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Authors: Maggie Shayne

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BOOK: Angel's Pain
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She grudgingly acknowledged that she approved of the princess's taste, then swept through an open door and into the lap of luxury. Not that the rest of the house was anything less than luxurious, but the idea that she would be staying right here sort of rattled Briar.

Deep carpeting lined the place; it was the color of French cream, as were the sheer curtains that hung in front of the tall, narrow windows. The room held an elegant love seat, a matching overstuffed chair and ottoman and an oak rocker. Every piece had forest-green accents: the throw pillows, the cushions lining the rocker, the tiebacks on the curtains, the throw rugs on the carpet. There was a gas fireplace, its wooden mantel sporting two oil lamps that looked like antiques, and a portrait hung on the wall above.

It was of Topaz's mother, the actress, Mirabella DuFrane. Though with her, no last name had been necessary. She'd been the stuff of legend before she'd vanished, leaving the world and her daughter to believe she'd been murdered. But she'd only become undead.

A soft, pain-filled moan drew Briar's attention to the left, where another open door showed her a bedroom. Her body jerked her into reflexive motion without warning when she spotted Crisa in the bed, hands pressed to either side of her head, tears streaming down her face. Briar was crowding up to the bedside before she could stop herself, shoulder to shoulder with Reaper, who was leaning over the girl.

“I wish I knew what the hell to do for her,” he said, and he sounded apologetic. “It's not like we can take her to a doctor.”

“Of course we can.”

Reaper frowned at her, and from across the bed, Topaz did the same. Roxy paid no attention. She was squeezing in between Topaz and the head of the bed, bending close and laying her hands gently over Crisa's, on her temples.

“Well, come on,” Briar said. “Don't tell me that out of all the vampires in the world there's not one who was a doctor in life.”

Reaper held her gaze, and she sensed he hated like hell to burst her bubble. “None that I've heard of. The closest we have is the scientist Eric Marquand.”

“Then get him here,” she snapped.

Reaper's eyes were probing hers, and she realized she was acting way too emotionally invested in the loon.

“You're hurting, too, aren't you?” Reaper asked.

She lowered her head quickly, hiding her eyes and whatever they might reveal from his probing gaze. “If I wasn't, do you think I'd be demanding you bring vampire Einstein to me?”

He didn't answer, so she glanced upward to see that he was waiting for her to meet his eyes. When she finally did, he said, “Yes, Briar. I'm starting to think maybe you would.”

“Then you're deluding yourself, Reaper.”

“Am I?”

Crisa's movements—and Briar's own throbbing pain—stopped all at once, and her moaning stopped, too. Briar snapped her attention back to the girl, fearing, for one heart-jolting moment, that she'd died. But she hadn't. She was lying there with her eyes wide open, staring at some invisible spot halfway between her and the ceiling.

Not giving a shit what sort of noble motives her bleeding-heart peers would attach to the act, Briar leaned closer but didn't touch. “It's better now, isn't it?”

“I feel him. He's calling to me now,” Crisa said.

Briar frowned at her, and Crisa's eyes suddenly locked on to hers. Just as quickly, her small hand closed around Briar's wrist and drew her down until she was sitting on the edge of the bed.

“He needs me.”

“Who does?”

“The boy. The little boy.” She frowned at Briar.

“Don't you see him?”

“I don't—”

And then she stopped, because she
did
see him. Just slightly, and maybe it was her imagination, or maybe it was something else. Frowning, she tried to attune her senses to Crisa's, and she shifted until her hand met the girl's and clasped it, fingers interlacing, to help her solidify the mental link.

The vision didn't solidify, though. It was just a hazy shape. Could have been a boy. Could have been a bulldog. She was damned if she knew.

Crisa sat up. “I have to go to him.”

“You're in no condition to go anywhere right now,” Reaper told her.

She shot him a defiant look, then turned it into a pleading one and aimed it at Briar. “I have to.”

“Not alone, though, right?” Briar said. “You're gonna want us to go, too. If this boy of yours needs you so bad, he must be in some kind of trouble, right?”

“I don't know.”

Topaz patted the girl's shoulder. “I think she's right, Crisa. If this boy is in trouble, then we need to help him. But we need to make sure you're okay first. You won't be able to help him if you're in debilitating pain.”

“It hurts,” she whispered. “But I have to go.” She brushed Roxy's hands away from her head as if they were bits of cobweb stuck in her hair and swung her legs to the side.

“Crisa, you're not going anywhere,” Briar said, and if she sounded impatient, she thought, all the better. Maybe the odd squad would stop thinking she'd turned soft. “Lie the fuck down.
Now
.”

Crisa didn't even look at her, which shocked Briar to hell and gone. Instead, the cracker-factory dropped her feet to the floor, sliding her backside to the very edge of the mattress; then, bracing her hands on either side of her, she started to get up, edging between Reaper and Briar.

Briar turned to face her, clapped her hands onto Crisa's shoulders and pushed until the girl's ass hit the mattress again. “I
said
lie down,” Briar repeated. “You're not well.”

“The headache's gone.”

So what was the vague, unfocused look in her eyes? Briar wondered. And why wasn't
she
feeling Crisa's urge to run to the imaginary blur in her head, when she was feeling everything else the girl did?

“The headache will come back, and when it hits you, it hits me, too. I'd like to get it fixed, if you don't mind, before you go taking off on me, okay?”

“You can't tell me what to do!” Crisa shouted, clenching her fists and shaking them in frustration as she did.

That stunned Briar so much that she took a step backward in reaction and just stared, gaping, dumbfounded.

