Twice Bitten (23 page)

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Authors: Chloe Neill

BOOK: Twice Bitten
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True to his word, Ethan met me in the lobby five minutes later, sans the Master of Sheridan House. But he was followed by Luc and Malik. Luc was in jeans and a white T-shirt. Malik—tall, dark skinned, and green eyed—wore black suit pants, square-toed black shoes, and a crisp, white, button-up shirt, the top button of his shirt open to reveal his Cadogan medal. Malik, the only married vampire in my acquaintance, was also one of the most handsome—shaved head, wide, clear eyes, sharp cheekbones. But he had the most solemn countenance of any vampire I’d met.
“I believe we’re ready,” Ethan said, glancing between them. “Malik, the House is left in your care and trusting. Luc, check in with our ground team. God willing, the need of them won’t prove necessary. But just in case . . .”

“It’s done,” Luc said. “We liaised earlier, and we’re all in contact. Grey and Navarre are on standby. You both have your earpieces?”

Like obedient students, we pulled out our earpieces, which we’d both stashed in our pockets, and showed them to Luc.

“Good children,” he said with a chuckle. “You don’t need to put them in until you’re on-site. You might want to do that in a private moment, and not with shifters breathing down your necks, lest they think we’re even more conniving than they already believe we are. When you get ’em in, we’ll be on the other end.”

“Do you want me to try Darius again?”

We all turned to Malik. Darius was the head of the Greenwich Presidium, the Western European council.

Ethan shook his head. “Not now. We’ve tried to reach him once, and he didn’t get back to us. At this point, it’s better to ask for forgiveness later than permission now.”

“You think he might say no?” I asked. Ethan slid me a glance.

“I think the GP is unpredictable in its current form. We tell them we’re liaising with shifters—that we’re offering strategic support to hundreds of shifters—and we push the GP panic button.”

“We invite a shitstorm,” Luc translated.

I nodded my understanding. Ethan blew out a breath. “If you’re all comfortable with your respective stations, we’ll head out.”

“Good luck,” Luc said, then gave me a pat on the shoulder. “Kick ass, Sentinel.”

“I’m really hoping it doesn’t come to that.”

“That makes two of us,” Ethan said. He and Malik whispered something together—the act was probably one of the rituals related to Ethan’s leaving the House in Malik’s care—then took the stairs to the basement.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

THE BIG BAD WOLVES
W
e drove to Ukrainian Village in silence. When we arrived, Ethan pulled the Mercedes into a slot on the street. We were early for ConPack, but it was still late on a Friday night for the rest of the neighborhood, which was quiet and mostly empty of traffic. We got out of the car, buckled on our katanas, and walked toward St. Bridget’s, which was well lit by streetlights and spotlights in the landscaping.
I stopped for a moment to gaze up at the cathedral.

“Cathedral” was definitely an appropriate moniker. St. Bridget’s was a gorgeous building, with peach-colored stone and a handful of towers topped by turquoise domes that looked like ski hats. A giant stained-glass window was set into the front of the building, its three rectangular panels showing a pastoral scene of trees and butterflies, a fawn reclining peacefully in the middle.

The church was an architectural jewel in the midst of the working-class neighborhood, like a lost remnant from an ancient fairy tale—a page that history forgot to turn, transported from the deep woods of Eastern Europe to the west side of Chicago.

It was, however, very much like the neighborhood around it in one respect—it was very, very quiet. It’s not that I expected picketers and protests, but from what we’d seen before, shifters weren’t the type to go gently into that good night.

“I maintain it’s weird they’re meeting at a church,” I said.

“It is unusual,” Ethan said beside me, “but it wasn’t our call to make.”

We stood there in silence for a moment, long enough that I glanced over at him. I found his gaze on me.

“What?” I asked.

He gave me a flat look.

“We’re here on business.”

“I want the air to be clear.”

“The air is as clear as it’s going to get. We made a mistake. We’ve both since remedied it, so let’s move on, shall we?”

“A mistake.” He actually had the gall to sound surprised at my answer, but I didn’t buy it. He hadn’t used the word “mistake” in his post-Breckenridge guilt party, but that was pretty much what he’d said.

“A mistake,” I repeated. “Can we get to work?”

