by Rhyll Biest
Hell on Wheels
Rhyll Biest
www.escapepublishing.com.au
Hell on Wheels
Rhyll Biest
An imperious princess, an arrogant mercenary, a marriage of convenience, and one hell of a roller derby bout.
Princess Valeda fled Hell to hide from her mad brother, but a war on her realm sees her dragged straight back to seal a military alliance through marriage. Her betrothed? The Captain of Bloodshed and Slaughter, a royal bastard with blood black as night whose passion for her might prove as dangerous as the war with her brother. Valeda is going to need all of her wits, treachery and cunning—and some lessons learned through demon roller derby—to overcome her past, defeat the enemy, and survive her marriage.
About the Author
Rhyll Biest is an Australian romance writer who loves to play host to the United Nations of Hotness in her imagination, and you’ll find lots of sexy Soviet men, Teutonic hotties and alluring Aussie blokes and vixens in her books. She discovered the demon underworld while working for the public service, and she has made it her mission to write about their demon exploits under the guise of fiction.
Acknowledgements
A big thank you to Escape Publishing (and the two Kates) for their support of this book. Another thank you to Erin East, both a lovely person and a talented editor, who provided very helpful editorial comments. And last, but certainly not least, a shout-out to Katherine Hatter and ‘Lucy’, the roller derby dames who answered all my nosy, feeble questions about their illustrious sport and provided much inspiration.
To all the derby girls out there, may your booty bump reign supreme.
Contents
About the Author
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Bestselling Titles by Escape Publishing…
Chapter 1
Cruel and diabolical, those were the best words to describe Valeda’s wedding.
It wasn’t some low-key affair but the kind Valeda despised: all frothy with importance, all frou-frou with ceremony. The kind that made her want to set her own head on fire—or someone else’s—just to escape.
But the bride was never allowed to escape.
Her, a bride. She wished it were a dirty lie, but it had to be true because there she stood in her stupid white gown making a bunch of promises she had no intention of keeping. The remnants of those promises, an even more loathsome concept than weddings, stuck on her lips, greasy and unnatural.
What she’d give for a moist towelette to wipe them away.
Six waxing moons mocked her as they illuminated the marble room and gloated over the lustre they coaxed from the orchestra’s instruments, all made from monstrous beetle carapaces.
Gloating just like her mother.
Valeda should’ve known that forcing her to marry a bastard soldier wouldn’t be enough for her mother, Queen of the Ninth Realm, peeved as she was by Valeda’s long absence from Hell. No, the queen had to invite a hundred of her closest frenemies as witnesses. Like rows of multicoloured crows they perched, eyeing Valeda like the roadkill she was, Valeda who had been knocked flat by a speeding family feud and thrown under the wheels of an arranged marriage.
Homecomings sucked when your home was Hell. They sucked even more when home could kill you and your mother’s summoning spell trapped you there, and your mother was less approachable than a meat grinder.
The notary read out the contract, his voice reedy with nerves. ‘Do you, Princess Valeda Ronove, agree to dwell with the Captain of Bloodshed and Slaughter, and not attempt to kill him until the contract period of two full lunar years has elapsed?’
‘I do.’ She didn’t glance at the groom. His sizeable frame and savage expression interested her not a bit. What use did she have for a giant bastard with inky stubble and a black halo? None. None at all. But ‘dwell’, thank Lilith, was a very loose term that could be interpreted many ways. As could ‘kill’. A wicked smile almost curved her lips.
The buck-toothed notary droned on. ‘And do you, Captain, agree not to kill or otherwise dispose of Princess Valeda unless she, or her mother, violates the military pact with your king’s realm, the pact which you are about to sign?’
There was a pause as Valeda’s betrothed took one, two, three seconds too long to answer. She slid him a pointed look, so pointed she hoped it would stab him right through his chest plate and skewer his plebian heart.
‘I do.’
Her gaze collided with his, and as she met his steely scrutiny, a scarlet glow lit his silver eyes for a millisecond.
Unease caressed her skin and stroked a scaly finger down her spine. Meet your new husband, Valeda, how do you like his eyes of blood? Her insides knotted as if someone were trying to knit a bridal bouquet with her guts.
Oh, how Paimon would laugh to see the result of his military flirtations. Her brother’s familiar face—angular, intense—flashed before her eyes, the vision followed by the shock of what felt like a fist slamming into her chest with the force of a pile driver.
Fire, fire in her ribs, burning hot as if real splintered shards of bone had ripped through her flesh and arteries.
Her breath hitched.
She tried to catch it but it was a slippery thing, almost as slippery as her mentor, the archdemon Lore, who’d been the one to build Valeda’s mental memory wall, who’d warned her not to think of her brother, who’d stitched sweet little neural trip-wires into her brain to keep her from doing so.
For if that wall crumbled, it would open a floodgate of memories so vile that they would swamp her sanity before pulling her very life’s breath deep beneath their oily, black undertow.
Blub, blub, blub.
Memories were her enemy, and not once in the three centuries she’d been absent from Hell had she needed a reminder of that. She had to escape.
