A sweatpants, toweled off, dressed in a T-shirt and jeans, then waited for Haidee to emerge from the bathroom. He didnât have to wait long, yet the time apart seemed infinite. When she entered the bedroom, he saw that her features were annoyingly blank, though her eyes were pink and a bit puffy. Had sheâ¦cried? His chest constricted painfully at the thought, and he nearly stalked to her, nearly took her into his arms. To soothe her.
His hands curled into fists. She couldnât have cried. To do so, she would have had to care about him. She didnât care about him. Therefore, he couldnât allow himself to believe a single tear had fallen from her beautiful eyes.
So why did his chest still ache?
He forced his thoughts to clear and his gaze to move away from her face. A fluffy white towel was wrapped under her arms and hit just above her knees. Obviously she had removed her bra. He saw no telltale straps. Sheâd probably removed her panties, too. Theyâd been so wet. So wonderfully wet.
The constriction in his chest migrated south. He knew what she looked like under all that cotton. Breasts that would fit in his hands. A soft though concave stomach. Hips that flared perfectly. Heâd desperately wanted to grip her there and force her to rub against his erection, over and over again. Even now, she tempted him. Even? Hell, especially now.
Clothes are on the bed, he told her, turning away before he forgot the reasons heâd left her alone in the shower. Even in his mind, his voice was rough. And yeah, it still shocked him every time he âspokeâ to her without having to sign the words.
The connection between them was the very reason heâd opted to tell her the truth about himself, about what he knew concerning her past. Heâd decided to show most of his cards before she glimpsed them on her own, hoping sheâd then reveal her own cards.
He hated that his demon had gone silent the moment heâd touched her and hadnât spoken up again. Secrets was always either quiet or agitated around her, and he never knew which heâd get. What bothered him most was that the demon probably could have discovered everything about her. Except, though Amun could cast his voice into her head, he couldnât read her the same way he read everyone else. He wouldâve liked to chastise Secrets for that, but didnât. He chastised himself. What was the use of having a demon if a man couldnât use the damn thingâs abilities?
Wasnât like he could use the other demons, either. Theyâd experienced the opposite reaction when he touched her, shrieking and scrambling for a new hiding place.
Behind him echoed a light patter of footsteps, then the rustle of clothing. He wanted to watch Haidee dress. He was desperate to see those curves again. All of her curves this time. Through the white cotton of her bra, every bit of fabric drenched, heâd seen those firm breasts crested with rosy nipples perfect for sucking. And those matching pantiesâ¦
His spine went rigid as another hot blistering wave of need savaged him. Between her gorgeous legs, at the apex of her thighs, sheâd had a little tuft of hair slightly darker than the flaxen mass above. Heâd almost dropped to his knees, almost dove in and feasted, shoving those unwanted panties out of the way and tasting the essence of her femininity. Gods, he remembered the sweetness of her. Knew the heaven that awaited him.
He needed to think about something else before he cut the tether of his control and fell on her and took her. He couldnât take her. As heâd promised her, he would not allow himself to touch her again.
He blanked his mind. There was one thing guaranteed to piss him off and keep his hands to himself. Her tattoos. Just the thought had him biting his tongue until he tasted blood.
In the shower, heâd gotten a peek at the travesty that was her back, and each marking had turned portions of his desire into boiling rage. If any part of him had ever doubted who she was, the tattoos there convinced him otherwise.
She kept score, Badenâs death proudly etched into her flesh. And the four Hunters the Lords had supposedly killed? He didnât know, but he would. How he would acquire the information when her secrets were her own, he didnât know, either. But again, he would.
Perhaps heâd seduce the information out of her.
Seduce. Instantly, his mind and body returned to lusting after her. Seducing would involved touching.
Perhaps his âno touchingâ vow had been premature.
Really, why handicap himself? He should have her. Often. As many times as the urge struck him. Until he obtained the answers he craved. Until he worked her from his system. Until he realized that she hadnât called him baby while heâd held and cleaned her because the endearment was clearly reserved for her precious Micah.
Red suddenly dotted Amunâs vision, just as it had done in the shower when sheâd spoken the bastardâs name, and he drew in a deep breath. Holdâ¦hold. Slowly he pushed the oxygen through his nostrils.
Micah could very well be a descendant of his, as Haidee had said. The idea intrigued him. Heâd never thought to have a blood-related family. However, the idea of that blood-related family being his enemy, well, that he didnât like. Wasnât like he and Micah could sit down and have a heart-to-heart, either. Besides the good versus evil thing, there was Haidee.
They both wanted her.
