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  He nearly smiled. Now was not the time for this. They were inside hell, out in the open, possible targets. But he could not help himself, was too desperate, greedy. Just a little longer. “Your story,” he prompted.

  “Where was I? Oh, yes.” Her honeysuckle scent enveloped him, chasing away the odor of rot. “I was a mean little girl. I didn’t share my toys, and I frequently made the other children cry, unintentionally compelling them to bend to my will. All right, perhaps a few of those times it was not so unintentional. I think that’s one of the reasons I was sent to hell as warden, though it was never said aloud. The gods wanted to be rid of me.”

  How forlorn she sounded. “Every living creature has made a mistake at one point or another. Besides, you were a child. Not yet sensitized to the feelings of others. Do not blame yourself.”

  “What of you?” she asked, and this time she sounded more buoyant.

  He’d relegated his human memories to a far corner in his mind, never to be considered again. Before, thinking of those days had stung, for he’d known they were forever lost—but he reminded himself that with his wife’s desertion, that was a good thing. Today, however, with the essence of Kadence all around him, he experienced only a thrum of sadness for what might have been.

  “I was a wild child, untamable, a roamer,” he said. “My mother despaired, thinking I would worry her and every member of our family to death.” He laughed, her sweetly aged face flashing in his mind. “Then they introduced me to Evangeline. She calmed me, because I wanted to be worthy of her. We married, as both our families desired.”

  Kadence stiffened. “You are…wed?”

  “No. She left me.”

  “I am sorry,” she said, but there was relief in her tone.

  “Don’t be.” Had he not given his soul for Evangeline, she would have died. And had she not left Geryon, he might have fought Lucifer when the time came to become guardian. And had he fought, he might not have met Kadence.

  Suddenly a frenzied snarl echoed through the distance. Giving up all pretense of being winded, Geryon popped to a stand, lifting the goddess with him and searching the distance.

  A demon was racing straight for them.

  CHAPTER NINE

  Geryon shoved Kadence behind him. Another touch—warmth, satin skin, perfection—and he yearned to revel in it. He didn’t, couldn’t. He’d agreed to come with her to save the human realm, yes, but also to keep her safe. Not because she was a goddess and not because she was the most beautiful thing he’d ever beheld, but because, in this single day, she had made him feel like a man. Not a beast.

  “Remember that I swore to let no harm befall you,” he told her. A minute, perhaps two, and the creature would reach them. Fast as it was, there was still a great distance to cover, the streets of hell stretching endlessly. “I will keep my word.”

  “Geryon. Perhaps I can—”

  “No.” He didn’t want her involved in this fight. Already she was trembling in fear. She was so scared, in fact, she had yet to realize her hands were resting on his back, twin conductors of inexorable pleasure. Had she known, surely she would have jerked away. “I will fight it.” Should she try, it would feed off her fear, becoming more crazed.

  As did most minions, the creature coming at them possessed a skeletal face and a muscled body covered in green scales, its forked tongue flicking out as if blood already coated the air. Glowing red eyes glared at them, a thousand sins resting where pupils should have.

  Warrior instincts demanded Geryon stride forward and meet the bastard in the middle. Fight there, like true soldiers. Yet his every male instinct demanded he stay where he was. To put any distance between himself and Kadence was to place her in further danger. Another demon could be hiding nearby, waiting for the chance to pounce on her.

  “This is my fault,” she said. “No matter that I had begun to relax, my fear of this place is bone-deep. And that fear is like a beacon to them, isn’t it?”

  He chose not to answer that, too afraid of scaring her further by acknowledging the truth of her words. “When he reaches us, I want you to run backward. Press against the wall and scream for me if you see any hint of another demon.”

  “No, I want to help you. I—”

  “Will do as I said. Otherwise, I will defeat him and leave this place.” His tone was uncompromising. Already he regretted bringing her here, whether the wall needed defending or not.

  She stiffened against him, but didn’t offer another protest.

  A cry of, “Mine, mine, mine,” rent the air.

