I shouldâve expected it sooner, honestly. When I ride home from Garrettâs and find Lance Green at my house, I realize Iâve been waiting for this moment since the first time I kissed his daughter.
Heâs sitting on our shabby couch, an untouched glass of water on the coffee table in front of him. My mom surges up from the armchair, a wild, frightened look in her eyes.
Who could blame her? Mr. Green is CFO of Wolf Ridge Brewery and sits at the very head of the pack after Emmett Green, Garrettâs dad. My mom is the lowest of the packâan omega. Which means keeping Lance happy is at the very top of her list, and Iâve fucked it up for her.
âTrey, honey,â my mom chirps, twisting her hard-worked fingers together. âMr. Green stopped by to see you.â
I went still the moment I stepped in, but I force myself to incline my head in his direction now.
He walks toward me. âIâll have a word with you.â He keeps going, right out the front door.
I follow him out, attempting a reassuring smile for my momâs benefit.
He walks down the steps and stands beside my motorcycle, arms crossed. Heâs glaring at it, like itâs the monster dating his daughter instead of me. Or like itâs the bike that killed his son.
âShe got into Stanford.â
âYes, sir, I know.â
His head snaps up, fury blazing in his eyes. âShe doesnât want to go.â He speaks through clenched teeth. âBecause of you, no doubt.â
I work to swallow. âI made sure she sent in her acceptance.â I donât know why I said itâheâs not going to find me to be the hero here by any stretch of the imagination.
He sneers like he doesnât believe me. âEnd it. You end things with her right now so she can go to college and focus on whatâs importantâher education. Iâm not going to let you screw up her whole goddamn life.â
Despite the fact that he ranks way above me, my fingers curl into fists. Not at the insults to me, but because my wolf canât stand the threat to his claim. To the mating that hasnât yet been completed.
I somehow keep my upper lip from curling and showing my teeth. âI canât do that, Mr. Green.â
In a flash, he tackles me to the ground, his hand around my throat. I hear my mom gasp from the doorway, and itâs that sound that reminds me not to fight back. To surrender to his dominance.
âIf you donât want me to throw you and your mom out of this pack, boy, youâll do what I tell you.
You have one week.â
I glare, but lift my chin to show my throat, which he still has in a choke hold. Itâs a sign of submission. One I have to offer.
He squeezes harder, cutting off my air. I refuse to struggle or show signs of stressâI just glare into his yellow eyes.
Fucker.
âI wonât let you ruin her,â he repeats, then abruptly releases me and gets up. He climbs in his car and drives away without another backward glance.
I walk inside and hold my mom, whoâs trembling and crying. âItâs all right, Mom.â I speak against her hair. âYou donât need to worry about it. I already broke up with her.â
The pack clubhouseâaka Garrettâs nightclub Eclipseâis wall-to-wall stuffed with leather-clad wolves. I sneak in the back, ignoring ugly looks and burrowing deep into Treyâs jacket. Iâd hoped the Tucson wolves had mostly forgiven me for what Iâd done to them twelve years ago. Guess I was wrong.
âWhy is she here?â one grumbles to his friends. Another shakes his head, looking straight at me, not bothering to hide his disgust. âSad to see a wolf act like a rat.â
Wolf Ridge basically shot itself in the foot kicking out Garrett, Trey and Jared, because nearly every young virile wolf in our generation and after followed them to Tucson. Thatâs part of the reason Iâm so high up in the packâa female. Fifteen years ago it wouldâve been unheard of. It should be Garrett poised to take the helm of Wolf Ridge Brewing, and of the pack.
I raise my chin and push to the front so I can see. My cousin Garrett stands on the stage, fingers hooked into his belt loops. Tank, the pack second, stands a little behind him to the right, massive arms folded across his chest. Neither look happy.
âQuiet down,â Garrett says, and everyone settles. He doesnât shout, but he doesnât have to. His voice is infused with command. âWeâre here to talk about the events at the shifter fight club and the proposed treaty between us and the leeches.â
âBurn âem down,â someone shouts, and a few more voices rumble approval.
