Dreams of a Dark Warrior
“medicine” would make that impossible.
To be aroused by a revolting detrus? When nothing else could tempt his deadened, scarred body?
While others in the Order called the immortals
miscreats,
short for miscreations, Declan often used the term
detrus,
the coarsest word they had for them.
It meant “vilest abomination.”
That was how he saw them. How he’d always seen them, ever since he’d learned of their existence twenty years ago. …
As the Valkyrie covered blocks, several beings approached her. More witches tried to coax her to go out with them. Two pointed-eared females—likely more Valkyrie—twirled swords, looking like they were primed for a battle and inviting Regin to come along.
She turned them all down with a grin, which promptly faded as she moved on.
Even more beings avoided her. Declan noticed several large males striding in the opposite direction when she came into sight; all wore hats of some type. No doubt behorned demons.
The field notes in her dossier reported that she was notoriously hard on demons. Whereas she simply
ended
vampires.
When she paused to text something on her cell phone, he drew back behind the cover of a nearby building. Then she gazed up with a peculiar look of sadness. That expression didn’t fit her glowing, animated face, seeming as foreign as joy on a dying man’s visage.
She stowed her phone back on her belt, then crossed to a back alley behind a five-story hotel. Without warning, she leapt to a balcony on the fourth floor, easily jogging along the rail before scaling to the roof. There he saw her hunch down at the edge, her ears twitching once more as she searched for her prey.
A perfect killer.
If it weren’t for the Order, immortals would likely rule the earth.
Recently, several had made strikes against well-known human leaders around the world. His commander, Preston Webb, had told him, “Even the more moderate species are aggressing on us, son. Any tenuous truce has fallen by the wayside.”
There truly was to be war between the species. As ever, Webb was right—
Declan lost sight of her. He hastened around to the front of the building, then cased the next, but he didn’tsee her on any of the roofs. Where the hell was she? He tore up and down streets, head craning.
In the distance, he heard what sounded like an explosion. Seconds later, he got a call on his earpiece from the leader of his backup unit. When Declan answered, he heard a war zone on the other end.
Yelling. Gunfire. Was that groaning metal?
“Magister, the target…”
“You weren’t ordered to engage her!”
“Sir, she found us!”
His men were the prey. The example killing.
Fuck!
He raced toward the sounds, turning a corner. He spotted her maybe half a mile away along a riverside quay downtown.
Never had he seen anything like the scene there.
One of their three black vans was on the bank of the river, upended on its grill. A second lay on its side in the street, with claw marks carved down its length. Bodies of slain soldiers sprawled all around it.
Declan sprinted, unable to reach her before she struck out, swirling with those swords like a tornado, slicing down men with unfathomable speed.
A dozen more soldiers had opened fire on her with their laserlike charge throwers. But those powerful weapons weren’t slowing her.
Hair whipping all around her face, she took the electricity, seeming to consume it. Lips curling, she stabbed her swords back into their sheaths and opened her arms wide.
Her lids briefly slid shut in pleasure.
As he ran, he inexplicably shuddered in reaction.Thoughts arose that never should, impulses long denied. …
“That all you got, muthafuckas?”
She glowed brighter, illuminating the street. “I
like
electricity, you dumbasses! Hit me with another.”
They did. She sucked it in. The streetlights surrounding her began to flare from her radiant energy.
“Know what else? I’m a freaking conduit.” She caught a jolt in one hand, and channeled it back with her other. She hit one soldier, exploding him into the air, killing him instantly.
Rage erupted within Declan. The strength and speed he fought so hard to hide rose to the fore. Blood pumped to his muscles, his thoughts dimming. Like a blur, he closed in on her, unsheathing his sword as he ran.
“You want some of this?” She turned to another soldier, shooting again. “How ’bout you?” And again.
Declan stole behind her, wrapping one arm around her neck to yank her back
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