#1 New York Times bestselling author Kresley Cole
enraptures again with this seductive tale of a fierce
werewolf prince who will stop at nothing to protect the
lovely archer he covets from afar.
A DANGEROUS
BEAUTY... Lucia the Huntress: as mysterious as she
is
exquisite, she harbors secrets that threaten to destroy
her
-- and those she loves.
AN UNCONTROLLABLE
NEED...
Garreth MacRieve, Prince of the Lykae: the brutal
Highland warrior who burns to finally claim this
maddeningly
sensual creature as his own.
THAT LEAD TO A
PLEASURE SO WICKED.... From the shadows, Garreth
has
long watched over Lucia. Now, the only way to keep the
proud
huntress safe from harm is to convince her to accept him
as
her guardian. To do this, Garreth will ruthlessly exploit
Lucia's greatest weakness -- her wanton desire for him.
Excerpt Prologue Thrymheim Hold, the
Northlands Home of Skathi, goddess of the hunt In
ages
long past . . . Lucia the Maiden cracked open her eyes and found herself
atop an altar, staring up at a furious goddess. Somehow
her
younger sister, Regin the Radiant, had found Skathi's
temple
and had brought Lucia here. From one altar to the
next, she thought deliriously as her fever raged.
Pain roiled inside her broken body. Her fractured limbs .
.
. never had she imagined such agony. "You deliver this into my sacred place," Skathi the
Huntress
of the Great North said to Regin, "and desecrate my
altar?
You court my wrath, young Valkyrie." Regin—all of twelve years old, with Lucia's blood
covering
her glowing skin—said, "What can you do? Torture my
sister?
Murder her? She has already survived the first and is
about
to succumb to the second without your aid." "I could murder
both of you." In answer, Regin pursed her lips, looking as if she were
sizing up Skathi's shins for a good kicking. Lucia struggled for consciousness, labored to speak.
"Don't
hurt her, please . . . my fault, my fault . . ." But her
words were drowned out by a rumbling boom. This hold was
carved into the heights of Godsbellow Mountain, shaken
continually by thunder. Skathi asked Regin, "Why bring her here?" "Because you're both neighbor and nemesis to the one who
did
this." Had interest flickered in the goddess's eyes? "The Broken
Bloody One?" "Aye." Canting her head at Regin in an appraising way, Skathi
said,
"You're not even old enough to be a true immortal yet.
For
one so powerless and insignificant, you dare much,
Valkyrie." "For Lucia, I dare this and more," Regin answered
proudly.
"Best be forewarned." "Regin!" Lucia gasped. The girl had lost her mind. "What?" She
stomped
her foot. "What'd I say?" Instead of smiting Regin, the goddess impatiently
gestured
for her guards, the legendary Skathians. They were
renowned
archers, all females who underwent grueling training
rituals
to serve the goddess. "Take the glowing one down the
mountain. Make sure she does not remember the way back." When Regin charged toward her, Lucia cried, "Nay, Regin .
.
. leave me!" The Skathians snagged Regin around the waist, forcing her
out as she flailed and shrieked, biting them. Lucia heard one of them say, "Ow! You little ratling!" And then they
were
gone. Skathi regarded Lucia's battered face impassively. "You
worry for her? When she has been spared? You, however,
will
not last the hour." "I know," Lucia whispered. "Unless you help me." She
caught
Skathi's gaze as she pleaded—a mistake to look directly
upon
the great and terrible goddess. Meeting her fathomless
eyes
brought on the sorrow and fear of all her prey over the
ages. It sank over Lucia like a bitter frost. "Please. . . ." When
Lucia held up her crimson-stained hand in supplication,
the
wound across her torso she'd been holding welled with
blood,
flowing over her sides. A fountain of sticky warmth
coated
the altar beneath her, surrounding her battered body, but
it
quickly cooled on the chill stone. Each drop lost left her shuddering harder, even more
desperate. The pain of her injuries maddened her. "You made your decision, Valkyrie," the goddess said in
answer. "And reaped what you sowed when you disobeyed
those
you were born to obey. Why should I help you?" Because I've only lived
sixteen years, Lucia thought, but she knew that
wouldn't sway Skathi, a timeless being who could scarcely
comprehend death—or youth. "Because I'll do . . . whatever you ask of me," Lucia
said
at last. The shuddering was getting worse; the altar
beneath
her was so cold. "P-pay any price." "If I saved you, I would impart my essence to you. A
being
like you would bear my mark of favor and be tied to the
bow
forever," Skathi said, strolling to an opening
overlooking
her mountain, guarded by miles of deadly woods that
swallowed unwary travelers. Lucia barely remembered
traversing the mystical forest as Regin dragged her
across
portals and dales for days. "Lucia, I'm taking you
to
Skathi!" "She will . . . not help." "She will! The
Skathians fight him every five hundred years. . . ."
Thunder boomed once more, the sound seeming to soothe the
goddess. "Where my followers have sacrificed to become
expert markswomen, you would simply be gifted with my
hunting skills. An unequaled archer, better than them
all.
