But perhaps it wasnât. What I am certain of is this: She broke my hold on her mind and body in order to fight one of our keepers and free herself. That is no easy thing. I do not know what exactly Wynter is, but if she was able to hex a place such as Aeon so thoroughly without tying her own life-force to that curse, we have to ask ourselves ⦠What else can she do?â
That was indeed an excellent question. At this point, Cain had a great many questions for his oh-so secretive witch. âIt seems that she might be more interesting to have around than I initially thought.â
âDonât be a fool, Cain. If she can be a threat to Aeon, she can be a threat to Devilâs Cradle. Perhaps even to you.â
âYou donât really believe the latter, but youâre hoping I will. Why? What is it that you want?â
Her face hardened. âI would have thought that was obvious. I want you to surrender her to us. Return your rights to her soul, withdraw your protection. Send her back to Aeon with the conduit and her old coven member.â
âEssentially, you wish me to do you a favor? No, Lailah, Iâm not feeling motivated to do that.â
âIt would be in your best interests as well as ours. Wynter is a power we donât understand.â
âYou and the other Aeons are all about destroying what you donât understand,â he said, his voice hardening. âIf something doesnât fit neatly in a box, if youâre not so sure you can effortlessly kill it, you reach the conclusion that it must therefore be eradicated.â
She swallowed. âAs I said before, I didnât request to speak with you so that we could revisit the pastââ
âBut there are so many parallels, arenât there? Curses, mysteries, secrets, deaths.â
The fingers on her lap flexed. âAeon was once your home. Would you truly see it rot away?â
He gave a casual, unbothered shrug. âI donât really see how itâs my business.â
âHow can you not care that you have given sanctuary to someone who is clearly a dark power?â
âIâve been described as a dark power plenty of times. Maybe youâve forgotten, Lailah, but Devilâs Cradle goes by another nameâthe Home of Monsters. What better place for her to live?â
âShe knows there is bad history between the Aeons and the Ancients. She is using you. Relying on you to keep her safe. Depending on you to fight at her side if a battle ever began.â
âConsidering war again, are you?â Cain truly did hope so.
Lailahâs eyelids dropped slightly. âShe must be made to undo what she has done, or Aeon will be no more.â
âYou can relocate. Itâs not so hard. We all did it. It wasnât our choice, just as it wonât be yours. And we werenât too pleased about it, just as you wonât be. But sometimes things simply donât play out as weâd like them to.â
âIs that what this is about for you? Revenge?â
âOf course.â
She drew in a breath through her nose, and then her face softened into an expression sheâd often worn in front of him many years ago. âCain, please, think ofââ
âSwitched tactics quickly, didnât you? Donât bother playing that card, Lailah. I stopped giving a shit about you long ago.â
She winced. âI didnât choose Abel over you, if thatâs what you think. It wasnât like that. I chose him because I couldnât be with you. Your creature would never have accepted me. It didnât like or trust me.â
âAnd you later proved that it was right not to. Is this why Iâm talking to only you rather than all four ruling Aeons? You all thought that Iâd be more likely to agree to cooperate if there was a âfriendly face?ââ Much like theyâd thought sending a âfriendly faceâ to Wynter might help their cause. âLet me be very clear. This conversation was a waste of your time. I wonât hand Wynter over to you.â
Lailahâs mouth went flat. âPerhaps we can come to an arrangement.â
âNo.â
âDonât be so quick to disagree. You have not heard my offer yet.â She seemed utterly convinced heâd fall all over himself to accept it. âGive us Wynter, and we will give you Eve in exchange.â
âNo.â
Lailahâs face went slack, and her eyes widened. âNo?â she spluttered. âBut she is your mother. You spent years demanding to see her.â
âAccording to Adam, she didnât want to see me.â Cain knew that wasnât true, though.
Lailah looked as if she might admit as much, but then she coughed. âThat has changed in recent years. Eve misses both you and Seth. I know your brother would very much like to have her at his side. Letâs not pretend you donât wish to make the trade. I know you do. You simply donât want to back down so easily.â
âThere will be no trade.â He planned to retrieve his mother himself once he was free. âThere is only one thingâoneâthat I want from you and the other Aeons. You already know what that is.â
She averted her gaze. âWe cannot grant you your freedom.â
He hadnât thought for a moment that they would. Because they knew that he and the other Ancients would wreak vengeance. âThen we have nothing further to discuss.â
âWe have unless you want war. You would be foolish to take us on. You were powerful once, but being contained has weakened you all over time. None of you would stand a chance against any Aeon, let alone a group of them and whatever army they brought. Donât put us in this position, Cain. Donât force our hand. We have left you in peace.â
He barely held back a snarl. âYou left us in a cage. You hoped it would send us stir crazy and that weâd destroy each other. You left us to rot. Tell me why the fuck I shouldnât do the same to your precious land.â
She inched up her chin. âThen you leave us no choice.â
âThere you go again pinning the blame for your actions on me. If you instigate a war, it will be your choice. It will also be your mistake. But then, youâre good at making those, arenât you?â Without waiting for a response, he returned his consciousness to his body.
