Chapter 19 #2
“What is it you like to burn?” Adrian asked, recognizing the signs of withdrawal and knowing that the monikers vampires chose often had significance.
“Crystal dream.”
Looking at Siobhán, Adrian asked, “Any possibility the drug is connected? Perhaps it affords a level of immunity?”
“Anything is a possibility at this point.”
“Thank you for your help, Singe.” Adrian stood and faced Siobhán. “Take me to Malachai.”
They left the room and moved down the hall.
“I have a question for you,” Adrian said quietly.
“Yes, Captain?”
“Lindsay Gibson mentioned that her blood has a negative effect on some of the beings she’s hunted.
Since she’s taken down both vampires and demons alike, I assume it’s the latter group that was susceptible.
” He thought of the vampress he’d interrogated in Hurricane.
He’d had Lindsay’s blood on his hands, but it didn’t spark a reaction of any kind, adverse or otherwise.
“Can you explain why her blood would allow a blade to slice into a dragon’s impenetrable hide? ”
She frowned. “Interesting. I’d have to think about it. I’d certainly love to test a sample.”
“Is it possible that having two souls inside her would be the cause?”
Siobhán slowed before a metal door with a window. “Yes, it’s possible. You know how powerful souls are. Two in one vessel likely creates a unique force we will probably never fully understand.”
Looking through the glass, Adrian saw Malachai kicking back on a cot with his phone in hand. Adrian knocked. Malachai looked up, his face breaking out in a smile when he recognized his visitor.
“I feel fine, Captain,” the Sentinel shouted.
“Good to hear.” Adrian was about to say more when a ferocious pounding came from down the hall. He looked over his shoulder. “What’s that?”
Siobhán frowned. “I don’t know. I don’t like it.”
A few more Sentinels appeared in the hallway as the violent thumping continued. They all looked to Adrian, who swiftly passed them en route to the source of the sound.
As the location of the noise became apparent, Siobhán said, “That’s the makeshift morgue.”
“Who’s in there?”
“Aside from the corpses of the two infected vamps? No one.”
The sound of glass shattering preceded a shout. “Let me out of here!”
They turned a corner into a short hallway that ended with a single door. A masculine face stared out through the broken window, amber eyes glowing with ire.
“Fuck you, Sentinels,” the man growled. “Either kill me or let me go. Don’t fucking leave me in here with a rotting corpse!”
“He was a corpse,” Siobhán whispered. “I shot him myself after he bit Malachai.”
Adrian didn’t take his eyes off the vamp in front of him. “He’s made a miraculous recovery.”
“But the other one is still dead…?”
“So is the one I caught. Turned into an oil slick, I was told.” He contemplated the seemingly cured vampire with narrowed eyes, the tempo of his heartbeat accelerating as he considered the possibilities.
“One of these things is not like the others,” he murmured. “The only difference being…what? The ingestion of Sentinel blood?”
Siobhán made a choked noise. “Shit.”
Yeah, deep shit.
“Are you feeling better?” Elijah asked as he watched Lindsay exit her adjoining bedroom.
He sat at the small desk in his suite, working on his laptop and trying not to feel like everything was closing in on him.
That was pretty damn difficult, considering the wariness with which the Sentinels were watching him and the expectation that weighted the gaze of every lycan he crossed paths with.
Everyone was waiting for him to make a move, one that would rip apart the well-oiled system that kept mortals blissfully ignorant. One side wanted to defuse his perceived power, while the other wanted him to blow up like a powder keg. He was fucked coming and going.
“Dude.” Lindsay shook out her wet curls with her hands. “Did you get that vitamin water I asked for?”
“It’s in your minifridge, Your Highness.”
“Good grief.” She stared at him with exaggerated shock. “Did you just make a joke?”
He refrained from smiling. “No.”
“I think you did.”
Elijah looked back at his laptop screen.
He liked her. And after the multiple times she’d gone out of her way to save his sorry hide, he thought of her as an ally.
He didn’t have too many of those, which was why he’d been speechless when she’d said they were friends.
Somewhere over the days he’d been guarding her, he had stopped thinking of her as just a principal and started thinking of her as just Lindsay.
He was more relaxed around her than he’d been around anyone in a long time, because her friendship came without strings or expectations.
She was crazy and fun, and blunt to a fault.
She was just goofy enough to reveal that she hadn’t socialized much as a kid.
Like him, she probably had a very small group of people she trusted.
He wondered if she’d ever shared her gifts with anyone else.
Hell, why did she have them in the first place?
She was a great big question mark, and everyone wanted a piece of her.
And it was his job to make sure no one, but Adrian, got any.
She reappeared a moment later, swigging from a bottle of some neon-colored liquid that boasted its nutritional content. “Ya know… I feel like I got run over by a freight train while suffering a hangover.”
