Black Moon (Alpha Pack #3)(17)



"See? I'm sure that's what you wanted, and you've had your fun. Let him go and I'll wipe his mind. He won't remember this ever happened."

"What would be the point in that? He has to know what he's done wrong."

Before I kill him went unspoken, but Kalen was suddenly, dreadfully sure that's what Malik had planned. "He knows. Isn't that so, Billy?"

The man found his voice, nodding emphatically. "H-hell, yeah! R-right! I recognize the purty fella here, from that night at the Grizzly." He laughed nervously as though sharing a joke. "We don't git many dudes like him in our neck of the woods and we was just havin' us a little fun, that's all! I swear we wasn't gonna hurt him or nothin'!"

"As though you could." Malik scoffed in contempt. "Fat slug of a human."

"H-human?" He glanced around in confusion.

"Malik, please. Let him go."

"He must pay, my pet."

"For what? Him and his buddies ganging up on me? It's not the first time that's happened, and you can't go around killing everyone who tries to walk all over me. . . ."

He trailed off, seeing the catlike expression on Malik's handsome face. The triumph. And in that moment he realized two things.

First, the hapless Billy wasn't leaving this basement alive.

Second, Malik had killed on his behalf before. When? How many? Every single person in the entire time Malik had been following him, since he was a homeless teenager?

"Yes," the Unseelie answered his thoughts. "Every last one. And they were delicious."

"Christ." Kalen pushed a hand through his hair, feeling sick. Helpless. He couldn't think of that now. "You can't do this."

"I really can. More important, you won't stop me."

"You think not? I'm just as powerful as you, and I'm fully capable-"

"But you won't. My boy, this is why I brought you here-to show you that essentially there is no difference between you and me." He gripped Kalen's shoulder and brought their foreheads so close they almost touched. Kalen didn't pull away as Malik went on.

"You want this scum dead for what he did to you," Malik intoned gently. "He's a symbol of all those who've hurt you again and again throughout your life. You want him to pay, don't you?"

"No! Killing is wrong."

"You've been beaten and worse by men like this, when you were little more than a boy. Before you fully came into your powers. Am I correct?"

"Yeah," he said bitterly.

"Just once, you want to feel what it's like to show one of them what it means to be completely at your mercy."

"Yes." The word emerged in spite of his resolve to deny it.

The bound man started blubbering, tears and snot running down his fleshy cheeks.

"He's no innocent, Kalen," Malik soothed. "He has raped and murdered, left many battered and broken. Including his wife and three children. Like the slime you called 'father.' Look."

With a push, Malik shoved several of Billy's memories into Kalen's head. They rolled like old, grainy footage of a home movie, and the scenes were real. The bastard grabbing a waitress from the Grizzly, forcing her to blow him behind the bar, knowing she wouldn't tell or else he'd spin his own tale through the town, ruining her reputation. Other scenes were of Billy and his buddies burying a body outside town. Someone they'd killed for owing one of them less than a hundred bucks.

But the worst were the kids. He'd abused his children horribly, beating them with his belt and scalding them with cigarettes, hot water. Just last week, the little one had spilled something on the greasy carpet, and the bastard had forced the child to drink half of a bottle of carpet cleaner. In their backwoods craphole of a shack, the boy had almost died. The man promised his terrified wife they were all dead if she breathed a word to anyone.

Disbelief and horror at what Malik had planned here tonight became eagerness. Morphed into a terrible, seething rage that demanded justice for the ones Billy had hurt. Killed. Especially the children. And it was justice. No one else would do anything about this piece of filth.

"Do you see?" Malik asked.

"Yeah. He's a piece of shit." Power surged through his veins. The need for blood sang through him.

"What shall I do with him, boy?"

"Show him what hell really looks like," Kalen said coldly. "Then kill him."

* * *

Miles away, in the darkness of his quarters, Nick's pacing in his bedroom was brought up short by an awful vision.

He'd been restless tonight, just as he always was when one of his own was suffering. And this man was in agony.

"Kalen," he whispered hoarsely. "No."

But he couldn't stop what was happening. There was no way he'd find Malik's hideout without Kalen's help, and the Sorcerer was already there.

Kalen's storm was on the horizon now, the thunder rolling. Lightning just beginning to flicker in the sky. The choices he made tonight, and the ones to come, he'd have to live with for the rest of his days.

However few those were.

The vision intensified.

Show him what hell really looks like. Then kill him.

"Oh, Jesus. No! Don't do it!"

J.D. Tyler's Books