werewolf form. The alpha was huge as fuck. Sage, Martin’s son, was
the only werewolf to match Martin in size. Devin wasn’t sure where
to go or what to do. Even with several feet of distance between him
and the alpha, he was terrified. He wasn’t a fighter, but he knew how
to defend himself.
He watched in fascinated horror as the alpha and his son took
swipes at each other. Devin crossed his fingers and held his breath,
hoping to the gods that Sage defeated the bastard. Out of the corner of
his eye he saw Jeremiah take off after Charles and hoped the sick
bastard met his demise. Charles deserved nothing less than a brutal
ending.
“No!” Devin shouted, watching in slow-motion horror as the
alpha pulled a knife out that Devin knew for a fact was made of silver.
The handle was wood, but the blade was pure silver. Before anyone
knew that the alpha had a weapon, Martin sliced Sage’s arm and then
rounded on Mercy, cutting him across his stomach.
Not Mercy, please not Mercy.
Devin had crushed on the man for
years, but Mercy had never batted an eye at him. That hadn’t stopped
Devin from wanting the man, though. Martin spun on his heel and
took off. Devin didn’t care about the alpha at the moment. No, he had
to get to Mercy. He ran toward the man, feeling tears springing to his
eyes. The alpha was going to die for this.
“What happened?” Jeremiah asked as he emerged from the
woods.
Devin dropped down to his knees, feeling helpless as Mercy lay
on the ground groaning, blood spilling from his gut. He wiped at the
tears and then pulled his shirt off, pressing the fabric into Mercy’s
wound. He shook his head as he answered Jeremiah. “Martin pulled a
silver blade from out of his pocket. It had a wooden handle. He scored
Sage’s arm before taking off.”
Devin’s Mercy
11
Sage walked toward his truck, a grimace on his face as he climbed
inside. The man grunted, but didn’t say a word.
“We need to get back to the house,” Jeremiah said to Mercy and
Devin.
“You’re letting me come?” Devin asked in surprise.
“Yes, but every single man in that house will be watching you. If
you try anything, I’ll slice your throat from ear to ear and deliver your
body to Martin’s front doorstep.”
Devin shook his head as he helped Mercy to the truck. “I may
have been blind, but I’m not a fool. I’ve seen what Sage can do.”
“It’s not Sage you have to worry about,” Jeremiah warned as he
drove the men home.
Once they were at a farmhouse outside of town, Sage held on to
Devin’s upper arm as he escorted him down into an unfinished
basement. It looked as if it had been thrown together as an
afterthought. The beams overhead were exposed, and the walls were
bare and made of concrete. There was no drywall in place, no finished
floors, nothing to say that this room was used on a regular basis. It
was as unfriendly as a basement could get.
The place matched the occupants’ present personalities perfectly.
Sage’s unrelenting hold on Devin’s upper arm reminded him that
he wasn’t here to sightsee. The man marched him across the room and
Devin didn’t want to go. He didn’t want to leave Mercy, but he wasn’t
going to argue with Sage.
For one, the man was too damn big to argue with. The werewolf
could crush him with a hand tied behind his back and blindfolded.
Devin had no doubt about it.
And two, he didn’t want to be kicked out. As crazy as it sounded,
Devin wanted to stay close to Mercy, even if it was in a basement. He
needed to know if Mercy was going to be all right. He felt partially
responsible for getting the man hurt, even if he hadn’t been the one
with the blade.
12
Lynn Hagen
Devin hadn’t tried to stop Martin, and he hadn’t warned anyone
the man had a silver knife. The silver would stop any wound from
completely healing. Not only would Sage have a scar over his forearm
now, but Mercy would have one across his stomach.
That was if the man even healed.
From what Devin had briefly seen, there had been a lot of blood.
That worried him, but he knew any amount of begging to go check on
Mercy would fall on deaf ears. Sage didn’t want to hear anything
Devin had to say right now. Sage was going off of what he seen back
in town.
No, he hadn’t tried to stop Martin. In his eyes, that made him just
as wrong as the psycho alpha.
Devin glanced around to see a lab set up on the other side of the
room. There was even an exam table and a mini fridge. “Is Doctor
Kell here?” he asked curiously.
“How do you know about the doctor?” Sage asked with a snarl
that made Devin pull back in fear. He marched Devin over to a steel
cage and opened it, shoving Devin inside. As the lock snicked into
place, Devin felt as if his life was over.
Sage was going to kill him.
There were no buts about it. The man had a hard gleam in his dark
eyes that told Devin he was utterly screwed.
He curled his fingers around the cold, steel bars as he stood there,
feeling the bitter cold of the basement creeping over him. He had used
his shirt on Mercy’s wound, and now Devin was freezing his ass off.
As the chill crept over his skin and began to seep into his bones,
Devin started shaking. He knew that his teeth would be chattering
soon. He hated the cold. Winter was his least favorite season. “Your
father went nuts when he found out that Doctor Kell was gone. He
suspects you, but he doesn’t know for sure.”
“First of all, don’t refer to that man as my father!” Sage’s words
were filled with so much hate that Devin felt the rage crawl through
him like an infection.
Devin’s Mercy
13
Devin swallowed. The scar on the man’s face made Sage ten
times more frightening as he stood there glaring at Devin. He knew
the alpha had scarred Sage’s face, deeming him an outcast, but Devin
didn’t care. Sage used to be his friend. He just wished they still were.
“Never make that mistake again.”
