CHAPTER TEN

Lincoln awoke to the sound of scraping at his front door.

He sat upright in bed, sheets falling to his waist. His chest was slicked with sweat. His heart beat a panicked tattoo inside his ribcage, as if trying to crawl up his throat and escape through his mouth.

Lincoln had been dreaming. He’d had visions of gaping pits, like wounds carved into the earth, and they had bled fire as lost souls writhed inside. The Devil had been waiting for him on the brink of the pits. She had beckoned to him with black fingernails and a blood-red smile.

Be with me , she said. Let me drink you .

He had railed against her, screamed that she needed to stay away. The angel would kill him. He might kill them both.

But she enveloped him in her arms anyway. It was sinful bliss. The kind of ecstasy no man was meant to know. Something had been watching their bodies unite, too—something darker than the night and taller than the deepest canyons.

Another scrape at his door.

Lincoln shoved his hat off of the alarm clock, which he used to dim the glow at night. Three o’clock in the morning—still almost two hours from sunrise.

He had worked into the late hours of the night after Orpheus left the sheriff’s office. He had been trying to look at the case from a new angle—one that didn’t involve werewolves—and kept finding himself arriving at the same conclusions. Those bodies had been eaten. There were tooth marks on the bones. It had to be werewolves, no matter what the angel said.

Lincoln had only surrendered to sleep an hour earlier, and it had been the longest, nightmarish hour of sleep in his life. It felt like he had been in Hell for eternities.

Somehow, he knew that the scraping at his door was the Devil herself again.

He pushed the sheets aside, grabbed his firearm from the safe—he had forgotten to lock it the night before—and loaded it as he approached his front door. His skin burned like the fires of Hell. He paused to jack up his air conditioner, even though it was already sixty-eight degrees. It was hot, too hot.

Easing the curtains aside, he peered through the window.

And then he flung the door open with a curse.

Elise was collapsed on his doorstep. At least, he thought it had to be Elise. He couldn’t think of any other woman with black hair and black eyes that would visit him at three o’clock in the morning. But all of her sensual confidence was absent. She was drenched in blood. Vomit was puddled next to her. She reached for him with black-nailed hands, but not for sex.

“Help,” Elise croaked. Her voice bubbled in her throat.

“Mother of God,” Lincoln said.

Orpheus had said that there would be consequences if Lincoln touched her again. If he’d had an ounce of sense, he would have shut the door. But as grave as Orpheus’s threats had seemed earlier that day, they were meaningless now with an injured woman on his doorstep. Lincoln had joined the sheriff’s department to save people. To help the folks that needed salvation. And here was the neediest soul of all, begging him for help.

He gathered her into his arms. She was even lighter than she looked, as if hollow-boned.

Lincoln glanced around at the other duplexes. There was no motion. That didn’t mean that nobody was watching.

He stepped inside and bumped the door shut with his hip.



Lincoln said a prayer as he ran the bath. The water heater was ancient; it took forever to reach a steaming temperature. He moistened a sponge and offered it to Elise. She shivered when she curled her fingers around it, though the water was scalding.

“What happened to you?” he asked.

Elise tried to respond. He saw her lips and tongue move, but only a croak escaped her mouth. When she tipped her head back, he saw why—her throat was destroyed. It was the kind of injury that he had seen on three of the bodies in the morgue. The kind of injury that nobody should have been able to walk away from.

Lincoln was no pussy. He had experienced multiple compound fractures in his college football days, sustained a concussion, and watched one player knock out all of his teeth during training. But the sight of Elise trying to draw breaths through the flaps of skin at her throat made him feel faint.

“Jesus,” he whispered.

She gave him a hard look, as if to say, Really? Apparently, she didn’t like any of his favorite religious epithets.

“Werewolf?” Lincoln asked.

She nodded.

He knew it. But the surge of victory he felt was bittersweet.

“I’m calling an ambulance,” Lincoln said, standing. Elise caught his pajamas by the waist and tugged him down, shaking her head. “You’re going to die without medical attention.” Frankly, it was shocking that she wasn’t dead already.

