By the time Danika emerged on the galleryâs showroom floor, Bryce had endured a mildly threatening reprimand from Jesiba about her ineptitude, one email from a fussy client demanding Bryce expedite the paperwork on the ancient urn sheâd bought so she could show it off to her equally fussy friends at her cocktail party on Monday, and two messages from members of Danikaâs pack inquiring about whether their Alpha was about to kill someone over Briggsâs release.
Nathalie, Danikaâs Third, had gotten straight to the point: Has she lost her shit about Briggs yet?
Connor Holstrom, Danikaâs Second, took a little more care with what he sent out into the ether. There was always a chance of a leak. Have you spoken to Danika? was all heâd asked.
Bryce was writing back to ConnorâYes. Iâve got it coveredâwhen a gray wolf the size of a small horse pushed the iron archives door shut with a paw, claws clicking on the metal.
âYou hated my clothes that much?â Bryce asked, rising from her seat. Only Danikaâs caramel eyes remained the same in this formâand only those eyes softened the pure menace and grace the wolf radiated with each step toward the desk.
âIâve got them on, donât worry.â Long, sharp fangs flashed with each word. Danika cocked her fuzzy ears, taking in the computer that had been shut down, the purse Bryce had set on the desk. âYouâre coming out with me?â
âIâve got to do some sleuthing for Jesiba.â Bryce grabbed the ring of keys that opened doors into various parts of her life. âSheâs been hounding me about finding Lunaâs Horn again. As if I havenât been trying to find it nonstop for the last week.â
Danika glanced to one of the visible cameras in the showroom, mounted behind a decapitated statue of a dancing faun dating back ten thousand years. Her bushy tail swished once. âWhy does she even want it?â
Bryce shrugged. âI havenât had the balls to ask.â
Danika stalked to the front door, careful not to let her claws snag a single thread in the carpet. âI doubt sheâs going to return it to the temple out of the goodness of her heart.â
âI have a feeling Jesiba would leverage its return to her advantage,â Bryce said. They strode onto the quiet street a block off the Istros, the midday sun baking the cobblestones, Danika a solid wall of fur and muscle between Bryce and the curb.
The theft of the sacred horn during the power outage had been the biggest news story out of the disaster: looters had used the cover of darkness to break into Lunaâs Temple and swipe the ancient Fae relic from its resting place atop the lap of the massive, enthroned deity.
The Archangel Micah himself had offered a hefty reward for any information regarding its return and promised that the sacrilegious bastard whoâd stolen it would be brought to justice.
Also known as public crucifixion.
Bryce always made a point of not going near the square in the CBD, where they were usually held. On certain days, depending on the wind and heat, the smell of blood and rotting flesh could carry for blocks.
Bryce fell into step beside Danika as the massive wolf scanned the street, nostrils sniffing for any hint of a threat. Bryce, as half-Fae, could scent people in greater detail than the average human. Sheâd entertained her parents endlessly as a kid by describing the scents of everyone in their little mountain town, Nidarosâhumans possessed no such way to interpret the world. But her abilities had nothing on her friendâs.
As Danika scented the street, her tail wagged onceâand not from happiness.
âChill,â Bryce said. âYouâll make your case to the Heads, then theyâll figure it out.â
Danikaâs ears flattened. âItâs all fucked, B. All of it.â
Bryce frowned. âYou really mean to tell me that any of the Heads want a rebel like Briggs at large? Theyâll find some technicality and throw his ass right back in jail.â She added, because Danika still wouldnât look at her, âThereâs no way the 33rdâs not monitoring his every breath. Briggs so much as blinks wrong and heâll see what kind of pain angels can rain down on us all. Hel, the Governor might even send the Umbra Mortis after him.â Micahâs personal assassin, with the rare gift of lightning in his veins, could eliminate almost any threat.
Danika snarled, teeth gleaming. âI can handle Briggs myself.â
âI know you can. Everyone knows you can, Danika.â
Danika surveyed the street ahead, glancing past a poster of the six enthroned Asteri tacked up on a wallâwith an empty throne to honor their fallen sisterâbut loosed a breath.
