On foot, Kitara led them through Bucharest. Normally, she would have run counter-surveillance to ensure they werenât followed, but there wasnât time. She couldnât shake a tail by slipping into a crowd of humans, eitherânot with two bloody angels following her.
âIf Iâm compromised because of this, I will make the rest of your lives hell,â she muttered, more to herself than to the angels.
She gestured for Storm to wait as she scanned the parking lot. Finally, she led them to the stairs of the run-down building. Kitara glanced around, pulled out the key, and let them in. She flipped the light switch as they entered and shut the door, locking it behind them.
âPut him there,â she said, gesturing to her couch. âAnd neutralize that paralytic before he suffocates to death. Youâre lucky you both werenât stabbed with it.â
Storm didnât answer as he settled Declan on the couch and concentrated on his friendâs injuries. Kitara left him to it, heading for the kitchen and the small, lone window there. She pulled the blinds aside to observe the dimly lit parking lot and the streets beyond. She remained there for a while, watching and listening, ignoring Declanâs labored breathing as Storm didâ¦whatever he was doing.
Could he heal the damage?
All Valëtyrians possessed some level of ability to heal others and healed quickly themselves. But the Myragnar didnât. It balanced the power in the Valëtyrian-Myragnar relationship, since the Myragnar relied solely on Valëtyrians for healing despite their range of purported metaphysical abilities.
Still, most Valëtyrians were classified as selective Healersâlimited to a specific field or type of ailment. Only a handful could heal anything and everything, capable even of pulling some immortals back from the brink of death.
Those Valëtyriansâthe comprehensive Healersâworked in Valëtyriaâs long-term healing wards. They couldnât be spared anywhere else. Even headquarters only employed one for emergencies, and other facilities did without. Valëtyria registered any immortal born with comprehensive abilities on their Healer rolls regardless of whether that individual wanted to be a Healer or not. Every comprehensive Healer was vital, necessary for the survival of both Valëtyrians and Myragnar.
Kitara glanced back into her living room. Declanâs breathing came easier now, and the light flickering between Stormâs fingers indicated he was, indeed, a Healer.
Finally, after an interminable silence, Storm sat back on his heels. âYouâll be okay.â
Kitara frowned. His file didnât mention he could heal at all, not even selectively. Either he coincidentally specialized in healing poisons and paralysis, or he was a comprehensive Healer.
And Kitara didnât believe in coincidences.
But an unregistered comprehensive Healer? Silverblood or notâ¦why?
âI still canât feel my legs,â Declan muttered.
âYeah, paralytics and poisons are tough,â Storm replied. âYouâre still experiencing the effects, but theyâll wear off soon.â
Kitara turned away from the window. âGood. Now I can eviscerate you two without guilt.â
Storm narrowed his eyes at her. She noticed with some relief that he wore blue colored contacts, though who knew how or where he acquired them.
âWhat the hell were you doing in the dark strip?â Kitara snapped. âYou could have killed us all.â
âYou donât answer your phone,â he said, his lip curling.
âI donâtâare you serious?â she asked, aghast. âYou risked me, your friend, and yourself trying to prove a point? You are an idiot. And youâd better believe Iâll report this kind of infraction straight to the Commanderââ
âTo which Iâll promptly respond that you went radio-silent, and I came to check up on the AIDOâs asset,â Storm retorted, dropping any pretense of keeping Kitaraâs cover intact.
âYouâre a Sleeper,â Declan breathed. âStars, now it all makes senseââ
âShut up, Captain,â Kitara snapped. âYouâll be court-martialed when they find out you escorted Storm Avensäel out of headquarters.â
To his credit, Declan didnât cow to the threat. âI suspect theyâll do the same to you for following us. Protocol dictates that, regardless of the circumstances, you donât risk your cover, even for AIDO allies.â
âProtocol?â Kitara spluttered. âProtocol puts Stormâs life far ahead of mine. His father would have my headââ
âSo weâre in agreement then,â Declan interrupted her. âNobodyâs reporting anybody. We all made it out alive, right?â
âDonât they teach you anything?â Kitara demanded. âNetherlings wonât necessarily drop you in a bar, but outside? They were definitely trying to capture you. You could have ended up chained in a dungeon somewhere, being drained dry! â
âKinky,â Declan drawled.
