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Authors: Nina Bangs

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BOOK: Wicked Edge
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“Yo, back up.
Just
a cat?”

What the…? Passion tried to regroup. Some kind of shape-shifter? Powerful. Wow, all kinds of colors whipped around him. He pretty much had the sin market cornered—greed, sloth, pride, and the always popular gluttony. But those sins she could handle. It was the black swirling in the background that worried her. Like Edge, he was irredeemable. She didn’t even want to think about what he’d done to earn the big black.

She stared at the cat, widening her eyes and trying for the kind of shocked expression a human would have. “No. You’re not real. A cat can’t talk in my head.” Did she look terrified, barely able to stand? Would a human scream? She considered the most effective reaction even as she reinforced the wall surrounding her thoughts.

“Cut the crap. The wall isn’t working. You can’t keep me out.”
The cat stood, stretched, and padded over to wind itself around her legs.
“Come on, sweetie, tell me why you’re here. And why are you in human form? Hey, if it’s any comfort, you almost fooled me.”

Giant whoop. Almost didn’t count. “Who are you?”
And how did you recognize me when no one else did?

“Ganymede.”
He stared up at her.
“And I recognized you because I’m just that good. Nothing gets past me.”


What
are you?” She glanced behind her. Could she make it back to the hotel if he decided angels weren’t welcome here?

“You’re safe with me. They took your powers away, didn’t they? The bastards. Why? What did you do? Must’ve been bad for them to kick you out.”
His big amber eyes glowed with his need to know.

“You first.” She backed a few steps toward the hotel. Passion didn’t for a minute think she was safe with him.

Ganymede kept pace with her.
“I’m the cosmic troublemaker in charge of chaos. Used to do the big stuff—massive storms, meteor strikes, all kinds of planet-altering disasters…”
He flattened his ears as his tail whipped back and forth.
“Then the Big Boss grounded me. Thought I was out of control. Now I have to stick with the smaller stuff.
Messing with humans doesn’t give me much of a rush, but you take what you can get.”
His eyes got that sneaky-cat look.
“Sometimes I cheat when the Big Boss isn’t looking, though. Gotta stay in shape in case he ever turns me loose again.”

Passion knew her mouth was hanging open. Cosmic troublemaker? Why hadn’t anyone told her about him? “I never heard of you. Are there others like you? And why did you even tell me this stuff?” Uh–oh. The obvious answer was that she wouldn’t live long enough to pass on what she’d learned.

His cat eyes gleamed in the darkness.
“Yeah, there’re more like me. Don’t know why you never heard of us. That’s just weird.”

Something dark and threatening slid over her. She shivered.

“I can tell you all this because you won’t pass it on. I’ll know if you try.”
He sat down and began to wash his face with one gray paw.
“I sense you’re a survivor. You won’t survive if you blab. Simple.”
Finished with his grooming, he returned to studying her.
“And I can reach you anywhere. Got it? Anywhere.”

Was this why the Council had sent her here? Did they know about these cosmic troublemakers? But why send
her
? Without her powers, she was pretty much helpless against this kind of evil.

She’d ask them directly, but none of the angels were allowed to meet the Council members. Archangel Ted passed on all of their messages.

She stared into the cat’s eyes as the silence stretched and stretched until she expected to hear it snap. Wait. The cat’s eyes…“Your eyes are the same color as Sparkle’s and Edge’s.” What were the chances?

“Give the lady a Snickers bar. I’ll leave it to you to figure out.”
He turned away from her. Then he paused.
“Just for your info, I take bribes. Ice cream, chips, and cookies will buy lots of forgiveness.”
He padded toward the castle.

“Wait. I thought you wanted to know about me.” Not that she
wanted to tell him, but she needed lines of communication if she were to have any chance of clearing evil from this place.

He ignored her. She watched him disappear around the side of the castle.

“Well, hell.” Passion felt no guilt over the curse. The situation called for it. Not here one day and a fat cat had blown her cover.

Passion thought about the cat’s eyes, about Sparkle’s and Edge’s eyes. She widened her own eyes. Oh, no. Were they all cosmic troublemakers? Who had set her up for this? She wasn’t qualified to deal with new evil entities.

Clenching her fists, she closed her eyes. “Someone had better get their ass down here to help me. This isn’t punishment, it’s murder. Because you know damn well I’m human and the evil here isn’t the ordinary kind. If you want me dead, just say so to my face.”

