H of her cell.
She had no idea how much time had passed since sheâd been pushed inside. She was alone. Food and water had been brought to her only once. The fruits and nuts and crisp, clean water had somehow curbed her hunger completely, strengthening her in a way she couldnât explain.
Oh, and the food had been delivered by an angelâa freaking angel living in a demonâs den. That still had her reeling. But she now knew beyond a doubt she was in the Budapest fortress. As theyâd dragged her down here, sheâd spotted wear and tear from a recent bombing. A bombing she hadnât been involved in, but one sheâd heard all about.
Enough time had passed for MicahââAmun,â Defeat had called himâto have suffered countless fates. Torture, relocation, even death. The thought of each had sent her into a near hysteric state. Sheâd clawed the walls until she had no nails left. Sheâd beaten the bars until her knuckles had cracked and swelled. Sheâd screamed for answers until her voice had fractured.
Now, in the silence, all she could do was think, one sentence echoing over and over again. Defeat had called him Amun. Was he Amun, a Lord? Or was he Micah, a Hunter?
Heâd known her, shouted for her help. That had to mean he was Micah. But, on the flip side, he hadnât known any thing else about her. Not their history, not their purpose. That had to mean he was Amun.
Argh! The back-and-forth, was he or wasnât he, was driving her as crazy as her confinement. Could he be a mix of both? Amunâs demon stuffed into Micahâs body? Because really, two men couldnât look that much alike. Could they?
No matter the answers, she wasnât leaving without him. Even though, deep down, a part of her suspected the worst. That two men could easily look alikeâespecially if powers beyond a humanâs comprehension were involved. That he was Amun, that heâd always been Amun. That Micah was someone else completely, out there somewhere, still searching for her, and she was simply trying to convince herself otherwise so she wouldnât feel guilty.
That kissâ¦something else she couldnât get out of her mind. Micah had never kissed her like that. Fiery, consuming. Necessary.
Despite the danger they had been inâwere inâshe would have allowed him to strip and penetrate her. She would have met him thrust for wild thrust, taking, giving, claiming. She would have clung to him, desperate for more, for everything.
Hell, she would have crawled inside him if she could have. Sheâd wanted them fused, never able to part. How crazy was that? A kiss had never affected her like that. Never. A man had never affected her like that.
Always before, she had remained detached. From everyone. Maybe because sheâd known the people around her would die, while she would continue on, eternally brought back from the grave. Maybe because there was darkness inside her. So much darkness. A living entity, as real as the ice that flowed through her veins, a presence in the back of her mind, muted but always there, urging her to despise people, places, life, death. Anything, everything.
For the first time, she hadnât had to fight to feel or garner affection. She had looked at Amunâ
Thatâs how you think of him now? Amun?
Yes, she realized. Somehow he was Amun to her now. Micah didnât fit those fuller lips and wider shoulders. So, she had looked at Amun, and sensual awareness had sizzled inside her. Connecting them. She had heard his voice inside her head, and that sensual awareness had deepened.
And if he really was Amun, not Micah, she should feel guilty about what had happened between them. She should be horrified that sheâd succumbed to her enemy. Should be devastated that sheâd let him give her more than an explosive kiss; sheâd let him lick between her legs, and she had loved it. Had been begging for more.
Guilt and horror were not what she felt, however. Well, not completely. She felt them, but she was still consumed by desire.
Forgetting the fact that Amun was the enemy, she wasnât a cheater. And yet, had he walked through her cell, she felt pretty certain she would have thrown herself into his arms.
She scrubbed a shaky hand down her face. What was happening to her common sense? Her well-honed self-preservation instincts?
Micah was the first boyfriend sheâd allowed herself in centuries, and only because she had dreamed of him first. But she hadnât needed him, hadnât been lost without him. She paused and peered down at her tattooed arm. At his name, branded so deeply into her flesh. M-i-c-a-h. She traced the letters with a scabbed fingertip. There was no leap in her pulse, no hum of desire.
She thought the name Amun.
Goose bumps broke out over every inch of her skin. She licked her lips, her mouth suddenly flooded with moisture.
See? Reaction. Always. And that wasnât good. Not good at all.
What ifâ¦what if she hadnât dreamed of Micah? What if sheâd dreamed of Amun? Did that mean Amun was a bad memory trying to surface? Or, like the visions he had showed her of her past, was he something good?
Neither made sense, really. One, in the visions, she knew the man she saw was her key to happiness, to freedom. Two, how could a demon-possessed immortal, responsible for the travesty that was her lifeâand her parentsâ and sisterâs deathsâbe something good?
