“I was wondering when you’d get around to telling me that.”

I raised my eyebrows. “You knew about Quinn?”

He nodded. “I saw the security tapes.”

“Vampires in shadows don’t show up in normal security tapes.”

He grinned. “No. But the rail system underwent a recent upgrade that included infrared systems being installed side by side with standard security. It’s helped catch a number of criminals.”

“That was kept rather secret, wasn’t it?”

“Sometimes the public just doesn’t need to know.”

“Tell that to the civil libertarians.” I pushed up from the chair and walked across to the machine to grab a coffee. “Why was Rhoan investigating Quinn O’Conor?”

Amusement touched his lips. “Oh, you are good.”

“Was it the dead vamp found in his cargo plane?”

“Very good,” he murmured, then nodded. “Turns out that vamp was a half-breed.” He looked at me, and I knew, right then, that I’d been on the money before. He’d known all along what Rhoan and I were. “But one born in the lab, rather than naturally, like you and your twin.”

I swallowed, but it did little to ease the dryness in my throat. “How long have you known?”

“Practically since you joined us.”

And we thought we’d been so careful

His smile was gentle. “Riley, I’m over eight hundred years old, and I’ve seen an awful lot in my time. I’ve met your kind before—you even have a name, do you realize that?”

The only name I knew was freak, and even then, until that man shot me, I’d only ever heard it in whispered tones from those in my pack who thought I was too young to understand

“Dhampires,” he continued. “The offspring of newly turned vamps, born to women who are usually attacked and raped in the vampire’s first hour out of the grave, women who somehow survive. A one in a million chance.”

“Our mother was a wolf.”

“And I’m supposing she was in moon fever, because a werewolf would certainly best a newly risen vampire.”

She had bested him—when it was over and his dying seed had somehow created life. “Why haven’t you ever said anything?”

“Because I respect your right to privacy.” He hesitated. “Though I have to admit, your birthright is part of the reason I want you on the team with Rhoan. I don’t think either of you has tapped your full potential.”

“And I want the whole picket fence and bundles of babies scenario, Jack, not long nights filled with bloodshed.”

“Actually, I want you and Rhoan to form the start of a daytime guardian division. Right now, we are somewhat hampered by our ability to hunt only at night.”

“Right now, your wants aren’t even registering on my radar.” I began to pace, taking care not to spill the lukewarm brown muck the Directorate had the cheek to call coffee. The moon was rising and I didn’t have to see it to know it was happening. The power of it burned through my veins. “So why did a dead half vamp make you decide to investigate Quinn? There’s nothing unusual in vamps occasionally dying on cargo planes, especially if they get their timing or packing wrong.”

“This vamp suffocated.”

I swung around to look at him. “Vamps don’t really need air to survive, so how did he suffocate?”

“He was only half-vamp, remember.”

“So he was too dumb to put airholes in the coffin?”

Jack grinned. “Actually, he had too much air.”

That raised my eyebrows. “How can anyone have too much air?”

“He was half merman, that’s how.”

“A vampire merman?” I couldn’t help the note of incredulity in my voice. “Why in hell would anyone want a cross like that?”

“I think hell had a lot to do with it. A hell run by fanatics determined to breed the perfect killing machine.”

“I can’t imagine a merman willingly being a part of research like that.” They don’t even like going to the doctors, for heaven’s sake

“I don’t think willingness has anything to do with what is going on here.”

“So why were you investigating Quinn?”

“It was just routine. He owns several pharmaceutical companies in Australia and the U.S. Of the ones here, the biggest is in Sydney. Sydney is where that vamp was headed.”

“That doesn’t mean he was headed to O’Conor’s labs.” I took a sip of coffee and screwed my nose up at the bitter taste. Still, with my head continuing to pound and my stomach beginning to growl over lack of food, bitter coffee was better than nothing

“As it turns out, he wasn’t, but we still had to check. Especially since Director Hunter wanted Quinn in on the investigation.”

I swung around to look at him. “What?”

Jack smiled. “The older vampire community is not a huge one. There are, perhaps, fifty vampires worldwide who have survived to reach their millennium years—and to do so means they are either extremely powerful or extremely canny. Quinn is both.”

And for a vamp over one thousand years old, he was also very well preserved. “Why would she want him on the investigation, though?”

“Because he was already seeking the origins of the lab-made dhampire and the Gautier clones, and it is infinitely better if we pool resources and work together.”

“Just how many clones are there?” That there might be more than two was a scary thought—and I could only hope they didn’t all have a desire to shoot me with silver. “And why would he be investigating them? He’s a businessman, not a cop or guardian.”

Jack grinned again. “O’Conor’s been many things over the years. A businessman is only the latest incarnation.”

“That doesn’t answer the question, Jack.”

He nodded. “The truth is I can’t actually stop him from investigating this, so it’s better to have him working alongside us.”

I frowned. “Throwing his ass into one of the cells upstairs would certainly stop him.”

“The cells wouldn’t hold me, let alone Quinn. Not with the sort of mind-power he’s got.”

A chill ran down my spine. “The Directorate is shielded. No one is supposed to be able to use mind-abilities within these walls.”

“Most can’t, and the cells will hold all but a very few.”

But not him, and not Quinn, obviously. It was an almost scary thought that the two vamps I’d felt so comfortable with were far more dangerous than Gautier ever could be. “Why is Quinn investigating the clones?”

“He saw—and stopped—one in Sydney sometime ago. Apparently the clone was the image of a friend he’d thought dead.”

Meaning the friend was the image of Gautier, if this “friend” was the dead man Jack had mentioned earlier. Part of me couldn’t help wondering if the poor guy had been so depressed about his looks he’d killed himself. “A vampire friend, I take it?”

Jack nodded. “Quinn’s also an old friend of Director Hunter. He recently contacted her about the matter—a professional courtesy, as he’d heard Moneisha mentioned while investigating and intended to come down to Melbourne and look into the matter further. Which is why she told me to bring him in on our investigations.”

“Her okay doesn’t make it legal to have a civilian involved in a Directorate case.”

“In matters of civil safety, the Directorate can enlist whatever help it deems necessary. And it does give us the chance to intercede before he does anything illegal.”

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