Why do you think you're worthy of that? When they have
trained so hard? When they are pure of heart—and body?" The Skathians lived by an ascetic code—and despised men.
I
understand why now. "They are not tainted as you are," Skathi continued. "As
you
willingly offered yourself up to be." Dim memories arose of her last nine days as prisoner of
Crom
Cruach—the Broken Bloody One, a monster with the face of
an
angel. Had that animal bitten her? She refused to look
down
at her body, but she suspected he'd gnawed at her skin
once
she'd blacked out. And that she'd fought him before she'd
mindlessly jumped from his lair—chunks of scaly flesh
were
still embedded beneath her claws. Lucia ruthlessly stamped out those visions of her
captivity.
She would never let herself remember them, especially not
that last night. What happened in the
dark. Blood streaming down my thighs. "I didn't know. . . . I never knew." Regret washed over
her.
"I'll s-sacrifice anything, Skathi." "Gifts from gods always come with a price. Are you ready
to
pay mine?" Lucia nodded weakly. "I can become . . . p-pure hearted.
And
I'll shun men." She
must
know I'll never be fooled again. "Virgin from this day forward?" After a long moment,
Skathi
said, "You escaped the Broken Bloody One this time—
courage,
or cowardice, making you leap—yet Cruach will come for
you
in the next Accession if he escapes his jail." Yes, but by that time
I'll
be truly immortal. I'll run farther, faster. "He shall merely do this again. Unless . . . you fight
him." "I want to fight him." She never wanted to see his
hideous
visage again. "Every five hundred years, he would become your bane and
you
his jailer." "Let me live to face him." Lying to a goddess? But Lucia was
desperate. Skathi's face took on a thoughtful mien. "Yes, I have
decided to heal you and make you an Archer—so long as you
remain chaste. Yet any time that you miss a target, you
shall experience the pain you are about to suffer. You
shall
always remember what brought you this low and never
repeat
this fall from grace. That
will make you a Skathian." Dizziness overwhelmed Lucia. She was so confused. "About to suffer?" This
torment could not be worse? "Yes, pain to hone your mind. Agony to sharpen your
resolve
like a blade stone." As she placed her milk-white hands
over
Lucia's torso, Skathi murmured, "Ah, young Lucia, in the
end, I believe you shall wish I'd let you perish." The
goddess's palms began to glow with blue light. Brighter, brighter. . .
.
Suddenly Lucia convulsed, shrieking as her infected
wounds
pulled taut, purging blood and pus, her fractured bones
grinding as they knit together. Her fingers clenched
tight,
her back arching—like a bow. "You'll be my weapon," Skathi cried, her face becoming a
frenzied mask. "You'll be my instrument!" On and on, the light burned, until abruptly there was
none.
Lucia was healed—but changed. A bowstring coiled around
her
body like a serpent. And in her trembling hands, a black
ash
bow and a single golden arrow had appeared. "Welcome back to life—to your new life. You are now an
Archer." Skathi met her eyes, and Lucia felt the weight
of
overweening dread, just as a thousand other souls had
before
her. "And, Lucia, you shall forever be nothing more."
* * * Southern Louisiana
Present day "Munro, you daft git, pass the ball!" Garreth MacRieve
yelled at his kinsman over the thunder and howling winds. Tonight was their yearly skins-versus-demons rugby match—
a
tradition for Garreth and his clan, meant to take his
mind
from the anniversary this day marked. Garreth was
barefooted, wearing only jeans and no shirt. Rain pounded
in
strengthening intervals, turning this abandoned grassy
airstrip in bayou country into a mire of muck and turf.
Sweat mingled with mud—and some blood. He almost felt . . . not numb. And that in itself was a
feat. Munro flipped him off but did finally sling him the ball.
The leather was coated in grit, mixing with the filth
covering Garreth's bared chest. He feinted left, then
sprinted right around two colossal Ferine demons, shoving
his hand in their faces, stiff-arming them. As he ran, with his heart pounding in his ears, he could
forget. The exertion and the aggression were both so
welcome, he wanted to beat his bare chest. The swift Ferines surrounded him, so he tossed the ball
to
Uilleam, Munro's twin, who took it in to score. His
brothers-in-arms were strong and ruthless contenders, as
was
he. The beasts inside them loved to fight, to play. Rough. The demons responded to the goal with trash talk and
shoving. Like a shot, Garreth was in the middle. "You're raring to fight for an heirless king," Caliban,
the
Ferines' leader, sneered. "Nothing new—you Lykae go
through
kings like I piss demon brew." Of all the sore subjects to bring up, Garreth's kingship
was
the one most infuriating. And on this day? He launched himself at Caliban, but Munro and Uilleam
heaved
him back. As other demons steered Caliban away from the
scuffle, Munro said, "Save it for the game, friend." Garreth spat blood in Caliban's direction before letting
the
two lead him away to cool off. While Uilleam and Munro
stayed with him, the other Lykae on the team made their
way
to the sidelines to mingle with the "cheerleaders." The demons took the opportunity to take a time-out and
drink
demon brew. The only bad thing about playing with demons—
one
of the few species in the Lore that could contend with
the
Lykae in a physical contest—was their continual "brew
breaks." Only seemed fair that Garreth and his kinsmen
shoot
copious amounts of whiskey to mitigate their advantage.
