by Cynthia Eden
But her father shook his head, his desperation plain to see. “I sent you to live. I knew what was—I knew what you were, yes, dammit, I knew. And I knew you couldn’t stay that way. The fire would take you over. Drive you insane until all you wanted to do was kill and burn. But Genesis, I-I thought they could help you, baby! That was all I wanted—for someone to help you.”
“No one can help me,” she said, voice breaking. “They never could.”
Her shoulders hunched. The home she’d loved for so long suddenly felt foreign to her. “I was . . . I was coming to tell you that you needed to leave town. The people at Genesis . . . not all of them are gone. I was told”—she stopped to lick lips gone bone-dry—“I was told that Rhett might be targeted for death.”
Her father’s jaw had gone slack with shock. “But Rhett’s human . . .”
And you’re not.
The words hung in the air. They didn’t need to be spoken.
“Genesis never cared about collateral damage,” Ryder said, voice rumbling.
No, they hadn’t. “I was supposed to do a job for them. I didn’t.” She’d let Wyatt die. She hoped he was in hell. “So they sent someone to kill Rhett.”
Her father staggered back a step. “I-I didn’t know, I swear! One of my old army buddies, he worked for them. He said they were going to make the world better. I just wanted you to be normal. To be like everyone else.”
“The funny thing, Dad, is that I thought I was normal.” Until he’d served her up to those sadistic bastards. “If you hadn’t told them about me, then Genesis would have never come for me. I wouldn’t have burned . . . if it hadn’t been for you.” And she didn’t even want to look at him. She couldn’t look him in the eyes. It hurt too much. You’re not the man I thought you were. Her gaze darted to Ryder. “Rhett’s missing. I’m going to find him.”
“We are,” Ryder immediately corrected her.
If Ryder hadn’t been there, she might have let the tears fall. She might have just broken. Pain twisted inside her, cutting like a knife. But Ryder was there. His fingers curled around hers. He was steady and solid and strong.
She stared into his eyes. Remembered the hell they’d faced. Remembered the hell they’d survived. Together.
Genesis hadn’t broken her.
Genesis hadn’t broken him.
They’d fought, together, and they’d keep fighting that way.
So she didn’t break. She pulled in several deep, frantic breaths. Ryder’s hold tightened on her.
In a world turned upside down, she found herself relying on the monster that most would fear.
He’s not a monster.
Sabine realized that she didn’t think of Ryder that way, not anymore.
He was her lover. He was her partner.
He was . . . more?
“I-I talked to Rhett this evening.” Her father’s voice was lost. “He was f-fine then.”
“You talked to him before a fire tore through The Rift, and before someone hijacked the ambulance he was in and shot one of the EMTs.” Her own voice sounded so calm. Odd, when she felt anything but calm. Turning away, she told him, “Get out of town. Go to wherever it is that you’ve got Mom stashed. Stay until all of this is over.”
Mom. Thinking about her mother just hurt too much then.
Sabine forced herself to take slow, determined steps toward the front door. Ryder shadowed her every move.
She wanted out of the house. But a hand on her shoulder froze her.
“You were two when I found you,” her father said, his hand trembling against her shoulder. “You were floating face down in the river.”
Sabine River. Yes, she knew where she’d been found.
“You should have been dead. I rolled you over . . .” He turned her to face him. “And I saw fire burning in your eyes. A baby . . . with burning eyes.”
She didn’t want to hear any more from him.
“I loved you like you were my own. You are my own.”
A child he’d sold to the devil. “How much did they pay you?” Sabine asked because she knew he’d gotten something from the deal.
“Nothing.”
Her life had been worth nothing?
“I wanted them to fix you, baby. I saw the fire again and again over the years—it would flare in your eyes whenever you got real angry, and I was so afraid of what would happen the moment you lost your control. I’d heard stories of others like you. Supernaturals that were too dangerous to be around humans. Evil. I didn’t want you to turn out like them. I wanted to help you.” His voice broke.
So did her heart.
