by Deanna Chase
Lincoln’s eyes roved over Elise’s wet, naked body. He didn’t look approving. He didn’t even look aroused. It was like he was searching for some truth imprinted on her flesh. “You’re a demon,” he said. “You’re a beast that crawled from Hell.”
So this was some kind of internal conflict for Lincoln? Some kind of clash between his faith and his desire?
Elise had no patience for that bullshit.
She tugged his belt open. Metal jangled. With a single pull, it whipped from the loops of his slacks, then clattered to the floor. Water dripped from her hands, spreading damp circles on his slacks.
He grabbed her wrist, twisted her arm.
“You’re not wearing gloves,” he said, looking at her palm. That one was bare, so she showed him her other hand. There was a tattoo on her palm. She used to have two, but only one remained. It was an elaborate black sigil with swooping lines and curlicues. “A demon mark?”
“No,” Elise said simply. It was God’s brand, an ethereal mark, and she wasn’t going to bother explaining it.
“Have you possessed me?” he asked, hands hot on her upper arms.
Elise unzipped his slacks, pushed them down his thighs. He was already erect. He stepped out of his clothes and got into the shower with her.
The water was cooling slightly. Elise twisted the handle until it could go no hotter, and steam rose from the tub in hazy swirls, making condensation gather on the walls and the broad planes of Lincoln’s chest.
“Do you want me to possess you?” Elise asked, tracing the eddies of fluid flowing down his abs.
He caught her wrists in a painful grip. “I keep dreaming about you. It’s like you’ve taken up space inside my skull. Are you gonna try to steal my soul?” There was his accent again, but this time, it was thick with passion rather than anger.
Elise had no interest in Lincoln’s soul, if such a thing existed. She wanted something far more tangible.
His grasp would have been bruising if she had been human, and it made her heart race, her breath grow choppy. She leaned against Lincoln. Their thighs slipped together. His arousal was trapped between them.
“Are you a killer?” he asked.
That wasn’t a hypothetical question. Lincoln was staring at her, expectant.
“I’m a killer,” Elise said. “I kill when people are in danger, or when someone has earned it. I don’t kill innocents because there’s no motivation for it. Not because it would be morally wrong. Morals mean nothing to me. I’m not a good person, Lincoln, but I am not your murderer, and I want nothing to do with your soul.”
“Hellspawn,” Lincoln hissed, lowering his head toward hers. His breath tasted like alcohol.
And she replied, “Pretty much.”
Then he was shoving her against the wall of the shower, his fingers spreading her thighs. He shoved himself between her knees and pinned her against the tile with his weight. Their wet bodies collided, slipping against each other in an urgent, frictionless grip that placed his body on the verge of penetrating hers.
The kiss was much more violent than the last time. He nipped her lips. His tongue shoved into hers, he fisted one hand in her hair, and he yanked her head back hard enough to make her gasp. There was no grace to it, no affection.
“You like that?” Lincoln asked.
Elise didn’t have to say yes. She arched her back, inviting him to take what he wanted—whatever it might be. Water sluiced down her breasts, dripped from the hard peaks of her nipples.
He shoved himself inside of her. No foreplay, no teasing. But she was hot, she was wet, and she tightened around him like a body jerking against the thrust of a sword. Lincoln got a better grip on her leg, trapping her knee between his arm and ribs, and shoved himself deep.
Lincoln grunted as their bodies slammed together. Elise’s breath was trapped in her throat.
Each thrust was as angry and hard as a punch. Their skin slapped together. She fisted her hands in his hair, sinking her teeth into his throat as he sank himself into her.
He built toward climax quickly. She could taste his arousal, the pounding of his heart, the building adrenaline. His anger was thick inside of her skin. She locked her legs around him and let herself follow him along for the ride.
His motions grew erratic. His muscles stiffened. A roar tore from his throat, and Lincoln spent himself inside of her.
Elise saw it was good, and she smiled.