âThis is not a joke,â she chastised him with a frosty look. âWhat if I hadnât been there to help? You literally walked into a den of snakes and volunteered to get bit.â
âStars, you sound like my dad,â Storm muttered.
Kitara stepped back, stung by the comparison, and attempted to quell her emotions before dark, destructive power surged under her skin again. âI have nothing in common with your father.â
âOther than keeping me out of the loop? Underestimating me? Being infuriating beyond comprehension? Yeah, youâre nothing alike,â Storm drawled.
âUnderestimating you? Who was it, exactly, that saved your ass back there?â
âEnough,â he snapped, and her eyes narrowed at his tone. âIâm a Major for a reason. I didnât have to go the Academy, you knowâI could have been unprofessioned and still been more significant than anyone in the AIDO.â
âRight, resident celebrity and all,â she sneered. âYour life must be so hard.â
He frowned. âYou donât know anything about my life.â
âI know your ego almost got your friend killed.â
âI told you, I had it handledââ
âYouâre lucky youâre not dead!â
âAnd we have you to thank for that,â Declan interjected before Storm could launch another barb. âI donât know where you came from, but Iâm really glad you showed up. Soâ¦thanks.â
Kitara ignored him. âWhat was so important it warranted risking this entire op?â
Stormâs nostrils flared. âI told you; Iâm done being kept in the dark.â
âAnd you realized you couldnât involve your dad like you threatened, so this was your backup plan?â
âWhat else was I supposed to do, Kitara?â He clenched his fists. âYou wonât answer your phone, you donât include me in your plans, you concocted someâ¦infiltration scheme so harebrained Iâm surprised it hasnât gotten you killed alreadyââ
âThat redheaded vampiress you met? Sheâs a contact intrigued by the idea of my ex getting butchered. And because I met her, Iâm one step closer to our target. Stars, you were a terrible choice for this position. I canât believe the High Council went along with this.â
Stormâs eyes widened, his frustration turning to anger. âFuck you, Kitara. You donât know a damn thing about me.â
âI know youâre in way over your head. Now stop trying to prove something and respect the fact Iâve been doing this a lot longer than you have.â
Declan stepped between them. âOkay, okay. Why donât you justâ¦calm down for a minuteââ
Kitara rounded on him. âDo not tell me to calm down,â she snapped. âThat has never worked out well for any man, anytime, anywhere.â
The Guardian held up his hands in surrender. âI didnât mean to imply you were overreacting. I just meant we should take a step back and consider the situation. I agree this was an unnecessarily dangerous situationââ
âThatâs an understatement,â Kitara muttered.
âIâm not in the Sleeper program,â Declan said, ignoring her. âBut I know a thing or two about being part of a unit. And if Iâm reading this situation correctly, Storm is your handler?â
Kitara didnât confirm or deny, but he pressed on anyway.
âYeah, he shouldnât barge into the middle of active ops. But his job is to make sure youâre safe, and he canât do that if you keep him in the dark.â
He glanced at Storm, his expression hardening. âAnd in my experience, a good handler trusts their operative enough to make judgment calls when necessary. They have to strike a delicate balance between independent action and control, because theyâre the ones there in the moment.â
âWhose side are you on, man?â Storm grumbled.
âThe AIDOâs,â Declan said without hesitation. âAnd if Iâd known this was your plan, Iâd never have offered to help you with it. AndâKitara, was it?âKitara, youâre clearly the experienced agent here. They wouldnât have assigned you to HQ otherwise. But he wonât learn to trust your instincts if you donât give him some explanation for your decision-making.â
He looked between them, expectant, then waved his hands between them. âDiscuss.â
With a long, exasperated exhale, Kitara turned to Storm. âThe ex-boyfriend angle explains my sudden appearance and my knowledge of his death,â she muttered. âOstragonians understand revenge almost as much as they understand a need for power.â
Storm crossed his arms but nodded for her to continue.
âThey also know Sleepers exist. Theyâre wary of newcomers, especially ones without an obvious agenda. But I came in spouting rage and revenge and what they think they know about AIDO agents contradicts that type of entry. Itâsâ¦a chess game,â she explained with a shrug. âThey expect Sleepers to infiltrate quietly and slowly. By taking such a brazen and, some might say âcrazyâ approach, the last thing theyâll suspect is an AIDO operative.â She scowled. âBut that only works if I donât have angels showing up in dark bars right after I get settled in. Happy now?â
Storm considered this for a long moment, the muscle in his jaw jumping as he ground his teeth. âI suppose that makes sense,â he finally conceded.