She would always have burdens and expectations to shoulder that Bryce would never have to endure, and Bryce was thankful as Hel for that privilege. When Bryce fucked up, Jesiba usually griped for a few minutes and that was that. When Danika fucked up, it was blasted on news reports and across the interweb.
Sabine made sure of it.
Bryce and Sabine had hated each other from the moment the Alpha had sneered at her only childâs improper, half-breed roommate that first day at CCU. And Bryce had loved Danika from the moment her new roommate had offered her a hand in greeting anyway, and then said Sabine was just pissy because sheâd been hoping for a muscle-bound vampyr to drool over.
Danika rarely let the opinions of othersâespecially Sabineâeat away at her swagger and joy, yet on rough days like this ⦠Bryce lifted a hand and ran it down Danikaâs muscled ribs, a comforting, sweeping stroke.
âDo you think Briggs will come after you or the pack?â Bryce asked, her stomach twisting. Danika hadnât busted Briggs aloneâhe had a score to settle with all of them.
Danikaâs snout wrinkled. âI donât know.â
The words echoed between them. In hand-to-hand combat, Briggs would never survive against Danika. But one of those bombs would change everything. If Danika had made the Drop into immortality, sheâd probably survive. But since she hadnâtâsince she was the only one of the Pack of Devils who hadnât yet done it ⦠Bryceâs mouth turned dry.
âBe careful,â Bryce said quietly.
âI will,â Danika said, her warm eyes still full of shadows. But then she tossed her head, as if shaking it free of waterâthe movement purely canine. Bryce often marveled at this, that Danika could clear away her fears, or at least bury them, enough to move onward. Indeed, Danika changed the subject. âYour brother will be at the meeting today.â
Half brother. Bryce didnât bother to correct her. Half brother and full-Fae prick. âAnd?â
âJust thought Iâd warn you that Iâll be seeing him.â The wolfâs face softened slightly. âHeâs going to ask me how youâre doing.â
âTell Ruhn Iâm busy doing important shit and to go to Hel.â
Danika huffed a laugh. âWhere, exactly, are you doing this sleuthing for the Horn?â
âThe temple,â Bryce said with a sigh. âHonestly, Iâve been looking into this thing for days on end, and canât figure out anything. No suspects, no murmurings at the Meat Market about it being for sale, no motive for whoâd even bother with it. Itâs famous enough that whoeverâs got it has it wrapped up tight.â She frowned at the clear sky. âI almost wonder if the power outage was tied to itâif someone shut down the cityâs grid to steal it in the chaos. There are about twenty people in this city capable of being that crafty, and half of them possess the resources to pull it off.â
Danikaâs tail twitched. âIf theyâre able to do something like that, Iâd suggest staying away. Lead Jesiba around a bit, make her think youâre looking for it, and then let it drop. Either the Horn will show up by then, or sheâll move on to her next stupid quest.â
Bryce admitted, âI just ⦠Itâd be good to find the Horn. For my own career.â Whatever the Hel that would be. A year of working at the gallery hadnât sparked anything beyond disgust at the obscene amounts of money that rich people squandered on old-ass shit.
Danikaâs eyes flickered. âYeah, I know.â
Bryce zipped a tiny golden pendantâa knot of three entwined circlesâalong the delicate chain around her neck.
Danika went on patrol armed with claws, a sword, and guns, but Bryceâs daily armor consisted solely of this: an Archesian amulet barely the size of her thumbnail, gifted by Jesiba on the first day of work.
A hazmat suit in a necklace, Danika had marveled when Bryce had shown off the amuletâs considerable protections against the influence of various magical objects. Archesian amulets didnât come cheap, but Bryce didnât bother to delude herself into thinking her bossâs gift was given out of anything but self-interest. It would have been an insurance nightmare if Bryce didnât have one.
