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Seducing the Jackal
Seressia Glass


Centuries ago, tragedy severed the alliance between the jackal shifters and powerful Egyptian priestesses.But when four of his brothers succumb to a deadly curse, clan commander Markus kidnaps one of the witches and insists she undo the evil magic. Although Tia can undo the curse, she insists her coven is not behind it—and she is shaken to her core by her intense attraction to her captor.The sparks between them quickly ignite, filling them both with passion and power unlike anything they’ve ever known. Will it be enough to heal the rift between their peoples?







Centuries ago, tragedy severed the alliance between the jackal shifters and powerful Egyptian priestesses. But when four of his brothers succumb to a deadly curse, clan commander Markus kidnaps one of the witches and insists she undo the evil magic.

Although Tia can undo the curse, she insists her coven is not behind it—and she is shaken to her core by her intense attraction to her captor. The sparks between them quickly ignite, filling them both with passion and power unlike anything they’ve ever known. Will it be enough to heal the rift between their peoples?


Seducing the Jackal

Seressia Glass




www.millsandboon.co.uk (http://www.millsandboon.co.uk)


Contents

Chapter One (#u731277e5-e720-5501-8d05-071c52fe5bb9)

Chapter Two (#u47dcdae9-f6b7-5a76-a76f-af77b003aac9)

Chapter Three (#u1f0f9d83-2a4a-569d-b108-9b1692e59866)

Chapter Four (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Five (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Six (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Seven (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Eight (#litres_trial_promo)

Chapter Nine (#litres_trial_promo)

Copyright (#litres_trial_promo)


Chapter One

Silence drenched the dark street as if the creatures of the night were too afraid to make their calls. Probably because of the jackals and men that skulked through the shadows.

The silence didn’t matter to Markus Grant. He and his brothers knew how to use the darkness and the silence to hunt, to survive. When they claimed their prize tonight, their future would be assured.

His right hand slashed the air in command to move forward. His men advanced, some in jackal form, some in their human shapes. The row of houses looked like plenty of others in this small community in the southern outskirts of Atlanta, with its maintained lawns and sidewalks fronting older, low-slung houses tucked beneath mature trees. Vegetation provided plenty of cover as the jackals raced toward their target, the house at the end of the street.

The only visible difference between it and the other houses was the number of large trees lining the high wooden fence framing the backyard. That and the lushness of the landscaping. The flowering azaleas and dogwoods seemed vibrant even at this late hour. A well-used four-door compact sedan sat in the driveway. Hardly the usual conveyance of an Isis witch.

Markus suppressed a growl. The Daughters of Isis used to collaborate with the Sons of Anubis to protect the funerary temples and complexes and prevent the dead from returning to the land of the living. Some of the dead didn’t know the spells to make it through the Weighing of the Heart ceremony and on to the Field of Reeds. Some simply didn’t want to go through the trials in the Underworld or were afraid that their souls would be fed to Ammit the Devourer. Still others lost their way or coveted what they’d left behind: life.

Regardless of the reason, some of the dead returned and in the journey back to the land of the living became darker, more evil: the Lost Ones.

When the dead rose from the sands as undead, the Sons of Anubis were called to action. The Daughters of Isis would empower them, weave spells to protect them and, after battle, heal them. When possible, they returned the Lost Ones to their graves and tombs so they wouldn’t be forgotten. Otherwise they were destroyed and became as dust.

That was then, a glorious work lost in the sands of time. Now all the Isis witches seemed to do was find inventive ways to kill jackals. Markus bared his teeth. No more. Tonight the witches would learn the meaning of fear. Tonight a Daughter of Isis would become a prisoner of the Sons of Anubis.

At his signal men and jackals swept toward the corner house. The numbers were sheer insurance, nothing more. Most of the jackals were patrolling each quadrant of the city, sniffing out clutches of Lost Ones. The lone witch would know as soon as her wards fell but she obviously was either sloppy or overconfident, since she hadn’t extended her wards below the fence line into the earth. Marcus led his men through the sliding glass door and into the darkened house. As planned, his men fanned out while he and two others entered the bedroom. The witch had just begun to stir from sleep as he slapped duct tape over her mouth. She kicked and thrashed, one blow connecting with his shoulder. It was the last punch she got in.