She gave him a jerky nod. âYou have your explanation. Is there anything else you want to know?â
âJustâ¦put it in your report,â he mumbled, looking away. âWe need to get back to the AIDO before anyone realizes weâre gone.â
Kitara gave Declan a once-over. âYou up for the trip back?â
âIâm stiff, but I can fly. Weâll be okay.â
âFine. Go. And Iâd better not see you out here again.â That last bit she aimed at Storm.
The silverblood ignored her. He helped Declan to his feet, and they shuffled to Kitaraâs front door.
Before they departed, Declan turned back. âThanks. I mean it. Youâre right, they could have killed us.â
âLearn from it,â Kitara said in staccato. âDonât come to the dark strip again.â
âCâmon, Dec,â Storm muttered. âLetâs go.â
Without another word, Storm pulled his friend through the front door, and they were gone.
After the angelsâ unexpected appearanceâflirtable or notâScarlet avoided the dark strip for a few nights, which meant Jamal did too. Kitara appreciated the respite. Putting on a facade for vampiresâbubbly or surlyâexhausted her. The Makerâs group of friends occupied their normal VIP section of The Sanguine Queen. Kitara took up residence in a dark corner booth of the establishment to observe them.
A spear of awareness swept through her as an aura registered in her mind. Kitara barely had time to palm her anti-toxin into her drink before someone joined herâthe white-haired immortal.
âItâs you,â she said.
âItâs me,â he replied, deadpan. âHello, Sabine.â
He must have asked Blake for her name, and Kitara cursed herself for not possessing the same forethought. âPeople-watching again?â she asked.
He shook his head. âNot exactly. You looked lonely; I thought I would keep you company.â
Kitara snorted. âI have no problem being alone, thanks.â
âMm.â The immortal made no movement to leave.
âYou know my name, but I donât know yours,â Kitara pointed out.
âBaylen,â he replied as he watched the patrons of the bar despite his assertion to the contrary. âAt your service.â
âCareful tossing out that line,â she said with a laugh. âSomeone might think youâre serious.â
Baylen smiled but didnât retract the statement.
âIs there something you want?â
âI have some information you might find useful,â he said.
Kitara leaned back and crossed her arms. âGenerous of you. What do you get out of it?â
âMaybe a favor in the future. Maybe nothing. You interested?â
The Sleeper considered for a moment, weighing her options. âAs long as Iâm not some kind of blood sacrifice for your favor.â
He almost laughed. âNo blood sacrifices in your future.â
âOkay, then. What do you know?â
He leaned in. âRumor has it, the General has become very interested in the Doruri recentlyâthe Fallen.â
That explained his apparent altruism.
Kitaraâs forehead creased. âThe General?â
The Netherling raised an eyebrow, surprised at her ignorance. âThe one whoâs organizing everyone?â
âI thought the Maker was doing thatâ¦â Kitara admitted, her mind spinning.
âI donât think so. The Maker prefers to work behind the scenes, pulling strings and orchestrating events from the shadows.â
âYou donât think he wants to seize power in Ostragarn?â
âItâs unlikely. Itâs not really his style.â
âThen what does he get out of any of it?â Kitara muttered, more to herself than the Netherling.
Baylen shrugged. âCould be heâs just bored.â
She snorted. âToo busy fielding requests from the general populace?â
âPerhaps. That does seem to interest him more.â
âSoâ¦why would this General suddenly be interested in the Doruri? That doesnât make any sense.â
Baylen tapped his fingers against the tabletop. âOne of my sources indicated he might be attempting toâ¦restore them.â
Kitara blinked in surprise and sat back a little. âThatâs not possible.â
âMaybe not. But other bits Iâve gathered donât make any sense either. Heâs raided human facilities for rare materials, contracted with an arms dealer not for weapons, but for manufacturing equipment, which indicates mass production of something.â
That matched the recent rumors Kitara had gleaned too, but the explanation for the seemingly unconnected events unnerved her more than she could have imagined.
âSo why is this of sudden interest to you? And why should it interest me?â
âYou havenât been here long. Keeping abreast of the current climate in Ostragarn ensures survival. The vampires have their own hierarchy. But the rest of usâ¦weâre at the mercy of the whims of Ostragarnâs most powerful players. Some of them are clever. Othersâ¦not so much. Until we know which one the General is, clever or not, those of us outside his immediate circle of influence are at risk.â
âAnd of course you canât go investigate yourself,â Kitara drawled.
