Secret Unleashed: Secret McQueen, Book 6
Page 26
“You look like her. Like Mercy.” He smiled, obviously thinking he was paying me a compliment.
“I think I look more like you.”
When his smile broadened, I knew I’d said the right thing. “It’s nice to meet you. Secret.”
“It’s nice to meet you too.” I wanted to say Dad. Wanted so badly to call him by that title since I’d been missing out on using it for over two decades. But when I was presented with a chance to finally say it to his face, the word froze in my throat and I couldn’t. Instead I said, “I need to ask you about the pendant.”
Ingrid was the first person Holden, Sutherland and I saw when we entered the Council headquarters in L.A. later that same night. Once I’d found out what my father knew about the pendant he’d been carrying, I secured us safe passage back to Los Angeles.
Desmond understood why he couldn’t join us for this leg of the journey and had volunteered to get our belongings from the hotel in San Francisco. I’d never been so grateful to accidentally stay at a Lucas Rain Hotel before. Under normal circumstances our things would probably be long gone, but since my ex-fiancé owned the hotel, Desmond told me our room had been left untouched, the expenses ignored at Lucas’s request.
He’d even arranged to get our towed car out of impound, hopefully with my katana still in the trunk.
As much as I hated Lucas sometimes, he could occasionally do something to remind me why I’d fallen in love with him in the first place. Love wasn’t what I felt now, but perhaps loathing might yield to grudging respect someday.
Sig had called Ingrid on our behalf to make arrangements for a conditional surrender. As long as we were back on council turf before sunrise, we wouldn’t be attacked. In spite of the assurances, I still felt like I was being watched the entire trip from the airfield back to the council headquarters.
Ingrid met us at the front entrance, and I could tell by her expression she was disappointed in me. Whether she was disappointed I had screwed up, or because I didn’t die, I couldn’t be sure.
“It’s a long story.” I still refused to go into detail with anyone.
“It had better be a good one.”
“Actually it’s pretty awful.”
That made her frown, and some of the bluster went out of her sails. “I see you found Sig’s missing kin.”
“I did.”
“And did you find the object Tribunal Leader Eilidh was so…impassioned about?”
The pendant felt heavy in my pocket. If it did what Sutherland claimed it could, there was no small wonder Eilidh wanted it so badly, or why she was willing to sacrifice our lives if it meant no one else would have it. In the wrong hands it would be a powerful weapon.
I just wasn’t sure Eilidh’s hands were the right ones.
If I’d been given a choice, I would have brought the pendant to Sig. Unfortunately I didn’t have that option. Part of me wanted to keep it for myself, but even with the power it provided I would have been a fool to believe I’d get away with running.
“I have it,” I confirmed. “Are they ready for us?”
“Yes. They’ve been patiently awaiting your return.” Sarcasm sounded funny coming from a seven-hundred-year-old. Yet somehow it managed to endear her to me. Obviously Ingrid hadn’t enjoyed her stay with Galen’s council in my absence.
“Don’t worry,” I assured her. “We’ll be going home soon enough.”
“About damn time.” The elevator arrived, and she selected one of the lower floors but didn’t join us in the lift. “Secret?”
I held the door before it could close. “Yeah?”
“For what it’s worth…I knew you hadn’t run.”
I was too stunned to reply, so I let the door shut instead. Holden and Sutherland were silent the whole trip down, but my father had a goofy smile stuck on his face, the same one he’d had since we got on the plane back to L.A. I’d have asked what he was happy about, but I wasn’t sure he’d know the answer.
Outside the Tribunal chamber two wardens tried to insist I enter alone, but I pulled rank and forced them to let me bring the men along. There was no way in hell I was letting either of them out of my sight, not until this whole mess was resolved. As of right now I had to consider the council enemy territory. When I had assurances we were all safe and the warrants were called off, then I’d take alone time into consideration.
