Marked by an Assassin (13 page)

Read Marked by an Assassin Online

Authors: Felicity Heaton

BOOK: Marked by an Assassin
12.47Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He bared his fangs and disappeared in a flash.

Hartt watched him go, his carefully schooled expression not hiding the wariness he felt. The regret.

Harbin growled, regaining his attention. Hartt could be as cold as Fuery when he needed to be, but the elf still had a little too much heart at times, was swayed by it when he should have been stronger. Archangel deserved what Fuery was dishing out to them and if Harbin were free of his cell, he would be fighting alongside the elf, no trace of regret or pity in his veins.

Hartt sighed out his breath and slowly slid his violet gaze back to Harbin, and this time the compassion in it was for him. He bared his fangs at his boss, reminding him that he didn’t need his pity and that he had sworn to keep everything Harbin had told him to himself. If Fuery caught Hartt looking at him as if he was a special snowflake and needed someone to take care of him, it wouldn’t be long before the entire guild was talking about him behind his back, trying to figure out why Hartt treated him differently from the rest of them.

“Stand back.” Hartt pulled a small black device from the air, twisted it and pressed it to the glass of Harbin’s cell. He flicked a look at Loke. “I suggest you move back too.”

Harbin did as instructed, striding to the back of his cell and curling into a ball in one corner, covering his head with his arms as he tucked it close to his knees. He sensed Hartt move and braced himself. A bright flash, a deafening bang, and then a shockwave rocked him and a thousand needles stung his flesh as pieces of the glass hit him. He grunted and grimaced, his ears ringing and the tiny lacerations stinging for a few seconds before his body began to heal them.

In the distance, Hartt muttered several curses in the mortal tongue.

Boots crunched on the fragments of glass.

“I suggest you escape this place.” Those words weren’t directed at him. Hartt was speaking to Loke.

Harbin had to do something. He couldn’t leave the dragon behind. They could all escape together. He pushed onto his feet and carefully crossed the treacherous span of glass-littered tiles to the front of his cell, grimacing whenever a piece cut into his bare soles.

“Desist!” The deep commanding voice had Hartt whipping his head in the direction of the end of the corridor and Harbin’s stomach dropped as he sensed the wave of power that washed through the cellblock.

There would be no escaping that way, not when the newcomer was blocking their path. Whoever he was, he was too powerful for them to fight, and Hartt seemed to know it. Even worse, Fuery seemed to know it too. The elf was suddenly beside Hartt, a stunned expression on his face that quickly morphed back into dark lines that said he was ready to challenge this new foe, even when he wasn’t sure he would win the battle.

Mad bastard.

Harbin reached the front of his cell. “Take the dragon.”

Hartt flicked him a look that made his stomach sink lower. “I cannot teleport three. I am sorry.”

His boss dropped his violet gaze to his boots, a sorrowful edge to his expression, and then drew in a deep breath.

Harbin didn’t have a chance to argue with him. Hartt grabbed him with one hand and collared Fuery with the other. He caught a flash of a bare-chested male with bright blue hair standing beyond the cracked glass front of a cell, and then darkness swallowed him whole.

Dammit.

He shirked Hartt’s grip the second they landed in an unfamiliar dark city street and paced away from him, the cuts on his feet stinging with each stride across the wet tarmac. Hartt’s steady gaze followed him, and he could sense the elf’s desire to apologise. He shot Hartt a look that told him it wasn’t necessary, because he knew that if he could have, he would have taken Loke with them. Hartt would have seen it as a golden opportunity to add a dragon shifter to their ranks.

Hartt drew down another deep breath and slowly sank to his haunches. He rested his elbows on his bent knees and stared straight ahead, his violet eyes turning unfocused. Harbin knew better than to ask if he was feeling alright. Teleporting three took a lot out of him when one of the three was Fuery. As mad as the elf was, he was extremely powerful, and that meant he drained Hartt’s strength. The rule with teleporting went that the more powerful a being an elf teleported with them, the bigger the drain on their power, and the longer it took them to recover.

They would have to wait for Hartt to recuperate and they would have to do it somewhere in the mortal realm.