She shook her head again. Pointed at the door.

He frowned. “I don’t understand.”

Elise pointed more insistently, and he realized that she was indicating the light switch, not the door. His duplex had been furnished to Mrs. Kitteridge’s taste, which happened to include a large vanity in the bathroom, with five bright bulbs the size of his fist.

She had been trying to avoid sunlight all day. Could the vanity’s lights be hurting her, too?

Lincoln flipped the switch.

It was unsettling to sit on the floor between a bleeding woman and his still-running bathtub without any lights. Her pale flesh gleamed through the streaks of blood, as if she glowed internally.

“Is that better?” he asked.

She nodded. One-handed, she unbuckled her spine sheath, dropped the falchion to the floor, and handed him the sponge.

Lincoln turned to wet it down again. When he turned back, Elise was stripping off her shirt.

He couldn’t see the mess of injuries in the darkness—only the outline of a black bra, the translucent globes of her breasts, the curve of her undamaged face.

He’d been to a strip club for a bachelor party, once. The moron had been marrying at twenty-one years old, and Bud was still so new to legal drinking that he had wanted to get wasted while coked-out whores rubbed against him. The girls had fine bodies, even finer than some of Lincoln’s cheerleader girlfriends. The silicone tits and surgically flattened stomachs had reset Lincoln’s standards for female perfection.

Those standards were getting reset again. There was nothing plastic about Elise’s body. She was silken flesh over tight muscle. She had to be missing ribs to have a waist that tiny. The gashes on her stomach almost looked like a strange gray tattoo that drew his gaze from her navel to her hips.

She dropped her shirt in his trash can. Pale fingers flashed as she popped the button of her jeans open. She had taken off one of her gloves, but left the other in place.

“Bath,” she said. Her voice was already clearer than before. “Help.”

Lincoln shut his eyes and said a prayer, and then another, to be sure. He did it silently. He didn’t want to tolerate Elise’s pitying looks, as if she knew something about his prayers that he didn’t.

He helped her to her feet, letting Elise cling to him as she shimmied out of her damaged jeans. Soon, she stood in front of him wearing nothing but her underwear: black boy shorts and a bandeau bra. Not exactly lingerie. But Lincoln’s blood burned, and he was all too aware of the place that her hands rested on his biceps.

The thought of shoving her bra over her breasts, watching them bounce free of the spandex, was all-consuming. He wanted to taste them. Just thinking about it made him smell sulfur again, the way he had in the dream.

“Camera,” she said. “Quickly.”

He blinked, snapping out of his fantasies. “Miss Kavanagh…”

“Elise.”

It was kind of ridiculous to call a woman by her last name when she was naked in his bathroom. But Lincoln needed every last barrier between them that he could manage. “Why do you want a camera?”

“Jaw radius,” she said, voice breaking on the second word.

Realization dawned over him. She had werewolf bite wounds on her throat and arms. She wanted photographic evidence to compare her injuries to those on the bodies in the morgue.

Lincoln was obsessing over what she would look like without the bra, and she was thinking about the case.

“Quickly,” she said again. “I’m healing.”

He set her on the edge of the tub and grabbed supplies: his long-neglected digital camera, fresh batteries, and a pen. He couldn’t find a ruler, so that would have to do for scaling the wounds.

When he returned to the dark bathroom, Elise had lowered herself into the water, underwear and glove and all, with her arms propped on either side of the tub.

“I have to use flash,” he said, sliding batteries into the camera. “It’s too dark otherwise.”

She nodded, consenting wordlessly.

Elise held the pen beside the bite wound on her bicep as he took pictures from every angle. The blood was quickly washing away, forming billowing clouds in the water, but the wounds looked so much worse in the brief flares of light. She had been shredded. Her skin was like tissue paper. And the blood itself…

Is that blood?” Lincoln asked.

Elise tipped her jaw back and held the pen beside her neck.

“Kind of,” she croaked.

“How can it be kind of blood?”

“Long story.”

Lincoln took a photo of the damage at her throat. It was already knitting together, but the tooth punctures were still clear.

