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Page 21
Page 21
Firm in her decision, Siobhán dressed and prepared to face Adrian, the angel who wielded the Creator’s vengeance against angels who’d taken mortal mates . . .
Read on for an excerpt from
A Hunger So Wild
A brand-new book in Sylvia Day’s Renegade Angels Series
On sale July 3, 2012.
Elijah Reynolds stood naked on a rock in the woods surrounding Navajo Lake and watched his dreams burn along with the decimated outpost below him. Acrid black smoke plumed into the air in wide, thick funnels that could be seen for miles.
The angels would know a rebel ion had begun long before they reached the ruins.
Around him, lycans yipped with celebratory joy, but he felt none of it. He was cold and dead inside, his life as he’d known it scorched to embers in the smoldering devastation that had once been his home. He excel ed at one thing: hunting vampires. Doing what he enjoyed came from working for the Sentinels—the most elite of all warrior angels. That indentured servitude, while chafing, was a smal price to pay to do what he loved. But very few lycans felt the same, which had led to this result. Everything that mattered to him was gone and what was left was a battle for independence his heart wasn’t invested in waging.
But it was done and couldn’t be undone. He’d live with it.
“Alpha.”
Elijah’s jaw clenched at the designation he’d never wanted. He glanced at the nude woman who approached him. “Rachel.”
Her gaze lowered.
He waited for her to speak, then realized she was doing the same in reverse. “Now you want to fol ow orders?”
Her hands linked behind her back and her head dropped. Irritated by her lack of conviction, he turned away. He’d told her a revolt was suicide.
The Sentinels would hunt them, exterminate them. The lycans’ one purpose for existence was to serve the angels; if they no longer did that, they no longer had a place in the world. But she wouldn’t listen. She and her mate, Micah—Elijah’s best friend—had incited the others to this act of sheer f**king stupidity.
He sensed the approaching male lycan before he heard him. Turning his head, Elijah watched a golden wolf step into view then shift midstride into the form of a tal blond man.
“I’ve rounded up those with self-preservation instincts, Alpha,” Stephan said.
Which confirmed Elijah’s suspicion that some had fled the battle without considering the brutal days certain to lie ahead. Or perhaps some of the smarter ones had returned to the Sentinels. He wouldn’t hold it against them.
“Montana?” Rachel asked hopeful y.
He shook his head, reminding himself that he’d promised Micah on his death bed that she’d be looked after. “We’d never make it that far. Sentinels Will be breathing down our necks within hours.”
One of the Sentinels had flown away during the conflict, blue wings spread wide as she raced to report the uprising. The rest had stayed and fought, but the razor-sharp tips of their wings had offered too little protection against the size of the Navajo Lake pack, which had needed thinning for months. Seriously outnumbered, the Sentinels had fought to the death, knowing that’s what their captain, Adrian, would do and expect. During the weeks that Elijah had been a member of Adrian’s pack, he’d seen for himself how tenacious and committed the Sentinel leader was. Only one thing could split Adrian’s focus, and even she couldn’t dul the angel’s kil er instinct.
“There’s a network of caves near Bryce Canyon.” Elijah turned his back to the Navajo Lake outpost for the last time. “We’ll hole up there until we’re organized.”
“Caves?” Rachel asked, scowling.
“This was no victory, Rachel.”
She flinched away from the undercurrent of anger in his tone. “We’re free.”
“We were hunters and now we’re prey. That’s not an improvement. We kicked the Sentinels when they were already down. They were outnumbered twenty-to-one, taken by surprise, and lacking Adrian, who’s dealing with so much shit right now his head isn’t ful y in the game. This was a one-shot, one-kil deal.”
Rachel’s shoulders went back, thrusting her smal br**sts forward. Nudity was nothing to a lycan; flesh or fur, it was all the same. “And we took it.”
“Yes, you did. Now trust me to handle the rest.”
“This is what Micah wanted, El.”
Elijah sighed, his anger swal owed by a tide of regret and grief. “I know what he wanted—a home in the suburbs, a nine-to-five-job, carpools, and play dates. I would do anything to give you that dream . . . to give it to any other lycan with a wish for the same . . . but it’s impossible. You’ve dumped a task in my lap that I failed before I began, because there’s no way for me to succeed.”
And they couldn’t know what that failure cost him. He would never say. He could only make the best of what he had to work with and try to keep those who were now dependent on him alive.
He looked at Stephan. “I want teams of two sent to the other outposts. Preferably mated pairs.”
Mates would protect each other to the death. In times like these, when they would be hunted while separated from their pack, they’d need all the support they could get.
“Notify as many lycans as possible,” he went on, rol ing his shoulders back to ease the tension in his neck. “Adrian Will cut off outside communication to and from all the outposts—cel phones, the Internet, snail mail. So the teams Will need to tackle the task directly, face-to-face.”
Stephan nodded. “I’l see to it.”
“Everyone needs to withdraw whatever money they’ve got socked away before Adrian freezes their accounts.” As “employees” of Adrian’s aviation corporation, Mitchel Aeronautics, their stipends were deposited in an employee credit union that Adrian had complete access to. “Most have already done that,” Rachel said quietly.
So, she’d thought that far ahead, at least. Elijah sent her off to gather the others; then he turned to Stephan. “I need the two lycans you trust the most for a special assignment: Find Lindsay Gibson. I want her whereabouts and status.”
Stephan’s eyes widened with surprise at the mention of Adrian’s mate.
Elijah struggled through the driving urge to find Lindsay himself, a mortal woman he considered a friend, the only one he had left now that Micah was dead. In so many ways, she was a mystery. She’d stumbled into their lives without warning, displaying skil s no mere human should possess and garnering the Sentinel leader’s attention in ways Elijah had never witnessed or heard of.
Unlike the Fal en, who had lost their wings because they’d fraternized with mortals, the Sentinels were angels above reproach. The sins of the flesh and the vagaries of human emotion were far beneath their lofty stations. Elijah had never seen a Sentinel show even a flicker of desire or longing . . . until Adrian took one look at Lindsay Gibson and claimed her with a fierceness that surprised everyone. The Sentinel leader protected her life with more care than he did his own, putting Elijah in charge of her safety despite knowing that he was one of the rare, anomalous Alphas that were swiftly weeded out of the lycan packs.
It was during the course of his protection of Lindsay that a friendship had developed between them. Their easy camaraderie ran deep enough that they would die for each other. I’d take a bullet for you, she had told him once. Not many people had friends like that and Elijah had none now but her. He may have become the lycan Alpha, but Lindsay’s safety wasn’t a concern he’d ever relinquish. She had gone missing under the Sentinels’ watch, and he wouldn’t rest easy until he knew she was okay.