Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Tuesday Teaser

 


KAGE HEARD what Isadora, and most likely every paranormal in that room heard—the distant rumble of motorcycles. And that meant only one thing: the Crimson Fang pack had decided to make an appearance.

“Kage? What’s going on now? Who or what is inbound?” Austin asked quietly.

“The Crimson Fang pack. Let your hearing extend and concentrate. Listen for the low rumble of motorcycles,” Kage said.

“Gotcha.” Austin closed his eyes, a frown line appearing as he concentrated.

While Austin tried out his new hearing ability, Kage studied the room. Every table was in quiet discussions. It was extremely hard to keep a conversation private around a group of paranormals—almost impossible actually, and those here wasn’t even attempting it.

“Oh wow, I can hear them!”

“They’ll be here shortly.” As Kage suspected, he wasn’t the only one concerned with the pack’s arrival.

They were troublesome, there was no denying that. He’d already been annoyed by one paranormal tonight. Raven was lucky Isadora had stepped in before Kage had. It appeared he was destined to be annoyed yet again.

Austin studied Kage for a minute. “I take it the fun and games are not over yet?”

“Oh, no. They’re just getting started.”

Everybody was tense again, but this time for a different reason. Denisha was correct when she called the Crimson Fang’s thugs.

Their alpha was an enormous human who’d been turned in the late 70s. The male was covered in tattoos, had hair halfway down his back, and sported a potbelly.

None of that made the alpha trash, of course. It was the unscrupulous behavior, amoral actions, and the pleasure he derived from other people’s suffering.

The rumble of motorcycles died away and silence prevailed in the restaurant. Scowling, Isadora drifted to the front so she could unlock the door.

After a few moments, Kage could hear the clop of boots on expensive floors. Two enforcers walked in first. Following them was another man. Neither of the three were the alpha, at least not according to the information Kage had.

They also had allowed their wolf to be very close to the surface, which annoyed Kage because it was nothing more than an intimidation tactic.

If the low growl from Li Li was any indication, she agreed. The wolves surveyed the room then the two enforcers walked to the empty table reserved for them. The third man remained where he was.

“I’m Dutch, the Sergeant at Arms for the Crimson Fangs.” Dutch’s gaze landed on Austin. “What the fuck is a human doing here?”

“Look, you overgrown puppy—” Denisha started.

“Lieutenant,” Kage said, softly.

“Yes, Elder.” Scowling, Denisha sat back in her chair but continued to glare at the newcomer.

“You will, of course, forgive my lieutenant’s reaction. She and Maia are very protective of Austin.” Kage stood. “I’ll let your lack of respect slide since you just arrived. This time. This is my bonded mate. I know you understand what that means since you’re a werewolf. At least you should.”

Dutch snarled, his upper lip exposing a fang.

“Careful, Dutch. You don’t want to piss off the shadow demon.”

“Fuck,” Maia muttered. “Fuck. Is that

“Yes.” Kage’s stomach dropped.

He knew that voice—it had whispered sweet nothings in his ear, that had promised things and not delivered, and had turned Kage’s world upside down a lifetime ago.

Kage’s nightmare strolled into the restaurant. Axel Scheffler was still tall and lean, was still insanely sexy, and was still the very definition of trouble.

Once upon a time, there had been a compatibility between the two of them. Daemons believed that Fate didn’t arrange one certain person for their kind like it did for werewolves and vampires.

If a daemon was attracted to someone by scent, it meant that person was compatible—they could be a mate. Both parties got a choice, which a Fated mate did not. Which meant a prospective mate could also walk away if no bond was formed.

There might have been compatibility between Axel and Kage, but they fought like cats and dogs. Axel made it very clear that, as a werewolf, he knew Kage was not his fated mate, and that Axel would mate with the person who was, if he ever found them.

That hurt, but Kage understood. But since Axel was compatible, Kage hoped Axel’s future mate would also be compatible. He and Axel were in a relationship, so why wouldn’t this future mate not also be compatible with Kage?

But even if they weren’t, Kage was willing to try to make something work anyhow, because he truly cared about Axel.

That was Kage’s first mistake. Axel might be gorgeous on the outside, but he was rotten to the core. The ruthlessness Kage could handle. Kage had killed when needed to and never lost sleep over it.

But Axel’s exaggerated sense of self-importance, his entitlement, the expectation to be recognized as superior, and the belittlement of anybody who wasn’t a wolf, were only a few of the things Kage eventually could no longer tolerate. Especially that last one.

Kage had ended things. Axel, being Axel, did not handle it well. How dare Kage end things? No one walked away from Axel, Axel ranted. He’d shifted and attacked. Of all the things Kage had been expecting, that certainly had not made the list.

