Chapter Thirty-Six

 

My hands worked quickly against the lock on the door to Louis’s apartments. It was early in the afternoon so only the human slaves were up and about doing their work. There would be a contingent of supernatural guards, but they were mostly stationed at the perimeters of the complex, waiting for Daniel to try something.

As I held my improvised pick and tension wrench, I wished I had tried to find Louis Marini’s daytime resting place. It would have been a satisfying end to our relationship to shove a stake through his sleeping body and sweep up his ashes to give to Daniel as a trophy.

“What’s taking so long, Z?” Neil’s gaze went to Trent, who was keeping watch on the hallway.

I pulled my hands away. They were cramping and this was work that required an enormous amount of dexterity. Had I known I was going to be kidnapped, I would most certainly have brought my own set of picks. As it was, Trent had procured a heavy wire hanger Neil had bent and worked over to make a decent tension wrench. I used a nail file to blunt the tip of a large safety pin to improvise a pick. They were inferior tools and I was slightly out of practice.

“Do you want to try it?” I asked Neil, irritated. I was doing my best, damn it.

“No, I want you to hurry,” Neil replied, just as irritated with me.

We were all on edge, the joy of last night turning into the anxiety of being so close to the exit. If something was going to go wrong, now would be the time for it to happen.

I used the thumb of my right hand to knead my left palm. After the cramp stopped, I forced myself to try again. I gently scraped the pins of the lock.

“That’s it,” Neil said. He looked up at me. “I heard a click.”

It was a very quiet little lock. I let Neil move in close as I held the pin in place and turned the cylinder. Neil indicated the clicks and before I knew it, the doorknob turned in my hands.

“We’re in,” Neil called quietly to Trent, who joined us.

“What the hell kind of queen knows how to pick a lock?” the wolf asked as we entered Louis’s empty apartments.

“The same kind who knows how to crack a safe,” I replied.

Trent walked to the door of the office. “Okay, then, let’s see you get through this one.”

I laughed quietly. I had no intention of picking the lock to the office. I walked straight into the bedroom and opened the dresser drawer. Sure enough, arrogance and habit were a thief’s best friends.

“Want to charge some purchases to a soon-to-be dead guy?” I asked Neil, pulling out the numerous credit cards Louis had stashed in the drawer.

Neil went through the pile, shaking his head. “He has like four different aliases.”

I shrugged as I palmed the key to the office. “Did you think the bastard was legit? If he’d had long enough, I’m sure he planned to take me back to Dallas and have me sign over all of Dev’s assets to him. Vampires are almost all cons of some sort.”

I came out, smiling at Trent. “See, key. A good thief never breaks in when she could just waltz through like she owns the place.”

Trent closed the door behind us and watched through curious eyes as I pulled back the painting. I turned the dial and asked Trent the question I’d been longing to ask since I saw Dev pull him aside the night before. “So did you get a job offer last night?”

The big wolf blushed slightly. “Yeah.”

I turned the wheel to the left and the right, trying out the first combination. “What did he offer you?”

“He said once the king took over, he would need someone to head security for you and the children.” Trent went on to announce the high six figures Dev had offered along with free room and board.

Neil shook his head. “I would hold out for more. You don’t understand how much trouble Dev’s sons are going to be.”

I moved on to combination number two. “You would probably have to liaise with the police a lot. I should warn you about that. Dev and Declan got into a shitload of trouble during their youth. Dev could write a Zagat’s ratings system for jails across the Earth plane.” No luck. I reset the wheel and started dialing number three. “It would mean moving to Dallas. If you have a pack you’re close to, you should feel free to turn him down. I know how important family is to wolves.”

Trent shook his head. “Nah, that’s why I joined the Army. I needed to get away. I…had a mate. She died. I don’t particularly want to go back to Boston. I was thinking about heading to Colorado after this was done and joining McKenzie’s pack, but there’s a bunch of competition out there. I don’t know. I’m thinking about it.”

Three was my lucky number. The safe swung open and I sighed in satisfaction. “Well, just so you know, I expect that it will be a boring job. I intend to be very dull for a long time. I just want to be at home and raise my little hoodlums. Your most exciting job would probably be escorting the boys and me to ‘mommy and me’ classes.”

“Where the boys will aggressively pursue all the little girls and make their parents terribly uncomfortable,” Neil added.

I tried not to think about that. I peered into the safe. “Wow.”

“Wow?” Neil climbed onto the chair next to me. “Wow. That’s a lot of cash.”

The thief in me really wanted to pull out that cash. It must have been at least a hundred grand. It was Louis’s war chest. I wondered if Niles and Elof knew their boss had all that cash at his disposal when they were struggling.

“We’ll come back for it later,” I promised. “Three-way split.”

“Are you serious?” Trent asked.

If he was going to hang around, he should get used to how things worked. “Hey, you were a good lookout. On this crew we split the take evenly. Remember that in the future.”