“I’m here, I’m here. Jeez, I’m so excited. I get to help you. Where’re the bad guys? Are they ugly, slimy, and repulsive? Oh, and I have to remind you that ‘hell’ and ‘damn’ qualify as curses. ‘Ass’ is just an ugly, ugly word.”

No, no, no! Passion opened her eyes and slowly turned.

“Hope.” She was dead.

3

Edge didn’t like the look in Sparkle’s eyes. He’d seen that hungry, eager shine before. “Leave her alone. Don’t you have other things to do?”

Sparkle seemed reluctant to pull her gaze from the door Passion had disappeared through. “Other things to do?” She sighed and transferred her attention to him. “Like keeping you and Mede from tearing each other apart along with half of Texas?”

“Trying to make me feel guilty?” He glanced up at the empty beam above them where Ganymede had crouched a few minutes ago. He’d disappeared right after Passion left. “Not working. Haven’t felt guilt for thousands of years.” So many memories, poking and prodding at him, insisting that he pay attention. But every time they tried to surface, he buried them under a few more layers of denial. Remorse was a weakness, an emotion he couldn’t afford in his job. “And I’m okay with leaving Texas in one piece as long as I get a shot at that bastard.”

His hatred for the other cosmic troublemaker rose on a wave of
red that pushed at his control, roared its demand that he kill, and scared the crap out of him.

Edge had walked the earth as a destroyer for tens of thousands of years. But he never killed in a mindless rage. He prided himself on his coldness, his methodical completion of each job. Emotion never entered into it,
couldn’t
enter into it. This time it did.

“What’s wrong with you?” Worry darkened her eyes. “I know you’ve never liked Mede, but suddenly I’m sensing real hatred. Did I miss something?”

“He’s an arrogant son of a bitch.”

Sparkle returned her attention to her nails. “See, something in common. Work with it. Bond over all that male ego.”

“You don’t get it.”
He
didn’t get it, but he wasn’t about to discuss his unease with the queen of emotional manipulation. She’d enjoy it too much.

“Maybe not, but I do know that if war breaks out between you guys, the Big Boss will step in.” She glanced at him and then looked away. “I don’t want to lose either of you.”

Because you love Ganymede.
Edge would never understand that.
Never.
The chaos bringer wasn’t any more lovable than he was, and he didn’t fool himself about that. Women might be drawn to Edge’s looks, but it didn’t take long for them to realize that loving him would be like trying to sink their teeth into a frozen block of ice cream. The pleasure wasn’t worth the pain.

“I need some fresh air.” He wanted to see what Ganymede was up to.

“Keep the damage away from the castle.” Sparkle waved down a waiter. “I need a drink.”

Edge didn’t breathe easily until he was outside. Sparkle was the cosmic troublemaker in charge of all things sexual—not a position that called for statements that ended in catastrophic ruin and
death—but she wielded a mean payback when someone crossed her. He’d never underestimate her power.

Ganymede, in his gray-cat form, sat on the edge of the seawall looking out over the Gulf. Edge ruthlessly stomped on his sense of relief that Passion wasn’t with him. He strode across Seawall Boulevard to join the cat.

“Did you talk to her?” Of course he had. Ganymede wouldn’t miss the chance to stick his whiskered nose into anyone’s business.

The cat didn’t look at him.
“Yeah. Interesting.”

“Interesting how?” Edge was instantly suspicious.

“Just…interesting.”

Ganymede’s voice in his mind had an I–know-something-you-don’t purr to it. Cryptic jerk. “Did you get into her head?”

“Of course.”
The cat finally turned his gaze on Edge.
“Did you?”

Edge narrowed his eyes, wishing he could splatter the dumb shit all over his precious castle.

Cats weren’t supposed to be able to smile. Didn’t have the facial muscles for it. But damned if Ganymede didn’t have a triumphant grin pasted across his furry face.

“You didn’t.”
He gave a cat shrug.
“Hey, some of us have talent, some don’t.”

Edge hung on to his temper. Barely. “What did you find out?”

Ganymede turned his attention back to the Gulf.
“Don’t think I’ll share that until I figure out what to do about it.”

He joined the cat in staring at the waves rolling onto the beach. “You know how much I want to kill you right now?”

“Yeah, I feel your hate. Me, I don’t have time for that shit. All I want to do is destroy…everything. The need’s been getting worse each day.”

