Viper Game

Wyatt didn’t wait to see what happened next. He raced back toward the front of the house, knowing if Ezekiel was calling for him, Malichai needed attention now. He tore into the house and headed down to the office he’d kept for the locals who needed a doctor. They’d moved his gear into the room and set up a surgery there, just in case.

The lights were blazing and he could see splashes of blood on the floor as he went inside. “Nonny!” She was steady. She’d always been steady, and like him, she was a natural healer. She didn’t panic. Not ever.

She was there right away, assessing Malichai’s condition as he lay on the operating table, facedown. He already had lines in. Ezekiel had worked fast to keep his brother alive, but he needed surgery.

“Pepper.” Wyatt turned his head the moment he sensed her in the doorway. He was already at the sink, scrubbing. “You don’ let anyone in the house. You understand me?” She was different. Distant. He couldn’t quite reach her, not even through their connection. Her face was very pale, but her answering nod was firm. “Whatever it takes, babe. Just keep them off of us.”

She nodded again and turned away, leaving him with Nonny and Malichai. Ezekiel had already raced outside to aid Draden. Wyatt looked at his grandmother. “Let’s get it done. Zeke set everything up. Check and make certain Zeke has all my instruments, the gelfoam and coils.”



Trap shot the big, burly soldier point-blank, and he didn’t go down. The man was half covered in silk, but he’d somehow torn the sticky filament off his arms. The gun had gone flying, but he had Cayenne wrapped in his big, beefy arms. She looked tiny, but Trap could see she was a handful, much stronger than the soldier first thought. She used her legs and arms to gain wiggle room from his death hold on her.

The big, beefy soldier suddenly grunted, as if she’d scored a hit on him, held her away from him with one hand and punched her repeatedly with the other. That’s when Trap shot him. Right in the face. Point-blank.

Trap wasn’t a man who displayed emotion often. He often didn’t recognize emotion in himself. Rage exploded through him, a rush of such proportions he followed up the bullets by kicking the soldier in the gut with both boots, using his forward momentum to gain even more strength.

He felt the jar through his body as he struck, but the beefy soldier dropped her and staggered back several feet. He turned his one working eye on Trap. There was malevolence there. A kind of distant boiling fury.

“Get up,” he ordered Cayenne. The soldier was flying on something. Bullets and a kick that should have broken his insides to pieces hadn’t even fazed him. “Damn it, get on your feet.”

The malevolent eye hadn’t stayed on Trap. It had gone to Cayenne, who was moving slow, groaning, trying to push herself up off the ground. Trap caught her by the back of her shirt and yanked her to her feet, pushing her behind him.

“Get the hell out of here.”

The soldier wiped at the blood running down his face, smearing it everywhere. Once more fixing his eye on Trap, he licked his fingers, smirking. Trap shot him again, a straight line of bullets up his body and back down, like a zipper. He heard the bullets thud into the man, but the soldier didn’t do more than jerk with each strike.

I’ll take him from the trees, see if I can drop silk around his neck like a noose while you distract him.

She was there. Moving in his head. No one moved inside his mind. No one. He spoke to his team telepathically, but they didn’t get in his head. It was an invasion of privacy, and he would have broken her neck himself if they weren’t in such a dangerous position. He was a man with too many secrets, and no one was allowed to ever get that close – or that intimate.

“Get the hell out of here,” he snarled. Shocking himself. He didn’t feel fear like the others. He didn’t usually feel. Cayenne disturbed him in ways he didn’t understand.

The soldier walked toward him. Walked. Not ran. He didn’t stop to pick up the weapon he’d dropped, he just came at Trap as if he was out for a Sunday stroll. Trap swore between clenched teeth. He studied his opponent as the man came toward him, using the eye of scientist. He was good at finding weaknesses in everything around him – especially people. He catalogued and filed away the shambling walk. The blood draining from each hole in the man. The way he moved his arms and opened and closed his fists.

Trap’s mind reduced the hulk to numbers, a stack of them shuffling through the dirt toward him. He calculated and calibrated and waited until the last possible moment, right before those big, beefy hands swung at him. He’d already figured the odds of the attack and exactly how the soldier would come at him. He had a few vulnerable spots, but not too many.