Authors: Virginia Kantra
Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Suspense, #General
outpace his thoughts. Could not escape Regina’s image, the smooth skin
of her arms and chest, the gold cross glinting below her collarbone, her
scowl. “I can’t give Nick a mother who’s around all the time. The least I
can do is spare him some guy who won’t stick.”
Dylan blew out a noisy gust of air. He would not stick. His kind
never did. If he cared for her . . . His thoughts tangled like seaweed. He
did not care for anyone. It was only fair for him to leave her now,
before— how had she put it?— she became attached to him.
Only, of course, he could not go.
He rode the rolling waves toward the deserted shore. Conn had
charged him to discover what the demons wanted on World’s End. For
the past two weeks, Dylan had eavesdropped, observed, and tramped all
over the island, hoping to find some trace of demonkind, some clue to
their purpose.
To the immortal seaborn, the time was nothing. But Dylan was dying
by minutes, trapped in his human body, trapped by his human family,
trapped on this fucking island, forced to watch Regina joke and work
behind the counter, her long slim legs, her strong firm arms, always in
motion, always just beyond his reach.
Frustration drove him onto the rocks. He hauled himself onto the
stony beach as the surf exploded around him. The water drained away,
and Dylan stood naked in the foam, his webbed toes gripping the sand,
his sealskin swirling around his ankles.
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He stooped to drag his pelt from the sea; froze.
Something was wrong. He could sense it. Smell it. He straightened
slowly.
The air was thick and still. Under the August sun, the island gave off
heat like a beast breathing. Dylan tested and tasted the wind, feeling the
tickle of ash in the back of his throat.
His hackles rose. Demon.
In the air.
On the island.
Among humans.
Dylan’s lips pulled back from his teeth. Retrieving his clothes from
their hiding place, he began to dress.
Finally, he could hunt.
* * *
Regina lay cold and curled on her side, clinging to sleep like a
blanket. Pain in her head, in her cramped legs and shoulders. Burning in
her throat. Her mouth was dry, her tongue thick and swollen. She tried to
swallow, and the fire in her throat woke her.
Oh my God, oh my God . . .
And then, Nicky.
Instinct surged, quicker than memory. Her muscles tensed. She had
to run. To fight. To protect Nicky.
The thought jolted her eyelids open.
Dark. She was somewhere dark and gritty, damp and cold. She
began to shake. Basement? No. There was an outside feel to the air, an
outside smell, earth and rock and water. She could hear it, water lapping.
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Where was she? Where was Jericho? Why was it so dark? She
blinked, straining her eyes against the blackness. Even on a cloudy night,
she should see a hint of moon, the reflection of the water.
She struggled to sit, pushing herself upright with her palms against
the cold, flat surface, taking cautious inventory. She wasn’t tied up. That
was good. She had all her clothes on. Even better. Despite various scrapes
and bruises, she didn’t think she had been raped. Yet.
She swallowed convulsively. Agony.
Her cracked lips parted without sound. Her heart pounded.
Must not cry out. Must not scream. Jericho might be nearby.
Sleeping? What if he was only waiting for her to wake up before he came
back to do—
Her mind stumbled, teetering on the edge of panic. He could do
whatever he wanted to her. Unless she found a way to stop him. To
escape.
A tiny sound escaped her bruised throat. Her scrapes burned, bloody
in the dark. She bit her lip hard, digging her nails into the gritty floor,
curling her hands into fists, shuddering against the cold.
Think of Nick. Don’t panic. Think.
She was hurt in the dark. She was alone. For now.
So. She better make the most of the time she had.
She crawled shakily to her knees.
* * *
As Caleb drove inland, the oversized cottages of the summer people
gradually gave way to the older, smaller houses of year-round residents.
Detective Evelyn Hall, State Criminal Investigation Division, rode
shotgun beside him. Hall, square and weathered as a barn, had come with
the evidence team. Caleb’s surprise at seeing her step off the ferry must
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have shown, because she’d said, “Seems women on your island can’t
catch a break.”
Caleb had smiled grimly, acknowledging the dig. Only months after
he accepted the position of police chief on World’s End, Maggie had
been attacked and the selkie Gwyneth’s naked, dead body had been
discovered on the beach. Now Regina was missing.
Evelyn Hall had suspected Caleb in the earlier attacks. But she was
the only female officer available to him, and if— when— they found
Regina Barone, Caleb wanted a woman with him.
Hall nodded out the Jeep window at a soaring A-frame perched
above a rock face. “Nice little place.”
Her tone was still dry, but Caleb recognized and responded to the
olive branch. “The old quarry’s a swimming hole now— or a skating
pond, in winter. Lot of vacation homes around here.”
“You said we were headed to a homeless camp.”
Caleb nodded. “On the other side. Used to be a waste dump for the
mining company.”
They passed more homes, the McMansions ceding ground to
dilapidated cabins, the terraced landscaping replaced by abandoned
appliances and rusting pickups. Not all the island had benefited from high
lobster prices and rising property taxes. Here, Caleb knew, were
households that had fallen off the beaten track and out of the mainstream,
adults inclined to drink or drugs, children subsisting on deer meat and
short lobster.
Which brought them to the homeless encampment, strewn like
garbage between the boulders. Waste disposal was a problem on the
islands. Anything transported on had to be hauled off or burned. As a
result, there were plenty of materials lying around for reuse. Caleb
counted several structures built of plywood, cardboard, and scrap metal,
and one honest-to-God tent pitched under the pines, its faded blue nylon
spotted with mildew.
The men around the fire— five, six, seven, not bad odds— were as
ragged and seedy as their shelters.