“Get out of town,” she told him, the last time she’d give her father the warning. “And tell Mom . . .” She had to clear her throat. Had to choke back the lump of pain and fury that had risen. “Tell her anything but the truth.” Because she didn’t want to hurt her mother.
“I-I can’t leave Rhett—”
“Leave on your own,” Ryder told him, his tone lethal, “or I’ll have my vamps drain you and drag your limp body out of this town.”
She knew the words weren’t an idle threat. Her father knew it, too. Glancing over her shoulder, she saw that the knowledge blazed in his eyes.
Eyes that still watched her with a sad desperation.
“Good-bye, Dad,” she whispered as she walked across the porch and into the yard. Sabine expected Ryder to follow right on her heels.
But he didn’t follow.
“Tell me the name of that old army buddy,” Ryder’s tight demand.
“N-no.”
A thud. Sounded like a fist hitting a wall. Her eyes squeezed shut as her shoulders stiffened. “Don’t hurt him, Ryder. He’s . . . he’s still my father.” The tears fell then, because she couldn’t hold them back any longer. She could even taste the salt of the tears on her lips. “And I still love him.” Maybe he had thought to help her. Maybe he’d thought . . .
It doesn’t matter. I still love him. I love the man who played hide-and-seek with me. I love the man who read Sleeping Beauty to me again and again and again. I love him.
She glanced back.
Her father stood inside the house, with Ryder at his side. “I’m so sorry, baby,” her father whispered.
She inclined her head. “I-I know.” And one day, when this nightmare was over, she’d go back to him. When the pain wasn’t so strong.
Tears fell from his eyes, too.
Ryder put his hand on her father’s arm. “I want the man’s name. He lied to you. He sent your daughter to hell. Give me his name, and give her the justice she deserves.”
Her father’s breath rasped out. “K-Keith Adams.”
Uncle Keith? Vaughn’s father?
Then Ryder was heading toward her.
Her gaze strayed—once more—to her father’s face. “I love you, Sabine,” he told her. “I always have, and I always will.”
She couldn’t stop her tears. “I love you.” Despite it all, she did.
“Lucky bastard,” Ryder snarled. “If she didn’t care for you, you’d be minus a head right now.” He pointed at her father. “Get out of town. Keep her mother safe.”
Ryder stopped in front of her. Gently, carefully, he brushed away her tears. “Don’t.” His voice was gruff. “It hurts me when you cry.”
Why would her tears hurt him?
He pressed a kiss to her cheek. “I told you before . . . Don’t ever fucking cry for anyone.”
She didn’t know how to stop the tears.
She heard the door shut behind them. The sound was so loud. That part of my life will never be the same.
Ryder pulled her against his chest and held her. Strong. Steady.
Slowly, she took deeper breaths. The pain in her chest eased.
Ryder kissed her lips. Such a light, gentle kiss. “The next person who makes you cry”—his words were a rumble—“I’m killing him. Family or not.”
Her fierce vampire. She was coming to know him so well. Well enough to say, “You wouldn’
t hurt my family.” Because he wouldn’t want to hurt her.
His gaze searched hers. “We have to leave here, Sabine.”
Yes. She glanced at the house. She’d been happy there.
Her father was peeking out the window.
It isn’t over, Dad. The love she felt wouldn’t let it be.
But she loved Rhett, too, and he needed her. “I think we know our next stop now.” Because Vaughn had been with her brother when Rhett vanished.
Another betrayal.
“Vaughn’s place isn’t far away,” she whispered. It was a familiar location to her.
Why was the familiar suddenly so painful to face? Because the familiar hides so many secrets and lies.
She’d been foolish to think that home was a safe place.
They were being followed.
Ryder had felt the eyes on them, had heard the rustle of footsteps, ever since they’d left the home of Sabine’s parents. He’d figured it was better for their prey to follow them. At least, that way, her bastard of a father would have time to drag his sorry ass out of town.
He kept his body close to her as they walked. He wasn’t sure if it was his enemies stalking them, hers, or who-the-hell-knew else.
