Chapter 2
TWO
Adam Devlin, aka the Devil.
That was who Vincent—Paris’s power-hungry father who’d eventually introduced himself—had commanded Icarus to seduce.
To what end, Icarus hadn’t asked. Not like he had a choice.
Once they’d given him his “mission” and made clear what would happen to Icarus if he failed, Vincent and his warlock, Atlas, had fizzled into thin air.
Five minutes later, so had the cuffs. Five seconds after that, Icarus had freed his cock from the cage, removed the plug, and chucked both toys out the open window.
Shame, as they’d been personal favorites, but he could never trust them again.
Hours later, lurking in the shadows of a crowded club, Icarus thought the same about the human sitting by himself at the end of the bar.
He could never trust someone that good-looking, who sat that eerily still, and who went by the moniker the Devil.
Six feet, broad shoulders, fit build. Not as fit as Icarus, but not everyone was frozen in time at twenty-five.
Not everyone was in peak physical condition in their twenties either.
Something about Adam Devlin made Icarus think he was far more dangerous in what looked like his forties than he would’ve been in his younger years.
Maybe it was the dark hair and beard flecked with silver, or the peaks and valleys of his long, sharp face, or his pale weathered skin, or the blue-gray eyes that never stopped surveying his surroundings, even as he lifted a glass of amber liquid to his lips.
Barrel-aged whiskey.
Icarus had tasted it once on the lips of a ridiculously wealthy, seriously buttoned-up pack leader who occasionally liked to take a walk on the wild side.
Warm and spicy with hints of oak and vanilla.
Flavors derived from natural resources that didn’t exist in abundance anymore—precious, expensive commodities.
Only the rich and powerful were able to afford vintage bottles or the sky-high price tag of a single shot in a place like Club Sutro.
Icarus bet on both about the Devil—rich and powerful.
A rival of Vincent, who Icarus was beginning to understand was rich and powerful too, especially to have a warlock in his thrall.
Of course the internet was scrubbed clean of their identities—Adam, Vincent, Atlas, and Paris, all of them erased persons—rich-and-powerful clue number whatever count Icarus was up to.
He probably should have known better, probably should have kept an ear closer to the ground of Yerba Buena, especially where his dealers and clients were concerned, but staying oblivious was generally better in his line of work.
The performance was easier when his sole focus was seducing his mark and keeping his own secrets.
Tonight’s performance was going to be the opposite of easy. “The show of your life,” Vincent had said. And the curtain continued to rise higher with each sip of whiskey Adam took, until the drink was all but gone and the stage lights were shining bright.
Showtime.
Icarus cinched his corset around his bare torso, tugged up his sheer black gauntlets, checked his garters were secure, and finger combed his hair, making sure his magenta strands were spiked to maximum height.
He might have been a fuckup in every other aspect of his life, but in this one area, he was in control.
He was the best. As if this was what he’d been born for—turned for.
He relished the rare slice of confidence.
Emerging from the shadows, he sauntered across the club at human speed, his stilettos clicking on the cement floor, his lace garters and nylon stockings brushing with each step.
Every paranormal in the club could hear his approach and how, after two steps, Icarus adjusted his gait so his steps were in time with the Devil’s heartbeat.
On the hunt, no other paranormal in the club would interrupt him.
Not unless they wanted their heart torn from their chest or their jugular ripped from their throat.
Adam, however, shouldn’t have been able to hear him, not over the thumping club music.
Shouldn’t have been able to sense him at all, Icarus approaching from his blind spot, but the human’s frame stiffened with awareness.
Maybe not completely human. Adam whipped his face around, glaring over his shoulder.
Storm clouds gathered in his steely gaze, a back-off warning aimed squarely in Icarus’s direction.
Icarus didn’t falter; he didn’t scare that easily.
He swayed his hips as he closed the distance between them, sidling up to the bar beside Adam.
“I’d offer to buy you another”—he ran a black-painted fingernail along the rim of the glass—“but even I don’t have whiskey-kind-of-money, and I’m the best courtesan here. ”
The Devil shifted on his stool as if to leave. “Not interested.”
“Yes, you are.” Icarus propped a foot on the bottom rung of Adam’s stool, planted a hand on his bent knee, and boxed Adam in. “If you weren’t, you would have ignored my approach.”
“You’re new here.”
“Nine months or so, up from Portola.” A practiced line. Never mind the decades between when he’d left Portola the first time and arrived in Yerba Buena.
“Which is why you don’t know.” Adam’s gaze darted past Icarus, sweeping the club again—along the wall of windows, the actual stage, the crowd, the exits—before landing back on him, impatient and unamused. “I used to be a cop. Not my instinct to ignore danger at my back.”
Icarus didn’t think that was Adam’s only instinct at work.
He went to work on another, widening his stance and giving Adam a bird’s-eye view of everything being offered.
The skimpy boy shorts beneath his garters did little to hide his package.
Intentionally. “The only danger you’re in is missing out on the best night of your life if you leave here without me. ”
Adam didn’t take the bait. He lifted a hip, withdrew his wallet, and pulled out two bills. “I already had the best night of my life. Ten years ago.” He slipped the bills under the glass, then tucked his wallet away. “Just here to commemorate it and move on. Same as every October first.”
A hole opened in Icarus’s chest, dark and fathomless, the sadness and loss in Adam’s voice a wrecking ball like Icarus had only experienced one other time in his life: the day he’d been turned, which was why he’d never turned anyone himself.
He couldn’t bear to be the cause of that feeling.
Couldn’t bear it now for Adam either. He lifted a hand, ignoring Adam’s flinch and the gun he’d glimpsed on the Devil’s hip, and cupped his cheek.
It was warm despite the gray clouds that hung around the man.
“I can make you forget it. For a night.” His own instincts—beyond mere self-preservation—demanded it.
Gray gave way to blue, a deep sad shade that reminded Icarus of Picasso’s Blue Period. “I don’t want to forget it,” Adam said. “I can’t.”
“Relive it, then?”
Adam’s bitter laugh made ragged the edges of the hole his earlier words had torn open in Icarus’s chest. “You’d end up dead.”
He already was, but Adam’s instincts hadn’t caught on to that detail.
Hadn’t caught on to the fact that the opposite of his words was doubly true.
If Icarus didn’t succeed in seducing him, Icarus would be dead.
For good this time. He teased the corner of Adam’s mouth with his thumb. “Risk I’d be willing to take.”
Faster than he should have been able, Adam clasped his wrist. To yank it down and push him away, Icarus expected—but Adam did the unexpected. He pulled Icarus closer and swiped his tongue over his own bottom lip, the tip brushing the pad of Icarus’s thumb. “Could I even afford you?”
Icarus bit back his gasp—surprise, victory, and lust all warring for a voice. Any of which, if spoken, would crater the mission.
The mission.
“If you can afford that whiskey”—he flicked his gaze to the glass—“you can afford me.”
A shaky breath coasted over Icarus’s palm, and Adam’s gaze finally drifted down, taking in all of Icarus.
His pulse sped, a blush streaked across his high cheekbones, and when he lifted his eyes back to Icarus’s, a lake of fire stared back at him.
The same fire that roared through Icarus, unlike anything he’d ever experienced. “Where—”
A phone rang, shattering the moment. A single blink and Adam disappeared, retreating into his shell, banking the heat as the storm clouds returned. The Devil tiptoed back under his skin, and he released Icarus’s wrist, shifted away, and pulled out his phone. “Devlin.”
The call lasted less than a minute, and when it was over, the Devil slid off his stool without another word. Without another look. Without the slightest clue that he’d just sentenced Icarus to death.