âShut up,â Tank growls, and silence falls again.
Garrett continues, âThe fact is, we had an agreement, and a few days later, they broke it.â
âNot formally,â Jared comments. Heâs right next to the platform, a boot propped on it. âWe donât know which leech was behind the dead body.â
âNo, we donât,â Garrett admits. âBut we know it was a vampire. Whether or not Frangelico sanctioned the kill, it happened after the treaty, and on the premises of a shifter owned business. While we donât claim that part of town formally as our territory, Trey and Jared are our brothers. We have their back.â
âThanks, boss,â Jared mutters.
Garrett nods. âLike it or not, we gotta do something.â He glances at Tank, who steps forward and jerks his chin at the audience. âFloorâs open,â he announces. âSay your piece. Keep it civil or Iâll throw you out.â
Immediately, a rough looking wolf speaks up, âI say war. We take them out.â A few rumbles of approval and Jared shakes his head.
âWar means deaths and collateral damage. Last thing we want are vampires going after innocents.â
âThey already are,â a dissenter points out, and everyone agrees.
Jared raises his voice, stepping onto the platform. âA few years ago I might be into fighting until death and glory. But now I have a mate. If thereâs a way to make this treaty work, I say we do it.â
âBut the vampires broke the treaty,â the rough looking wolf says.
âNot Frangelico,â I call out, pushing forward. âI met with him and I donât think heâs behind it.â
âRemind me how youâre part of this, traitor?â someone mutters.
I whirl, teeth bared, but Garrett barks, âSheridan, up here. Now.â
Tucking my head a little, I obey. My cousin looks pissed.
âYou met with Frangelico, right? What was his reaction?â
âHeâs not happy about this body, either.â He seemed more unhappy about his orders being disobeyed than the actual death, but I leave that part out. âI think one of his lieutenants, might be acting without his permission. Just a gut feeling,â I hasten to explain. âNero has, um, a thing for me. Heâs been willing to stir up trouble.â A glance around the room tells me the wolves donât believe me, and why should they? Iâm an outsider who betrayed them once before. âTrey,â I blurt before I can stop myself. Garrett raises a brow and I wish I could rewind and erase. Trey doesnât deserve to get dragged into this.
âWhat about Trey?â Garrett prods.
Darn. âTrey was with me. He can tell you more.â
Garrett raises his voice. âWhereâs Trey?â
âHere,â a rough voice makes my heart leap. Treyâs tall form shoulders through the crowd. When he steps on the platform, the light hits his bruised face and a few shifters gasp.
âWhat happened?â Garrett growls.
âHad a little disagreement with a leech, so I fought him.â Treyâs expression is unrepentant.
âGot to be some real damage if itâs still showing,â Tank points out, and Trey shrugs.
âLet me get this straight,â Garrett frowns. âYou fought a vampire?â
âNot a vampire. One of his seconds. Frangelico doesnât let his leeches fight. But what Sheridan says sounds about right.â My heart quickens at Trey backing me up, only to realize he hasnât once looked at me. âI think one or a few of Frangelicoâs lieutenants are rogue.â
âIf thatâs the case, Frangelico should want to know who broke the treaty as much as we do,â Tank says.
âWolves and the leech king on the same side?â Garrett sounds doubtful, but shrugs.
More wolves start shouting out their opinions, and jostling each other. Someone pushes against me, and I push back, fighting to stay on my feet.
âEnough,â Tank roars. Garrett holds up his hand for silence and gets it immediately.
âAll right, discussion over. This isnât a democracy. Weâre a pack. Iâm the leader, and if I see fit to deal with vampires, thatâs what weâll do. We stand our ground without a full out war. Keep looking for the killers, and hope Frangelico will do the same.â
Even though they were about to riot a moment ago, the wolves around me nod agreement. I let myself relax.