Carrying both him and Fuery just a short distance from Archangel would have sucked the strength from Hartt. There was no way he could teleport all three of them back to Hell without killing himself.

They needed a place to hide, and Harbin needed answers, and there was one place they might find both of those things.

Underworld.

 

 

CHAPTER 10

Harbin was sure he was about to make the biggest mistake of his life yet.

He stared at the black steel door of the closed nightclub, his heart thundering against his ribs, slowly building up the courage to knock on the damn thing and accept whatever fate awaited him. Whatever happened once that door opened, it was going to be tough to handle and he wasn’t sure he was ready.

He wasn’t sure he would ever be ready.

He had spent the time it had taken to locate the nightclub and then the long walk to it mulling over everything and gathering the balls to go through with the plan, but now he was here, that strength had fled him and he wanted to forget it and find somewhere else to lay low and discuss everything he had discovered about his mark.

The two elves staring at him as if he had gone mad propelled him into action when they both stepped forwards, their armour peeling back from their hands in unison as they raised them to knock.

He growled at both of them and they glared at him, but relented when he blew out his breath and approached the door.

He could do this.

How bad could it be?

Images of his older brother killing him sprang to mind.

Or worse, Cavanaugh looking bitterly disappointed to see him again.

His hand fell, his stomach dropping with it. He couldn’t do it. It had been too long and Cavanaugh probably blamed him for everything that had happened and hated his guts, and he wouldn’t blame his brother one bit, but he didn’t think he could take seeing the anger and resentment in his brother’s eyes.

Not again.

“For the love of the gods.” Hartt grabbed him before he could move a muscle and darkness swallowed them.

When it evaporated, all three of them were standing in the middle of the closed nightclub with several fae and some mortals staring at them. A slender mortal female near the long black bar that lined the wall opposite him turned towards him, her blonde hair swaying across her shoulders as she shifted and pinned him with large dark eyes. His own eyes widened when he saw beyond her, catching sight of the unconscious blue-haired male laid out on the bar top, the coloured lights rotating above him washing him with sombre hues.

Loke.

Harbin looked back at the female. Was this the one who had betrayed Loke? He would have growled at her had the male standing beside her not been staring at him so intently, radiating familiar power that had him carefully considering any move he made.

The one who had commanded Hartt and Fuery to halt their attack.

Another elf.

The male’s violet eyes glimmered with keen intelligence and his blue-black hair was preened and perfect, neatly clipped at the sides and back, revealing his pointed ears. Black scaled armour hugged a lithe physique that belied the power this male held within his grasp.

It wasn’t only physical power. He radiated power of another nature, his regal bearing and confidence speaking of a male who commanded respect and seemed to have it from all those around him—a mortal female, a jaguar shifter, an Archangel huntress and a demon king.

Even Harbin’s two elf companions seemed at a loss and unable to bring themselves to look at the male, which led Harbin to suspect he was some sort of leader of their kind.

The elf’s pure violet gaze darkened and the hand he held against the blonde female’s neck tensed. “Ignore them. Thorne and Sable will deal with them.”

That didn’t sound good.

The blonde female nodded and returned her focus to Loke, and the black-haired Archangel huntress and her burly russet-haired bare-chested companion advanced on him. The big demon grunted, his red eyes glowing like embers as he rolled his thickly muscled shoulders and his dusky horns began to curl from behind his pointed ears.

The huntress Harbin might be able to handle, but the demon was going to prove a problem, especially since he had the sinking feeling the pair were bonded. If Harbin tried to take out the huntress, the demon would lose his shit, and an enraged demon was far too powerful for him to take down, even with two elves on his side.

A door to the left of the black bar shot open and Harbin’s breath rushed from his lungs as his gaze shot towards it and landed on another tall male clad in just a pair of pale grey sweats.

Fuck, maybe letting the demon kill him wasn’t such a bad idea after all.

The new male’s silver eyes verged on wild, his equally silver short hair mussed on top, as if he had been sleeping just seconds before.

Just seconds before he had smelled Harbin in the club.

The male stormed towards him and Harbin struggled to breathe, fighting to settle his heart and his nerves, and find a sliver of strength and courage to face the male who was looking at him as if he was staring at a ghost but was throwing off dangerous vibes that had Harbin’s animal side prowling and ready to push for freedom and attack.

