Outmanned, outgunned, and outmaneuvered, Kitara panted against the ash-dusted, blood-spattered concrete. Tears and sweat mixed with blood, leaving weak red rivulets down the sides of her face.
âYou done?â Scarlet asked as the Sleeper stilled. Kitara took a shuddering breath and didnât answer. It didnât matter. The vampire jerked her chin in Jamalâs direction. âGet her inside.â
Jamal complied with a gleeful leer. He skimmed his long pale fingers over Kitaraâs body, but his hands lingered over her breasts, then her hips. With a snarl, she jerked to one side and lashed out with a foot she could still feel, connecting with Jamalâs crotch. Burning pain seared up her legâthe broken bone, no doubt.
âFuck!â The vampire stumbled back a few steps and fell to his knees, his hands tucked between his legs. âFucking bitchâ¦â
Scarlet sighed with exaggerated annoyance. âIdiot,â she muttered. âIf you werenât trying to cop a feelâ¦â She jerked her head at the remaining vampires, who in turn dragged Kitara into the apartment. A trail of blood streaked the floor, pooling beneath her once they dragged her inside. Whatever they wanted her for, they needed her alive.
âNice place.â Scarlet surveyed the space as she sank leisurely onto the couch in front of the prone Sleeper.
Jamal hobbled in after them holding the discarded gun, his expression a mask of hatred.
âI really should thank you,â Scarlet said. âYour little showdown with the angel last night gave me what I needed to get the Makerâs friendsâ attention. He sends his regards, by the way.â
They were working together.
Kitara closed her eyes against the surge of betrayal. Had Baylenâs text been a ploy to get her to leave her flat?
How stupid can I get?
âThey wondered why an angel would keep bothering with a Dor out here,â Scarlet continued, enjoying herself. âWhat was it you said once? Slayers donât mess with Doruri unless theyâve done something really impressive to piss Valëtyria off? Guess you were speaking from experience. But his attention got their attention, and wouldnât you knowâturns out the General himself put a bounty on your head. You must have done something truly spectacular to end up on Valëtyria and Ostragarnâs shit list.â
âSo how much am I worth?â Kitara couldnât resist asking. She needed information, any information that could give her an edge.
Scarlet chuckled, revealing fangs that gleamed in the dim light. âMore than you can imagine, Sabine.â
Her cover was still intact, somehow. Stormâs confrontation hadnât unmasked herâand given Scarletâs blasé reference to him, his true identity remained hidden too.
She shouldnât feel relief, but she did.
Heâs safe.
âYouâre going to do great things for us,â Scarlet murmured. âThe General wasnât sure about it at first. Apparently, the Maker had to spend some time convincing him you were the one he wanted. But those eyesâ¦â A red cat-like smile spread across the vampireâs face. She leaned forward from her seat on the couch for a closer look at Kitara, who briefly considered spitting in her face. âThose eyes,â the vampire repeated. âHe said theyâd be like gems. The Dor with luminescent green eyes.â
ââ¦A Dor with luminescent green eyes and a body that would tempt angelsâ¦â
Baylen called her the same thing.
Kitaraâs lids fluttered closed, hiding the aforementioned eyes from Scarletâs vicious red scrutiny.
âYouâre so quiet all of a sudden,â Scarlet said, her tone mocking. âDonât have anything youâd like to say?â
When Kitara refused to answer, the vampiress let out a dramatic exhale. âGuess Iâd better go call him, then.â She jerkedher chin in Jamalâs direction. âDonât fuck her up too badly. He wants her alive. And never say I donât do anything nice for you.â
With that, Scarlet rose from the couch and exited to the corridor outside Kitaraâs flat, her stilettos clicking mockingly the whole way.
The other vampires followed, leaving her and Jamal alone in the bloodied flat.
The paralyticânot to mention her broken bones, wings, and fleshâhad left Kitara in a compromised state. Even if she wanted to wield the darkness of her fatherâs family, which she didnât, they would kill her long before she could kill them all first.
Jamal loomed over her, a leering snarl on his face, gun still in hand. âNot so tough now that Blakeâs lapdog isnât around, are you?â
His words gave her pause.
Blakeâs lapdogâ¦
Was Baylen working with them or not?
She didnât have more time to consider it. Jamal seized her by her hair, yanking her head up with a jerk. She stifled a hiss at the pain in her scalp.
âWith what I have in mind,â Jamal crooned in her ear, âyouâll be begging Scarlet to let the General have you before Iâm done.â
She would never see Devika againâ¦
Grief washed through her, and Kitara closed her eyes.
«Devâ¦Â»
A beat.
«Kitara?» Devika sounded sleepy.
«IâmâIâm soâsorry.»
The Historianâs consciousness came into sharp focus immediately. «Kitara, whatâs happening? Oh my god, Kitaraâ¦Â»
«I love you.»
«No no no, donât you say that, Kitara!»
The Sleeper wouldnât let her witness whatever the vampire had planned. She cut the connection. From her prone position on the floor, she could see the dust bunnies living under her couch.