They had a tail. Soon enough, they’d get the bastard to show himself.
They were in front of a small house on the edge of the French Quarter. Time had faded the house, roughened its edges. The place was pretty secluded. Good. That way no one would hear the humans’ screams.
Ryder was in the mood to make someone scream.
Sabine is hurting. That fact pissed him off.
She was standing in the shadows and gazing up at the house. Lights glowed from inside the windows. Looked like Keith Adams was waiting up for them.
A trap. Obviously.
“Who’s watching us?” Sabine asked. “Is it Dante?”
Ah, so she’d noticed, too. Good. Her vamp hunting instincts were definitely starting to kick in. “If it were Dante, we’d have a circle of fire around us by now.” The phoenix wasn’t exactly subtle.
“Then who?”
He smiled at her. “Let’s find out, love.” He pulled her close. Pressed a quick kiss to her lips. He wanted to take and taste more, but he only allowed himself that little sample of her. “Do me a favor,” he said, voice rasping. “Wait one minute, then scream for me.”
Her brow furrowed. “What?”
“Scream. Loud. As loudly as you can.” He had no doubt that Sabine could be very loud.
Then he slipped away. Finding a perfect vantage point to watch his prey was easy. Vampires weren’t just fast.
He leapt into the air and easily landed on the side of the roof.
They could do things that humans thought were impossible.
He crouched on his perch. Watched. Waited.
Sabine screamed. The woman had some pretty fantastic lungs.
He saw a shadow jerk away from the darkness on the left side of the property. The shadow stumbled forward, racing toward Sabine and her scream.
Do you think she’s weak now? Afraid? That it’s your perfect time to attack?
Think again.
Ryder leapt down and crashed right into the fool who was running for Sabine. They hit the ground, tumbling, and when their bodies stopped rolling, Ryder had his claws at the throat of Vaughn Adams. Ryder could easily see the human in the dark. Not the army buddy he’d sought, but the son. He figured one human was as good as the other.
Vaughn tried to yank up his gun. Ryder broke the man’s hand. This time, Vaughn was the one to scream.
Sabine rushed toward them. “Where’s Rhett?”
Ryder yanked the human to his feet. Vaughn was groaning and trying to cradle his right hand. So weak. So human.
“Where is my brother?” Sabine demanded. She was fierce. Eyes glaring. Hands clenched into fists. Fury clear to read on her face.
Maybe the human couldn’t see all of her rage. He probably could see very little in the dark.
His disadvantage.
Ryder swiped out and let his claws rip open the human’s side. The scent of blood filled the air.
“Stop!” Vaughn screamed. “I don’t know what the hell is happening—stop!”
“He’s lying,” Ryder said, not about to buy the man’s BS. “He was tracking us, hunting us. He started following us the minute we left your father’s house.”
Vaughn stopped his moaning and groaning. His shoulders straightened. His chin lifted. “Damn right, I did. And I called for backup.” He bared his teeth. Really? Was that supposed to be intimidating? A human’s teeth? “You’re surrounded, vampire. There’s no getting away for you this time.”
Ryder tilted his head to the right. Listened. Heard nothing. “Try again.” Now, he bared his teeth. “Or I’ll just end this game and rip open your throat.”
“Ryder.” Sabine’s snapping voice. “Get him to tell us where Rhett is, then you can have your bite.” She grabbed a fistful of Vaughn’s shirt. “Or maybe I’ll have one.” She sounded deadly.
Sexy.
He liked it when she showed her kick-ass side. That side was starting to peek out, more and more.
But Vaughn shook his head. “You won’t get a chance, they’re coming—”
Ryder tensed when he heard a growl. A low, animalistic sound. Not the growl of a werewolf, that was rougher, deeper. This sound . . .
He stepped away from the human and scanned the darkness. This sound was different. This sound had every muscle in his body tensing.
Then he was attacked.
Sabine screamed when a blurry form ran at Ryder. The attacker hit him, cutting Ryder’s stomach open with a slash of his claws. The attacker moved fast, far too damn fast, and punched with a killing force.