Thatâs when my dad and Alpha Green walk in.
My heart plummets.
They chose a back exit, so they come up behind the platform. Tank turns first, stepping off the platform to make way for Garrettâs dad, the Wolf Ridge alpha. My alpha. Father and son face off, faces blank. They look so alike, only a few touches of gray signaling the elder.
Garrett speaks first. âDad.â
âSon,â Alpha Greenâs voice is just a touch deeper than his eldestâs. His stance is more wary, but he is the odd one out here. Most of the wolves present belong to Garrett. The split between the packs was mostly peaceful, but that could change.
Fates, I hope not. A war between packs would be worse than one with vampires.
âWeâre here because youâre having a little trouble with the humans.â
âItâs a vampire problem, actually.â Garrett steps closer to his dad and plants his feet. âBut weâre getting it under control.â
Alpha Green raises a brow, just like his son does when heâs skeptical. âI just spent the past twenty four hours meeting with contacts at the FBI and state police, calling in favors. Theyâre labeling the body a drug overdoseâelements of a toxic substance were found in the victimâs blood stream. They also agreed to keep any curious details from the human media. For now.â
The room seems to heave a relieved sigh. Garrett nods. âI appreciate your help. The whole shifter community does.â
âI did what I had to do to protect our species,â Alpha Green answers. âThe question is, are you?â
Garrett bristles, but appears to gather patience. âWeâre dealing with the vampires. We have reason to believe this death was caused by a rogue leech. If we catch him, we can turn him over to Frangelico, end the deaths and keep the peace.â
Alpha Green nods slowly.
âWhat about the fight club?â My dad clicks his teeth as if tasting the scent of prey. âIt has been causing trouble for us since it opened. It is obviously a point of weakness for us wolves. First the authorities investigate the fights and the drug dealing, and now this body. Seems to me, we wonât have much time to back you against the vampires if weâre too busy hiding evidence from the humans. Cleaning up your mess.â
âWell, son?â Alpha Green says to Garrett. âWhat do you intend to do about the fight club?â
âI can answer that,â Trey calls out. All eyes turn to him, and he steps up on the platform, facing my dad, who visibly grimaces at the cuts and bruises all over Treyâs face. âIt was mostly my idea.â
âMine too,â Jared puts in quickly, but Trey shakes his head.
âIt was my idea to give the vampires free reign in the club. And I hired Grizz, too. He fought for us, and I thought he was solid. Now I realize weâre caught up in something big here. Possibly a vampire coup. I donât want anything Iâve built to jeopardize my pack. Iâm willing to pull the plug on it, if thatâs what my alpha thinks is best.â He makes it obvious, heâs looking at Garrett, not Alpha Green.
As Trey speaks, a smug look spreads over my fatherâs face. My own hands clench into fists.
âShut it down?â Garrett asks. âIs that what you want?â
Trey shrugs. Jared shakes his head, but mumbles something like, âWhatever you think is best.â
Now my father is outright gloating. âIt sounds like the best thing for the pack is shutting the fight club down. For good.â A murmur goes around the room, rumblings of discontent. The fight club is popular. Itâs brought a lot of new wolves to town, new pack members. If Trey would just speak up, heâd find how many backers he has in the room. Instead, he folds his arms and stares out the window.
I want to run to Trey, and force him to look at me instead of my father.
I want to scream.
âSounds like you have a clear course of action,â Alpha Green says to his son. Garrettâs eyes narrow, but he doesnât say anything. From what I know of my cousin, heâs still thinking, and when he makes his decision, it could spell the end of Treyâs dream. And for what? Because my dad used his political clout against my ex-boyfriend, and twisted everything to make it sound like Treyâs fault.
Itâs not fair. But am I brave enough to stand against my pack, and, more importantly, my dad?
Not now, Lao Tzu.
I move closer to the platform. My dad catches my eye and I stop.
Great. Iâm so scared my life is flashing before my eyes, and it consists entirely of cheesy wisdom quotes.