He grabbed her wrists as another jackal sedated her. “It’s for your own protection,” he told her, staring into furious dark eyes. “No one needs to get hurt.”

Fury gave way to fear then unconsciousness. With efficient movements, he bound her and tossed her over his shoulder, crushing guilt under his boot heel. She hardly weighed anything and her defensive skills were sorely lacking. Why had the local Isis witches allowed her to leave the safety of their circle? Had they ostracized her for a lack of magic? Was she not a Daughter of Isis after all?

No, he wouldn’t think that. He couldn’t think that. If that were true, all of this was for nothing, and more of his men would die.

Markus rejoined his men in the hallway. “The entire sunroom is a shrine to Isis, sir.”

It was confirmation, not that they needed it. “Acknowledged. Load up what you can, in case we need it. Her keys are on the kitchen counter. Pack up her car quickly and get out quicker.”

Markus carried his unconscious prize out of the house and over the back fence in less than two minutes. A quick dash through the wooded lot to the waiting van, and they were on their way.

Only when he had received word that the rest of his men were safely out did Markus allow himself to relax. So far, so good. The most dangerous part of the mission was complete.

“You think this will work?” asked Hector.

Markus knew his second in command didn’t doubt the mission. No one questioned him in that regard; he’d proven his ability to lead centuries ago. Hector’s blood brother was one of the afflicted, in the first stages of a debilitating illness that had cost the lives of four jackals so far. Markus swore there wouldn’t be a fifth, and this witch would guarantee it.

“It will.” Confidence loaded his words. “She’s a Daughter of Isis. One of them cast the curse. She’ll break it.”

“What if she doesn’t?”

“Then we’ll use her as bait to trap another witch.” He leaned forward on the jump seat. “One way or another, we’ll end this curse. I don’t care if we have to trap every Isis witch in the northern hemisphere to do it. We do whatever it takes.”

He held up his fist. “For Sons and brothers.”

Hector tapped it with his own. “For Sons and brothers.”


Chapter Two

Consciousness rushed back with the subtlety of a freight train. The first thing Tia noticed was that her wrists were bound in front of her. Second, she wore only her thin cotton nightgown. Third, while she lay on a comfortable, richly appointed bed, the unadorned concrete walls and lack of windows made the room nothing more than a cell.

Kidnapped.

Tia fought to quell her panic, forcing the grogginess away so that she could think. She’d been taken from her home. Someone had to have had strong magic to break through her wards. She’d checked them thoroughly before going to bed. Not even another Daughter of Isis should have been able to unravel her protections without her knowledge. She hadn’t even felt a warning until after the wards had been breached. By the time she’d roused from sleep, it had been too late.

“I know you’re awake, witch.”

The voice, cold and harsh, stabbed at any lingering hope. Did he call her a witch because he knew she was one, or was it an epithet of some sort? If he knew she was an Isis witch, he would have gagged her. Since he hadn’t, it was a strong possibility her kidnapper had no idea who he’d taken.

A smile bent her lips. She’d make him regret that.

Tia struggled to an upright position on the mattress, twisting around until she could see the face of her captor. She could have tried using her Voice without facing him, but staring into another’s eyes always strengthened the compulsion. Besides, her power reserves were low since she hadn’t had time to replenish her magical energy. She didn’t know if she had enough strength to put him under her control long enough to break free, but she’d try.

She expected her captor to be sitting but he stood instead, blocking the door. He was a slab of a man; dressed in old work boots and black jeans so well-worn they had a charcoal sheen to them and showed every bit of the muscles in his long legs. A gray T-shirt stretched across his wide chest, made even tighter by the defined copper-skinned arms folded across it. A close-cropped goatee called attention to a soft mouth, probably the only soft part of him. It balanced the dark cap of tight waves, and the amber-whiskey-colored eyes that glared at her from beneath strong brows and above an even stronger nose. Despite his size, his build wasn’t that of a bodybuilder, more like that of an Olympic gymnast.