She kicked back into motion, her sure strides eating up the distance from one cell wall to the other. A better question: How could a demon-possessed warrior be the one thing she craved? The one thing she didnât think she could live without?
Live. Without. The words echoed through her mind, and she stumbled to another halt. Her stomach twisted, sharp little knots forming, cutting. No. No, no, no. She purposely kept her home and belongings sparse, her friendships casual. That way, she could pick up and leave without a momentâs notice or regret.
She could live without him. She could. He was a mystery right now. A mystery she needed to solve. That was all.
Another complication sprouted. If the warrior she craved was Amun, he wouldnât want her when he discovered the truth about her. The fact that heâd kissed her meant he hadnât realized who she was and what sheâd done to his friend, Baden. When he did, he would want to kill her, not pleasure her.
But he knew you were a Hunter. You told him. Still. Easier to forgive a run-of-the-mill Hunter, she thought, than the Hunter who had helped behead his friendâand planned to do the same to all the others.
Footsteps suddenly resounded. Haidee swung around, facing the cell door. She tensed, waiting, dreading. A few seconds later, the blond, blue-eyed keeper of Defeat rounded the corner and approached her prison. Bile burned a path up her throat. His pretty features were devoid of emotion, but his skin was pale, the tracery of his veins evident.
Though her heartbeat sped up, thumping erratically, she didnât back away, wouldnât act the coward.
âHow are you feeling?â she asked, just to taunt him. âHave a tummy ache?â
Both of his sandy brows arched into his hairline, his eyes glittering dangerously. His gaze perused her from top to bottom, purposely lingering at her breasts, between her legs. âIâm feeling like I can do anything I want with you.â Calmly yet brutally uttered, his threat clear. âAnything.â
That wasnât the answer sheâd expected, and she scowled at him. But then, she should have known he wouldnât simply endure her snide remarks. He always had to one-up her. So. Enough pleasantries.
âWhereâs the warrior?â she demanded. âThe one I was with?â
âYou mean Amun, keeper of the demon of Secrets?â So calm, so certain. âOr your boyfriend?â
Secrets, heâd said. Just as sheâd suspected. The confirmation explained so much. The knots in her stomach twisted into themselves, sharpening further. Still, she wouldnât confirm or deny what she knew. âMaybe thatâs what you want me to believe. That heâs masquerading as a Hunter, while in reality, heâs really your friend.â The words croaked from her. âOr maybe you just want me to hate my own boyfriend. Maybe you want me to hurt him and afterward, youâll taunt me, laugh at me.â
âNow why would I want that, huh? If heâs my friend, demon-possessed like me, yet I told you he wasnât, that he was your man, you would do your best to watch over him. And I would want my friend watched over, wouldnât I?â Strider propped his shoulder against the bar, and though his head was turned, his hard gaze remained fixed on her. âBut if he isnât, if he is your boyfriend, why would I give the pleasure of killing him to you, even for a joke?â
Her chin lifted a notch, her stubborn core refusing to be cowed. Despite his sound reasoning. âWhy would you admit he was your friend, then? Thereby placing him in danger?â
âSo Iâve admitted heâs Amun, have I?â
No, he hadnât. Heâd only questioned her thoughts on the matter, probably trying to confuse her. âI donât care who he is.â Either way, he belonged to her. That was a fact she couldnât argue, even with herself. âI just want to see him, make sure heâs okay.â
âWant, want, want.â He tapped a finger against his chin. âWho said anything about giving you what you want?â
She popped her jaw, still refusing to show him emotion. âWhy are you here, Defeat?â
âWeâll get to that in a minute. First, I have some questions for you.â
âAnd I have every intention of answering them,â she said, sugar sweet.
âYou will if you want to see yourâ¦man again.â The last was gritted, as if the prospect bothered him.
âYou just told me I wouldnât get what I wanted.â
âNo, I didnât. Think back. I asked you who said you would.â
True. Bastard. But would he honor his word? The Lords of the Underworld were not known as givers in her world. âAfter you just taunted me with never seeing him again, you expect me to believe youâll escort me back to his room if I give you answers you wonât believe anyway?â Or bring Amun here, she thought, but didnât say the words aloud.
No reason to put ideas into his head if they werenât already there.
He shrugged. âYouâre right. I was merely taunting you. Can you blame me, though? You bring out the worst in me, and I struck back.â
She wanted to yell at him to continue but remained silent, waiting.
âSo,â he prodded. âWe gonna do this? Answers in exchange for a little sightseeing?â
âYes,â she gritted out. She had no other recourse. He might be lying, but she was willing to risk Hunter secrets on the hope that heâd follow through. And thatâs what he would demand, she thought. Secrets. âLetâs hammer out a few details before I start spewing info. When will you take me to him? A few years from now?â She wouldnât put such a trick past him.