Trey steps down, and starts to walk away. Itâs now or never. I step onto the stage just as heâs about to walk through the exit.
âWait a minute,â I hear myself say.
I canât believe it. Sheridan steps up onto the platform, bold as you please. Itâs getting a little crowded, but she puts her hands on her hips in a proud Wonder Woman pose. âThis isnât right, and you know it.â
Her father bristles but Alpha Green raises his hand. âSay your piece.â
âFrangelico decided to move here and claim territory. Heâs old, heâs powerful, no one can stop him without lots of bloodshed. So far, weâve had a peaceful treaty. Fight Club had nothing to do with the death, in fact, they were a target. We shouldnât be shutting it down. We should be defending it. Because we need a place like it. A place thatâs neutral where both vampire and shifter can interact. Someone saw the possibility of that, and decided to target it. And if you shut it down, youâre playing right into their hands.â
The room is silent. Alpha Green looks thoughtful, Sheridanâs dad is incensed. But no one will speak until an alpha does.
Garrett steps up and claps a hand on Sheridanâs shoulder. âSheâs right. When Fight Club was first set up, I was skeptical. But since it opened, weâve had less pack violence, both between our members and with other animals. Any shifter with a grievance can go let out steam. And because itâs not claimed by the pack, weâre not responsible to arbitrate or reimburse any deaths.â
Sheridan looks back at her cousin and he jerks his chin up in approval before dropping his hand.
âBut itâs not safe,â Sheridanâs dad says. âAny human could walk in there. The authorities are watching closely.â
âSo we move it. Or we fly under the radar for a few months. Human fights only. The concept remains. Itâs a good one.â Garrett folds his arms over his chest, facing his father. âI donât like the vampires there any more than you do. But Frangelico isnât going anywhere. And he didnât come in and start a war right away. He seems to be willing to deal.â
âSheridan, Iâm surprised at you,â Sheridanâs dad says. Sheridan flinches but doesnât cower. âI expected you to think more responsibly about things.â
âHey,â Garrett intervenes. âYou sent her to scope the situation. Either you trust her or you donât.â
Garrettâs dadâs eyebrows go up, and the two stare at each other for a moment. Alpha Green breaks away first, not lowering his gaze. He looks almost proud. âItâs up to you, son. Itâs your territory. Phoenix will back you.â
âFight Club stays open,â Garrett commands. A shout of victory goes up. Someone claps me on the back.
âWeâre not done yet,â Tank growls. âWe need to solve the crime. Get it sorted with the vampires. Time is running out.â
He and Garrett start giving out orders. Sheridan steps down, becomes one with the crowd. Probably hiding from her dad. I donât blame her. It took guts for her to stand up to her father.
Sheâll be leaving, and itâs for the best. She deserves a good life, one I canât give her.
On that thought, I hit the exit. Time to get on my bike and ride, clear my head. If by the time I get back, Sheridanâs gone, Iâll know where I stand. At least Iâll have the fight club to focus on. And Mr. Greenâs face, the moment his precious little girl grew up and called him on his shit.
âRobson,â someone snarls behind me and I whirl.
Lance Green prowls up, his eyes shifter bright. âStay away from my daughter.â
I stare down at him. Why was I ever intimidated by this guy? I can just pack up my mom and have her move. Sheâll probably be better off in Tucson anyway, away from those snotty wolves.
Mr. Green growls, âIf you try to keep her here, I will end you and your pathetic little club. Do you hear me?â
âNo.â
A vein practically leaps off his forehead. âWhat?â
âI said . Listen, graybeard. Sheridanâs an adult. She makes her own decisions. She made it pretty clear in there, but if you wonât accept it, thatâs between you and her. I know you want to protect her, but if you think you threatening me is gonna work this time, you got another think coming.â
âYou canât talk to me this way, you mangyââ
âShut it.â I stab my finger into the older wolfâs shoulder. He may have seniority, but Iâm bigger and stronger and taller and completely done. âSheridan makes her own decisions. I know she has a good life in Phoenix, and Iâm not gonna push her to give it all up for me. But Iâm done kowtowing to you. I rolled over once. Iâm not going to do it again.â I spin on my boot and stride to my bike.