They
swilled it straight from the bottle, each one with his
own,
the Lykae version of Gatorade. Their cooler was full of fifths. "You've got to let this go, Garreth," Munro said, taking
a
deep drink. Garreth swiped his hand over the back of his neck,
getting
the feeling that he was being watched. But then, he and
all
the other players were. Nymphs lined the field, oblivious
to
the rain, touching themselves and sucking on their own
fingers as they impatiently waited for this game to turn
into an orgy. He irritably gazed at the females. "Why'd you invite
them?"
he demanded. "Damn you both, I weary of this. Did you
never
think that I doona like nymphs?" "Nay," Uilleam said with a swig. "Any being that sports a
penis likes nymphs." Munro drained his bottle and added, "You canna argue with
medical facts." Garreth knew Uilleam and Munro meant well, but this was
getting old. "I doona like them. They're too . . . too .
. ." "Beautiful?" "Lusty?" "Easy," Garreth
said. "They're too easy. For once I'd like to have a
female
give me a challenge. One that would no' fall into bed
with
me because I'm supposedly a king." When Munro opened his mouth to speak, Garreth said, "Aye,
supposedly." Munro shook his head gravely. "And still you believe
Lachlain will return." The three had been round and round about this for one and
a
half centuries, since the time his older brother had
vanished after setting out to hunt vampires. Uilleam and Munro told Garreth that he awaited Lachlain
unreasonably. Best accept that his brother was gone,
especially after so long had passed since his
disappearance.
One hundred and fifty years—to the day, this day. They said
Garreth hadn't moved on and accepted his responsibilities
as
king. They were right. "When will you believe he's no' coming back?" Uilleam
asked.
"Two hundred years from now? Five hundred?" "Never. No' if I still feel he's alive." Though vampires had
killed
the rest of his immediate family, for some reason,
Garreth
still sensed Lachlain lived. "No' if I feel it as I do
now." "You're as bad off as Bowen," Uilleam said, finishing his
own bottle—and opening another. Bowen was Garreth's first cousin, a shell of a man since
he'd lost his mate. He spent every waking moment in
agony,
yet he wouldn't accept the loss and end his life as most
Lykae males would have in his situation. "No' like
Bowen,"
Garreth said. "He saw his mate gored, saw her death. I
dinna
see such proof with Lachlain." No, I searched and searched and found . . .
nothing. "Game on!" a demon called. Garreth shook himself from his memories, swigged whiskey,
then mustered to the field with his kinsmen. Caliban bared his fangs at his opponents, a gesture
Garreth
returned as the teams huddled up. Quick snap. Ball in
play.
Passed to Caliban. Garreth saw his chance,
charging
for him, pumping his arms for speed . . . faster . . .
faster. . . . He leapt for the demon, tackling him with
all
his strength. As they careened to the ground, a length of Caliban's
horn
snapped off, and he bellowed with rage. "You're going to
pay
for that, Lykae!" For miles, Lucia the Huntress had been stalking her
night's
prey, growing increasingly perplexed when the tracks she
followed led her closer to what sounded like a battle,
echoing with roars and curses. Mayhem? Without inviting the Valkyrie? And in our territory,
too? If beings were going to trespass in order to
war, they should at least have the courtesy to invite the
host faction to the conflict. When she came upon the battlefield, Lucia canted her head
to
the side. Clash of the
Loreans, she thought as she beheld modern
gladiators—not at war, but at play. Immortal rugby. Winds whipped along the mile-long field, and lightning
flashed above them, mirroring the intensity of the
contest.
It was like a ceremony celebrating . . . maleness. Lucia easily recognized the horned players as demons, and
she suspected their shirtless opponents were Lykae. If
so,
then the rumors were true. The werewolves were in fact
encroaching on Valkyrie territory. She was surprised. In
the
past, they'd kept to themselves, staying at their
sprawling
compound outside of the city. Congregating at the sidelines, Nymph spectators trembled
with excitement, likely seeing this as no more than a
mud-wrestling match between brawny heartthrobs. A ruthless hit on the field made Lucia raise a brow. Not
at
the violence—she was a shield maiden after all—but at the
unthinking
violence. Though these Loreans all trespassed, they were
oblivious to an Archer in their midst, one who could
inflict
serious damage—very swiftly and from a great distance. Levelheaded Lucia, as she was now known, didn't
comprehend
unthinking. But
then she didn't comprehend men. Never had. Luckily for them, the only violence she'd deliver this
eve
would be to her targets: two kobolds—vile gnomelike
creatures—who'd been seen stalking human young to feed
on. Her sister Nïx, the half-mad Valkyrie soothsayer, had
dispatched her to these bayous to dispose of them. Lucia
had
asked Regin to join her, but she'd declined, preferring
to
play video games in the comfort of their coven over
another
"rain-drenched bug hunt." Lucia had jumped at the chance. After donning a T-shirt
and
hiking shorts, she'd strapped on her leather thigh
quiver,
archer's glove and forearm guard. With her trusty bow in
hand, she'd set out at once. . . . Another brutal hit.
