huh?”
“You’ve been crying,” the woman said. “And there’s blood on your face.”
Gwen’s expression shot straight to exasperation. “I should have checked in the rearview mirror. Dammit.”
Oddly enough, this little piece of honesty seemed to relax the woman. Gwen barged ahead while she thought she had a chance. “Look, you’ve seen the news, right? All the stupid mean stuff going on out there right now?”
Anger crossed her face. “My son’s arm is broken.”
To judge by the warning now easing in through Demardel, it wasn’t the only trouble this woman would see. “Okay, the thing is, my friend and I—you know, the one who was here with me yesterday?” Gwen waited for the slight nod of recognition as the woman peered out through sun-and dust-glazed glass and then through the windshield, where Mac sat with his eyes closed and his head tipped back. “We’ve run into some of it, too. And we think someone might be, you know, deliberately pushing it, and we’re trying to figure that out.” That was one way to look at it. “And we’ve had a really bad day, and my friend needs...well, he needs rest. And we can’t go back to the hotel right now, so I’m just looking for a park or something—a quiet place with shade. I thought maybe you might know—” She stopped talking, seeing the look on the woman’s face and unable to read it. Either she was about to—
Gwen spun around to the small dining area, found the man immediately—beefy, lots of neck, bullet- headed...black T-shirt in size enormous, long and baggy black shorts. And glaring with dark-eyed intensity at the oblivious tech-infested teen sitting across from him with some sort of unpleasantly beeping game gadget. Not just glaring, but clutching a fork in his meaty hand like a weapon and halfway out of his seat.
“Hey!” she snapped, not even thinking about it. “My brother the cop is meeting me here for lunch, so if you want to start something, do it somewhere else!”
Startled, he glanced at her—and then gave her the finger. His girlfriend—sturdy, dressed in tight clothes that would have been snug on Gwen’s smaller frame—stood up and turned around. “Bitch,” she said. “Did I hear you talking to my boyfriend?”
“Dammit,” Gwen muttered, and the woman behind the counter met her glance with alarmed understanding. Right here, right now. Someone was deliberately pushing it, all right. The feel of it washed through her, as dull as it had ever been for her, and yet somehow not touching her.
She faced the girlfriend squarely. She might have lifted her chin, but it wasn’t deliberate—or, probably, smart. “Brother,” she said evenly. “Cop.”
The girlfriend looked around the diner. “Don’t see no brother.”
By now the teen had lifted his head from the game, realized what he’d gotten in the middle of, and froze. The beefy guy slapped the game from his hand to clatter across the tile floor, and that’s when Gwen realized her mistake.
Too late.
These two had already been brimming with anger and resentment. Like the church group in the park, the young tough at the gas station...these two had been cruising for a target, and the hatred had found them willing hosts.
“Not in this diner!” the woman behind the counter ordered them, but her voice had gone thin behind its determination. “I have an alarm button back here and if you don’t leave, I’ll hit it!”
“Plenty of time before the cops get here,” the girlfriend said, and her fleshy features took a briefly inhuman cast—pure meanness incarnate.
With quiet and economical motion, the waitress placed a baseball bat on the counter. It sat there for only a single meaningful moment before Gwen grabbed it up—finding it short, stout and weighted at the end.
The girl brought out a switchblade. The guy looked plenty comfortable with his fork and his muscles.
And that gut instinct of hers cried
“Dammit,” Gwen said again. “I didn’t know they even made switchblades that big.”
The couple marinated in the waves of hatred even as they stayed outside of her—a surge of everything cruel and mean and frightening, and a thing that had twice taken Mac down already. She didn’t dare glance for the Jeep as she retreated a step. Didn’t dare hope the woman had meant it about that alarm button. And she wondered if she turned tail and ran, just how far she’d get.
Because she didn’t think this was coincidence. She thought that man—
Or just plain take them down.
“Brother!” she said, and heard her own desperation. “Cop!”
But they came for her anyway, and she took a better grip on the bat—thinking of the absurdities that came with batting advice.
Adding one of her own:
She’d go for the guy, not the switchblade. He could kill her with or without the knife. Yep, that was the plan, and because he was beefy and top-heavy, she’d go for the knee—because he didn’t have to be out, he only had to be on the floor and—
They stopped, pure surprise on twin expressions.
Gwen felt it, then—the odd trill of acknowledgment from Demardel, the sensation of space in use behind. “That had better be you,” she said, and wasn’t at all surprised when her voice came out shaky.
“He’s no cop.” The girlfriend managed to make that sound mean, too.
“I’m not her brother, either.”
But oh, he sounded dangerous—that confidence coupled with the certainty of what he could and would do.
Narrow diner, bottleneck at the counter—the troublemakers were trapped, though they didn’t seem to know it.
Mac knew it. Gwen saw it on his face—worn in comparison to the night she’d met him, but honed by it. Lean and tight and fit, muscled in a way that showed through the fit of his shirt and the power of his stance. The healing abrasions on his arms, the lingering bruises on his face—they were the injuries of a man who had been where these two now only thought about going.
But in control. Who
For now.
And if he still needed rest, if he needed recovery—he damned well didn’t show it.
“Put your toys away,” he told them. “Leave this place while you can. Don’t forget to leave a tip.”
The man pointed at Mac’s empty hands with a jutting chin. “You got nothing.”
“He doesn’t need to have anything!” the waitress said, her voice both angry and shaking. “I want you to leave! For years you’ve gotten good food here, and now you think you can do this? You are no longer welcome!”
Gwen sucked in a breath with a new onslaught of warning, a jangle of nerves and anger swirling together with the flow of imposed feeling. Her ears warned her; her eyes warned her. Cocky male voices, careless steps— and there they were in the doorway, crowding it—taking the space, and taking in the situation. The rest of the local bullies had arrived—and just that fast, had taken sides.
The girlfriend smiled at Gwen, a smile reeking of nastiness and satisfaction that made words unnecessary.
Mac moved. He snagged Gwen by the waist and hoisted her up to the counter, shoving aside a napkin holder and industrial sugar shaker. She released the bat to him and swung over to the other side of the counter, where there was a red alarm button attached to...
Nothing.