: Chapter 9
The Wicked In Me
Shock. It was an emotion that Cain hadnât felt in a truly long time. So long, in fact, he almost hadnât recognized the feeling when it crashed into him.
There hadnât been even a millisecond where he had considered that Wynter might be responsible for the current fuckery going on at Aeon. He hadnât even been sure anything was truly going on there.
Cain found himself staring at her again, conceding to himself that heâd sincerely underestimated her. Oh, heâd known she was powerful. Heâd known she was essentially an alpha playing at being an omega. But he wouldnât have guessed she could wield that level of power. No one would think it to look at her.
Seth scratched his head. âDonât take this the wrong way, Wynter, but how could one little witch infect the land that way?â
âI didnât infect it, I cursed it,â she said. âThere are ways to undo a curse, of course. But the methods are very intricate. You canât undo one by simply combating the results. The people of Aeon are no doubt trying to tackle the decay because they havenât yet realized the root of the problem. Thatâs why curses are often so successfulâpeople donât always immediately suspect that thatâs what theyâre dealing with, and so they donât take the right steps to counteract it.â
She made the whole thing sound simple. Like hexing protected land was easy enough. It wasnât. Not at all. But then, maybe it wasnât as difficult for those who possessed dark magick.
Cain twisted his mouth. âSo once the residents of Aeon realize itâs a curse and treat it as such, theyâll be able to undo it?â
She nodded.
âAnd to undo that, theyâll have to end your life, right?â asked Azazel. âYou wanted to cause destruction, and so only your own destruction will undo it. Thatâs why witches rarely cast such curses, from what I heard.â
âThe cost is often considered too high, yes,â she said.
âNot that Iâm judging, because I think this is all fucking brilliant,â Azazel went on, âbut why retaliate to this extent? I know they essentially betrayed you on every level, but for you to be prepared to die just to get revenge â¦â
Her eyes dulled, but then her expression shuttered ⦠as if sheâd severed whatever connection she felt to the emotions rolling through her. âWhen I was a child, they exiled my mother. Or so I thought until the day they did the same to me, and I realized she was dead.â
âWhy did they exile her?â asked Seth.
She linked her fingers. âI died. Then I came back. The Aeons donât take kindly to the use of forbidden magick.â
Azazel propped his hip against the wall. âHow did you die?â
She looked down, her tongue poking the inside of her cheek. âWhen I was ten, two teenage boys lured me into the woods where they then paralyzed me with magick so they could have a little sadistic fun. They pissed on me. Spat in my eyes. Shoved sharp little stones up my nose. Tried making me choke on dirt. Stabbed me multiple times. Burned the soles of my feet with magick. Sliced my throat but then, bored of waiting for me to die, jammed the knife into the side of my throat.â
Cain ground his teeth as anger bubbled up inside him. Sheâd recounted the incident so matter-of-factly, but her words were laced with the helplessness sheâd felt back then. There was also a pure predatory rage thereâit was subtle, but he heard it. So did his creature, which was at this very moment utterly enthralled by her.
She swallowed. âI felt everything, but I couldnât move. Couldnât scream. Couldnât cry out for help. So being paralyzed by power yet again made the âexileâ so much worse. Especially since the keeper intended to dismember me on behalf of the angry families of the boys who were executed after what they did to meâoh, and he meant to gouge out one of my eyes for them to have as a souvenir. To put it simply, I was in a blind fury.â
âAnyone would have been.â Cain crossed to her, unable to do anything else when she looked so very alone. âIt would be safe to conclude that the Aeons believe youâre behind the blight and intend to force you to fix it. They probably didnât suspect you at first, since it wouldnât initially seem like a magickal attack. But when the blight kept unnaturally spreading, they no doubt concluded that it had to be you whoâd caused it, and now they want you to unravel what they will believe is a spell.â
âThat would explain why they went from wanting you dead to wanting you alive,â Seth said to her.
