by Jess Haines
“Testicles McGee is on the phone for you.” Kumiho covered the mouthpiece with her hand before handing me the phone, whispering her next words and adding a wide grin and a suggestive brow waggle. “You’ll have to tell me your secret. He’s totally smitten. Since you’ve been up, he’s been calling every fifteen minutes to check on you, I swear. I held him off as long as I could.”
I was so exhausted, I couldn’t find the energy to laugh. The thought of Royce being so worried about me also did plenty to raise my flagging spirits and filled me with a deep, fuzzy kind of warmth. I tucked the phone between my ear and shoulder, closing my eyes. “I’m here.”
“Did she just call me what I think she did?”
“Yes. What, you don’t think you make a good hero from a romance novel?”
Royce made a gruff sound, neither disputing nor denying the idea. It was the first time—probably the only time—I ever thought of anything about him as adorable.
“Speaking of which, when are you going to come here to sweep me off my feet? And help me get Sara back?”
He hesitated. “Shiarra, I’m sorry. I’m not able to leave New York right now.”
That stunned me silent.
“You won’t be alone,” he continued, regret coloring his tone. “I wish I could be by your side right now, but there are too many issues here for me to come to you. I’ll be sending help to rescue her, but I want you on the road back to New York as soon as possible. I can send a plane or helicopter to pick you up once you cross the state line into Kentucky.”
“Please tell me you’re joking.” I barely managed to get the words out from behind the forming lump in my throat. “You can’t seriously be asking me to leave her behind.”
“I’m not asking you to leave her behind. I’m asking you to come to safety and let my people and your mage friend take over to get her out of there. I don’t want you putting yourself back in danger, and I can’t afford to have traces of my bloodline found in connection with what Max has brought down upon himself.”
“No. I’m not leaving without Sara.”
“Shiarra, going back would be suicide. I might never get you out of his hands—”
“No. Don’t even say it. Don’t even think it. I won’t go in alone, but I can’t leave her there. Not after . . . I can’t.”
Royce growled, the sound garbled and staticky over the phone. “Stay where you are. Don’t go charging in.”
“I don’t think I can walk without help, let alone charge off to rescue Sara. Besides, I’m not stupid or suicidal.” I paused. “You’re really not coming?” My voice was thin, strained, even to my own ears.
“I cannot. If I leave now, Max or one of my other enemies will seize the opportunity to move in on my territory. Aside from which, I can’t have our sire believing me directly responsible for any harm that may come to him.”
That didn’t sound very good. While both Max and Royce had made passing mentions of the vampire who turned them in the past, I had never given her much thought. Considering he ruled three states, I had thought Royce was beyond answering to anyone but himself anymore. I wondered what Athena must have thought about Max’s attack on New York and his attempt to kill Royce, before shaking my head and concentrating on the issue at hand.
“I don’t want to go back there, but I’ve got to do something to help Sara. To stop Max. I feel so useless, and I don’t know what to do—”
“Don’t worry,” he cut in before I could get too worked up. “The arrangements have been made. You’ll stay with Soo-Jin while the others collect Ms. Halloway. You’ll both return to New York, safe and whole.”
Whole. Something I would never be again. I didn’t say it, nor did I voice how betrayed I felt that he wouldn’t ride in with the setting sun to save me. It was irrational, and I knew it, but it still stung that he chose to let someone else do the dirty work.
“I feel your pain, my little hunter. Don’t fret. You’re safe now, and Ms. Halloway will be soon, as well.”
That didn’t do much to make me feel better, but I wasn’t going to argue. The important thing was getting Sara free, not me doing something foolish to endanger myself or my new friends. Even if Royce wasn’t there, with Arnold’s help I had no doubt we’d get Sara out. It was saving everyone else who was trapped there, and putting a permanent halt to Max’s slave trading business, that worried me.
It took a bit of courage to get my next words out, knowing I was asking a lot more of Royce than he owed me or Sara. If he chose not to help me get everyone else out, I hoped Arnold might feel differently.