Valeda let out a slow breath in the hope of releasing some of the pain setting fire to her ribs. The captain glanced at her, his black brows drawing together in a slashing frown. Had he heard her released breath? No, impossible. More likely he was checking whether she’d turned into a turnip. All low borns loved a nice, big, juicy turnip.
‘And Princess, do you swear by Lilith that you’ll use all the infernal powers at your disposal to assist the captain and his king’s realm in decimating your brother and his legions?’ The notary raised his brows at her.
Another brutal fist slammed into her screaming ribs at the mention of her brother’s name, and the salty taste of blood filled her mouth.
More blood.
Soon she’d drown in the stuff.
Valeda smoothed her face into an expressionless shield. A true princess of Hell did not whimper. Ever. ‘I do.’
The notary’s gaze shifted. ‘Captain, do you swear by Lilith that you will crush the queen’s son beneath your boot heel in exchange for her daughter’s hand?’
‘I do.’
Valeda almost rolled her eyes. What a redundant question. As if the Captain of Bloodshed and Slaughter ever missed an opportunity to crush something beneath his boots. His boots were made for crushing. They were as big as ships, the scarred black leather crusted in mud and other things best not too closely inspected, and they were anchored to the ground by inch-thick don’t-fuck-with-me soles. The captain’s boots looked as out of place as the flower
girls he’d selected: two scarred giantesses called Fira and Missy.
The flower girls wore flouncy, buttercup yellow dresses—Lilith only knew where they’d found them—that emphasised their rippling muscles. Their lack of shadowy aura meant they had zero elemental powers and made Valeda suspect they were nothing more than common soldiers, as did the way both of them steadily chewed iboga root and spat streams of it on the floor. The wedding organisers hadn’t thought to bring spittoons for the flower girls. No-one had thought to.
A frown stole across Valeda’s forehead, marring her carefully cultivated resting bitch face. How had this happened to her? How had she ended up with flower girls who required spittoons? How had she ended up back in Hell, the one place her memory wall couldn’t survive and where her brother could find her, something else she wouldn’t survive?
How had she, the one demon so immune to love she’d willingly given away her heart, ended up a bride?
The flower girls yawned, cursed and stuffed fresh iboga root in their cheeks. They hadn’t stopped chewing it since they’d arrived two moons ago when, still reeling from her forced summoning home, Valeda had spied on their approach from her bedroom window, using a telescope to study the long line of riders led by her husband-to-be. He’d appeared a giant angel of death in his black armour; all he’d been missing was wings.
The castle’s hellhounds had bayed, uneasy at the new guest in their midst. And they hadn’t been the only ones made uneasy.
The notary indicated where she should sign.
She picked up the pen, the chilly steel further numbing her already bloodless fingers, and signed the papers that would ensure her mother had the military might to slay her own son, papers that would bind Valeda to the darkness by her side.
When it was his turn, the captain shocked her by actually using letters to sign his name. Well, well, he was a literate low born. Next she’d run into a satyr saving himself for marriage.
As the captain straightened from signing, the candlelight cast deep shadows over his temples. Beneath his savagely straight brows his eyes squinted as if in fatigue. Perhaps he’d been up all night with his troops carousing.
She loathed carousing.
‘Captain, you may kiss the bride.’
Don’t even think about it, turnip-breath. Lilith only knew where those lips of his had been. But as she sneered at him, she felt as if a steel-tipped boot were smashing the inside of her skull. The wedding ceremony and the indignity of marrying a commoner all paled beside the bloody, concussive battle raging inside her skull. A battle she was losing. Soon, the seething darkness of her memories would pulverise the wall designed to prevent their return and make mince of her brain.
A tickle at the back of her nose made her tilt her head up. Another nosebleed? She’d already had five since arriving home.
Two sleeps, five nosebleeds.
Hell forced far too many memories to the surface. Memories with sharp teeth and claws for eyes, memories with edges more painful and disabling than any neural punishment the memory wall in her head could dish out. But her forced summoning kept her firmly trapped in Hell until her mother removed the spell.
And Valeda would sooner let her head be used as a piñata than explain to her mother why she couldn’t remain in Hell. To do so would lift the outer bark of appearances and expose rotting, worm-ridden family truths, along with the steps Valeda had already taken towards becoming an archdemon—something her mother would stop if given the opportunity to interfere. No, as usual the truth was not an option.
When the captain took her hand and raised it to his lips Valeda wanted to scream, but since a true princess of Hell only screamed when delivering a deathblow to her enemies, she swallowed it down and allowed a wintry smile to settle on her lips. ‘My mother has high hopes for this alliance.’
Lips as soft as his eyes were hard brushed her knuckles. ‘Like the queen, I long for nothing more than your brother’s blood.’
At the mention of her brother, acid coated her tongue before corroding its way down her throat. Her toenails carved grooves in her inner soles as she dealt with the bag of angry snakes in her head.
The wolfish eyes watching her narrowed.
Acid trickled down her throat. Stop, just stop. Please.
