Apprehension iced Mauvais’s blood. He had a feeling neither Lucien De Noir nor his son would enjoy that meeting very much. But he reminded himself that he owed nothing to either De Noir or—if his suspicion proved correct—Dante. Their fates were their own. Still. . . .
“As I said,” Mauvais murmured. “I know nothing about a son, but I can tell you where to find De Noir.”
“Lucien De Noir,” the fallen angel mused, shaking his head. “Where
“And
“Loki,” the immortal replied. “Call me Loki.”
Mauvais drained his brandy in one swallow.
14
FUCK MURPHY AND HIS STUPID GODDAMNED LAW
NEW ORLEANS
CLUB HELL
VON STOOD OFF TO one side of the club’s kicked-in door, Silver’s coiled presence right behind him, and listened to the chaotic and brutal sounds issuing from the darkened and grafittied entrance hall—shouts, the fleshy thud of fists against flesh, pained grunts, the spatter of blood hitting the floor—a free-for-all battle.
“The fuck?” Silver muttered under his breath. “What
Von heartily agreed. The fuck, indeed. It sounded as though a posse of idiots—
But he was pretty damned sure that something else very different was going on.
Someone was fighting for his or her life.
Von slipped a hand inside his leather jacket for one of his holstered Brownings—a gesture as natural and automatic as breathing—and felt a cold shock when his fingers brushed against only the jacket’s soft lining.
No guns. No holster.
Hell, it wasn’t even his jacket, but a brown bomber borrowed from Jack—one smelling of stale beer and spearmint gum and thankfully missing any pithy declarations or tiny gators.
Standing across from him on the other side of the boot-battered door, her Glock held in both hands, Merri Goodnight arched one eyebrow, her expression asking:
With a let’s-keep-her-guessing wink, Von pulled his hand free of the jacket. Maybe his Brownings were inside, upstairs in his sprinkler-drenched room along with his double shoulder holster, leather jacket, and non- gator-infested clothing, but he sure as hell wasn’t weaponless. Neither was Silver.
But he couldn’t say the same for Thibodaux, despite the gun in the man’s hand. Merri’s partner towered behind her, his attention focused on the darkness beyond the battered doors, his Colt held down at his side in a one-handed grip.
A nightkind rumble was no place for a mortal. No matter how good a shot.
Von suddenly regretted his decision to bring the former SB agents along in the hope that their investigative skills might turn up a clue as to who had snatched Dante. And where he might’ve been taken.
“On three?” Merri whispered.
Von nodded, then glanced over his shoulder at Silver. Clothed in more of Jack’s generous donations—a black Voodoo Fest tee, jeans, and classic Converse high-tops, all suspiciously gator-free—his purple hair smudged nearly black in the moonlight, Silver met his regard with gleaming eyes.
<
Silver flashed fangs for reply.
“One,” Von said, low.
“Two,” Merri picked up.
“Three,” from Silver.
Von
Even as he sped into the club, Von heard only a few low, pained moans—the hard-knuckled combat had ended. As he came to an abrupt halt in the center of the soot-streaked dance floor, he also realized that only one vampire remained standing.
One he recognized. Murphy and his stupid law had struck again.
Holly Mikova pushed silky tendrils of hair the color of honey butter back from her face. Red light from the buzzing neon BURN sign jittered along the crescent moon tattoo beneath her right eye.
“Ah, there you are, McGuinn,” she said, a faint Russian accent flavoring her words. She wore a curve- hugging rose-red lace mini over black tights and wedge-heeled black boots, looking for all the world like a pop diva during a video shoot break instead of what she was—deadly. “Just the man I was looking for.”
“Well, you found me, darlin’,” Von drawled, despite the tight knot forming in his belly.
Holly’s return to New Orleans so soon after her last visit could only mean bad news given the summons she’d delivered less than a week ago—and a lifetime of shit had passed since then—and the promise he’d made in response.
A promise made to buy time. But a promise he’d intended to keep—
And in Holly’s deep blue eyes, Von read the truth.
Von nodded at the half dozen nightkind sprawled or crumpled on the floor, like plucked and discarded petals from an unwanted rose. A couple had even tucked themselves into fetal balls of pain. One unlucky bastard who happened to be more mobile than his buddies was busy trying to crawl away. He dragged himself across the floor, blood glistening in his wake like a snail’s moist trail.
Von shook his head. “Still making friends, I see. Didn’t your mama ever teach you to play nice?”
“
Von chuckled. “Woman after my own heart. Sure you ain’t nomad?”
“Absolutely positive. Good thing I stopped by to take out the trash for you, yes?”
“Well, that remains to be seen, darlin’.”
Frowning, Holly stepped forward, bent, then twisted the unlucky bastard’s head to the left. His neck broke with a sharp snap. He went limp, down for the count until his body healed.