“I need you to tell Arnold to bring whatever he needs to remove a collar like the ones on Christoph and Ashi.”
Royce paused. The smooth, deliberate tone to his next words told me he was pulling on his I-know-better-than-you pants and felt I was treading on dangerous ground. “You may think Christoph or even Ashi might help you, but let me assure you, the moment those collars come off—”
“I didn’t say I wanted them to come along for the party,” I said, interrupting. “There’s someone else. She’s trapped in there, too. Probably more than just one Other, considering what I saw, plus a bunch of normal people who don’t deserve what’s happened to them.”
“The other humans you mention are one thing. I was intending to have any other captives my people came across brought back here. However,” Royce continued, still choosing his words with care, “I may not always agree with Max, but if he has an Other wearing a collar that suppresses magic or shapeshifting, it’s probably for very good reason. Removing it may not be wise.”
“That’s true, but she helped me when she didn’t have to. She’s probably not going to be a danger to anyone but Max. Besides, I promised I would help her.”
He made a soft, frustrated sound. “Very well. I’ll pass on the request. What is she? Do you know?”
“No,” I replied, trying to hide my embarrassment. I could practically feel his disapproval radiating through the phone. “Her name is Iana, if that helps. She mentioned being with him since a police riot or something.”
“The police strike in Boston?” The disapproval turned to alarm. “I thought she was dead. She cannot be released. Keep your distance from her if she ever finds her freedom.”
“She might be dangerous, but she’s my friend, and she’s more broken than anyone I’ve ever met. I made a promise to her and I’m keeping it.”
Royce didn’t respond immediately. I held my breath, praying he would understand how important it was to me to keep my word to Iana. Out of all of the people in Max’s menagerie of slaves, she was the only one who had done anything to help me or show me any compassion while I was there. Something about the thought of her being left that way, trapped forever as something she wasn’t, rankled too deeply for me to shrug off my promise to help her.
“As you wish,” he said.
If only it hadn’t sounded like a condemnation.
Chapter Seventeen
Royce didn’t keep me on the phone long after that. He asked to speak to Kumiho, who took the phone with an exaggerated eye roll and flapped her other hand in the universal gesture for talking too much. Her antics did dredge a smile out of me, even if I wasn’t feeling too great just then. Her expression soon shifted to one that looked too serious for her candy-coated exterior and she moved away from me, disappearing into the hallway, an unseen door soon shutting with a quiet click behind her.
Whether Royce was asking more favors of her or giving her some instruction to sit on me to keep me from pulling a Lone Ranger, it didn’t matter. I had talked about this with Sara while we were in Los Angeles. I was going to do what I could to be smarter about how I dealt with my problems. Rushing in, as Royce had said, would be suicide. Even if he was plotting with Kumiho to keep me out of the action, for once I would consider those plans without disregarding them on their face.
I could admit to myself that I wasn’t strong enough to face Max alone and maybe not even with an army at my back. The thought of
being in the same room with him again filled me with a terror so deep that the constant, minor trembles in my hands became full-body spastic shudders. Though I wanted to be brave and strong, to think that I was capable of better, I knew the limits of my courage.
Taking a deep breath to quell the growing fear and frustration, I finally did what I had been avoiding since it happened.
I peeled the loose shirt and pants off my left side to see how badly I had been burned. The brand didn’t hurt the way it had yesterday. It had subsided to a dull heat that grew into a sharp burn when I moved in a way that rubbed or pulled the damaged skin, but it was still an ugly, irritated red around the edges. The mark itself was a mottled indentation of black and red, with a touch of yellow.
The scar it would leave would be a permanent reminder that my time with Max was not some impossible, horrible nightmare. That bird and that circle of olive leaves, once the symbol of the currency of Max’s homeland, was now a symbol of how I was some form of currency to him. Property. The sight of it fixed me with a confusing mix of fear and fury and a hollow emptiness, but there wasn’t anything I could do to erase it.