Wynterâs brow creased. âYou didnât ask the bounty hunters?â
âWe did,â said Seth. âThey donât know why the Aeons want you.â
She eyed Cain closely. âItâs possible that more hunters will come for me.â
âItâs unlikely, since I insisted that it be publicly known that youâre in my serviceâpeople are highly reluctant to harm the property of an Ancient. Itâs a death sentence.â
âI doubt that will stop residents of Aeon from coming for me, thoughâtheyâll be acting on orders from the Aeons; they wonât dare ignore said orders. Hell, you may even be visited by the Aeons themselves. If youâre not prepared to go up against them to keep me safe, I can understand that, but Iâll need to leave.â
She wasnât going anywhere. His creature would never allow it, even if Cain would. He put his face closer to hers. âI told you I wouldnât give you up. I meant it.â
âBut can you speak for the other Ancients when you say that?â
âOh, they wonât do the Aeons any favors. We loathe them even more than you do. The Aeons know that. So I doubt they would come for you personally. At least not initially. But they may send representatives.â
Pausing, Cain took a moment to study her face. âI see youâre skeptical that weâd protect you. I can understand why. Iâll be honest, itâs not all about you or our verbal contract. The fact is ⦠nothing would please me and the other Ancients more than for Aeon to be uninhabitable. That was once our home, and they banished us much as they did you. For as long as youâre alive, their land will continue to waste away, and their people will continue to fall ill. For those reasons alone, we will never let them harm you.â
She glanced from him to Seth to Azazel. âYou all want revenge, too.â
Cain nodded. âAnd together, weâll get it.â
âOne question,â Azazel said to her, raising his finger. âWill the curse only effect the surface of the town?â
âI canât say for sure, but itâs possible that the city below will also suffer.â
A grin spread across Azazelâs face. âBest news Iâve heard in a long time. The other Ancients will be just as pleased to hear it.â
The four of them talked a little while longer but then, tossing Cain a look that said theyâd at some point revisit the reason sheâd originally come to the Keep, Wynter left.
As the solar room door closed behind her, Azazel smiled. âI like that girl.â
âYou like what she did to Aeon,â Seth corrected.
âSame thing.â Azazel shook his head. âShe really has no clue just how valuable she is to us. For the first time, we have something the Aeons want. We have a way to lure them here; a way to drag them into our path so we can kill them.â
Cain nodded. âAnd in doing so, weâll finally destroy our cage.â
âWe need to tell the others,â said Seth.
âWe do.â So Cain called them to the Keep, and soon every Ancient was sprawled around the solar. He brought them all up to speed, watching as they went from bored to enlivened.
Grinning, Dantalion said, âYou know what I love most about this? The Aeons actually brought this on themselves. They exiled her. They sent hunters after her. They drove her here, serving the key to our freedom to us on a silver platter.â
âOh, the irony.â Lilithâs mouth curved. âIt almost feels like fate or some higher power had a hand in this, doesnât it?â
âOr this is some trick,â said Ishtar, her voice clipped. âShe could be working for them. Could be a spy.â
Lilith frowned. âThat doesnât even make sense.â
âShe lived at Aeon for years; she was one of its people,â said Ishtar. âShe could still be one of them.â
Seth shook his head. âI felt her hatred for the residents there. It all but hummed in the air. Plus, the Aeons long ago ceased attempting to plant spies here. They got tired of us always sniffing them out and sending the bodies back in piecesâthey hated giving us those victories. Wynter is no spy.â
âNo, sheâs not,â said Cain. âSheâs someone who needs to be protected at all costsâfor her sake, and for ours.â
Dantalion nodded and then sliced his gaze to a sulky-looking Ishtar. âIf your ego is so fragile that you cannot bring yourself to protect a woman Cain fucked, you at least need to keep your distance from her.â
Ishtarâs face flamed. âDid I say I would hurt her? No. I merely said she could be a spy. I do not trust her.â
âYou donât want to trust her,â Azazel corrected. âYou want her to be a villain to justify your distaste for her. Fine. But leave her be.â
Ishtar shot Cain a petulant look. âIf I were you, I would stop sleeping with her. Youâll only end up hurting her, and we do not need the âkey to our freedomâ, as Dantalion called her, turning against us.â
Cain almost rolled his eyes. âIâll take that on board.â
He had no intention whatsoever of keeping his hands off Wynter. His creature would put up a protest if he did. It currently regarded her as something it ownedâhow long that would last, Cain wasnât sure. Probably only a few days. A week at most, because the monster didnât prize her. It had never prized any of the women it very briefly considered its own. It had only âclaimedâ them in its way because it didnât do well at sharing.