“Merit—,” he began, regret in his voice, but I held up a hand. His guilt wasn’t going to make me feel any better.

“Let’s get to work.”

We took the stairs to the slate of doors that spanned the front of the church. I assumed this was where people gathered after services, maybe shaking hands with the clergy, maybe making plans for dinner or lunch.

The doors were unlocked and opened into a small receiving room, the walls of which bore signs directing parishioners toward children’s care rooms and morning coffees.

We pushed through a second set of doors, and I gaped at the sight before us, walking inside past Ethan to take in the full view. The church’s exterior was impressive, but that was nothing compared to the interior. The sanctuary was like a treasure chest, with floors of gleaming stone, walls of stained glass, gold-framed icons, gilded alcoves and frescoes. Gleaming columns and ornate brass latticework marked the church aisles.

Robin, Jason, Gabriel, and Adam stood at the front of the sanctuary, but it was Berna who first got our attention.

“You will eat,” she said, stepping in front of us, a disposable aluminum pan in her outstretched arms. The pan was covered with foil, but it steamed with heat, and I could smell what was inside: meat, cabbage, spices—Eastern European deliciousness.

“You take,” she said, and shoved the pan, still hot, into my arms.

“I appreciate the sentiment, but you didn’t have to keep feeding me.”

She clucked her tongue. “Too thin,” she said, then reached out two knobby fingers and pinched my arm.
Hard
.

“Ow
.

“No meat,” she said, disapproval in her voice. “No meat on bones, you don’t find man.” Then she cast an appraising glance at Ethan, one bottle-blond eyebrow raised. “You are . . .
man
.”

Not that I disagreed, but she was making the wrong match.

“Thank you, Berna,” I said, hoping to draw her attention back to me and distract her from her love connecting.

Slowly, as if guessing my game, she glanced back at me, then gave me an up-and-down appraisal that was none too flattering. After clucking her tongue again, she walked around us and disappeared into the lobby.

I glanced over at Ethan and proffered the cabbage rolls. “Should I just put this in your car while we’re here?”

He blanched, apparently not crazy about the idea that his Mercedes would smell like the back room of a Ukrainian pub.

“Good evening, vampires.” I turned to find Adam grinning at the pan in my hands. He was dressed simply—plaid button-up over gray T-shirt, and jeans over heavy black boots—but that didn’t diminish the wolfish appeal.

“Good evening.” I held out the pan. “She keeps pushing food at me.”

“That’s Berna. It’s her way of showing affection.”

Not for my physique, apparently. That notwithstanding, I still had a steaming pan to deal with. “Is there somewhere I could put this for a few hours?”

“You think holding a pan of cabbage rolls will interrupt your vampire mojo?”

“It will make it a little harder to swing my sword.”

“Well, we wouldn’t want that,” he said coyly. “I’ll take you to the kitchen and you can drop it off there. Also gives you a chance to see a little more of the church.”

“Thanks.”

I’ll wait here
, Ethan silently said.
I’d like to talk to Gabriel about Tony.

Good luck
, I offered back, wondering whether the fight at the Brecks’ was truly water under the bridge or whether Gabe was going to hold it against us. On the other hand, he hadn’t changed his mind about our providing security, so he must have been comfortable enough.

Keep your guard up.

Liege
, I dutifully answered back.

I followed Adam down the aisle on the left side of the church, offering Gabriel and Jason a wave as I passed. He moved through a door and into the side wing Luc had showed us earlier. It was obvious we’d moved from the original architecture to the 1970s renovation. Where the chapel was luxurious, the side wing was straight-lined and kind of sterile. Function had won out over form here, from the industrially carpeted floors to the cinder block walls.

But as we passed the nursery rooms, it became clear that the parishioners were less concerned about what the church looked like than what went on there. I stopped at an open door and glanced inside. Drawings and educational posters decorated the walls. Toddler-sized tables and chairs dotted the room, and worn stuffed animals and wooden blocks were stacked neatly on a windowsill.

“They’re a tight community,” Adam said beside me.

“I can tell.”

When we’d both looked our fill, Adam continued down the hallway, then turned into an industrial-style kitchen clearly meant for preparing meals for a big, hungry congregation. He held open the door of the refrigerator while I slid the pan onto a shelf. That done, he closed the door again, then leaned against one of the stainless-steel islands in the middle of the room.

