Untamed Fate (Magic Side: Wolf Bound Book 2)

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Untamed Fate (Magic Side: Wolf Bound Book 2) Page 5

by Veronica Douglas


  smell her rising trepidation. A desire to go to her rose in me, but I fought it

  down. She’d all but forced me into bringing her here. She could handle

  herself.

  Savannah looked back to cell 36, jaw set. “Kahanov and the Ripper were

  neighbors.”

  Neve nodded.

  “Give this one a wide berth,” the guard said as he unlocked the door with

  an iron key once he finished dispelling the magic charms.

  “Oh, the Ripper knows better than to pull any tricks,” Neve said as she

  stepped into the well-lit cell. The prisoner inside locked eyes with her and

  then scooted against the wall of open bars at the far end.

  Beyond them was an empty circular space with an observation tower in

  the center that magically monitored all the cells that encircled it. The prison

  was a panopticon, more commonly known as the donut, for that reason.

  “Stay back, you cursed woman!” the devil yelled.

  I was glad to see him squirm. The Magic Side Gazette had nicknamed

  him the Ripper for the way he tore his victims’ bodies apart. The last person

  he’d murdered happened to be in the Dens, and though it wasn’t a pack

  member, it had happened in our territory.

  I flexed my fists, and my knuckles cracked with the anticipation of

  breaking his nose.

  “Quiet. We just want to talk,” Neve said coolly.

  “Not with you in here.” His signature smelled like rotting corpses and

  tasted of tar, and his body quaked with fear.

  Amal shot forward and had her claws at his throat before he could twitch

  a muscle. “Then you’ll talk to me. We’re looking for Kahanov. He got away

  with you and the others on the night of the twenty-third. Any idea where he

  might be?”

  “You mean he’s still out there?” He let out a piercing cackle and clutched

  his sunken chest. “The fates must have smiled upon him, then, because that’s

  a surprise.”

  “Oh, really? And why’s that?” Amal asked.

  “Why would I give you information, filthy lycanthrope?” he snarled.

  “Because if you don’t, I’ll ram my claws into your eyes and rip off your

  balls. Then I’ll have my friend Neve here suck the breath from your lungs.”

  Amal’s cheery voice betrayed the wrath she could unleash.

  The devil’s eyes bulged, and he raised his hands in acquiescence.

  “There’s no need for violence. I’ll tell you what I know, but maybe you’ll put

  a word in with the guards on my behalf. I haven’t seen the sun in a month.”

  “Maybe.” Amal stepped back and crouched in front of him. “Tell me

  about your escape.”

  The Ripper’s catlike eyes flashed to me before settling on Amal.

  “Kahanov and I escaped together. But you already knew that.”

  “How did you coordinate the escape? Were you two friends? Where did

  you intend to go?” she pressed.

  “So many questions.” The Ripper smiled, but Amal’s claws extended, and

  he froze. “We weren’t friends, but he was my neighbor, and when you’re in

  this place long enough, you take what you can get. The plan was his. I helped

  him slip past the guards, and once we got free, we were supposed to meet up

  with the Viper. She was going to get us out of Magic Side.”

  “The Viper?” Amal glanced back at me, but I hadn’t heard the name

  before.

  “Can’t tell you anything about her. We never managed to meet up.

  Kahanov ditched me the second we reached the northern dock. So instead, I

  did what I do best.” A bloodthirsty grin spread across his face, and I couldn’t

  restrain myself any longer.

  I stepped forward and punched him, careful not to break his jaw but

  ensuring I felt his nose crunch. He howled and clutched his bloody face.

  As the Ripper’s cries subsided to the whimpers of a wounded beast, Amal

  gave me a sharp look, then folded her arms and continued her interrogation.

  “Where was the Viper going to take you?” Irritation colored her voice, but

  she kept her cool.

  “Don’t. Know,” he replied, his answer distorted by the hand he used to

  stanch the bleeding. “Like I said, Kahanov ditched me, and I wasn’t privy to

  the details of his plan.”

  “Is that all you have for us?”

  The Ripper nodded but I sensed his lie, and my patience was running thin.

  I unleashed my alpha presence and let my claws extend. Amal tensed, and the

  devil shrank further into the corner, averting his eyes. “S-stop. I’ve told you

  everything.”

  I took a step closer, and his skin turned ashen. “You were surprised that

  Kahanov was still on the run. Why was that?”

  “B-because. He was half mad. I didn’t think he’d last long on the

  outside.” The devil’s voice trembled with fear, so I pulled back my power.

  “Half mad how?”

  “It started a few weeks before we escaped. His mood changed, and he

  became obsessed with the LaSalles. Like, deranged obsessed. He’d been here

  too long, and he finally broke.”

  “Did he know the LaSalles personally?” Savannah asked, appearing by

  my side.

  The Ripper dragged his eyes up her body and grinned, a terrible

  expression considering the condition of the rest of his face. “Don’t know,

  beautiful. He never spoke of them before he went nuts.”

  “Then we’re done here.” The way the devil was looking at Savannah

  made me want to snap his neck, and it was all I could do to maintain control.