Amun should have taken her in the shower, despite her fragile protests, and pounded the worst of his emotions straight into her. And those protests of hers had been fragile. So fragile he could have bent his head and blown on the hammering pulse at the base of her neck and her reasons for denying him would have snapped beyond repair.
There were no doubts in his mind that sheâd hungered for him, too. Her pupils had been blown, her lips parted as sheâd struggled for air. She probably hadnât realized that her nails had sunk into his pecs the moment sheâd flattened her trembling palms on him, fingers curling, some part of her desperate to be connected to him, eradicating all hint of distance.
The action, small though it was, had been a claiming, and heâd reacted violently. Not that heâd shown her. That boiling rage had been his only link to sanity.
Over the years he had pampered the few women heâd been with, and given them what time he could, as well as attention and fidelity. Even when they hadnât given him the sameâand had then tried to hide their actions from him. As if they could. But he liked seeing a female light up because of his special treatment. He liked knowing he was the cause of their happiness.
He knew his friends considered him calm, without a temper. Normally he was. But when he looked at this woman, this supposed enemy, this unexpected savior, something hard and primal seethed inside him, knocking at the door of his restraint. He felt like a godsdamn caveman, wanting to carry off his woman and hide her from the rest of the world. Wanting to put his body between hers and anyone who dared threaten her. Wanting to tie her to his bed, keep her there forever, keep her ready for him.
Wanting to soothe her even as he ravaged her.
The desires were dark and sultry, insidious as they snuck past his defenses and wrapped around his every cell, changing the very fabric of his being. He was Amun no longer, but Haideeâs man.
That title was not something he could tolerate. Not for long, at least.
Still. He was on the right path, he decided. If he had her, he would tire of her. How could he not, when she was who she was? And when he tired of her, when the newness of her touch and taste and scent wore off and he no longer needed her to beat the demons back to maintain his good sense, he could do his duty and slay her. But until thenâ¦
He would just have to continue protecting her.
The rustle of clothes died, and he pivoted on his heel, facing her. A smart man would never have given an enemy his back in the first place. But then, a smart Lord would never have allowed a Hunter to live long enough to dress.
Haidee stood by the side of the bed, arms hanging at her sides, her hands empty. His gaze raked her, and he told himself the perusal was necessary, that he needed to check for hidden weapons. The pink T-shirt and jeans she had donned belonged to Gwen, another petite female, but still they bagged on little Haidee. Despite her feminine curves, she was too thin.
Irritation joined his other emotions. Over the past however long Strider had been in charge of her care, the warrior had most likely given her enough food to survive. No more, no less. Sheâd probably lost pounds she hadnât been able to spare. That would change now that Amun was in charge. Causing needless suffering wasnât his style.
She had toweled off her hair as best she could, but still the blond-and-pink locks dripped onto her shirt, wetting the material covering the delicate frame of her shoulders.
âWhat now?â she asked in her raspy voice.
She hadnât shifted under his scrutiny, he realized. She had stood still, allowing him to look his fill. Perhaps sheâd studied him, too, because tiny flickers of the mating heat had returned to those distracting eyes.
He liked that she liked the look of him. Usually, with Paris and Strider and, hell, Sabin around him, women found the roughness of his features tooâ¦well, rough.
Sit down, he told her. Now we talk.
âMore talking?â She didnât sound enthused.
Yes, more talking. He would not allow her to irritate him into forgetting what needed to be said, he vowed. Sit.
With only the barest hint of hesitation, she obeyed. She perched at the edge of the bed, folding her hands in her lap.
Thank you. Now, it was time to show her the rest of his cards. Her reaction would dictate their next course of action. Amun spread his legs, braced his knees and prepared to defend himself from attack.
âWhat are we going to talk about?â
Me. You guessed my identity, but I doubt you know exactly what that means. So here it is, flat out. Iâm possessed by the demon of Secrets. He waited for a reaction; he didnât get one. In the shower, heâd merely played with the details, never actually admitting he was possessed.
âAnd?â she demanded.
No, he would not allow her to irritate him. And you know about immortals, but do you know anything about the heavens and hell?
âI know they exist.â
That was a start. Recently I ventured into hell to rescue a friend.
She gulped. âYou rescued another demon?â
In a way. Legion had been demon, but had bargained with Lucifer for a human body. A human body she still possessed. She wasnâtâisnâtâevil. Well, not totallyâand she was being tortured.
âShe?â
Did he detect a note of jealousy or was that wishful thinking on his part? Yes. During the few days I spent down there, I wasâ¦overcome by demon thoughts and urges.
When he offered no more, she nodded.
Those thoughts and urges are a part of me now, driving meâ¦
âInsane?â
Now he was the one to nod, though his was stiff. Only when Iâm with you do those things become manageable.