“Why?”

Ganymede washed his face with one gray paw.
“Chaos is my
thing, but I’ve always controlled it. This time, not so much. It’s like something in my head wants to break out and tear Galveston apart. Never felt anything like it.”
He paused to stare at Edge.
“What’s happening?”

Edge shrugged. “Someone’s messing with us?” Funny that he could talk rationally with Ganymede about this while he still burned to kill him.

“No one’s that powerful.”

Nothing wrong with Ganymede’s sense of self.

“Sparkle wants this to be a long-distance thing. No rubble littering the castle.” He clenched his fists as he gathered his power to him.

“Got it. Whatever my honeyfluff wants. But I’m either going to do some heavy damage or explode, so I’ll just have to…”
Ganymede’s voice faded away as he stared fixedly at nothing.

“Same here.” Edge’s need to kill almost choked him.

Suddenly, Ganymede seemed a little less tense.
“Somewhere in the Himalayas, a mountain evaporated. Must be all that global warming. Jeez, that felt good.”

“And somewhere in Colombia, a drug lord died.” The Big Boss hadn’t ordered the hit, but Edge figured that in this case he’d be okay with some freelancing.

“The San Andreas Fault just shook her booty.”
Ganymede looked almost relaxed.
“Okay, I can handle my destroy–it–all obsession for a while longer. But if this crap keeps escalating, these little pressure releases won’t work anymore.”

Edge closed his eyes. “Almost there. Maybe something more challenging will…” His eyes popped open. “Damn, that was Bain.” He’d recognized his target at the last moment and pulled his punch, but he had no doubt he’d put a hurting on the demon. He raked his fingers through his hair. “I figured any demon would work and didn’t check for ID.”

Ganymede laughed.
“Hey, maybe I won’t have to kill you after all. Bain will do it for me.”
He was still chuckling as Edge started to walk away.

“Got one more thing to say to you, Finis.”

Edge froze. Ganymede had used his real name.
Finis.
The end. The Big Boss had named him, and it fit his job description. Edge hated the name, and Ganymede knew it.

“You’ll never be my equal. You know why?”
Ganymede didn’t wait for an answer.
“Chaos bringer is who I am. It’s my whole existence. Death is just a job to you. That’s all it’ll ever be. You’ll never know what it’s really like to live the dream, sucker.”

Edge didn’t turn to look at Ganymede. If he did, he might do something that would piss Sparkle off enough for her to order him from the castle.

He decided to slip through the restaurant’s kitchen entrance to save time. He was late for his next fantasy, and Holgarth believed the show must go on with or without one of the major players. Besides, Edge didn’t want to meet anyone who would want to stop and talk. He had things on his mind.

Ganymede’s ego wouldn’t allow him to believe that anyone could be powerful enough to influence his emotions. But Edge didn’t see any other explanation for his irrational hatred that had been building over the last few weeks. Right now, he was handling it. But how long before the fury took over and drove him into mindless battle? Sparkle wasn’t kidding about them obliterating half of Texas if that happened.

He took a deep breath. He’d like to track down Passion so they could continue the conversation Sparkle had interrupted, but he didn’t have time now. He glanced at his watch. Later than he’d thought. The fantasy had started.

He’d play the evil vampire in this one. Edge was seeing a trend here. Holgarth always cast him as the evil something in every
fantasy. Sure, he’d had lots of experience with the part, but just once he’d like to be the hero.

You’re not hero material.
Couldn’t deny that. He headed toward the dressing room for his vampire outfit.

“We’ll share your room. It’ll be fun. Just us girls, doing our nails while we plot the overthrow of the unspeakable evil polluting the castle.” She frowned. “Is caring about my nails pride?” She answered her own question. “Archangel Ted won’t be able to see my nails. Besides, it’s just this once.” Hope was almost bouncing with enthusiasm. “I’m so excited. I can’t see the colors of sin like you, so you’ll have to point me in the right direction. But I still have my powers, so once you identify the wicked ones, I can delete their files permanently. I can—”

Passion closed her eyes for a moment, trying to center herself before opening them again. Hope was the heavenly executive secretary for Ted. She had access to everyone’s files. If she deleted your file, you were dead to the Supreme Being, didn’t exist, no paradise for you. Not that heaven was much of a blast in her opinion. But that was just her.

BOOK: Wicked Edge
10.29Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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