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The attempt at communication didn’t last. A gasp cut it off, and then there was coughing, weak coughing . . . followed by the utter stillness of death.

“Jesus,” Lucan muttered as he stared into that face.

“So you do know him.”

Lucan looked at the Executioner, the other male a powerful figure in all that black, all those weapons. “I can’t believe you went all the way up that mountain to kill this sonofabitch. If you expect me to be pissed off or more motivated, you’re shit out of luck. I hate the fucker.”

The Executioner smiled, his glittering eyes that of a murderer who enjoyed killing as much as a normal person might be happy with a nice dinner or a good night’s sleep.

Like death was something so natural, so required to his well-being.

“Oh, you’re motivated enough, aren’t you,” the male murmured.

“So why’d you go to the clans and risk a problem? My kin are ass-holes who will eat their own—literally. You don’t want to get their attention, trust me.”

“I didn’t go to the mountain. He came here. Who is he?”

Lucan narrowed his eyes. “My cousin.”

“This is a family reunion, then. How sweet.”

Not even close, Lucan thought as he started to pace around in a circle, memories clawing into the center of his chest—

Before he could stop himself, or go through any of the many reasons he should keep his emotions in check, he took a running soccer kick and nailed the corpse in the gut. On impact, the dead arms and legs flopped, and the head kicked hard on the concrete floor.

He did it again. And again. And again. And—

Something warm splashed up on him. He looked down.

Blood was on his fresh sweatshirt and he brushed at it even though he wasn’t bothered by the stain. He just needed something to get himself off the soccer train.

Refocusing on the Executioner, Lucan demanded, “Did you think it was me when you snuck up on him? Is that why you shot him?”

“It’s daylight. I can assure you I was not the one who pulled the trigger.”

The guard, Lucan thought. Some of them were humans, or so he’d heard. But who knew whether the rumor was true.

Lucan shook his head. “No, they thought it was me—that’s why you went looking for me. They thought I’d gone AWOL, and when they brought this to you, you had to check on me to see if it was. What’s Mayhem’s reward going to be for delivering me to you?”

“He gets to live another night.”

“Lucky him, this place is an amusement park just full of fun and games.” Lucan crossed his arms over his chest. “Your guards thought they’d done you a favor, because they didn’t know our arrangement—which is what happens when you hire mercenaries. They only get part of the job right. And you thought you’d lost your connection with Mozart. You were pissed, and because this wolf didn’t have a collar, you weren’t sure whether it was me or not. Oops.”

“You make a lot of assumptions.”

Whatever, he thought.

“All I know for sure is that you don’t want this kind of trouble.” He nodded down at the body. “When he doesn’t come back, others will search for him.”

“And exactly what kind of trouble do you think I’ll be in?”

“If they get into this facility, it’ll turn into the biggest takeout restaurant you’ve ever seen—and you’re on the menu.”

The Executioner smiled again, flashing his fangs. “No one can get in or out of here without my knowledge.”

Oh, really, Lucan thought. “Aren’t you a clever little bitch.”

The Executioner stepped forward until they were nose to nose. “Watch yourself, wolf. You can easily be in your family member’s position.”

“He’s not my family, at least not in his opinion. That’s how I ended up here. And if you want to put a bullet in me, do it where it counts.” Lucan put his arms wide. “Right in the heart.”

As the Executioner’s face hardened, it was clear that the male didn’t like the shift.

And not in the wolven’s assumption of its human-like form.

The power dynamic was not what it had started out as, with Lucan the only one who had a weakness to exploit. Now . . . the Executioner wanted something only Lucan could provide.

Tricksy, tricksy.

“I’m waiting,” Lucan snapped.

Even as Rio was telling herself that she needed to get going, explore what she could, find a way out, get back to Caldwell . . . she parted the curtains that fell from the ceiling. Over on the bed, lying on his back . . . a burn patient was in a terrible state: His face was a raw wound, the features swollen and glistening, the eyes forced shut by the injuries. The rest of his torso and arms were just as bad, nothing but raw meat that was left unbandaged, likely because any kind of gauze would just stick and become entangled—

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