The Sentinels had worked her hard all morning, so hard that Elijah stepped in a couple of times. They hadn’t liked that, but they knew Adrian would back him up. As for Lindsay, she’d put up with the brutal pace without protest, taking the occasional dirty hit and brushing it off.
The Sentinels clearly didn’t understand the significance of Adrian’s display of sexual dominance the day before, or they would have been more careful with her.
Perhaps even Adrian didn’t understand the entirety of the driving need he’d felt to claim, mark, and possess her, a need aggravated by her attempt to get away.
Female lycans knew better than to flee. Rousing the beast by denying him his mate wasn’t the smartest idea.
Elijah had once assumed it was the demon in the lycan bloodline that made them so primal with their mates, but he’d been careful with Lindsay from the beginning, just in case. A smart move, if he said so himself.
Now it’d been proven that the angels were capable of the same possessive and wild carnality. Perhaps the angelic contribution to the lycan genetic makeup was the largest source of that near-violent covetousness.
Regardless, the lycans had gotten Adrian’s message loud and clear.
Unfortunately, Elijah feared that the awareness of Lindsay’s importance to the Sentinel leader only made her more vulnerable.
Those who whispered about rebellion had been looking and waiting for a chink in Adrian’s inviolate power, Elijah realized, and Lindsay was it.
Fuck. He scrubbed both hands over his face. How had he missed how fanatical the others had become? How long had Micah been filling the others’ heads with the pipe dream of freedom?
“I can hear the wheels in your head turning,” Lindsay said drily, tossing her empty bottle in the recycle bin.
He needed to be hunting down whoever had set him up, but he couldn’t leave Lindsay, and there was no one he could trust with her.
She went to the closet and pulled out her messenger bag, perfectly comfortable with walking around with an arsenal slung over her hip. “I need to go out.”
He pushed back from the desk. “For what?”
“Seriously tacky touristy Disney and California stuff. Hats, sweatshirts, shot glasses, et cetera.”
His lack of excitement must have shown on his face, because she laughed.
“I have to get my dad stuff he’ll roll his eyes over,” she explained. “But, lucky for you, we won’t be gone too long. I’ve got an interviewee coming in at three.”
Elijah looked at the clock and noted it was one. He had to hand it to her—she’d taken a beating all morning and kept on ticking. “Do you have plans tonight?”
“I need to get my car from the Point, but otherwise you’re free to do whatever.”
He nodded. “Good. Thanks.”
Once she was settled in the hotel for the night, he could talk to Rachel by phone.
He had to get some idea of how pervasive Micah’s rebellion plans were.
Elijah knew he had to rip that weed out by the root as soon as possible—a damn near impossible task when he was away from the rest of the pack most of the time.
“Why don’t you have a girlfriend?” Lindsay asked him as they exited the elevator on the bottom floor. They usually took the stairs—all seventeen floors—but she was too wiped out to need the exercise today.
“Too complicated, too time-consuming, too much work.”
Lindsay stopped abruptly just outside the revolving doors leading to the awning-covered bell desk and valet area.
Bellmen were going through training in front of them, while gardeners put the finishing touches on the flower bed framing the crescent-shaped driveway.
Life as mortals knew it was carrying on as usual, but the sudden stiffening of Lindsay’s posture and her intense focus were like a dog on point, signaling the proximity of prey nearby.
Abruptly, his senses went on alert. Elijah scanned the immediate area again, just as he’d automatically done before they’d exited the lobby.
The uncanny wind that always seemed to follow Lindsay blew past him, carrying the blood-rich scent of a vampire.
The beast inside him coiled in readiness, growling softly in anticipation of his order to attack.
The vamp responsible for their instinctive reactions appeared a moment later, strolling into the parking lot from the public sidewalk, blissfully unaware of the predators she’d roused.
Her looks hit Elijah like a sledgehammer.
She was tall and stacked, with curvy hips and full, firm tits.
Her hair hung to her waist, straight as a board and blood red.
She was dressed like a goddamned dominatrix, with spiky-heeled boots, tight black pants, and a leather vest dipping in a low V that displayed the deep valley of her cleavage.
Elijah was blindsided by the insane urge to bend her over the hood of the Mercedes she was walking past, wrap her hair around his forearm, and drill her lush body until he came with a roar.
He hated vampires, especially the females, who were more vicious than the males. Yet his cock was swelling with feral lust the longer he watched her.
She jerked violently, jolting him back to reality. She spun wildly, as if felled by a blow, then rounded back with fangs bared.
It wasn’t until he saw the glint of sunlight on something metallic embedded in her shoulder that he realized what had happened.
“Shit,” he muttered, barely catching Lindsay by the shoulder as she darted forward.
“Let me go, El,” she snapped, yanking to be free of his unyielding grip.
“What the fuck are you doing?” he barked. “It’s goddamned daylight. That’s one of the Fallen.”
Lindsay sliced across his forearm with her blade, eliciting a roar of pain and garnering her release.
She was halfway to the vampire when she answered him. “That bitch killed my mother.”