A muscle ticked below his eye. âIâll take you immediately following our conversation.â
âAs if youâll keep your word,â she said, raising her chin another notch. She might be willing to risk everything, but that didnât mean she would be stupid about it. The terms needed to be laid out flat, ironed and starched. Just in case. To do that, she would have to provoke him. Some things had to be offered without her prompting.
His eyes narrowed to tiny slits, the top and bottom lashes catching and twining. âChallenge me, then. Challenge me to keep it.â
Like that. Had she challenged him on her own, he would have punished her. âIs he even alive?â Even asking, she wanted to cry. You can live without him, she reminded herself. She just didnât want to.
Oh, God. He already meant that much to her? Despite who and what he might be? Despite how he would hate her?
âYes,â Defeat said. âHe is. Though his condition has worsened.â
Her heart thumped against her ribs. âHow many questions? There has to be a limit.â
He gave another negligent shrug. âFive. And your answers had better be truthful.â
How will you know if they are or arenât? she almost asked, just to taunt him as heâd taunted her, but she didnât. The outcome of this was too important. âAll right. IâI challenge you to take me to see MicahâAmunâafter I answer five questions honestly.â If he punished her for the challenge, anyway, it would be no more than she deserved for allowing him to trick her.
Defeatâs pupils gobbled up his irises as he jerked his head once in a stiff nod. âI accept.â His hands fisted. âSatisfied?â
Sheâd seen that reaction before, recognized it as what heâd claimed. Acceptance. âIâm as satisfied as I can be in a place like this.â
Those pupils continued to grow, as if sheâd said something provocative. And maybe she hadâa virile man would see her words as an invitation to satisfy her physically, and this man was more virile and invitation-happy than mostâbut it had been unintentional. She wasnât attracted to Defeat. He was beautiful, yes, but he lacked Amunâs intensity. She also wanted to throw up in her mouth a little every time she looked at him.
âWhatâs your first question?â she demanded.
He didnât hesitate. âWhat the hell are you?â
She didnât pretend to misunderstand. âIâm human.â
Fast as lightning, he struck out, his fist pounding into the bar and rattling the very foundation of the cell. âAlready youâre lying. You can materialize weapons out of thin air. Thatâs not something humans can do.â
She gave no reaction to his fury. âIf I can, why havenât I produced one since being here? And I promise you, I would have sliced your throat from end to end if Iâd had even the slightest opportunity during our trek.â
Now a muscle ticked in his jaw, but at least he didnât strike out again. âAn easy boast, almost believable. Maybe you just wanted a ticket into this fortress.â
âTo do what? Expedite my torture?â
âYou were Bait once. Maybe youâre meant to be Bait again.â
âThen you were an idiot to bring me here,â she lashed out.
His nostrils flared with the force of his renewed fury, but he said nothing else.
âThis is getting us nowhere,â she said, as calmly as she was able. âThe weapons didnât simply materialize when we were in the jungle. I hid them from you until I found the opportunity to use them.â And that was the Godâs honest truth. âThat, and youâre kind of a dumbass.â
He exhaled, the breath seeming to drain his fury. âWell, thatâs an improvement over stupid and idiot.â
Gentle, amused teasing. From him. Shocking. Or was he trying to throw her off balance? âI answered. Honestly. So, second question.â
The gentleness faded, only a single thread of the amusement remaining. âIf youâre human, how are you alive? I watched you die. Which is a nice way of saying I fucking murdered you!â
âIâve been reanimated.â She didnât mention how or how many times. He hadnât asked. âThatâs two. Next.â
He shook his head. âNot done with that one yet. If youâve been reanimated, and Iâm guessing thatâs just a fancy way of saying you were brought back to life, a god aided you. Only a god has the power to reanimate a body after a beheading. And even then, Iâm not sure itâs possible.â
Silence enveloped them. He stared at her pointedly. She stared back.
âWell?â he demanded, spreading his arms as if he were the last sane man in the universe.
âWell, what? You didnât ask a question.â
The muscle in his jaw started ticking again. âWho aided you?â
Aided was not the word she would have chosen. Cursed, maybe. âA creature very much like you. I think. I didnât see it, only know I had a reaction to it the first and only time it touched me.â And thatâs all she would say on the matter. Even if he asked for more. âThatâs three. Next.â Why hadnât he asked her about the Hunters?
âRhea, then,â he said, as if that explained everything.