Her eyes settled on a lumpy dark shape just on the other side of the couch.
Her go-bag.
Within which sheâd packed a spare set of knives.
Her state of consciousness was iffy at best, and the blood loss alone would make her sloppier than usual. With damaged wings and a broken leg, she wasnât exactly playing with a full deck, but any chance of escaping hinged on getting to the duffel bag.
She needed to get this paralytic out of her system. She needed to be able to move.
She swore never again, but thisâ¦this was an extenuating circumstance.
In the dim light of her flat, Jamal didnât notice when dark power twisted around her deadened fingers, then sank into her skin. The tendrils of inky blackness snaked through her veins, darkening the vessels in her arms for a moment, then disappeared.
Feeling surged back into her hands.
Déjà vu. Thatâs what this was. Storm stared blankly at the text conversation between himself and Kitara, where sheâd left him on read.
Again.
And whose fault is that, asshole?
With a deep sigh, he sent another message.
Kit, Iâm so sorry.
He tossed his phone on his bed, feeling defeated.
Ninthëvel. Ninthëvel. Ninthëvel.
It echoed around and around in his brain.
What had Aramis said?
ââ¦those answers may change the way you perceive the world, your mother, and yourself. There is no going backâ¦â
The Myragnar couldnât have known how right she was.
Someone banged on his door, startling him.
âStorm!â someone yelled. âLet me in!â
Panic saturated Devikaâs voice.
Storm jumped up and wrenched open the door. âDev, whatââ
âItâs Kitara,â she cried.
Stormâs heart plummeted into his stomach.
With disheveled hair, wearing shorts and a t-shirt, Devika had clearly just woken up. âSheâshe mindspoke with me and she soundedâ¦she sounded bad, Storm. I didnât catch all of it and I tried to find Kenric but heâs missing too.â Devika wrung her hands. âI thinkâ¦I think sheâs in trouble.â
All the color drained from Stormâs face. He swore loudly and dashed back into his room.
Devika followed. âWhat are you going to do?â she asked with a tremor in her voice.
âWell I canât just sit here, thatâs for damn sure,â he said as he fished his phone out of his pocket. âDid you get any indication of where she was?â
âI donât know. Her flat, maybeâ¦?â
Storm initiated a phone call.
Voicemail.
With a snarling curse, he dialed again.
Alasdair picked up this time. âNowâs not a good time, Stormââ
ââDair,â Storm cut him off as he pulled on clothes. âI need a portal, now. I donât care how you do it, I donât care what corners you have to cutââ
âStorm, I canât justââ
âKitâs in trouble!â Storm barked, cradling the phone between his ear and shoulder as he laced up his boots. âI donât have time to argue âDair, please!â
âStorm, I donât know what to tell you, something else has happened and theyâre all in useâthe Commanderâs just blown through hereââ
âAlasdair Vidmar,â Storm ground out through his teeth. âSo help me, if you donât find a way, I will blast my way out of this facility and charbroil anyone who tries to stop me.â
A second of silenceâa second that felt interminable as Storm waited.
The response finally came. âYou and Kitaraâ¦thatâs how it is?â
âThatâs how it is,â Storm snapped.
âShit,â the Engineer swore. âOkay. Keep your tablet on you. Iâll try to find one not actively transmitting.â
âThanks, âDair, I owe youââ
âStorm?â
They spun. Zayne stood in his doorway, having apparently heard them a few doors down. He too appeared to have just stumbled out of bed.
âIâll be on standby,â Storm said into the phone and hung up.
Zayne frowned at their expressions. âStars, what happened nowââ
âKitaraâs in trouble,â Devika interrupted.
He blinked. âShit, how?â
âI donât know,â Devika wailed. âSheâs hurt, I donât knowââ
âWhat are you doing?â Zayne asked Storm.
âIâm going to her.â Storm pulled a black hoodie over his head.
âStorm, wait.â Zayne held up his hands. âLetâs wait and think about this. Your dadââ
âIâm her handler. Itâs my job to protect her.â Stormâs tablet chimed a soft melody at him. A glowing blue sigil appeared on the screen. âAlasdairâs hacked a portal.â
âJesusâ¦â Zayne muttered, rubbing his forehead.
His phone rangâAlasdair.
Storm answered. âYeah?â
âBe back in thirty minutes. Whatever happened out there tonightâ¦itâs bad.â
âIâll be back before then,â Storm promised.
âBe careful.â The Engineer hung up.
Storm set coordinates on his tablet.
âI want to come with youââ Devika began.
âNo way,â he cut her off fiercely. âI have no idea what Iâm walking into. Sheâd never forgive me if I put you in danger.â
âWhat should we do?â Devika asked with a trembling breath.
Storm hesitated. âIf Iâm not back in thirty minutesâ¦â he began as the sigil appeared on the floor before him. âIf Iâm not back by thenâ¦â
âYouâll probably be dead,â Zayne muttered darkly.
âLetâs hope not,â Storm growled under his breath, then stepped on the sigil.
The blue light hummed, surged, then both he and it vanished.