âHow dare you talk to meââ
I growl at him and he stops in his tracks a few feet away. âItâs over. You want to fight it out, get on the schedule at the club. I fight most Fridays.â I start my bike and the engineâs roar rips the air between us. âAnd one more thing. I hear you threatened my mother again or go after her job at the brewery, Iâll challenge you for dominance.â He whitens at that. A dominance fight would upset the balance of the Phoenix pack, but I donât care. About time someone knocked him off his pedestal and put his shady dealings on display. âI donât care how many I have to fight to do it. Iâm young and tough and I might just win.â With that, I hit the gas and speed outta there, not bothering to look back.
Garrett is about to wrap up his alpha speech when I see my dad leave, following Trey. That canât mean anything good. I push my way to the exit, hurrying to the parking lot in time to hear Trey shouting my name.
âSheridan makes her own decisions. I know she has a good life in Phoenix, and Iâm not gonna push her to give it all up for me.â He jabs his finger into my dadâs chest again. âBut Iâm done kowtowing to you. I rolled over once. Iâm not going to do it again.â
What does Trey mean? I bite my tongue, hugging the wall.
My father looks insulted, huffing and puffing something as Trey walks away, but Trey is having none of it.
âItâs over. You want to fight it out, get on the schedule at the club. I fight most Fridays.â Treyâs bike cuts on. I jump from the shadows, ready to hustle over and get to the bottom of things, when Treyâs shouted words stop me cold.
âAnd one more thing. I hear you threatened my mother again or go after her job at the breweryâ¦â The rest of what he says is drowned out by the rushing in my ears.
Thatâs why Trey cheated. Thatâs why he broke things off. Thatâs why heâs getting away again.
âStop,â I shout, but too late. Treyâs gone, his bike growling up the road. He doesnât look back. I wouldnât, if I were him. What have we Greens ever given him but heartache? âNo.â I kick a rock against the wall. Itâs not satisfying enough. âFuck,â I spit. Thatâs better.
âSheridan.â My dad turns, both stern and placating, ready with another lecture. I can see it on his face.
I am not in the mood. âWhat the ?â I shriek at him.
He jerks back. âSee here, young ladyââ
âYou threatened his mother?â Bootsteps at my back tell me weâre no longer alone.
âCuz?â Garrettâs voice barely penetrates. I stalk forward, fists balled. Iâm not going to hit my father, but heâs about to get a piece of my mind.
âSheridanââ my dad starts.
âI donât believe you. I got good grades and followed all the rules, and what do you do? You go after my high school boyfriend? Not only that, but his family? What the fuck is wrong with you?â
My dad steps forward and I push him back. âLeave Trey alone. And his mother! You donât abuse your power in the pack to tell me who to date! You donât tell me who to date at all. Or , for that matter.â I yank back my shirt collar to show Treyâs mark.
âSheridan,â someone else says. Alpha Green. I should act submissive and listen to him, but Iâm done acting. Real Sheridan is in the house and she is not hiding. Iâm as alpha as the rest of them, if I want to be.
âIâm done. I hereby withdraw from the Wolf Ridge pack.â As soon as Iâm finished saying the words, I feel something crack inside me, like the pack bonds were hit by a hammer and shattered.
âSheridan,â my dad says, alarmed. âYou canâtââ
âYou canât stop me,â I snarl and stalk towards my Mercedes. Not quite the exit I wanted, driving off in a car my dad gave me, but whatever. I pay insurance and put gas in it; itâs mine.
âWhere will you go?â Alpha Green calls. I know he felt the backwash of the blow to my pack bonds.
