by Ciara Graves
Reaping Mercy
Mercy Temple Chronicles
Ciara Graves
Contents
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
Afterword
Reaping Mercy
Mercy Temple Chronicles Book Five
Mages. Sirens. Demons. Dragons. Gryphons. A Federal Paranormal Unit. Attackers of magic. The Mercy Temple Chronicles will hook you!
Mercy’s in a bind. Her best friend, witch Gigi is lost in the dark coven sector. Damien, Rufus, Bowen are all out of reach. The only one she can turn to is Rafael. The one who held a gun to her head the last time she saw him.
Heartbreak has to take a back seat to finding Gigi. Rafael needs to get over her secret and help her on this mission.
Demon Rafael’s had more than enough of Mercy’s lies. But when it comes down to it, he can’t let her go into that godforsaken sector to find Gigi alone.
Problem is, can he get over Mercy’s betrayal long enough to work with her?
Warning: Unputdownable action-packed fantasy, with mages, sirens, demons, dragons, gryphons and a Federal Paranormal Unit
Chapter 1
Rafael
I nursed another beer at the bar, glaring at my reflection in the mirror behind it. The music was too damned loud, but I needed something to drown out the demon rage I hadn’t been able to tamper since Mercy stormed out of my apartment.
Two weeks.
It’d been two weeks since I remembered the last piece of the puzzle. Two weeks I sat on enough information to bring her down and drag the Hunters back to Nashville. That night when I left my apartment, I had every intention of going straight to Nor’s place and telling him everything I knew. Telling him the truth about Mercy. Only I didn’t. Somehow, I’d circled right back around and ended up standing outside my own front door. I told myself it was for the best. If I told Nor about her, about what she was, I’d be put on the case, which meant I’d be forced to hunt Mercy down.
I never wanted to see her again.
So instead, I kept the information about a possible coming war to myself. Told no one about the artifacts, and spent every night since doing my best to forget Mercy. Too bad nothing worked. Nothing at all. I saw her face on the crowded sidewalk, dreamt I heard her laughter echoing through my apartment. Hell, there were times I woke up sure she was in my arms. But she never was, and she never could be. She was dragonborn. Nothing else mattered.
I ordered another beer and glowered at the crowd around me. I avoided the Underground at all costs. The only place I could think to go was the club Mercy and I tracked Liam to on our first case. I told myself it had nothing to do with hoping she’d be brought here for some reason. Or be drawn to me. The music was loud enough to give me a pounding headache, but every time I blinked, Mercy’s face, her eyes filled with so much rage and hurt, were before me again.
“Drinking alone?”
I growled, giving Iris a sideways glance as she plopped down on a stool beside me. “What the hell are you doing here?”
“Hanging out. You?”
“What do you think? Go away.”
“Why, so you can keep brooding on your own? Think I’ll keep you company for a while.”
“I don’t want company. I want to be left alone. Go find some poor sop to dance with.” I turned my back to her and picked up my beer, eyeing the mass of people on the dance floor. I waited for Iris to get the hint and leave, but she refused and stayed right where she was, ordering a martini.
“You and Mercy get in a fight or something?” she pushed.
“Don’t.”
“Don’t what? You’re in a piss-poor mood these last few weeks. And we haven’t seen any sign of her. Figured you two were ticked off at each other, but this fight seems to be lasting a long-ass time.”
“Not a fight.”
I stayed turned away from her, but she watched me all the same.
“Sure, not a fight. Whatever you say.”
“You know, Iris, this is one of those times you’d be a better partner if you’d go away and leave me alone.”
She got up, and I sighed in relief until she spun me around on the stool and nailed me with a glare. “Whatever shit you’re going through is affecting everyone trying to solve this damned Envy case. You’re scaring half the younger guys every time you walk into the damned room, and you really think Nor’s going to let you keep acting like this? I’m trying to do you a favor. Talk to me.”
Nor had been watching me like a hawk. It wouldn’t be long before he called me into his office to give me shit for my attitude. Again. The first couple of days, I told myself I could control my anger, and no one would notice. But Mercy cut me too deep, and part of me eventually had to admit why her betrayal pissed me off so badly. I’d be damned if I was going to share that information with Iris though.
Taking my beer, I stalked past her and skirted around the dance floor.
Iris stayed by the bar, at least, and after finishing off my beer, I left the club. The night was cool with the scent of spring rain on the breeze. At the end of the street, I stopped short. Going home sounded like a terrible plan. I had a stack of work waiting for me on my desk and trudged along the busy sidewalks toward the Fed building.