  The creature closed in, faster…almost…there. Claws raked at Geryon as he grabbed his opponent by the neck. Multiple stings erupted on his face, followed by the trickle of warm blood. Flailing arms, kicking legs. Only when the temptation of Kadence’s hands fell away did Geryon truly begin to battle. He tossed the creature to the ground and leapt upon it, knees pinning its shoulders. One punch, two, three.

  It bucked, wild and feral. Saliva gleamed on its fangs as curses sprang from its bony mouth. Another punch. Still another. But the pounding failed to subdue it in any way.

  “Where is Violence? Death? Doubt?” he gritted out.

  The struggling continued, intensified, terror leaping to life in those red eyes. Not fear for what Geryon would do, he knew, but terror for what its brothers-in-evil would do if they learned of any betrayal.

  Though Geryon hated for Kadence to see him kill—again—it could not be helped. That’s what they had come here for, after all. He raised his hand, spread his elongating, dripping nails and struck. The poison that coated his nails was a “gift” from Lucifer to aid in his duties and acted swiftly, without mercy, spreading through the creature’s body and rotting it from the inside out.

  It screamed and screeched in agony, its struggling soon becoming writhing. Then the scales began to burn away, smoking, sizzling, leaving only more of that ugly bone. But the bones, too, disintegrated. Ash coated the air, blowing in every direction.

  Geryon stood to shaky legs. He kept his back to Kadence for several minutes, waiting, hoping—dreading—that she would say something. What did she think of him now? Would there be any more of her tending? Finally curiosity got the better of him and he pivoted on his heels.

  She stood exactly as he’d commanded, her back pressed against the rocky wall. Those glorious ringlets cascaded around her. Her eyes were wide and filled with…admiration? Surely not.

  “Come to me,” she said.

  CHAPTER TEN

  Kadence had been unable to hold back her entreaty. Geryon stood several feet away, panting shallowly, his cheeks cut and bleeding, his hands dripping with his opponent’s lifeblood.

  His dark eyes were more haunted than she’d ever seen them.

  “Come to me,” she said again. She motioned him over with a wave of her fingers.

  The first time, he’d given no reaction. As though he hadn’t believed he’d heard her correctly. This time, he blinked. Shook his head. “You wish to…punish me for my actions?”

  Silly man. Punish him? When he’d saved her? Yes, part of her was angry that he’d kept her from the fight, that he’d threatened—vowed—to leave without doing what they’d come here to do. But part of her was relieved. I am not a coward. Not anymore. Next time, I will act. No matter his wishes, no matter mine.

  “Kadence,” Geryon said, and she realized she had been staring at him, silent.

  “I would never punish you for aiding me.”

  Again he blinked. “But…I killed. I hurt another creature.”

  “And you were injured in the process. Come, let me attend to your wounds.”

  Still he resisted. “But you would have to put your hands on me.”

  He said it as though the thought should be loathsome to her. “Yes, I know.”

  One hesitant step, two. At that pace, he would never reach her. Sighing, she closed the rest of the distance herself, twined their fingers—experienced a powerful jolt, gasped—and led him to the rocks. “Sit. Pleas
e.”

  As he obeyed, he tugged his hand from her and rubbed where they’d been connected. Had the same jolt pierced him? She hoped it had, for she did not want to be alone in this…attraction. Yes, attraction, she realized. Physical, erotic. The kind that prompted a woman to leave her inhibitions and invite a man into her bed.

  Whether that invitation was accepted or not was a different story.

  Reluctant as Geryon was, she was positive he would turn her down. And perhaps that was for the best. Her lovemaking tended to scare men away. Because when the pleasure hit her, she could not control her nature. The chains she’d erected broke, unleashing her will with a vengeance.

  Physically, her lovers became her slaves. Mentally, they cursed her, knowing she had stolen their freedom of choice, unwitting though it had been. She had never bedded the same man twice, and, after three tries, had stopped altogether. One she had considered bad luck. Two, a coincidence. Three, undeniably her fault.

  How would Geryon respond? Would he hate her? Probably. Already he knew the horrors of being bound to someone else’s will. She would not doubt if freedom was the most precious commodity in his life.

