T barricaded himself inside his own bedroom, he had his phone in hand and was texting Lucien. He couldnât deal with this. Heâd reached his bullshit limit.
At fortress. Come get me. Now.
It was nice, having a friend who could flash from one location to another with only a thought.
Within five minutes, his friend materialized a few feet away from him. Lucien was winded, barreled chest rising and falling shallowly. A sheen of sweat covered his entire torso. His mane of black hair shagged around his severely scarred face, and his multicolored eyes were bright. He was shirtless, his butterfly tattoo practically crackling with electricity on his left shoulder. His unfastened pants were barely staying on his hips. To top it all off, tension radiated from the man.
âWhat the hell were you doing?â Strider asked from his closet. Heâd already strapped himself with weapons, but a few moments before had decided a couple more blades wouldnât hurt. Well, wouldnât hurt him.
One of Lucienâs black brows practically knitted into his hairline. âWho the hell do you think I was doing?â
O-kay, then. Lucien had been in bed with Anya. For a moment, Strider almost forgot how pissed he was with Amun and Haidee as he savored the fact that heâd just cock-blocked the keeper of Death. Almost. âAnyone ever tell you that you shouldnât check your messages while youâre rolling around in bed?â
âYes. Anya. And believe me, Iâm going to pay for this.â His deep baritone was amused and excited rather than fearful at the thought of incurring his volatile femaleâs wrath. âHereâs a news flash for you. No matter what Iâm doing, I check my messages when Iâm worried about leaving my friends at home with a contingent of angels, when one of my men is sick, or when a Hunter is in residence. And when all three are happening at once? I check even when I donât have messages. So. Whatâs wrong? Why did you summon me? Amun okay?â
Strider shoved an extra clip for his .22 into his pocket as he abandoned the confines of the walk-in. âAmunâs great. Better. The problemâs me. I gotta take off for a little while.â For his sanity, yes, but mostly for Amunâs safety.
Amun had lifted the fragile Haidee into his battered arms and carried her to his bed. He had tucked her under the covers, so careful not to jostle her, and climbed in beside her. Strider didnât think Amun realized this, but the warrior had caressed the woman during their entire conversation, as if the need to touch her was already ingrained in his soul.
A sense of challenge had begun to rise inside of Strider. For Haidee, a godsdamn Hunter. Worse, a godsdamn killer. Heâd wanted to win her from Amun and claim her for his own, and the want had been far more intense than his usual âthatâs mine and Iâm not sharingâ mind-set.
If Strider stayed here, he would eventually give in. He wouldnât be able to help himself. His demon would badger him constantly, and in the end, he would fight his friend, hurt his friendâbecause no way in hell would he pull his punches like heâd done the first timeâand hate himself.
Hate. Huh. Heâd never hated himself. If anything, heâd always liked himself a little too much. Once, a human female had even accused him of picturing his own face while he climaxed. He hadnât denied it, either, and next time heâd slept with her, heâd made sure to scream, âStriderâ at the pivotal moment.
She hadnât appreciated his sense of humor, and that had been the final nail in their relationship coffin. He was too intense, too jaded, too warped and tooâ¦everything for most women to take for long. But so what. He was made of awesome. Anyone who couldnât see that wasnât smart enough to be with him, anyway.
Haidee, though⦠She would be able to take him. With her strength of will, her courage, her unbending and reckless spirit, she would match him. Maybe even surpass him.
That is the key player in Badenâs murder youâre thinking about.
Hadnât mattered to Amun, he thought darkly. Why should it matter to him?
Fuck! He hated those thoughts.
Hated. There was that word again.
ââlistening to me?â he heard Lucien ask with exasperation.
âSorry,â he muttered. âSay again.â
Sighing, Lucien strode to the bed and sat at the edge of the mattress. Striderâs gaze followed his friend, picking up little details about the room along the way. He hadnât cleaned in a few days, had been too busy guarding Amun, so his clothes were scattered throughout. His iPod hung from his nightstand, the earbuds wrapped around a lamp.