Haidee schooled her features, unwilling to show him the depth of her confusion. Rhea, the supposed queen of the Titans? Haidee had heard of her, of course. A small group of Hunters even worshipped her. But why did Defeat assume the woman was responsible for Haideeâs curse? Or âinfection,â as the Bad Man had called it? âTwo more questions to go. Better make them good.â
âWhen I saw you withâ¦him, kissingââ heâd almost said a name, she realized, but had managed to stop himself in time ââwere you interested in him as a man or as a possible escape route?â
Of everything Defeat could have asked, why that? âWhy the hell do you care?â
His traced the tip of his tongue across the seam of his lips. âI donât believe our bargain involved explanations on my part.â
Fine. âThe man.â
There was a beat of silence before he gave her a reaction. A flash of that fury, quickly gone.
âHeâs always been the gentle one, you know,â Defeat said almost absently. âHeâs rarely ever displayed a temper.
Has never hurt one of his friends. And he would be horrified to know what he did to me.â As soon as he realized what heâd said, what heâd admitted, he scowled at her, as if the confession was her fault.
She pretended not to notice. âYou have one more question. And did I forget to tell you that if you lied to me, I would personally reacquaint your spine with a shard of glass?â
He stared at her for a long while, studying, searching for something. Whether he found it or not, she didnât know. Then he spoke, soft, gentle. âWhy did you help kill Baden, Haidee?â
She sucked in a breath. Of everything he could have demanded to knowâ¦how dare he ask that? As if he didnât already know the answer. As if he hadnât rallied to destroy her, all those centuries ago. As if he would enjoy hearing her pain and her heartbreak.
Just like that, all the hate inside her exploded to the surface, and she stomped to the bars, placing herself within striking distance. She didnât attack him but dared him to attack her.
He didnât move, just continued to stare at her.
âWhy did I help kill him?â She threw the words at him as if they were weapons, and maybe they were. âBecause he took what I loved most. And donât try to lie and say he didnât, that Iâm confused, or misremembering. I saw him. I was there.â
âHeââ
âIâm not done! Why else did I help kill him? Because he represented what I despised most. Because he deserved what I did, and he knew it. He wanted me to do it. And not once, not once in all these years, have I ever regretted it.â
Again, silence. Those blue eyes glittered far more dangerously than before as he reached inside his pocket.
Haidee expected a dagger to the stomach but still didnât back down. Physical pain might dull her emotional anguish.
He merely keyed the lock. The cell door swung open, the hinges squeaking. âFor some reason, you calmedâ¦our boy before. Heâs worse now, and we need to know if you can calm him again.â
Him. Amun. So, she thought, furious all over again, Defeat had meant to take her to the warrior all along. She hadnât had to answer a single question. Sheâd been tricked, just not the way sheâd thought. What a fool she was. âAnd what is it, exactly, that I calm him from? How is he worse? What the hell did you do to him?â
âIâm going to take you to him,â the demon went on, ignoring her. Either he was unaware of her volatile emotions or he just didnât care. âBut if you harm him, Haidee, I will kill you. And Iâll make it hurt in a way you canât even imagine.â
THE MOMENTÂ DEFEATÂ led her down the hallway to Amunâs bedroomâa hallway still filled with towering angels and their outspread wingsâshe heard the warriorâs voice inside her head and forgot everything else.
Haidee! That single word was a tormented wail. Needâ¦youâ¦pleaseâ¦
How long had he been calling for her? Why hadnât she heard him before now?
Haidee!
Sheâd uncover those details later. Right now, he was in pain, so much pain, and nothing but helping him mattered.
Wrenching away with all her strength, she broke free of Defeatâs hold and rushed forward. No one tried to stop her. Not the angels and not the Lord. She expected Amunâs doorway to still be splintered from Defeatâs vicious kick, but someone had fixed the metal and wood, both now blocking her entrance.
She twisted the knobâunlocked, thank Godâand raced into the bedroom, quickly slamming the door shut behind her. She tried to flip the lock in place and noticed it had been removed. Shit! Something else to worry about later. Tiny beads of ice dotted her skin, and her knees knocked shakily as she pivoted. Then she saw him. He was thrashing atop the bed, just like last time.
Finally, she was with him again. He was alive. But for how long? He was worse, Defeat had said, and Amun had barely survived the last set of wounds.
Haideeâ¦pleaseâ¦
So weak, suffused with all that pain. âIâm here, baby. Iâm here.â Acid flowed through her as she stumbled toward him. Some distant part of her brain noticed that every piece of furniture but the bed had been carted out. Then she was standing at the edge of the mattress, peering down at him, and all thoughts fled.
He moaned inside her head.
