Rare Vigilance

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Rare Vigilance Page 15

by M. A. Grant


  His lips pressed together and he freed himself from Atlas’s grip with a twist of his arm. “My aunt.”

  Atlas had to breathe. He had to breathe and he had to think, but that was so much harder when faced with Cristian’s sacrifice. Cristian knew who he was meeting with, had known the entire time, and considered the knowledge offered worth the risks. Risks Atlas had never seen coming, thanks to his own selfish goals.

  Jasper continued on, stepping around the detonated bombshell in the conversation as if he hadn’t been the one to throw it there. “That said, it would probably be best for this meeting to remain between family.” He deferred to Cristian’s aunt. “Shall I wait in the car?”

  “No,” she said. “I want you there with us.” Her narrowed gaze flitted over Atlas and dismissed him. “Only you, Mr. Rhodes.”

  Atlas had learned to function around Decebal’s wealth, but this woman—this Wharram—reminded him there were those living echelons higher. She was old money, with the apathy born of privilege soaked into her voice.

  He opened his mouth to protest her order, but Cristian gripped his hip. Atlas’s breath hitched from the intimacy of the gesture and his protests died out.

  “Mr. Kinkaid will wait out here,” Cristian agreed. He may have been looking at Atlas, but his words were directed to his aunt. She nodded and headed inside, Jasper close behind. “Give us some time to talk,” he told Atlas.

  His hand falling away from Atlas’s body felt like a goodbye. Like a rift he wasn’t sure they’d be able to close. And there wasn’t a damn thing he could do about it, not without revealing his treachery.

  “Since this is a family matter,” he ground out, “I’ll wait here, Mr. Slava. Let me know when you’re ready to leave.”

  Cristian offered him a bland smile and stepped away, following his aunt. Her security team stepped in behind Cristian, cutting him off from Atlas. One of the agents, a sturdy man who could have easily been a professional boxer, scowled when he dared to look past him to watch Cristian enter the building. With no choice but to trust Cristian, Atlas returned to the car.

  “Tell me about her,” he told Ioana as he slid back into his seat. He stared out the windshield at the building as if that would somehow help him see what was going on inside. Fuck, he didn’t want Cristian alone with them.

  “You are going to get us killed,” Ioana whispered back.

  It was such an unexpected response, Atlas actually looked at her. She was hunched over in her seat, trying to make herself as small as possible. “That’s Bryony Wharram, Angelica’s younger sister,” she continued. “She is one of the most powerful women on the Eastern seaboard. She does not tolerate rudeness or familiarity. And you, a human, may not speak to her at all.” Ioana said nothing more. She trembled and refused to look up.

  The realization came too slowly. “She frightens you,” Atlas said.

  “I never would have come if I’d known Cristian was meeting her. We shouldn’t be here.”

  A frisson scuttled down his spine. Jasper had gotten Atlas to join their crusade because they needed access to Decebal. He’d unwittingly attempted to deliver Cristian to their hands once and, luckily, failed. What if Bryony decided not to waste this second opportunity? Maybe that’s why she’d agreed to meet Cristian in the first place. Maybe her plan was ready to spur into motion and all it needed was the last nudge to push Decebal to give in to her demands. “Is she a danger to him?”

  “Family is sacred,” Ioana said. “And he is Angelica’s son.”

  It wasn’t a real answer, and an unspoken but hovered at the end of her statement, though she refused to be coaxed into further conversation. She huddled in the backseat, as if a movement or a word would reveal her presence and invite punishment for it. Eventually, he gave up on Ioana and tried to plan his next steps. If a vampire like Ioana was this terrified of Bryony, it meant he’d never stand a chance against her. Jasper was human, he knew that from their sunlit meeting; he could serve as a useful target if it came to it. Which only left Bryony’s security team for him to figure out.

  They weren’t impressive. The longer the meeting dragged on, the less professional they became. They got lost in discussions, laughed and joked with each other, and never paid attention to their surroundings. Their ineptitude was astonishing, and Atlas was confident labeling them as vampires also. They’d only be so arrogant if they thought themselves powerful enough to stand up to any challengers.