Eilidh, Galen and Arturo were seated in the same arrangement they had been the last time I saw them. Tonight Eilidh and Galen were dressed in matching emerald green, while Arturo had opted for a black suit.
“How kind of you to grace us with your presence, Secret.” Eilidh tried to sound bored, but her voice maintained an edge of malice.
“I wasn’t aware there were time restrictions on my mission.” I’d practiced what I would say to them in my mind, going over it a thousand times on the flight south. Now that I was actually standing in front of them, I wasn’t sure I’d be able to remember any of it.
“No, but we weren’t aware you would disappear without a trace.”
“My methods, unconventional though they may be, yield results. You wouldn’t have asked my council for help unless you wanted results, yet now you want to question how they were obtained?”
“Results?” Eilidh sneered. “The window still sits in San Jose. I see no results.”
“I’ve returned your warden.” I indicated Sutherland, who stood in front of Arturo.
“Hello,” he greeted.
“Wonderful. You’ve brought us a mad vampire. What a delightful treat.”
“Eilidh…” Galen didn’t threaten her, but his tone implied she should rein herself in. She was behaving like she was in charge here, but she wasn’t. This was his dog-and-pony show, and she obviously got away with speaking out of turn because she was Galen’s sister.
“Don’t Eilidh me,” she snapped.
Galen grabbed her wrist and squeezed. Though the expression on his face remained calm and pleasant, he had to be hurting her because she squeaked.
“I believe my sister was trying to ask why it has taken you two weeks to do what another could have accomplished in two days?”
I reached into my pocket and withdrew the crystal pendant, letting it catch the low light of the room, reflecting prisms onto the floor in a wide arc of rainbows.
“Your council was not entirely honest with me. I’d like you to start by admitting as much.” I closed my hand into a fist and returned the pendant to my pocket. “You claimed the window was what interested you, but that wasn’t true, was it?”
“We did want the window,” Galen said. “But I suppose you have uncovered our reasons for wanting it.”
“Maxime thought Eilidh wanted the window because she believed she’d be able to stand in the light it cast. But that wasn’t its power at all. The real power was in one of those thirteen crystals.” I patted my pocket. “The one I now have.”
“Are you trying to…barter with me?” Galen asked, sounding equal parts impressed and offended.
“I’d like to think of it more in terms of Let’s Make a Deal.”
Arturo must have been the only one who watched game shows in the seventies because he chuckled while the siblings remained stony.
“Please, tell me what you want that would make you behave so recklessly,” Galen demanded.
“I want Sutherland Halliston remanded to my custody. Permanently.”
“You are asking us to give you ownership of your sire?” This time Galen did laugh. “Unheard of.”
“No,” I said, cutting his laughter off abruptly. “You forget I’m here in Sig’s stead. I’m requesting you give his blood kin freedom to move to the East Coast council. I will make sure he arrives safely.”
“Why?” Eilidh asked. I could understand her disbelief. To her, Sutherland was a crazy, useless baby vampire. Certainly not worth trading for what I had in my pocket.
“Because he figured out what you were after from the start, and instead of taking it for himself he spent God
knows how long recreating that stupid window so he could bring it back to you without being discovered. But more importantly, I want him with me because you have a traitor here, and I won’t leave any of my people behind.”
Eilidh’s mouth went slack while Galen and Arturo both shifted forward in their seats. “I beg your pardon, Secret, but do you know what kind of an accusation you’re making?”
“Yes.” The truth was I believed we had a traitor in the council at home as well, but they didn’t need to know that. “Moreover I’m not making wild assumptions. I know you have a traitor. My people and I were followed while we were in San Francisco, and we were attacked. The same person who attacked us had already seized Sutherland, which was why he’d gone off the grid. Now I know who was responsible for attacking me, and I know Alexandre Peyton was involved somehow. But for Peyton to know we’d gone from Los Angeles to San Francisco, someone here had to alert him. That same someone would have known Sutherland was my father, otherwise there would have been no sense in him being taken ahead of time.”