âI know. I know you hurt.â
Haidee? Not quite so pained now.
âYes, baby. Haideeâs here.â
He sighed with the barest hint of relief.
The shadows had returned, were even then dancing around his once again savaged body. His eyes were swollen shut, his hands bloody and torn. The wings of his butterfly tattoo wereâ¦moving, breaking apart, forming hundreds of other butterflies. Those, too, danced over him, up his thighs, on his stomach, his pectorals, his arms, then disappearing behind his back.
In that moment, she was absolutely certain the man she watched was Amun rather than Micah. Which meant the Lords wouldnât hurt him. Thank God. The intensity of her relief was stunning.
Whatâs wrong with you? she wondered again. Now that her worries over Amunâs possible torture and execution were proven unnecessary, she couldnât forget or refute two simple facts. This man had never been a Hunter. This man was her enemy.
She should kill him. She should add to her tally and be all the closer to evening the score. Like Baden, Amun deserved whatever punishment she dished. The vile things these men had done in ancient Greece⦠Still. She couldnât force herself to hurt him. He was too battered, too pitiful. Had sought only to protect her.
His attitude will change. You know it will. The moment heâs well, his friends will tell him who you are. Heâll go for your throat faster than you can say, âBut I spared you.â
Sheâd worry about his hatred then. For now, for better or worse, she and Amun were connected. Later, she would search for answers, find out how and why. Maybe she could even convince herself sheâd never had visions of him. And thenâ¦maybe then she could find a way to cut the ties that bound them. If he didnât do it first.
Until thenâ¦
She would do everything in her power to save this man, just as before.
Even the thought was a betrayal to the Hunters. A betrayal Micah would take personally. But that didnât alter her plans, and that, she realized, drove home the knowledge that her relationship with him was over.
She was shocked by her lack of unhappiness at the prospect. Shocked further that she didnât wish things were different. She just wished there was a way to let him know. Gently. She desired another man, a demon-possessed man at that, and Micah deserved better than she could ever give him.
She sighed, the relieved sound an echo of Amunâs. It was nice, having something figured out. If only healing Amun proved to be that simple. She reached out and brushed the sweat-soaked hair from his brow. Those dancing shadows screeched, darting away from her and burrowing under Amunâs skin, even as the warrior leaned toward her, seeking closer contact.
What did that darkness represent? What did it mean? Definitely something evil, as sheâd first suspected. Amun obviously hated it, cringing as the last thread of gloom faded inside him.
Haidee, my Haidee. Another sigh wafted through her head, this one laced with contentment. Donât leave me.
âI wonât leave you.â Her trembling intensified as she climbed in beside him and wrapped him in her arms. âIâll be here as long as you need me.â
IN HIS OWN BEDROOM, Torin watched Haidee on one of his computer screens. Haidee. Come back to life. Who would have thought? And why hadnât Strider told him? The questions lost their importance between one heartbeat and the next. His eyes widened as the shadows scrambled to escape her touch. Heâd never seen anything like it and had no idea what it meant.
He did know one thing. She wasnât human, as sheâd told Strider. No mere human could frighten demons as sheâd just done. And they were frightened of her. Theyâd hidden inside Amun, rather than try and escape him as theyâd done from the first.
âSo what the fuck is she?â he muttered.
SCOWLING, STRIDER BARRELEDÂ his way inside Amunâs chamber. How eager Haidee had been to reach the warrior, her sworn enemy. And now Strider saw her sprawled on the bed, curled into Amunâs side, tenderly smoothing his brow. As if she wanted to be there. As if she was glad to be there. Helping a Lord.
She thinks Amunâs her boyfriend, remember? Of course she was glad. Of course she was helping.
âEx?â he growled with more force than heâd intended.
Her gunmetal gaze shifted and locked on him warily. âWhat?â There was nothing wary about her voice. That single word snapped at him with more force than even he had used.
Clearly, she wanted him to get out and leave her the hell alone.
His molars gnashed together, and he beat down the tide of jealousy that suddenly raged through him. Jealousy. Jealousy over a Hunter. A Hunter heâd always planned to kill. Why couldnât he simply be happy that Amun now had a chance to pull through?
Because Haidee was going to make Amun miserable. And if the big guy fell in love with her, he just might abandon his friends to be with her. Which would get his ass killed for good. Ultimately, she would betray him.
I wonât let that happen. Ever.
Win, Defeat said, sensing the challenge.
I will. Strider raised both of his hands. In the left, he held a syringe. In the right, chains. Theyâd been waiting in the hallway, but sheâd been too damn concerned for Amun to notice. âYou didnât honestly think youâd have free rein with him, did you?â