  Sighing, she tore several strips of cloth from the bottom of her robe and knelt in front of him, between his legs. His shaft was hidden by a short skirt of leather and metal filigree. A warrior’s cloth. Perhaps it was wanton of her, but she wanted to see him there. She licked her lips, thinking maybe, perhaps, what if she–

  As if he could read her mind, he sucked in a breath. “Don’t,” he said.

  “I’m sorry. I—”

  “Don’t stop.”

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  Don’t stop. Did he mean for her to move his armor out of the way? Or simply to clean him as she’d promised? Already he was nervous, on edge, and had resisted even the slightest of handling. Afraid to risk a mistake, she leaned in, reached up and mopped the blood from his face with one of the strips of cloth. Acting the coward again, are we?

  His delectable scent filled her nose, a midnight breeze that inexplicably reminded her of home. A sprawling, opulent home she had not been able to visit since reluctantly agreeing to oversee the fortification of hell. How she missed it.

  “In all the years I have known you,” she said, carefully avoiding the deepest gash, “you have never left your post at the gate. Do you eat?” At first contact, he had jumped. But she maintained a steady, casual rhythm and he gradually relaxed.

  Perhaps one day he would allow her to do more. Would she enslave him, though, as she had the others?

  “No. There’s no need.”

  “Really?” Even she, a goddess, needed food. She could survive without it, yes, but she would waste away, becoming a mere shell of herself. “How, then, do you survive?”

  “I’m not sure. I know only that I stopped needing food the day I was brought here. Perhaps the fire and smoke sustain me.”

  “So you don’t miss it? The tastes and textures, I mean?”

  “It’s been so long since I’ve seen even a crumb that I rarely think of food anymore.”

  She wanted to feed him, she thought. Wanted to sweep him out of this nightmare and into a banquet hall with tables piled high, food of every kind gracing their surfaces. She wanted to watch his face light in ecstasy as he sampled one of everything. No one should be forced to go without such nourishment.

  When his face was clean, she switched her attentions to his right arm. Angry claw marks glared at her, and she knew they had to be hurting him. Not by word or deed did he betray it, though. No, he actually seemed…blissful. “I’m sorry I do not have the proper medicines to ease your pain.”

  “You have no reason to be sorry. I’m grateful for what you’re doing and hope to repay you in kind some day. Not that I desire you to be injured,” he added quickly. “I do not.” Horror blanched his features. “I would hate such a thing. Truly. I only want to see you healthy and whole.”

  Her lips curled into a slow smile. “I understood your meaning.” Finished with her ministrations, she settled her hands in her lap. She didn’t move from her position between his legs, because an idea had taken root in her mind. Perhaps he wasn’t ready for her to remove his armor—he was so sensitive about his appearance, after all—but that did not mean he would refuse her…other things. And he’d seemed to enjoy having her hands on him. “May I ask you a question, Geryon?”

  He nodded hesitantly. “You may do anything you like to me.”

  Had he meant the words to emerge so sensually? So husky and rich? “Are you…do you like me?”

  He looked away from her and gave another nod. “More than I should,” he muttered.

  Her pulse fluttered madly. “Then I would like very much if you would kiss me.”

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  Kiss her? “I shouldn’t. I can’t.” Though gods, Geryon wanted to, desperately, and found his gaze straying to her lips. They were lush and red. Glistening. His mouth watered for a taste of them. His horns, sensitive to his emotions as they were, throbbed.

  Those pretty lips dipped into a frown. “Why not? You said you liked me. Did you lie to spare my feelings?”

  “I would never lie to you. And I do like you. You are beautiful and strong, the finest thing I have ever known.”

  “You think me beautiful? Strong?” Pleasure lit her expression. “Then why won’t you kiss me?”

  “I will hurt you.”

  Her face scrunched adorably in her confusion. “I don’t understand. You’ve never hurt me before.”