He smiled, and it softened his face, making him look younger. “I’ll remember that, Your Highness.”

I pulled out the Blood Stone. “Hello. It’s nice to see you again.”

Neil retrieved the fake out of his pocket and replaced it carefully, having noted the way the original had been sitting. “I think that’s right.” He looked longingly at the cash. “Good-bye, lots of little Benjamins. Soon you’ll have a new home. I’m going to take such good care of you.”

I sighed because Neil would spend that cash as fast as we made it. It was his nature. “Let’s get out of here. I need to get back and look like someone who didn’t just crack a safe.”

Closing the door, I reset the dial and pushed the painting back into place. I glanced around the room and was satisfied that we hadn’t left a trace. I stashed the stone in the front pocket of my jeans. Daniel was coming. I only had to wait another few hours or so and my husband would be here. Both of them.

Trent pulled me down, putting his mouth to my ear so he could whisper. “Shh. Someone’s in the outer room.”

“Oh, god,” I replied softly. “I left the light on. It should have been off. Louis would never have left it on. Who is it?”

Trent breathed deeply and he and Neil looked at each other. “Shifter,” they said at the same time.

My heart seized because that meant one thing and one thing only. If that was a shifter, he knew we were here. He would be able to smell us.

The door to the office opened and the shifter who worked in the dungeons stood looking at us with a smile on his narrow face. He was lanky to the point of skinny and his eyes were little black beads. “Trent, I always suspected you were a plant. Guess we get to see who’s stronger now.”

I felt Trent sigh against me as he moved me back. “Easy job, huh?”

I let the wolf put himself between me and whatever that shifter was going to turn into. “I did say the easy part came when we got back to Dallas.”

“You stay back, okay?”

“Aye, aye, captain.” I didn’t have a weapon of any kind and I doubted the three days I lasted at kickboxing class were really going to come in handy now.

Trent used his strong legs to kick the other man back into the living area. It was a much bigger space, but the shifter was already changing. His clothes ripped around him and the air was heavy. Trent’s change was quick. Though he started after the shifter, his massive gray wolf was charging by the time the other guy took his form. I’d been wrong about the snake. He was a huge, gross-looking lizard thing. He looked primeval, with dead, black eyes and a slithering tongue.

I was actually a little grateful for the lizard. Normally I’m of the firm belief that shifters should really only shift into other mammals. It makes sense to me. Humans are mammals, so I expect something warm blooded to try to kill me when I have to face down a shifter. When they turn into snakes or lizards or birds, it tends to freak me out. Not a one of them has ever turned into a giant frog, which I might find kind of funny. I have yet to see a giant spider. I think insects and arachnids are too hard. I think I’d just run from a huge spider. But while the lizard made my stomach churn, it also didn’t make a ton of noise. A lion or panther would have roared and brought everyone down on our heads.

“Is that supposed to be a komodo dragon?” I asked, looking back at Neil. I would warn Trent not to let it bite him because their mouths were icky. I’d seen that in a documentary once. When I got a good look at Neil, I took a shocked step back.

His eyes were red and it seemed a little like he was caught in an in-between stage of his change. His features were distinctly wolf like, but his face still had human form. He was Neil…and he wasn’t.

“Sweetie, are you okay?” I was slightly horrified by what he was becoming. I didn’t leave him. Something instinctive inside told me to hold my ground. Running might get whatever was inhabiting Neil to chase me, and I didn’t want that to happen. I didn’t want him thinking I was prey.

“I’m fine, Zoey,” Neil replied, his voice deeper than normal.

“No, I don’t think so,” I breathed back, all the while listening to the brawl going on right in front of us.

Trent was fighting quietly and methodically. He was exceptionally well trained and it showed as he went straight for the lizard’s underbelly, trying to turn him over so he could use his claws on the soft flesh there. The lizard managed to get one of Trent’s legs into his gross and probably full of all kinds of bacteria mouth, and I heard Trent groan as the lizard bit down.

When I glanced back at Neil, I noticed something strange. Under the white fabric of the polo he was wearing, I could see the odd tattoo on his body had started to glow. I reached out to touch it and when I did, my fingers singed even as the fabric started to burn.

“Oww,” I hissed, pulling my hand back.

“Both?” Neil was staring at the fight ahead of him, but there was nothing of my friend in those red eyes.

“I don’t understand.”

His eyes narrowed and finally found mine. “Where is my master?”

I didn’t like the sound of that. I thought quickly. Neil was a wolf and I had to hope that whatever was riding him now still had contact with that essential part of his being.

“I am your master,” I said, making my voice as firm as possible. It was the tone I used when I wanted someone to obey me.

“Both?” He gestured toward the room and indicated the combatants.