They tore up Kage’s penthouse and beat each other bloody before Kage finally use the shadows to dump Axel on the other side of the hemisphere.

Yes, he abandoned the werewolf on the other side of the fucking world. Maybe that had been a bit dramatic, but at the time Kage had been pissed and hurt—mentally and physically.

Axel had accused him of all sorts of ridiculous things and attacked him, something that had taken Kage years to get past. Had he loved Axel? At the time, Kage thought he had, even though his relationship with the wolf had been toxic. He’d figured that out in retrospect.

Their relationship had ended one hundred years ago, and Kage had no regrets. Trying to make something work between them would’ve eventually ended with one of them most likely dead.

Then Kage had met a small human boy being abused by his father, and Kage had taken up the role of protector. He became the monster under the bed in order to protect Austin.

Kage waited for the child to grow into a man so he could claim his mate. Funnily enough, it’d been Austin who’d finally moved their relationship along. Not Kage. And he had never been more grateful that Austin had accepted the shadow’s embrace.

Axel’s short brown hair was styled becomingly, but the short beard was new. As were the skull rings and bracelets. He wore what Kage assumed was standard biker uniform—black boots, jeans, a white T-shirt, and a leather jacket. And sunglasses. The fucker was wearing sunglasses in the restaurant.

Unlike the humans, werewolves didn’t wear a biker vest or cut to display their patches to show their affiliation. The last thing werewolves wanted was attention from the human police.

“Where is Alpha Whitlock?” Li Li demanded. “And who are you?”

“Alpha Whitlock is dead,” Axel answered as he came to a stop next to his table. “My name is Axel. I challenged for the position of alpha, and I won.”

Shit, shit, shit. Axel won? Kage didn’t like the sound of that at all. That meant the slimy bastard was back in San DeLain now.

“Why have I not heard of this?” Li Li snapped “There are only two packs in San DeLain, and as an alpha, I should have been told.”

“Yeah, sorry about that,” Axel answered nonchalantly. “I’ve had more important things to handle.”

Li Li climbed to her feet, her eyes also transitioning to yellow. “More important than contacting the only other alpha in this metropolis? Are you trying to be insulting?”

Axel shrugged. “I’m not trying to be, no. It happened yesterday. I’ve been busy, but I did plan to extend the courtesy of letting you know. Consider yourself told.”

A low growl escaped Li Li.

Within a space of a few minutes it had become glaringly apparent that Axel had not changed at all. Nothing and no one was more important than him and his business.

There were leaders from a vampire’s coven, a werewolf pack, a dragon’s court, a merman’s colony, a gargoyle’s clan, and a daemon’s clan. Plus, an arachne.

And already Axel was causing trouble.

Isadora cleared her throat. Li Li glanced toward the other woman in the room. Frustration crossed Li Li’s face, but she sat down.

“We will discuss your lack of manners later,” Li Li said.

“Whatever.” Axel glanced toward Kage’s table. “Well now. Hello, love. Long time no see. Tell me, who is this lovely, lovely human sitting next to you?”

Kage purposely kept his face blank, even though it was the second time a paranormal in the room had made reference to Austin. “My bonded mate.”

Axel sprawled in his chair. “A mate, huh.” His fingers drummed on the pristine white tablecloth. “Imagine that. Are you going to introduce me?”

“Absolutely not. Not only am I not going to introduce him to someone like you, I’m going to give you fair warning right now—you look at my mate wrong, and I won’t just deposit you on the other side of the world this time, I’ll make you disappear. Permanently,” Kage added.

Dutch snarled, baring his fangs at Kage.

Kage fought not to let a partial shift overtake him. That would show Axel that he’d managed to get under Kage’s skin. And that puppy next to him. “Do you understand?”

Kage didn’t scream his threat or yell. He didn’t growl or snarl. Instead, his voice was deadly soft.

“Oh, I hear exactly what you’re saying.” A slow smile crossed Axel’s face. “Very clearly.”

“Well, since we’re being clear and all, you should know the Fire Court considers Kage’s mate an honorary friend. He has my protection,” Hudson added. “And that of my court. Just in case I wasn’t clear.”

Hudson crossed his arms over his chest. Conrad and the other two dragons copied him.

“I like the boy too,” Isadora said from the bar. “I usually stay out of other paranormal’s business, but I feel the need to make my position clear also.”

Seemed like it was pretty clear where they stood. The show of support from Isadora floored Kage. She wasn’t exaggerating when she said she didn’t involve herself in the goings-on of the paranormal community. Austin must have really made an impression on her. He wondered how his mate would feel about that once he figured it out.

“Very touching,” Axel said, the smile gone. “Anyway, onto more important stuff. Why the hell am I here?”