Misty Simon

Wicked Ink


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he thrust his sword into his opponent, welcoming the pain when the man managed to land a blow just above his heart.

      His tattoos coalesced into a solid mass around the blade, holding it in his skin, which gave him the advantage of keeping the man’s sword prisoner while he redoubled his attack.

      His opponent went down with the word Andraste and a cackle on his lips—not dead, but unconscious from the blow Garrett had dealt to his head with a black mallet that had formed in his other hand.

      Garrett removed the man’s sword from his own chest and threw it down next to his body. He would have to call his friend Jackson to come clean up after him. He hated to do it, but there was no way he would be able to get rid of this trash without going crazy. Garrett owed Jackson for a ton of things, but nothing more than the day he’d taken him off the streets as a favor to Lissa.

      Fortunately he felt the weight of his cell phone in his back pocket. Taking it out, he growled instructions to Jackson, then limped toward the end of the alley. He had no idea how he was going to find the kidnapped woman. He might not interact with many people, but he knew their habits, the intricacies of their lives. He was a watcher. Marta was a lawyer who had three grandchildren from her only son. They all came to dinner on Saturdays, never missing a week. He had to find her.

      He set out with the intention of searching every nook and cranny of the city, every single place he could think of where a prisoner might be stashed. But there was too much ground to cover, and the craving for chaos and oblivion was overwhelming. Two hours after the fight, when the sun began to peek over the range of mountains to his left, he decided to call it quits. It went against his every impulse, but he couldn’t fight the darkness and the craving much longer.

      At the last minute he stopped, remembering to pick up the couple of shards of glass from earlier in the evening. Once he reached the area beneath his balcony, he used the grappling hook to pull himself back up the side of the building to avoid showing himself in the hallways. His chest ached enough to keep him conscious. The tattoos wouldn’t be able to hold back the blood flow from the injury much longer. He had to get to the chair quickly and then find some medical supplies.

      Failure rode on his shoulders the whole way up to his balcony. He climbed hand over hand, hoping the exertion would help clear his mind, but it wasn’t working. The scream of police sirens down below did nothing for him, either. He hoped Jackson had had enough time to set things right.

      When Garrett entered his apartment, it was to the sound of knocking. His breath came in sharp gasps and he felt like Mr. Hyde without a Dr. Jekyll in his near future.

      He could ignore the sound, but the thought didn’t sit well with him. Jackson might need assistance, not that Garrett could provide it, or the police might be on the other side of the door with questions for him. They’d be willing to break down the door if he didn’t get there fast enough.

      Fortunately, he’d been smart enough to keep his exposure as a person with weird abilities to a minimum. He’d never been caught in the act, although a few local newspapers had run articles about a mysterious man who helped poor schmucks who had gotten themselves into trouble.

      Taking a moment, he calmed his breathing and ran a hand over his short hair. He had no idea who was on the other side of the door, and since he didn’t have X-ray vision like his favorite little-known comic-book hero Booster Gold, staring at the wood wasn’t going to do anything for him.

      He opened the door to what he could have sworn was a ball of energy.

      “Oh my God, Garrett, did you see what’s going on downstairs? There was another attack and they’re saying Mrs. Handel is missing! Do you think it’s the same people who attacked the others? Oh my God!” Her face was drained of color.

      He stepped out of the door. He didn’t want her inside his apartment, but he was well aware that this wasn’t a conversation he should have while leaning against the door frame. Maybe she had information he could use? After all, she was friends with Marta. If only he’d had time to purge before talking with her. His head was muddled and his control was on the verge of cracking.

      “Just be careful.”

      “I am, but who knew this kind of thing would happen in our neighborhood? I’ve lived here for almost five years, and I’ve never seen anything like it. I’m scared. I don’t know why someone would target our building, but I can’t think of any other explanation.”

      For the first time he took in what she was wearing. A pair of drawstring sweatpants hung from her lush hips, and a large T-shirt crept off the jut of her creamy shoulder. This was not the Dory he was used to seeing. Normal Dory was buttoned up to the top of her neck and decked out like the accountant she was. Beautiful, untouchable by the likes of him. This Dory was softer somehow, with curves and dips he had never noticed before. Ugly lust rose in him. He wanted to drop her to the floor and take her then and there, releasing all the pent-up rage inside him. He took an involuntary step back, breaking his eye contact with her body. It was disgusting of him to even be thinking things like that. Where was his decency? He needed the chair and the purge more than ever after two hours of running around with his body supercharged on all things dark and evil.

      “Garrett?”

      Blood blossomed on his shirt as the tattoos surrounding the wound in his chest gave out. The last thing he saw before the darkness finally claimed him was a pair of bright blue eyes widening in horror.

      * * *

      It was not easy to kick open Garrett’s door and drag him through it. Dory had never been inside his apartment. Since he was always so private, she was tempted to look around, but the deadweight in her arms was not going to go away, so she’d just have to stay curious a little longer.

      He had fallen forward as a huge splotch of blood came gushing out of his chest right above his heart. She could have sworn something black had swirled beneath his white T-shirt, but it had disappeared too quickly for her to be sure.

      The nearest piece of furniture was a black leather couch. She aimed for it, figuring she would drag him the last two feet by the hair if she had to. But they made it right before her legs gave out under her, thank God.

      Arranging him as best she could on the sofa, she swung his legs up on to the long expanse of leather. All six foot plus of him didn’t completely fit, but it was the best she could do, since she didn’t want to tend to his wound while he was lying on the floor.

      Running to the kitchen, she snagged a pair of kitchen scissors from a wooden knife block and quickly tore through three drawers until she found a handful of small towels. Surprisingly they all had flowers on them, but it didn’t matter…they would soon be covered in blood. She could replace them with new ones when she was done.

      She headed back to the couch, thinking she could find bandages later. Maybe he had a first-aid kit in the bathroom or something. She had one in the living-room closet of her apartment, but she didn’t want to leave him alone until she was sure he was going to make it.

      “Don’t you dare die on me,” she said fiercely as she cut away his T-shirt and unstuck the fabric from the long slit in his otherwise perfect skin. Blood seeped out of the cut, which looked like a stab wound. She gagged but got down to business without thinking too much about what she was doing.

      He mumbled something and grabbed her around the waist. In his weakened state, pushing him away was akin to shaking a small kitten off her foot, but his hands kept coming for her. She ended up kneeling by the couch to make herself a smaller target. He was probably delirious. He kept muttering the words “Need chair” between guttural growls.

      “You need to calm down or I’m not going to be able to do anything for you.” She ran a hand over his brow, trying her best to soothe him as her mother had done for her when she was a young girl. Pressing the small hand towel to his wound, she tried to stanch the blood. She’d never seen blood so dark before, but she chalked it up to the fact that she hadn’t seen much blood at all over the past seven years. She made a point not to be anywhere near it, but this was a special circumstance. She was willing to put her fears aside for this man