Cain blinked twice, bringing the room into focus. No one had left, and Maxim was now in the room. Cain flicked the males from Aeon a look and then told his aide, âShow them out.â
Rafe slowly stood. âWill you truly protect Wynter? I know youâre powerful. But will you eventually get tired of people coming for her? Will you one day give her up just to get the Aeons off your back? Theyâll kill her if you do. Maybe not right away, but eventually. And theyâll make it hurt.â
âWynter isnât going anywhere,â Cain told him. âAnd those bastards wonât ever get their hands on her.â
Rafe nodded, satisfied. âTell her I said to take care of herself, and that Iâm sorry I wasnât able to protect her from Estherâs plans.â He allowed Maxim to lead both him and Griff out of the room.
Dantalion dismissed his own aide and then turned back to Cain. âWhat did Lailah say?â
âExactly what I thought sheâd say,â replied Cain. âShe asked that I surrender Wynter to the custody of the Aeons.â
Azazelâs brows snapped together. âWhy would she believe you would do that?â
âApparently, given the destruction that Wynter has caused, I should consider her a danger to all of us and to our land.â
Dantalion rolled his eyes. âLailah is foolish if she thought that youâd be so easily manipulated. What else did she say?â
Her life-force is not tied to the curse. Her death would therefore not be enough to undo it.
Cain wouldnât mention that yet. He needed to speak to Wynter about it first. âShe offered to give me Eve if we handed over Wynter in return.â
Azazel frowned. âShe actually thought youâd trade her for Eve? Seriously?â
âThat makes no sense,â said Dantalion. âNor does her attempt to cajole you into handing over the witch. Why would we give up the only thing that will lure them here?â
âThe Aeons apparently have it in their heads that weâve weakened in power over the centuriesâI chose not to correct her on that,â said Cain. âThey also believe we wouldnât want them to come here; that weâd feel we wouldnât stand a chance against them. In Lailahâs eyes, I am simply being stubborn and spiteful. She has no idea that in threatening war she gave us exactly what we want.â
Dantalion stilled. âSo they will come?â
âThey will have to,â said Cain. âTheir keepers wonât stand a chance against us alone; they need the aid of Aeons if they are to kill us to get to Wynter.â
A look of grim satisfaction came over Azazelâs face. âWho exactly do you think will come? They wonât all lead the army here.â
âAt least one of the ruling Aeons will have to lead them, but I doubt it will be Adam,â said Dantalion. âHe only gets his hands dirty if he absolutely has to. Abel is much the same, but he will at the very least send Lailah to do the deed for him. If so, Saul will be here even if only to protect her. She is most likely the only person he cares for.â
Cain nodded. âThey always did like fighting beside one another.â The siblings were close, much like Abel and Seth had once beenâand that was another reason Cain doubted that Abel would come. The Aeon wouldnât want to have a direct hand in Sethâs death, because it was Cain who Abel held responsible for Sethâs âbetrayal.â
Dantalion rubbed at his chin. âWe need to call a meeting with the other Ancients and inform them what happened here. Iâm happy to hold it at my Keep.â
Cain and Azazel both nodded their assent.
When Maxim returned to the room moments later to inform Cain that the witches were being escorted out of town, Cain asked him, âIs Wynter at the Keep?â
Maxim grimaced. âProbably not, though she assured me that she would head there soon.â
Cain stiffened. âWhy are you pulling that face?â
The aide cleared his throat. âI found her, like you asked. She and her coven were in the woods near the lake.â Maxim tugged at his collar. âThey, um ⦠they were standing over the dead bodies of several keepers from Aeon. Apparently they stumbled upon them.â
Anger spiked through Cain, tightening his muscles and clenching his jaw.
Dantalion growled. âThey dared send keepers here?â
âWas she hurt?â asked Cain.
âShe had no lethal wounds,â replied Maxim, âthough, if the stains on her tee were anything to go by, her left shoulder and chest suffered bad injuries. She swore they would all be healed by Anabelâs potions. Wynter also said she would meet you at the Keep once sheâd showered and changed.â
Azazel rubbed at his jaw. âDo you think Rafe and Griff knew that others had been sent?â
Cain shook his head, silently cursing the Aeons to hell and back.
âYouâre certain all the keepers are dead?â asked Azazel. âIt would have been nice to have one or two to play with.â
âOh, they are definitely dead,â Maxim told him.
Cain drew in a breath through his nose. âItâs almost as if danger finds that coven wherever they go.â
âOr as if Wynterâs a magnet for it.â Dantalion shrugged at Cain. âAfter all, she attracts you. Youâre probably the biggest danger there is.â
That wasnât something that could be denied.