Embrace the Night (11 page)

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Authors: Crystal Jordan

BOOK: Embrace the Night
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“I love you, too.” With one final squeeze, Tess let her go and went to give Alex a quick hug before she nodded to Millie and then to Philip when he stepped aside and held the door open for her. “I have my car with me, but thanks for the offer.”
She sent a last glance to Luca, but left without another word.
“Right,” Millie said when the door shut, angling a look that was almost apologetic toward Chloe. “Much as I like Dr. Jones, Normals shouldn't hear Magickal business, so let's get on with this, shall we?”
“What are we getting on with, exactly?” Chloe met Merek and Alex's gazes, narrowing her eyes at them. “No one has told me anything.”
Her aunt blinked. “But, Alex said he'd tell the FBI you're not going into protective custody.”
Luca stepped forward and almost looked like he wanted to sweep a courtly bow to her aunt. “Ms. Standish, I can't begin to tell you how unwise that course of action would be. While I know it's difficult to understand how necessary it is to have your niece and her godson leave their lives behind, they are in grave danger, and that danger only worsens if they remain here as easy targets for the terrorist cell that wants them.”
“Ah, I see.” Millie's eyes twinkled with a glee that would give anyone who knew her pause. Chloe braced herself. “You mean, they'll be safer with you and your team?”
“Yes, they will be.” He stroked his fingers down his goateed chin.
Millie tilted her head in apparent innocence, and Chloe almost groaned. “As safe as my niece was last night, when a trusted member of your team betrayed you and allowed her to be tortured for information? That safe, you mean?”
A muscle in Luca's jaw ticked, but he said nothing more.
“Let me be clear, Special Agent Cavalli.” Millie dropped her act and gave the vampire the kind of look that had been making grown men cry for over a century. “Chloe and Alex are not going with you. Not now, not ever. I don't trust you to keep them safe, and I
will
be having words with your supervisor about what occurred last night. Since your father is as powerful as I am on the Council, I think it's safe to say you won't be fired, but a mistake was made, and it was made with a member of
my
family. I take that very personally.”
“I understand.” This time he did execute a short bow. “Ma'am.”
“Good.” She swept an imperious hand toward the door. “Then I suggest you leave now and take your lackey with you. Your supervisor—and, subsequently,
you
—are going to see just how unhappy this situation has made me. You should call your father and let him know he's going to need to go to bat for you on this.”
“Of course.” Jerking his chin at Agent Laramie, the vampire turned for the door. Philip opened it, not a single flicker of expression crossing his face. Before he exited, Luca paused for a closing salvo. “You may think I was mistaken in choosing one of my team members, but that should only emphasize how much danger Chloe and Alex are in.”
“It does.” Her chin dipped in a nod. “I've made alternative arrangements for them.”
“Have you?” His eyes gleamed as they locked on Merek. The vampire pinned the warlock in place for a long moment. Then he huffed out a breath, and a wry smile flickered across his face. “With your clairvoyance, you have a better shot than anyone else I know of. Take care of them.”
Merek winced before his face became an impenetrable mask. “I will.”
The vampire opened his mouth to say more, but clamped it shut again and walked out, Laramie on his heels.
“Why are you still here?” Luca snarled at someone outside the room.
A throaty laugh floated through the doorway, and Tess's voice was soft but clear. “What? You think I couldn't guess she was going to kick you out, too? Even Special Agents aren't that special in Aunt Millie's world. Besides, I drove, remember? I thought you might need a lift.”
Luca grunted and snapped the door shut behind him.
Millie's eyebrow arched, an irreverent sparkle in her Standish hazel eyes. “Well, then. She should have him jumping through her hoops nicely . . . and in very short order, I suspect.”
“Keep an eye on her for me, would you?” Chloe smoothed the blanket over her thighs. “I don't want her getting hurt by a Magickal just because she has the misfortune to be my friend and therefore crossed paths with one.”
“Of course.” Millie waved a graceful hand. “I'll look after all your affairs while you're away. Don't worry about a thing, dear.”
“Thank you.” Chloe took a deep breath. “All right. Tell me about the alternative arrangements you and Merek have made.”
“Yeah, I'd like to hear about this, too.” Alex's mouth curved in a small grin. “Millie forgot to mention it to me when I called her.”
Millie sniffed. “I did no such thing. If I'd wished to mention it to you, I would have.”
His grin stretched into a rare, broad smile, his pale green eyes dancing with amusement. “My mistake.”
“Just so.” Millie nodded, but her eyes had taken on that sinful twinkle again. It had always amused Chloe to no end to watch the stoic teen wolf and the curmudgeonly old witch play off each other.
Merek's expression remained unreadable when he faced Millie. “Before we do this, Ms. Standish, I have to tell you that my clairvoyance is blank when it comes to your niece. I can offer my skills as a cop, but not my precognition.”
That made Millie pause, and she gave the detective a long, penetrating stare. Chloe was impressed that he didn't fidget or squirm. Older, more powerful Magickals than him had broken under Millie's scrutiny before. “Do you think anyone else would be as dedicated to their security as you would?”
“No, ma'am. I would die to keep them safe.
Anything
I can do to protect them, I will, I promise you that.”
“I hope that's enough, but I'd rather have you than some team of men who turn on their masters.” Millie set her enormous handbag on the end of the bed, pulling out a myriad of strange things. Folded clothes, manila envelopes, a cosmetics bag, a sheaf of paper—Chloe suspected her aunt had put a spell on her purse to make it fit anything she wanted because as enormous as the bag was, it couldn't store all of that. Without help, anyway.