Elise and Lincoln remained in the shower until it washed away their mingled fluids and the water became cold. Then they climbed into bed, their clean skin easily slipped between the sheets.
He rolled onto his side, facing away from her. Elise remained sitting upright. Her fingertip trailed along the line of his spine, dipping into the furrows between the muscles.
“Did you steal my crucifix?” he asked.
“No,” Elise said. “Why?”
“Father Armstrong brought it to me. Said you stole it so that you could possess me.”
The priest must have realized that Elise was coming after him. If he had thought that he could talk Lincoln into kicking Elise out of Northgate, he was sorely mistaken. “When did you see him?”
Lincoln still didn’t roll over. “At the office. After we talked, I got suspended.”
Elise’s finger stilled. “Suspended? Why?”
“Don’t know. The priests visited the station. Then Sheriff Dickerson dismissed me.” He said it flatly, matter-of-factly, without a hint of emotion. “They didn’t mention you, so I don’t think that it’s because I hired help.”
No, Elise was willing to bet that they had dismissed him because he was the only one at the station that wasn’t in on the murders. Somehow, they were all involved—from the priest to the coroner and the sheriff herself. But if they were trying to take Lincoln out of the picture, then she doubted it would stop at a suspension. Even if he wasn’t on the list, he was definitely in danger.
“You need to go into hiding,” Elise said, rubbing a knuckle gently against the divots at the small of his back.
He didn’t respond. His breathing had grown deep and even as exhaustion sucked him under. She could taste the moment that the electrical signals in his mind changed gears from wracked turmoil to peaceful unconsciousness, and Elise continued to idly stroke his back, even when dreams began dancing underneath his flesh.
Lincoln was a disturbed man. His worries followed him into dark oblivion, writhing in his skull like black serpents, and his muscles remained tense.
He needed to rest. Hiding could wait. Elise pushed the blankets aside and went to check her email in his office.
McIntyre had already responded to the photos of the Bible. Weird hobby for a priest. I’ll see if I can find anything about those symbols. How did you find this Father Armstrong? What does he matter?
That was a good question. Elise typed out a quick response.
The coroner is also named Armstrong. Find the connection. After a moment’s hesitation, she added, See what else you can find about the victims.
She sat back after she sent the email, kicking her feet up on the desk and lacing her fingers over her bare stomach. The warding ring reflected the light from the computer’s monitor. She twisted the gold band with her thumb, watching the way that the twisted furrows seemed to dance as they rolled over her finger.
Elise had never been in a committed relationship with James. The bond between a kopis and aspis was meant to run deeper than marriage. Even after they had sworn their oaths, they had both been in other relationships: Elise with Anthony, for a few months, and James even more seriously with Stephanie Whyte, a witch from his coven.
But even though they had pretended to have a platonic relationship, they hadn’t fooled anyone. Stephanie had always loathed Elise. She had thought that Elise was the younger woman, trying to steal James—or maybe that James had some perverse obsession with adolescent women. Elise had dismissed Stephanie. Unfortunately, the witch hadn’t quite been wrong on either count.
Even so, it had been three years since Elise had seen James. There was no reason to feel guilty about hooking up with Lincoln.
The computer chimed. McIntyre must have been awake—he had responded to her newest email. No record of Armstrong in public employee records. I’ll keep looking. Anything else to report?
Elise drummed one fingernail against the desk, pondering her long and useless day.
All she said in her reply was, No.
When she hit the “send” button, she paused to look down at her hand. The nail that she had been tapping on Lincoln’s desk was clear, not black. A normal fingernail.
Elise spread her fingers. All of the nails looked normal.
It was only then that she realized that the light from the monitor wasn’t making her skin ache, either.
She turned on the lamp. No pain.
Standing, she approached the mirror mounted on Lincoln’s wall and tipped back her chin. The imprint of teeth on her neck was gone. So was the damage on her bicep. Her pale skin looked a little less pale than usual, her hair was glossier, and her lips were redder. It was like she had just recovered from the flu.
