Eve of Destruction (5 page)

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Authors: S. J. Day

Tags: #Fantasy

BOOK: Eve of Destruction
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She nodded.

“Liar,” he murmured.

“Let’s just say I would prefer to go camping with a different crew, if I had a choice.”

His hand wrapped around her nape and pulled her closer. He nuzzled his nose against hers. “I’ll miss you.”

An impatient thumping upon Eve’s trunk shook the car and drew his attention to the rear window.

“No place for muckin’ aboot!” a masculine voice shouted.

Alec pushed up his sunglasses, noting that the heckler was one of a group of three people walking by. He was tanned, blond, and looked to be in his early thirties.

“That’s Ken,” Eve said with laughter in her voice.

Ken’s eyes darted between them, widening with horrified recognition. He quickly retreated, holding both hands up in a gesture of surrender. He had a duffel bag draped over one shoulder and teeth white enough to blind. “Sorry, Cain. I didnae ken it was you.”

“Smooth move, arsehat,” one of his companions muttered, shoving him.

“Ken, huh?” Alec grinned. “I was just thinking he looks like a Barbie doll.”

“Don’t let that pretty-boy exterior fool you. He’s the best in the class.”

Alec climbed out of the driver’s seat and rounded
the trunk. Opening the passenger door, he helped her out and asked, “What’s his nickname?”

Eve had assigned names to all the Marks in her class. He thought he knew why. A nickname could serve two purposes: it could dehumanize a subject or it could personalize them. Alec suspected Eve’s use of nicknames was due to both reasons.

“Just Ken,” she said, “since he does look like a Ken doll.”

Catching her elbow, Alec led her toward the elevators.

She shot him a wry glance. “You know, Gadara isn’t going to like me riding up to Monterey with you instead of with the others.”

“Gadara could use one of his planes to transport you all up there. Since he doesn’t want to make life easy for you, we’re not going out of our way to make life easy for him.”

“You keep breaking rules for me.”

He shrugged it off.

She looked at him in a way that made him want to take her back to bed. “The wolf in the bathroom told me you made a deal for my life. Then broke it.”

“You believe everything an Infernal tells you?” He didn’t want her gratitude. Not when he was the reason she was marked to begin with, and certainly not when he was hoping she would learn to like being a Mark.

“Thank you,” she said softly, killing him.

They rode the elevator up to the atrium level.

Eve’s nose wrinkled. “I don’t think I’ll ever get used to the smell of so many Marks in one enclosed space.”

“You have to admit, it’s more pleasant than the stench of rotting Infernal souls.”

“Yeah, but it’s too much. Makes it hard to breathe.”

The lush vegetation in the atrium planters created a humidity that intensified the sweet smell created when a hundred-plus Marks gathered. The effect was pleasant to Alec, as was the surge of power he felt whenever he was surrounded by Marks. Stepping into a firm was always a heady rush, no matter which firm he visited or where it was located. His blood thrummed with energy and his heart rate lurched into an elevated rhythm, as if the other Marks shared their energy with him. But Eve’s senses were still very sensitive. He wondered how long that would last. Since he’d never mentored before and had yet to be trained for the task, he had no benchmark to compare her to.

They crossed the marble lobby to a recessed hallway where a private set of elevators would take them to the bowels of the building.

“What do you know about this fort we’re going to?” Eve asked. “Anything?”

“Fort McCroskey was closed in 1991. There are some services still available—a commissary and some family housing for the students of a nearby military school—but otherwise it’s a ghost town.”

“Why are we going there?”

“There’s enough infrastructure left to facilitate training. The Army still uses it for that reason on occasion and since our purpose is the same—the defeat of an enemy through force—it serves our needs just as well.”

“Fun.”

Alec linked his fingers with Eve’s. The next week would be rough for her. “I’ll be back before you even have a chance to miss me.”

The cast of her features changed from disgruntlement to worry. “I’m an idiot. Bitching about learning how to defend myself while you’re on assignment.”

“I’ll be fine. You just take care of yourself.”

