younger.”
Why that made Devin angrier, he wasn’t sure. But it did. He
curled his lips in before he said something he would regret. He knew
his anger was stemming from other problems, deeper issues, and
Devin wasn’t going to take it out on Mercy.
* * * *
Mercy could see the pain in Devin’s blue-grey eyes. It was like a
living and breathing entity in the room as the shorter man glared
daggers at him. The knowledge that something more, something
deeper had gone on in Devin’s life had Mercy ready to kill something.
And what an odd reaction that was.
He walked out of the bedroom, not wanting to argue with Devin,
or see the raw anguish in the man’s eyes. It was killing him. Devin
was filled with so much hate that it was coming off of the guy in
waves.
“Everything okay?” William asked as he watched Mercy come
down the steps. He was still a bit sore from his wound, but it wasn’t
anything he couldn’t handle.
“Just peachy.” He needed to run, to work off the aggression he felt
building inside of him. Not only was Mercy confused about how he
felt where Devin was concerned, but baffled at the rage he felt inside
for what had been done to the man. Mercy didn’t know for sure, but
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he was pretty damn certain what had happened to make Devin so
bitter and enraged.
And he wanted to kill Martin.
He took off from the porch, running toward the woods, letting his
thoughts fly free as his feet hit the soft earth.
How the hell could Devin be twenty-five? The man looked so
much younger. How could Mercy have miscalculated his age? But
then deeper questions started pushing toward the front of his mind.
What had Martin done to Devin? Not only had Mercy seen anger
and anguish in the man’s eyes, but shame as well. There was a wall so
thick around Devin that Mercy wasn’t sure he would ever get past it.
And why did he want to? It was true he had developed feelings for
Devin over the years, but he was a loner, always had been. Why was
he even entertaining the thought of getting close to the other man?
Mercy came to a grinding halt and dropped down to a squatting
position when he smelled something out of place in the forest. He ran
out here too many times and had become familiar with the scents
surrounding him.
He was crouched, sniffing the air. Mercy could smell pine, small
creatures that inhabited the forest, the flowers coming into early
bloom, but he could also scent man, and that scent shouldn’t have
been there. He knew everyone’s scent in the house, and this wasn’t
one of his friends.
Mercy instinctively wanted to run back to the house to protect
Devin, but remained where he was. It wouldn’t do him any good to
run back to the house. The intruder would only follow, and Mercy
wasn’t leading whoever it was back to the mates or Devin.
Biting back the growl, Mercy narrowed his eyes when he saw the
intruder come into view, an assault rifle slung over the bastard’s
shoulder. The man was walking carefully, his steps measured, trying
to be as quiet as he could.
That wasn’t going to help him. Mercy had the guy in his sights
and wasn’t going to lose him. He didn’t have any weapons on him,
Devin’s Mercy
53
but then again, Mercy didn’t need any. He was damn good at hand-to-
hand combat.
He just needed to get the rifle away from the guy.
Mercy’s hands curled, fingernails breaking skin at the need to stop
this man from getting too close to the house. Whether Mercy wanted
to admit it or not, he cared deeply about Devin and wasn’t going to
allow anything to happen to the guy—even if Devin didn’t want his
help.
He didn’t know how true his words rang about keeping Devin safe
until he saw this intruder. Now he knew it to be a hard fact. No matter
if he was a loner or not, Mercy was going to protect Devin.
In his crouching position, Mercy silently inched closer,
positioning himself until he was at the man’s back, and then he struck,
yanking the weapon free and tossing it away before taking the man
down. “Who are you?” he snarled close to the man’s ear, unsure if
there were any other intruders with this one.
The man grunted, but remained silent.
Mercy pulled the man’s arm behind his back and applied pressure.
The grunt grew louder, but the guy still didn’t say a word.
“You will talk.” The defiance in the intruder’s eyes enraged
Mercy, but he kept his cool. He was known for thinking before acting,
for his calm exterior and methodical ways. What he wasn’t known for
was letting his emotions get the better of him.
But damn if he wasn’t close to doing just that right now. The
thought of Devin being hurt again drove Mercy close to the edge. He
wanted to make someone pay for what had happened to the guy back
in his bedroom. Devin’s anger was eating away at Mercy. If he
couldn’t get his hands on Martin, this one would do.
No. That wasn’t right. He wasn’t thinking logically.
Who would blame you? None of your friends would hold this kill
against you.
Mercy shook his head, trying to dislodge those tempting words.
He would know. He would hold it against himself. He may have
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killed before, but never in cold blood. What in the hell was Devin
doing to him? Mercy never lost his composure.
Never.
“You’re lucky I have a wealth of self-control or you would be
dead right now.” Mercy pulled the man to his feet, holding his arms
behind him, and led him to the house. He could lock the intruder in
the cage below and let Sage have the guy. Mercy needed to put space
between them. He didn’t trust himself at the moment.
“What do we have here?” Monterey asked as he stepped off of the
back porch.
“Someone trying to get to close. His rifle is still in the woods.”
Mercy nodded toward the forest. “Take him and I’ll go retrieve it.”
Plus, Mercy needed time alone, time to gather his thoughts.
Monterey grabbed the guy, hauling him up so close that the
intruder’s feet nearly left the ground. “Gladly.”