âAnywhere but Wolf Ridge. Other than that, I donât know.â Actually, I do know. Iâm going to go pack my things, and call Trey and beg him to take me back. Iâll hang out at the fight club. Sleep on the stoop if I have to. Well, there was just a dead body on the stoop, so maybe not that.
I throw the car into gear and peel out of there, and donât look back. Garrett and his pack probably donât want me, but it doesnât matter.
Only Trey matters. I belong to him. Trey is my pack, and my home.
I roar up the highway, heading out of town. Fuck Tucson anyway.
Something tells me to pull over, so I do. Thereâs no danger around, so I donât know what my wolf is telling me, but I pull out my phone and scroll through old messages. There are a bunch from Sheridan, most of them asking me to call back. I listen to each, trying to decipher the meaning behind her words. She sounds crisp and professional, not desperate or weepy. But thatâs Sheridan. Sheâs not about to lose it over a guy. Maybe what we have was really just her reliving her youth, sowing wild oats.
She came out here to do a job, and the job is done. Thereâs really nothing for her here, except me. But I donât count. I canât give her the life sheâs meant to live.
âFuck,â I mutter. Iâm tempted to toss the phone, but some instinct stills my head. My wolf is hoping sheâll call us or something.
I slump on my bike. Iâd give anything to have her call. I can stop myself from claiming her, if I stay away long enough for her to leave, but if she calls and chooses me, Iâm hers.
Iâve always been hers.
The first thing I do when I get home is throw the damn quote calendar in the trash. Wisdom is nice and all, but itâs time I went with my gut.
My next call is to Garrett. He answers on the first ring. âCuz?â
âIâm requesting asylum with your pack.â
âI figured this was coming.â He sighs. The voices and commotion in the background fades. A door shuts and his voice comes in clearer. âHow long?â
âI donât know. Justâ¦give me a couple of days to get my stuff together. Your pack probably wonât be happy with me staying. Not after I got them all kicked out of Phoenix.â I took a deep breath. âGarrett, Iâm so sorry about that⦠about betraying you and the others. I was just so scared someone was going to get into real trouble, get hurt all over stupid drugs butâ¦â I pause, knowing this wasnât the first time Iâd apologized, but it would be the first time Iâd told the complete truth. âWhen Trey broke up with me, I thought Iâd die, but then when he took up with Kaylee⦠something inside me brokeâ¦
I just go so mad. I know that doesnât excuse what I did, butââ
âMaybe not,â Garrett says slowly. âAnd I wonât lie and say we werenât really hurt⦠we were. But maybe it wasnât just you. Maybe everything happened as it did because of the fates. If you hadnât betrayed us, we wouldnât have been kicked out of the pack. If we werenât banned, we wouldnât have come to Tucson and formed a new pack. Our own pack. Most of our members have good lives here. Better, one might argue, than the scraps they wouldâve had to fight over in Phoenix. But that doesnât mean theyâll forgive you as easily as I did. If you try to join my pack, they wonât make it easy on ya.â
âI know. I deserve it.â
âTell you what, kid. You got asylum as long as you need. As long as youâre on our turf, no one messes with you. But to join our pack you need a sponsor.â
âSponsor?â
âYeah. And thereâs only one who I trust to look out for you.â
Trey. My heart leaps up, only to plummet. âHeâs not talking to me.â
âYou stood up to your father and mine tonight. Not to mention handling meets with the vampires. If Trey wants you in, I could use you.â
âThanks, Cuz.â We end the call and I let the phone drop. Now I just need to find Trey and grovel. And for that I need the right outfitâ¦
Thereâs a strange scratching on the window, a figure moving in the shadows. I rip the curtain aside and glare at the creepy vampire beyond the glass.
âNero.â I knew it. Yep, thereâs his black car is parked at the curb.
âHello, little wolf.â He draws his nails down the window and I grit my teeth at the horrible sound. I close the curtain, and open my desk drawer, drawing out a little surprise I have ready.
When I open the door, Nero is waiting.