Devin deleted the reference from his vocabulary.
“And second, are you going to try and escape so you can let him
know we have his precious doctor?” The question held such bitterness
that Devin was afraid to answer the man. He had never seen Sage act
this way before in all the years he had known the man, and it scared
the hell out of him.
“I have no loyalties to that bastard,” Devin answered honestly.
“You seemed pretty cozy with him back in Mystery,” Sage said
with a snarl.
Devin could see that no matter what he said, Sage was going to
bite his head off. He walked to the other side of the cage and sat
down, curling his legs in as he glanced around him. He wasn’t sure if
this was any better than how Martin had treated him, but at least Sage
wasn’t beating the shit out of Devin or handing him over to a
depraved human.
“I did what I had to do to survive, Sage. I’m sorry about attacking
Jeremiah, but I was left with no choice.”
Sage scoffed as he turned on his heel to leave. “We all have
choices.”
“How is Mercy?” Devin asked as the werewolf began to climb the
steps. He ignored Sage’s smart comment. If the man only knew half
of the stuff Devin had been through at the hands of the alpha, Sage
wouldn’t be so quick with his judgment. Sage of all people should
know how his father treated people. The guy had exiled his own son
for crying out loud.
When Sage kept going, Devin could feel the tears welling up in
his eyes. He wasn’t a bad person. It wasn’t his fault that Martin had
forced him to come along. It wasn’t his fault that Martin forced a lot
14
Lynn Hagen
of things on Devin, period. The man had a corroded and twisted mind,
and the rot was only growing deeper. Devin hadn’t been strong
enough to fight the alpha, so he did the only thing he could.
Survive.
Devin curled into a tighter ball as the chill of the basement grew.
He knew he was going to have to undress. If he didn’t, he would ruin
his clothes when the full moon rose tonight and he shifted. He was
unmated. That meant he had no choice when it came to shifting. As
soon as darkness fell, Devin would be lying in his cage in his
vârcolac
form.
Devin quickly removed his jeans and shoes when he felt his skin
begin to tighten. He didn’t have much time. He could see from one of
the dirty basement windows that the sun had almost set. As he folded
his jeans and set them aside, Devin began to shiver so badly that he
jogged in place to generate some body heat.
He felt stupid as hell for jogging naked, but once again he was left
with no choice. Not if he didn’t want to freeze his balls off.
When pain shot down Devin’s spine like a fissure in the earth,
Devin dropped to his knees and huddled in the corner of the cold,
steel cage. All he could think about was Mercy as his skin felt like it
was being shredded from his bones. Devin cried out as he writhed on
the cold floor in agonizing pain.
His jaw locked as every damn bone in his body felt like it was
breaking. The pain was almost unbearable. As cold as the basement
was, Devin began to sweat as he tried desperately to breathe. It wasn’t
easy. The pain from shifting shot through his body in waves as Devin
rolled to his hands and knees and tried to crawl away from the agony,
but it didn’t do him any good.
Devin rolled to his back, crying out as bones crunched, reshaping
and transforming. He screamed as his body grew and small hairs
sprouted, covering his body in a layer of fur. Devin rolled back to his
belly, crawling slowly across the dirt floor once again as he panted
heavily, his claws digging into the dirt as his eyes shifted.
Devin’s Mercy
15
He threw back his head and howled as the pain ripped through
him once again. He pushed to his feet, staggering and slamming into
the steel bars, reminding him once again that he was trapped. His
head fell back, howling with a strong lungful of air as the shift
completed.
Devin lowered his head as he looked around the basement and
knew he wasn’t going for a run. Other howls rent the air from above
him. Devin glanced up and wondered if Mercy had shifted as well.
The man was wounded, so he knew it was going to hurt like a son of a
bitch when Mercy shifted.
“Let me out,” Devin whispered desperately as he rocked his head
on the bars. He was warm now, but that small relief gave him no
comfort. He didn’t deserve to be locked away like some criminal. All
he wanted to do was go check on Mercy.
The werewolf may not have ever given Devin the time of day, but
that didn’t mean Devin wasn’t concerned about the handsome man.
He used to be friends with all of the men upstairs from his pack and
still cared about them, even if they no longer cared about him.
“It seems I have a visitor,” Doctor Kell said as he entered the
basement in his werewolf form and raked his cold, dark eyes over
Devin. The man just stood there watching him, as if seeing a
werewolf in a large cage was an everyday thing for the man.
Devin didn’t trust the guy. Kell was Martin’s pack doctor and did
what the alpha commanded him to do. Devin may have had the same
reasons, but he knew for damn certain that Kell hadn’t been beaten
when he went against the alpha.
Devin had.
He backed away from the bars and took a seat on the floor in the
far corner of the cage. Devin had witnessed what a scientist could do
and wanted no part of it. If Kell thought he would use Devin as a
guinea pig then the werewolf had another thing coming.
16
Lynn Hagen
“I see you don’t trust me,” Kell said flatly as he walked over to his
table of beakers and took a seat on a stool, giving Devin his back. “I
completely understand.”
Devin seriously doubted the man understood anything about him
or what he had gone through. Kell had been treated like royalty in the
pack because he was not only the doctor, but a scientist. Martin pretty
much gave Kell free rein.
No, he would never trust Kell, even if he was here with this small
pack now. But then again, Devin didn’t trust anyone. That luxury had
been forced out of him by men so ruthless and brutal that he knew he
would never feel safe again. Not even thoughts of Mercy made Devin