My desk was now a table in one of the conference rooms. After the fight with the dragonborn and Nor learning about the artifacts, all my attention had been directed at tracking down Envy. The information came in at a trickle. only because I had to find legitimate reasons for how I knew what I knew. Most I said came from Mercy and Nor didn’t question it. The rest of it was what I’d picked up while helping her, and Bowen, and Rufus. That I kept confidential. Once we reached Nashville for intel on the mage, the reports piled up. All sent from other sectors. Envy was all over the damned place, but no one knew where his current location was. He was tied to so many others. Sifting through the overwhelming amount of information took up all my time. Too bad even that wasn’t enough to distract me from Mercy. It reminded me of her fight against Envy. How I watched her nearly die. How I’d gone into a full demon rage to save her.
Reminded me of how much I cared for her.
“Doesn’t matter,” I snapped to myself as I slapped a stack of files down in front of my chair. “It’s over. You’ll never see her again.”
“Rafael.”
I snarled as I jerked upright.
Nor moved back in time to avoid my flying fist.
“Shit, sorry, sir.”
“Save the apologies. You look like hell. Did you sleep here?”
I rubbed my eyes hard and shrugged. “We have to find Envy. I had a lot of work to catch up on, and I couldn’t sleep.”
“Rafael, we need to talk.”
“I’m fine, sir.”
“I wasn’t asking you if you were or not.” Nor hauled me up from my chair.
I protested, but he snarled, and I clamped my lips shut. The rest of the floor was empty, so no one saw me practically being dragged into Nor’s office like I was about to be scolded by a principal.
He tossed me into his office and slammed his door shut behind him. “What are you doing?”
“The death of twelve agents hit me hard, sir. It could’ve been prevented.”
“It hit all of us hard, but we’re getting through it. We’re not walking around looking like we’re going to tear people apart, limb by limb,” he ranted, throwing his arms in the air as he spoke. “What do you mean it coul
d’ve been prevented?” he added, his voice quieter, shooting me a curious glare.
A glare I didn’t like. “Nothing, just we should’ve been able to save them.”
Nor crossed his arms and his brow arched. “We had no idea what we were up against. You saying someone neglected to tell us we were going to be fighting a dragonborn hybrid?”
I ground my teeth. That was exactly what I wanted to say, but that’d be giving up Mercy. As much as I was pissed off at her, I couldn’t get the words out. I shrugged. “I don’t know, but that’s why I want to find Envy and end this.”
“End what?”
“End whatever this madness is with the hybrids,” I shouted furiously. “It all started with Liam. And all it’s done is get worse.”
“Why do I sense there’s more you’re not telling me?”
“I don’t know.”
“I do not accept that answer. Try again.”
My hands throbbed from being clenched into fists so tightly. “Nothing, sir.”
“Have you spoken to Mercy recently?”
Keeping my face blank, I inwardly cursed Iris. Had she told Nor about our conversation last night? “Not in a few days. I believe she’s tracking down some leads of her own,” I lied and waited for him to buy it.
“Has she had any trouble?”
“Not that I’m aware of, no.”
Nor held my gaze steady for a solid minute then nodded toward the door. “Get your ass out of here and get back to work. But watch your anger. I’m not going to have you start a brawl in my office. Understand? You need to vent some rage, go to the gym and beat the crap out of a punching bag.”
I pushed my tongue against my cheek as I hurried out of his office. I had punched another demon three days ago. He’d made some remark about Mercy. I couldn’t even recall exactly what he said, but something inside me snapped, and I decked him. We’d been separated by a furious Nor, and I had no explanation to give him that excused my behavior. I returned to the conference room and one by one, my new team arrived. eyeing me warily. I gave out their assignments for the day. When Iris came in, I took hold of her arm and hauled her into the stairwell.
“Did you tell Nor you saw me last night?” I demanded.
“So what if I did? Hope he ripped you a new one,” she muttered and tried to go around me for the door.
I blocked her.
“Move it, Rafael.”
“You stay out of my business, got it?”
“Or what? You’re falling apart. Everyone else can see it, and if you don’t get over whatever funk this is, you’re going to get yourself or someone else hurt. You can’t go out into the field like this.”
Why did she have to be right? I grabbed hold of the railing, squeezing until my hands ached.
“Rafael, you’re going to hurt yourself,” she said, her voice softer, reaching for my hands.
The second her fingers brushed the back of my hands, Mercy’s face appeared before me along with her laughter. It was her touch I felt, and I tore myself away from Iris.
“Get back to work.” I threw open the door and hurried back to the conference room.
The rest of the day was spent keeping my mouth shut and everyone else staying as far away from me as they could. I didn’t eat, but I drank coffee until it tasted sour and churned in my gut. Iris’s comment had gotten to me, but worse was Nor asking if I’d heard from Mercy, if she’d been having any trouble. I wouldn’t know, would I?
I told myself I didn’t care what became of her anymore. Too bad that was a shit-ass lie that I didn’t buy. Worry nagged at me. What if the reason I hadn’t seen her in two weeks wasn’t because she was staying clear of me? What if she’d been wounded?
What if Envy had gotten to her after all? What if she was dead?
By the time another long workday ended, I stalked out of the office and aimed for home. It wasn’t that I wanted to be there. I could use a shower and a fresh change of clothes. Showing up to work wearing the same thing three days in a row would only give Nor more cause to chew my ass out. I was nearly there when my cell rang.