She nearly winced at the impact from that one—a piece of
horn skipped down the field like a lost helmet—but she
wasn't surprised. Lykae and demons were two of the most
brutal species on earth. Worse, one of those bare-chested males had caught Lucia's
attention. Completely. No matter how badly she wished it
otherwise, Lucia still noted attractive men, and as the
teams skirmished, she couldn't help but appreciate the
power
in his towering frame, his speed and agility. Though mud
splattered his torso and a shadow of a beard swathed his
lean face, she still found him handsome in a rough and
tumble way. His eyes were a burnished gold color with rakish laugh
lines
fanning out from them. At one time, he'd been happy; he
clearly wasn't now. Tension radiated from his body, anger
blazing off him. When those golden irises flickered a bright ice blue, she
confirmed what he was. A Lykae. A werewolf. An animal. His handsome face masked a beast, literally. "You call that a hit, you bluidy ponce!" he yelled at one
of
the demons, the muscles in his neck and chest standing
out
in strain as he bowed up and bared his fangs. His accent
was
Scottish, but then most of the Lykae were Highlanders—or
they used to be, before homesteading southern Louisiana.
"Aye, Caliban! Go fook
yerself!" Others were drawing him back from a particularly large
demon, seeming exasperated, as if the male had been
picking
fights all night. Probably had. The Lykae were considered
a
menace in the Lore, with little control over their
ferocity.
In fact, they seemed to revel in it. One hundred percent unadulterated male, alpha to the
core.
And still he was making her . . . lust. As the game
continued, Lucia waited for revulsion to drown out her
attraction. And waited. Yet with each pitiless blow the male gave—and took—and
with
each of his growled threats and taunts, it burned hotter.
Her breaths shallowed and her small claws went from
straight
to curling, aching to clutch a warm body to her own. But when she remembered the last time she'd felt like
this,
a chill swept over her. She dragged her gaze from his
antics
and surveyed the nymphs frolicking on the sidelines.
Lucia
had once been like them—hedonistic, serving no higher
purpose. Am I still to be like them? No,
she
was disciplined now; she had a code. I'm a Skathian—by right of
pain
and the blood I've spilled. With a hard shake of her head, she forced herself to
focus
on her mission—dispatching the kobolds. To the naked eye,
they appeared cherubic, but they were actually ground
dwellers with reptilian features. And when their
populations
went unchecked they tended to snatch human young, which
jeopardized all of Lorekind. The pair had split up, one of them fleeing deeper into
the
swamps, while the other hid behind the wall of nymph
spectators, assuming itself safe in this crowd. Lucia absently fingered the flights of the barbed arrows
strapped to her thigh and savored the comforting weight
of
her bow over her shoulder. Her prey assumed wrong. The Archer never missed.
Garreth swiftly broke away from the pack of demons at his
heels, gaining more and more ground toward the goal. Rain
pelted him as his speed increased. This would be an easy score, taking him nearly the entire
length of the field. Finally the demons pursuing him gave
up, slowing one by one, hailing curses. Yet then, in the most bewildering moment of his life,
Garreth's lids grew heavy and his dark claws bit into the
ball he carried, puncturing it. As he inhaled deeply, he
isolated a new, exquisite scent from a thousand threads
of
them—the coppery smell of lightning, cut blades of grass,
the swampy bayous all around them. Sensations overwhelmed
him, racking his muscles as he slowed. Her. My mate. She's
near.
. . . She was downwind but close enough that he
detected her.
He didn't know what she looked like, what her name was,
or
even her species. Yet he'd been waiting a millennium—his
entire existence—for her. His head swung around in the
direction of the scent. A small female stood alone off to the side of the field. At his first sight of her, his breath was lost, his Lykae
Instinct roaring to life within him.
—Yours. Take her.—
She was half a mile or so away, but he saw her clearly
through the rain, could make out every detail. She had
pouting pink lips and flashing amber eyes. A black bow
was
strapped over her petite body, and she'd tied a leather
quiver full of arrows to her thigh. Wee pointed ears
poked
out through her mane of long, wet hair. Yes, mine. Gods, she was as exquisite as her scent— Wham! The demons
tackled him with the force of a freight train, flattening
him on the field, piling on top of him. His left shoulder
popped from its joint. A knee to his jaw wrenched three
back
teeth loose. He growled, not with pain but with
frustration,
punching the still-hitting demons with his one good arm.
As
he battled to free himself, he sucked his teeth into his
windpipe. The twins ran to help him, finally peeling the demons off
him. Garreth struggled to his knees, futilely coughing,
hacking as he watched the strange female. Suddenly, in a laserlike movement, she readied her bow,
nocked three arrows from her quiver, and drew the
bowstring
to her cheek. What the
hell? Everything happening so fast . . . Aiming
for
the nymphs? No, not
them. A kobold cowering among them. Never hit it from so far
away.
