"Yes, I did, my lord. I was the one who approached him." He pointed to Zsadist. "And, when it was clear your brother would not betray you, the lesser."
Wrath nodded, having already talked to Tohrment about what had really gone down that night. Tohr had caught only part of Z's response.
"My lord, you should know that your brother was ready to kill me just for asking him."
Wrath eyed Zsadist, who was staring at the doctor like he wanted to mount the male's head on a wall. "Yeah, I heard that didn't go over too well. Z, I owe you an apology."
The warrior shrugged. "Don't bother. They bore me."
Wrath smiled, thinking that was so like Z. Pissed off no matter the circumstance.
Havers looked around at the brothers. "Here in front of these witnesses, I accept the sentence of death."
Wrath stared hard at the doctor. And thought of all those years the male's sister had suffered. Even though Wrath had never intended for her life to be so grueling, the outcome had been his fault.
"Marissa was the reason, wasn't she?" Wrath said.
Havers nodded. "Yes, my lord."
"Then I'm not going to kill you. You did it because of the way I treated your loved one. Vengeance is something I can understand."
Havers seemed to wobble from shock. Then he dropped the chart he was holding and collapsed by the bed, grabbing Wrath's hand and putting his forehead on it. "My lord. Your mercy knows no bounds."
"Yeah, the hell it doesn't. I am giving you your life as a gift to your sister. If you ever pull a stunt like that again, I'm coming after you with a dagger. We clear?"
"Yes, my lord."
"Now leave us. You can poke and prod me later. But knock before you come in, got it?"
"Yes, my lord."
As Havers scooted out the door, Wrath kissed Beth's hand. "Just in case we're busy," he whispered to her.
A low, collective chuckle filled the room.
He glared at the brothers to shut them up and then made his pronouncement. He knew he'd shocked the hell out of his warriors when there was a long silence.
"So are you down with Tohr, or what?" he asked the group.
"Yeah," Rhage said. "I can deal."
Vishous and Phury nodded.
"Z?"
The warrior rolled his black eyes. "Come on, man. What does it matter to me? You, Tohr. Britney Spears."
Wrath laughed. "Was that a joke, Z? After all this time, have you finally found your sense of humor? Hell, you're giving me another reason to live."
Z flushed and snarled a little while the others chided him.
Wrath took a deep breath. "And my brothers, there's something else. I'm ascending to the throne. As I've told Tohr, we need to rebuild. We need to revive the race."
The brothers stared. And then one by one, they came up to the bed and swore their fealty in the old language, taking his hand, kissing the inside of his wrist. Their grave reverence shook him, moved him.
The Scribe Virgin was right, he thought. These were his people. How could he not lead them?
When the warriors were finished with their oaths, he looked at Vishous. "Did you get the jars of the two lessers from that barn?"
V frowned. "There was only one. The recruit that you and I met the night of your mating. I went back and stabbed the body while you were being operated on. Got his jar from the house."
Wrath shook his head. "There were two. There were definitely two. The other one was the lesser who was driving that Hummer."
"You sure he went down?"
"He was on the ground with a blow to the head." Abruptly, Wrath sensed Beth's disquiet and squeezed her hand. "Enough, we'll talk about this later."
"No, it's all right-" she began.
"Later." He kissed the back of her hand and stroked it across his cheek. Holding on to her eyes with his own, he tried to reassure her, hating the world he'd brought her into.
When she smiled at him, Wrath tugged her down for a quick kiss and then looked back at the brothers.
"One more thing," he said. "You're going to move in together. I want the brotherhood in one place. At least for the next couple of years."
Tohr winced. "Man, Wellsie's going to hate that. We just finished installing her dream kitchen."
"We'll work out something for you two. Especially because there's a child on the way. But the rest of you are going to be roommates."
There were grumbles. Serious grumbles.
"Hey, it could be worse," he said. "I could make you live with me."
"Good point," Rhage said. "Man, Beth, if you ever need a break from him-"
Wrath growled.
"What I was gonna say," Hollywood drawled, "was that she could move in with all of us for a while. We'll always take care of her."
Wrath glanced up at Beth. God, she was so beautiful. His partner. His lover. His queen.
He smiled, unable to look away from her eyes. "Leave us, gentlemen. I want to be alone with my shellan."
As the brothers filed out, they were laughing with masculine appreciation. As if they knew exactly what was on his mind.
Wrath struggled on the bed, trying to force himself upright so that he bore the weight of his upper body on his hips.
Beth watched him the whole time, refusing to help.
When he was steady, he rubbed his hands together in anticipation. He could feel her skin already.
"Wrath," she said with warning as he beamed at her.
"Come on up here, leelan. A deal's a deal."
Even if all he could do was hold her, he just needed her in his arms.
Chapter Fifty-three
Jose de la Cruz shook the arson investigator's hand. "Thanks. I look forward to your written report."
The man shook his head as he glanced back at the charred remains of the Caldwell Martial Arts Academy. "Never seen anything like this. You'd swear some kind of nuclear bomb went off. Frankly, I don't know what to put in the file."
Jose watched the man walk over to his county truck and drive off.
"You going back to the station?" Ricky asked while getting into his own squad car.
"Not right now. I gotta head across town."
Ricky waved and headed out.
Alone at the site, Jose took a deep breath. The smell of the fire was pungent, even four days later.
As he headed to his unmarked, he looked down at his shoes. They were pale gray from the twelve inches of soot that covered the site. The stuff was more volcano ash than anything left behind by a normal fire. And the ruins were odd, too. Usually parts of a structure survived, no matter how hot the flames. Here, nothing remained. The building had been razed to the ground.
Like the arson investigator, he'd never seen anything of the sort.
Jose got behind the wheel, stuck the key in the ignition, and put the car in gear. He drove eight miles to the east, into a grittier part of town. A series of unimpressive apartment build-ings appeared, urban weeds that grew up from the concrete and asphalt ground.
He stopped in front of one. Put the car in park. Turned off the engine. It was a long time before he could force himself out of the car.
Steeling his nerves, he walked over to the front entrance. A couple was coming out, and they held the door open for him. After going up three flights of stairs, he headed down a ratty hall with carpeting that was flat and brown from having borne thousands of footsteps.
The door he was looking for had been repainted so many times, its sunken panels were almost flush.