Iâd been hunting souls for over five centuries.
It was lucrative work, and had a way of becoming easier the longer youâve done it. Bring one soul back to Hell, and you gain power. Bring two souls back to Hell, your power doubles. And so on.
Collect enough souls, and Hell begins to afford you certain luxuries: human money, specifically. It became far easier to convince humans to trust me when I could impress them with expensive things.
But the best hunts werenât easy. I didnât want them to be; I welcomed the thrill of a challenge. Perhaps that was why Iâd become so drawn to the oddities, the weirdos, the murderous little freaks. Perhaps that was why I longed for their souls most of all.
Dear fucking Lucifer, I did love a killer.
Human or demon, it didnât matter: a being with blood on their hands and a smile on their face just did it for me. Vicious little mortals were rarely a threat to me; but damn they were cute, and their souls had a unique weight to them that I adored.
I liked cute things. I liked to crush them and break them and see what would become of all the jagged little pieces. Perhaps my definition of âcuteâ was just a little different.
Juniper Kynes, for example. Adorable. Murderous. Vicious. And bound to be mine.
Iâd been hunting her for four years now. I wouldnât call myself obsessed â that sounded messy. Intrigued was more accurate. Determined, perhaps. After all, there came a point in every hunt where it was up to the prey to make their move. I couldnât simply take her soul; she had to give it willingly.
Iâd waited years for my little wolf to stop running. I knew she would. She couldnât resist forever.
A wolf needs a pack. A wolf canât hunt alone.
All she had to do was text me four simple words:Â I want to talk.
I smiled when I saw the message pop up on my cell.
Business or pleasure? Iâm a busy demon, no time for small talk.
Fuck you. I laughed aloud, and waited. She wouldnât make a second of this easy, and thatâs what I liked: a challenge. I wanted to fight for it.
Then, I want to make a deal.
It was a good thing I was alone, because my human disguise instantly slipped. I couldnât hide my claws when I was so eager to get them into her. Name the time and place.
Joanieâs Bar, in Blackhook, near the coast. Come late.
I suppose she felt safe in the tiny town she chose. It was miles from Abelaum, hugging the cold coast, a few streets of houses and several old businesses, half of the buildings abandoned. Fishing boats lined the small marina, and Joanieâs Bar was perched above that.
I was too eager, and I got there before she did. It was a tiny place, the walls lined with photos of fishermen with their catches. I took a table in the back corner, where I could survey the room, watching as the humans mingled at the bar and quietly sipped pints in their booths. Theyâd given me a few odd looks, but no trouble. Instinct told them to keep their distance.
Blackhook was nearly two hours from Abelaum, but it still wasnât exempt from the Godâs influence. The Deep Oneâs tainted essence could still be felt here, pungent in the air, like an ever-present odor of mold and rotten fish. Those who lived here likely didnât even notice. But Abelaumâs rot had spread, as rot always does.
Especially now that Kent and his Libiri had succeeded in offering their first sacrifice.
All of Abelaum was talking about it: the sad fate of Juniperâs brother. I could assume his murder was what brought her back here, but I was curious what sheâd want. A new life, perhaps, somewhere far from Abelaum. Maybe sheâd want money. Maybe sheâd want Kent Hadleigh killed, which I certainly wouldnât mind doing, although it would prove tricky. There was a reason Leon hadnât already killed him.
The best hunts were difficult, but the best deals were simple. After all, once a deal was done, the idea was to quickly move on to the next. I had places to be and souls to collect, humans to fuck, pleasure to be had. Although I couldnât help but wonder what it would be like to linger with her for a while, to squeeze a few extra benefits out of the deal for myself.
She was a damn good fuck. Beautiful and dangerous. An anomaly born of blood and pain, terror and sacrifice. A human who, against all odds, flouted God and destiny, and emerged, bloodied and broken, to be made into something new.
My own little wolf, a beast in human form. A fragmented piece of destiny.
I sensed her long before she reached the doors. Her smell was absolutely irresistible. Like honeysuckle blooming in the morning, like earth after the rain, like pine needles crushed underfoot. Wild and invigorating, once it got inside your nose, there was no shaking it. When she entered the bar, it was like watching a storm pass over the mountains.
She wore ripped jeans, hiking boots so worn the laces were fraying, and a black hoodie with Thrasher emblazoned across the front. Her long, wild brown hair was pulled into a ponytail, revealing the shaved undercut on the side of her head. And her faceâ¦fuck. The heart of the storm was in those dark eyes and dripped to her full, liquor-tinted lips. Her skin was browned by the sun, and a slim pale scar â like the slice of a knifeâs blade â ran along her jaw.
She stood just inside the doorway, swaying slightly, not bothering to wipe the mist of rain from her face.
She was drunk. I couldnât blame her.
