Page 55 of At Your Mercy

Page List

Font Size:

The other man stood near the far wall, arms crossed. He was stockier, with a scar cut through his brow. A heavy case sat at his feet—metal, with reinforced corners. He was the weapons dealer, no doubt. His silence was the opposite of the stylist’s chatter, but it still rang in my ears.

Elias gestured between them, pleased. “Darling, these men are here to ensure you’re both beautiful and deadly. They’re some of the best.”

The stylist stepped forward eagerly, holding up a glittering dress that probably cost several thousand dollars, if not more. “This would bring out your eyes beautifully. With your complexion, we should stay away from earth tones—stick with jewel shades and metallics.”

My gaze slid past him to the case on the floor. The dealer’s hand rested on it, possessive. I counted the veins on his wrist, the way he shifted his weight—ready, alert. Definitely armed.

“I’d like to start with my new toys,” I proclaimed. “If that’s okay?”

The stylist looked offended, but Elias’s soft chuckle diffused the moment. “Stubborn and single-minded, as always. That’s all right—you’ll humor him later, won’t you?” His eyes glinted at me, more command than question.

I smiled, the picture of obedience. “Of course.”

The weapons dealer spoke then, his voice full of gravel and smoke. “I’ve brought three pieces you won’t find anywhere else. All clean, all unregistered. One’s a blade, one’s a pistol, one’s… let’s call it experimental.”

Something flickered in my chest—interest, despite myself.

Elias caught it instantly, of course. He always did. “I’d place bets on the experimental one,” he chuckled.

This house was a showcase—a cage disguised as luxury. And tonight, Elias was parading both chains he thought he owned me with.

The dealer crouched, the metal case groaning as he unlatched it. The firelight caught the steel corners, then the inside gleam as the lid cracked open.

I stepped closer, eager to see.

He moved with slow reverence, like a priest unveiling holy relics. “First—your blade.”

He drew it out carefully, the length of a short sword but slim and balanced. The steel had a faint dark sheen, almost black, and the handle was wrapped in something that looked like leather but wasn’t.

“Carbon-infused. Won’t shatter, won’t dull for years. Cuts like it’s hungry.”

My hand itched, but I didn’t reach for it. Not yet.

He set it down, pulling out the second: a pistol, compact but sleek, no markings. Black matte finish, muzzle threaded for a suppressor. “Polymer frame. Modified for recoil. Swaps calibers with just a chamber change.”

He glanced at Elias before adding, “No one will trace it.”

Elias’s lips twitched. “How convenient for my boy.”

And then the last. The “experimental.”

The dealer lifted it with both hands, carefully. It was a knife, but not like any I’d seen. The blade was curved, serrated near the hilt but smooth toward the tip. Along the spine, a faint blue shimmer pulsed—like veins of light under glass.

“It’s built with a conduction system,” the man explained proudly. “Tiny battery in the handle. You strike deep, press here—” he tapped a recessed switch near the grip, “—and it sends a current through the blade. Shock strong enough to lock a body’s muscles, stop their heart if you’re lucky.”

My breath stalled.

Elias smiled, stepping closer, like he could sense the curiosity sparking in me. His hand brushed my shoulder, light, familiar, poisonous. “You deserve the best. Choose whichever calls to you.”

I kept my face blank, though the curved blade sang to me, every nerve in my body wanting to feel its weight. But I forced my eyes to flick toward the pistol instead, then back to the blade.

All three men watched me closely as I bent over the case.

My fingers closed around the shocking blade. The handle was smooth, deceptively light, but the pulse in it felt alive, like a weapon with a heartbeat.

Elias’s smile widened like he’d given me a gift no one else deserved. “Yes, that suits you. Lethal, but elegant. And so rare. Coveted the moment it’s seen.”

I forced myself not to flinch at his words.