“Put him in the cage and let Sage know he’s here.” Mercy knew
that look. Monterey was dying for a piece of the guy. So was Mercy,
but that wouldn’t get them any answers if the man couldn’t talk from
a fierce work over, or worse.
“Sure, take all of the fun out of this.” Monterey smiled, but it was
a predatory smile, no friendliness to it.
The intruder struggled a bit, twisting his body around, fear finally
seeping into his eyes, but Monterey rearranged his grip, tightening it
to the point the man couldn’t move. “Now, now. We can’t have you
trying to get away before we torture you.”
Mercy did grin this time, widely, but the man’s back was to him,
and he didn’t see it as Monterey hauled the guy into the house. Mercy
wasn’t sure why he had smiled, but seeing the pout on Monterey’s
face was a bit funny. The man was tall, thick, and unbeknownst to
most, a fucking teddy bear. That didn’t mean the man would take
anyone’s shit. It just meant Monterey wasn’t a brooding man like
most of the men in the house.
Devin’s Mercy
55
There was a crash and then someone shouted, Mercy recognizing
the voice as Pat’s.
Maybe Mercy really wasn’t the one the intruder had to be wary of.
With the mood Pat was in, even Mercy was trying his damnedest to
stay away from the werewolf. Pat was over the top on his best days,
and the man hadn’t had a good day in a while.
Once again the thought made Mercy want to track Sheriff Sam
Reese down and choke some sense into the man. Sam may be human,
and he may have stolen Jeremiah’s blood from the hospital so no one
would be the wiser about who they were, but the sheriff didn’t have to
run from Pat when he found out they were werewolves.
Pat may have joked about not being interested in Sam, but
everyone knew that for the lie that it was. Pat was in love with Sam.
Mercy had seen it in the man’s blue eyes. Anytime Sam was around,
Pat went all weird.
To see Pat ruminating and sullen, not his usually perky self, pissed
Mercy off. He had known the man his entire life and hated to see him
hurting like this.
But then again, he couldn’t force Sam to accept Pat. That was
something the sheriff had to come to terms with. Mercy knew for a
fact that Sam felt the same way about Pat. The human had found the
stupidest reasons to come around just so he could see Pat.
Time.
That was what the sheriff needed. But if he didn’t get his head out
of his ass soon, Mercy was going to ship Pat to Sam. He wasn’t sure
how much more of Pat’s scathing attitude he could take.
Walking back toward the woods, Mercy searched until he located
the fallen assault rifle. He picked it up and noticed something odd.
Paying closer attention, he checked to see if there was a bullet in the
chamber when he saw something that made his blood run cold.
There weren’t bullets in the gun, but injection darts, filled with a
blue liquid. He remembered Jeremiah telling him about the injection
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Lynn Hagen
Martin had given Sylvester, Jeremiah’s mate. It had turned Sylvester
into a werewolf that same night.
Everyone in the house was a werewolf. He wasn’t sure what the
serum would do to a
vârcolac
or any of the converted mates. His grip
on the rifle tightened, thinking of Devin being injected with one of
these darts.
Mercy turned back toward the house, unsure now if he could stop
himself from killing the bastard.
Devin’s Mercy
57
Devin stared at the clothes Mercy had given him to wear. How in
the hell was he supposed to fit those? Mercy wasn’t a small man.
While Devin wasn’t either, he wasn’t super huge. Okay, he was only
five foot three, but he couldn’t help it if his parents were shrimps. He
didn’t like his smaller size, but there wasn’t a damn thing he could do
about it.
It had made him a tougher man, though. Growing up, he had
always been picked on for his shorter stature, and that only made him
fight harder to defend himself. Soon, the other kids realized that
Devin wasn’t somebody they could just push around and left him
alone. He wasn’t a fighter, but he knew how to defend himself.
But he hadn’t wanted to be left alone. He had wanted friends. That
was when Pat befriended him, and then soon after, Monterey, York,
and then Isaac. A year or two after that, Jeremiah and Sage began to
let him tag along.
But it was Mercy who had made Devin’s heart speed up every
time he laid eyes on the guy. Mercy was so fierce, so quiet that Devin
was drawn to him. It may have started out as wanting the man with
the most muscles because Devin was always picked on, but it soon
turned into something more.
Much more.
But Mercy had never given Devin the time of day when it came to
letting the guy know how interested he was in the man. He knew he
was too young at the time, and Mercy knew this as well. But now
Devin was a fully grown man.
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And…he wasn’t sure what he wanted. Devin was still having
nightmares about what had happened to him in that isolated cabin. He
still feared the woods, and that just pissed him off considering he had
loved the forest ever since he was a small child. Now, it was a sinister
place that made him cramp up with nightmares every time he looked
out of the window.
And Mercy, well, Devin began to shake with nerves anytime the
man was around. He was still attracted to the warrior, but he was also
terrified of him. Devin had seen too much violence and had been
victim to too much abuse to trust anyone. If he couldn’t trust his
alpha, then who could he trust? An alpha was supposed to be the
cornerstone of protection and security in a pack. Martin had been
anything but.
Now Devin was so damn confused and filled with so much anger
that he was lost, feeling as if he had no one.
Pushing those morose thoughts aside, Devin eyed the pants and
then decided to try them on. Maybe it wouldn’t be so bad. Sweatpants
he could work with, tying the string tight to fit around his waist, but
jeans…
Devin pulled them on and then rolled his eyes when they