helping out the nurses in the clinic and then reading in her room. Finally, she'd given up and left him a note on his bed, asking him to come find her when he got in. He hadn't stopped by, however.
And this failure of communication had gone on long enough.
She went to the door of her bedroom, surprised when it wouldn't open. She frowned. The handle wouldn't move. She tried again, jiggling the thing, then throwing her strength into the brass. It was jammed or locked.
And her bedroom walls were lined with steel, so she couldn't dematerialize.
“Hello!” she called out, banging on the door. “Hello! Havers! Someone! Would someone kindly let me out? Hello!”
She eventually gave up, a chill condensing in her chest.
As soon as she fell silent, Havers's voice drifted into her room, as if he'd been waiting on the other side the whole time.
“I'm sorry it has to be this way.”
“Havers, what are you doing?” she said against the door panels.
“I have no other choice. I can't have you going to him anymore.”
She made sure her words were loud and clear. “Listen to me. Wrath is the not the reason I've gone out. He's been mated to someone whom he loves, and I feel no ill will toward him. I've… I've met a male. Someone I like. Someone who wants me.”
There was a long silence.
“Havers?” She hit the door with her fist. “Havers! Did you hear what I said? Wrath is mated, and I've forgiven him. I wasn't with him.”
When her brother finally spoke, he sounded as though someone were choking him. “Why didn't you tell me?”
“You didn't give me a chance to! I've tried for the last two nights!” She banged the door again. “Now let me out. I'm supposed to meet my… someone at Darius's.”
Havers whispered something.
“What?” she demanded. “What did you say?”
“I can't have you going there.”
As the anguish in his voice snuffed out her anger, the back of her neck grew tight with alarm. “Why not?”
“It's no longer safe in that house. I… Dear God.”
Marissa splayed her hands out flat. “Havers, what did you do?”
There was only more silence.
“Havers! Tell me what you have done!”
Beth felt something hit her face hard. A hand. Someone had slapped her.
With a groggy jerk, she opened her eyes. She was in a barn. Strapped down to a table with metal bands around her wrists and ankles.
And Billy Riddle was standing over her. “Wake up, bitch.”
She struggled, straining against the cuffs. As he watched her, his eyes lingered on her breasts and his mouth pressed into a tight line.
“Mr. R?” Another male voice. “You do recall that you're out of the rape business.”
“Yeah. I know.” Billy's glare got worse. “Makes me want to hurt her just thinking about it.”
The blond-haired man who'd abducted her came into Beth's line of sight. He had a shotgun on each shoulder, muzzles up.
“I'll let you kill her, how's that? She can be your first.”
Billy smiled. “Thanks, sensei.”
The blond man turned toward the barn's double doors. They were wide open, revealing the dimming light in the sky.
“Mr. R, we need to keep focused,” he said. “I want these guns loaded and lined up with boxes of ammo on that work-table. We should put out knives, too. And go get the can of gasoline from the garage as well as the butane blow torch that's next to the Hummer.”
Billy slapped her one more time. And then did as he was told.
Beth's mind turned over slowly. The drugs were still in her system, making everything seem like a dream, but with every breath she took, the fog was lifting. And she was getting stronger.
Wrath's violence was so deep, so vicious that it put frost on the walls of his chamber, and his breath came out in cloud bursts. The candles flickered slowly in the dense air, throwing off light, but no measurable heat.
He'd always known he was capable of great rage. But what he would bring down on those who had taken Beth from him would be for the history books.
There was a knock on the door. “Wrath?”
It was the cop, and Wrath willed the door open. The human seemed momentarily thrown by the temperature in the room.
“I… ah, I went to the Caldwell Martial Arts Academy. Guy's name is Joseph Xavier. No one's seen him today. He called in and got a replacement for his classes. They told me where he lived, and I did a drive-by. Condo on the west side of town. I broke