years.
Why didn't
'Hey, Detective Ramirez, it's Riley Dawson,' she said into her cell phone, quite pointedly not looking in Conlan's direction. He was amused by her defiance.
Not just amused, to be honest with himself. It made him hot. Although, for some reason, all the woman had to do was
Definitely not a good sign.
She was quiet for a moment, nodding at something the detective was saying on the line. Then she spoke again. 'Thank God.'
She glanced at Conlan. 'The baby's going to be okay.' Then she spoke into the phone again. 'Yeah, I can come in and give you a statement, but pretty much what I told you last night is all I know.'
'Okay, then. You have my cell number. Just call me.'
As she flipped her phone shut, Conlan debated and then decided against telling her that her cell phone was not going to be getting any signal when she was deep beneath the ocean.
She'd figure it out. Why borrow trouble?
Alaric leaned over the seat from his spot in the back, directly behind Riley. 'I hate cars, Conlan. Tell me why you believed it was so important for us to use cars?'
Conlan flicked a glance at him. 'Traveling via mist is easy enough for you and me, and even Ven, but not as easy for some of the Seven, especially over long distances. And it would definitely freak Riley out. Since she's the only one who can sense Reisen and his men, I wanted her to feel comfortable.'
Ven spoke up. 'I'm good with this. My toys don't travel well. No metal without orichalcum in it, remember? Hey, we've got fine engineering, a smooth ride, and an excellent sound system. I've got some killer CDs loaded, if you want to click on the tunes.'
Conlan looked in the rearview mirror, making sure that Justice and the others were behind him in the Hummer. 'Not exactly inconspicuous vehicles you picked, are they, Ven?' he said drily.
Riley made a small sound in her throat, and her hands clenched around her tiny telephone. 'We need to get there, fast. They're close now. I—they must be in the park. This is the road to First Landing State Park. I'd heard that the local Shape-shifter Appreciation League had a forum there.'
Ven snorted. 'Great. Now the bastards have an appreciation league? When they spend most of their time finding ways to eat you people?'
Riley turned her head to look at him, eyes troubled. 'I don't think that's entirely true. Both shape-shifters and vampires have made a considerable effort to integrate peacefully into society.'
It was Conlan's turn to be disgusted. 'Are you all fools? For thousands of years, both races have considered humans as sheep—their personal food supply. Suddenly, they come out into the daylight—metaphorically speaking —and the first thing they do is try to take over. How is that integrating? Peacefully or otherwise?'
'I, well, I sort of agree with you.' She sighed. 'I always thought it was a little freaky that only a few years after we even knew vampires existed, suddenly they're running their own house of Congress. I mean, how did that happen without some sort of mind control?' she said.
'Mind control or physical threat,' Alaric said smoothly. 'It seems that many of your dissenting voices have met with untimely accidents or disappeared. Did none of you notice the pattern in that?'
'I don't know what you're talking about,' Riley said. 'There hasn't been anything about that in the news.'
'You mean the shape-shifter-controlled media? I wonder how
Conlan pulled into the park's entrance and found a spot for the car, vicious thoughts whirling around in his brain. As he slammed the car into park and shut down the ignition, he shifted in the seat and stared at Alaric. 'Do you suspect that they could be teaming up? After so many centuries of blood feud, do you really believe that the shape-shifters would help the bloodsuckers?'
Alaric returned his stare calmly, although Conlan noticed that the priest's eyes had begun to glow. 'You've been gone for most of the decade, Conlan. There does seem to be a spirit of cooperation between them that was never there before. It worries the Council a great deal.'
'Hell, it worries me a great big fucking deal,' Ven snarled. 'If we—'
Riley shrieked, in a high-pitched, shrill tone that Conlan had never heard before. She clutched her head and screamed. He pulled her into his arms, trying to comfort her. Needing to comfort her.
Needing to make that inhuman sound stop. 'Riley! Riley, what is it?'
She abruptly stopped shrieking and stared up at him, eyes vacant and turned inward. 'They're here. They're here and they're killing. Murdering. Violence and death and pain…
She started to scream so loudly Conlan thought his eardrums would rupture. He took her by the shoulders and shook her a little to try to pull her out of the hell she was clearly experiencing.
'Riley! You're safe. You're here with us. You have to shield from those emotions,' he said roughly.
She shook her head back and forth. 'No, no, no, you don't understand,' she moaned. 'It's Quinn. Somehow, they've got my sister. I can feel her—I can feel her, and she's
Ven and Alaric jumped out of the car and slammed their doors shut, then Ven yanked Conlan's open. Conlan lifted Riley onto his lap and pulled her out of the car with him. He helped her to stand, arm firmly around her waist. 'Tell us. Point us to where they are, Riley. You know we can help her if you do.'
She looked up at him, still clutching her head, still dazed. 'What? Pain, Quinn,
Alaric's head snapped up, and he pointed down a path. 'There. I can sense the Trident now. It's blazing with power. And—I don't know how, but I can sense her sister, too,' he said, lips drawn back in a snarl. 'I can
The Hummer pulled into the parking space next to them, and the warriors piled out. 'Hey, cool place. So, what's the scoop?' Christophe called, then he stopped, frozen, as he caught sight of Riley. His face hardened, and he headed toward them, followed by Bastien and the others.
'We go after them now,' Conlan commanded. 'Riley, you stay here out of danger, and—'
'No! She's my sister!' she snapped at him, seeming to come briefly out of her daze. 'I'm coining with you.'
'We don't have time to argue about this,' Alaric said. 'And we're attracting unwelcome attention.' He nodded to a group of campers who were openly staring at the leather-clad group of warriors. Then his entire body jerked, as if he'd taken a blow.
'Now. We go
Ven looked to Conlan, who nodded. 'Follow him. All of you. I'll be right behind you.'
As the warriors pounded down the trail after Alaric, he looked down at Riley, who still leaned against him. 'You remain behind, where it's safe, or I swear I'll stay here and sit on you,' he growled.
She blinked. 'Yes, okay. I'm feeling very weak, suddenly. But will you bring Quinn back to me right away?'
'I promise,' he said, then opened the car door and helped her back inside. She leaned back against the seat, clearly exhausted, and he felt a wave of concern for what the empathy must cost her.
He bent down to her and pressed a kiss on her forehead. 'I'll bring her right back to you.'
She looked up at him, eyes huge in her pale face. 'Then
As she closed her eyes again, he gently shut the car door, looked around to see that the tourists had moved behind their large camping vehicle, and then he shimmered into mist. He'd get there more quickly—and unseen. And may the gods forgive anyone who had dared to harm Riley's sister.
Because Conlan had no mercy in him.