Stryker was confused. "You're neither Daimon nor Apollite. There's nothing to be gained from feeding off you."
He laughed bitterly. "Tell them that."
Stryker frowned as he noted the thin black band wrapped around the man's throat. It was a containment collar of some sort. "What are you?"
"I'm misery."
No doubt. The man more than looked the part. "Do you have a name?"
"Jared."
"I'm-"
"Strykerius, but you go by 'Stryker.' You hate the goddess you serve and you seek to kill her only son and claim vengeance on the former human who murdered your sister."
Stryker froze as the creature laid bare his plans. "How do you know that?"
"I know everything. I feel every heartbeat in the universe. Hear every scream for mercy and feel every tear of pain."
And he was spooking the shit out of him.
"Sorry," Jared said. "I do that to a lot of people."
"Do what?"
"Spook them."
"Can you hear my thoughts?"
Before you have them, I hear them. This time, he didn't speak. His voice was loud and clear in Stryker's mind.
"Stay out of my head."
Jared gave him a taunting grin. "Believe me, I would love to. It's a mess in there. But you're too close physically to me for me to block it." He banged his head against the stone wall. "Pain is the only way to keep your thoughts out of my head."
"Is that why they beat you?"
He gave Stryker a cold "duh" stare. "Mostly they just do it for fun."
Stryker honestly felt sorry for the creature, who had to be in absolute agony. There was something about him that seemed familiar, and yet Stryker couldn't place it. "How long have they held you here?"
Jared let out a tired breath. "Medea is coming."
The words had barely left his lips before the door opened to show her. Dressed in a red blouse and jeans, she was beautiful. No father could ask for a more perfect child.
A more loving one, perhaps, but not one more beautiful.
Her gaze went to Jared, where sympathy flashed for an instant but was quickly hidden behind a wall of stoicism. Jared's look, however, was angry and defiant.
She turned her attention to Stryker. "I'm sorry about your current position."
Jared scoffed. "Yeah, she's a basketful of sympathy. One glance at me tells you exactly how deep it runs."
"Shut up."
A leather muzzle appeared over the lower half of his face. Jared growled as he tried to jerk free of his chains or remove the muzzle, but it was useless. His muscles bulged as he fought against his restraints.
"Is that really necessary?" Stryker asked his daughter.
She ignored Jared's shouts and Stryker's question. "You should be more concerned about your own well-being."
"Why? You intend to kill me?"
"I'm sure Matera will the first chance she gets."
"Then why am I here?"
Folding her arms over her chest, she shrugged. "Curiosity. I want to understand where my powers come from and how to better channel them. I know I didn't get them from my mother. . . . She was psychic, but she didn't have the ability to summon the things I can."
Her words intrigued him. What exactly were his daughter's powers? "What kind of things?"
Me. He heard Jared's voice in his head.
Medea turned toward Jared and shot a blast into his chest. He hissed in pain as a black circle smoldered and burned his flesh. His entire body drew tense and taut.
"Stay out of this."
Stryker ground his teeth as a single red tear of pain slid down Jared's cheek. How strange that he cried blood. Stryker had never heard of such a creature. But regardless of what he was, Jared didn't deserve this.
Stryker glared at his daughter. "You know, as coldblooded as I am, I've never been one for torture. Either kill him or free him."
She shook her head. "My mother would never allow that."
"Then leave him alone."
"You really don't care for torture, do you?"
"No, I don't. It's one thing to strike out in anger, another to cause agony for the hell of it. I'm a soldier, not a coward."
"Are you calling me a coward?"
He looked back at Jared, who was panting to cope with the agony of his wound. His chest was still smoldering as the blast continued to burn his skin. "You should always give your opponent a fighting chance. Let the best fighter win, and if it's not you, then die with dignity."
She arched a brow at him before she turned toward the other prisoner. "Jared? Is he lying to me?" She held her hand up and the leather muzzle vanished.
"No," he said, his voice strained and weak. "He lives by a very screwed-up moral code."
The creature and his powers intrigued Stryker. "What is he? Your personal lie detector?"
She gave him a flippant smile. "Something like that."
Jared scoffed. "Why don't you tell him the truth? I'm your pet dog you keep chained up so he won't piss on your floor."
She threw her hand out again and his muzzle returned to cover his face. "Why do you push me so?"
Jared jerked at his restraints as he shouted something indecipherable.
His strength was admirable. Stryker even noted the light of respect for the creature in his daughter's eyes.
"You two lovebirds fight like this all the time?" Stryker asked her.
She snorted. "I don't fight with him at all. He's merely a tool I use."
"Use how?"
She didn't respond. "Matera says I should let her kill you for abandoning us."
"But?"
"I want to understand how it is that you could leave the woman you loved and never once look back or regret it. I find that kind of selfishness baffling."
Stryker froze as her accusation stung him deep inside. Not regret it? He'd regretted the loss of Zephyra every day of his life. But he'd been raised to believe that duty came before love.
Always.
His father had demanded he divorce Zephyra and marry a priestess to fulfill the destiny his father had planned for him and he'd done it. No, it wasn't just that. Zephyra had all but kicked him out the door when Apollo told her what the god thought of her and her lowly birth.
"The daughter of a fisherman married to the son of a god? Are you out of your minds? There are whores for you aplenty, Strykerius. I didn't save you from slaughter to see you marry this and beget worthless children from lesser genetic stock."
Stryker should have defended Zephyra. He'd known it at the time. But at only fourteen, a prime marital age in the ancient world, he'd been scared of his father's powers. Scared of disappointing the god who'd meant the world to him.
"Well?" Medea demanded. "Answer me. Why did you leave us?"
Stryker deadened his features. He was no longer a frightened youth. He was an eleven-thousand-year-old general. "I don't answer to anyone, and I damn sure don't answer to my daughter. What happened then is between me and your mother."
"Are you willing to die then?"
"I'm a warrior, Medea. I accepted death as inevitable the moment I picked up my first sword to fight. I killed my own son for betraying me. It seems somehow fitting that my daughter should kill me for perceived similar actions. My only regret will be not knowing better the child who is so similar to me that she could execute me so swiftly and without regret or hesitation."
She lifted her arm up. Stryker expected her to kill him. Instead, the chains holding him broke loose from his wrists and ankles.
"Come with me."
Stryker followed her as a new plan formed in his mind. Little did she know he was no docile pup to be commanded by any person.
When he reached the door, he turned back to see Jared hanging limply from his restraints, his muzzle firmly in place. A wave of sympathy went through him.
Don't feel sorry for me, Stryker. I didn't choose to be here.
Those ominous words echoed through his head as he followed Medea out of the room and she closed the door, blocking his sight of Jared.
"Is he a prisoner?"
"No. He was a gift."
"A gift?"
She nodded without any further explanation.
"From?" he prompted.
She opened a door and led him inside a cold, austere room. "Jared's presence isn't something we talk about. Ever."
Perhaps . . .
Medea started down the hallway. Now that Stryker was free of the room, he felt his powers soaring. There must have been some sort of dampening spell on the room. Now that it was gone . . .
Invigorated, he rushed to his daughter and grabbed her from behind.
Eyes wide, she gasped.
"I'm a leader, child. I follow no one." Tightening his hold, he flashed her out of the building and back to Kalosis.