He pushes back the silky blond curtain of his hair, licking his lips. His fangs flash as he caresses the air between him and me, as if thereâs a solid wall keeping him from crossing the threshold. âLittle wolf, little wolf, let me come in.â
âNot by the hair of my chinny chin chin,â I say, and have an idea. âBut if you tell me who left the dead body at Fight Club, Iâll come out to you.â
Nero raises a brow. âWhy do you wish to know?â
âIâm impressed,â I lie. âLucius is so old heâs practically all powerful. Whoever dares to disobey him must be very strong.â
âOh I am, lady wolf. I will show you how strong.â
I cock my head to the side. âSo it was you?â
âYes,â he hisses.
âWhy?â
âFrangelico is old, but he has forgotten his purpose. Vampires are made to rule. Me and my brethren, we keep the old ways.â
âBrethren?â Dang, there were more of them flouting Luciusâ rules. They hadnât done much yet, but they were probably only beginning.
âSoon you will know. The world will know.â Nero licks his lips. Did I ever think he was hot? âNow come out, little wolf.â
âOkay. But firstââI twitch aside my bathrobe sleeve, and raise the Glock I bought after I took out a frat boyââsay hello to my little friend,â I quote, and aim for the vampireâs crotch.
The call comes in right as Iâm about to pack up and ride back. Sheridanâs number scrolls across the screen as if Iâve conjured it. In my rush to answer, I almost drop the phone.
âTrey?â Sheridanâs voice wavers, just a little, and Iâm on my feet, muscles tight and ready to fight.
âWhatâs wrong, sweetheart?â If her father yelled at her, so help meâ¦
âI have aâ¦leech problem.â
I kick up my bikeâs kickstand before sheâs gotten half her explanation out. âWhere are you?â
âAt the casita.â
âStay there. Stay put.â
âIâve got it mostly under control, I justââ
âDo as I say,â I order, and roll out.
I break a speed record getting back to Sheridanâs place. My motorcycle races through the old barrio, pulling in behind a black sedan that smells of vampire.
Sheridanâs sitting on the stoop in a bathrobe, her eyes vacant.
I go to one knee. âYou okay?
âYeah.â She forces a smile.
âWhat happened?â
âI had a visitor.â She nods to the dark car parked on the street in front of her house. âI shot him.â Twitching aside a fold of her bathrobe, she uncovers a gun with an extended muzzle.
âWhoa.â I hold out my hand. I want to know what the hell happened, but Sheridanâs acting so weird, probably best to go slow. I pick the pistol up and examine it. It smells funny.
âAnd no one called the cops?â I glance around but all the houses are dark and silent. No one is squinting through the blinds at their neighbor in a bathrobe, which is good, because theyâd also see a big scary biker carrying arms.
âI had a suppressor.â
âI canât believe this.â
She shrugs. âSpeak softly and carry a big gun.â
âAll right. Whereâs the body?â
âSecured. Itâs Nero.â
âYou shot a vampire?â Come to think of it, the gun smells like garlic.
âAnd staked him halfway. It wonât keep him down forever, but itâll buy us some time.â
âFor what?â
She rises and shakes her hair out of her pony tail. âI need to dress, and then I need an escort.â
âEscort?â I blurt. This is all going too fast.
âYeah.â She pauses on the threshold. âHe confessed to killing the fight club victim, so we need to deliver him to Frangelico.â
Before she can disappear into the house, I catch her hand. Thereâs no time, but I have to say something. âWait. Sheridan. Youâre really okay?â
âI was in shock a little. But now Iâm fine. Youâre here.â She pecks me on the lips. Again, she starts to go and I tug her back.
âThere isnât time to discuss this now,â I tell her. âBut when you were in danger you called me.â
âYes.â
âYou chose me.â
Her expression softens. âYes.â
I kiss her, and let her go. âGo change. Fast. Weâll talk later.â
She grins and disappears, my little vampire huntress.