choosing silky strips of blue lingerie before getting dressed.

“Let’s do this,” she said, though her heart gave a stuttering, skipping beat at seeing Parker.

She balled her hands into fists, shoving them into her pockets. Eamon had told her he believed it was the nature of her gift to want to see everything, to know everything, and she’d lost control of it. She would have stripped her brother’s mind if Eamon hadn’t used a spell to stop her as Parker embraced her, glad she’d been saved from the Harlequin Rapist.

Disapproval cemented the captain and Parker in place. Neither offered a smile or a hug. She hadn’t expected otherwise, yet that traitorous emotion of hope left her vulnerable.

An ache spread through her chest in a slow, treacherous wave. Cathal’s hand settled at the base of her spine, driving the pain behind a wall of resolve.

No regrets. There was nothing about the way she lived her life that she had to apologize for…and yet, in the same room with the man she still thought of as Dad, a part of her still craved love unconditioned on conforming to his expectations.

She let Cathal guide her to the couch, didn’t protest when he encircled her wrist, tugging her hand free of the pocket and clasping it as he sat.

Anxious to get this over with, she said, “I can guess what brings you here, Parker. What about you, Captain?”

There was censure in his expression. Hard intolerance in the presence of a man he’d convicted based solely on what his father and uncle were. Killers. No doubts there, though without her, the authorities had nothing.

“I wanted to make sure you are okay, even if the company you keep remains a concern.”

“I’m good.” She didn’t have the stomach to launch an accusation at him, that he’d had something to do with her being scooped up and confined in a small, windowless interrogation room. That he’d suggested it might break her so she’d become the prosecution’s golden witness in a case against the Dunnes.

She focused on Parker. “I won’t sign off on a lie. How do you want to spin this?” They could hardly include the terms psychic-bond or magic-infused tattoos in the official report.

“There’s enough evidence to get a death sentence anyway, so let’s keep your statement simple. Tell me everything that happened prior to your rescue.”

She did, adding her signature to the end of Parker’s written account. “Now for the tricky part.”

Cathal’s hand tightened on hers, an apology sliding into her through the contact or through the connection created by the ink on his forearms, she didn’t know which. “Not necessarily. For purposes of the report, I’ll sign a statement saying I had a tracker on you.”

A truth, though a misleading one. With the inked eye touched to his palm she saw a memory and knew the tracker was actually on the Harley.

Cathal’s determination poured into her like molten steel. It was all the warning she got before he said, “Given my father and uncle, you’ll understand why calling the police wasn’t a first choice when I discovered the woman I’m going to marry had been abducted.”

Silence exploded through the room like a bomb, sending shockwaves through her as well. She turned toward Eamon to gauge his reaction but his expression was the calm of a glassy sea.

Parker was the first to speak, a furious, “No fucking way, Etain.” But she didn’t refute Cathal’s statement. Didn’t argue he was nothing like his father and uncle.

Cathal’s hand left hers to take up the pen she’d placed on the coffee table after signing her statement. He made quick work of writing his own and placing his signature on it.

“I’d like to speak with you, Etain,” the captain said. “Alone.”

Eamon took Etain’s hand in his. “That won’t be possible this evening. I believe we’ve concluded the necessary police business. Liam will show you out.”

With the mention of Liam’s name, Eamon glanced toward the doorway, drawing Etain’s attention there as well, to see eyes dancing with suppressed laughter, and more.

Shhhadow walker. Assassin. The words came hissed in the same sibilant voice she’d heard in her nightmare, as if her gift now had a voice and didn’t always require the press of her palms to skin. The label given to Liam tightened her chest as shards of ice slid into her bloodstream with the question, Why would Eamon need a killer in his employ?

“Do you intend to let this man dictate what you can and can’t do, Etain?” the captain asked, demand in his voice, but concern too, worry for her future. And at the moment she was a little concerned about it too.

Dragging her gaze from Liam she said, “No,” and was cut off from elaborating by the ring of the captain’s cellphone.

He removed it from his pocket, checking the incoming number before answering it. The caller did most of the talking. When the captain spoke again he said, “I’m with her now. Let me get back to you.”

Lowering the phone he said, “That was Oakland PD, there was an armed invasion at a biker bar. Twenty- seven dead, one survivor. He’s not expected to either regain consciousness or live. They’ve requested your help.”

“No,” Eamon answered. “I won’t allow you to put her in danger again.”

Imagined coils tightened around her chest, suffocating her. Cathal reclaimed her hand, his shock nearly overriding the fear drenching her, numbing her lips as she felt the phantom pull of a gun’s trigger. Not a bad dream, but something else. “When did it happen?”

“A little over an hour ago.”

Icy cold invaded her limbs, coming with the sense that she’d lived it real-time, not as some premonition of impending events. “Was it the bar where the Curs hang out?”

A cop face met her question. Answer enough. “Why do you ask?”

She squeezed Cathal’s hand in an unnecessary message not to mention the dream, now nightmare reality. “I was there a few days ago, doing what Parker asked me to do.”

“Then you’ll know some of the victims.” He stood, Parker doing so as well. “I’ll escort you to the hospital unless you intend to let Eamon dictate what you will or won’t do.”

“I’ll go.”

“You won’t,” Eamon said. “Think, Etain, just how dangerous touching the dying might be to you.”

But she wasn’t worried about herself. Not as she flashed back to the scene of the slaughter and felt the phantom burn at her wrists, a tight circle of it that climbed upward into the vines on her arms. Searing heat coming with an awareness that someone nearby wore her ink—coming with the sickening dread that they all wore it, her, the killer, and Vontae—and worse, because of it, the killer she’d been in the dream had sensed Vontae.

Guilt sank gut-twisting roots inside her. Magic both attracts and repels, Eamon had told her once, and this seemed horrifying proof of it. “It doesn’t matter. I have to do this.”

Preempting further argument, she told the captain, “I’ll touch the remaining survivor. I’ll get the memories and draw them. I swear it.” The words brought with them her mother’s warning. Never make an oath you aren’t willing to pay dearly for if you break it.

“Let’s go,” the captain said.

Eamon’s hand settled around her upper arm in an unwavering restraint. “Etain will follow shortly. I will ensure she keeps her pledge but there are matters we need to discuss first. What hospital?”

“Highland General.”

The captain’s expression when he met her eyes conveyed the message he wasn’t leaving until he heard what she wanted. It would have warmed her heart except this had everything to do with solving a crime, and had the additional benefit of getting her out of both Eamon’s and Cathal’s company.

He never contacted her just to find out how she was doing. It was always because he needed her to touch a victim. And it wasn’t any different with Parker.

Cathal ended the tense moment, siding with Eamon. “A few minutes won’t matter, Etain.” His hand tightened on hers and she could feel his fear for her. “It might be better if you don’t walk into the hospital with your father and brother. Not after all the hype about your involvement with the Harlequin Rapist taskforce.”

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