Chapter Eighteen

Chapter

Eighteen

Hawkyn flashed them both to her house, but he kept

her close as he cleared the place to make sure there were no signs that Drayger

had set a trap or was hiding in a closet. Once Hawkyn gave the all-clear, she

nearly collapsed in relief.

It was good to be home. She was exhausted, mentally tied up

in knots, and she’d kill for a cup of chamomile tea.

“Are you hungry?” She headed for the kitchen, her stomach

rumbling. She’d missed breakfast, thanks to the fact that she’d suddenly become

pregnant and Primori, and the Memitim at the castle had kicked them out.

Nicely, but still.

Jordan had even given her a hug.

“Hungry? No. I can’t even think about eating right now. I

don’t like being out in the open like this.”

“You said it yourself. I have a guardian angel, right? So if Drayger shows up, won’t my new angel sense it?”

“Yes, but—” He flinched and looked down at his arm. For a

long moment, he simply stared.

“Hawkyn?” His silence was starting

to scare her. “What is it?”

“It’s Drayger.” His mouth curved slowly into a grim smile

that gave her chills. “He’s no longer Primori.”

She sucked in a startled breath. “Seriously? What...what

does that mean, exactly?”

“It means he’s no longer under angelic protection. Mine or

otherwise.”

Afraid to hope but hoping to no longer be afraid, she

studied every micro-expression on Hawkyn’s face for signs that there was a

catch to what he was saying. But his eyes glittered, his fangs gleamed, and he

was smiling like he’d won the lottery.

“So he can pay for what he’s done?”

He nodded. “We can alert the police.” His gaze turned dark

with bloodthirsty anticipation that sent a fresh wave

of chills across the surface of her skin. “Or I can kill him.”

Oh, yes. She wanted that. Holy shit, it frightened her how

much she wanted that. But she wasn’t Drayger’s only victim. There were a lot of

families out there who needed justice and closure.

As if Hawkyn sensed her inner turmoil, he folded her into

his arms.

“I’ll take care of it,” he murmured against her hair. “I’ll

make him feel everything he did to you and the others.”

“No,” she said, pulling back so she could see him. “He needs

to be caught. He needs to pay for what he’s done, but it needs to happen

through the human justice system.”

“But—”

“No.” She pressed her fingers to his lips, silencing him

when part of her really wanted him to convince her that his way, the deadly

way, would be better. “It’s for the families of his other victims. They need

closure. But he’ll pay the true price after he’s dead, won’t he?”

“Oh, yes.” A vengeful light glittered in his eyes. “He’s

evil, so he’ll go straight to my father’s realm. I’ll make sure he pays for all

eternity.”

She shivered.

“I’m sorry,” he said, regret turning his voice rough. “I

scared you.”

“Oh, no,” she whispered. “You turned me on.”

Hawkyn pegged her with an amused look. “In that case, before

we call 911, let me tell you what I did to a demon who I once caught breaking

into an orphanage...”

Hawkyn was going to be there when the police arrived

to arrest Drayger. They should be at his house at any

moment, and Hawk couldn’t wait. He just had to resist the urge to kill him

before the cops got there. If Aurora gave him the go ahead, he’d slaughter that

fucker in a heartbeat. Sure, killing a human was forbidden, but so was just about

everything he’d done since the moment he’d flashed

into the grocery store parking lot and found Drayger in the middle of an

attempted abduction.

Hawkyn was so over following the rules. If Aurora changed

her mind and wanted Drayger dead, the guy was going to die.

Unfortunately, she was adamant about letting the bastard

live long enough to pay for his crimes in jail, so both he and Aurora set wards

around her house, allowing him to leave for a few minutes without worrying.

Between the wards and her new guardian—whoever it was—she was as safe as could

be expected. He doubted he could have left her anyplace

safer, actually.

He kissed her, promising to be back within minutes. Without

his shadow wings, he had to manually engage the khote with a command,

and then he flashed inside Drayger’s living room. But before he’d fully

materialized, the stench of blood and terror stung his nostrils.

Something was wrong. Horribly wrong.

Cursing, he summoned a weapon to the ready, an electrical

shock that would stun anyone—or anything—he encountered.

Noises came from the back of the house...crying? He moved

down the hall, slowing at the trickle of blood that flowed from the master

bedroom.

Fuck. A sharp, piercing ache pounded in his chest. If

Drayger had slaughtered another female, Hawkyn would never forgive himself.

Steeling himself for the worst, he stepped inside the room.

Turned out that there was no way he

could have prepared himself for the bloodbath in front of him. The walls,

ceiling, furniture, everything was splattered—and it wasn’t just blood. Bits of

flesh, entrails, and even teeth had found their way into all

of the nooks and crannies.

And all of it belonged to Drayger. The leg on the bed. The

arm on the floor. The other arm hanging from the ceiling fan. Hawk didn’t want

to know where his head was.

Damn, this house was going to have to be torn down, because

no one was going to want to live here after these crime scene photos got out.

