by Nashoda Rose
“I got you.” His gentle words pulled me into him, despite trying to fight it. A finger stroked back my damp hair from my face and tucked it behind my ear. “I can’t take back what I did, Max. It was a job and I didn’t know . . .” He sighed and tugged me a little closer. “I didn’t know I’d care this much.”
I searched his words for the truth, but I didn’t trust myself. I didn’t trust him. “It doesn’t matter now.” Because it was too late. Anything that had begun to build had been ripped apart and stomped on.
“No,” Jasper said abruptly. I jerked at the fierceness in his tone. “It’s not too late.”
He’d read my thoughts. Oh, God, he’d found a way through the cracks. I pulled against him, shoving at his chest. “Don’t you dare. You don’t have the right to read my thoughts. You don’t have the—”
He kissed me.
At first I was shocked as his aggressive mouth met mine, one hand holding the back of my head to prevent my escape. My lips were soft against his, the twinge between my legs pulsating, my stomach whirling with flutters of winged angels.
Then sanity stabbed me in the chest and I tried to yank back, but his grip was relentless and he titled my head and forced me to accept him. To let him back in.
His lips vibrated beneath mine as he spoke. “Please.” It was a haggard pleading that tore another piece off me because whatever had been happening between us was lost to the murky lies.
I went limp against him, mouth unmoving as he kissed me. He stopped and rested his forehead against mine as he breathed heavily. My lips tingled and felt swollen. I ran my tongue over them, immediately tasting him and regretting it.
“She followed me one night to the river where I’d go swimming sometimes. We weren’t allowed to leave our Talde at night because of the threat of vampires and we . . . well, we weren’t strong enough yet.” His voice was quiet and unsteady. “Holden used to get so pissed at me when I went out at night. He was always the practical one and I hated rules.”
His hand slid down my back and settled on my hip. “I didn’t think there was any harm in her coming with me. There’d been no sign of vampires in months. I was pretty . . . confident in my Sounding ability and I thought . . . I thought I was strong enough at sixteen. I wasn’t.” He stumbled over the last words and cleared his throat, his hand tensing on me for a second before he started talking again. “I didn’t even make it to the river before I heard her muffled scream from behind me. My world collapsed hearing that sound. It shredded me, but it was nothing compared to what happened over the next few days.” He glanced at me and tears filled his eyes, but they didn’t fall, just pooled in his bottom lids. “They wanted to know where Lillian, a really powerful Healer, was. I wouldn’t tell them. I’d never give in. But then her screams . . . my sister’s cries . . .” He dropped his head forward and his voice lowered. “Three days. I told them where Lillian’s Talde was after three days. They promised to let Beth go, but I knew they wouldn’t. Fuck, I knew they wouldn’t and I told them anyway because I hoped maybe . . . fuck, maybe they would just kill me and let her go.”
I should’ve got up and walked way, but I didn’t. I sat in his lap as he told me the devastating story of what happened to his ten-year-old sister. The torture he endured, the suffering as he hung from the tree for days, listening to her cries and begging. Then his sister being tossed like garbage into a shallow grave right in front of him. The laughter as they kicked dirt over her lifeless body. “My parents . . . their grief . . . it ruined them. I had to leave. I couldn’t watch what I’d done to them anymore. I never saw them again and I spent the next years hunting the vampires who killed Beth. And every day I did, I cared less and less about . . . everything. It was easier that way. To never care about anything . . . anyone again.” His hand found mine and he linked our fingers. “I’ve lived that way every single day since—until you.”
I had no words and I didn’t think I could speak them as his story settled into me. I knew what Beth had suffered. Maybe my story was different, but I knew the fear she must have felt before she died. We’d been the same age, taken from those we loved, our home.
But his story didn’t change anything.
I crawled out of his lap and he let me. I stood on shaky legs and looked down at him sitting on the floor looking completely . . . vulnerable with sadness misted in his eyes and his mouth drawn downward. But it didn’t matter anymore.