Danika nodded to the necklace. âDonât take that off. Especially if youâre looking into shit like the Horn.â Even though the Hornâs mighty powers had long been deadâif it had been stolen by someone powerful, sheâd need every magical defense against them.
âYeah, yeah,â Bryce said, though Danika was right. Sheâd never taken the necklace off since getting it. If Jesiba ever kicked her to the curb, she knew sheâd have to find some way to make sure the necklace came with her. Danika had said as much several times, unable to stop that Alpha wolfâs instinct to protect at all costs. It was part of why Bryce loved herâand why her chest tightened in that moment with that same love and gratitude.
Bryceâs phone buzzed in her purse, and she fished it out. Danika peered over, noted who was calling, and wagged her tail, ears perking up.
âDo not say a word about Briggs,â Bryce warned, and accepted the call. âHi, Mom.â
âHey, sweetie.â Ember Quinlanâs clear voice filled her ear, drawing a smile from Bryce even with three hundred miles between them. âI wanted to double-check that next weekend is still okay to visit.â
âHi, Mommy!â Danika barked toward the phone.
Ember laughed. Ember had always been Mom to Danika, even from their first meeting. And Ember, who had never borne any children beyond Bryce, had been more than glad to find herself with a secondâequally willful and troublesomeâdaughter. âDanikaâs with you?â
Bryce rolled her eyes and held out the phone to her friend. Between one step and the next, Danika shifted in a flash of light, the massive wolf shrinking into the lithe humanoid form.
Snatching the phone from Bryce, Danika pinned it between her ear and shoulder as she adjusted the white silk blouse Bryce had loaned her, tucking it into her stained jeans. Sheâd managed to wipe a good amount of the nightstalker gunk off both the pants and leather jacket, but the T-shirt had apparently been a lost cause. Danika said into the phone, âBryce and I are taking a walk.â
With Bryceâs arched ears, she could hear her mother perfectly as she said, âWhere?â
Ember Quinlan made overprotectiveness a competitive sport.
Moving here, to Lunathion, had been a test of wills. Ember had only relented when sheâd learned who Bryceâs freshman-year roommate wasâand then gave Danika a lecture on how to make sure Bryce stayed safe. Randall, Bryceâs stepfather, had mercifully cut his wife off after thirty minutes.
Bryce knows how to defend herself, Randall had reminded Ember. We saw to that. And Bryce will keep up her training while sheâs here, wonât she?
Bryce certainly had. Sheâd hit up the gun range just a few days ago, going through the motions Randallâher true father, as far as she was concernedâhad taught her since childhood: assembling a gun, taking aim at a target, controlling her breathing.
Most days, she found guns to be brutal killing machines, and felt grateful that they were highly regulated by the Republic. But given that she had little more to defend herself beyond speed and a few well-placed maneuvers, sheâd learned that for a human, a gun could mean the difference between life and slaughter.
Danika fibbed, âWeâre just heading to one of the hawker stalls in the Old Squareâwe wanted some lamb kofta.â
Before Ember could continue the interrogation, Danika added, âHey, B must have forgotten to tell you that weâre actually heading down to Kalaxos next weekendâIthanâs got a sunball game there, and weâre all going to cheer him on.â
A half-truth. The game was happening, but there had been no discussion of going to watch Connorâs younger brother, CCUâs star player. This afternoon, the Pack of Devils was actually heading over to the CCU arena to cheer for Ithan, but Bryce and Danika hadnât bothered to attend an away game since sophomore year, when Danika had been sleeping with one of the defensemen.
âThatâs too bad,â Ember said. Bryce could practically hear the frown in her motherâs tone. âWe were really looking forward to it.â
Burning Solas, this woman was a master of the guilt trip. Bryce cringed and snatched back the phone. âSo were we, but letâs reschedule for next month.â
âBut thatâs so long from nowââ
âShit, a clientâs coming down the street,â Bryce lied. âI gotta go.â
âBryce Adelaide Quinlanââ
âBye, Mom.â
âBye, Mom!â Danika echoed, just as Bryce hung up.