He hadn’t been lying. No matter how long I lived, I could never, ever forget.
A box of tissues landed in my lap. I jumped, stifling a scream and scrambling to adjust the clothes to cover up the mark.
“You looked like you could use them.”
Kumiho padded on silent feet to the kitchen, leaving me to wipe my shame away in relative privacy. I wanted to promise myself that these would be the last tears I would shed over what Max had done to me, but I knew that promise would be a lie. There was so much about it that hurt, more than I had words for, more than what was etched into my skin.
It took a bit of time for me to shove that hurt back into a locked box and bury it in the region of my heart. The discontent stayed there, lodged deep in my chest, ready to burst open again at any moment—but I would keep it hidden away for as long as I could.
Dashing the last of my tears away with a wad of tissues, I took a deep breath, held it until my lungs felt they would burst, then let it out. Thus composed, I got back to my feet and limped to the kitchen, leaning my good hip against the counter.
Kumiho turned, looking me up and down as though she’d never seen me before. Maybe she was seeing me with new eyes after whatever Royce had discussed with her.
“Well. Apparently I am to be your bodyguard for a bit longer than expected,” she said. “The war has reached my doorstep, whether I wish it or not.”
“War? What war?”
Her scrutiny turned sharp, her brows knitting. “Were you not aware that there have been uprisings— vampires wresting control of long-held cities from each other, werewolf packs destroying or consuming one another, shifters and the undying clashing in terrible battles in contested cities? New York was one of them, and I thought there were some rumors of your involvement with the werewolves there.”
I started to shake my head, but then paused and considered. The night I broke into Royce’s apartment building, urged by the spirit of a dead man inhabiting the hunter’s belt I’d been wearing at the time to take some twisted form of revenge against the vampires inside, there was supposed to have been some big fight between two local packs of werewolves. The Sunstrikers, led by my ex-boyfriend Chaz, had some kind of beef with the Ravenwoods. The human hunters—White Hats—who had been helping me at the time had chosen to side with the Sunstrikers, but I refused to join their fight.
“Maybe,” I said, choosing my words carefully. “I know there were some problems in New York, but I was trying not to get involved.”
“That’s probably for the best. Unfortunate business. You’re lucky you missed Alec’s show of temper after his properties were burned down. I heard the carnage was a marvel to behold.”
Her eyes glinted with a vicious light, her teeth bared in a feral grin that said better than words that she enjoyed the thought of bloodshed. That slick pink lipstick, like her lips had been coated with melted taffy, somehow made her appear more fierce and predatory. Then what she said sank in, and I had to collect my jaw off the floor before I could sputter out a few words of my own.
“Wait ... excuse me? Did you say burned down?”
“Yes. I take it he didn’t tell you?” She rubbed her chin, musing. “There was some fracas with a Were pack. They destroyed one of his clubs, and then that apartment building near Central Park. Burned them down. Alec has kept his battles in the courts and shadows since ... oh, the 1700s, I’d expect, but since the arson he’s been raging a rather bloody war with the wolves. If he kept it from you, I imagine he didn’t want to alarm you.”
I bit my lip, not sure how to respond or what to think. It seemed like something so important would have been one of the first things for us to discuss, but I couldn’t argue with her logic. I already had plenty of problems on my plate. Worrying about what happened to Royce’s properties and if everyone who lived in that apartment building was okay wasn’t going to do me any good. Of course, that had never stopped me before. I hoped Mouse, Ken, Wesley, Christoph, Analie, and all the others who had lived there were alive and unhurt. They may not have been dear friends, but they had all looked out for me in their own way.
Also, I didn’t think Chaz would have been so stupid as to try to burn down Royce’s properties, but if he had, a tiny—very tiny—part of me was worried about him.
I still thought Chaz was a sleazy douchenozzle of a shitstain, but—damn him to hell—I couldn’t turn off all my feelings for him. I hoped the scumbag was okay.
