His mouth quirked up in one corner, but there was a hint of barely disguised anger this time. “Oh, I don’t know. . . . I think we’ve managed to exhibit an admirable amount of self-control, especially where a few potential specimens are concerned.”
“Self-control?” I hissed, getting up in his grill. “Seducing me to try to get a peek at my ability was your definition of self-control?”
He shrugged. “Hey, we could’ve just thrown you into a lab, hooked you up to a bunch of machines, done a little slice-and-dice number on your brain. But instead we opted for a more entertaining approach.”
“You arrogant, self-righteous—” I lunged forward, my uninjured hand balled into a fist, ready to knock that smug expression from his face.
Nate snatched me up around the waist and swung me away before I could get in a good swing, and plopped me back down on my feet at a safe distance from Ian. “He’s not worth the paperwork, Trish.”
Ian held up his hand in truce. “I didn’t come here to rehash what happened between us, Muffet. I just want the vampires.”
“You can shove them up your ass,” I hissed. “You’re not getting them.”
“I’m afraid you don’t have a choice,” Ian said with an indifferent shrug. “They’re part of an open investigation.”
“What investigation?” Nate asked, the shadows around his face growing darker.
Ian glanced at Nate, noticeably uncomfortable with the Reaper questioning him directly. “Seems there’s a vigilante going around knocking off vamps. Shows up out of nowhere, takes them out, then disappears before we can arrive at the scene. We’ve nicknamed him the Spider.” Here Ian turned his attention back to me, pegging me with a pointed look, which I pretended to ignore. “You know a thing or two about spiders, don’t you, Trish? Care to tell me what you know about our guy?”
My blood went cold, sending a chill through me, but I just lifted my chin a notch. “Piss off, Ian. I’m not telling you jack shit. If it’s your investigation, get approval from Al, and then you can have the bodies. Until then, you can go fu—”
“Oh, would you look at that!” Ian interrupted, producing a folded document from his pocket. “What is this?” He made a show of looking it over. “Could it be an acquisition form signed by the Director of the FMA?”
Nate snatched it from Ian’s hand and opened it up so I could read it with him. “It looks legit,” he muttered. “We’re going to have to hand them over.”
I shook my head. “I’m calling Al.” I stomped a few paces away and dialed Al’s emergency number. He picked up on the second ring. Before he could even speak, I barked, “What the hell are you thinking?”
“Hello to you, too,” he drawled.
“I’m not handing them over,” I said, speaking low into the phone. “I need to get a look at these vampires, Al. There’s something odd about them.”
“Apparently, you’re not the only one who has noticed that fact,” he pointed out. “I’m sorry, Trish. There’s nothing I could do this time. They’ve got us by the balls right now. If they expose us—”
“Who’d believe them?” I practically shrieked. I took a deep breath and let it out slowly, then said in a calmer tone, “We’re fictional characters made real, Al. Let them tell whoever they want—no one would believe them.”
“People believe anything if they hear it often enough,” Al replied. “And the Agency has the power to make it really bad for us if we don’t cooperate, Trish. You still have the victim. Give them the other bodies.”
I huffed, not believing that the man I’d looked up to and admired for his fearless self-sacrifice and unwavering principles was giving in so easily. “Al—”
“That’s an order, Trish.”
I hung up without another word and pocketed my phone, then paced a few furious steps one direction and then another before getting it together. I strode over to Alex and said through clenched teeth, “Tell the team to pack it in.”
His brows shot up. “What?”
“Just do it,” I snapped. “Right now. Tell everyone to drop what they’re doing and get in the vans.”
He frowned at me in confusion, but said, “You got it.”
I marched back over to where Nate and Ian still waited. “Go ahead and take off, Nate,” I told him. “Go be with Tess.”
Then I cast an acerbic glance toward Ian, biting back the furious words racing through my head as I brushed by him, knocking into his shoulder as I passed.
“So does this mean we’re squared away?” Ian called after me.
I merely lifted my good hand and offered him a very pointed reply.
Chapter Four
I flipped on the light in the foyer of my apartment and tossed my keys onto the credenza as I locked and bolted the door behind me. The familiar sounds of homecoming were answered by the nearly silent padding of paws. Within seconds, I felt the comforting bump of a feline head rubbing against my calf and heard the low buzzing purr of greeting.
I bent and picked up the armful of gray fluff and nuzzled against her for a moment. “Hi, baby,” I whispered. “Did you miss me?”
Sasha nuzzled under my chin, assuring me she had. I grinned and let her hop to the floor to lead me into the kitchen for her dinner. Or was it breakfast? The poor thing’s schedule was as screwed up as mine these days. I filled her bowl, then set out some fresh water and gave her a good scratch behind the ears before leaving her to her meal. I was just exiting the kitchen when Sasha suddenly began to growl, her fur standing on end, her head low between her shoulders as she peered around me.
I whipped around, fully expecting to see someone standing there, but the room was empty. “What’s the matter, Sasha?” I asked, frowning at her. Her growl faded a bit but she was still on alert, her eyes never leaving the doorway even as she resumed eating.
A little unnerved by her unusual behavior, I did a quick walk-through, turning on all the lights in my living room and dining area as I went. Finding nothing out of the ordinary was almost as unsettling as if I’d come upon a burglar trying to abscond with my meager possessions. Just to be on the safe side, I walked the perimeter of the apartment, double-checking the locks on the doors and windows and the sliding door that opened onto my balcony.
Satisfied that all was still secure, I headed for the bathroom, slipping out of my button-down as I went and tossing it into the hamper. My khakis were pretty much ruined, the knee of one leg ripped out from my altercation with the vampires, but I tossed them into the hamper anyway. Standing before my bathroom mirror in nothing but my pale blue tank and panties, I met my own gaze, noticing that lack of sleep was already bringing out dark circles under my eyes. I pulled my hands through the curls that came down to just below my chin, then watched them with a sigh as they sprung back into place.
God, no wonder Nicky had called me “doll.” What grown woman had ultrablond freaking ringlets? And there wasn’t a damned thing I could do about them. I’d tried cutting them, coloring them, straightening them. . . . Nothing worked. No matter what I tried, my curls would be back to their ol’ springy selves by morning.
Of course, if my ringlets made me look younger than I was, my eyes made up for it. After all I’d seen over the years, there was an
ancientness to them that was sometimes a little disconcerting even to me. I leaned closer to the mirror, peering deep into the dark green gaze that stared back at me, wondering for probably the trillionth time what I’d see in that person’s soul if I could get a glimpse.
Would it be memories of Make Believe, of family and friends that I’d left behind, or would the horrors I’d witnessed since coming to the Here and Now override those happier images? I’d tried to purge my mind of all the terrifying sights—the memories of the criminally insane, distorted and surreal; the murderous and depraved thoughts of those who were evil at their very core; the innocent driven mad with terror before their final seconds