The big snow leopard male was pissed as all Hell and Harbin could hardly blame him.

But at odds with the anger rolling off him in tangible waves was something that gave Harbin the courage and hope he needed.

Incredulity filled the male’s pale eyes.

The sandy-haired jaguar shifter moved into the path of Sable and Thorne and folded his arms across his chest, causing the dark grey t-shirt he wore with his paler grey sweats to tighten across his back. “I have a no fighting policy in this club, as you’re well aware. At least until I know what the fuck they want.”

Sable’s golden eyes darkened and Harbin had the impression she wanted to ignore the shifter and attack them anyway. She looked like the type that loved to fight. Maybe the almighty train wreck that was about to hit him and spill the story of his life would provide enough entertainment for her and everyone else in the room.

Harbin sucked down a breath and blew it out. “Brother.”

Everyone turned to look at him, but the jaguar shifter’s stunned expression won first prize. “You know them, Cavanaugh?”

His brother nodded, his silver eyes locked on Harbin. “I like to think I knew one of them anyway… it’s been a while since we’ve seen each other. I might be wrong.”

Those words cut him and he dropped his gaze to his bare feet, clenched his teeth and tried to weather the hurt that welled up inside him. He cursed the softer part of him, the emotions the female had unleashed, breathing new life into them, because they only caused him pain. They were the source of so much agony and he had kept them contained, had locked them away to spare himself, and now he couldn’t so much as breathe without feeling as if he was dying, each gulp of air scraping in his lungs.

He sensed Fuery and Hartt flanking him, and silently thanked them for their support. Hartt knew the story of his life, but Fuery didn’t, and Harbin hadn’t expected him to care enough about him to have his back.

Although, the mad bastard probably just wanted to fight everyone else in the room, and forming an offensive line with him and Hartt was a good way of pushing someone into attacking first.

Harbin lifted his head and looked back at Cavanaugh, and the low-lit club and everyone in it fell away as he stared into familiar silvery eyes, at a face that took him back to better times and only made the pain in his heart grow fiercer.

Sable shouted something and Hartt retaliated, but Harbin didn’t pay them any attention as he looked at his brother, fighting to find the right words to say.

He had been keeping track of Cavanaugh’s movements over the years, using his network of contacts like spies to keep an eye on his older brother. It had surprised him when Cavanaugh had left the pride and come to London, but it hadn’t surprised him when he had learned that his brother had finally found his mate and brought her back to Underworld with him. He was glad for them in a small way, one he didn’t want to acknowledge, not when he knew that such an ending wasn’t on the cards for him. It was rare for a snow leopard shifter to find their mate, and Cavanaugh’s had been right in front of him from the start.

Eloise.

Harbin had always known his brother’s feelings for the female, even when Cavanaugh had failed to see them for himself. It was about time the idiot noticed how mad he was for her, and how in love she was with him. Cavanaugh had a big heart, had always been the better male, and he deserved a happy ending.

Himself on the other hand, he only deserved the anger he could see building in his brother’s eyes as Cavanaugh came to terms with what he was seeing and that it was really him standing in the middle of the closed nightclub, causing another fight to break out because trouble had always followed him everywhere.

Cavanaugh continued to stare at him in silence and Harbin wasn’t sure how much more he could take. He hadn’t seen him in two decades, and he wasn’t exactly the brother that Cavanaugh remembered. He doubted that his older brother could see a single shred of the male he had once known in him now.

Maybe he could change that at least, although the desire that ran through him would possibly just show Cavanaugh how much he had changed, because he couldn’t remember ever apologising for anything in the eighty years they had lived together in the mountains.

But he needed to do it, he needed to tell his brother how sorry he was before Cavanaugh turned on him and hit him with both barrels.

Other books

The Forgotten by Tamara Thorne
Mr. Wrong After All by Hazel Mills
We Saw The Sea by John Winton
Betrayed by Trust by Frankie Robertson
Watching You by Gemma Halliday
A Christmas to Die For by Marta Perry
Rebound by Cher Carson
That Girl From Nowhere by Koomson, Dorothy
Songs of the Earth by Lexi Ander