Authors: Dianne Duvall
David’s warm brown eyes met hers. “Maybe next time.”
Horrified that he had read her thoughts, she felt heat rush into her face.
No need to fret
, his voice spoke kindly in her mind.
I know your reasons. And there are many in this room who aren’t physicians, but have the same curiosity.
Thank you. I’m so sorry you were injured.
He nodded.
Seth wrapped his long fingers around David’s left wrist and lifted the arm to shoulder’s height.
A muscle jumped in David’s cheek as he grunted and stiffened. His eyes flashed amber.
Seth touched David’s shoulder with his other hand, which—beneath Melanie’s fascinated gaze—began to glow. Down the arm Seth trailed his hand, his touch gentle.
David’s breath soughed out in a relieved sigh. The tightness left his face. The tension that had wrapped those present in a cocoon of discomfort eased.
The pain David had inadvertently been broadcasting had felt to Melanie and the others like displeasure.
The glow faded from Seth’s hand as he removed it. “Better?”
David rotated his arm experimentally. “Much. Thank you.”
Seth patted his shoulder, then strode down the table to take his seat.
Roland cleared his throat. “I could have helped you with that.”
David shook his head. “You’re still healing from the wounds you incurred while hunting vampires, then healing Dr. Lipton.”
Sarah’s head snapped around. “You said you were fine.”
Roland shifted. “I
am
fine . . . for the most part.”
“You can’t do that, Roland.”
“I didn’t want to worry you.”
Her eyes narrowed as she stared up at him. “Am I going to have to start strip searching you to check for wounds every night, or will you tell me the truth from now on?”
“I would prefer the first option.”
Chuckles rounded the table.
Sarah punched Roland hard in the shoulder.
“Ow! That hurts a lot more now that you’re immortal, you know.”
Her lips twitched. “I know.”
Seth took his seat. “All right. Let’s get this over with. Darnell told me you’re pissed about something, Chris. I assume whatever it is involves Bastien. But before we get to that . . .” He glanced at each of the immortals present. “Any vampire recruitments yet?”
Heads shook.
Bastien leaned forward. “I may have succeeded in recruiting one. I was supposed to have met him tonight, but forgot when Dr. Lipton was injured. I’ll see if he shows tomorrow.”
“Good work. Make sure Richart accompanies you in case the vamps plan another ambush.” He held up a hand when Chris opened his mouth. “Dr. Lipton, I’m sorry you were injured tonight. I trust your presence here means you are well now?”
“Yes. Roland healed me.” She met Roland’s gaze. “Thank you.”
He gave a short nod. “You’re welcome.”
Sarah smiled and leaned into him.
“You weren’t bitten, were you?” Seth went on.
“No. One of Emrys’s men shot me.”
“Three times,” Bastien added, voice tight. “And there were two shooters. They waited until they saw us destroy the vamps we were hunting, then zeroed in on Melanie in the aftermath.”
Yuri and Stanislov swore.
Richart leaned forward. “There were thirty-six total concealed on the campus. On the rooftops. In alcoves. Behind bushes. We were there for some time before the vamps arrived, and the soldiers did nothing to give away their presence.”
Yuri grunted. “They were armed with the drug?”
“Yes.”
“How many were you able to capture?”
Richart glanced at Bastien. “None.”
Here it comes
, Melanie thought.
Chris leaned back in his chair and crossed his arms over his chest. “Bastien killed them all.”
“Where were you?” Yuri asked Richart. “I thought the two of you hunted together. Did you aid him?”
Richart shook his head. “Dr. Lipton’s wounds were fatal. I teleported her here to see if David was present, then to the network so the doctors could work on her until I could locate Roland.”
“Roland,” Seth said, “Take Richart to your home first thing tomorrow night. I won’t have someone dying because he doesn’t know where you live.”
Roland gave an abrupt nod.
Stanlislov eyed Bastien. “So while Richart took Dr. Lipton to safety, you killed all of the soldiers?”
“All of them,” Bastien confirmed. “When they shot Dr. Lipton, they weren’t shooting to wound. They were shooting to kill. Any of them who saw us fight the vampires knew she was neither immortal nor vampire, but they shot to kill anyway. The bastards deserved to die.”
Looks were exchanged all around.
Étienne cleared his throat. “I have no problem with that.”
