Embraced By Darkness (Riley Jenson Guardian 5)
God, it felt good. Damned good.
"And who's going to do that, Patrin? You? Or will you run to Daddy for help like you always do?"
"Bitch, I don't need my father's help to take the likes of you. I never have."
"Which is why you're now on your back with a gun shoved into your throat, isn't it?" I said pleasantly.
He snarled and bucked, trying to throw me off. I gripped harder with my thighs, using more force than necessary. Indeed, more force than a wolf should have had. But then, I wasn't just wolf - and he, of all people, should have remembered that.
He swore at me, viciously and fluently. I ignored him, and glanced at the second wolf. He, too, was a red wolf, but from a different pack. His hair was so dark it almost looked black in the fast-disappearing light, and his eyes were golden.
"Please tell your employer if he doesn't remain still, I'm going to be forced to shoot something vital."
"I'm afraid I won't be able to let you do that." He was still using calm tones, and though there was tension to be seen in his lean body, the vibes he was throwing off were all cool confidence.
"And I'm afraid you won't stop me." I hesitated, glancing back at Patrin. "He didn't tell you, did he?"
"Tell me what?"
"That I'm a guardian." I glanced at the second wolf again. "I'm trained to track, fight, and kill vampires. Many of my kills have been several hundred years old, and far faster and stronger than you two ever could be."
Which was more than a slight fabrication of the truth, but neither of them would know that. Besides, I hardly think they'd believe me if I said I'd helped bring down a dark god, and that was nothing but the truth.
"No, he didn't tell me that. But I still can't let you shoot him. I have to try and stop you. You understand."
What I understood was that his calm demeanor suggested he was well trained, and probably a deadly shot. Patrin would only hire the best, after all. And as much as I would have loved to prove a point to these men, I'd really been shot at enough today.
So I eased the gun away from Patrin's neck, emptied the chamber, then pushed the weapon across the floor to the second man. "I actually have no plans to kill him today. Unless, of course, he refuses to answer my questions."
"Fair enough." The flick of movement had me tensing - and suddenly wondering if I'd misjudged him - but he was merely bending to retrieve his weapon. "I'm Kye, by the way."
"I gathered that." I looked down at Patrin again. "If I get off you, are you going to behave?"
"You're the one that attacked me" he all but spat.
"Nice change, huh?"
I climbed off him and stepped back. He got to his feet, rubbing his neck and glaring at Kye.
"So tell me, did that fucker you call Father arrange a hit on me?"
"No, though it's a damn good idea." He dug a handkerchief out of his suit pocket and dabbed rather uselessly at his bloody nose. "Why?"
"Because someone set up an ambush outside, complete with stiver bullets."
"Hence your rather dramatic entrance," Kye said, as he walked across to the window.
"Well, finding strangers sitting in my living room after a close brush with silver does make me a little wary." I looked at Patrin again. "And if you don't tell me why you're here, I might get violent again."
"A letter arrived for me yesterday," he said. "From Adrienne."
I raised my eyebrows. "I thought she was dead."
"She is." His voice was flat, devoid of emotion. Yet the emotion lacking in his voice was all too evident in his eyes. Patrin wasn't only angry, he wanted revenge.
That was why he was here - to hunt down and kill his daughter's murderer. Not an unexpected sentiment, even from a wolf as cold and as uncaring as Patrin.
But the fact that Adrienne had sent a letter meant she'd known whatever she was investigating was dangerous. Perhaps she'd even seen her own death.