Luckily, Ryder wasn’t so easy to kill.
He slashed back with his own claws. Tossed the jerk into the air.
“What the hell?” Vaughn’s shocked voice. A voice that shattered into a terrified, pain-filled scream.
Because someone had just taken a bite out of the guy.
A vampire was guzzling the guy’s throat, a vamp with dark, matted hair and bloodstained clothes.
That human is my prey. Back the hell off.
Ryder grabbed the vamp and yanked him back. “You don’t know who you’re screwing with—” Ryder began, more than ready to teach the guy about the vamp hierarchy in this world.
But then he got a look at the vampire’s face. At the parch-white skin. The sunken, black eyes. And . . . the fangs.
Not just sharpened canines, like vampires were supposed to have. All of this guy’s teeth narrowed down to razor-sharp points. And the claws that had cut into Ryder before? He got a good look at them now. Those claws were like long, black knives. Not a vampire’s normal claws.
Primal. The word whispered through his mind. Wyatt had warned him, but getting the warning and actually seeing the primal were two way different things.
The vampire was tall, too thin, but there was a hell of a lot of strength in his body. Too much.
What all had Wyatt told him? Wyatt had tried to cure the primal with Ryder’s blood, but that hadn’t worked and—
The primal vampire’s attention shifted to Sabine. He licked his lips. “Want . . . you . . .”
Oh, the hell he did.
They want . . . what you want.
The primal vampire ran for Sabine. Before he could grab her, Ryder slammed into the SOB. “She’s taken.” He drove his fist into the guy’s gut and let his own claws swipe and tear.
The vampire just laughed. His fangs came at Ryder’s throat.
I’m not on the menu.
Ryder slammed his head into the guy’s nose. Bones snapped. Blood gushed.
“Vaughn?” Sabine’s voice. She sounded scared. Ryder glanced over at her. She was on the ground, right next to the human. He was shuddering. Convulsing. She put her hands on his chest, obviously trying to hold him down. Her head snapped up and her frantic gaze found him. “Ryder, I thi
nk he’s dying!”
The night couldn’t get any fucking worse.
He focused on the vamp. Then he heard the rumble of tires. The shrill screech of brakes. Footsteps pounded toward them.
Vaughn’s backup.
So it could get worse.
“I can’t stop the blood!” Sabine cried. “It’s too much. He’s dying!”
No, he wouldn’t die. Ryder kept his body between Sabine and the freak who wouldn’t take his eyes off her.
Those teeth . . . humans should have known better than to play God. When you fucked with nature, nature fucked back.
The guy in front of him was one giant fuck-up.
“Give her . . . to me.” The primal vampire’s words were a growl. Not normal speech. Too rough. Too gritted. As if speaking were hard for him.
Had Ryder’s blood done this? Or had the primals become this way thanks to the first experiments that Genesis had run on them? Were they already screwed to hell and back, and my blood just made things worse for them? Wyatt had said that three primals received Ryder and Sabine’s blood. Three.
“Give her . . .” the primal vamp growled again.
“Not going to happen.” Ryder sucked in a deep breath as he prepared for the next attack. There were three main ways to kill a vampire. First up . . . fire. No fire here. Second . . . a stake to the heart. No wood. Well, he might be able to rip off part of the fence on the west side of the house, but if he did that, he’d have to leave Sabine. The freak might grab her while Ryder rushed for the weapon. Then the guy would drink from her. No. Not happening.
So that just left him with option number three.
Beheading.
Could he take the vamp’s head, before the guy took his?
Time to find out.
The humans were coming closer. Racing toward them.
Ryder flexed his fingers. His claws were out. This wouldn’t be the first time he’d taken another vampire’s head. Not the first, not the last.
But this guy wasn’t like the others.
The primal vampire stalked toward them. “Taking . . . her.”
No, asshole, I’m taking your head.
With a growl of his own, Ryder attacked.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Vaughn was choking on his own blood. Sabine stared down at him, terrified. His eyes were wild. So scared and desperate.