  “My teeth…they are too sharp.” He didn’t add that his hand were too toxic, his strength too mighty. Were he to lose control of himself and squeeze her, which was a possibility considering how much he desired her, she would be hurt. Scared, too. Perhaps even irreparably damaged.

  “I’m willing to risk it,” she said, placing her palms on his thighs and burning him soul-deep.

  He both hated and loved his half-armor at that moment. Hated because it kept him from skin-to-fur contact. Loved because it blocked her gaze from parts of his monstrous form. “Why?” What reason could she possibly have for wanting to place her luscious lips on something so…disgusting? Mere curiosity would not drive a female to such an act. Evangeline had vomited the moment she’d first spied his changed appearance. “I could tolerate what you were, but I can not tolerate…this,” she’d thrown at him.

  “Because.” Twin pink circles painted Kadence’s cheeks, but she didn’t turn her gaze.

  “Why?” he insisted. He placed his hands atop hers. Gulped at the headiness, the silkiness.

  “You saved me.”

  So she was grateful. His shoulders sagged in disappointment. Did you truly expect her to desire you? No, he hadn’t expected it—but he had hoped. “It would be dishonorable to kiss you for such a reason.”

  Though she remained on her knees, she rose until they were merely a whisper apart. “Then do it because I’m desperate, needy. Do it because I’ve suddenly realized how quickly something can be taken from me, and I wish to know some part of you before I’m—”

  “Before you’re…” he managed to choke out. She was desperate? Needy?

  “Do it,” she pleaded.

  Yes. Yes. Geryon could no longer resist, dishonorable or not. He would be careful, he vowed. So careful. He bent the rest of the way, softly pressing his mouth against hers. She didn’t pull away. She gasped, lips parting, and he swept his tongue inside. Her taste…so sweet, like a snowstorm after a millennium of fire.

  “More,” she said. “Deeper. Harder.”

  “Sure?”

  “More than I’ve ever been.”

  Centuries had passed since he’d kissed a woman and never while in this form, but he began thrusting his tongue against hers, rolling them together, retreating, then going back for more. When he felt his teeth scrape hers, he stiffened. And when she moaned, he tried to pull away. But her arms slid up his chest, one anchoring around his neck, the other caressing a horn. So sensitive was the protrusion, he ha
d to grip his thighs, nails sinking deep, to keep his claws off her.

  “Like?” she asked.

  “Yes,” he managed to grit out.

  “Good. Me, too.” Her lush breasts pressed into his chest, her nipples hard and searching.

  She enjoyed his kiss? Tremors rocked him, their tongues beginning another dance, his muscles tightening against the strain of remaining exactly as he was. With every moment that passed, every breathy sound that emerged from her, his control snapped a little more. He yearned to toss her down, climb atop her and pound, pound so hard he would brand himself on every inch of her. Inside every cell.

  “Stop,” he finally said. “We must stop.” He jerked to his feet, away from her, already mourning the loss of her taste. He kept his back to her, panting, his heart racing.

  “Did I do something wrong?” she asked softly, and there was a catch in her voice.

  Oh, yes. You stole a heart I could not afford to give. He’d promised never to lie to her, however, so he merely said, “Come. We have waited long enough. We have demons to hunt.”

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  They stopped at the first building they came to: a tavern. An actual, honest-to-gods tavern, where blood was served rather than alcohol. Kadence had known such things existed down here, but it still struck her as odd. Demons, acting as humans.

  They’d had a two-mile trek from the pit’s entrance to here. A two-mile trek she had spent remembering Geryon’s earth-shattering kiss, cursing him for stopping it and fretting about his reasons.

  Throughout her endless life, she had welcomed only those three lovers into her bed, and all three had been gods. If gods had not been able to handle her, there was no way Geryon could. But she had hoped. For once she’d had no thoughts of controlling her nature, only enjoying. Yet Geryon had walked away from her, just as the others had. Am I so terrible? So horrible a person?

  More than the others, she had wanted Geryon to find pleasure with her because he meant more. She liked who she was with him. Liked how she felt when he was near. Instead, she had…disgusted him? Repelled him? Failed to arouse him in even the slightest way?