“Nor I,” Lisette added.
“Nor I,” Richart said.
“Seriously?” Chris demanded. “We needed the intel those men could have provided. Marcus, you more than anyone ought to understand how important it is that we find and destroy Emrys. Any one of those men could have helped us accomplish that.”
Marcus’s brow furrowed. “I understand your anger, Bastien. But there are others you should have taken into consideration. Emrys will do anything to get his hands on Ami. And tonight we had a real opportunity to obtain the information we need to locate him and end this once and for all.”
Bastien swore. “You’re right. I fucked up. I’m sorry, Ami.”
“It’s okay, Sebastien.”
“No, it isn’t,” Marcus countered.
“He’s right,” Bastien agreed. “I wasn’t thinking.”
“You
never
think,” Chris accused.
When no one came to Bastien’s defense, Melanie said, “He was thinking when he devised the plan to enlist vampires’ aid in defeating Emrys. He was thinking when he came damned close to recruiting a vampire just hours later.”
Bastien squeezed her arm under the table. A warning not to speak up for him? Well, screw that.
Chris raised his eyebrows. “We don’t even know if that vampire is trustworthy. He could arrange an ambush. Or run scared. Or offer to help and prove no aid at all because he’s too deranged. Those soldiers, on the other hand, we
know
could have helped us. They have to report to
some
commanding officer. Any one of the telepaths here could have withdrawn that information from their minds and we would have known the location of Emrys’s outfit and possibly Emrys himself.”
“And any one of those soldiers could have drugged Bastien while he was disabling and restraining the one or two or ten men that would have satisfied you,” Melanie again defended Bastien, who squeezed the hell out of her hand. “We had no idea they were there until they shot me.”
“If he had time to kill them, he had time to knock them out,” Chris maintained.
“I agree,” Marcus said.
Seth turned to Bastien. “He has a point. Next time maim and disarm them. Don’t kill them.”
Bastien nodded, face grim.
Melanie felt guilty because he wouldn’t be in this position if she hadn’t been shot. And he looked as if he were mentally kicking himself in the ass.
“I think Bastien should be removed from duty,” Chris announced. “I don’t think he should be allowed to hunt anymore. And I want him banned from network premises forthwith.”
The pronouncement spawned many looks of surprise, but no protests.
Melanie’s temper roused. “You can’t do that. Cliff and Joe need him.”
“He should have thought of that before he plowed through my men again.”
Seth groaned. “Damn it, Sebastien. What did you do this time?”
“They wouldn’t let me see Dr. Lipton,” Bastien bit out. “And if Richart hadn’t come to my defense, Chris would have had me chained up in the holding room as soon as we arrived at the network.”
Melanie gaped at Chris. “You tried to chain him up again?”
“Yes,” he said unrepentantly.
“For what?”
“He killed all of those human soldiers in a fit of rage. I wasn’t going to take the chance that he would harm my men.”
Stanislov looked around. “I don’t see how one action would necessarily follow the other.”
Richart nodded. “I objected. I thought Chris overreacted.”
Melanie looked around the table. “Okay. Maybe everyone else here already knows the answer to this or maybe they’re just too polite to ask. Or maybe they just don’t give a damn. But I have to know . . .” She returned her gaze to Chris. “Why do you have such a bug up your butt about Sebastien?”
A few of the immortals—namely the French immortals—coughed to cover laughs.
Bastien’s head jerked around. “Melanie—”
“No. I want to know.”
Chris’s brows drew down. “Melanie?” he repeated, catching Bastien’s more casual address.
“Well?” she persisted. “Why do you dislike him so much? I understand why Roland, Sarah, and Marcus do. Bastien tried to kill them. And I know why
they
do.” She motioned to the other immortals present. “They’re pissed because he killed their friend Ewen.” She paused. “And, by the way, while you’re busy hating and condemning him for that, you might ask yourselves why David and Seth aren’t. They’re the wisest men in this room and neither one of them seem to have a problem with Bastien.”
Seth held up a finger.
“Except for his mouth,” she amended.
Seth smiled and dropped his hand. “Thank you.”
“I mean, did it ever occur to any of you that there might be a reason for that? That maybe Bastien killed Ewen in self-defense? That maybe Ewen mistook Bastien for a vampire and attacked him, leaving him no choice but to fight to the death?”