Bryce sighed toward the sky, ignoring the angels soaring and flapping past, their shadows dancing over the sun-washed streets. âMessage incoming in three, two â¦â
Her phone buzzed.
Ember had written, If I didnât know better, Iâd think you were avoiding us, Bryce. Your father will be very hurt.
Danika let out a whistle. âOh, sheâs good.â
Bryce groaned. âIâm not letting them come to the city if Briggs is running free.â
Danikaâs smile faded. âI know. Weâll keep pushing them off until itâs sorted out.â Thank Cthona for Danikaâshe always had a plan for everything.
Bryce slid her phone into her purse, leaving her motherâs message unanswered.
When they reached the Gate at the heart of the Old Square, its quartz archway as clear as a frozen pond, the sun was just hitting its upper edge, refracting and casting small rainbows against one of the buildings flanking it. On Summer Solstice, when the sun lined up perfectly with the Gate, it filled the entire square with rainbows, so many that it was like walking inside a diamond.
Tourists milled about, a line of them snaking across the square itself, all waiting for the chance at a photo with the twenty-foot-high landmark.
One of seven in this city, all carved from enormous blocks of quartz hewn from the Laconian Mountains to the north, the Old Square Gate was often called the Heart Gate, thanks to its location in the dead center of Lunathion, with the other six Gates located equidistant from it, each one opening onto a road out of the walled city.
âThey should make a special access lane for residents to cross the square,â Bryce muttered as they edged around tourists and hawkers.
âAnd give tourists fines for slow walking,â Danika muttered back, but flashed a lupine grin at a young human couple that recognized her, gawked, and began snapping photos.
âI wonder what theyâd think if they knew that nightstalkerâs special sauce is all over you,â Bryce murmured.
Danika elbowed her. âAsshole.â She threw a friendly wave to the tourists and continued on.
On the other side of the Heart Gate, amid a small army of vendors selling food and touristy crap, a second line of people waited to access the golden block sticking out of its southern side. âWeâll have to cut through them to get across,â Bryce said, scowling at the tourists idling in the wilting heat.
But Danika halted, her angular face turned to the Gate and the plaque. âLetâs make a wish.â
âIâm not waiting in that line.â Usually, they just shouted their wishes drunkenly into the ether late at night when they were staggering home from the White Raven and the square was empty. Bryce checked the time on her phone. âDonât you have to get over to the Comitium?â The Governorâs five-towered stronghold was at least a fifteen-minute walk away.
âIâve got time,â Danika said, and grabbed Bryceâs hand, tugging her through the crowds and toward the real tourist draw of the Gate.
Jutting out of the quartz about four feet off the ground lay the dial pad: a solid-gold block embedded with seven different gems, each for a different quarter of the city, the insignia of each district etched beneath it.
Emerald and a rose for Five Roses. Opal and a pair of wings for the CBD. Ruby and a heart for the Old Square. Sapphire and an oak tree for Moonwood. Amethyst and a human hand for Asphodel Meadows. Tigerâs-eye and a serpent for the Meat Market. And onyxâso black it gobbled the lightâand a set of skull and crossbones for the Bone Quarter.
Beneath the arc of stones and etched emblems, a small, round disk rose up slightly, its metal worn down by countless hands and paws and fins and any other manner of limb.
A sign beside it read: Touch at your own risk. Do not use between sundown and sunrise. Violators will be fined.
The people in line, waiting for access to the disk, seemed to have no problem with the risks.
A pair of giggling teenage male shiftersâsome kind of feline from their scentsâgoaded each other forward, elbowing and taunting, daring the other to touch the disk.
âPathetic,â Danika said, striding past the line, the ropes, and a bored-looking city guardâa young Fae femaleâto the very front. She fished a badge from inside her leather coat and flashed it at the guard, who stiffened as she realized whoâd cut the line. She didnât even look at the golden emblem of the crescent moon bow with an arrow nocked through it before stepping back.