Wariness fell over her lovely features like a curtain, but she didnât attack. âWhy me?â
I have no idea.
âGuess.â
He released a sigh. Perhaps for the same reason I can project my voice into your head.
âThat tells me nothing,â she said, pursing her lips.
How adorable she was, just then. A pouty princess. The thought made him frown. Whether we like it or not, there is something between us. Maybe, because of that, the demons know what I know, and theyâre afraid of you. Afraid of Hunters.
âMaybe. Soâ¦you hate these thoughts and urges?â Her question was soft, almost hopeful.
Why hopeful? Because she wanted to believe the best of him? Yes. Beyond anything.
She peered down at her lap, where her fingers were linked and now twisting together. He hadnât expected such calm. Not from her, a demon-hater, when heâd just admitted to being poisoned by all kinds of evil.
Was she playing him? Lulling him into a false sense of relaxation? If so, what was her ultimate goal?
He should know; his demon should know. More than ever he hated that he couldnât read her. Hated that the two times heâd peeked inside her mind, heâd seen her smiling. Heard her laughing.
Hated, because the images were branded inside him, a part of him, haunting him. Hated that even so, he craved another glimpse.
âWhy did you tell me this?â she asked.
Because of my affliction and your affiliation, we canât stay here. Iâm a danger to my friends, he told her, expecting her to argue. If she remained in one location, her associates had a better chance of finding her. And you, well, youâre a danger to them, too. As much a danger as they are to you.
He didnât want either group to find her. Plus, his twenty-four hours were almost up, and every noise outside the door had him stiffening. Sabin was liable to burst into the room with a flamethrower at any moment.
âYes, we need to leave,â she replied, thick lashes finally lifting. âSo where do you propose we go?â
Such pragmatism was admirable. Combine that with the we and the heat of her gaze, and she presented a powerful aphrodisiac. You wish to stay with me?
âOf course.â
There was no âof courseâ about it. Why did she want to stay with him? His suspicious soul floundered for an answer, and found only one: she was playing him. Perhaps she even meant to lead him to her fellow Hunters, just as sheâd done to Baden.
Amunâs hands curled into fists. Fists so tight and hard his already damaged knuckles cracked from the strain.
âAmun?â she prompted.
His name on her lipsâ¦another aphrodisiac. We will go to the only place I can purge the thoughts and urges.
Her eyes widened. âYou can purge them?â Once again she sounded hopeful, as if she truly cared.
Though the prospect rocked him to the core, he revealed only mild surprise. While you slept, I spoke with someone in the know. And the conversation had pissed him off royally.
âYou must return to hell,â the angel Zacharel had said, unconcerned, when Amun sought him out.
What? Amun had mentally shouted. When he remembered to sign, his motions had been jerky. My little jaunt into hell is the reason Iâm like this. So returning isnât really a solution, is it?
âYou took the demons out, now you will take them back in.â
No.
A shrug. âThen you will forever be chained to the womanâs side. Not that forever will be long. Not for you. Without her, the spirits overcome you, and the next time you are overcome, you will die by my hand.â
If getting rid of the demons is as easy as going to hell, why didnât you take me back already?
âI did not say it would be easy. Nor did I say returning with me would be helpful. You must take the girl.â
No, he repeated.
âYour choice, of course. I have no qualms about removing your head.â
It was impossible to argue with so logical and uncaring a being. How do I get them out of my body once I âtake them back in?â
Zacharel had walked away without answering, without offering even the slightest hint. Why? What was Amun supposed to do when he got there? How long was he supposed to stay? Exactly where in the endless pit did he need to go?
He told me the only way to free myself was to return to hell, Amun said to Haidee now.
âReturn toâ¦hell? As in the fiery pit of the damned?â The last was uttered in a horrified whisper.
Yes. And youâre going with me. He waited for her to protest, to fight him. She didnât, not yet, and he relaxed. Somewhat. He couldnât subdue her, defend her and search for a way to liberate himself. You wonât burn, he assured her. I wonât allow the flames to reach you.
âIf we go,â she said with a tremor, âwill there be anyone with us?â
If, sheâd said, and he relaxed a bit more. No. Weâll go alone. He desperately needed the muscle and supportâbecause gods knew, heâd barely survived last time, and heâd had two trained warriors with himâbut he wouldnât place his friends in danger. Not from the demons, and not from Haidee. Besides, that would defeat the purpose of whisking Haidee out of their midst. Why? Do you wish to take someone with us?
Her lips pressed together in that mutinous line, and he suspected heâd somehow hurt her feelings. No, surely not. She would have to care about him, he reminded himself, and she didnât.