My blood chilled as I realized what he was asking, and I wondered what the hell Stewart had done to my friend. Neil wanted permission to kill them both. I doubted a lecture from me about world peace and passive resistance would be taken well. He might question my status as his master. “Just the lizard thing. The wolf is a friend and must not be harmed.”

He nodded and then he disappeared. I didn’t know if he moved so fast I couldn’t see him or if he did something wicked cool like teleport, but one minute he was beside me and the next he was straddling the lizard, his clawed hands around its neck. Trent seemed surprised by the sudden entrance of another person in the fight and he backed off.

There was a horrible crunch and then the lizard’s neck bent at a weird angle and the body just stopped. It fell to the floor, deflating quickly. When I looked back up to Neil, he seemed confused to be standing there.

“Z?”

I rushed over as Trent was changing back into his human form.

“Neil, are you all right?” It was a stupid question to ask but the only one my lips seemed capable of forming.

“How did I get here?” He dropped the lizard’s head and stared down at his hands. “I was talking to you and then…then I was standing over this thing.”

“Good thing, too,” Trent said. “That damn lizard had a hold on my leg and he wasn’t giving up. I hate lizards. Give me a freaking panther any day. I’m gonna see if Marini has anything I can wear in those closets. Me walking around naked with a lizard corpse might draw attention. We need to clean up here.”

While Trent took his naked self off to find clothes, I held Neil’s shaking hand. “Stewart did something to you. That tattoo glowed and burned my fingers. Take a look at your shirt.”

The fabric was burned in the shape of the tattoo. He shook his head. “Why didn’t I hurt Trent?”

“I told you not to,” I replied. “Look, we’ve been down here for weeks and this is the first time it’s happened, right?”

Neil took a deep breath and nodded. “I’ve been fine the whole time, Z. After waking up in the field, I’ve been normal except for the weird ink on my chest.”

“Then we have to assume that whatever is happening only happens when you feel really, really threatened.”

“Or when I think you’re threatened,” Neil added.

“So we just stay calm and keep the adrenaline down, and when we get out of here we’ll figure it out.” I set about righting the living room. The fight had knocked down some lamps. I wasn’t sure I could save the couch, but I managed to get it back into position. It would pass a cursory inspection.

“Man, I had heard you were kind of weak in the physical department,” Trent said as he walked out of the bedroom dressed in slacks and a button-down. He quickly went about picking up the remnants of his former clothes. Even though the end game was at hand, we didn’t want to tip Marini off that we’d been here. “But there was nothing weak about that performance. That was pretty damn awesome if you ask me.”

Neil looked at me while Trent started to pick up the corpse, and I knew this was a secret we would keep between us.

“Well,” I said brightly, “I suppose when you’re a vampire king everyone looks a little weak.”

“I guess so,” Trent answered, picking up the corpse. “I’m gonna take this and shove it in the catacombs. Why don’t you head back to your room and I’ll meet you there? We can wait for Donovan’s signal together. He better hurry his shit up, though. I don’t want to have to get through another night here.”

Neil and I carefully relocked the doors after taking inventory of the apartments and erasing all evidence that we had been there. The walk back to our rooms was a quiet one.

“Z?”

“Yeah?”

“I don’t think I’m going to be able to stay calm for the fight,” he said.

I was worried about that, too. There was no way that thing wouldn’t come out when we took on two hundred vampires, their supernatural servants, and everything else they could throw at us. It had worked to our advantage in this case, but I worried what would happen in the chaos of a battlefield. I couldn’t risk that Neil would harm our allies.

“I don’t want to hurt someone I care about. I couldn’t handle it.”

“I’ll figure something out,” I promised.

 

* * * *

 

Two hours later, we’d been waylaid by the cooks, who were freaked out about having to prepare a meal for her Royal Highness Queen Miria and a party of Fae. I could have told them I didn’t think that dinner was going to happen, but I played my part and discussed the dietary preferences of the Faery contingent. I was tired and it was almost dark as Neil, Trent, and I made our way back to my rooms. My edge of anxiety was verging now on full-blown panic as I knew the time when Danny would make his push was coming at us with the speed of a steamroller.

“Neil, why don’t you come with me?” Trent asked. “I got some weapons in my room. We need to move them in here so when the time comes we’re not caught off guard.”

Neil checked his watch. “We better hurry. Sunset is only fifteen minutes away. I don’t want her alone after that.”

“Agreed,” the wolf said. “We’ll do it in ten.”

I entered my rooms alone and thought about how I couldn’t wait to get one of those weapons in my hand. I hated feeling completely vulnerable, and it would be good to have even a little piece of metal to put between me and Marini. As I closed the door behind me, I wondered if I shouldn’t have gone with Trent and Neil because the minute the door shut, I felt a hand around my waist, pulling me up against a hard masculine body that seemed very glad to see me. Before I could scream, the other hand slapped across my mouth.

“You don’t want to do that, Your Highness.”