How could it not? He hated her, and she may have detested what she had done but… the way he’d trapped her, his murderous intent, and the stench of his betrayal mingled with her fears. If she could rip out his throat, she would. Her jaw clenched, and she gnawed the rod, teeth clinging stickily to the metal.
CHAPTER 4
Wolfgang stood, inhaling wetly through his nose, snorting, swallowing the evidence. That was from the tears he refused to shed. His eyes would be shining with them. Roughly he dragged his arm across his face, pressing, dabbing, then he glared down at her.
Blood on her. Blood, knives, a hook through her, and that scream of hers that fair stuck a nail in his heart, ground in his worthlessness, woke him up to truth.
What was he doing?
Merrick would’ve laughed at Wolfgang. If he knew. If a dead man could know.
Torturing a fucking mermaid? His intent had failed at the first hurdle. This was not him.
He staggered back a small way, remembering the day Merrick was taken, and every night and day since then when he’d imagined Merrick rotting, eyeless, rolling in the waves and the currents, being picked clean by sharp-toothed fish. Fish like her. Like this hooked creature. By now, he’d be limbless and gutted.
A flesh-tattered skeleton.
All her doing. He raked her with his scrutiny again. Vengeance should have been sweet.
“What are you?”
And he wasn’t sure what he was truly asking with that.
Was she human? Couldn’t be.
Was she human enough to value her life as he would a human’s?
He rubbed his shut eyes with splayed finger and thumb.
If she was not… what was he doing anyway? Would he torture a dolphin?
How did he prove it? Did it fucking matter? He pressed his fingers harder onto his eyeballs.
After all, when had he ever thought it moral to dissect a living animal? Never. His colleagues had laughed at him when they visited a restaurant with live lobsters in tanks. He’d walked out when they threw one, still brandishing its limbs, in a pot of boiling water.
One of his weirdnesses.
Wolfgang dropped his hands, feeling the looseness in his arms and that roiling nausea as if he might throw up. His jaw muscles knotted.
He’d stuck that gag on her to keep her from biting him with those shark teeth, maybe killing him if she reached his neck, but it also meant she couldn’t talk back. What was he going to do with this lithe, beautiful, piece of death?
He kneeled again. Letting her go made him feel sick too.
Not an animal then. Too smart. A monster? So many human monsters in this world. His brain ticked over, offering up a gem of a thought for the first time in ages.
“Why do we not have fossil evidence of you, of your… people?” He jerked his wrist, pointing the knife at her, and his upside-down mermaid zeroed in on that with those big green eyes.
He wondered if she knew how pretty those were – how exquisite the liquid color.
Before her last visits, he’d dropped a submersible drone into the bay and had seen her coming.
She moved like a piece of wet silk through the water. Trails of the sea bubbled by in flickers that clung to her body, shreds of gemlike luminescence. Glimpses of breast and the swirling fan of dark red hair on her naked back. The undulations of her body made a liquified burlesque.
Startling. Sensual. A personification of lust.
His eyes had been open, fixed on the small cellphone screen. Absorbed, he’d almost missed looking up when she surfaced below him.
Nothing had recorded – he’d seen it, but it wasn’t there. No video. No images. Nothing left on his cellphone except empty ocean. And he’d still wanted to kill her for what had been done to Merrick. Desire did not cancel hate.
He came back to the present. Grimaced at his reaction below. Down, dick. I command you, not the other way around.
“Why don’t we see skeletons? Dead mer… folk or whatever you are? Is it magic?”
She shook her head and silver-hued tears slipped from the corners of her eyes.
Unhappy? Join the club. She probably didn’t know the answer.
Wolfgang shook his head.
Did they turn into seaweed when dead? Convenient, if he were the sort who could kill her. He’d kept her asleep all day, waiting to see if that wacky folk tale were true, and had spent half those hours looking at her curled up in his sheets.
As a mermaid, underwater, she was art nouveau in motion, skin and