Until Mac growled.
Like an animal.
Gwen froze. Slowly, she turned—just her head, looking over her shoulder.
This man, she didn’t know. Wouldn’t have kissed. Wouldn’t have spoken to. Wouldn’t have ever gotten that close.
Not with that made-for-a-grin mouth twisted in a snarl and that dangerous stance and the sword flowing out from his hand like an extension of his arm and the shadows gathered darkly around him like close companions.
“Mac,” she said, trying not to let the uncertainty out.
The woman tugged Gwen’s arm, little whimpering sounds in her throat, and Gwen turned on her. “Stop it!” she snapped, her words as much of a command as she could make them—thinking about the high emotions of the park, of the gas station. That’s when Mac had been so staggered before. Then, and those times when the ugly, viscous wash of feeling had crept over her. “Stop it! You’ll make things worse!”
“Clever woman,” the man told her, both approving and unmoved.
The woman clutched at her, unable to comprehend, little sounds stuck in her throat where she might have been trying for words.
Mac’s inhuman growling had ceased; his breath came hard and fast through clenched jaws.
Gwen doubted it was an improvement. She cast a desperate glance at him. The sword shone even brighter, she thought, as impossible as it was to be there at all.
“Pretend,” she told the woman, not taking her eyes off Mac. “
But she didn’t look away from Mac. Not anymore. Not as she calmed the woman—breathing deeply, murmuring reassurance...feeling some of the uncontrollable hysteria ease. Seeing the reflection of it in Mac—the slow return of sanity to his expression.
“You,” the man said, now more annoyed than approving, “have been a mistake all along.” A pause, too meaningful to amount to anything good, and then he added, “Or did you think I was too stupid to have a gun?”
Gwen’s carefully even breathing stuttered to a stop, leaving her lungs instantly aching. The woman beside her exploded back into fear, from silence to a gasping cry, and Gwen—
Gwen just plain couldn’t blame her. In some part of her mind, Gwen was gasping right along with her. But she never took her eyes off Mac, not even as she tightened her hold on the woman, giving her a little shake—
Mac threw a hand in front of his face, staggering back at the emotional onslaught. The sword flared a frightening quicksilver glow, coloring everything around it with hot silver-blue light. He cried out—pain or denial, Gwen couldn’t tell—and his face twisted until he raised the sword, so full of intent that the sudden surety of imminent danger slammed into her.
The woman cowered, tearing away from Gwen to fling her hands out in a protective gesture, warding away the looming blows, her hand streaming blood and her knees grinding into the concrete.
He closed his eyes, a noise of agony in his throat, and wrenched around—staggering, going down, and flinging the sword away.
She wanted to go to him. To wrap him up from behind and make it okay. All of it.
But she knew better. It wasn’t okay. And that damned awareness of hers...the one that said she was a target...
Still shrieking as loudly as the woman behind her.
She snatched up the sword. Not sure what she was thinking, only that now she had a weapon and she still hadn’t seen any damned gun and
“We’re going,” she told the woman without turning around—and told Mac, too.
She hadn’t taken more than a step before the sword twitched in her hand, its unaccustomed weight startling her. She held it away from herself, eyes going wide.
She dropped it with a cry, as much repulsed as startled, watching with horror as it was, suddenly, nothing more than a pocketknife, a sullen and retreating glow.
“You really didn’t think it would be that easy?” The man stepped out from behind the screen, arrogant—and entirely correct—in his assumption that unlike Mac, she couldn’t see him in the darkness.
And Mac was down, wrapped in his own little world of shock and misery. The knife—but she’d only barely glanced away!—was gone.
Gwen glared up at the catwalk. “We,” she said, all but spitting the words one by one, “are leaving now.”
To her disbelief, the man nodded. “You may go,” he said. “That I would turn him in one day wasn’t to be expected. That he is so very close... It’s enough. Return to your hotel, if you will. I will be pleased to have a talk with that blade once he takes the road.”
“Not,” Gwen said. “Gonna. Happen.” Bold words. Full of complete crap, as she clutched her bleeding hand to her chest, cradling it. But only for an instant, as she turned her back on the man—oh, God, her skin crawled at that—and grabbed Mac’s shoulders, giving him a little shake. “Come on,” she said. “Come
It was good enough. They made progress. Gwen hesitated beside the woman and tapped her on the shoulder. “C’mon,” she said, plucking at the woman’s sleeve, raising her from her protective hunch. “Outta here.”
She barely heard the slice of sharp metal through air.
She didn’t recognize the deep hollow thunk that followed.
She didn’t understand why the woman suddenly stiffened, her eyes wide and her mouth dropping open.
Not until the man said coldly, “You presume. She was always mine.”
And the woman slumped again, a heavy throwing knife deeply embedded in her back and her eyes already gone vague.
Gwen turned on him, awkward and tangled as Mac lurched against her. “You—”
“Go,” he suggested, just as coldly. “While you still can. You’re interfering with my feast.”
Gwen didn’t quite remember making it to the door. Or how she’d managed Mac, who bore his own weight but didn’t seem to know what to do with it. Or how long, exactly, she stood blinking in the bright sunshine, trying to orient herself, once they were outside.
She found her injured hand wrapped around the pendant through the T-shirt, her mind gone to that habitual place of
She spat a noise of self-disgust. She wasn’t Daddy’s little girl any longer. She hadn’t been for a long time. She just hadn’t wanted to let it go.
Besides, who needed help? The van sat right where it had been left, and if memory served, the driver had simply dumped the keys in the cup holder. It was probably pretty damned safe to assume no one would steal from his employer.