Presented with such a visual feast, her base magic stirred, but not enough to quell the renewed fear that stalked up her spine. She didn’t need to see the sigil on his T-shirt or the gold Anubis-head pendant that hung on a thick chain around his neck to know who—or rather, what—her kidnapper was. She also knew that if she couldn’t control him with her Voice, she had no other options.

Locking her gaze to his, she summoned her power. “Release me, dog.”

The block of a man dropped his arms, his expression blank. He took a step forward, leaned over her...then burst out laughing. “You thought you could enslave and insult me in the same breath? I removed your gag just to see—or rather, hear—what you can do. Try again, witch.”

Dammit! Like “witch” was an endearment, coming from one of the Sons of Anubis. She knew her freedom hinged on her ability to use her power. Unfortunately, she hadn’t had the time or the inclination to recharge her base magic.

Regret soured her stomach. What would her coven sisters think if they could see her now, as defenseless as they’d always thought? What about her grandmother?

Thinking about Aya, the high priestess of the coven, had Tia reaching deep inside to her magical core. She stared up at the jackal and put every bit of compulsion she could into her Voice. “Help me escape to safety.”

Power filled the room. It rolled over the man. His eyes widened as the power of her Voice hit him. Again, he swayed toward her. Then he stepped back, shaking himself hard the way a dog dashed water from its coat. “You have magic, I’ll give you that. But if you think you can control me, think again.”

Tia cursed under her breath. If the jackal was immune to her compulsion, that meant he had magical strength in his own right. Still, he had kidnapped her, not killed her. Obviously, he wanted something from her. Something only a Daughter of Isis could provide. “Who are you and what do you want?”

“I am Markus Grant, and I lead the Sons of Anubis who have chosen to call this town home,” he told her, his eyes glinting. “Those who still hold to our sacred duty to keep the Lost Ones where they belong, away from the land of the living.”

Tia refrained from rolling her eyes. Pretty speech, even if it was a lie. She knew the Sons of Anubis had abandoned their “sacred duty” centuries ago, leaving a bloody trail of broken Daughters of Isis in their wake. Without the jackals’ help, they hadn’t been able to protect the funerary temples or much of anything else, and had to abandon their home, their land.

The news that a jackal clan not only lived in Atlanta, but also thrived enough to take on the Lost Ones, disturbed her. Her grandmother’s warning slithered through her mind. Aya had told her to be extra vigilant when she left the protection of the coven, with good reason. Jackals tended to kill first and ask questions never. She’d thought she’d taken every precaution. Now she knew better. How long had the Sons of Anubis been in Atlanta? Had they somehow tracked her circle, followed them here?

She mustered what little defiance she had. “If you think I’m going to tell you where my sisters are, you’re wrong.”

“I don’t care where the Daughters of Isis are holed up,” he retorted. “At least, not at the moment. What I care about right now is you, Tia Jensen.”

Air seized in her lungs, causing her voice to squeak past her lips. “How do you know my name?”

“I know more than your name. I know that you’re a physical therapist with an exclusive client list. I know that you are affiliated with the Golden Lotus Circle of the Daughters of Isis, but you’ve been a solitary practitioner for the last four years.”

Tia stared at the man before her, fighting to suppress her fear. It flooded her nerves, pushing her magic, the power of Voice, further away. He’d stalked her. This jackal had hunted her like a wolf chasing down a rabbit. “What do you want with me?”

“Your powers.” His gaze raked the length of her, making her aware of the thin excuse for a nightgown that she wore. Her ears burned with embarrassment. The burn scalded her body in impotent rage as he half turned his back to her, as if implying that she wasn’t much of a threat to him. Considering how easily he’d breached her wards and taken her from her own bed, he was right, and it made her even angrier. She tamped it down. Getting angry wouldn’t help her escape, only hamper it. She needed to remain calm to keep her magic at the ready.

He gave her a sidelong glance. “I had hoped you’d be powerful enough to be of use to me, but if you’re not...”

He didn’t finish his statement, but he didn’t have to. Tia knew exactly what the jackals did to those they found useless.