A noise startled him, and he spun, instinctively summoning a

scythe. A female, naked and covered in gore, huddled in the closet, one hand

pressed against a nasty gash in her thigh. She looked familiar, but why?

He stepped out of the khote and became fully

visible. She didn’t even look surprised. Her glazed eyes took him in with

wariness but not fear.

“Who are you?” She scurried out of the closet, putting more

space between them and moving closer to the door. “Are you going to kill me?”

“Kill you? What? No.” He spoke softly, afraid to spook her.

“I came here to make sure he didn’t hurt anyone else. Are you all right? Did he hurt you?”

Flexing her fingers like a cat, she growled, a deep, throaty

sound he wouldn’t have been surprised to hear from a tiger. “Not this time, he

didn’t.”

“So you did this?” When

she didn’t answer, he took a closer look at the carnage, and suddenly, her

mannerisms made sense, especially when matched with the claw and teeth marks on

the body parts and the ripped women’s clothes on the floor. “You’re a shifter.

Lion or tiger. Right?” Shifters often destroyed their clothing when they

morphed from human body to their animal form. At her continued silence, he

sighed. “Well, he deserved to die, so good job.”

He wholeheartedly approved of her brand of justice.

Hopefully Aurora wouldn’t be too disappointed, but he could, at least,

guarantee that the authorities learned the truth about Drayger. The photo album

of his victims sat on the dresser, obscene in its blatant spot out in the open,

and it wouldn’t be difficult for the cops to figure out where his dungeons were

once they knew what they were looking for.

The female’s voice trembled as she spoke. “You...you know

what he was?”

“I know far too much about what he was.” He frowned. “How do

you know? Who are you?”

She took the photo album off the dresser, handling it as if

it were a live grenade as she flipped it open and handed it to him. His gut

dropped to his feet at the pictures of a dead, dismembered woman who was the

spitting image of the female in front of him.

And now he knew why she looked familiar.

“Ah, shit,” he said roughly, slamming the book closed. “Was

Lexi your twin sister?”

“No,” she said, her voice a low, tortured growl. “I’m

Lexi. He tortured and killed me.” She grabbed one of Drayger’s green and yellow

Oregon Duck T-shirts off a hanger and slipped it on, covering herself all the

way to mid-thigh. “I had nine lives. I’m down to six.”

What the hell did someone say to that? He could only imagine

how much it would suck to live through three deaths and remember them. And she

had more to go. Poor female was going to need a lot of therapy.

Sirens sounded in the distance, growing louder.

“I’m sorry,” he said lamely. “But we’d better go. Can I take

you somewhere?”

Her eyes narrowed, skepticism creeping into her posture, and

he couldn’t blame her. “I don’t think so.”

“I’m an angel,” he said gently. “You can trust me. I can

take you almost anywhere you want to go.”

Her dubious snort was accompanied by further narrowing of

her eyes until they were little more than slits. “Angels kill my kind, and I’m

not ready to die again.”

“I’m not that kind of angel.” He wasn’t sure what kind of

angel he even was anymore. He might be no kind of angel soon enough.

But one thing he was sure of was that, angel or

not, he was going to be a fucking great father.

She gestured to the deep laceration in her leg. “Are you

familiar with Underworld General Hospital?”

“All too well,” he muttered. “Let’s go.”

The sirens became deafening as he reached for her hand, but

before he flashed them out of there, he saw movement out of the corner of his

eye. He whipped his head around so fast a human would

have suffered from whiplash. Drayger’s head, there it was, sticking out from

under the bed. And it was...collapsing.

Hawkyn’s gaze flicked from body part to body part. His arms,

legs, torso...all the parts were deflating like tires with no air.

“What’s going on?” Lexi stared at the scene in horror. “I

thought he was human.”

“I thought so too.” A sudden, terrifying thought popped into

his head, and as he watched Drayger’s remains become nothing but empty skins,

he understood what was happening. “Oh, shit,” he whispered. “Oh...fuck.”

“What?” Lexi tugged on his arm. “Tell me!”

“Drayger wasn’t human. He was a fucking bludgolem.”

“A what?”

He wracked his brain for information he’d stored away since

his first years of training, when he’d been required to learn about every type

of known demon. Bludgolems were rare, so rare he’d never seen one, nor heard of

anyone encountering one. But there were rumors. Lots of rumors.

“They’re like viruses. They infect hosts, usually children.

They spend years infecting the child’s mind, and they’re only released when the

host dies.”

“Released? So the bludgolem is

still alive?”

“And looking for a new host.”

“Another child?”

He shook his head. “According to legend, if they have

unfinished business, they’ll infect an adult, and they’ll take over, using the

person to finish whatever it is—” He broke off with a curse. “Aurora.”

“Who?”

He didn’t bother replying. He grabbed Lexi’s hand and

flashed to Underworld General, dropped her off in the parking lot, and flashed

back to Aurora’s house.

The screams reached his ears before he’d even fully

materialized.

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