  Well, he’d already bested one vampire before. Three made for bad odds, but at least he knew what to expect.

  Almost an hour passed in brittle silence before Atlas’s phone buzzed. Pulse racing, he checked and saw Cristian’s text: I want to go.

  “Thank God,” Atlas muttered. He reached for his door handle.

  Ioana jerked and grabbed hold of his shoulder. Her grip was painfully strong. “What are you doing?”

  “Mr. Slava wants to leave. So we’re leaving,” he said.

  “Mr. Kinkaid,” she said, “he can’t just leave. Give it a bit and she’ll bring him out.”

  “No.” Atlas finally wrenched free from her grip and got out of the car, ignoring her cry of “Atlas!”

  The agents glanced up when they heard the car door open, but it was the sound of it closing on Ioana’s frantic call that put them on actual alert. They stepped away from the pub entrance as he closed the distance between them—forty feet to thirty, to twenty—and told him to get back to his car. Ioana swore behind him; she must have extricated herself from the backseat to follow after him.

  “Evening,” he called to the other agents, forcing down the surge of fear threatening to overwhelm him. “Mr. Slava informed me he’ll be out in a minute. If you could please move away from the door—”

  The smaller of the three agents stepped forward and crossed her arms over her stomach. “Return to your vehicle.”

  Atlas held his hands out at his sides, showing he had no weapon, but didn’t slow his pace. “I can’t do that. Mr. Slava requested we leave and it’s my job to follow his orders.”

  “Atlas, please!” Ioana begged as she rushed to catch up with him. “Cristian will understand—”

  Boxer agent threw his head back and laughed. His eyes glowed amber when they caught the light and his teeth were pointed. Atlas managed to avoid stumbling and focused on the door. He needed to reach it. Needed to be there when Cristian walked out so he could assure himself Cristian hadn’t paid the price for his terrible mistake. He wanted to be there for the man he was tasked to protect, even though he’d thought otherwise before. It was almost a relief to recognize that.

  Only a few steps left. He was close enough to smell the cigarette smoke on the third, silent agent. Close enough to see Boxer’s surprise at his refusal to back down.

  “Last warning,” the woman growled.

  “You are between me and my client,” Atlas shot back. “Move.”

  She bristled, Ioana shouted something, and Atlas was about to push through when Bryony’s agents stilled unexpectedly. The door to the pub swung open and Cristian rushed out. His red-rimmed gaze met Atlas’s and the world seemed to slot back into place as he reached out. Not to the other agents. Not to Ioana. To him.

  Atlas dragged him under an arm, murmured reminders that they were leaving in hopes Cristian would stop shaking. He turned so Cristian was protected by the shield of his body and started to draw him away, but Bryony stepped out of the pub after her nephew. Her lip curled when she spotted Atlas.

  “Cristian, come along,” she said, as if the conversation they’d been having inside wasn’t over. “We both know it’s the best decision for you.”

  Cristian shuddered against Atlas and he tightened his grip on the man, offering what little comfort he could through the touch.

  “Mr. Slava is returning home,” Atlas told Bryony. “Have a nice evening.”

  It was too dangerous to wait fo
r her reaction. It would only take a single word from her to destroy Cristian’s trust in him. He hurried Cristian toward their car, angling them so he could keep an eye on the others as they moved. Ioana had already retreated and waited by an open door. Atlas shoved Cristian toward her and got in the driver’s seat.

  “Tell me if they start moving,” he ordered Ioana and focused on backing out of the tiny lot as quickly as he could manage. The moment the car pointed toward the exit and the lake road that spelled their escape, Atlas gunned the gas.

  Ioana waited until they were deep in the curves of the lake road before telling him, “I don’t see anyone behind us.”

  Atlas knew they weren’t being followed. He’d been checking the mirror every few seconds. But hearing that confirmation from someone else was a welcome relief. He made a rolling stop at the sign connecting back on to Desolation House’s main road and kept on. As long as he didn’t have to try to evade any tails, the drive back would get them home well before dawn or Decebal’s return home.