She spotted me as her eyes swept the room, and lightning flashed in her storm. There was a moment of fear, of indecision, but she didnât turn back. She didnât come up to me right away either. Instead she went up to the bar, where she embraced the older woman serving drinks, and companionably grasped the shoulders of a few grizzled fishermen hunched over their drinks.
She was surrounded by friends here, and wanted me to know it.
I leaned back, grinning in my chair. How cute! She thought a bar full of humans would actually have a chance of stopping me. She was lucky I didnât want to hurt her; at least not in ways her dark, twisted heart didnât desire.
After a brief conversation with the bartender, she made her way over to me. Her eyes were wary but her walk was confident, and she settled in the chair across from me.
âYou remembered what I look like this time,â I said. âI feel so special.â
âDonât,â she said flatly. Her voice was deep and a little husky. But I knew how it sounded when it softened with pleasure, when it heightened with pain. âI always try to remember useful things. Hopefully, Iâm not wrong in assuming youâre going to be useful.â
âHopefully, Iâm not wrong in assuming the same of you.â I nodded toward the bartender, who was watching us like a fucking hawk, and held up two fingers for drinks. She glared at me as she began to pour.
âThatâs Joanie,â Juniper said. Sheâd folded her arms, her shoulders rigid. âShe and her wife have owned this place for twenty years. Most of the people in here wouldnât hesitate to shoot you if you try anything.â
I smirked. âI know. You came here when you first left Abelaum. Joanie gave you a job and a place to stay for a little while. You stayed until the Eld tracked you out here.â My smirk widened as her jaw tightened with anger. âWhen they started swarming around this place every night, you decided to leave.â
She swallowed hard, her eyes locked on me. âWhy the fuck have you followed me all this time? What makes me so goddamn special to you?â
âA good hunter tracks his prey,â I said, âand waits for just the right moment to take his prize.â I smiled as Joanie brought over two beers, slamming mine down a little harder than need be. As she walked away, I said, âWhat the hell did you tell her anyway? Am I an awful cheating ex, an unpleasant cousin?â
âMy business is my business,â she said. âThey donât care about who you are. All they care about is that I leave here alive.â
âAnd you will. What a waste if I were to just kill you after all these years. I guess you could say Iâve gotten attached.â I leaned forward over the table, not missing the way she tensed as I got closer. âBut you came here to discuss a deal, so let me tell you the first thing about deals: they hurt. Theyâre supposed to. But deals with me? They hurt even more.â
Her eyes narrowed. âWhy?â
âBecause I want them to. I happen to enjoy making humans suffer for what they want. And by the time a human is ready to make a deal with me, it is very much what they want.â
She snorted. âTry working in a BDSM dungeon. Sounds like what youâre looking for.â
âOh, I already did. They found my methods a bit tooâ¦extreme. But I only cater to what the masochists want. Who am I to tell someone, no, I wonât sew your mouth shut and make you scream, after Iâve been begged to do exactly that?â
Her expression didnât change. âYou talk too much. Sorry to burst your bubble, but pain doesnât scare me.â
âYou shouldnât tell me things like that, Juniper.â I kept my smile reserved, but I was all tingly. There was nothing more exciting than a challenging human, nothing sweeter than a mortal who pretended they werenât afraid. âIt sounds an awful lot like a challenge.â
âIâm not interested in your games. I want to make a deal, Zane. What are your terms?â
âYou tell me, little wolf.â I waved my hand. âTell me your heartâs desire, and I can make it happen.â
She narrowed her eyes, silent for a moment. Then, âI want to destroy the Libiri.â
Ah. Well. I hadnât quite expectedâ¦that. âDestroyâ¦right. You mean kill Kent Hadleigh?â
âI want to kill Kent. I want to kill Jeremiah, Victoria, and Meredith. I want their family wiped off the face of the Earth, and then, I want the same for their followers. I want their most loyal slaughtered. I want anyone who has ever supported them to spend the rest of their miserable lives shaking in fear that I might find them.â She leaned back, folding her arms. âAnd I want to do it myself, with my own hands. I just need back-up.â
âThatâsâ¦extensive.â And time consuming. Very time consuming. Time that I could be spending starting my next hunt.
She plastered a cocky smirk on her face. âAre you saying you canât do it?â
âIâm saying that what you want is going to be a lot of trouble. Destroying the Libiri would mean eradicating half the town of Abelaum.â
She shrugged. âI donât have a problem with that. Iâll make it simple: weâll just drop a nuke on the whole place. Easy.â
I laughed. âWhile I admire that your idea of simplicity is me giving you access to nuclear bombs, Iâm afraid there are in fact limitations on what I can do for you. In this day and age, I canât simply wipe a town off the face of the Earth. Hellâs Council would have a fit if I took a deal like that. Wouldnât you rather have a fresh start? A house somewhere far away, money for whatever your heart desiresâ¦a new life?â
âThere is no new life for me. They killed my brother.â She nodded slowly, and although she rapidly blinked them away, tears welled up in her eyes. âThereâs no fresh start from this. If you donât dig out the rot, it will only keep spreading. The only thing my heart desires is revenge.â Her hands were clenched into fists on the tabletop. Her voice lowered. âI donât care what you want from me. My soul, my sufferingâ¦I donât care what it takes. You say your deals hurt. Well, so do mine. And Iâm not afraid. Are you?â
This woman. This goddamn woman.