He sat back on his heels to go through the pictures. From the first photo to the last, there was noticeable healing.

“You didn’t need my help to survive, did you?” he asked.

“No,” Elise said. “But I needed you to take pictures.”

She wiped at her arm with the sponge. The worst of the bite was already healed. Only the imprint of teeth remained.

Lincoln couldn’t help but watch as she sponged off her legs, lifting them from the water one by one to wash away the kind-of-blood. It didn’t tint the water pink. It slicked the surface, more like amber-colored oil.

“Thank you,” she said, drawing his gaze back to her face. Elise was wiping her partially-healed throat clean. There was still the circle of tooth marks on either side of her neck, but everything else had regrown as soon as she washed the wounds.

Lincoln cleared his throat. “I’ll get you a towel.”

He left fresh linens for her on the counter, then returned to his bedroom, pacing from the window to the door and back again.

Elise Kavanagh’s soul was damned. Her body was sin. The angel was right—Lincoln should have stayed far, far away.

His door creaked open.

Elise stood in the hall, toweling off her hair. It didn’t look wet to him. It was the same as always: a silky black sheet that fell straight to her waist, framing pale shoulders. She was still wearing only her underwear, and there was no hint of self-consciousness in her expression. She was aware of her perfection, and without shame.

Lincoln’s dream swam to the surface.

Let me drink you , she had said, red lips curved into a smile.

In reality, Elise didn’t say anything nearly so seductive. “I’ll need to borrow a computer. I want to send the photos to my friends in Vegas.”

She may have been the Devil, but she sure was focused. Probably would have been a good cop in another life. “Sure. Spare bedroom,” he said, handing her the camera.

Their fingers brushed. Elise didn’t pull away.

Orpheus owned Lincoln’s soul, as surely as Hell owned Elise’s soul. Standing with her there, in that moment, was like dancing with fire. He was all but begging to be burned.

His mouth operated independently of his brain.

“I have pie,” Lincoln said.

Elise lifted her eyebrows. “Pie.”

“Yes, ma’am. Picked one up at Poppy’s over the weekend. It’s not as good when it’s not fresh, but…”

“Cherry?” she asked. The word was filthy on her lips.

Lincoln swallowed. “Yes, ma’am.”

She took the camera from him, stepping back. A smile lingered on her lips. “I would love a bite of your pie, Lincoln.”



Where technology was concerned, Lincoln didn’t seem to have joined the twenty-first century. A manual typewriter dominated the center of his desk. There was a computer to the left, which looked like it hadn’t been turned on in months—maybe years—and it booted up to a decade-old operating system. Elise had to play around with it for a few minutes to figure out how to connect the camera, since it didn’t wirelessly detect the device.

Once she got it downloading, she opened the email client and drafted a message to McIntyre.

Found the werewolves. There’s an entire pack. No deaths yet. Send money.

Elise attached the photos and sent it.

On impulse, she turned the camera around, snapping another photo of herself. The instant of light was like a jolt of electricity. Then she turned the camera around to look at the picture she had taken.

There was a crucifix on the wall behind her. He had one in every single room. Her gaze tracked from the cross to the imprint of teeth still ringing her neck, unhealed.

Worry crept over her.

“Why aren’t I healing?” she whispered, paging back through the other photos.

The places she had ripped—those were healed. But the direct points of contact between Rylie’s teeth and her skin had not.

Elise had absorbed a lot of damage in her years as a demon. Only one wound had ever scarred, even temporarily. It had been inflicted by the iron chain of a basandere—a Basque spirit—that had taken up residence in the Las Vegas sewers. He had brought several crates of infernal drugs along with him. When Elise attempted to clean him out, he had tried to choke her to death.

The bruises from the chain had lasted for an entire day, which was about twelve hours longer than any injury had lasted before. Elise had assumed that it was some special basandere skill. They were ancient creatures, part of the fabric of the earth, and there was no telling how her infernal body would react to mortal spirits. But here she was again, failing to heal from a wound.

She felt strangely fragile. Like she might rip open at the bite marks and vanish forever.