Reaper pressed his hand to her back as if in a show of support, right between her shoulder blades. And she resented it.

“Crisa,” Roxy interrupted, probably in an effort to defuse the situation. “Did you get these headaches before?”

“Before when?”

“Before you came to us. Before Reynold died.”

Crisa lowered her head, closed her eyes, but not before they welled with glistening tears. “No. Never. Rey-Rey would've known what to do. He would have made it better.”

“Did he ever have to make anything else better for you, Crisa?” Roxy pressed on. “Were you ever sick or in pain or—”

“Rey-Rey says vampires don't get sick.”

“I see.”

“I cut myself once. I had a glass, and I was running. I fell and it cut my hand and it bled really bad. But Rey-Rey fixed it.”

“Yeah. But no headaches?”

Crisa shook her head. “No.”

“It's too late to go anywhere tonight,” Topaz reasoned. “You know we can't be out in the daylight.”

“I know.”

“So you should rest until dawn, and then the day sleep will restore you, and we can talk more about this boy at sundown.”

Crisa looked up sharply. “No talking.” Then she swung her head to the other side, staring intently at Briar. “I'll go to him. I have to.”

“You don't even know where he is,” Briar said. “Hell, you don't even know
who
he is.”

“I'm going to him. I have to,” Crisa repeated.

Reaper's hand slid from Briar's back to her shoulder, and squeezed.
Try not to agitate her.

Agitate her? Hell, I'm getting ready to
smack
her.

“You can't stop me, Briar,” Crisa insisted.

“Why the fuck would I want to?” Briar asked. “Listen, you do whatever the hell you want, okay? Just don't get yourself into trouble in the middle of nowhere and expect me to come running to the rescue, Crisa. I'm nobody's hero.”

Crisa turned her face into the pillows and buried it there as Briar shook her head in frustration and stomped out of the room.

Topaz and Reaper followed. Roxy remained, her hands moving gently to Crisa again, one on the uppermost shoulder, the other cupping the nape of her neck.

Topaz pulled the bedroom door closed gently. “Your room is the one on the right. I didn't think she should have the one with the balcony. Each one has its own bath. There's a minifridge over there.” She pointed to what looked like a hardwood stand. Clearly it was a refrigerator, cleverly disguised to match the rest of the décor. “You can help yourself to sustenance.”

“Fine.”

“Briar, she's sick. Something's wrong. She's not turning on you, not really.”

“As if I give a damn.”

“Well, just in case.” Topaz sighed. “Good night.”

“Whatever.”

Topaz left them. But Reaper remained.

 

It hadn't taken quite as much torture as Gregor had expected. The beatings didn't do the trick, but once he started skinning Derrick Dwyer alive, he talked plenty. In fact, it only took one small strip from his forearm to get him going.

Shame, that.

According to Dwyer, the girl, Crisa, was a mentally tweaked vampiress with a chip in her brain. Some experimental thing that let Dwyer see through her eyes, hear through her ears, and to some extent control her by speaking to her inside her head. That part hadn't been thoroughly tested yet.

There was more. Nothing that mattered, though. Something about it only being functional for a short period. Something about it deteriorating and killing the girl once it did, unless it was removed in time. Like he gave a shit.

All Gregor knew was that he had a way to track down Reaper, a way to watch him, to get an advantage over him. He wanted that bastard. He wanted his power, and he wanted to exact vengeance.

And as for Briar, oh, he was going to
enjoy
hurting her. She had betrayed him.

She would die slow.

But for right now, Gregor had to focus on the matter at hand. He'd left the agent hanging—quite literally, he thought with a smile—and told his son to take care of getting him down and into a bed. He'd had to hurry to get here, to Dwyer's home and his computer, while enough of the night still remained.

And now, even as dawn approached, Gregor remained, riveted to the screen, watching and seeing it all just as Dwyer had described. He saw Reaper, his face above the girl, as he apparently carried her through a house. He saw the house, as well, through the girl's eyes, though her vision seemed blurry. He saw the girl being placed in a bed and Reaper bending over her. And Briar was right beside him, damn her.

Seeing Briar's wild hair and dark, dark eyes again was like feeling a blade twist in his chest. He didn't like that feeling.

There were others there, too, and as he watched and listened, he learned their names. Roxy, a sexy redheaded mortal, and Topaz, a beautiful, classy brunette. He thought the redhead might be one of the Chosen, but he wasn't sure.

And then, as he watched, the girl started ranting about needing to go, needing to go to him, to the boy. The
boy
. And then static filled the screen and a shape took its place, slowly taking form amid the snow.

He frowned and narrowed his eyes, leaning closer to the screen. It was…it was Matthias.

Dammit! How was that possible?

Clearly he had more questions to ask of Derrick Dwyer. But they were going to have to wait until night fall. The sun was tugging at his senses, dulling them. He was going to have to take refuge in Dwyer's house for the day. But he had one more task to accomplish before he surrendered to the power of the day sleep.

He had drones in place in various locations around the country, ready to obey his commands, some of them to the west, where there were still a few hours of darkness left. He phoned them now, to set his plan in motion.

 

Briar ignored Reaper's presence and went to the fridge, opened it and removed a plastic bag with the Red Cross logo on its face. The fridge had two doors, a lower one that was larger and an upper one that was smaller. It looked just like a full-sized model with the freezer on the top, only about a quarter of the size. But when she opened the top door she was surprised to find a micro wave instead of a freezer.

“Damn, where do people even
find
shit like this?”

BOOK: Angel's Pain
4.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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