Shame stung her eyes. Her coven sisters had thought her useless when she’d failed to manifest greater power at the onset of puberty as the seventh Daughter of a seventh Daughter was supposed to do. Hurt by the rejection, she’d distanced herself from the other Daughters by going to college, staying in on-campus housing until she completed her studies, then putting a down payment on a modest house. She’d been making a solitary life for herself, but home was still in the circle with the other Daughters of Isis, even if they didn’t think so.

“You say that you hunt the Lost Ones.” She wasn’t sure if she believed that, but she’d play along if it garnered her freedom. “Do you want my help fighting them?”

Again the laugh. “I’ve seen your defensive spells—or lack of them. I doubt your fighting skills are much better.”

Anger flooded her. “Your pack of dogs broke through my wards and into my house in the dead of night like a navy SEAL team storming an enemy hideout. You drugged me, bound me and brought me here before I could blink. What can one Daughter of Isis do against a pack of jackals?”

“For one thing, not rely on magic to save her,” he shot back. “Which you should have known, given how weak your magic is.”

“I. Am. Not. Weak!”

* * *

Markus’s eyes widened as the witch’s power punched him, causing him to rock back on his heels. Not so weak after all. Obviously she needed her passions provoked in order to fully tap into her power. Something told him provoking her passions wouldn’t be a problem.

He wasn’t sure what he’d expected when weeks of reconnaissance had finally come to fruition, but this woman wasn’t it. She appeared young, though that was hardly an indication of age for their long-lived races. He knew she still had a healthy student loan balance, and her driver’s license stated she was mid-twenties. It was unusual for a witch so young to live outside of the safety of a coven, which was why he’d expected someone older, wiser, more of a challenge. Had she been thrown out of the Lotus Circle because she wasn’t powerful enough?

No, he’d felt her power when she’d gotten angry. It was there, waiting for her to tap into it. Maybe she was bait, living away from the protective circle of witches in order to trap the Sons of Anubis. His hand lifted, fingers wrapping around the gold Anubis-head talisman all adult jackals wore. Let the witches try. He and his jackals had survived and would continue to do so. No sacrifice would be too great.

He stared at the witch. If would be a shame if she was part of a trap. Women like her had always been a weakness to him—long-legged, thick in the thighs and full in the chest; eyes sloe, dark, fathomless and large in her copper-skinned face. Just the sort of woman he would pursue if he had the time or the inclination.

He had neither. Not with Lost Ones walking the night. Certainly not with someone targeting the Sons of Anubis. Not with two of his clan brothers so close to death just down the hall.

Markus fisted his hands. This Isis witch was a tool, a means to an end, nothing more. He couldn’t think about his need, how long it had been since he’d enjoyed a woman. He had to think about his clan, their survival and their eternal fight against the undead. Not the need that spiked through him every time he felt her magic.

Angry with himself for being distracted, he bared his teeth at her. “For both our sakes, I hope you aren’t weak. If you’re weak, then you’re of no use to me. And if you’re no use to me...”

“Jackal, please.” She rolled her eyes at him. “You know, threats tend to make people not inclined to help you. Just saying.”

“You’re right,” he told her. Surprise lit her face, and he clenched his jaw against the sensual punch to the gut. “But what you don’t seem to understand is that I’m not threatening you. I’m just letting you know what will happen if you don’t do what I want. Just saying.”

Her chin lifted. “What exactly do you want?”

He pulled a blade from the sheath strapped to his thigh.

She recoiled, hands coming up defensively.

“Relax. I’m not going to kill you.”

He didn’t say “yet,” but she flinched as if he had.

Good. She didn’t need to know that he’d only killed in defense of himself or his clan, or in his sacred duty to Anubis. What she did need to know was just how serious he was about keeping his clan safe.

Reaching over, he grabbed her wrists and slid the blade beneath the nylon tie that bound her. His fingertips tingled against her skin. She trembled as his thumb stroked over her pulse, but he didn’t know if the reaction was due to his touch or the dagger. “Hold still.”

A sharp jerk and he freed her. She immediately rubbed her wrists, staring up at him. “What now?”

“Come with me.” He held a hand out to her just to see what she would do.