But the pain wouldn’t go away, not until she left Hell, and if she left it up to the armies slugging things out on the battlefield to decide her fate, that could take months. She’d be nothing but paste by then. Princess paste.
Paste of princess.
The serrated edges of that thought nibbled at her hapless nerves.
But there was another way out: she could seek help from Lore. Lore could be indifferent, self-absorbed, and capricious, but she was also old and powerful, powerful enough to repair the wall she’d built. Plus, Lore wanted to see Valeda, her protégé, become an archdemon, though how she would take Valeda’s marriage and tethering to Hell was uncertain. Valeda loathed uncertainty. ‘I’m so glad you and my mother share an aim in common,’ she murmured to her husband, smiling at a spot just above his left ear.
‘I’m glad you’re glad.’
What? She studied his lean, hungry face. Was that … mockery?
She almost jumped when one of the gargantuan flower girls handed her a blade. The knife ceremony.
Valeda nicked her palm lightly, just deep enough to draw a single drop of sapphire blue blood—proof of her elemental demon powers.
Her mother handed the captain a blade and Valeda studied him as he opened his palm and sliced deep, never flinching, until black blood welled up.
Black blood, red eyes—you’re all the wrong colours, husband.
Yet he was handsome, so handsome it made her eyes bleed. The scar on his cheek only underscored the savage good looks he’d inherited along with his black blood. The coloured blood that gave Hell’s nobles their elemental powers was hereditary, and every noble family could name the forbear who had swallowed a single, precious tear of maleficence—a gift from Lilith herself for her children with Samael. And then there were those demons who trod the dangerous path of eating and drinking the maleficence of other demons to become archdemons, Hell’s most powerful and ruthless beings.
That was her path, and the only way to save herself. There was no time for husbands, marriage, or playing fair.
In the middle of that thought the captain seized her hand.
Hot guilt tap-danced across her skin, burning hottest where his skin touched hers.
When he pressed their palms together, his silver gaze as intrusive as a stripsearch, she feigned indifference. But in truth his stare made her as uneasy as the meaningless bloodletting ritual. Her thoughts, her personal space, her plans, her knowledge, her blood—they were all hers, hers alone. Sharing was for pre-adults and demons with the brains of pasture nymphs. She had her own agenda and no battle-scarred, lowborn turnip-lover was going to derail her train of awesomeness.
She eyed the midnight tattoo on the side of his skull. Like the savages they were, the demons from his realm favoured brutal undercuts, and the shorn area beneath his glossy black hair revealed a slavering hellhound. Jaws snapped at his left ear while the length of the hound’s body extended down the thick column of his neck.
She got the subtext: he was a predator. But she was not prey.
She refused to be trapped, no matter how much was riding on the military alliance and her marriage. Since her mind threatened to split wide, spilling the entrails of memories she couldn’t survive, she had to create some wiggle room, a little leeway for survival, even if that meant bending the terms of the contract a bit.
Otherwise … well, paste of princess.
The captain’s grip tightened as if he’d read her mind and she frowned as she tried to extract her hand. She would not be coerced or controlled. With an arctic smile she drew on her elemental powers and drove them into the nerves of the fingers holding hers so that the searing cold forced him to drop her hand.
Ha!
Oh, he didn’t l
ike that, no, of course not, not at all.
The two sweeping, straight slashes he called brows drew together into the Frown of the Apocalypse.
Ignoring the look designed to fillet her, she handed her ceremonial knife back to her flower girl. But instead of handing his blade back to her mother, the captain shoved it flat between her breasts and held it there, the steel in danger of smearing her ivory finery with his black blood. He locked gazes with her. ‘Betray me or my king and I’ll cut your heart out.’
She bared her teeth. ‘Too late.’
***
Too late. What did that mean? Adriel barely refrained from shaking the answer out of her. At least he’d finally elicited a hint of emotion from the ice princess. She was pissed off, she had to be given the way her skin glittered with a dusting of frost that extended to the ends of her long lashes. White lashes that veiled navy eyes with ocean depths. The reflected light in her eyes resembled ice floe afloat at sea, and whenever he looked too long into the dark, silent depths of that sea he felt a tug, like that of an undertow.
It was unsettling.
It had to be that tug which put him so on edge. It had to be. As did the fact that in a room full of beating hearts, hers was strangely silent.
He would get to the bottom of her heart’s silence, along with the way her brother’s name made her wince, and the way her eyes called to him like ocean song. He didn’t know her at all and yet there was something about her that pricked his blood.
He smiled to himself. He would work it out. She couldn’t keep all her secrets submerged forever.
His eyes narrowed as she turned her back on him to talk to another, her frosty aura raised like a defensive shield. Given her family’s reputation for treachery, her words had probably been nothing more than a clever brush-off designed to make him retreat.
But he never retreated. Ever.
That was how he and his brother had risen from the gutter, two lowborn bastards with elemental power in their veins. It had been a risk to join the king’s legions and reveal his and Hakan’s gifts, but instead of having Adriel and his brother murdered the king had given them a chance to prove their loyalty. After a century of service, Adriel was now a captain and his brother Hakan a general.