“I don’t know if you like it heated or cold, so I’ve got one of each,” Lincoln said, entering the room with two individual plates of Poppy’s fine cherry pie.

Elise turned the camera off and set it on the desk.

“Which one do you prefer?” she asked, watching him walk toward her. He had put on a muscle-hugging white tee, which left nothing to the imagination. Lincoln set the plates on the desk. He was sweating enough to dampen the shoulders of his shirt, and it filled the air with the musk of his scent.

“Hot, with ice cream melting on top,” he said, with a husky edge to his voice. He shoved the hot plate toward her. “Try it.”

Elise picked up a fork, weighing it in her fingers, considering the four equal tines. There was silver in the alloy. She thought about driving it through Rylie’s eye socket.

Lincoln watched her expectantly as he dug into his own pie, waiting for her to eat. She had agreed to take a piece, but now that it was sitting in front of her, she couldn’t bring herself to take a bite. She set the fork down and pushed the plate away.

“Nice typewriter,” Elise said, nodding at his desk.

“The power’s not good in Northgate. I’ve still got to get work done during outages. The department’s standard forms don’t fit in a printer anyway.”

“Have you heard of a laptop? They work when the power fails.”

“It’s not nearly as charming,” Lincoln said. “Something wrong with your pie?”

“I still don’t like it,” Elise said.

His mouth slanted with mock disapproval. “Just when I was starting to like you.”

She stood, and they were close—too close. She could feel the heat radiating from his skin. Elise traced her fingers through his short bangs, over the line of hair behind his ear, the stubble on the back of his neck.

“Miss Kavanagh,” he began.

“I have a present for you,” she said. “In the pocket of my pants. Twelve silver bullets. Hopefully, enough for you to kill a couple of werewolves. And, hopefully, you won’t ever need them.”

He looked surprised. “Thank you.”

“No problem. I’ll need to borrow clothing from you until stores open tomorrow. Do you have any female friends or sisters?” Elise lifted an eyebrow. “A girlfriend?”

“No girlfriend.” Lincoln coughed. “Sister’s at college, and I wouldn’t feel right asking Sheriff Dickerson to borrow her jeans. You know? But you can borrow anything I have.”

“I already lost one of your sweaters.”

“I have more,” he said.

Elise took the plate from his hands—he had already eaten the entire slice—and set it aside. She reached into the neck of his shirt, pulling out the crucifix. His skin burned her knuckles.

“Thanks for your help tonight, deputy,” she said. “You’re a good Christian.”

No modesty in his eyes. Only pride. “I try my best, ma’am.”

But when she turned away, Lincoln’s fingers brushed down her spine, and it wasn’t an innocent Christian touch. Elise closed her eyes, savoring the shiver that rippled across her skin.

“What are these?” he asked in a low voice.

It took Elise a moment to realize what he was talking about. She twisted around to look at her lower back in the mirror on his wall.

There were rows of tiny brands tattooed onto her back, all the way down to her thighs. They had been crimson-black when she was first marked, but the ink hadn’t lasted; nothing but ghostly white scars remained.

Elise remembered having those marks tattooed on her with the same unfortunate clarity that she remembered everything else. The needle had been excruciatingly painful. Its sting had aroused her in more ways than one—her adrenaline, her anger, her lust.

Had it been the pain that she had reacted to, or the man doing the tattooing? Was Elise so fucked up that she could only enjoy pleasure when it came with torture?

Everything with James had been torture. She knew that now.

Elise didn’t want to think about him. She didn’t want to feel guilty for yearning for Deputy Marshall’s touch. She didn’t want her future ruined by James.

She turned in Lincoln’s arms, pressed close to his chest.

“I have more scars than you could possibly see, deputy,” Elise said, snaking an arm around the back of his neck, brushing his stubble again.

His hazel eyes—so human, so innocent—were flooded with a very human emotion. He felt the exact same need that crawled over her now. “What made you like this?” Lincoln asked, his hands hot on her waist.

Simple question, with such a complicated answer.

Yatam, father of all demons.