âOfficial Aux business,â Danika declared with an unnervingly straight face. âItâll just be a minute.â
Bryce stifled her laughter, well aware of the glares fixed on their backs from the line.
Danika drawled to the teenage boys, âIf youâre not going to do it, then clear off.â
They whirled toward her, and went white as death.
Danika smiled, showing nearly all her teeth. It wasnât a pleasant sight.
âHoly shit,â whispered one of them.
Bryce hid her smile as well. It never got oldâthe awe. Mostly because she knew Danika had earned it. Every damned day, Danika earned the awe that bloomed across the faces of strangers when they spotted her corn-silk hair and that neck tattoo. And the fear that made the lowlifes in this city think twice before fucking with her and the Pack of Devils.
Except for Philip Briggs. Bryce sent a prayer to Ogenasâs blue depths that the sea goddess would whisper her wisdom to Briggs to keep his distance from Danika if he ever really did walk free.
The boys stepped aside, and it only took a few milliseconds for them to notice Bryce, too. The awe on their faces turned to blatant interest.
Bryce snorted. Keep dreaming.
One of them stammered, turning his attention from Bryce to Danika, âMyâmy history teacher said the Gates were originally communication devices.â
âI bet you get all the ladies with those stellar factoids,â Danika said without looking back at them, unimpressed and uninterested.
Message received, they slunk back to the line. Bryce smirked and stepped up to her friendâs side, peering down at the dial pad.
The teenager was right, though. The seven Gates of this city, each set along a ley line running through Lunathion, had been designed as a quick way for the guards in the districts to speak to each other centuries ago. When someone merely placed a hand against the golden disk in the center of the pad and spoke, the wielderâs voice would travel to the other Gates, a gem lighting up with the district from which the voice originated.
Of course, it required a drop of magic to do soâliterally sucked it like a vampyr from the veins of the person who touched the pad, a tickling zap of power, gone forever.
Bryce raised her eyes to the bronze plaque above her head. The quartz Gates were memorials, though she didnât know for which conflict or war. But each bore the same plaque: The power shall always belong to those who give their lives to the city.
Considering it was a statement that could be construed as being in opposition to the Asteriâs rule, Bryce was always surprised that they allowed the Gates to continue to stand. But after becoming obsolete with the advent of phones, the Gates had found a second life when kids and tourists began using them, having their friends go to the other Gates in the city so they could whisper dirty words or marvel at the sheer novelty of such an antiquated method of communication. Not surprisingly, come weekends, drunk assholesâa category to which Bryce and Danika firmly belongedâbecame such a pain in the ass with their shouting through the Gates that the city had instituted hours of operation.
And then dumb superstition grew, claiming the Gate could make wishes come true, and that to give over a droplet of your power was to make an offering to the five gods.
It was bullshit, Bryce knewâbut if it made Danika not dread Briggsâs release so much, well, it was worth it.
âWhat are you going to wish for?â Bryce asked when Danika stared down at the disk, the gems dark above it.
The emerald for FiRo lit up, a young female voice coming through to shriek, âTitties!â
People laughed around them, the sound like water trickling over stone, and Bryce chuckled.
But Danikaâs face had gone solemn. âIâve got too many things to wish for,â she said. Before Bryce could ask, Danika shrugged. âBut I think Iâll wish for Ithan to win his sunball game tonight.â
With that, she set her palm onto the disk. Bryce watched as her friend let out a shiver and quietly laughed, stepping back. Her caramel eyes shone. âYour turn.â
âYou know I have barely any magic worth taking, but okay,â Bryce said, not to be outdone, even by an Alpha wolf. From the moment Bryce walked into her dorm room freshman year, theyâd done everything together. Just the two of them, as it always would be.
They even planned to make the Drop togetherâto freeze into immortality at the same breath, with members of the Pack of Devils Anchoring them.