“You’re Xamien’s friend. He trusts you.” I tilted my chin up as I thought of the day I met Jasper. “I wasn’t a stranger, Jasper. You met me six months ago and yet still you took a deal to use me for my ability. A job with the possibility that you’d have to kill me.”
Jasper’s face blanched and I heard his sharp inhale. “Max, fuck. I wouldn’t have done it—”
I snorted and I raised my brows. “That’s not good enough. I’m sorry for what happened to your sister. But sharing why you’re the bastard you are . . . doesn’t change the fact.” I spun on my heel and walked out of the bedroom.
I BENT MY KNEES, RESTED my arms on them and hung my head, closing my eyes. I fucked up. I put off telling her the truth about the job and what I was feeling for her until it was too late to fix what I’d done.
She was right. It wasn’t just her I’d fucked over; it was Xamien. Despite what I tried to ignore, he was my friend. Was being the optimal word because Xamien would kill me when he heard about this.
“Jesus.” I put my hands in my hair as the overwhelming need to go after her hit me. I knew she hadn’t left; I could hear her on the porch swing as it creaked back and forth. Shit, I couldn’t stop my ability from honing in on her wherever the hell she was.
How the fuck did this get so out of my control. When I met her six months ago, I’d known then something was different. I stalked her for fuck’s sake. When I was away from her, it was as if I’d left my heart behind so it could stay with her.
But I fought it. I pretended it wasn’t more than lust when I knew it was.
“Would you have killed her?”
I jerked my head up, seeing Holden standing in the doorway. I was so focused on Max I blocked all other sounds out. He had his hands in his pockets, and for once, no judgment in his expression. I even thought I saw a flicker of sympathy.
“No.” I may have tried to convince myself otherwise, but she . . . Max made me feel as if I was breathing pure, untainted air. She fed me the life I’d submerged into the earth with Beth. I took the job to be closer to her, to protect her, and at the same time, my self-destructive side took it to try and convince myself I didn’t care about her. That I could do the job and walk away with my scattered fragmented pieces.
What I hadn’t realized was Max had been slowly repairing me without me even knowing it. I didn’t give a fuck about my Ink being healed and I took the job so no other bastard would kill her.
I took it to make her mine.
None of it mattered now.
“Stop thinking of what you’ve done and fix it.” I snorted and Holden’s lips pulled downward with that disappointed glower he would always give me when I fucked up as a kid. “It’s salvageable, bro, and she’s worth it, isn’t she? Worth trying. Worth whatever it takes?”
She’s worth everything. “Fuck yeah.”
“Give her some time then talk to her. Not your bullshit, Wasp, really talk to her.”
My head snapped up as my ability picked up someone approaching the house. I jumped to my feet and was shoving past my brother when he called, “It’s just Guise. He’s staying a few days.”
I made it into the living room just as the front door open. Guise stopped and we stared at one another for a minute. I hadn’t spoken to him or seen him since that day he and Holden found me; watched me dig for Beth.
He chin-lifted to me. “Wasp.” He strode into the kitchen and pulled a mug from the cupboard then poured steaming coffee into it.
And typical Guise, he didn’t make a big deal of the reunion.
Guise was a Visionary, me
aning he had the ability to see real damn far. The odd thing was he wore glasses, light rimmed, subtle and sitting casually on the bridge of his nose. They made him look intelligent and warm when Guise was anything but.
The Scar was clean cut, dressed immaculately and there wasn’t a tattoo visible, although he had to have his Ink somewhere on his body. Guise lived with one purpose in mind—kill. He may do it quietly and with finesse, but when he slit a man’s throat or decapitated a body, it was as if he was cutting up a watermelon. Smooth, easy and without concern. Unlike me though, Guise didn’t take money for his kills.
Guise was also my brother’s best friend. Was mine at one time too when we were kids, although he’d been much older than me. Adrian gave me updates on him and Holden, whether I wanted them or not. Over the years, I just accepted the info and there was a slight wave of relief when I heard something; it meant they were alive.
The swing stopped rocking and Max’s weight shifted. I heard every step she made as she walked across the porch to the door. She walked in the house and Guise’s eyes roamed the length of her. I watched as the corners of his mouth tilted upward, then the barely noticeable straightening of his back.