Metaraon, the Voice of God.

Adam, the first man.

Isaac, my father.

James Faulkner, my betrayer.

Lincoln didn’t know about the past that Elise was always trying to escape, and she wasn’t about to tell him. It had nothing to do with shame. She had told McIntyre and Anthony much of the truth, and admitted the rest to Leticia—the kinds of things that a woman could only tell another woman.

No, Elise didn’t trust Lincoln. With her wounds? Yes. But with her past…no. He was responsible for that email with her picture. He had an entire town keeping an eye on her. She didn’t trust that he didn’t have other secrets, too.

“Nothing made me. I was born for sin and damned from the beginning,” she said, pressing her hips to his. He was already aroused, rigid between them.

“I have faith, Miss Kavanagh,” he said. “I believe anyone can be saved. God loves us all.”

“Elise,” she corrected, yet again. “And I used to have faith, too.”

“I’ve still got enough for the both of us.”

He really seemed to think that she could be saved, but that was because he didn’t know what Elise had done. He didn’t know that there was no salvation for anyone, anywhere—not a Godslayer, and not a crooked deputy from small-town Pennsylvania.

Elise wrapped a finger in the chain that held his crucifix.

“Then save me,” she said, pushing Lincoln back, forcing him to sit on the desk.

She stepped close, thighs on either side of his, fitting their bodies together. He was shorter than James, more muscular. He smelled of aftershave and cherry pie. Elise slanted her mouth against his, one hand on his cross and one at the back of his head, and she tasted the mortality on his tongue.

Elise clung to her corporeal form as she explored his mouth. Her every instinct wanted to pour inside of him, possessing Lincoln from the inside out. She settled for grinding her hips against his. They were separated only by two thin layers of clothing, but she made sure that he felt it.

His breaths came choppy and hot on her neck. Aroused, afraid—it was all the same. He was right to fear her.

Elise’s fingers slipped down his abs, finding their way into the waistband of his sweats. And when she circled her bare fingers around him, his gasp was delicious. Caught somewhere between pain and rapture.

Lincoln’s hand cupped the back of her neck. His thumb brushed the bites.

There was the pain. It made her skin prickle with gooseflesh.

Elise groaned.

He pulled his hands away.

“Do it again, harder,” she whispered into his mouth, stroking him slowly, up and down, enjoying the tension in his body.

But he pulled back to stare at her with heavy-lidded eyes. “I’m not going to hurt you.”

“Do it,” Elise insisted, grabbing his wrist, pressing his hand to her throat.

But Lincoln only trailed his fingers down her ribs, pulled her tighter against him, pressed his manhood between her legs.

“Not like that,” he said. “I don’t hurt women.”

Frustration rose in her, heady as the arousal. “It’s not that kind of pain.”

“No,” Lincoln said, and he was tugging on her underwear, pushing it down her legs, baring her to the warm Pennsylvania air.

Elise shoved him onto the desk, flattening him beside the ancient computer monitor. She flowed up his body. Flipped her hair so that it hung over her shoulders, a veil of darkness separating them from the world.

“Do you want me to bleed you?” Elise asked, digging a fingernail into his jugular.

Lincoln looked shocked. And then a muscle in his cheek twitched, because her hips were moving again, and she was removing his ability to respond with the friction between their bodies. His hands tightened on her hips, not hard enough to bruise.

He opened his mouth to respond, but the words never came out.

The office window shattered.

Elise was off of Lincoln in a flash, all the way across the room, in the shadows of the corner. Broken glass dotted the carpet. She lifted her fists, prepared to face an attack.

But nothing jumped through the broken window. The early morning air was silent, inside and out, and Elise and Lincoln were still alone.

The deputy pushed himself to a seated position. He was panting hard, still coming down off of the arousal. “What just happened?” he asked, trying to stand. His knees buckled under him.

Elise stepped up to the window. Hints of paler blue clung to the trees—the first hints of dawn. The stars and full moon were still brilliantly bright. If there was someone outside in the trees, they were beyond her vision.

“I think we’re okay,” Elise said, turning back to Lincoln.

