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Deadly Desire (Riley Jenson Guardian #7)(36)

By:Keri Arthur

“I think so. They've obviously come to finish the job.” And Jessica had obviously suspected me a whole lot more than I'd figured.I swung my bag around and began picking through the mess of clothes to find the small containers of holy water. I dragged out two and handed one to Kye.
Kye shook the container, then gave me a somewhat dubious look. “Water?”
“Holy water. It burns them like acid and will blind them if it gets in their eyes.”
“You really are a most surprising woman, Riley Jenson.”
His expression was an odd mix of amusement, excitement, and hunger. The hunter was ready for his kill—and I wasn't entirely sure who, exactly, was his prey. Nor was I sure whether the shiver that rolled across my skin was excitement or fear.
“So how do we kill it?” he continued.
“Them,” I corrected, shoving the container into my jeans pocket, which freed up my hands but kept the water within easy grabbing range. “I think there's two—one in front, one behind. And decapitation is the only way we can get rid of them.”
“Do we attack, or do we wait for them to come to us?”
He didn't seem perturbed either way, but then he hadn't fought these things before. I had, and I'd prefer not to relive the experience if I could avoid it.
“Let's keep moving. They may not be here for us at all.”
“You don't believe that any more than I do.”
Well, no. And I couldn't help wondering why they were stalking me tonight. If they'd been at the club all along—and I had no doubt their mistress would keep them close, for safety's sake if nothing else—then why hadn't they come after me last night? She'd suspected me then, too.
And the hounds couldn't have picked up my scent at the club because I'd used Liander's special soap both times … Then I stopped and cursed myself for being a fool. I may have used Liander's soap before my shift, but I hadn't used it when I took a shower after work. Which meant I'd washed away the neutralizer and allowed my own natural scent to come through.
That's why they'd picked it up. It was a stupid, stupid thing to do, and one I'd make sure never to repeat. If I got out of this situation okay, that is.
We walked on, our footsteps light on the concrete. Cars rushed by, their headlights tearing through the surrounding shadows and revealing nothing more ominous than discarded soda containers and old hamburger wrappings.
I flared my nostrils, trying to catch the scent of sulfur, but it seemed to have disappeared as easily as it had come. Yet they were still out there, still watching. I could feel them, like a blot of evil growing on the horizon.
Kye stopped again. “The feel of magic just got sharper.”
I viewed the street ahead. I still couldn't sense anything more than I had moments ago, but that didn't mean much. “You're sensitive to magic?” 
“Yeah, something like that,” he said, voice clipped. “There's people walking this way, too. Unless you want to endanger them, we'd better bring this thing to a head in a more secure spot.”
“And here I was thinking you didn't care about anything or anyone else but yourself,” I said, then pointed up Little Bourke Street. “There's several small alleys there that aren't really used at night. It'll limit the possible damage to others.”
“That'll do, then.”
We headed across the street and down to the first alley. The sulfur scent drifted past again, sharper and closer than before. I still couldn't feel the hellhound in front of us, but there was definitely one behind.
The reek of rot and rubbish from the nearby bins filled the air, overriding every other smell. As I stared into the darkness, I reached into my bag for the knife, drawing it from the sheath and out into the darkness. The silver blade seemed to glow with its own blue fire, and markings I hadn't noticed before suddenly appeared along the blade's length. But its closeness burned my skin. I wouldn't be able to hold it for very long, bone handle or not.
“More magic,” Kye said, voice flat and all the more dangerous for it. He was looking at me rather than at the knife. “That's an interesting looking implement you've got there.”
“It's a gift from a concerned lover.”
Something flared in his eyes—something dark and very, very dangerous. “I'd like to meet this lover sometime and find out where he got it.”
“It's silver, Kye. Silver and werewolves are never a good mix.”
“Neither are werewolves and vampires, but that doesn't seem to have stopped you.”
His comment surprised me enough that all I could do for several seconds was stare at him, then anger surged and I lashed out. He caught the blow in his fist, holding it tight. “Don't ever hit me, Riley.”
“Don't ever creep around in my head,” I snapped back, pulling my fist from his. Surprise flickered briefly through his eyes before the mask returned. “Or I'll fry your fucking mind to a crisp.”