I dug it out of my pocket, but the number was blocked. I started to shove it back when it rang again.
“Not answering,” I grunted and declined the call.
“That’s too damned bad,” said a voice on my right in the shadows in the alley.
The next second, two strong hands grabbed hold of me and threw me away from the sidewalk.
I barely managed to stay upright, and as I backed up, aiming for the streetlight behind me, my attacker came into full view.
“Damian?”
His face had finally healed from the gargoyle attack, but from the way he favored his right side, the rest of him hadn’t. His eyes said he did not want to talk, and I backed up another step.
“Give me one damned reason why I shouldn’t kill you right now for what you did.” He stalked closer, shaking his head. “One reason, Rafael, and maybe I won’t kill you.”
“You won’t kill me anyway. You’re in no shape to fight. Go home, Damian, before I arrest you.”
“You’ll never arrest me. And Mercy—how dare you pull a gun on her after everything she’s done for you?” He reached for the dagger at his hip. “You don’t deserve her.”
“She lied to me. Betrayed me. And in turn, her lie resulted in the deaths of twelve agents. I should turn her in. I should go tell Nor right now exactly what she is and let the Hunters have her.” I dug my nails into my palms as I said each word, swearing to myself I meant every single one.
“And if you turn her over, you’ll be condemning an entire race to death. Do you want that hanging over your head?”
That was exactly the reason why I hadn’t said anything about Mercy. The only reason. Or was it?
“Why are you here?” I finally asked Damian. “What do you want?” My gut twisted thinking Mercy might be hurt, but there was no worry in the half-demon’s eyes. Only anger was housed in his expression. “Did she send you? Tell you to come rough me up? Too much of a coward to do it herself?”
Damian moved faster than I expected, for how wounded he was. The dagger was pressed against my throat as he slammed me into the wall.
“Don’t you ever call her a coward. That woman is braver than you could ever know. I came on my own to ensure you do not give her away. If you do, I’ll be back, and we won’t have a nice chat like this. I’ll kill you, hear me? I’ll kill you if you turn her in.”
“Be careful, Damian. You wouldn’t want to hurt yourself anymore.”
He pressed the dagger harder to my skin until the blade pricked my neck and warm blood oozed from the thin laceration. “You might be a Fed, but I know how to disappear. No one will ever find me again. Final warning.” He backed off and sheathed the dagger at his hip.
“She shouldn’t have lied to me.” I gingerly touched the bleeding cut.
“And if she told you the truth the first time you met, what would you have done? Not gone to Nor and told him?”
I wanted to say no, but that wasn’t true. I would’ve turned her in for the good of the people. A dragonborn. She was dragonborn, and I was letting her run around Sector 21 like she was simply a cursed mage. Not half of a race that was meant to be extinct.
“In case you do actually care about stopping this war,” Damian said as he withdrew a piece of paper from his pocket, “check into this man.”
I waited a beat then took the paper. “Who is he?”
“Important. Find him, and you might get some more proof of what you’re telling your agents. Maybe they’ll stop being suspicious of you.”
“How would you know that?” I shoved the paper in my pocket.
Damian didn’t answer. He turned and walked to the end of the alley. At the street, his hand slipped back to his dagger. He nailed me with a glare so intense my hand went to my neck where he cut me, as if the dagger was right back at my flesh.
Then he was gone.
The walk to my apartment was quick, and once I was insi
de with the door locked, I slammed my fist into it, cursing in rage at the situation Mercy put me in. The night I learned the truth. The night I drew a gun on her replayed itself in my mind. She told me to shoot her that night like it would be nothing for me to finish her off.
I’d already stabbed her through the heart, at least that’s what the hurt in her eyes avowed. That I betrayed her. And not the other way around.
Not that it mattered, I repeated to myself again. My new mantra. I was not going to see her again. It was easier that way.
Once I had a beer in hand, I pulled out the paper Damian gave me and studied the name.
Franklin Monroe.
I had no idea who he was, but he’d be my focus first thing tomorrow morning.
Tonight, all I wanted to do was pretend I’d be able to forget every last memory about Mercy. A couple of nights ago, I nearly gave in and went back to the witch who helped me before. Thought she could give me another potion. But my chest ached already knowing I couldn’t be with Mercy. As much as her memories pained me, having something to hold onto of her was better than nothing.
Until she got in the way, or someone else revealed her as being dragonborn. Revealed all her crimes. Then I’d have to take her in, and she would not go down easily.
It’d be a fight, a bloody one.
And in the end, could I kill her?
Chapter 2
Mercy
I snapped my fingers and a spark shot up before my eyes. “Come on,” I muttered to myself. “Just one flame. All I want is one flame.” I snapped my fingers again and nothing. Not even a spark this time. I grunted loudly and settled back into my meditative pose on the floor.