Continuing to chafe sensation back into her hands, she ignored his and stood on her own. “This way, I assume?” she asked, reaching for the knob.

Impressed despite himself, Markus rapped on the door. The witch stumbled back a step as a guard opened the door onto a long hallway decorated with depictions of Lord Anubis in his various funerary roles and the journey through Duat, the Underworld.

The witch stopped short. Her gaze roamed the walls, taking in each scene, every minute detail. “Amazing,” she whispered as her hand came up to trace the closest brightly rendered image. “The details, the colors—it’s beautiful!”

Markus allowed a swell of pride. “We tried to recreate the images as accurately as possible, even sourcing as many of the original pigments as we could.” His fingers traced the graceful lines of a lotus flower. “We wanted a remembrance of what we’d lost. Luckily, our clan has never forgotten our past or our purpose.”

He looked down at her, anger surging again. “Why don’t I introduce you to the artist?”

Without waiting for an answer, he wrapped a hand around her bicep and dragged her down the hall. Four other doors flanked the hall, but only two had guards stationed outside—the one they’d left and the one they approached, second from the end. The hall then veered sharply right, opening onto a large open room holding a pool table, a massive flat-panel TV, bar and other entertainments before ending at the stairs leading to the upper level.

He stopped at the second-to-last door, nodding to the jackal standing guard at the end of the hall. The guard opened the door, allowing Markus to shove Tia inside. She stiffened at his treatment, then gasped as she took in the contents of the room. Three strides in, she could see several cells. Jackals occupied two of them. One lay curled on a futon, his upper half human and the lower half misshapen jackal. The other, fully human, lay on his side, eyes wide and unblinking, minute twitches jerking his body. Markus could smell the sour notes of sickness choking the air and the acidic-ash burn of dark magic.

Tia cried out, rushing toward the closest cage. Markus snagged an arm around her waist, preventing her from reaching the bars. She frowned up at him, moisture shimmering on her lashes. “What’s wrong with them? I know you can’t take them to a hospital, but to keep them like this is beyond cruel—it’s inhumane! Where is your healer?”

Her outraged horror pleased him as much as her tears surprised him. This particular Isis witch, at least, hadn’t cast the spell that had felled his men. “They’ve been cursed, somehow,” he told her, deliberately harsh. He didn’t try to release her, and she didn’t try to pull away. “If we knew how exactly, we’d know how to treat them. As for our healer, we no longer have one. She was one of the first to die.”

“Die? You have to do something!” she exclaimed, tugging free of his hold to grip the bars of the closest cage. “They’re suffering!”

“I did do something. I brought you here.”

A myriad of emotions flew across her expressive face, shock prevalent. Her lips twisted as she turned away from the cage and looked up at him. “You’ve just doomed your brothers, jackal. I can’t heal them.”

A cold, hard knot formed deep in his gut. “You can’t, or you won’t?”

If she heard the menace in his tone, she paid it no mind. “I can’t. I don’t know how.” She lowered her head, not enough to disguise the bitterness that filled her words. “Even if I knew how, I’m not strong enough. You should have shanghaied another Daughter.”

Something turned over deep inside him. It took a moment for him to recognize it as compassion. He almost reached out to her—to pat her shoulder, to stroke her hair—he didn’t know. Instead he forced his hand down, fisted it. He didn’t want to feel compassion for the witch, his enemy. He didn’t want to feel anything at all for her.

“You are a Daughter of Isis,” he barked, bringing his military training to bear. “There was a time when your kind served with the Sons of Anubis, worked to drive the dead back into Duat. You gave us spells to protect us, spells to arm us and spells to heal us. It is—or was—the duty of every Isis witch. Though we are enemies now, it is still part of you, part of your nature. Part of your magic. You can do this!”


Chapter Three

Tia took the verbal kick in the ass for what it was, rediscovering her backbone with every word the jackal barked out. Straightening her shoulders, firming her chin, she wanted to believe as he believed, that she could reach down deep past the centuries of betrayal and hatred, and find the power that bound jackals and witches together.

You’re out of your mind, a horrified voice inside her head said. They’re jackals. Jackals! You can’t help them!