He stooped to pick through the glass. “What’s this?”

Lincoln held a heavy gold band in one hand. It was a ring. To mundane eyes, it would have looked like plain men’s jewelry. To Elise, it sparked with magic.

She looked down at her right hand. There was a matching band on her middle finger, a little slenderer, but carved with the same delicate lines.

Her heart began to pound.

Elise looked out the window again, searching for a familiar face—the face of a man she had told to leave her alone, never speak to her again. The man who had tattooed her back, stolen her heart, and scarred her soul permanently with his lies.

But James Faulkner wasn’t there.

Magic After Dark Boxed Set
cover1.html
text00000.html
text00001.html
text00002.html
text00003.html
text00004.html
text00005.html
text00006.html
text00007.html
text00008.html
text00009.html
text00010.html
text00011.html
text00012.html
text00013.html
text00014.html
text00015.html
text00016.html
text00017.html
text00018.html
text00019.html
text00020.html
text00021.html
text00022.html
text00023.html
text00024.html
text00025.html
text00026.html
text00027.html
text00028.html
text00029.html
text00030.html
text00031.html
text00032.html
text00033.html
text00034.html
text00035.html
text00036.html
text00037.html
text00038.html
text00039.html
text00040.html
text00041.html
text00042.html
text00043.html
text00044.html
text00045.html
text00046.html
text00047.html
text00048.html
text00049.html
text00050.html
text00051.html
text00052.html
text00053.html
text00054.html
text00055.html
text00056.html
text00057.html
text00058.html
text00059.html
text00060.html
text00061.html
text00062.html
text00063.html
text00064.html
text00065.html
text00066.html
text00067.html
text00068.html
text00069.html
text00070.html
text00071.html
text00072.html
text00073.html
text00074.html
text00075.html
text00076.html
text00077.html
text00078.html
text00079.html
text00080.html
text00081.html
text00082.html
text00083.html
text00084.html
text00085.html
text00086.html
text00087.html
text00088.html
text00089.html
text00090.html
text00091.html
text00092.html
text00093.html
text00094.html
text00095.html
text00096.html
text00097.html
text00098.html
text00099.html
text00100.html
text00101.html
text00102.html
text00103.html
text00104.html
text00105.html
text00106.html
text00107.html
text00108.html
text00109.html
text00110.html
text00111.html
text00112.html
text00113.html
text00114.html
text00115.html
text00116.html
text00117.html
text00118.html
text00119.html
text00120.html
text00121.html
text00122.html
text00123.html
text00124.html
text00125.html
text00126.html
text00127.html
text00128.html
text00129.html
text00130.html
text00131.html
text00132.html
text00133.html
text00134.html
text00135.html
text00136.html
text00137.html
text00138.html
text00139.html
text00140.html
text00141.html
text00142.html
text00143.html
text00144.html
text00145.html
text00146.html
text00147.html
text00148.html
text00149.html
text00150.html
text00151.html
text00152.html
text00153.html
text00154.html
text00155.html
text00156.html
text00157.html
text00158.html
text00159.html
text00160.html
text00161.html
text00162.html
text00163.html
text00164.html
text00165.html
text00166.html
text00167.html
text00168.html
text00169.html
text00170.html
text00171.html
text00172.html
text00173.html
text00174.html
text00175.html
text00176.html
text00177.html
text00178.html
text00179.html
text00180.html
text00181.html
text00182.html
text00183.html
text00184.html
text00185.html
text00186.html
text00187.html
text00188.html
text00189.html
text00190.html
text00191.html
text00192.html
text00193.html
text00194.html
text00195.html
text00196.html
text00197.html
text00198.html
text00199.html
text00200.html
text00201.html
text00202.html
text00203.html
text00204.html
text00205.html
text00206.html
text00207.html
text00208.html
text00209.html
text00210.html
text00211.html
text00212.html
text00213.html
text00214.html
text00215.html
text00216.html
text00217.html
text00218.html
text00219.html
text00220.html
text00221.html
text00222.html
text00223.html
text00224.html
text00225.html