“It's not like I want to,” he said, voice still flat, and yet sounding oddly frustrated. “Trust me on that.”
“You're a telepath. You have the choice to intrude or not. Trust me, the not is the best option here.”
“I'm not a telepath, Riley. I've told you that—”
I clamped a hand over his mouth, stopping his denial. Not that I believed it, anyway. “Listen.”
For several seconds there were no sounds beyond the usual for this time of night. Then it came—the soft scrape of a nail against concrete.
They were on us.
But they weren't just coming from the main street. One of them was above us, on the roof.
Kye swung around and pulled out a gun from under his coat. The burn of silver suddenly became stronger.
“You carry silver bullets?” I asked, slipping my bag over my shoulder and tossing it into the shadows, out of the way.
“In certain situations, yes. Back to back, Riley. They're going to come at us from two angles.”
“Thanks for telling me that. I would never have guessed otherwise,” I said sarcastically, but he didn't answer.
I looked at the rooflines above us. A shadow moved in low and fast, and then it leapt.
“Drop,” I said, doing exactly that, trying to scrunch myself into the smallest possible ball. As the hound flew over the top of us, I slashed with the knife. The blue fire on the blade seemed to blaze even brighter as it scoured the creature's stomach, burning through hair and flesh and down into gut. Blood and God knows what else gushed, thick and black and putrid, splattering across my clothes and burning like acid. I swore and tore off my coat, but by then the creature had turned and was leaping again.Two shots ran across the night. The creature jerked and twisted away from us. For a moment I thought the shots had missed, then I saw the hole in the side of its jaw, the blood and bone splattered across the nearby wall.
It snarled, revealing wickedly sharp teeth. Kye twisted around and fired off a third shot. It took the creature in the chest, ripped through flesh and bone, then clean through its body, smashing into the wall behind it. The creature howled and leapt.
I grabbed Kye, pulling him sideways, both of us falling to the ground hard. Again the creature flew over us, but this time it lashed out. Claws raked my side, spilling warmth down my hip.
I bit back a yelp of pain and slashed with the knife, missing its belly but getting a hind leg. Toes and gleaming claws plopped down onto the pavement beside me.
“Oh, fuck, here comes the other one,” Kye said, scrambling to his feet before reaching down to grab my arm and haul me upright.
“Use the holy water. We have to blind them if we're to have any hope at all.”
“Whatever else these things are, they're hounds,” he said grimly. “They hunt by scent.”
“They can't if you destroy their sensory center as well.”
He didn't look convinced that would work, and in honesty, I wasn't, either.
“You take the injured one,” he said.
“Kye—” But I was already talking to the air.
Soft padding steps echoed behind me. I twisted around, the knife held in front of me like a blazing lance. I wished it was a lance—long and strong and wickedly sharp—because it was the only way I was going to beat this thing without getting too damn close.
The bloodied hellhound stalked toward me, its steps measured, its gaze on mine, luminous and deadly. Fear stirred in my stomach, but I pushed it away. I'd beaten these things once before. I could do it again.
It sprang. There was no warning, no bunching of muscles. One minute it was walking, the next it was in the air. I twisted out of its way, slashing at the soft flesh of its neck, hoping to at least sever something vital. Again the blue fire erupted along the blade, but the hellhound shifted at the last moment, and the knife barely skimmed the creature's flesh.
It snarled and slashed out with its claws. I leapt backward, crashed into some bins, then spilled sideways along with the rubbish. I caught my balance and backed away, down the lane, drawing the creature away from Kye, who seemed to be having no more luck with his creature than I was with mine.
The hound shook its head, spraying droplets of blood that hit the brick walls of the buildings on either side of us and began to sizzle. These things had acid for blood. What the hell kind of hound were they? At least the other hounds I'd faced in the past hadn't possessed deadly bodily fluids. 
It leapt again. As I ran backward, out of the way, I drew the small container from my pocket and popped the top. But I didn't throw it, holding steady as the creature hit the pavement and launched again. When it was near enough that I could smell its fetid breath, I threw the holy water. The liquid arced across the air like a silver ribbon, hitting the creature across the snout and splashing upward, into its eyes.