  I grabbed Savannah’s arm and towed her out of the cell.

  “What are you doing, Jaxson?” she snarled as she tore free of my grasp.

  I narrowed my eyes and stepped into her space. “I said we’re done. You

  shouldn’t be talking to that bastard. He’s a fucking monster that ripped

  women like you apart.”

  She flinched like my words had slapped her face, and she crossed her

  arms. “So now what? We still don’t know where he is.”

  I cocked my head as Amal’s voiced echoed into the hallway. She’d

  resumed her interrogation about how the escapees made their break.

  I returned my attention to Savannah. “Amal and I are going to track down

  the Viper.”

  “You and Amal? So you’re leaving me out of this again?”

  I set my jaw and mirrored her crossed arms. “I have no idea who the

  Viper is, but if she’s working with monsters like the Ripper and Kahanov,

  then she’s probably a monster, too. The fact that he was able to coordinate

  with someone on the outside suggests Kahanov has connections in Magic

  Side. I’m not walking you into danger. So go home, sit tight. We’ll deal with

  him.”

  “No.” She shoved me, but I didn’t budge, so she strode down the hall a

  few paces before turning back. “Why the hell are you so invested in

  protecting me? I’m a LaSalle, and you’ve made it clear you couldn’t care less

  for me.”

  I slowly crossed the distance. “Because Kahanov is an asshole, and I’m

  not going to give him what he wants.”

  She raised her chin defiantly. “Then maybe you should just toss me in his

  empty cell. I’d be nice and safe, and you’d know where I was.”

  “Maybe I should.”

  She bared her
teeth, and the silence stretched between us. There was

  something about the fire in her eyes and the scent of her rage that made me

  want to slam her up against the wall and take her mouth with mine. She

  gently bit her healing lower lip, and I imagined what she might taste like.

  Pure fucking heaven with a bite of poison.

  My wolf strained in my chest, and it was all I could do to steady my

  breathing and repress my desire. Why was I letting this unbearable woman

  get under my skin?

  Amal emerged from the cell, and the guard slammed the door.

  Savannah glanced at Amal and Neve talking, and then whispered, “If I

  have to cower in a cell, then you’re just handing Kahanov all the power.

  Please, let me help you hunt him down. Maybe it’s risky, but I need this, and

  I can help. You know I can.”

  Her body trembled with repressed rage and frustration. I looked deep into

  her eyes, measuring her will. They flickered with something I couldn’t quite

  put my finger on at first—not hatred, nor desperation, nor fear.

  I leaned closer and breathed in her scent, searching for answers. It always

  drove me wild, but even as desire overwhelmed my mind, a shock of

  recognition cut through the fog. I understood the emotion now—the call of

  the hunt. The compulsion to relentlessly chase. To tear down your prey. To

  take its life.

  I knew that emotion well. It was strange from a sorcerer, but I could

  respect the need. It would also ensure that Savannah was under my watch.

  Grinding my teeth, I relented. “Fine. Tomorr—"

  A metallic thud echoed through the door of the cell beside us, and

  Savannah jumped at the noise.

  The door to cell 35 was sealed with five arcane locks. Someone had

  posted a sign beside the window slit: Do not talk to the prisoner.

  I stepped up to the door and slid the slit open. A shadow moved inside—a

  hulking figure, sitting in darkness. His signature resonated with power. Even

  through the magically sealed door, it vibrated the air around us. It felt like

  flames across my skin and smelled of fresh tobacco and amber.

  “What do you want?” I growled.

  His head turned slowly, and he spoke in a rough voice laced with danger.

  “If you’re looking for Kahanov, you’re not going to find him.”

  “And why’s that?”

  The inmate shifted, and his words echoed out of the shadow. “He was

  gone before he even escaped.”

  7

  Savannah

  I spent the evening filling Casey in about our visit to the Ripper and

  complaining about thick-skulled werewolves. “I told you Jaxson was an ass,”

  was my cousin’s most frequent response.

  At least Jaxson had agreed to let me help. For now. I was certain that at

  the slightest sign of peril, he’d try to stuff me in a box. What kind of monster

  would shove a woman into a jail cell just to protect her?

  Screw werewolves.

  By midnight I was out of complaints, and we were nearly out of whiskey,

  which was probably a bad sign for the morning.

  I remorsefully dragged myself upstairs and into bed, but I tossed and

  turned. Nightmares flooded my mind.

  I was alone in the twisting halls of Bentham. The lights flickered, and the

  sound of footsteps followed me around every bend.

  The Ripper was coming.

  I raced from level to level, but no matter how many stairways I

  descended, the glowing numbers of the cells stayed the same.

  One door was always open. Number 37. Every time I checked, no one was

  inside.

  I searched the empty cell. “Where are you, you fucker?” I screamed.

  Kahanov’s breath traced over the back of my neck. “In your room, right

  beside you.”

  Gasping, I sat up in bed, chest heaving. I pressed my eyes closed and tried

  to calm my breath, but when I opened them again, it was no better. I felt like

  I’d run a marathon, and sweat covered my skin.

  Just a dream, I thought, slumping back down onto the soaked mattress.