How the hell had it gotten there? Oh, yeah. Heâd tossed it over his shoulder last night, uncaring where it landed.
âTorin texted me and told me Amun was doing better, but damn,â Lucien said, once again dragging him from his thoughts. âYou scared ten years off my life.â
âYouâre welcome. Eternityâs too long, anyway.â
âNot when youâre with the right woman.â
He experienced a flash of jealousy that so many of his peeps had found the âright womanâ already. And damn it, he was as sick of being jealous as he was of everything else.
âTalk to me,â Lucien said. âLet me help you, whateverâs going on.â
âNothing to talk about.â He needed to forget Haidee, lose himself in another woman, in the heat and wetness of her body. An appropriate woman. Someone inexperienced, though not a virgin. Someone he wouldnât have to work his ass off trying to win, then work his ass off again to please. âI need a break, thatâs all.â
âYou summoned me with a ânowâ because you need a break?â
âYeah. Youâve been on break for weeks, it seems. Let someone else have a turn.â
Silence, thick and heavy, enveloped them. Lucien studied him, and whatever he saw in Striderâs expression caused him to lose his air of irritation. âAll right. Iâll take you wherever you want to go. For Torinâs sake, someone needs to take your place before we leave. Heâd never admit it, would even deny it, but he needs some help running this heap.â
Gods, he loved his friends. Lucien wasnât going to question him further. Was just going to give him what heâd asked for.
âIâd do it,â Lucien continued, âbut Iâm busy. I havenât been vacationing as you seem to think. Iâve beenâand currently amâguarding the Cage of Compulsion in a place Rhea canât reach. And I canât tell you where that is. Torin asked me not to say anything since thereâs a Hunter in residence.â
The cage was one of the four godly relics needed to find and destroy Pandoraâs box, and in desperate need of that guarding. Strider knew that wasnât the only reason Lucien refused to move back into the fortress. The god queen was out for blood, and the man didnât want his Anya in any more danger than necessary. Strider could dig. âWilliamâs here,â Strider said. âHe canââ
Lucien was already shaking his head. âHeâs useless. He grows bored too easily to be relied upon. Heâll forget whatever duty heâs promised to perform and head into town for a little some-some.â
Some-some. Someone was picking up his womanâs vernacular. âApparently heâs related to Lucifer. That has to count for something.â
âBelieve me. I know who heâs related to,â Lucien replied dryly. âThat doesnât change anything.â
âYeah, but heâs strong. No one will want to mess withââ
Again Lucien shook his head. âNope. Like I said, heâs unreliable. Heâll think of himself first and everyone else not at all.â
âI know.â William wasnât demon-possessed. He was a god, according to himself, and had spent centuries locked in Tartarusâa prison for immortalsâfor sleeping with the wrong woman. Hundreds of them, in fact. Heâd even slept with Hera, the former god kingâs wife, and had been stripped of some of his supernatural abilities as further punishment. Exactly what those abilities were, he wouldnât say.
Strider liked the man, even though, as Lucien had said, he looked out only for himself. Even though he could turn on you in a heartbeat, stabbing you in the backâor rather, the stomachâas Lucien had experienced firsthand.
My kinda guy, Strider mused. And since William wasnât wanted here, maybe heâd want to leave with Strider. Strider made a mental note to text him before taking off. Never hurt to vacation with a friend.
So. Who did that leave to guard the fortress and those inside? âKane and Cameo,â he said with a nod. Disaster and Misery. âSince Amunâs better, they can return from wherever they are.â
Lucien pondered for a moment, then nodded in turn. âAll right, then. Itâs settled.â
âOne more thing. Tomorrow I need you to contact Sabin.â Strider planned to be too wasted to be coherent. âHe needs to return, too, and meet the female Hunter up close and personal. But donât call him until tomorrow, okay?â
While Torin had apparently been texting, Strider had been calling both Lucien and Sabin every day, giving them updates on Amunâs health. Only thing he hadnât told themâyetâwas Haideeâs identity. He didnât know why. Heâd certainly meant to share, but every time heâd tried, the words had congealed in his throat.