In that sense, it could definitely be said that the creature was as selfish as they came. But the fact was ⦠it wasnât built to âcare.â Or treasure. Or protect. It was cold-blooded. Cruel. Insidious. And it was built to kill.
âHow long do you think it will be before people from Aeon come to our doorstep?â asked Seth.
âNot long,â predicted Dantalion. âThe Aeons will send others in their place. They wonât come here unless they absolutely have to.â
âThere is no saying that the Aeons will come at all,â said Ishtar. âThey will most likely continue sending others her way.â
âWhich is why it is imperative that we ensure she is protected,â Lilith pointed out. âAnd we will.â
A short time later, after the conversation came to an end, the Ancients began to trickle out of the solar.
Lingering, Seth said, âI take it youâre no longer planning to Rest sometime soon.â
âDefinitely not,â replied Cain.
Seth rubbed at his nape. âI didnât want to say anything in front of the others; I was worried Ishtar would twist my words. Donât take this the wrong way, but thereâs something not quite right about Wynter. Not in a negative sense, itâs just ⦠I canât explain it. To be fair, though, Iâve never before met someone who has an undead soul and possesses dark magick. It could simply be that.â
It could be. But truthfully, Cain wasnât so sure. Heâd suspected from the very beginning that there was much more to Wynter than there appeared to be. That suspicion had only grown. And while he didnât usually care to know the secrets of others, he was nothing close to indifferent where she was concerned.
He had no right to demand she part with her secrets when he was unable to part with his own. He could certainly try to figure it all out for himself, though. Yes, he could watch, observe, and study her. Heâd solve the mystery of little Miss Dellavale eventually.
Heâd also keep fucking her until he was no longer so greedy for everything she had to give.
Although his monsterâs possessiveness would fade fast, the creature nonetheless wouldnât object to Cain having her in his bedâit didnât particularly care how Cain chose to entertain himself. But until the possessiveness was gone, there was no way for him to undo what heâd done on his creatureâs behalf. And how the fuck could he explain that to her when he couldnât even admit to having a monster inside him?
*
Wynter was adjusting the position of her workbench when she sensed someone enter the shed the next day. Turning, she found that there were two someones.
Well, if it isnât the berserkers.
âWhat brings you here?â Seeing that they werenât holding weapons, she added, âYouâre clearly not potential customers.â
Grouch folded his arms. âWeâre here to make you a proposition.â
âA proposition?â she echoed.
âWe were wary of hiring you when you first came to us,â Annette told her. âTrusting strangers ainât our thing. Now that youâve been in the city a few days, weâve been able to see that youâre no asshole. Youâre also good at what you do. We can agree to give you a chance.â
Wynter looked from one berserker to the other. âA chance to what?â
âWork for us,â said Grouch. âOn a trial basis at first. Weâre talking minimum wage, but Iâd say thatâs more than what youâre earning per day right now.â
Then he really had no idea how much custom she got. She might have been touched by the offer ⦠if he and his daughter werenât acting as if they were doing Wynter some grand, charitable favor for which she should get down on her knees and give thanks. They were very clearly expecting her to pounce on their offer and snap up this amazing opportunity.
She gave them a polite smile. âThanks, but Iâm good as I am.â
Grouch stared at her for a long moment. Then he puffed up his chest, his brows snapping together. âYouâre not serious.â
âUh, I really am.â
Annette perched her hands on her hips. âWeâre the best blacksmiths in this town.â
âSo Iâve heard,â said Wynter. âYou must be super proud.â
âPeople come to us all the time looking for work,â Annette added.
âIâd imagine they do,â said Wynter. âEveryone wants to work with the best.â
âExcept you? What, youâre bitter that we didnât hire you before?â
âBitter? Not at all. I was disappointed initially, but Iâm now glad you turned me down. If you hadnât, I might not have started this shop with my crew. Itâs doing pretty well.â
Grouch glowered. âYouâre cutting into our profits.â
Wynter shrugged. âThatâs just business. You cut into the profits of the other blacksmiths, but Iâm guessing youâre fine with it.â
His nostrils flaring, he snapped his mouth shut.