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Caleb got out first. Evelyn Hall waited by the Jeep, the door open
and the shotgun within easy reach.
A fat, muscled man sporting a red bandana and a graying ponytail
stood as Caleb approached.
Caleb greeted him. “Bull.”
“Chief. You checking up on Lonnie?”
Lonnie, the clinic patient, who claimed he was possessed by the
devil.
“How’s he doing?” Caleb asked.
Bull shrugged. “See for yourself.”
Caleb found Lonnie in the ring around the fire, his elbows on his
knees, his eyes on the smoke. He didn’t look up. In the good news
department, he didn’t levitate off his boulder and start spitting pea soup
either.
“Make sure he takes his meds,” Caleb said.
“I’m not his fucking nurse,” Bull said.
“Me either,” Caleb said evenly. “I want to speak with Jericho.”
“He’s sick.”
Caleb’s gaze traveled over the encampment. “Mind if I look
around?”
Bull crossed his thick arms over his massive chest. “Got a search
warrant?”
“Got a camping permit?” Caleb asked evenly.
“Fuck,” Bull said.
“I’ll take that as permission to search,” Caleb said.
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He regarded the dark opening of the nearest shelter, sprouting from
the shadow of the trees like a giant fungus, and his mind flashed back to
hot white streets and sharp black shadows, blank doorways and blind
windows,snipers on rooftops. His belly tightened. He was glad to have
Hall and her shotgun at his back.
He ducked inside the structure, a finger of sweat tracing down his
spine.
A stench compounded of beer and urine, sweat and mold, hit him.
No Jericho. Nobody at all. No body. Caleb didn’t know whether to be
sorry or glad.
He wiped his face. And heard a rustle in the leaves outside, a crackle
in the stillness. Squirrel? Deer? His instincts jumped on high alert. His
hand as he reached for his gun trembled. Shit.
Light slanted beneath the rear wall where plywood rested on an
exposed root. Caleb eyed the crack. Barely room for someone there to
crawl out the back while he came in the front. Not two someones, not a
man dragging a woman. (Bound, unconscious, dead.) But that rustle . . .
He backed out of the structure— there wasn’t room to turn around—and signaled to Hall to hold her position. Would she understand? She
nodded without speaking and leveled the shotgun to her shoulder.
“Hey,” Bull protested.
“Shut up,” she said.
Caleb eased around the side of the shelter, his gaze sweeping the
woods and slope behind. Tough going if he had to give chase. Leaves
crunched. A bush rattled. He raised his weapon.
And came face to face with his brother, Dylan.
Caleb exhaled. “What the fuck are you doing here?”
Dylan’s black gaze lifted from the muzzle of the gun to Caleb’s face.
“Your job.”
Caleb’s job was protecting the island. He didn’t have time for this
shit. “Where is she?”
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“Who?”
“Regina Barone. Have you seen her?”
There was an instant’s utter stillness. Some expression flickered on
Dylan’s face and was gone too quickly to be identified. “Two days ago,”
he said coolly. As if it didn’t matter. As if she didn’t matter. “Why?”
“She’s gone.”
Dylan was rigid. “Where?”
“I wish to hell I knew,” Caleb said, more honestly than he intended.
Dylan’s face was white, his mouth a thin, grim line. “Hell has more
to do with this than either of us could wish.”
Caleb frowned. “What are you talking about?”
“I must find her,” Dylan said.
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Eight
“YOU’RE NOT GOING ANYWHERE,” CALEB SAID.
Dylan raised his eyebrows, fighting the pressure in his chest.
“Obviously not. Since I came back.”
He could hardly breathe. The urgency that had driven him from the
sea surged back. Only now the stink of something wrong, the stench of
evil, was sharper. Stronger.
Regina was gone.
He made himself like stone, like flint, like the prince’s tower at Caer
Subai. Cold and immovable. Emotion would not bring her back.
“What are you doing here?” Caleb asked bluntly.
Dylan relaxed his fists; forced himself to speak coolly. “I followed
the demon spoor here. If they have her, I will find her.”
If they held her . . . He did not like to imagine what the demons
could do to her smooth skin, her strong spirit.
“What would demons want with a twenty-nine-year-old cook?”
Caleb asked skeptically.
Dylan shook his head, frustrated. “I don’t know. They should not
have taken her in any case. She is warded.”
“Warded?”
“She wears the triskelion on her wrist— the wardens’ mark. It
should have protected her.”
“From demons maybe,” Caleb said. “A tattoo won’t stop a human
kidnapper. She could have been grabbed by this Jones character.”
“Have you found him? Questioned him?”
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“Not yet.”
“Then I will.”
“Forget it,” Caleb said. “This is a police investigation. You can’t
interfere.”
Dylan suppressed the snarl in his throat; stared down his nose
instead. “And if he is possessed, you can’t help. You need me, little
brother.”
Caleb didn’t like that. Dylan could tell. Too bad. “Right,” Caleb said
tersely at last. “Let’s go.”
Dylan followed him around the corner of the ratty shelter. Stopped.
The half-dozen humans collected around the fire did not concern him.
However, the large woman with the gun standing beside Caleb’s
Cherokee could be a problem.
She swung the long barrel toward him. “Who’s that?” “Don’t say
anything,” Caleb said to Dylan.
Fine with him. He had had enough of humans and talking in the past
two weeks. But there was that gun . . .
“Detective Hall,” Caleb said. “My brother, Dylan.”
Dylan met her gaze and smiled at her slowly, deliberately, watching
in satisfaction as the barrel of the shotgun wavered and dipped. Not quite
enough.
“What’s he doing here?” she asked.
“Assisting in the investigation,” Caleb said.