The Tribunal stared at me.
“Of course, I’m not suggesting any of you are responsible. But I am saying your Council Elders need to be looked at very seriously.”
“And what of Maxime?” Eilidh asked. “I notice he is not with you now. He knew you were moving. He knew who Sutherland was to you.”
“He knew after. And Maxime is dead. Don’t you ever suggest to me again he had anything to do with this.”
She went silent. Galen sat back in his throne with a thoughtful expression. “Is that all?”
“I want a full written pardon clearing myself, Mr. Chancery and Mr. Halliston of any wrongdoing.”
“Naturally.”
“And I want your assurances that if the traitor in your midst isn’t brought to me within a month’s time…I will be back. And it won’t be for a friendly visit.”
“Duly noted. Consider it done.” Galen shot Eilidh a glare before she could protest, rendering her silent. “The pendant, please.”
I pulled it out again and cleared the gap between us, placing it in his outstretched palm. “Does it really do what she thinks it does?” I asked as I withdrew.
He closed his fingers around it, keeping it for himself rather than passing it to Eilidh as I’d expected he would. “It does.”
“Then it’s not to be trifled with. Don’t make me regret giving it to you.”
“You have my assurances it will be used wisely. You and your people may go. I’ll ensure the signed documents you requested are ready for you upstairs, and I will be in contact with Sig in regards to the…security problem you claim we have.”
“I know you have.”
“Indeed.”
“Thank you, Galen.”
“A pleasure, Secret. Though you can understand why I hope to never see you again.”
“Likewise.”
We left the room, Holden hot on my heels with Sutherland dawdling behind. Once we were back in the elevator, Holden could no longer restrain himself. Evidence of his curiosity had been written all over his face since we’d left the chamber.
“What was it?” he asked.
“The pendant?”
He gave me his patented are you stupid look.
“Remember how Maxime said Eilidh believed the Tiffany window had magical properties? He was half right. The window itself wasn’t special, but the crystal Sutherland had on him was one of the thirteen prisms set into the window, and it is magical. Very magical.”
“What does it do?”
“Worn as a pendant, the way it’s set now? It will allow a vampire to walk in sunlight.”
The three of us went quiet, only the rattle and buzz of the elevator filling the silence. Sutherland was still beaming. His expression hadn’t wavered once.
“You gave it up? For him?”
I shook my head. “No. I gave it up because it wasn’t mine. And I gave it up because it might help me find Peyton. And anything that will help me find him is worth the sacrifice to me.”
Holden leaned against the back wall of the elevator, crossing his arms over his chest. “You think Peyton was responsible for our kidnapping, don’t you?”
“Yes.”
The elevator pinged, and we exited. A warden was standing with Ingrid, holding a sheaf of papers as Galen had promised. Before we got off, Holden grabbed me by the arm and tugged me back, holding me in place in front of him.
“This need you have to get vengeance, you can’t let it consume you. I want Peyton dead as much as you do, but you can’t let him be your sole purpose for getting out of bed every night. Otherwise he’s won.”
I pulled free from his hands and met his eyes, trying not to look as lost as I felt.
“There are other things that get me out of bed,” I promised.
“Secret…this is a dark path you’re going down.”
I touched his cheek and smiled faintly. “The path is long gone. There’s no turning back now.”
Chapter Forty
When I’d made Major Logan van Buren promise to leave me alone in a small room with The Doctor, I hadn’t dreamed of what he’d do for me. But a week following my arrival home from California I got a visit from Tyler, letting me know it was time for the government to make good on one of their promises to me.
A black SUV picked me up outside my apartment and took me to an abandoned building in the Meatpacking District.
No one questioned me for bringing a sword.
An armed guard let me into a small gray room, nearly identical to the one I’d spent over a week of my life in, and the door locked behind me. A metal chair sat in the center of the room, over a metal grate, and a black shape was huddled in one corner, just out of the reach of the single bulb lighting the space.
