“This is your car now,” he said. “And yours is mine.”
“My car,” the man repeated, eyes glazing.
“Right. Go home and clean it, it’s ghastly dirty.”
“Wait until he starts on the trunk,” I mumbled, getting into the man’s vehicle.
Bones drove less aggressively this time, but he still went way above the speed limit. Instead of the direct route to the park, he took side roads. Once we reached the park, Bones pulled under a tree, shutting off the engine and the headlights.
In the quiet, my accelerated breathing sounded too loud. “Do you—do you think—”
“Why do you believe Gregor’s at the motel?”
He asked it as nonchalantly as if he were inquiring, paper or plastic? That didn’t fool me. His knuckles were almost white on the steering wheel.
How to explain? “I got these sharp pains in my head, and I could hear him, only he wasn’t talking to me now. I think it was memories of what he’d said before, and the only other time it happened was when he was close, on the street in New Orleans.”
A pause. Then, “What did he say?”
“You couldn’t hear it?” That surprised me.
“No.” The mildness drained from his tone. “Else I wouldn’t ask.”
“Um, okay. The first one was quick, just a fragment. Something about there not being a cherry farm in France. This time, he was warning me that someone was after me.”
Bones grunted. “That sounds very present tense, don’t you agree?”
“Yeah, it does,” I mused. “But somehow, I still think it was a memory.”
Fabian appeared at the windshield. The sudden sight of him made me jump in my seat. He could sure sneak up on someone.
“The yellow-haired vampire was there,” he announced. “He was behind the motel with six others. I don’t think they saw me.”
Bones stared at me. His gaze was filled with something I couldn’t name.
“I’m sorry,” he said quietly.
“For what?”
“This.”
His fist shot out.
When my eyes opened, I saw darkness with slight flickers of light around the edges. I was sitting, but not in the car. It sounded like we were on a plane.
Immediately, I reached for the blindfold, but cool hands stopped me.
“Don’t, Kitten.”
I turned in the direction of his voice. “Get this off me.”
“No. Quit squirming and let me talk.”
I froze, remembering. “You knocked me out.”
“Yes.” Wariness edged his tone. “Are you going to sit still?”
“Depends. Why’d you hit me?” He’d better have a damn good reason.
“Remember when I said the only people who could be informing Gregor of our whereabouts were in the car? Liza, Band-Aid, and Hopscotch didn’t know where we were staying in Fort Worth, and even if they did, they’ve been without means to communicate. Denise and Spade didn’t know where we were staying. Fabian was with us the entire time, and if somehow he were a traitor, he could have said Gregor wasn’t waiting at the hotel. That leaves only you and me. I haven’t told Gregor anything, so that leaves…you.”
I was stunned. “You think I’ve been sneaking behind your back with Gregor?”
“Not on purpose, but in the same way Gregor maneuvered you to Paris, and communicated with you in your dreams; who’s to say he hasn’t found a way to eavesdrop as well? It’s a guess, Kitten, but if I’m wrong, you only lose some time awake.”
And if he was right…
“What’s your plan? Smack me into a coma and wait to see if Gregor goes away?” I’d thought nothing was worse than feeling helpless, but being a potential liability? That was worse.
“Of course not. But when we change locations, I want you to take those pills so you’ll sleep. If you don’t know where we are, but Gregor’s still able to track you, we’ll know it’s not from his picking through your mind while you dream.”
God, this sucked. Like waiting to see if an animal was rabid, I’d be penned and quarantined.
“Then why did you bother waking me? We’re on a plane. I can hear the engines. Why not wait until we got to where we’re going?”
“You need to eat and drink, and I thought you’d like to freshen up.”
Once again I reached for the blindfold, and once again he stopped me.
“Leave it on.”
“Why? I already know we’re on a plane, but I can’t navigate by the clouds!”
“You don’t know what kind of plane,” Bones replied intractably. “Make, model, type; these things could be used to trace you. It’s just for a little while, Kitten.”