It didn’t matter that they were jackals. It didn’t matter that their kind had killed and hunted her kind for centuries. It didn’t even matter that they had kidnapped her. The two caged jackals were suffering. She had to try to help. The healer in her could do no less.

She knew her coven sisters wouldn’t understand, much less agree. To them, the only good jackal was a dead or dying one. Then again, some of the Daughters had been around for centuries and had experience clashing with the jackals. Tia was young by the circle’s standards, having been born in the New World and with no firsthand knowledge of fighting the Sons of Anubis.

“Okay.” She gave a sharp nod. “The first thing we need to do is make this place more conducive to healing. I don’t suppose we can move them?”

He shook his head. “It took several of my men just to get them here. We caged them for their safety as well as ours. Does this mean you can help them?”

“I can try.” She turned to face him. He really was a slab of a man, but in a very nice hot damn sort of way. It made her wonder what his jackal looked like. “I need to go home, get some stuff.”

“No.”

She bristled, even though she knew he wouldn’t agree. “I’ll come back.”

He clearly didn’t believe her. “The answer is still no.”

“What you want me to do is a big deal,” she spat. “I can’t just wrinkle my nose and wish them back to health! Did any of your jackals train with your healer?”

“No.”

“Do any of them possess any talent for healing or spell work?”

“No.”

“Are there any female jackals who can help me perform the chants to Isis?”

He folded his arms, a stubborn expression crossing his features. “No.”

She blew out a frustrated sigh and settled her hands on her hips. “Are you telling me no because it’s the truth or because you don’t want me to know? Because I gotta tell ya, if it’s the second reason, you truly suck.”

The left side of his lips kicked up in a smile as if he found her pissiness amusing. She wondered if he’d smile if she kneed him in the nuts. “There aren’t any female jackals available to help.”

Great. He was dooming her to failure before she even started. “Look. You want to save them, right? So do I, since that’s the only way I’m getting out of here. So help me here. Do any of you at least know of the ancient hymns and prayers?”

He uncrossed his arms, just to cross them behind his back, military style. “We’ve kept up our prayers to Anubis, mostly for protection and guidance as we go into battle, prayers and blessings as we send the dead back to Duat, and thanksgiving when we return home safely.”

Tia knew painfully little about the Sons of Anubis, but she didn’t think their war prayers would work, or their fellows jackals would have healed already and she wouldn’t be here. Still, she’d take anything she could get.

“Okay. Maybe those will help to invoke Anubis. Do you have the right incenses, the right altars to make prayers to Isis and Anubis? If someone here doesn’t have a sistrum or know how to use it, I need to have my recordings. All of that stuff is at my house—you know, the sanctuary that you defiled and kidnapped me from?”

“Yes, the sanctuary that had an entire wall in your sunroom dedicated to Isis?” He again folded his arms across his chest. “I had my men gather up many of your things. We were respectful,” he added when she opened her mouth to protest. “They have all been carefully arranged in the next room. And we have medical and spiritual supplies our healer left behind, in those cabinets against the wall. We can set up whatever you need.”

The thought of these jackals manhandling her altar made her stomach churn. Her shoulders sagged. “Strangers, enemies, touching my personal stuff, my sacred things. I can’t begin to use them until I purify them again.”

He didn’t offer an apology, not that she expected him to. Someone willing to kidnap a person wouldn’t give a damn about her belongings. “Can you start without those?”

“Probably. I can at least try to find out what’s wrong with them.” She looked at him again. “If I do, will you let me go?”

“Of course.”

The words flowed from those gorgeous full lips too easily. “I would have your word, sworn under the watchful eye of the god you hold dear, that you will let me go once I heal your men. In return, I will swear to Isis that I will do everything I can to break the sickness that taints them. Deal?”

Amber eyes bored into hers. She kept her gaze open, honest. She’d already shown that she was willing to help heal the afflicted men, but she wouldn’t be able to focus completely on what she needed to do if she had to worry about whether or not Markus planned to keep her prisoner, or worse.

“Done.”

