be. The man was far too young in Mercy’s mind, and Mercy liked to
walk alone. Always had.
He closed the bedroom door and walked over to the cot, unsure of
what to do. He knew for a fact Devin was keeping a distance from
everyone and wouldn’t welcome anyone touching him, even if it was
to wake him from his nightmare.
Squatting down, Mercy reached out to gently nudged Devin’s
sweat-soaked shoulder, but stopped himself.
The man whimpered, but his eyes remained closed.
Unaccountable fury swept through him as he watched Devin
struggle with his nightmare. Whether the man wanted touch or not,
Mercy couldn’t sit by and watch the sweaty, struggling vision before
him. He sat on the side of the cot and pulled Devin up, pulling the
man into his arms as he began to talk quietly into his ear, telling him
he was safe, that it was only a nightmare.
Devin’s struggles slowly eased until he felt the man go so stiff
that he should have shattered. “Don’t touch me,” Devin whispered.
The plea broke Mercy’s well-protected heart. The whisper was filled
with so much agony that he could do nothing but obey it. He eased
Devin back down to the mattress.
“I was only trying to wake you from a nightmare you were
having,” he said gently. “I wasn’t taking advantage of you.” Although
the mistrust in Devin’s eyes crushed Mercy in a way he didn’t think
possible. He stood, giving Devin a nod. “It won’t happen again.” And
Devin’s Mercy
45
it wouldn’t. Mercy wanted Devin to feel safe, even if it was just with
him.
“It isn’t you,” Devin confessed. Mercy could see the man wanted
to say more but curled back up into a tight little ball and closed his
eyes. “It was never you.”
He wasn’t sure what Devin was talking about, but Mercy felt
peace settle over him that Devin didn’t look at him as one of the
monsters. Mercy may have been pack enforcer when he was in
Martin’s pack, but that didn’t mean he had a heart of stone. “Can I ask
you something?”
Eyes so crystal clear they were almost transparent looked at him.
“Depends.”
Mercy ignored the mistrust he could hear edging Devin’s tone.
“Martin has taken teenagers.”
“And you think I had something to do with that?” The question
was spoken quietly, but Mercy could hear the hurt.
He shook his head. “No, but I was wondering if maybe you
overheard where he might be keeping them.”
Devin looked as if he were thinking things over and then nodded.
“I might.”
Mercy squatted once more at Devin’s side, the other man scooting
away. “I need to know, Devin. Martin wants—”
“Please stop using his name.”
“He wants to use these teenagers in his experiment.” He waited,
letting the implications sink into Devin’s mind.
“The North Fork River.” Devin glanced at Mercy and then quickly
looked away. “There’s a cabin about ten miles south of the main
road.”
Mercy wanted to ask Devin how he knew about this cabin, but had
a feeling Devin wouldn’t be forthcoming with his answer. His eyes
were haunted when he spoke, which already told Mercy that the
memory wasn’t pleasant.
“Thank you.”
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Lynn Hagen
Devin turned over, giving Mercy his back as he pulled the blanket
up over his shoulder. Mercy curled in his fingers to form tight fists in
order not to reach out and soothe a hand over the man’s hair. It was an
odd reaction, but it was there, the need to comfort Devin and chase
away his nightmares.
You are ten years older than him. It won’t work.
Mercy stood, leaving Devin on the cot, swaddled in his protective
blanket as he sought out Sage. He found the man still sitting in the
dining room with Monterey, Isaac, Pat, York, and Jeremiah. “Devin
thinks he might be holding those boys at North Fork River.”
Sage cursed.
“Know the place?” Mercy asked.
“It was our summer vacation spot when I was a young kid. The
bastard sure knows how to twist up my fond memories.” Sage didn’t
sound pleased.
“I’m going to get lunch started while you guys hash out your
plan.” Pat stood, walking out of the dining room.
Mercy took Pat’s seat, folding his hands in front of him on the
table. “When do we go in?” It wasn’t a question of if. There was no
doubt in any of their minds that they were heading to that place to
rescue those young men. Human or not, they didn’t deserve to be
tortured.
“I know the lay of the land,” Sage said. “All we need is to know
how many guards he has there and take them out.”
Mercy nodded. “Call me when lunch is ready.”
The need to be near Devin was overwhelming. The need to protect
him from his own nightmares was staggering.
The need to hold Devin in his arms was baffling.
Devin’s Mercy
47
Devin sat on the front porch, the comforter wrapped tightly
around his shoulders. It was early spring, but the nights still were very
cold. He had needed fresh air, and oddly enough, Mercy had given it
to him.
He would have thought the man would have kept him locked up in
the bedroom. But not only had Mercy told him he could sit on the
front porch, the man had let Devin sit alone. No guards. No words of
warning about him running.
Devin wasn’t delusional. He knew there were eyes on him. But for
Mercy to give him that little bit of trust went a long way with Devin.
He may not fully trust Mercy, but the guy hadn’t made any moves on
Devin, hadn’t taken advantage of him.
Devin thought about Mercy holding him earlier. How good it felt
to have warm arms around him that weren’t tearing at his clothes or
punching him for something he hadn’t done. It was madness even to
consider how much strength Devin had felt in Mercy’s arms, yet they
didn’t crush him.
Mercy didn’t want him.
Devin didn’t want to be touched.