“How did you know that?” Bastien demanded and looked at Seth. “Did you tell her that? I told you to stay out of my head.”
“I didn’t tell her.”
Again Bastien asked Melanie, “How did you know that?”
She shrugged. “What other reason would you have to kill him?”
“Because Bastien’s a prick?” Roland suggested.
Melanie rolled her eyes. “You’re biased.”
“And you aren’t?” he posed.
Étienne’s eyes widened.
“Merde.
It’s true. Ewen attacked him.”
Marcus straightened. “Bastien must have given him reason.”
“He was draining a woman,” Lisette said.
“Stay out of my head,” Bastien growled at the French siblings.
“Then Ewen was in the right,” Marcus proclaimed.
Chris nodded. “He can’t be trusted.”
“Bullshit!” Tanner blurted. “Bastien doesn’t kill anyone who doesn’t deserve it.”
“His vampire followers did,” Chris said.
“Vince, Cliff, and Joe didn’t,” Melanie denied.
Tanner nodded. “And Bastien had no way of knowing about the ones who did.”
“If he couldn’t control them, he should have killed them.”
“You’re just pissed because he managed to get past you and all of your men and kidnap Sarah, taking her right out from under your noses.”
Heavy silence took the room.
Really? Was that it? Was that the bug, so to speak?
Melanie studied Chris’s reddening face and decided, yes, that was definitely the bug.
“Actually,” Bastien said slowly, “he’s pissed because, while I stole Sarah right out from under his nose, I broke that nose and shattered several bones in his face, knocking him unconscious before he could get off a single shot or give a shout out to warn the rest of his men.”
Ooh.
That was . . . That was not good.
Chris’s face turned positively purple.
Sarah cleared her throat. “If it helps, I didn’t see Bastien coming either.”
Darnell grinned. “Yeah, but you managed to shoot him twice and stab him in the ass.”
Laughter erupted.
Seth held his hands up. “All right. All right. Settle down. We’re all glad Sarah stabbed Bastien in the ass.”
More chuckles.
“Chris,” Seth commanded, “you’re just going to have to get over Bastien hitting you in the face, because it’s interfering in your work. Follow Sarah’s example and move on. As for the network . . . tell your men to give Bastien some space and he’ll stop kicking their asses. I want Cliff and Joe to continue to have access to him. They’re doing us a favor and pretty much voluntarily incarcerated themselves to do it. They need the break and whatever happiness and contentment he can bring them.”
Though that didn’t go over well, Chris made no objections.
It was Seth. How could one oppose his edicts?
Seth turned to Bastien. “Bastien, I need you to do your part as well. Stop antagonizing everyone and show a little more patience if you run into interference at the network. Instead of injuring the men who work there and who help us, pick up your phone and give me or David a call. If you can’t reach us, call Richart. He wisely teleported you out of there tonight before the situation could escalate. If necessary, he can do so again.”
Bastien nodded.
“David, have you anything to add?”
David said nothing for a moment, his handsome ebony face thoughtful. Melanie had never encountered anyone with such dark skin before. It was beautiful. As flawless as a supermodel’s. Yet somehow remained masculine.
“Everyone here must be mindful of the situation that brought us here tonight,” he said in his deep, honeyed voice. “Though Richart, Bastien, and Dr. Lipton were at UNC for quite some time, they were unaware of the soldiers’ presence until those soldiers made their presence known. I wonder, Chris, if the network might provide the immortals and their Seconds with some kind of thermal imaging binoculars or scopes that would allow them to see the heat signatures of soldiers who may otherwise escape their notice upon initial inspection.”
Chris reached into his jacket and drew out one of his ever-present notebooks and a short, stubby pencil. “Done.”
Melanie had seen him scribbling in similar notebooks so often she wondered if he didn’t have a roomful of them somewhere.
As Chris made notes on the memo pad, he raised his eyes and met Bastien’s. “Would that have helped you tonight?”
Melanie held her breath.
Chris could have asked Richart instead and avoided conversing with his
nemesis.
Was this a sort of peace offering?
“Before tonight I wouldn’t have thought such necessary,” Bastien replied slowly, “but, yes. Thermal imaging would have revealed at least a few of them. Those who were concealed by shadows and foliage even
our
eyes couldn’t penetrate.”