Technically, it wasnât true immortalityâthe Vanir did age and die, either of natural causes or other methods, but the aging process was so slowed after the Drop that, depending on oneâs species, it could take centuries to show a wrinkle. The Fae could last a thousand years, the shifters and witches usually five centuries, the angels somewhere between. Full humans did not make the Drop, as they bore no magic. And compared to humans, with their ordinary life spans and slow healing, the Vanir were essentially immortalâsome species bore children who didnât even enter maturity until they were in their eighties. And most were very, very hard to kill.
But Bryce had rarely thought about where sheâd fall on that spectrumâwhether her half-Fae heritage would grant her a hundred years or a thousand. It didnât matter, so long as Danika was there for all of it. Starting with the Drop. Theyâd take the deadly plunge into their matured power together, encounter whatever lay at the bottom of their souls, and then race back up to life before the lack of oxygen rendered them brain-dead. Or just plain dead.
Yet while Bryce would inherit barely enough power to do cool party tricks, Danika was expected to claim a sea of power that would put her ranking far past Sabineâsâlikely equal to that of Fae royalty, maybe even beyond the Autumn King himself.
It was unheard of, for a shifter to have that sort of power, yet all the standard childhood tests had confirmed it: once Danika Dropped, sheâd become a considerable power among the wolves, the likes of which had not been seen since the elder days across the sea.
Danika wouldnât just become the Prime of the Crescent City wolves. No, she had the potential to be the Alpha of all wolves. On the fucking planet.
Danika never seemed to give two shits about it. Didnât plan for her future based on it.
Twenty-seven was the ideal age to make the Drop, theyâd decided together, after years of mercilessly judging the various immortals who marked their lives by centuries and millennia. Right before any permanent lines or wrinkles or gray hairs. They merely said to anyone who inquired, Whatâs the point of being immortal badasses if we have sagging tits?
Vain assholes, Fury had hissed when theyâd explained it the first time.
Fury, who had made the Drop at age twenty-one, hadnât chosen the age for herself. Itâd just happened, or had been forced upon herâthey didnât know for sure. Furyâs attendance at CCU had only been a front for a mission; most of her time was spent doing truly fucked-up things for disgusting amounts of money over in Pangera. She made it a point never to give details.
Assassin, Danika claimed. Even sweet Juniper, the faun who occupied the fourth side of their little friendship-square, admitted the odds were that Fury was a merc. Whether Fury was occasionally employed by the Asteri and their puppet Imperial Senate was up for debate, too. But none of them really caredânot when Fury always had their back when they needed it. And even when they didnât.
Bryceâs hand hovered over the golden disk. Danikaâs gaze was a cool weight on her.
âCome on, B, donât be a wimp.â
Bryce sighed, and set her hand on the pad. âI wish Danika would get a manicure. Her nails look like shit.â
Lightning zapped through her, a slight vacuuming around her belly button, and then Danika was laughing, shoving her. âYou fucking dick.â
Bryce slung an arm around Danikaâs shoulders. âYou deserved it.â
Danika thanked the security guard, who beamed at the attention, and ignored the tourists still snapping photos. They didnât speak until they reached the northern edge of the squareâwhere Danika would head toward the angel-filled skies and towers of the CBD, to the sprawling Comitium complex in its heart, and Bryce toward Lunaâs Temple, three blocks up.
Danika jerked her chin toward the streets behind Bryce. âIâll see you at home, all right?â
âBe careful.â Bryce blew out a breath, trying to shake her unease.
âI know how to look out for myself, B,â Danika said, but love shone in her eyesâgratitude that crushed Bryceâs chestâmerely for the fact that someone cared whether she lived or died.
Sabine was a piece of shit. Had never whispered or hinted who Danikaâs father might beâso Danika had grown up with absolutely no one except her grandfather, who was too old and withdrawn to spare Danika from her motherâs cruelty.
Bryce inclined her head toward the CBD. âGood luck. Donât piss off too many people.â
âYou know I will,â Danika said with a grin that didnât meet her eyes.