Kumiho folded her arms, resting her butt against the counter as she regarded me. “You aren’t in any danger while you’re here, if you’re worried. No one—no one—would dare intrude on my territory. Not even in a time of war.” Her fierce grin widened until I could swear I could see her molars. It was easy to believe her, even if I had no idea what she was. “And your beau is quite a fierce creature when roused. I wish I could be there to see it when you fully grasp what a beast he is under the veneer. I imagine that will be something to behold.”
I cleared my throat, unable to meet her gaze. “I’ve seen enough. I know what he is and what he can do.”
“Oh, I doubt that very sincerely.”
Before I had time to question what she meant by that, she uncrossed her arms and pushed herself away from the counter, striding past me and out of the kitchen. Her movements were swift, liquid, the smooth stride of a predator on the hunt. Very reminiscent of how Chaz moved close to the full moon, when the beast roiled just below the surface of his skin, apt to slip its leash at any moment.
She returned a few minutes later, a purse in hand and swaddled in a thick, fur-trimmed ski jacket.
“Give me your measurements. I need to run a few errands. I’ll pick up some new clothes and shoes for you while I’m out,” she said, shoving a pen and small pad of paper in my direction.
Though I didn’t want to look a gift horse in the mouth, the abrupt change of topic and thought of being left alone here sent a pang of dread through me. Seeing my stricken look, she placed a hand on my shoulder, heat and a tingling sense of possession radiating from her touch.
“Remember, you’re safe in my home. Not even Euphron of Sicyon would dare violate the sanctity of these grounds.”
I nodded, pulling away with a shiver. She did not try to touch me again.
It felt a little like I had left one cage only to be trapped in another.
Pushing that thought to the back of my mind, I wrote down my shoe and clothing sizes. Then, as an afterthought, I added Sara’s sizes before I handed it to her. She glanced over the paper, arched a brow, then stuffed the note and the pen in her purse.
“While you’re out—will you check if Dustin is okay?” I asked.
Her features darkened with a flash of pity. I got the idea it was more for my hopeless naïveté than worry about Dustin’s welfare. It was soon hidden behind a mask of brisk industry as she adjusted her clothes and made a p
oint of rearranging some things in her purse.
“I’ll check,” she said. “Remember, stay inside. I’ll be back in a few hours with some new clothes and the cavalry. There’s some paper in that desk over there. If you can, make a map of what you know of the grounds and where your friends might be hidden away. It will help us make plans once the others arrive.”
Right. Royce’s vampires and Arnold were on the way. Knowing that I could contribute something useful that would keep my hands busy eased some of the guilt and tension that had built up between my shoulders. It took a few breaths to steady my voice enough to speak.
“Thank you, Kumiho. For everything.”
Her expression softened, and she bowed her head, her hair sliding forward like a dark satin curtain to obscure her features. “Don’t thank me, girl. I’m not good or kind or moral. You’ll never know how lucky you are to have me on your side. Vampires are not the only ones with dark appetites, and repaying the debts I owe your master will see mine well fed.”
For the first time, I felt a thrill of fear of this woman.
Her eyes were a strange, orange color, glinting in the shadows cast by her hair. Her gaze bored into mine for what felt like an eternity before she turned away. Silent, even in those stiletto heels, she stalked to the front door.
“Wait.”
She stopped, hand on the knob, but didn’t turn around.
“You may not think so, but you’re not a bad person. You’re kinder than you think.”
“You’re speaking from a place of ignorance,” she said. Though the words were sharp, I still heard the edge of pain and longing in them. “You don’t know what I am or what I’ve done. You don’t know anything about me.”
“I know you dropped everything in the middle of the night to pick up a perfect stranger whose life was in danger.”
“Because I was bound to repay a debt. Someday you’ll understand what it means to owe a debt to an immortal. When that day comes, the world will be darker for it.”