“Okay.” Breath rushed from her lungs in relief. She’d have to accept his word—if he had meant what he had said about doing his sacred duty with the Lost Ones, then swearing to his patron god was no small thing. She had to believe he would let her go.

“Tell me what happened to them.” She knelt on the floor beside the cage with the fully human jackal. Glazed eyes stared unseeing as minute tremors shook his thin frame. She spread her fingers against the bars, reaching for her healing ability. “You said something about a curse?”

“Yes, they were cursed. By an Isis witch.”

* * *

“Liar!”

The Isis witch leaped to her feet. “A Daughter of Isis would never attack a jackal warrior!”

“Of course not.” He put his fists on his hips, goading her further because he needed to get the accusation out before it poisoned him. “Direct action has never been the way of an Isis witch. Your kind prefers stealth and tricks.”

“You don’t have the right to be angry, jackal,” she spat. “We have done nothing to you but what we had to.”

“The Daughters of Isis abandoned us!” he thundered. “You turned your backs on your own people, your own men and gave yourselves to the people of Greece and Rome! Left us to protect the temples while the Two Lands fell. We were there, fighting the undead and the curse of Ammit while you were being feted in Athens and Pompeii!”

“We escaped with our lives!” Tia shouted. “We had no choice but to flee after your clan declared war on us by murdering our high priestess!”

He drew back, eyes wide, nostrils flaring, and for a moment, she thought he meant to strike her. “What. Did. You. Say?”

Her hands settled on her hips. “I. Did. Not. Stutter.”

“The Sons of Anubis have never taken an innocent life!”

The door crashed open, men and jackals flying into the room. Tia flinched as they surrounded her, guns and teeth bared. Memories slammed into Marcus, memories of a time when the children of Isis had stood hip to hip with the children of Anubis, fighting with them instead of against them. He remembered his mentor, Sekhanu, with his mate, the Isis High Priestess Asharet, and how their love had united the witches and jackals. Just as he remembered how their deaths had separated both sides forever.

Hector stepped forward, placing himself between Markus and the furious witch. “Do you need us to remove the witch, my lord?”

Eagerness drenched his tone. Markus knew how much his second wanted blood, especially an Isis witch’s blood. “No. She’s already sworn to help us. She just learned the origins of the curse, and didn’t take the news well.”

“How can you be sure one of the Daughters caused this?” She gestured to the stricken men, ignoring the weapons pointed at her. “What proof do you have?”

“Your magic has a scent, unique to Isis witches,” he told her. “As we can smell the Lost Ones even in the Great Western Desert, so we can smell magic cast by one of you. Our men reek of it.”

“I don’t believe you.”

“Here.” He grabbed her forearm, dragged her to the cell holding the half-shifted jackal. “Use your senses,” he growled. “Feel the magic rising off him like a landfill stench then look me in the eye and tell me it isn’t born of an Isis witch!”

She spread her fingers wide, her chin lowering. His hackles rose as he felt her call her power, but he kept his expression blank to all but anger. After a moment she gasped, stumbling back from the bars.

“Great Mother Isis.” Dismay clogged her features. “It feels like the magical working of one of the Daughters’ circles, but it’s...wrong somehow.” She shook her head. “It must be some sort of trick. It goes against all the tenets and aspects of Isis. How can you expect me to believe this was caused by the Daughters?”

“How can you expect me to believe that one of the Sons took the life of a high priestess of Isis on the temple steps?” The accusation angered him anew, rage reflected in the snarls of the men and jackals arranged around them. “What proof do you have?”

“That high priestess was my great-grandmother, Asharet,” she said, her voice thrumming with emotion. “Her dying words were �watch the jackals.’ And there was a dead jackal beside her.”

Markus crowded her. “That dead jackal was Sekhanu, my mentor and Asharet’s mate. He would have no reason to slay the love of his life.”

“The dead jackal was my great-grandfather?” she whispered, stricken. “I didn’t know—grandmother never said. She doesn’t like to speak of that time. She only told me that she’d received word that Asharet and many other Daughters were killed, the temple steps littered with the bodies of jackals. Aya gathered as many of the remaining priestesses as she could and headed south. Eventually they made their way out of Egypt.”




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