He’d been intimate with every inch of her flesh. The only imperfection on it was the reddish stain on her palm that proved she could heal.
Wasn’t it?
Uncertainty screamed through him. Instantly, Zeke awoke. He was slumped over the desk in the prisoners’ room. The two men were still in their chairs, their heads hanging down with sleep.
“You okay?” Jacob asked from the doorway.
“Just a few minutes.”
“How many?”
“Only an hour and a half.”
Zeke stood so quickly, his chair fell over and smacked into the floor. The prisoners jerked awake at the noise. “How could you have let me sleep that long?” he snapped. “Why did you let me sleep at all?”
“You’re exhausted. We thought…” Rather than finish, Jacob looked at Paul.
“It wasn’t all that long,” the man said.
It was time he no longer had. Carreon wasn’t about to back down at the end of the twelve hours. Neither would Isabel. Zeke had to get Liz, her father and Jacob away from here before he no longer had the chance.
“Come with me,” Zeke said to his brother, then hurried down the hall.
“Hey,” Jacob said, catching up. “Where are you going?”
Zeke ran to his room. He opened the door so hurriedly it crashed against the limestone, causing the walls to glow, then flicker like a nightclub’s strobe light. The bed was empty.
His skin crawled. “Liz!”
She wasn’t in the bath. Zeke ran back into the bedroom. “Where is she?”
“I don’t know,” Jacob said, “but she can’t have gone far. One of our men is guarding the stronghold’s entrance.”
“That didn’t stop her from leaving the last time.” Zeke bolted from the room.
Jacob followed at a run. “Only because Carreon’s men had already gotten inside and shot Samuel.” He paused to gulp air. “She’s still here.”
“Where, dammit?”
“Her father’s room?”
He checked. Dr. Munez lay on his side, asleep. Zeke closed the door as quietly as he could, deciding that they’d come back for him later. Given his age, Munez’s pace would only slow them down now. “She must be in the dining room.”
At this hour, it was empty, the area dark. Shafts of light poured from the walls in the kitchen area, creating shadows on the long tables, the numerous chairs. Brief noises interrupted the quiet. The sounds of metal cookware tapping against burners. Cabinets being opened, then closed.
Several women looked over as Zeke and Jacob hurried inside, Isabel among them.
Zeke kept himself from shuddering at the sight of her. She didn’t look any different than she always did— always had through the centuries. However, he knew what she was.
“What’s wrong?” she asked.
He lied quickly, “Nothing. Jacob and I are just checking to make certain everything’s all right.”
She stepped toward them. It took all of Zeke’s will not to flinch or move back, which would only alarm Jacob and cause him to ask too many inconvenient questions.
“Why wouldn’t everything be all right?” Isabel asked.
One of the other women huffed. She was in her early fifties, her husband, son and grandchildren living in this stronghold. “He let Kele and Carreon’s brother leave. No telling who Kele will bring back with her this time.”
“Pedro,” Jacob said, his tone as hard as hers. “A kid who needs our help.”
“You should worry about your own,” the woman shot back.
“Kele can’t get inside unless we allow it,” Zeke cut in, his attention on Isabel, not the other woman. “What happened before won’t happen again.”
“It’s getting late,” Isabel said. “You know that, don’t you, Zeke?”
He backed up, then hurried from the room.
Jacob was at his side in an instant. “What’s with Isabel? What did she mean about it being late?”
“I don’t know.”
“What did you two talk about before?”
“Could Liz be in your room?”
Jacob lifted his shoulders. “Maybe.”
She wasn’t. Zeke’s belly twisted.
“This doesn’t make sense,” Jacob said, “where in the fuck did she—hey, where are you going?”
Zeke spoke over his shoulder as he raced down the hall. “Meeting room.” It was the only place left that made sense.
He found her in front of the large computer screen, focused on the image of Carreon’s lieutenant strangling the stripper.
Zeke pulled Liz into his arms and held her tightly. He swallowed at how she shivered. “We’ll fix this,” he promised, even though he couldn’t. Not from here. Not at this time. The fucking prisoners weren’t simply refusing to speak, they really didn’t know where Carreon was.
Liz gripped Zeke’s tee in her hands and shuddered. “Carreon’s probably already sent some of his men to the stronghold so someone will be there when I—”
“You’re not going back.”
“We don’t have much time left.”
Zeke tightened his embrace, not wanting to hear the defeat in her words. He had to protect her. They had to have a future no matter what Carreon or Isabel wanted. He was this clan’s fucking leader. There had to be a way to fix this.
How? With what?
Liz moved against him as though she ached to stay, but couldn’t.
“I won’t let you go,” Zeke whispered to her. “I’ll find a way to make this right. I’ll…” He didn’t continue, not knowing what else to say.
Jacob watched them for a moment, then went around the table to the computer Kele had been using. “Maybe the answer’s right in front of us and we didn’t see it.”
Zeke shook his head. “What do you mean?”
“Let’s look at what we have and go through it again. It couldn’t hurt.” He brought up the screen and frowned.
“What is it?” Zeke asked.
Jacob sank into the chair. His fingers flew over the keyboard, then stopped. He shook his head. “This isn’t right.”
Zeke stopped hugging Liz. With his arms still around her, he turned to Jacob. “What isn’t?”
“The most recent downloads were deleted. Why would she do that?”
Who? Isabel? “What are you talking about?”
“Kele. She erased the history, or thought she had.” Jacob stared at the screen as he continued, “Nothing’s ever really gone from a computer. I’m bringing it back up.”
“Why would she delete anything as important as this?” Liz asked.
Zeke hadn’t a clue. What purpose would it serve? It wasn’t as if she was going to try to win Jacob over again. That was over. Zeke had seen it in Kele’s expression, the depth of sorrow and shame in her eyes. She hadn’t been acting. He knew she—
His thoughts paused as remnants of his earlier vision returned. Again, he saw a woman’s legs. A fire. An