âWill youâwill you allow me to have a weapon?â The word allow choked from her, and he doubted sheâd ever spoken it before.
Yes, but if you attempt to use it on me, I will strike back in kind. Perhaps a lie, perhaps not. He valiantly hoped she didnât try to test the claim.
Silence stretched between them, an oppressive cloud he couldnât shoo away. He gave her the time she needed, though. He was asking a lot from her and offering very little in exchange. Of course, he would have to force her if she refused himâthey truly had no other optionsâbut until she did, he would let her think the decision was hers.
âAll right,â she finally said on a sigh. âIâll do it. Iâll go with you.â
No fight at all.
Once again he was thrown, but this time he couldnât hide the intensity of his shock or the earth-shattering cascade of relief. Then his suspicions flared. What did she hope to gain, placing herself in danger to help him regain his senses? Or did she plan to go simply to gather intel? Yes, he thought with a nod. That was far more likely. She was a Hunter, after all, and finding ways to destroy demons was her business.
Hunter. The blasphemy echoed through his mind, and he cringed. Stop reminding me.
âStop reminding you of what?â she sputtered, obviously confused by his sudden bout of disgust.
Nothing, he muttered. He nearly apologized but bit the words back. He would not apologize to this woman. Ever. He had some pride, at least. Weâll waste no more time.
Amun strode to the door and knocked. Behind him, he heard Haidee gasp, her clothes rustling again as if she had pushed to her feet. A few seconds later, the lock clicked from the other side, and the wood squeaked open, revealing the angel Zacharel. Black hair in perfect order, emerald eyes devoid of all emotion. White-and-gold wings arched over his shoulders and swooped down his robed sides.
âYes,â the warrior said. The greeting should have been inflected with a question, but surfaced as a mere statement.
We are taking you up on your offer of transport, Amun signed.
Zacharel offered no hint of his thoughts. âIâll gather the necessary supplies. Be ready to leave in five minutes.â With that, the door shut, locked.
Amun rested his forehead on the cool wood, reminded for a moment of Haideeâs skin. Hell. He was returning to hell when heâd sworn never to go back. In a deep, dark corner of his mind, he thought he heard Secrets whimper.
Thousands of years ago, Secrets had fought to escape hellâand won. And yet, Amun kept taking him back. At least the other demons remained calm, neither crying nor cheering in regard to his plans. But then, they were more afraid of Haidee than anything else.
âWhy canât you speak?â she asked, slicing through the tension he hadnât realized had sprouted anew.
My demon, he replied, offering no more. He straightened and turned to her. Mistake. She had stood, and as always, he was struck by the delicacy of her features, the passion that lurked under her glowing skin. More than that, his mouth watered for a go at those breasts, that stomach, those legs.
He shouldnât have dressed her in the T-shirt and jeans. He should have dressed her in a shapeless sack.
âBecause you carry the demon of Secrets, you canât speak?â
Yes. Had he ever thought to find himself in this position? Sharing his own inner mysteries with a Hunter?
âI donât understand. Why does your demon prevent you from speaking?â
She wasnât curious about him, he knew, but was merely fishing for information to perhaps share with her people. Still. He answered. I open my mouth, and everything the demon has discovered, every dark deed of those around us, every bit of information that could ruin families and friendships, slips out.
âSo you can speak?â
What did that matter? Yes.
âBut you choose not to?â
Yes, damn it. Why do you want to know?
Amunâs uncustomary outburst didnât faze her. âItâs justâ¦itâs a good thing youâre doing. Very sweet.â
So unexpected was the praise, he could only blink at her.
âNo one else can hear your voice? Inside their head, I mean.â
No. Just you. Bitterness had crept into his tone, and he could do nothing to mask it. Not that he wanted to. Let her hear. Let her know.
Twin pink circles stained her cheeks, and she cleared her throat. She eased back onto the mattress, prim once again. âSo how did you guys hook up with angels?â
A change of subject. Wise of her, yes, but foolish of him to offer more truth. A friend of ours married their leader. More like Bianka had claimed Lysander as her property, but Amun wasnât sure Haidee would understand that kind of sentiment.
âAn angel and a demon? Married?â
Pretty much. As stone-cold as Lysander was, the term âangelâ seemed just about as appropriate as âfairy godmother.â The term âdemonâ fit Bianka perfectly, though. Her soul was darker than Amunâs, but in the best possible way. The Harpies were so open, so honest about their mischievous nature, they were a delight to be around. At least for Amun. For a while, heâd even considered pursuing Biankaâs twin sister, Kaia. War had gotten in the way. Speaking of angels, you should know that your precious Galen isnât one. Heâ
âOkay, letâs agree right now not to talk about your friends or mine,â Haidee interjected angrily. âItâll only make us angry with each other. We should focus on the mission.â
So she considered Galen a friend of hers? Of course she did, he thought next, and wanted to punch something. The leader of the Hunters wanted every Lord of the Underworldâexcluding himselfâdead and buried. Because of Baden, Haidee had to be a prize among prizes for the keeper of Hope. Or was it possible Galen didnât know who she was?