âOh, Juniper.â I shook my head. âYou donât know what youâre asking for.â
The rain was pouring, tapping heavily on the barâs old roof. It was late, and the only ones who remained in the bar was the bartender herself, a few drunks, and us. Juniper closed her eyes a moment, her lips pressed into a thin, hard line. She wanted a hard deal, so sheâd get one. If I was going to be responsible for helping her enact her revenge, I was going to require more than her soul.
I tapped my fingers on the table, and when she opened her eyes to look at me again, her expression betrayed no fear.
âI donât care what you want,â she said again. âIâll give you my soul. Iâll damn myself for this. Torture me. Fuck me. Hurt me. It doesnât matter. I want them all dead.â
Thoughts of doing all three to her made it goddamn hard to maintain my human disguise. I shifted in my seat, readjusting my rigid cock in my jeans. âYour soul is merely the down payment. Itâs a heavy price for a heavy task.â
She had a good poker face, this one. Any emotion was so rapidly buried, it was as if it had never even been there to begin with. âTry me. Whatâs your price?â
I sipped my beer, slowly, savoring it for a moment. Human alcohol did nothing for my kind, but the taste was pleasant enough. âYour soul is the start,â I said. âYour body will also be mine. Your pleasure, your pain â and your submission. Mine. In exchange, Iâll help carry out this revenge you seek.â
It felt like an adequate price for the task. After all, if I was to be tethered to her to get her wishes carried out, I was going to make sure I enjoyed myself. She was silent for a moment, her mind turning. I was good at reading humans, discerning their emotions, determining if I was pushing too hard or not enough. But she was tricky. She hid everything so carefully.
Finally, she said softly, âI wonât submit.â
âThen Iâm afraid we donât have a deal.â
Thunder boomed outside, rattling the bottles of liquor behind the bar. Juniper hissed, turning her face away in fury. But she didnât get up. She didnât storm away. With her eyes fixated on the rain streaming down the barâs front windows, she said softly, âI canât. IÂ canât.â
âCanât is a little different than wonât, isnât it?â I grinned.
âAll I know is how to fight.â She looked up, and behind the anger in her eyes, there was desperation. How funny to find that one little word was her sticking point. But I wasnât that picky.
âThen fight me,â I said. âFight to your heartâs content, and know that youâll lose, every single time. Know that no matter how hard you fight, youâre mine in the end.â Her eyes flickered across my face, searching for a trap. âAnd if you canât bear it, beg for mercy. We demons may be cruel, but even we understand the concept of necessary mercies.â
She scoffed, her desperation vanishing and pride taking its place. âI donât beg.â
âUnder my claws, you will,â I said. âIf you ever do ask for mercy, Iâll grant it. If you can agree to my terms, youâll have what you want. Weâll kill the Hadleighs. Weâll destroy the Libiri. Anything they attempt to accomplish, weâll destroy.â I gulped down the last of my beer. âI havenât had a deal like that since the Middle Ages. I used to get bargains for wars and assassinating kings. This is honestly a little nostalgic.â
She clenched her jaw so hard I could see the pale blue swell of a vein down the side of her face. She didnât like my fond reminiscing, but I didnât care. Gaining access to play with her as I pleased was well worth the time it would take to complete this deal.
âItâs a big decision,â I said, as she glared in thought. âYour body and soul for revenge. I want it all, Juniper. Make no mistake, for a deal like this, I will own you in every possible way. You say youâre not afraid of painâ¦â I leaned closer, and watched her entire form clench up again, her body getting ready to fight. âBut I think youâve forgotten how to feel it.â
I reached out, brushing my finger lightly against the barely-visible line of a scar peeking from beneath the neckline of her shirt. Her skin was so soft for such a hard woman. She held my gaze without flinching.
âThey hurt you once,â I said softly. âSo you decided you would never feel pain again, didnât you? If you canât feel it, then you wonât fear it.â
She smiled slowly. âAlmost. But not quite. They hurt me once, so I decided pain canât hurt me anymore. I decided pain feels really damn good. Pain keeps me going. Sometimes pain is the only thing that reminds me Iâm alive.â
âThen I think weâll get along just fine, Juniper Kynes.â I stood up, and she flinched at the scrape of my chair against the wooden floor. âGo home. Sleep off your liquor and think about it. If you want the deal, go into the forest tomorrow night, as deep as you can. Iâll find you.â
She looked at me with wide eyes, which quickly narrowed in suspicion. âThe forestâ¦why?â
I grinned. âBecause out there, no one can hear you scream.â