She was poised, motionless, for a shot. Though rain and
wind
whipped her hair over her cheek, she never blinked, never
took her eye from her target even after she released that
bowstring. The arrows flew between two nymphs and sliced through the
kobold's neck, severing his head from his miniature body.
A
fantastical shot. Yet she appeared bored with the result.
Heaving, choking, Garreth saw her casually wend her way
through the stunned nymphs.
Once she reached the two pieces of kobold, the archeress
chucked them into the nearby swamp. She replaced the bow over her body, then strolled back in
the direction she'd come from. When she realized all
attention was on her, she slowed. "Oh." She gave them a
Queen Elizabeth wave and said, "You may play on." As he wheezed and his cousins whaled hits on his back
like
anvil blows, she met Garreth's gaze. He reached a muddy
hand
toward her, but she frowned with disdain, then
disappeared
into the brush. Finally Uilleam kicked Garreth in the
back,
and his back teeth flew from his windpipe like Chiclets. "What in the hell's the matter with you?" Munro demanded. Between labored breaths, Garreth clambered to his feet.
He'd
been told what to expect when finding his mate, but never
had he imagined the strength of his reaction. "It's . . .
happened." They knew immediately what he spoke of. Munro looked
incredulous; Uilleam, jealous. How long had they both
been
waiting? "The archer?" Uilleam asked. "Never seen anyone shoot
like
that. But she looked like she might be . . . a Valkyrie." Munro swore under his breath, "Bluidy bad luck." "Just force my shoulder back in place! Be quick, man!"
Naturally, the first time Garreth encountered his mate—
the
one he'd awaited so long—she'd seen him calling his
competitors pussies and playing by dirty rules. He was
shirtless, well on his way to being drunk, and filthy
with
blood and mud. He wasn't even wearing shoes. And it probably appeared as if he'd been about to take
part
in an orgy. "You tell no one of this," Garreth grated. "Why the hell no'?" Munro gave a hard yank on Garreth's
arm. "Whatever she may be, she's other," he said. "And she's to be the
Lykae
queen? No one
knows, not until she's marked and mated. Vow it!" "Aye, then, we vow it," Uilleam said. The second they popped his shoulder back in, he took off
at
a sprint. —Track her.
Claim.— With his Instinct louder and sharper than
it'd ever been, he ran headlong through the rain. He'd just been despairing over another year without his
older brother, another year of royal responsibilities
that
he'd never thought would fall to him. On this day, the
fates
still refused to surrender Lachlain. But they'd given
Garreth his mate in that ethereal creature. As he charged forward, excitement welled within him,
followed by overwhelming relief. With the way the rain
had
been pouring earlier, he could've missed her scent. Now
he
was on her trail. Yet at the line of moss-curtained cypresses—the entrance
to
the most remote section of the swamp—he slowed. Somehow
her
scent was emanating from four different directions. He
decided on one to follow, then raced through the brush,
hurdling streams and bogs. When he reached the source of the scent and there was no
sign of her, he turned in place. Then gazed up to find
one
of her arrows lodged in a tree, so deep only the flights
showed. And to those, she'd tied little bits of her T-
shirt.
Clever girl.
She'd
used her arrows to obscure her trail. But he would follow each to the end, tracking her for as
long as it took. She'd been born for him. And I was born to find her.
. .
. Terrain passed beneath his feet for half an hour before
he
located her true trail. With the innate stealth of his
kind,
he prowled closer, hunting this huntress in the now
drizzling rain. The swamp made it easy for him to approach her
undetected.
There were a thousand shadows to conceal him, with
animals
constantly creeping about to distract her. Once he spied her again, he just stopped himself from
sucking in a breath. Up close, she was even lovelier than
he'd thought her. She had to be a Valkyrie, one among a
species of women both notoriously beautiful . . . and
notoriously fierce. Her features were stunning—high, bold cheekbones, plump
lips, and a slim, pixie nose—but her coloring made her
beyond compare. Her skin was golden and smooth, her eyes
the
color of Scots whiskey. She was of middling height and curvy, wearing a wet white
T-shirt that hugged generous breasts. Khaki shorts fitted
tightly over her pert arse and displayed shapely legs.
Her
hair was long—a dark mane, heavy with rain. On her right hand, she wore a leather shooting glove. A
long
leather forearm guard stretched from her left wrist to
her
elbow. Who knew archery
gear could be so sexy? His female would wear her leathers when he took her curvy
wee body tonight. At the thought, his shaft hardened in
his
damp jeans, and he almost growled. Instead, he silently followed her, watching as she closed
in
on the prey he'd already scented in the burrows beneath
them. If she was in fact a Valkyrie, she'd possess superhuman
senses like his own—keen hearing and the ability to see
in
the dark or over long distances. Yet her sense of smell
wouldn't be nearly as developed as his. She'd need to
track
the creature by sight and sound—and she was doing so
expertly. But all the while she would freeze, jerking her head back
in
his direction, her pointed ears twitching. Without warning, she leapt up into a waterlogged oak,
crouching there as she resumed her shooting stance,
nocking
another arrow. From a distance, her short bow was
unassuming, a recurve bow with the ends arching away from
her and a thickened grip in the middle. Typical, if old
fashioned. But as he neared he could see there were
etched
gold markings in the polished black wood. Her weapon was as fine and proud as its owner obviously
was.