Amunâs teeth gnashed togetherâhe was doing that a lot latelyâgrating the top layer into a fine powder, but he nodded. Very well. There will be no talk of our friends.
âI just, I donât want us to fight,â she said. âAnd just so you know, Galen isnât a personal friend.â
âTime is up,â Zacharelâs hard voice proclaimed before Amun could reply.
At the vocal intrusion, he whipped around, at the same time moving in front of Haidee to act as her shield. The door was still closed. He frownedâuntil the angel simply stepped through the wood, a backpack dangling from his hand.
Heâd possessed the ability all along, yet had only now opted to reveal it. Why?
âI will take you to the place your journey must begin,â Zacharel said. As with all angels, there was an undeniable layer of truth in his tone, and Amun couldnât doubt a single thing he uttered. âBut know that Lucifer is angry that he was thwarted in his quest to destroy you and yours through Legion, and will be out for eternal blood. Be wary, trust nothing and no one.â
I never do.
âExcept, perhaps, each other,â the angel added.
Amun glanced over his shoulder, and he and Haidee shared a look.
Zacharel nodded in approval. âI can promise you that your last journey through the underworld was nothing compared to what you will soon face. In reparation for his role in Legionâs freedom, Cronus has returned it to its former glory.â
Why would heâ?
The angel held up his hand, halting Amunâs tirade. âIt was either that, or return Legion.â
He made the right choice, then.
âLetâs see if you still agree when you get there. Monsters youâve only heard whispered about, you will soon encounter.â
Haidee stood, her cool hands flattening on Amunâs lower back. He had to bite his tongue to stop his moan of pleasure. Finally, contact. He felt as if heâd been waiting forever to feel her, any part of her, again. That she now offered comfortâ¦comforted him.
Gods, he really was pathetic.
You wonât allow any of my friends to follow us? he signed.
âCorrect. I will ensure you and the girl remain undisturbed by them.â
Amun took no offense. If anyone could keep the brutes here from getting their way, it was this hard-as-steel creature. Thank you.
âNow. Something else you should know.â A breeze ruffled the golden down streaked through the angelâs wings like a flowing, molten river. âWith the changes, there are now six realms you must pass through before you even reach the gateâand the gate is another obstacle altogether.â
Haidee stepped to Amunâs side, but didnât break contact. âHow will we return here when weâre done?â
Zacharelâs green gaze briefly shifted to her. âShould you save Amun, you will have nothing to worry about. Should you not, you will never leave.â
The ominous warning rang through his mind. Then Amun shrugged. They would save him; it was that simple. Weâll find a way, he told Haidee.
Her hands trembled against him, but she said no more.
What about weapons? he signed. Food?
âEverything you need is in here.â The angel tossed the pack, and Amun caught the too-thin, too-light duffel with ease. âGood luck to you, warrior.â
The moment his fingers wrapped around the straps, his surroundings completely fell away. From light to murky dark, the smooth white walls were replaced by jagged stone stained with crimson splatter. Bones littered the equally rocky ground, and the temperature instantly flared hundreds of degreesâor so it seemed.
A cavern, he realized, deep in the earth. And there was no sign of Zacharelâno dainty hands on his back. Fighting a rush of panic, Amun swung around. He relaxed, but only for a second. Haidee was a few feet away, hunched over and vomiting. Beside her rested a toothbrush, toothpaste and bottle of mouthwash.
Amun closed the distance between them before he realized what he was doing. With one hand, he smoothed her hair out of the way. With the other, he stroked her back, trying to comfort her as sheâd comforted him. Flashing from one location to another in a mere blink of time affected some but not others. She, apparently, fell into the âsomeâ category. The angel must have known she would.
As strong as she usually was, the weakness probably appalled her.
The sickness will soon pass, he told her. Even as he soothed her, he thought perhaps she had infected him with a toxic mix of hunger, stupidity and unwanted tendernessâand he would never find a cure.
She spit, wiped her mouth with the back of her trembling hand. âThank you. For not kicking me while Iâm down.â
Iâm not a monster, Haidee. Yet.
âI know,â she said weakly. âOtherwise, I wouldnât be here.â
She, apparently, suffered from the same toxic mix.
That did not bode well for their mission.