I spied a bulletin board on the facing wall and walked over for a better look. A sign-up sheet for an after-church luncheon was posted beside a flyer for a canned food drive. Get a little; give a little, I thought.

And speaking of getting a little, I decided to take the opportunity to learn a little more about Adam and his crew. I started with the geography.

“So, I was just curious—why Ukrainian Village? What’s your connection to this neighborhood?”

“Shifters?”

I nodded.

“We have roots in Eastern Europe. Our families are tight-knit. You put the two together, you get Ukrainian Village.”

“Huh,” I said. “That’s interesting.”

He arched his eyebrows at me. “Is it interesting, or are you just making nice to do your part for a vampire-shifter alliance?”

He spoke the words with sarcasm, but there was a thread of something more in his voice. Irritation? Anger? Disgust? I wasn’t sure if that was animosity toward vampires or toward politics generally. Both were shifter-esque emotions.

Not wanting to fight it out, I mimicked that negligent shrug he’d given earlier. “Just making friendly conversation. Nothing wrong with that, is there?”

A twinkle in his eye, he answered back, “No, ma’am, there most definitely is not.”

We chatted a little longer, just enough for me to feel him more. I’d anticipated getting some of the “youngest brother of a Pack leader” vibe, and while he was quite the smartass, he seemed earnestly concerned about the Pack.

“I’m nervous about tonight,” he admitted as we took the hallway back to the main chapel. “It’s not that I think Gabe couldn’t handle whatever popped up, but I’d prefer we keep things as violence free as possible.”

“Any thoughts on a culprit for the bar shooting?”

He shook his head, his expression tightening. He was holding back.

“I heard Tony . . .” I wasn’t sure how to finish the sentence, so I didn’t.

“His death changes things,” Adam said, “but I don’t know if that means he was behind the attack.”

“We had the same thought.”

Adam frowned. “It’s just that a planned assassination isn’t a very Pack thing to do. Crime of passion, sure, but not assassination. It’s a little, maybe,
vampire
?”

I arched a suspicious eyebrow. Anti-vampire prejudice wasn’t really the vibe I wanted right now. I was much too outnumbered. And speaking of prejudice, I asked, “Has Gabriel said anything about the incident at the Brecks’?”

Adam chuckled mirthlessly. “The incident with Ethan?”

I nodded.

“Well, he wasn’t thrilled about the disruption, but I think he was more amused by the whole thing.”

I crossed my arms over my chest. “Amused?”

Adam shrugged. “They’ve known each other for a while. Gabe knows Sullivan to be cold, calm, calculated. And that was definitely not cold, calm, or calculated. Gabe figures Sullivan has it pretty bad for you.”

“You’d be surprised,” I said dryly. The vibration of my cell phone saved me from further elaboration. I pulled it out of my pocket and glanced at the screen. It was a text message, but not from Luc or Malik or the Cadogan guards. It was from Nick—and it wasn’t good.

“TIP SAYS CONTRACT ON TOP DOG; HIT IMMINENT,” the message read. It was signed “NB.”

I stopped in the middle of the hallway, my heart suddenly pounding. We’d been right—whoever the culprit, the violence wasn’t limited to the attack on the bar.

Someone meant to take out Gabriel, with or without Tony.

I glanced up at the door to the chapel in front of me. I needed to tell Ethan and Gabriel, but first I wanted facts. If Nick had information—a source, a time, anything—I wanted to hear it from his lips before I took it to the men who’d doubt its veracity the most. The vampire and shifter who were already suspicious of Nick.

I glanced up at Adam, who’d stopped a few feet away, his head cocked as he looked at me. “Everything okay?”

I hitched a thumb back toward one of the nursery rooms. “Okay if I use a room for a couple of minutes? I need to make a quick phone call.”

“Something up?”

I faked nonchalance. No sense sounding the alarms until I had proof in hand. “Not really, but it’s time sensitive.”

It took a few seconds, but he finally nodded. “Help yourself. You can meet us back in the chapel when you’re done.”

I smiled brightly. “Thanks, Adam. And thanks for the chat.”

“You’re very welcome, Kitten. Anytime you want more than chatting, Gabriel knows how to reach me.”

For now, the key was reaching Nick.

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