Eve eyed him carefully. “But it’s not going to be easy, right? He has subordinate wolves to protect him; you’re alone.”

“It’s no fun when it’s easy.”

“I wish I felt that way.” She leaned against the metal handrail that surrounded the elevator car and crossed her arms. It was her
you-are-not-going-to-bullshit-me
pose. “Have you done this before? Gone after an Alpha while he’s home with his pack?”

“Piece of cake.”

“Now who’s lying?”

Alec grinned and took in the view from the top of her head down to the combat boots on her feet. Eve was the type of exotic beauty people looked more than twice at. Creamy skin, inky dark tresses, red lips. His own paradise, his refuge from the rigors of his life.

It had been lust at first sight ten years ago and nothing
had changed since then, despite being apart the entire time. She was his apple, his temptation. He was her downfall. Talk about a shitty foundation for a relationship. They had baggage, hurt feelings, regrets. Eve was the kind of woman a man married. White picket fence, kids, and a dog. Alec was aiming for advancement to archangel and heading his own firm.

The elevator doors opened and they stepped into the training center. The entire floor was dedicated to creating the best fighting force of Marks possible. There were classrooms with desks as well as dojos, indoor firing ranges, weight rooms, and fencing studios. Alec sometimes stayed to watch the instructions, impressed with the level of efficiency. As the original Mark, he’d been forced to survive by the skin of his teeth. Some said he was born to kill, built for it, and he agreed.

Eve led the way to a glass-enclosed conference room. As they entered, the conversation died and all eyes turned toward them. There were a handful of people in the room, ranging in age from late teens to middle age, male and female. Some sat around the long table that dominated the center of the room, others sat atop it with their legs dangling over the sides. Ken was pouring himself a glass of water from the silver pitcher on a nearby console. They all looked at Eve, then glanced furtively at Alec except for a nearby blonde who assessed him boldly from head to toe.

“How are you feeling, Hollis?” asked a dark-haired Hispanic man in jeans and button-down flannel shirt.

“Good. Thanks for asking.”

As Alec joined Eve in the far corner, he returned every stare. Eve hopped onto the widow ledge, her lithe legs dangling and her fingers curled around the lip. They were white knuckled, betraying her unease. The tension in the room was thick and it pissed him off.

He leaned back and crossed his arms, facing the room dead-on. Uncomfortable shuffling ensued, then a return to the previous discussion.

Ken cleared his throat. “I cannae wait to get started.”

“You’re two sammies short of a picnic,” a petite redhead said derisively, flipping her hair over her shoulder.

“Well,” Alec murmured for Eve’s ears only. “The girls are easily pegged with their nicknames, I think. ‘Goth Girl’ especially. I’m assuming the redhead is ‘Princess,’ since she’s covered in glitter.”

Eve smiled. “I am so high school, aren’t I?”

“It’s not your fault they’re easily identifiable. Besides, I liked you in high school,” he purred, alluding to the ill-fated tryst that led them to where they were today. He couldn’t regret it, and he took every opportunity to remind her of why she shouldn’t regret it either.

Eve bumped her shoulder into his. “Can you guess which one is ‘Mastermind’? That one’s a bit harder.”

Alec looked around. There were seven people in the room besides themselves. Since he had already identified four of the Marks, he quickly ruled them out—Ken, the red-haired princess with her glitter mascara and lip gloss, the Goth girl with her pale blond hair and pixie-perfect features, and the “Fashionista”
whose height and rail-thin figure were the stuff of supermodel dreams. The remaining occupants were the guy who greeted Eve when they entered, a wan and slightly portly teenage boy in a nylon jogging suit, and a gray-haired gentleman in dress slacks and polo shirt.

“The old guy?” he guessed. “He kinda has that Magneto vibe.”

“You’re older than he is,” Eve reminded. “And no, he’s ‘Gopher.’ His name is Robert Edwards.”

“Okay. Then it’s the guy in the jeans.”

“Nope.”