She pulled on a tank top and a pair of shorts, then stepped into the kitchen and turned that light on, too. It didn’t burn her skin.
Elise was back to normal. Whatever had caused her healing to slow, it seemed to have fixed itself between her reappearance in the forest and the email with McIntyre. But nothing remarkable had happened in that time period. She had talked with Seth and Rylie, glimpsed the Bible again, driven the motorcycle for a while.
And she’d had sex with Lincoln.
She paced in the kitchen, tapping her very normal fingernail against her chin as she thought. Elise was a demon, but no specific type of demon that she had met before—not a nightmare or megaira or mara, and definitely not a succubus. Sexual energies shouldn’t have healed her. She didn’t seem to feed off of humans at all.
Yet here she was: werewolf injuries healed, skin flawless, and feeling better than she had in days.
Lincoln’s house suddenly felt small and uncomfortable. She stepped onto his back porch, letting the moist, rain-scented air embrace her. The forest whispered as a wind rustled the drying autumn leaves against each other. It was warm and humid, no better than it had been indoors.
But the wind parted the clouds, letting the moon peek through for an instant. It bathed her skin in pale light. Elise lifted her arms to embrace it.
The moon beams didn’t hurt at all. She had definitely healed.
She stared at her hands. “What happened to me?” she whispered.
“I did,” said a man.
Elise turned, and she came face-to-face with James Faulkner.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
James had always been a disarmingly attractive man. The contrast between his black hair and blue eyes used to always shock women into silence when they first met him, and Elise had thought less of the people that were entranced by James’s good looks. But she wasn’t immune anymore. The sight of him in Lincoln’s back yard stunned her to silence.
Elise hated herself immediately for the reaction.
James was as tall and graceful as she remembered him. Some of that was because he had been a professional dancer in his youth. Some of it was because he had angel’s blood somewhere in his lineage, making him one of the few ethereal Gray in existence. There had always been something regal about the way he stood, like he knew he was better than everyone else, and was just waiting for his throne.
He was conceited and overbearing, but it was for a good reason. James was more powerful than any other witch alive.
Elise could see the evidence of that power now. The last time that they had been together, his hair had gone completely gray, and he had been showing every day of his forty years in the lines of his face. But his hair was black again. He was ageless.
It was probably a glamor spell. She wondered if he was using a glamor to hide his emotions, too, because his poker face would have been good enough to fool any high roller playing the tables in Vegas.
“How did you know to find me here?” she asked, backing up until her heels bumped the first step of the stairs into Lincoln’s duplex. A few extra inches of space didn’t help.
James’s features were pinched. “I didn’t,” he said, speaking carefully, emotionlessly. “I came to see Deputy Marshall.”
The silence was thick enough that Elise felt like it could have drowned her.
If James hadn’t known what she had done before, he certainly did now. But his face still didn’t change.
“How do you know him?” Elise asked.
“His family used to be with my coven, and he owes a debt to me,” James said matter-of-factly.
“Reno coven, or Boulder?”
A pause. “Boulder.”
That meant that Lincoln’s family, somewhere along the line, had been with The White Ash Coven—the witches that had been responsible for grooming sacrifices to God.
Anger knotted inside of Elise. It didn’t burn slowly, like her emotions usually did. It was fast and hard and took her breath away.
Somehow, she wasn’t surprised. Of course Lincoln was involved with the coven that had destroyed her life. It would have been far too convenient if she could have hooked up with a man that was sane and normal.
“Why the hell are you telling me this?” Elise asked, keeping her voice down so that she wouldn’t wake up Lincoln. “Do you want me to feel guilty for fucking him?” She practically threw the words at him, looking for a reaction that never came.
“You asked me what I was doing here. I answered. Your sexual proclivities are none of my business,” James said.
How could he be so goddamn calm about it?