He shivered, not only from the cold, but from the ice forming
around his heart. He didn’t want to be this emotional train wreck, but
didn’t know how to stop it. He glanced around noticing how quiet it
was. The soundless space would have been nice if Devin’s mind
would only quiet or if his emotions weren’t so battered. The pine-
needle-strewn yard made Devin want to run free, to feel the earth
48
Lynn Hagen
beneath him, but he had another month before he could shift and he
had missed out on the freedom this shift.
It was heartbreaking that he had missed what he loved the most.
Devin had always become excited when in his lycan form. He wished
he could shift at will like the mated werewolves. But, being single, he
was ruled by the full moon, which sucked.
“You’re thinking too hard.” Mercy walked out onto the porch,
handing Devin a cup of hot chocolate.
“Thanks.” Devin grabbed the cup, not realizing how cold he had
become until the warmth of the mug warmed not only his hands, but
his body as he took a tentative sip.
Mercy took a seat on the steps, but kept his distance. “How do you
feel?”
Devin glanced at Mercy, hearing something in that tone…a subtle
edge that resonated with the unnamed thing inside of him. “Fine.” The
lie had slipped off of his tongue so easily that it surprised Devin.
Lying to Mercy didn’t sit well with him, but his other option wasn’t
something he would even consider. He would take his humiliation to
his grave.
Shifting his blanket around, Devin took another sip of his hot
chocolate and realized there were tiny marshmallows floating in the
top of the drink. They were the real ones, not the kind that came with
the powdery mix. And then Devin tasted it.
This was homemade hot chocolate.
He could tell by the rich taste.
As the night fell, Devin looked out over the forest surrounding the
house, a small part of his mind wondering if at this very moment one
of Martin’s men was watching him.
“No one’s out there.” It was eerie how Mercy kept reading his
mind. “Monterey is in the forest, watching. I would know if someone
came anywhere near the house.”
That thought settled Devin’s nerves, even if having Mercy so
close was the real reason he was on edge. His feelings were
Devin’s Mercy
49
conflicting and Devin didn’t like that. He wanted to shut the world
out, to keep everyone at bay. But Mercy was slowly pulling the bricks
away from the wall he had erected around himself, a wall to help him
survive what had been done to him.
“I should go inside.” Devin stood, escaping. It was the only thing
he could think to do. He wanted to look Mercy in his eyes, to tell him
he appreciated the homemade hot chocolate, but Devin feared looking
into those grey depths.
Mercy was dangerous to Devin in ways that mattered, and though
Mercy had freed him from the cage in the basement, he wasn’t sure
he’d survive the ex-enforcer if he allowed Mercy into his life, into his
darkest secrets.
No, it was best for him to find out how long he was going to be
held prisoner and then make plans to settle somewhere as far away
from Martin, and Mercy, as possible. Both men were lethal to him,
but for different reasons.
Against his will, Devin listened for Mercy to come inside as he
neared the steps. He realized that he was starting to see Mercy as his
anchor, his safe harbor. Devin growled. Mercy could be neither.
“I see they allow you freedom now.”
Devin turned to see Kell coming up from the basement. The
doctor was the last person Devin wanted to see. The scientist was up
to no good, but Devin had no proof. It was a gut feeling, a hot burning
sensation in the back of his mind telling him to keep an eye on the
man.
“Even dogs are allowed to roam free at times.”
The smirk wasn’t friendly. “Yes, they are.”
Devin noticed the look in Kell’s unyielding eyes and knew it for
what it was. A lethal promise. This man wasn’t hiding his intentions
in front of Devin, and Devin knew why. No one would believe him if
he told them that Kell was an evil bastard with less-than-friendly
intentions.
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Lynn Hagen
“Don’t you have someone to butcher?” Devin’s tone held such
rage that he was frightening himself. “Or some serum to create for
your beloved alpha?”
“I have no idea what you are talking about.”
Devin knew why Kell backed down. He heard the front door
close. Mercy was standing behind him. He wanted to shout at Kell to
tell the truth, but knew it was futile.
“Is there a problem?” Mercy asked as he moved closer, Devin
feeling the heat at his back. He inched toward the steps, letting his
gaze fall from Kell.
“No.” Devin hurried up the stairs, promising himself that he was
going to expose Kell for the monster that he truly was. Even if Mercy
and his friends no longer trusted Devin, he wasn’t going to allow
harm to befall them.
Mercy followed him.
“I don’t need a keeper. I didn’t run when you allowed me
outside.”
“Put your claws away, Devin. I’m not your enemy.” Mercy moved
ahead of Devin, opening the bedroom door. Devin walked in behind
him, slamming it shut.
“Then why do you keep following me around? Do you think I
would hurt one of the mates or go running back to the bastard?”
Devin cursed under his breath, hating that he was losing control.
Mercy was in front of him in seconds, his body a strong and hot
aide-mémoire of the dominant male before him. The heat coming off
of Mercy was a vivid reminder of the wild animal the man truly was.
“Have I given any indications that I think you would run or hurt
anyone?” His tone was snarly, as if he were offended that Devin
would even think that of him.
“No,” he admitted. “So why do you keep following me around
then?”
Devin’s Mercy
51
Mercy pulled his shirt off, tossing it toward the chair before
grabbing a heavier fabric shirt from the drawer, tugging it on before
he answered. “Maybe I’m making sure you’re safe.”
This only angered Devin. “I’m not a helpless cripple who needs a
babysitter. I’m twenty-five fucking years old and can take care of
myself.”
He wasn’t sure why Mercy looked surprised, but the expression
was gone just as fast as it had appeared. “Huh, I thought you