No fuckin’ way. A low growl simmered inside me and I curled my hands into fists. I had no misconceptions of what Guise looked like to a woman—muscled, tall, dark hair like mine, and stark defined features that softened with the glasses—a costume of disguise. Exactly, how he got his nickname. Nothing was as it appeared.
The air shifted when Max saw me and froze. Her red rimmed eyes glared and every second she looked at me was like she was squeezing her hand around my heart and attempting to rip it apart.
I deserved it. Shit, I deserved a hell of a lot worse for all the shit I’d done in my life.
And Max . . . Max was made up of all goodness. But she was also made up of contradictions. Quiet and subtle on the outer edges while attempting to keep herself locked behind her shielded mind, but beneath that—fire. And I’d felt the burn of that fire blazing with her unrestrained anger. But I’d rather have her anger than the closed-off girl I’d met six months ago.
I watched Max, every muscle stiff, pulsing and eager to respond to what I was fighting—myself. Guise walked toward her holding out his hand to pass her a coffee, the perfect fuckin’ gentleman and yet . . . Guise was the perfect deception. He’d slip his knife between her breast bones without a backward glance or regret if she was a criminal who hurt the innocent.
Just like I would. Usually. Normally. Fuck, I wasn’t so sure if I could do it anymore and in a way it made me want to do it just to prove that I could. But the thought of never having the chance with her . . . I’d already lost her.
“Thank you.” She nodded to Guise and her voice drifted across the twelve-foot space between us like a sparrow on the wings of a gentle breeze. The way she said thank you hit me and it had my legs already running toward her. And it was totally fucked up because I wanted to drag her back into the bedroom and fuck her until she forgave me.
“You’re welcome . . . Max,” Guise emphasized her name in a slow drawl.
I cleared my throat as it tightened. I wanted to shove my fist down his throat then beat the shit out of him. It would be a crapshoot as to who would win, but if he touched her—
“Leave it, bro. He knows you’re watching and is trying to get you riled. Payback for throwing away his friendship for the last century.” Holden’s voice held a deep, resonated tone as he came up beside me. It was a warning that calmed the roar fucking with my control.
I sighed and dropped my gaze from Max. “I can’t fuckin’ breathe, Holden.”
“Yeah, it’s called giving a shit. Welcome to the living.” He patted me on the back. “She needs time, Jasper.” Max sat at the table and curled her legs up beneath her and then lifted the mug. I held my breath, waiting for it. She pursed her lips and then lightly blew on the steaming coffee. I saw the subtle tremble in her hands and knew it was me who caused that. Not Drake. I made her tremble and it wasn’t in a good way.
When she lowered the coffee, Max looked at me and our eyes met. Then my cock jerked and I shifted my position to ease the discomfort. Jesus, I wanted all of her and I didn’t like Guise sitting near her at the table. I didn’t like that he was quietly talking to her. I went to take a step toward them when Holden grabbed my arm.
“She’s already broken . . . don’t finish the job.”
I hesitated, unable to look away, captivated and bound by her. I knew words weren’t enough for Max. And there was only one way I had a chance at bringing her back to me.
“Keep her safe.” I turned to go back down the hall to grab my bag and then leave out the back door.
“Whoa. Jasper. You’re fucked up right now. Don’t be stupid. I know what you’re thinking, but it’s not the only way.”
“Words mean nothing to her. I’m doing what I should’ve done the second Adrian offered me the job.” Because I’d known then that I loved her or at least was falling in love with her. I started to walk down the hall, but Holden followed me.
“What? Get yourself killed. Fuck, Wasp. You’re not indestructible. You can’t go after an ancient Scar alone. How are you going to find him?”
I snorted. “Not an ancient Scar, he’s a hybrid ancient Scar, but one thing I’ve excelled at over the years . . . is maintain a reputation for being an asshole.”
“What are you thinking?”
“Drake will have heard of me. He knows what I do for a living and he knows I’ll turn for enough money.”