Millie turned to wave Merek forward, only to find he'd already stepped over to loom behind her. He was good at looming, but Millie wasn't any better at letting someone loom over her than Chloe was. She grinned when her aunt gave him an affronted look. He lifted an eyebrow and motioned to the lineup of items she had on the foot of the bed. The gesture wasn't as impatient as it would have been if he'd been dealing with Chloe, but that just proved he was a smart man. No one messed with Mildred Standish.
Chloe hoped she was just as formidable when she was her aunt's age.
Moving the pile of clothes to drape across Chloe's feet, Millie smiled. “These are for you, dear.”
And that was why she loved Millie so very much. “You're the best.”
“Yes, I know.” Her aunt winked at her, but her expression turned severe just as quickly when she returned her gaze to Merek. “I collected all the documents you required, Detective Kingston. I've already spoken to
your
supervisor, and you are on indefinite paid leave. Make sure my niece and her godson come through this safely, and you can name your price from me.”
“Thank you, ma'am.” He scooped up the envelopes, fishing out . . . plastic cards? But he examined them closely, squinting at them, tilting them into the light to see every angle. “These look good.”
“Philip had the contacts; I had the money. Combine those two and excellent quality can be assured in a relatively short amount of time.”
Alex reached out and deftly plucked the cards from Merek's fingers, his lupine speed making the movement so fast, Chloe didn't even see him move. He glanced at them. “Huh.”
Then he handed them to Chloe. Identification. Fake identification. Both the cards had her driver's license picture on them, but neither had her real name. She had to assume there were cards for Alex and Merek, too. “So we're running.”
Merek shrugged and met her gaze. “Like you said, Luca was going to swoop in and take you where I couldn't be sure you were safe.”
“Because the FBI trumps the police. So you called someone who trumped everyone.” She gestured the cards in Millie's direction.
“Yeah.”
“Good thinking.”
His breath whooshed out. “Yeah?”
“You could have warned me.” She sniffed, and watched a small grin twitch across his face. His gaze slid from her to Millie and back again; a flash of realization crossed his expression, and then he shrugged, his smile widening.
Chloe winced as something occurred to her. “If we're on the run, there's no way I can take my memory potion. It takes very precise conditions to keep it viable, has insanely complicated ingredients, and a very short shelf life.”
“So, you'll know everything Smith wants in a week or two.” Merek's grin disappeared, then he sighed. “But that's data Alex already has readily available in his head, so we won't be much worse off than we would have been; we just won't have your potion's unexpected advantage anymore. I don't intend to let anyone close enough to you to find out you can spill secrets.”
“I like that plan,” Chloe said with a little too much fervor.
Millie watched the byplay, tilting her head as she considered them. She nodded abruptly, but Chloe had no idea what conclusions her aunt had come to. “Philip and I will take Alex back to his house to gather whatever clothing he wants, and Merek will do the same for you, Chloe. I assume you'll want to take your familiar with you, but if not, I will happily house her for you.”
Merek glanced at Chloe. “That might be—”
“No. My familiar comes with me. She's been with me since my mom died, and I'm not abandoning her.” Chloe refused to think about the awful days after her mother's death or about how Ophelia had come to be her animal companion. She'd done her best to put those events behind her and dredging them up would help no one.
Hands on his hips, Merek stared down at her. “Chloe, it's important that you and Alex change your usual patterns, leave as many of your habits behind as possible. That means no computers for Alex. No gadgets. No modifying the very simple cell phone I give you
for emergencies only
to do anything it shouldn't. No hacking anything. Hell, it means no e-mail. Nothing.” He gestured to the trendy clothes on the bed. “You, city girl, get no more makeup, no expensive clothing. No going to Magickal clubs. No more big city life for you.”
The look of horror on Alex's face was probably reflected on Chloe's. No city. No lights. No people. It was her worst nightmare summed up in a handful of sentences.
“He's right, dear.” Millie's expression held so much understanding and sympathy when she met Chloe's gaze that she had to look away or she knew she'd start tearing up. Only Millie knew why Chloe craved city life and lights, and Chloe wasn't about to explain how pathetic she was to a big bad warlock cop.
“Let me make this clear.” Merek looked back and forth between Alex and Chloe. “If you want to live through this, you'll do what I'm telling you. You are one-third of a puzzle they already have two-thirds of. This isn't good news for you.”
They had Damien's part of the puzzle, either willingly or by force. She shuddered to think of the ways one might force a vampire as powerful as Damien to bow to one's whims. Torture would only be the jumping off point for negotiations. Another shuddered rippled through her. She didn't want to think about torture techniques. It brought to mind her own recent experiences. Gods help her if she had to survive more of that. If it got worse, she wasn't sure she could. As ugly as surviving what had happened with her mom had been, the night before had still shown Chloe she was even more of a survivor than she'd ever imagined. But she'd also discovered exactly where her breaking point was, and they'd come dangerously close to the point of no return. She didn't want to get that close ever again.
Chloe sniffled, coughed into her fist. “Fine. I'm still not leaving my familiar. She wouldn't stay anyway.”
“That is the truth. That cat should have been named Houdini.” Her aunt dug deeper into her purse and handed a smaller satchel to Merek. Definitely a bespelled purse. Chloe managed a grin, then felt her mouth sag open when Merek unzipped the satchel. Money. Lots and lots of money. The satchel might even be bespelled for extra space, too. Millie patted Merek's arm. “That's all the cash I had available in my house. There won't be any bank withdrawals for anyone with computer skills to trace. You said smaller bills were better, less noticeable, so that's what you have there. If you need more, I'll make sure you get it.”
He took her hand, shook it. “Perfect, Ms. Standish.”

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