  “Mr. Slava, what happened back there?” Atlas asked.

  When he got no answer, he checked on his passengers in the mirror. Ioana was halfway across the backseat, her hands outstretched toward Cristian, though he’d drawn away as far as he could manage so she couldn’t touch him. She simply waited there, an offer of comfort if he wanted it. Cristian stared out his window, expression too blank for brooding. Atlas had seen shock before, had experienced it, and his knowledge of the fog it caused tempered his immediate anger toward the situation they’d just escaped. Whatever had happened during the discussion with Bryony had been bad enough for Cristian to flee, so he kept his voice calm and tried again. “Cristian—”

  Cristian swallowed hard, but didn’t look his way. At least it was a reaction.

  “What happened?” he asked.

  “She wanted me to go visit my grandparents. When I told her I didn’t want to, she tried to convince me why I should. She talked about my mother. And my father.” He made a choked sound, part laugh, part sob, all agony. “I used to think my parents were lying when they said that side of the family was dangerous, but now...” He trailed off.

  “But now?” Atlas prompted gently.

  The wheels hummed a peaceful lullaby as they sped through the night. Ioana had curled away from Cristian, trying to grant him space, though she continued to watch him with rapt attention. Atlas stayed quiet, using Cristian’s breathing to center himself as his own adrenaline died out. After a few minutes, Cristian said, “She was fairly insistent I consider my grandparents’ offer to visit.”

  They were far away from Bryony Wharram, Atlas reminded himself. The knowledge didn’t make it any easier to unclench his fingers from around the steering wheel. “How insistent?”

  “She implied a visit would happen sooner, rather than later. How that happened would be my choice.” He finally met Atlas’s gaze in the rearview mirror. “I’m not stupid. I know it was a promise, not a threat. Mother warned me they would try to win me with kindness before they drove the dagger home. God, she was right. They’re going to use me as leverage against Father and... Atlas, Ioana, I’m sorry I involved you in this.” He took a deep breath and looked away. “I’ll speak to him when we get back.”

  “He’ll be furious,” Ioana warned.

  Atlas wanted to snap at her to leave it alone, for his sake as much as Cristian’s, but Cristian had already turned to her. He said, “I know. I’ll take full responsibility. My poor decision will not touch either of you.”

  “I don’t fear your dad’s judgment,” Atlas interrupted. “You were put in a bad place and you did the best you could with the limitations. You weren’t rash. You didn’t romanticize how it could go. You acted as well as you could.” When Cristian tried to protest, he added, “I worked with diplomats, Mr. Slava. I always respected those who chose hope over hate, even if it meant my platoon had to move in to support them afterward.”

  “But my actions could hurt you,” Cristian began.

  “And theirs did,” Atlas interrupted, tapping a finger over the scars on his neck. “We were attacked on our way back from staging to extract our people from the embassy if some meetings went south. I’ve got a lot of regrets from that night, but supporting someone trying to do the right thing has never been on my list.” And in case he hadn’t made it clear enough, he said, “You are not on that list either.”

  “I don’t want you in danger—”

  “That’s the job. I’ve got no illusions about it. I know what I signed up for. Whether you tell your dad what happened tonight or not, it doesn’t change my directive.” It was the truth, but Atlas knew it went deeper than that. He’d followed orders before. The responsibility he felt toward Cristian, his urge to protect and try to make right all the things he’d done wrong, that wasn’t about obedience. It was about choice, and he took a breath before promising, “No matter what, I will protect you.”

  He waited for Cristian to try arguing again, but instead the man closed his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose. “I worry it will get far more difficult after tonight.”

  Atlas shrugged, hoping it hid the rising tension in his shoulders. He knew it would get more difficult, for both of them. Now that he’d connected the dots between Jasper’s mysterious employer and Bryony Wharram, he had no choice but to escape his own deal. “We’ll handle it.”

  “You know what the worst part is?” Cristian asked miserably.

  “What?”