. . . She went motionless, aiming directly for the spot where
he'd
scented her prey. Did she plan to hit it through the
earth? Aye, because in a reaper's voice, she whispered, "Underground won't save
you." I can hear its breath,
muffled now. Lucia knew the kobold had gone
underground, scurrying for its life. She'd trailed it
here,
easily reading the signs that all prey left behind. From this angle in the tree, she could shoot into the
ground, piercing her arrow straight into the tunnel
beneath.
Her special
arrow—it'd go in sleek and aerodynamic until contact,
then
it would release three razor-sharp barbs. Soon she'd report two confirmed kills back to Nucking
Futs
Nïx. Just as Lucia always did. And then what? Then I'll repeat days like
this,
over and over, until the Accession. When the nightmares came. For now, kill the
kobold,
go home. Yet for some reason, instead of focusing on her target,
she
recalled broad shoulders and lean cheeks, remembering how
the Lykae had looked at her just before he'd been
tackled.
He'd stared, heaving breaths with that barrel chest,
sweat
trickling down his muscled torso. Until he'd gotten
flattened by some of the biggest demons she'd ever seen. His interest had disconcerted her. In fact, all eyes had
been on her—something that didn't often happen since
Lucia
usually had the brazen, showstopping Regin the Radiant to
distract notice from her. But if anyone, including that male—who surely hadn't been
reaching for her with that grubby paw—had gotten curious
and
actually followed her, she'd taken care to cover her
tracks. Lucia shook her head hard, refocusing, inhaling a breath.
Once she exhaled, she held herself motionless, sighting
down
the arrow's length. The ancient inscriptions on her bow
seemed to glow. . . . She released the string. With a thunk, the arrow punctured the ground,
boring deep, all the way to the kobold burrowed below. A
muffled shriek sounded. Target hit. Even underground, she'd nailed it. Not
surprising—she hadn't missed a shot in centuries.
Skathi's
essence literally worked like a charm. Lucia swung her bow back across her body, then leapt down
to
finish off her immortal prey with a swift beheading.
It's hard being this
good, she thought as she sauntered to the spot of
contact. It's harder to
act modest. She sighed. My cross to bear. Three tenets comprised the Skathian code: honesty,
chastity,
and humility. She managed honesty—mostly—and chastity
totally. But she couldn't grasp the reasoning behind
humility. When she neared, the creature scurried in the tunnel
beneath
her feet, making the arrow shaft dart frenziedly in the
mucky ground, which amused her. This was her greatest pleasure—the hunt. When she was out
like this, she felt less like an imposter, filled with
shameful secrets. In these moments, she didn't feel as if
her sins were stamped upon her like a scarlet letter for
all
to see. And she could briefly forget what would soon befall her
in
the approaching Accession. Shaking away that thought, she crouched to dig free her
prey, hauling it out by the ankle in a rush of mud and
roots. Still in cherubic form, the kobold squirmed
frenetically, her arrow jutting from its throat. She dropped it to the ground and plucked free her arrow,
taking half its neck with those barbs. The creature
transformed, growing reptilian, with snakelike eyes and
scaly skin. When it snapped its now elongated fangs at her, she
turned
the arrow lengthwise, pressing the shaft down over what
was
left of its neck. As blood sprayed up her arms, she
grinned.
relishing her job as enforcer of laws. Lucia had just beheaded the thing when her ears twitched
with awareness yet again. Something's watching me. She leapt back
to
her feet, eyes darting. Something close. The male. She sensed it was him—but how had he gotten the
drop on her? She peered into the shadows and almost gasped when golden
eyes glowed back. "Why are you following me?" she
demanded.
On occasion, she acted as a negotiator between factions
because she was so patient and levelheaded—or so everyone
thought. Perhaps he sought her help to solve some
grievance. The male stalked closer to her, ignoring the natural
path,
heading directly for her. A Lykae had made her the object
of
its interest. Never a good development. "How could I no' follow a lass as bonny as you?" he asked
in
a raspy brogue. The mud had washed clean, revealing the
perfection of his still-bare chest and torso and all the
strong planes of his face. His chin was stubborn with a
hint
of a cleft, his skin tan, with those faint laugh lines
etched beside golden eyes. Rain spiked his lashes. His thick hair was wet and dark, whipping across his lean
cheeks. She'd bet it'd be a rich brown when dry. His gaze met hers for long moments before he leisurely
took
in every feature of her face. The way he looked at her
was
consuming, savoring—as if she were the most beautiful
creature on earth and he'd been starved for the sight of
her. She frowned as a sense of awareness seemed to tingle
through
her every nerve. When his gaze dipped to her body, he raised a shaking
hand
to run over his mouth, clearly liking what he saw. What's not to like—
No! Act reasonable and
serious. Above all things be rational. "Who are
you?" "I'm Garreth MacRieve of the Lykae clan." He drew nearer
and
she sidled back. They began circling each other. "Never
seen
anyone shoot like you." That truly never got old. "Because no one can," she
answered
matter-of-factly. Had the corner of his lips briefly curled? "What devil
did
you make a deal with to shoot like that?" She almost sighed. Devil? I did something entirely different with him.