Alec’s eyes widened. “The kid? You’re shitting me.”

Laughing, she said, “No, I’m not. He’s older than he looks. Early twenties. Name is Chad Richens. He and Edwards are both from England, so I’m guessing that’s one of the reasons why they gravitated toward each other. The other is that Richens can come up with schemes, but he doesn’t like to do the dirty work.”

“Like what?”

“Like the time he had Edwards swap out everyone’s bayonets with dull ones from the previous day. We all worked twice as hard as he did that session, because he and Edwards were the only ones to have freshly sharpened blades. It was Richens’s idea, but Edwards was the one who actually made the switch. Claire freaked when Ken figured it out. I thought she was going to give herself an aneurism.”

“The fashionista?”

“Yes, Claire Dubois, from France. Isn’t she gorgeous? She says she wasn’t before the mark. Apparently, she used to be a meth addict. She burned her
apartment down and killed her boyfriend in the process, which is why she was marked. She’s still very high strung and fidgets a lot.”

Alec studied the teenager. “How is Richens doing in the physical portion of the class?”

“Not good. Even with the help of the mark, he has trouble with the combat training, which is why I think he tries to get through the sneaky way. He’s a video game junkie and strategy is his strength, not his fists. He also has a short fuse.” Her voice lowered. “Edwards told me Richens’s dad was abusive. I think he carries some of that around with him.”

It didn’t escape Alec’s notice how well Eve had researched her classmates in order to better understand them. It was a sign of a natural hunter. Killing wasn’t merely a physical act. It was also cerebral. “There must be some potential in him, or he would have been assigned to a nonfield position.”

“He killed someone. I don’t know the details. He won’t talk about it.”

“Murderers usually end up with field work automatically.”

“Stupid,” she muttered. “I think his being here is a major screwup on someone’s part.”

“Watch it.” Alec shot her a chastising glance. Eve’s beliefs were her own and he respected her right to have them, but sometimes she voiced her opinions in a way that was too irreverent to be safe. “So, that leaves us with the dark-haired guy. He’s ‘Romeo,’ I take it.”

Eve nodded. “Antonio Garza, from Rome. But that’s
not why I call him Romeo. He’s got a thing going with Laurel . . . and being discreet isn’t his strong suit.”

“Which one is Laurel? The princess?”

“That’s the one. Laurel Hogan. Romeo wooed the Goth girl first, but she says he’s too much of a gigolo for her tastes. He’s better off with Laurel anyway. If you ask me, Izzie is missing a few tools in the shed.”

Alec studied the petite blonde with a calculating eye. She was slender, pale, her blue eyes rimmed with thick kohl and her mouth painted a dark purple. He would describe her as “delicate,” despite her spiked collar and cuffs. “Why do you say that?”

“Izzie’s pulled a Bowie knife on damn near everyone in this room at some point or another. She doesn’t like any of us.”

“That’s an odd name.”

“It’s short for Iselda. Iselda Seiler. ‘Izzie’ suits her more than ‘Goth,’ I think. Like the other girls, her nickname is more of a description than anything else.”

Alec noted the guarded way Eve watched the other woman. Not that he blamed her. The blonde had been mad dogging him since he entered. “You don’t like her.”

“I don’t mind her,” she corrected. “But she sure seems to have a problem with me. More so than the rest of the class, and that’s saying something.”

“Is there anyone here you get along with?”

“Well . . .” Eve shrugged. “I don’t
not
get along with anyone, but I haven’t made any friends either. I just keep a low profile and stay out of the way.”

Alec turned to face her. He asked her about her experiences in class every day, and every day she found a way to redirect him to another topic. Their present conversation was the most she had shared to date.

“How does Raguel feel about that?” he asked. “I bet he wants you front and center.”

Her nose wrinkled. “Sure, so he can pick on me and point out all the ways I’m doing things wrong.”

Alec’s jaw clenched. When he was done with Charles, he would deal with Raguel. Eve had innate talent. It was a travesty that she didn’t know it because the archangel withheld his praise.

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