  Another nightmare.

  The echoes of the sorcerer’s voice in my mind made my skin prickle, and

  an ominous sensation of being watched crept along my spine.

  Had the sorcerer been scrying on me?

  I was wearing my charm, so he shouldn’t have been able to watch me. I

  went to touch my necklace, but my arm didn’t move. It was leaden and

  useless, like I’d been sleeping on it.

  I looked frantically around the room. Dim light from the waning gibbous

  moon filtered through the curtains, casting soft shadows across the furniture.

  Something wasn’t right, but I couldn’t put my finger on it. Then a slender

  shadow moved along the walls, and my stomach knotted as trepidation

  wound around my heart.

  I told myself that it was just the shifting curtains or the branch of a tree

  outside…but then, with a soft, slow motion, the old rickety mattress sagged

  beside me. I tried to whip my head around to the right, but my body only

  moved as if pushing through molasses.

  Deep dread squeezed my lungs and throat as I looked into the blurred,

  inky face of the intruder.

  The faceless man.

  He sat there beside me on my bed, head cocked curiously to the side.

  I opened my mouth to scream, but he quickly placed a finger to my lips.

  “Come, now, we don’t want to wake anyone up. It’s the middle of the night.”

  My cry burned in my lungs, but no sound came out, no matter how hard I

  pushed.

  The blur followed his face, just like when I’d scried. But his appearance

  was different—his body distorted the air around him, stretching the shapes of

  everything like fabric pulled tight over an object beneath. It was as if,

  somehow, he were pushing his way through a picture of my room.

  A familiar voice snarled in the back of my mind. Wake up!

  Shit. It was still a dream.

  I forced words out of my leaden lips. “I. Am. Still. Dreaming…You.

  Aren’t. Here.”

  He brushed my hair from my shoulder and whispered, “Yes, Savannah.

  You’re dreaming. But your eyes are wide open because I want you to see

  what happens next. Don’t worry. Soon, you’ll be with me.”

  Rage fogged the corners of my vision, and I pushed a hiss from my frozen

  lips. “Soon, you’ll be dead.”

  His hand paused. “Oh, Savannah, you have such a penchant for irony.”

  The faceless man rose, strode around the end of the bed, and examined

  the random sketches scattered over the furniture. “You do art things. How

  quaint.”

  With his back turned, I felt his hold over me slip… just a little.

  Although I couldn’t move my hands, I thrust spite-laden words from my

  mouth. “We’ll find you and kill you. We know who you are.”

  He chuckled. “Oh, I doubt that. If you did, you wouldn’t have quite so

  much sass. But it’s no surprise you don’t know the truth. You don’t even

  know who you are, Savannah. And you can’t control your own body.”

  The faceless man waved his hand, and my right arm threw off the covers

  of its own volition. Terror wound around my thundering heart. He gestured

  upward with his hands, as if coaxing a small child, and my legs
slipped over

  the scratchy sheets and out of bed.

  Wake up! the voice in my soul cried.

  But instead, I stood, adorned only in my skimpy nightclothes. At least the

  sorcerer wasn’t looking.

  “Are there any pictures of me?” he inquired, turning my way.

  Fuck.

  I nodded against my will.

  He made little walking gestures with his fingers, and I staggered over to

  the desk with ungainly steps. My mind whirled. What was happening? Was I

  sleepwalking? Why could he control me?

  “Show me what you’ve been working on,” the shadowy man purred.

  Every nerve in my body screamed in protest, but I opened the drawer and

  pulled out the crumpled papers.

  This can’t be happening.

  I held out a fistful of the sketches I’d drawn of Jaxson. My heart leapt a

  little, glad that even out of my control, my body knew how to deliver a

  snappy fuck you.

  The faceless man shook his head. “What rubbish. We know you can do

  better.”

  He waved his hand, and I ripped them and tossed them in the trash.

  Resentment and regret drowning my thoughts, I pulled out the drawings I did

  of him.

  “Much better. Spread them out.”

  I did as he instructed.

  “My, you are quite talented. But Savannah, you’ve got my face all wrong.

  You’ve just made a smudge. I think it’s time for you to see it for real.”

  I gritted my teeth. “If I wanted to see an asshole, I’d just bend over in

  front of a mirror.”

  He laughed. “So much fight. Such a strong soul. I doubt I’d have any

  chance of doing this if I didn’t have your blood. But I do, so let’s go.”

  Shit. Those bastards had taken it when I was trapped in the sanitorium.

  Kahanov waved to the bedroom door.

  My neck burned, and my teeth ached. My heart had lost its rhythm and

  was pounding erratically in my breast. Despite my fury, despite my fear, I

  obeyed. Straining with every step, I walked over and undid the latch on the

  door.

  The pained voice in my head whimpered, Wake up, Savy!

  But I couldn’t. Sweat trickled down my spine as I opened the door and

  stared into the empty hall. I tried to shout, but my voice was locked again.

  But maybe Casey had heard my door. Maybe he would hear my footsteps or

  me talking to myself.

  They were fool’s hopes. The house was silent except for my labored

 

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