She stifled the memories that had begun to surface more
and
more often. "Mayhap your bow's enchanted?" "My bow's not enchanted—merely unequaled." For over a
thousand years, it'd held fast, as perfectly honed today
as
it'd been the night of Lucia's transformation. The black
ash
wood was polished to a sheen and carved with elaborate
inscriptions. In a long-dead language, it was written
that
Lucia was a servant to the goddess Skathi. Forever. "You
don't think mine could be a natural"—goddess-given
—"talent?" "Aye. But to marry talent and beauty such as yours as well? Hardly
sporting to other lasses." She'd often thought so herself. Luckily for them, she had
no
interest in garnering a man's attention. "And you could no' be bonnier." In fact, she could be. Her hair was drenched. Her clothes
were boring—a serviceable pair of shorts and a plain
T-shirt. She wore no makeup or jewelry, but then, she
never
did. Not since she'd started wearing the bow. "Are you fey or Valkyrie?" I'm an Archer. A
celibate in plain clothes. A shadow in the background.
"Guess." At least he got points for not mistaking her for
a
nymph. Unfortunately, the two species resembled each
other
with their elven features. That was where all
similarities
ended. "With the bow and the pointed ears, I'd normally say fey.
But you've wee fangs and claws, so I fear it will no' be
so
easy as that." "Easy? What are you talking about?" He opened his mouth, then closed it, slanting his head at
her in an appraising way. She sensed that whatever he'd
been
about to tell her, he decided against it, instead saying:
"Seduction. Valkyrie are notoriously difficult to
seduce." He wanted to seduce her? No talk of a date, of courting,
just sex. Men!
"Difficult, you say? If you've made a go at one of us in
your current state—unshaven, bloody, half-dressed, and
covered in mud—I just can't imagine why. Not to mention
that
you smell of mash and distillery. Be still my heart." He scrubbed a palm over his face, seeming surprised to
find
stubble there. "Today is no'
a good day for me." "Then you should go back and enjoy your groupies. I've
always heard that nothing brightens one's outlook like an
orgy with nymphs." Why this sharp tone? As if she were
jealous. A spark of disquiet arose in her. "Doona want them." He drew closer. "Even before I saw
you."
He gazed deeply into her eyes, as if he could see through
her chaste, ascetic shell and recognize how wild she
truly
was. As if he knew her façade was a shaky house of cards
that could be felled with a touch. You have a darkness in
you, Lucia, Skathi had warned her eons ago. You must constantly be
vigilant
against it. Yes, vigilant. Lucia needed to get home, away from this
rumbling-voiced werewolf. A face like his had been her
undoing once, a handsome face that had concealed a
monster. Just as this one's did. "The attraction isn't mutual," she said crisply. "So be
on
your way." With that, she turned to dispose of her kill,
intending to throw the pieces into the water for the
animals
there to feed on. When she bent for the kobold's head,
the
Lykae picked up the body, as if he were being
gentlemanly,
retrieving a dropped handkerchief. So surreal. They lobbed the pieces into
the
murky water. Her task done, she brushed off her hands and turned for
home. He followed. She stopped, glaring briefly at the sky before telling
him,
"Werewolf, save yourself both time and effort. Whatever
is
the opposite of a sure
thing, that's me." "Because I'm a Lykae?" Because you're a
man. "You were right earlier—I am a Valkyrie. And my
kind considers yours little better than animals." They
did. Though Lykae
weren't
formal enemies like the vampires, older Valkyrie had
battled
them in the past, during bygone Accessions—faction-wide
wars
in the Lore. They'd said it was rare to see one fully
turned
unless you threatened their mate or offspring, but that
even
a hint of the beast that resided inside them was
harrowing.
. . . So where was the conviction in Lucia's tone? "Aye, mayhap they do, but what do you consider me?" He
narrowed his eyes. "Surely you doona agree with them or
you
would no' want me to mate you now." Her lips parted. "Mate
me? I've met arrogant males in my day, but you are
the king of them." A shadow passed over his face. "The king, then? What a
way
of putting it." But he quickly recovered. "Then give me a
boon for taking the prize. Tell me your name." She exhaled, then grudgingly said, "I'm called Lucia the
Huntress." "Lousha," he repeated. Everyone she'd ever known had pronounced her name Loo-see-ah. With his
thick Scottish accent, the werewolf pronounced it Lousha. She just
stopped
herself from shivering. "Well, then, Lousha the Huntress"—a roguish grin curled
his
lips—"you've snared me." Tingles danced over her body, but just as swiftly
foreboding
filled her. She had no business responding to him. He'd
just
left the nymphs and a guaranteed orgy. He would expect
sex
from a female this night. Which she could never give—even if she wanted to—without
disaster. So why was her gaze descending along his damp chest? Her
eyes followed the trail of hair from his navel down to
the
low-slung waist of his worn jeans, then lower . . . she
almost gasped to see the bulge there. She realized he must have been doing the same perusal of
her—because the bulge grew.