“Good evening, Doctor.”
I crossed the space from the door to the chair and took a seat, facing the wall instead of the stooped figure.
“How’s your chest?” I placed my katana blade down on the floor, holding the hilt between my palms. It was still encased in its glossy black scabbard, so for the time being it was more an object of beauty than an outright threat.
Once I took it out, I wouldn’t be putting it away again until the blade had tasted blood.
A fae once told me I’d tainted the sword by killing vampires with it. I wasn’t sure if that meant the sword was now touched by evil somehow, but at the moment I didn’t care. If my katana wanted to kill, it was only because it stole the desire from me.
Right now I wanted to kill a human worse than I’d ever wanted anything in my whole life.
“I asked you a question.”
The form shifted, and The Doctor pushed a thin wool blanket off his head, allowing me to see his face for the first time. He’d lost some weight since I’d last seen him, but not enough to make him look unhealthy. He’d grown a short gray beard, and his hair was unruly, but apart from that he was the same striking figure he’d once been.
“I lack your speed for healing,” he replied. “A shame, really.”
“Tragic.”
“You’re looking lovely, my dear. No worse for the wear, it seems.”
I choked out a laugh. No worse for the wear? “There are some things even a monster can’t heal.”
He shrugged, pushing the blanket off entirely. “I don’t put much stock in psychology.”
“That’s too bad. You’d be a therapist’s wet dream.” I lifted my sword into my lap, stroking my hands down the smooth case. “In all your time studying my kind, did anyone ever tell you how a vampire is punished for being naughty?”
He shook his head, but I’d clearly piqued his interest. Even in here, two feet away from a woman with a sword, he was obsessed with his quest to understand. If his single-minded focus had belonged to anyone other than a sociopath, the things he could have learned would have been remarkable.
“How?” he asked.
“A vampire is chained up in a tiny room. You must know by now silver works best for t
hat sort of thing.”
He nodded.
“Then they are starved. They’re starved for decades. Sometimes for centuries. They are left in the dark, chained to the wall, until they are little more than skeletons, but all the while the brain still works. They can still think. Reason often vanishes, but thought remains.”
I slipped the blade free from its enclosure and let the scabbard clatter to the floor. The dim light from the overhead bulb glinted off the sharp edge, making the gold dragon inlay glow like firelight.
“Not much different from human prison in some ways. Left alone with your thoughts for an eternity.” I got out of my chair and dragged the blade behind me, the metal kicking up sparks against the concrete floor, a high-pitched wail echoing off the walls. His attention was on the weapon now, losing interest in my story.
“I’m guessing you talked to a lot of people over the last week. I’m even willing to bet some of those people made you promises, didn’t they? Did they promise you a cushy minimum-security prison? Maybe Witness Protection?”
His gaze flicked from the sword to my face, and I knew he’d been promised the world.
“They were lying to you. They were your judge and jury. Do you know what that makes me?”
“Executioner,” he whispered, attention shifting back to the sword.
“Executioner,” I replied, placing the blade in front of his face so he could get a good eyeful. “There’s one thing I wanted to tell you first, though.”
“Yes?” He licked his lips and looked up at me.
“Twenty-one hours.”
“What?”
I raised the sword so the blade was against his throat, the sharp edge nicking his skin and making blood dribble down the metal. “You wanted to know how long it would take someone like me to heal a broken arm. Twenty-one hours.”
He smiled. “Good girl.”
My apartment smelled like pasta sauce when I got home.
I kicked my boots off at the door and put the katana back up over the fireplace before I followed the smell into my tiny kitchen. In spite of Peyton still being at large—the Feds insisted The Doctor hadn’t known where he was—I wasn’t willing to hide anymore. He’d been able to find me halfway across the country, so if he wanted me, he could come get me. Now I was ready for him.