âLook, I understand your issue,â said Wynter. âPeople arenât so bothered about going to the best blacksmith or purchasing the best weapons, when they can buy something cheap and have it enchanted to improve it. They also donât need to buy a new weapon in order to have a different enchantmentâI can change runes at any time. All this affects your business, I know.
âBut I warned you that youâd lose custom. You didnât listen to me. You laughed at me, insulted me, pointed a sword at me. And then you lied that I was going to hex your shop so that Iâd get in trouble with Cain. All that considered, did you really think Iâd jump at your offer? Really?â
âSo you are bitter,â said Annette.
Wynter shook her head. âItâs not bitterness. I simply have no reason to like you. I donât want to work for you. I donât want to work for anyone. Like I said, Iâm good as I am. But thanks anyway. I appreciate the offer.â Not really, but whatever.
Annetteâs face hardened. âYouâll regret this.â
Wynter pursed her lips. âI donât see how.â
âPeople think youâre all badass right now,â said Annette. âTheyâre forgetting what else dark magick can do. Iâll be happy to remind them.â
âWell, I wouldnât dream of getting in the way of your happiness, so â¦â
Annetteâs mouth tightened. âThereâs something else youâre not considering. Weâre not the only business owners who arenât too fond of your little shop. Together, the group of us can cause you some serious aggravation.â
âThat would be a very big mistake,â said a new voice.
Everyone momentarily froze, and then the rapidly paling berserkers spun to face the newcomer.
Annette took a step backwards and nervously wiped her hands on her thighs. âCain, we ⦠I mean, Iââ
âNo excuses, no lies.â He took a slow, aggressive step toward the berserkers. âNow listen to me very carefully. Every person in this shed wears my mark. That alone should be enough reason for you to watch out for each other. I see that it isnât. So let me be very clearâif you make any trouble for Wynter, her coven, or her shop, you will pay for that in blood. Nobody fucks with whatâs mine and escapes punishment. Is that understood?â
âYes,â Grouch immediately blurted out while his daughter nodded.
âGood.â Cain carelessly waved a hand. âNow get out of my sight.â
The berserkers gave him a wide berth as they scurried around him and out of the shed.
Cain closed the door, his gaze fixed on Wynter. All the intensity in those unfathomable eyes hit her in her core.
âPay for that in blood?â she repeated. âYou donât think thatâs a little excessive? I mean, itâs not like they threatened to kill me or anything.â
âNo, but they would have played games with you.â He stalked toward her. âThe only person who gets to mess with your head is me.â
She felt her brow furrow. âI donât even know what to do with that comment.â She didnât know what to do with him in general. âYouâre like no one Iâve ever met before.â
He trailed his fingertip from the hollow beneath her ear all the way down her throat. âI could say the same to you. Iâm not easy to intrigue. Iâm even harder to shock. You managed to do both.â
âHmm, well, I appreciate you coming all the way here to take away that barrier thing.â
âYou think thatâs why Iâm here?â he asked, his mouth kicking up in amusement. Amusement.
She felt her lips flatten. âIt should be why youâre here. I want whatever you put inside me gone.â
âIâm only guarding whatâs mine. Is that so bad?â
âSince when am I yours?â And since when did her body get all tingly over the M word?
âSince I decided.â He bit her lip before she could bark out a retort of any kind. âThe barrier, as you call it, will fade on its own within a few days. Now, the reason I came here was to tell you not to make any plans for after tonightâs celebration. Youâll be coming home with me.â
Bold bastard. âOh, I will?â
âYou will. Because you want to.â
âSo very sure of that, arenât you?â
âWe can pretend Iâm wrong, if youâd like. But you donât strike me as a game player, or as a person who has an issue with reaching out to take what they want.â
Ordinarily, no, she didnât have such an issue. Nor did she play games. Life was too short for that shitâsomething sheâd learned early. But this was ⦠oh, who the hell was she kidding? Certainly not herself. The truth was that she had no intention of resisting him, whether it would be wise or not.
He stroked a hand down her hair. âI want to fuck you in my bed. I want you to break for me again.â He dipped his head and stared deep into her eyes. âYou want the same thing. And so youâll come home with me later, wonât you?â
Sniffing, she lifted an imperious brow. âIâll expect more than one orgasm.â
One of his sexy-as-shit smiles surfaced. âIâd be disappointed if you didnât.â