She stared hard at him, looking for a glimmer of jealousy, heartbreak, anything that would tell her that he cared she was involved with someone else. But he looked as calm about it as he had when she had dated Anthony, or Malcolm, or any other of her brief flings.
There was nothing. No emotion at all.
He had always faked that too goddamn well.
“I think you dropped this,” Elise said, fishing his warding ring out of her pocket. She tossed it to him. James plucked it out of the air. “Put it on. I don’t want you digging around in my head if I accidentally lose mine again.”
He clutched it in his fist. She noticed that he was still wearing leather gloves, concealing his palms. “I haven’t worn the ring in months,” he said.
Elise clenched her fists, digging her nails into her palms. “Why?”
“I’ve been waiting for you to take yours off. I wanted you to be able to find me,” James said. “Tonight, when I suddenly felt your mind again, I believed…”
He trailed off. Cleared his throat.
James had hoped that Elise losing the ring had been a sign that she was ready to take him back. Maybe he had even thought that she was asking him to save her. No wonder he had been so desperate to find her.
“I’ve been working with McIntyre and Anthony,” Elise said. “We’ve taken down two overlords, another horde of zombies, and more nightmares than I can count. I have not called for you once. Not goddamn once, James. I don’t need you anymore.”
“But you need Deputy Marshall?”
“I thought it was none of your business.”
James rolled the ring between his gloved fingers. The wind blew the clouds over the face of the moon again, shrouding him in the shadows of night. Elise didn’t need light to see the long, straight bridge of his nose, the piercing blue eyes, the hard jaw. His face was permanently imprinted on her soul.
He was one fucking spectacular liar. Even now, she couldn’t see a hint of emotion in his eyes, even though she knew that her denial must have stung him.
“I don’t want to argue with you, Elise,” he said levelly. “But I do need to ask you a favor.”
Oh, this was going to be good. “What?”
“Leave Northgate,” James said. “Leave this place and never r
eturn.”
“Wait—you want me to leave? But you said that Lincoln’s…” She waved a hand, searching for a way to term it. “He’s aligned with you. He’s the one that brought me here.”
“Against my will, I assure you.”
“And you were trying to send me a message with Lucinde Ramirez.”
The first hint of surprise flashed over James’s features. “Lucinde? You mean, Augustin and Marisa’s daughter?” He seemed genuinely baffled.
“One of the people that went missing here in Northgate is a nine year old girl named Lucinde Ramirez,” Elise said. “When Lincoln mentioned her, I assumed that you had falsified records as a way to get me to come here.”
“Believe me, Elise, there is nothing that I want more than for you to be far, far away from Northgate. I would not use her memory to get to you.” A muscle twitched under his left eye. “I can’t believe you think that little of me.”
“I don’t know what to think of you anymore,” she said.
He raked a hand through his hair. “Christ, Elise. I don’t want to hurt you.”
The cogs in her mind were turning now, spinning too quickly for her to savor the crack in his otherwise emotionless veneer. If the name hadn’t been chosen by James to manipulate Elise, then what else could it be? Who else could have possibly known that name?
“What’s in Northgate that you want me to avoid?” she asked.
“It doesn’t matter.”
Elise narrowed her eyes at James. “You panicked when I saw Seth. Were you worried he could hurt me? Is he part of this cult that’s murdering people?” she pressed.
“What cult?”
“The serial killers,” Elise said. “The ones that have killed seven people.”
“I thought that it was a rogue werewolf,” James said.
It was like they were speaking two different languages.
Everything that Elise had believed to be true about the investigation seemed to be wrong. Seth wasn’t related. Neither was James. He hadn’t lured her there—he wanted her to leave. He didn’t even know what was going on.
“Someone’s killing people,” Elise said. “A girl named Lucinde Ramirez may or may not be missing. Lincoln asked me to come, and I’m not leaving until the case is closed.” James opened his mouth to argue, but she went on before he could. “I’m not debating. I’m just telling you.”