All he knew was that he still wasnât going to tell them. Like him, theyâd find out the truth as soon as they talked to her. And when they did, Strider wouldnât have betrayed Amunâs trust, but would still have done all he could to safeguard his friend from the murdering bitchâs influence.
Shit. He was getting worked up again, fighting a need to stomp back to Amunâs room and do some damage.
Win? Defeat asked.
Oh, no. Weâre not going there.
âConsider it done,â Lucien said.
âGood,â he replied, tangling a hand in his hair. ââCause I really need this break.â
Once again Lucien asked no questions. He merely straightened and gave another nod. âPack while I hunt down the lucky twosome and bring them home.â
âNo need to pack.â He had his weapons. Thatâs all he needed.
For the first time during their conversation, Lucienâs lips twitched into the semblance of a smile. âTwice youâve said you need a break. We both know nothing will change in a day or two. Youâll still be stressed, on edge. So I want you gone for at least two weeks, and thatâs a nonnegotiable requirement if you expect transport. Pack.â
Death didnât wait for Striderâs reply. He simply disappeared.
Strider packed.
WILLIAM THE EVER RANDY, as the shitheads here had started calling him, lay propped on his bed, a mountain of pillows behind him. His covers were tucked around his waist and legs, cocooning him in a way he despised but refused to complain about because his Gillian Shawânicknamed Gilly, also nicknamed Little Gilly Gumdrop, though only he was allowed to call the seventeen-year-old human that last oneâwas responsible. She had a huge crush on him, and she had thought âtucking him inâ would soothe him.
Unlike the tucking in, heâd done everything he could to discourage the crush. Sheâd told him she wanted to date a nonsmoker, so heâd immediately taken up the habit. Was even now sucking a disgusting cloud of ash into his mouth and blowing smoke in her too-appealing, perfectly sun-kissed face.
She gave a delicate cough.
Tragically, the smoke failed to diminish the loveliness of her features. Big, wide eyes of the purest chocolate. Sharp cheekbones that hinted at the passion she would one day be capable of giving. A pixie nose, slightly uptilted at the end. Lush pink lips. And framing all that beauty was a cascade of midnight hair.
With a sigh, he smashed the cigarette butt into the ashtray beside him. Maybe it was time he took up drinking.
âLiam,â she said softly. Her nickname for him. A name he would kill anyone else for using. Maybe because it was hers and hers alone. She sat beside him, her hip pressed against his, warm and soft and completely feminine. âI have a question for you.â
âAsk.â He could deny her nothingâexcept a romantic relationship. Not only because she was too young, but because heâ¦well, he liked her. Yeah, shocking. William the Perfectâa much more suitable name for himâfriends with a female other than Anya. The world should have ended.
But, in many ways, Gilly truly was his best friend. When heâd returned from hell, unable to care for himself, she had done so. She had fetched his food, endured his dark moods as the pain became too much, and washed his sweat-soaked brow when necessary.
If, when she reached maturity, he was foolish enough to touch her, their easy camaraderie would be ruined. She would be forever disillusioned about the kind of man he was. He didnât want to disillusion her.
She deserved a man who would give her the world. All William would give her was pain.
So, become involved? Hell, no. Not now, not later. He wouldnât allow himself to hurt her. Ever. He was many thingsâa womanizer, a killer. Callous, sometimes cruel, always selfish and dark in a way no one inside this fortress knew. But this tiny little beauty had been through enough in her short life. Physical abuse, and so much worse. Sheâd run away from home, had lived on the streets, taking care of herself when loved ones should have ensured her safety.