Holden shook his head. “I don’t believe you’d ever do that, Wasp.”
I shrugged. “Maybe not now. But he doesn’t know that.”
Holden grabbed my arm and yanked me to a stop. He pulled his cell phone from his pocket and passed it to me. “I think this is a mistake.”
“You can think whatever you want.”
“At least . . . Jasper your Ink. You can get her to—”
“No!” I threw his arm off me. “Never. I’ll never have her touch my Ink.” I stopped myself from looking over at her one last time, knowing I might not leave if I did and then I walked away.
I GOT UP FROM THE table when Jasper disappeared down the hall with Holden. The Scar, Guise, had been saying something about his Talde and what they do, but I’d been focused on Jasper and hadn’t heard a word he said.
“He’s leaving,” Guise said.
That got my attention. I abruptly looked at him, casually sitting back, his long legs stretched out, ankles crossed. “Leaving? Where?”
He shrugged, glanced past me and gave a subtle nod. I turned and Holden stood looking at me, his expression solemn with the edges of his mouth pulled down and half-lidded tired eyes. I felt the slow spread of unease.
“Jasper?” It was all I could manage at the moment with my throat tight and fear skidding into me. I didn’t want to care, but I did. I didn’t want to go after him, but my legs were already running in my head.
Guise got up.
Holden approached.
“Tell me.” I directed my words at Holden.
“He’s gone after Drake.”
My heart crashed through its protective barrier and dropped to the pit of my stomach. “No.” I shook my head. “No. He can’t.” Drake would kill him without a second thought. He was an ancient, his abilities ten times stronger than a regular Scar. And now he was a vampire with the unquenchable thirst for blood. His cruelty knew no bounds and I had the scars to prove it. A slow precision to his method of destruction in order to break you to his will. He wouldn’t just kill Jasper—he’d rip through his mind and take every morsel he could use against him and then torture him until he got what he wanted.
And in this case it was me.
I’d done everything I could by remaining quiet and alone at Xamien’s. I’d made myself invisible, kept to myself. Hid my abilities from the Scars so there was never a chance Drake would hear about me. Discover where I was.
Never kill anyone I care
d about again.
But it wasn’t enough.
I did what my mom wanted. I did what I was supposed to do and never healed his Ink. They didn’t die for nothing. For six years I survived Drake. Finally free of him, I had to stay hidden so he’d never find me again and kill more people.
But Jasper found me. He’d dug and dug until he unearthed the trapped emotions and I finally felt—alive. And I liked it. I liked fighting with him; I liked feeling the heat between us. I liked the teasing and the lightness in my chest whenever he was with me.
Jasper did that.
I felt something.
Holden’s large hand slid into mine and gave a reassuring squeeze, before letting go. “What are his chances?”
My breath locked in my throat and I couldn’t swallow as my throat tightened with the words. “There isn’t a chance.” Tears welled up in my eyes and my throat tightened. “And Adrian is right,” I said. “I’m too dangerous alive.”
Holden abruptly grabbed my shoulders. “No. Not an option. We’ll find another way.”
I stiffened my spine and raised my chin as I let the cold rush over me. “There’s me.”
I FOUND HOLDEN’S CAR HIDDEN in the side of the hill with a shitload of brush all over it. I yanked each branch off with frustration. Ever since I left the cabin, I had the urge to go running back.
To beg. Beg her to forgive me.
Jesus, it was pathetic. I was pathetic.
The paint chipped off the roof as I dragged a heavy branch across it and whipped it aside. I watched it fly through the air, land hard and roll down the mountain out of control.
Like me. I felt like that branch, unable to stop the caring. Bombarded with emotions I hadn’t let myself feel in a century. Maybe it was partially because of where we were. Here in the mountains where I swore I’d never come again.
My heart sat in the pit of my stomach, no longer steady and rhythmic but all fucked up and stealing my calmness. I didn’t like leaving her. But I had no choice. The risk was too great that Adrian would find someone else to do what I had been hired for. Drake had to be taken out before that happened. And Holden and Guise were the best to keep her safe.