  “She couldn’t tell me anything about Mary’s death. She said no such creatures existed. When I described them, she laughed and told me I was making it up.” Cristian said it so carefully, Atlas knew he’d described the monsters from Atlas’s memory to her. He’d lied about how he knew about them, obviously, but he’d tried to dig a little deeper, not just for Mary’s sake, but Atlas’s as well.

  He pressed his foot harder against the gas pedal, desperate to put even greater distance between them and Bryony. He couldn’t outrun Cristian’s undeserved kindness, but maybe he could escape the monstrous agreement he’d crafted with his aunt. “Do you think she was lying?”

  “I don’t know why she would. What could she possibly gain from lying about something like that?”

  “People lie for all kinds of reasons.”

  Cristian hummed. He rested his head against the window and fell silent. They were almost back to the Scarsdale city limits before he spoke again. “Atlas, I need you to promise me something. No matter what you have to do, don’t let her near me again.”

  It was the easiest promise he’d made in a long time, and that meant it was one of the most dangerous too. But still he said softly, “Okay, Cristian. Okay.”

  Chapter Thirteen

  Bryony Wharram haunted Atlas for days. Bea, ever observant, confronted him about it one day as they shared a late meal at Whitethorn before his shift.

  “What the hell is going on?” she asked, setting down her burger. “You’ve been jumping at shadows for days. Don’t think I haven’t noticed.”

  “Something’s going on with Cristian,” Atlas told her, “and he won’t tell me how I can help.”

  It wasn’t a complete lie. Since the meeting, Cristian had been steadily withdrawing from everyone around him. There were no irritating text messages when Atlas was supposed to be off shift, or feeding trips to Rapture. Whatever Bryony said to Cristian, it had dug in deep and wouldn’t let go.

  “You don’t help him,” Bea said seriously. “That is not your job. And that’s what this is, Atlas, a job.”

  “I know,” he grumbled and reached to grab some fries from the boat they were splitting when his phone rang.

  The screen flashed with a private number, but he knew who it was.

  “Just a second,” he told his sister and left her office. The supply closet was the closest and most private space he could find, so he ducked inside and answered. “Atlas Kinkai
d,” doing his best to keep his voice steady.

  “Mr. Kinkaid,” Bryony said, “I grew tired of waiting for you to call and make more demands of me.”

  The room was too small, acrid with the scent of toner from the well-used copier, and Atlas had to swallow twice before he could croak out, “I’m not sure what kind of demands you expected me to make.”

  “Oh, a desire to call off our bargain or leave your sister out of this whole sordid affair. Isn’t that what you wanted to ask me?” she asked lightly.

  “Even if it was, I don’t think it would make much difference,” he said.

  She gave a delighted laugh. “It wouldn’t. I’m afraid you’ve no way out of this one, Mr. Kinkaid. Decebal wouldn’t be very forgiving of the man who attempted to hand over his son to strangers. And my poor nephew has been betrayed so many times already... I think learning how deeply you hate his kind would break him entirely. He’s surprisingly fragile, especially when he gets news he doesn’t wish to hear.”

  Cristian wasn’t fragile. He was stubborn and infuriating and sometimes shortsighted, but his heart was in the right place.

  “He’s stronger than you think.” It slipped out on accident and Atlas winced when Bryony’s side of the line went silent.

  “How curious,” she murmured after a dangerously long stretch. “I would love to learn that for myself.”

  “I don’t believe that will happen.”

  Like that, a new tension crackled between them. Bryony’s voice was bitingly cold as she explained, “What you believe does not matter, Mr. Kinkaid. Your belief does not make you different from any other human playing in the mud. Your life, your death, mean nothing in the tide of history. When I order you to bring me my nephew, you will. I know, because you are human, and humans are only capable of understanding fear. You will bring me Cristian because you fear the loss of your sister. Isn’t that so?”

  “Don’t you dare threaten her—”

  “It is not a threat. It is a fact. You tried to keep Cristian from me the other night and I let you. The next time you try to prevent me from taking what I want, I will not be as kind. You chose to work with us, and we have no intention of releasing you from that promise yet.” Her voice lifted, chiming as she asked, “Is that clear, Mr. Kinkaid?”

 

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