She quickly glanced up, found the Lykae's gaze was
riveted
to her breasts. Her nipples were straining against the
wet
material of her shirt, and he was staring hard at them as
if
he wanted to remove her top—with his mind. When their eyes met once more, his flickered blue again,
reminding her anew of why interacting with him was
unwise.
"Run along, wolf. Or I'll make you wish you had." "That will no' be happening, Valkyrie." "Why?" At his determined look, a suspicion arose in her,
one
so ridiculous it hardly warranted another thought. But
she
couldn't shake it. "I'm not . . . your mate, or anything,
right?" She couldn't be. "Nay. Though I might wish it otherwise." Thank the gods for
that.
"Then—leave." When he instead drew nearer, she yanked free her bow and
nocked an arrow, drawing the string without thought. She
aimed straight for his heart, which wouldn't kill an
immortal like him but would put him down for a good
while.
"Stop right where you are, or I'll shoot." He didn't stop right where he was. "You would no'. When I
mean you no harm?" "This isn't an idle threat," she said in a steely tone.
His
expression turned impatient, as if he couldn't understand
where her caution was coming from. "I will shoot you if you
come closer." He came closer. So she shot him in the heart. Or four
inches
to the right, having decided at the last second to vary
her
aim by a degree. The arrow landed in his solid chest, drilling through his
muscles until only the flights were visible. "Bluidy
hell,
woman!" he bellowed, scowling down at his chest. In a placid tone, she reminded him, "I told you not to
come
closer." He fisted the flights, trying to draw the arrow free, but
those barbs made it impossible. Reaching around
awkwardly,
he grated, "Help me get this thing loose!" She blinked up at him. "I put the arrows in. I don't take them
out." His chin jutted. "You do with me." The corners of her lips quirked, surprising her. What a wild, mad Lykae.
She schooled her features. "Why would I ever?" "Because, Valkyrie"—he started for her again, apparently
planning to ignore the arrow in his chest—"by the close
of
this night we'll be sharing a bed, and you'll feel
foolish
to have shot up your bedmate." With a sigh, she let sail another arrow. "Oh, dear, how
foolish of me.
You
were saying?" He continued closer. "When I set to kissing those pouting
lips of yours—" Another arrow sunk into his chest. Now three wounds marred his gorgeous body, three trails
of
blood tracking over the rises and falls of rock-hard
muscle.
Gritting his teeth, he said, "This hurts like hell, lass,
but it's heartening." "How do you figure?" "At fifty times the distance, you dispatched that kobold
with three arrows to the neck. I've earned a trio to the
chest. Seems you slapped him while you're tickling me.
You
doona want to kill me, which is a good sign. Maybe this
is
your way of flirting?" She sobered once more, reality washing over her. "I'm not
flirting—trust me, you'd know." Because disaster would
be
imminent. Damn it, he kept coming for her. "If you're truly a hunter, you will no' leave a wolf to
suffer. I'll bet you usually shoot to kill—no' merely to
torment." He had a point. It wasn't in her nature to torture a
being.
Unless they had it coming. "Oh, very well. If I help you
remove them, will you leave me alone?" "Leave you alone? I'd rather bluidy wear them, Valkyrie." With that, he slammed his fist against the end of the
first
arrow, sending the shaft jutting farther out his back. He
reached behind him, now able to just snag the tip.
Clenching
his jaw, he threaded the arrow through his chest, the
flights disappearing beneath the surface of his skin as
he
pulled it out from his back. While she gaped at his resilience, he cast the bloody
arrow
aside, then started on the next, repeating the process.
With
each one, the muscles in his body went tense; once the
arrow
was freed, he groaned and relaxed—somewhat. Almost as if
he'd taken sexual release but wasn't sated. A part of her was flattered that he'd rather go through
this than receive her help. She could've snapped the ends, allowing him to pull them
forward, but instead he withstood this pain—because he
didn't want to leave her alone? His strength amazed her, his fortitude imposing. That
awareness returned, and her skin pricked in the clammy
night
air. When he began removing the last arrow, he advanced on her
once more, tearing it free as he stalked closer, barely
giving a wince, that determined mien never faltering. She took a step back, debated using her one remaining
arrow
to put him down. She couldn't kill him, but she could
slow
him with a shot between the eyes. "I believe I've earned the right to stay—as well as a
kiss
from you." She made a sound of frustration. "As if you'd be happy
with
a kiss? You expect to have sex with me and it simply will
not happen—" "But you want it to, do you no'?" To have him take her here, hot and sweaty in the swamp?
She
swallowed. He was a Lykae—he'd want her on her hands and
knees . . . Her heart sped up at the thought, but she
shook
her head stubbornly. "Of course not! Understand me,
MacRieve, I'm a Valkyrie. I'm not bound by your . . .
animalistic needs." His voice a low rasp, he said, "After one night with me,
Lousha, you will
be."
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