âA random Ostragonian asking questions raises suspicion. But a Dor asking questions about Doruri-related rumors wouldnât.â Baylen leaned forward and met her gaze intently. âBeing Doruri yourself and new to the area, you may be better equipped to find out what Itzalâs up to under the guise of trying to suss out your place in the hierarchy here.â
âThatâs his name? Itzal?â
He nodded. âIn fact, Iâm surprised no one else has approached you yet.â
âI havenât been here very long,â she hazarded.
âStill. You made quite a statement with your entrance.â
âNot to those I needed, apparently,â she muttered.
Baylen raised an eyebrow. âNo?â
âIâve been waiting to talk to the Makerâs friends, but they donât seem interested.â
âThose blowhards?â He snorted, his gaze flickering toward the VIP area. âThey donât help anyone meet the Maker.â
Her brow wrinkled. âWhat do you mean?â
âTheyâre low-rung messengers, mostly,â Baylen replied with a note of mirth. âI donât think a single one has even met the Maker, much less become a âfriend.â The Maker would not entrust even his shoe size to such loudmouths.â
âBut how do youââ She broke off and stared at him. âStars, you actually know him.â
He traced the rim of his glass for a prolonged, silent moment. âI do.â
âWhy didnât you say so?â
He snorted. âIf I mentioned it to everyone Iâve spoken to for less than fifteen minutes, his secret identity wouldnât be secret for long. It takes time to vet people, and no one else can know we had this conversation. I thought you might partner with the vampiresâ coven, but Iâve since reevaluated.â
Kitara shook her head, unsurprised. âIâm better off alone, and I wonât mention this discussion. Does Blake know?â
âMaybe, though the Maker prefers to keep various parts of his network ignorant of the others,â he explained. âStill, if the deception came to light, I imagine itâs the last anyone would see of them, given how Ostragonians feel about lying for power.â
âBut you know theyâre lying.â
âAnd for now, their deceit benefits me by allowing me to work under the radar. All eyes are focused on them, so no one gives much thought to a regular patron paying for mid-shelf drinks while the egotists are flashing bottles of Dom and gold-rated blood.â
âI knew they seemed too conspicuous to make sense,â Kitara muttered.
âAnd it was that overheard observation that resulted in this conversation.â Baylen gestured between the two of them. âYouâre clever enough to read between the lines. You did get the right peopleâs attention. Mine.â
She side-eyed him. âSo trying to find out what the GeneralâItzalâwants with the Doruriâ¦itâs some kind of test?â
âIn a way. The Maker wonât do business with those who jump to conclusions or prove themselves untrustworthy. So for now, you work with me and thenâ¦weâll see.â
âDoes he know about me? Know I want to see him?â
âI keep information like that to myself. If it all goes sideways, itâs better for all involved.â
âReassuring,â she muttered. âSo if I find the information you want, youâll introduce me?â
He chuckled. âDonât get ahead of yourself.â
Her own past had taught her that a web of deception often concealed uncomfortable truths, and a collection of smaller truths could cleverly disguise a great lie. After all, her true identity hid behind a carefully-crafted mask of deception.
Kitara met Baylenâs gaze. âRestoring the Fallenâ¦it is impossible, you know. Youâre probably just sending me on a wild goose chase.â
His lips quirked in a half-smile. âThe Maker would say the impossible is his specialty.â
Baylen hadnât said explicitly how he knew the Maker; for all she knew, he was a rival setting up his own network. And if he wasnâtâif he was a friend of or worked for the mysterious Netherlingâbeing in his good graces would get her closer to unmasking the immortal behind the scenes. She couldnât pass up the opportunity to use Baylen to further her own agenda. After all, this was her assignment. Get close to the Maker. Find out who he is.
She drained the rest of her drink. âIâll consider it.â
âOf course,â he replied smoothly. âI understand your caution. All I ask is that you keep our conversation between us.â
âUnderstood.â
Baylenâs lips lifted in a wry smile, and he straightened. âVery good. Iâll be in touch.â
Kitara opened her mouth to reply, but the immortal vanished with a subtle pop! as the air rushed to fill the space he no longer occupied. Stunned into silence, she stared at the empty spot. No immortal she knew of could disappear that way. How had he done it?