Unknown - Scorched

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Ex-detective Macmillan has a taste for bad girls, but his last lover really took the cake?and his humanity. Now a half-demon, Mac?s lost his friends, his family, and his job. Then a beguiling vampire asks for his help to find her son. Suddenly, Mac has a case to work?one that leads him deeps into the supernatural prison where Mac learns that cracking the case will cost him his last scrap of humanity.

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And then the tunnel began to tremble, dust falling in gusts as if a giant baker were tossing handfuls of flour. Alessandro heard the clink of stone shifting, the rattle of mortar shaken loose. The roof of the tunnel began to slope upward and he gratefully straightened, lengthening his stride.

The passage opened into a cave, and he took a last bound into the torchlight, hard on Bevan’s heels. The cave was filled with hounds, a babble of excited voices. Lore had said there were forty in this group. There had to be at least half that many again, some just babes in arms. Alessandro wheeled, looking behind him. The last of the hounds was leaping out Of the passage, arms and legs flying wide.

And then, with a sound like the swish of a sliding door, the tunnel disappeared. He had expected a crash, an avalanche of falling rock. Alessandro gaped for a moment, and turned to Bevan.

“That’s how it happens,” said the hound. “The outer territories have already gone.”

“If we’d still been in there?”

Bevan shrugged.

Forcing his hands to be steady, Alessandro fiddled with his sword, attaching the scabbard back on its hanger. His thoughts felt like rubber balls, frantically bouncing off the insides of his skull. I hate magic. I really, really hate magic.

He sucked in a breath and looked around the cave. There was another door. At least they weren’t trapped.

Then he took in the hounds. “These are mostly females and children,” he said.

“Yes,” said Bevan. “The males are dead. Killed by the changelings and goblins.”

Alessandro cursed inwardly. Some of the hounds were in their beast form, black dogs with long, pointed snouts and upright ears. They all looked exhausted, especially the children. He had a sudden, vivid memory from his human life, of playing with his own younger siblings. He knew a tired toddler when he saw one.

But there was no time to rest. He looked at their mothers, trying to gauge their condition. All the hounds were ragged, the clothes sewn from coarse, hand-dyed material the weight of old sacking. Their feet were bare. What they did have were bright strings of painted wooden beads— rich, gaudy colors defiant against the Castle’s gray-on-gray hues. Women always find a way to shine.

He had to believe the beads. These mothers would get their children to safety, if he and the male hounds could secure a path.

Bevan was talking to an older woman, who wore many bright strands around her neck. An elder, and probably a grandmother. She held a little girl on her hip, who peeked at Alessandro with wide, dark eyes. She’s going to break hearts someday.

The words flew fast in the houndish tongue, with a lot of pointing at the remaining door.

“What does she say?” Alessandro asked Bevan.

“That way leads to the dark pool of water. From there it is possible to find the Castle door.”

“Is that way guarded?”

“That is not the problem.”

Bevan turned back to the woman, who talked some more.

“What?” Alessandro snapped, apprehension making him impatient. “Are the corridors vanishing?”

“No,” said Bevan. He asked another question, got a one-word reply. “They’re afraid. There’s something out there.”

“What?”

“She doesn’t know. A creature that spreads darkness. They ran in here before it got too close. And then they were too tired to carry on.”

Alessandro pushed past Bevan, storming toward the doorway.

The hound caught his arm. “What are you doing?”

“You and your men stay and keep these people safe.”

“What are you going to do?”

“I’m going to find out what that something is.”

Connie and Mac raced down the narrow walkway that overlooked the guardsmen’s courtyard. Mac stopped, looking over the railing at the benches and empty dormitories below. The fires were burning, but the courtyard was | empty.

“Where are the guardsmen?” Connie asked.

“Up to no good,” Mac growled. “What are those?”

He pointed to a row of frames that stood in the courtyard. They looked like giant tennis rackets standing on their handles. Some sort of hides were strung in the middle, lashed to the frames as if to stretch them. They were a light brown, with dark rosettes, and whatever creatures they came from had been huge.

“Trolls,” Connie said weakly. “Those were trolls. That’s Bran’s work.”

“Do they hunt them?”

“It’s punishment. Trolls are slow but they talk. They live in tribes.”

Mac’s stomach heaved. Did one of those hides belong to the creature he’d seen thrown into a cell? Furious, he flung himself down one of the stairs that zigzagged down to the cells beneath. “Do you see anyone in the cells?”

“Are the caves their cells?” Connie asked, jogging down the stairs after him. “Because there’s someone in that one.”

“Where?” Mac asked.

“There.” She pointed to a cell across the courtyard. “He—I’m pretty sure it’s a he—isn’t moving.”

Mac squinted. She was right. “Good eyesight. That’s a guardsman’s coat. I’ll bet you a quarter that’s Reynard.”

He turned to Connie. “I need your key.”

She gave it to him with a questioning look.

“Let’s see if it works on the cell doors. Wait here.” Mac dusted across the courtyard, materializing right outside Reynard’s cell. The ledge outside the cell door was as wide as a sidewalk, allowing Mac plenty of space to crouch and look inside the bars.

What he saw disgusted him. The cell was tiny, not large enough to lie, or stand, or even sit in comfortably. The captain’s usually spotless clothes were torn and blotted with blood.

Perhaps most cruel of all, he was conscious. “My own men did this.” Reynard’s expression hovered somewhere between a grimace and a rueful smile. “You look shocked, demon.”

“I served as a kind of guardsman in my old life. This is shocking.”

“They claimed I let you escape.”

“Yeah, well, just be glad I got away, because I’m here now.” Mac pressed the gold disk against the lock. It flared with light. The mechanism ground with a shrill squeal, and then a clank. The light winked out. He yanked the door open. It came away in a cloud of stone dust, the raw ends of the bars scraping the rocks.

Reynard moved to crawl out, but his limbs refused to obey.

“Hang on.” Mac reached in, grabbing the man’s hip and arm and dragging him forward. Reynard collapsed to his hands and knees, his limbs too stiff and weak to stand. Mac steadied him with one hand. The landing at the top of the stairs was small. A false step would take the captain a long, long way down to the courtyard below.

“Where is the incubus now?” Mac demanded.

Reynard shook his head. “Gone. The others took him to the black lake.”

Damn. They had guessed wrong, come to the wrong place. “When?”

“Not an hour ago.” Reynard grasped the top of the cell door and determinedly got his feet under him.

Mac grabbed the captain’s jacket with one hand and hauled him to a standing position. Reynard wobbled dangerously. He hunched, holding one arm across his stomach.

“I’ll help you stop them if I can.” Reynard said. “Anything to stop Bran.”

“Can you walk?”

“Of course. Just give me a moment.”

Mac kept one hand on Reynard’s shoulder, steadying him. “Do you know where the sorcerer is?”

“Atreus? They took him as well.”

Mac glanced across the courtyard to see Connie, leaning on the rail and watching. It was going to be a slog to get Reynard across the courtyard to join her. Or not. “Hold still.”

“What?”

They rematerialized on the other side of the courtyard. Reynard grabbed the railing with white knuckles. “God’s teeth!”

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