After Danika and Reyes, the keeper of Pain, had hooked up, Danika had brought her here. William had taken an instant liking to her. Sheâd needed someone to look out for her, and William had decided to be that someone. For now. That meant destroying those who had destroyed her innocence and later helping her find a man worthy of her love. That meant resisting her.
Lids heavy over those exotic eyes and lashes so thick and curling they seemed to be reaching for her brows, she traced some sort of design on the covers beside him. At last she found the courage to ask her question. âYouâre cursed by the gods, but I donât know how youâre cursed. I mean, I tried to read your book. Anya let me borrow it, I hope you donât mind, but the pages were weird.â
The subject he hated more than any other. His curse. The only person heâd ever discussed the particulars with was Anya, and then only because theyâd been cell neighbors inside Tartarus, and heâd needed something to do while the centuries ticked by. When theyâd later escaped, heâd made the mistake of showing her the book that detailed everything heâd told her, as well as his only chance for salvation.
He shouldnât have been surprised when the naughty goddess had stolen that bookâand now threatened to rip the pages out every time he pissed her off. Nor should he have been surprised that sheâd given Gilly a peek. Anya had taken over the girlâs care, too, and knew how the sweet little human felt about him. But damn it, his secrets were his own.
âLiam?â
Resisting was pointless. And gods, he was pathetic. To not even put up a fight? Sickening. âThe book is written in code,â he explained. A roundabout fuck-you from Zeus, he mused. A âhereâs your salvationânot.â He had yet to find the key to unlocking that code. He knew it was out there, though. It had to be out there. He couldnât believe other wise. Even though he was afraid to find the key, afraid to know more about his curse.
âYes, but how are you cursed?â she repeated.
He shouldnât tell her. He knew what she was doing. Trying to find a way to save him. Still. She needed to know the truth. Maybe then her crush would at last crash and burn. âAll I know is that the woman I fall in love with will unleashââ He pressed his lips together. The woman he fell in love with would unleash every evil being he had ever created. And he had created some monsters. That, he wouldnât tell her. âShe will kill me,â he finished. That, too, was the truth.
Her eyes widened as she lifted her gaze to his face. âI donât understand.â
âThe curse isnât completely mine. I share it with her.â Whoever she was. âOnce I fall in love with her, sheâll lose her mind. Sheâll think only of my demise, and sheâll make sure it comes to pass.â
Another gift courtesy of that too-cocky shit, Zeus. Good news was, the joke was on the now deposed king. William had never fallen in love and never would. There was only room in his heart for one, and he was that one.
âI would never hurt you,â Gilly said softly. And before he could reply, not that he had any clue as to what to say, she added, âLetâs backtrack a little. The book contains a way to save you? And her?â
âMaybe.â He gently chucked her under the chin. âDonât even think about it, Gumdrop. The curse is one of blood, which means someone has to die. If Iâm saved, the one who saves me will be the one to die in my place. That isnât going to be you. Understand?â
She didnât speak, but she didnât nod, either. Nor did her gentle expression change. That scared him. The thought of dying should have freaked her out. The thought of her dying did freak him out.
With more force than heâd intended, he said, âBe a good girl, and go get some rest. Youâve got circles under your eyes, and I donât like them.â
Finally. A reaction. Her mouth pressed into a mulish line, and as well as he was coming to know her, he prepared himself for pure, unbending stubbornness. Whoever she ultimately ended up with was going to have his hands full. Poor bastard.
Dead bastard. William might kill him just for fun.
Donât go there.
âIâm not a little girl,â she gritted out. âSo stop treating me like one.â
âYou are a little girl,â he replied easily, rolling his eyes for good measure. She was, and that was a fact.
She stuck her tongue out at him, proving his claim. âThe boys at my school donât think so.â
He would not react to the sight of that tongue. Or to the provocative words. âThe boys at your school are dumb.â
âHardly. They want to kiss me.â
A flicker of rage took residence in his chest. âYou better not encourage them, little girl, because I will hurt them if they ever try anything with you. Youâre not ready for that kind of relationship.â
âAnd I suppose you get to decide when Iâm ready?â
âExactly.â Smart, his little gumdrop. âIn fact, as soon as I think youâre old enough, Iâll let you know. Until then, keep your lips to yourself or youâll regret it.â
âOh, really? Give me a hint, then.â There was steel in her voice rather than amusement. âWhat age do you consider old enough and just how will I regret disobeying you?â
A wiser man would have kept his fat mouth closed. âThree hundred. Or so,â he added, giving himself room to work. âAnd believe me, you do not want to find out.â
âFirst, Iâm human,â she snapped. âIâll never be that old.â
âI know.â And he didnât like that fact, he realized. She had eighty years, give or take a few, but no more. And that was only if she wasnât run over by a car. Or beheaded by a Hunter.
Damn it. If he had to sign on with the Lords for a permanent place in their army just to look after her, he was going to be annoyed. He had shit to do, places to be.
âSecond, Iâm not afraid of you.â
She should be. The things heâd done over the yearsâ¦. The things he would do in the years to comeâ¦. âLetâs forget the fear for now. By your own admission, youâre a puny human. Which is another reason you need to rest.â He gave her a âgentleâ push off the bed. âGo. Get out of here.â
She hit the floor with a hmph, then popped to her feet. She peered down at him for a long while. He let her look, silent, knowing what she saw. A black-haired, blue-eyed stunner who had broken more hearts than he could count. He prayed that she, like all the others before her, wouldnât overlook the fact that his heart had never been breached. That she wouldnât see him as a challenge, as tamableâ¦as worth any risk.
His phone beeped, disrupting the quiet and signaling a text had come in. She glanced at the phone on the nightstand, then at him.
âGo,â he said more firmly.
âFine.â She spun and strode from the room, leaving William with an odd, hollow feeling in his chest. Damn it, he thought again.
Another beep sounded. He pushed Gilly to the back of his mind and lifted the little black device to read the screen.
Screen name âStridey-Manâ asked, Want 2 vacay w/me?
William snorted as he typed. Romantic getaway for 2? UR not my type, dickwad.
Only a few seconds passed before the second message arrived. Fuck U. Iâm everyoneâs type. So U in or out? âCause Iâm thinking about hooking up w/P, wherever he is. Uâd just B extra baggage.
Leave the fortress. Leave Gilly and her dark, too knowledgeable eyes. Leave her staggering hope for something he couldnât, wouldnât, give her. Leave her probing questions, her gentle touch. Some 1 taking UR place here at fort? he typed. Much as he wanted to escape, he wouldnât leave her helpless.
K & C are gonna come back. Last chance. In or out?
This time he didnât hesitate. In. Stridey-Man: Knew U couldnât resist me. B ready in 5.
Right on. Make it 10. I want 2 style my hair for U. U know, just how U like it.
Stridey-Man: ASSHOLE.
He snickered, having more fun teasing Strider than heâd had in a long, long time. ?? U up for a lil stop before we play??
Stridey-Man: Where?
Locale deets later. Alls U need 2 know is I plan 2 murder Gillyâs fam.
Heâd wanted the deed taken care of long before now, but his little jaunt into hell had altered his plans. The demons down there had nearly eaten through his arm, and the stupid limb had only recently healed. Plus, Amun had promised to go with him and tell William about the mom and stepfatherâs deepest secrets and fears so that William could make the road to dead frightening and painful.
Only, Amun was still whacked out of his mind and William was tired of waiting.
Stridey-Man: Rock on. But now U only have 8 minutes 2 do UR hair.
Trust the cocky Strider to agree to a brutal massacre without asking dumb questions like âwhyâ and âhow.â
William untucked the covers and stood, making a mental list of everything heâd need for the coming trip. A few blades, serrated and nonserrated. A vial of acid. A bone saw. A spiked paddle. A cat-oâ-nine-tails. And a bag of Gummy Bears.
Gods, but this was going to be fun.