“Saiman is waiting for us in a conference room. He says he owes you a favor and Barabas called him to invite him to the Keep on your behalf.” Gold flared in Curran’s eyes. “Would you care to explain this, because I’m all ears?”
Ten minutes later Curran and I marched down the hallway toward the conference room. When you live in a building with excellent acoustics populated by people with supernatural hearing, you learn to argue under your breath, which was precisely what we were doing.
A month ago I’d gotten a late-night call from the Mercenary Guild informing me that Saiman had been kidnapped. An information broker and a magic expert, Saiman was a shrewd businessman who had his fingers in all sorts of pies, from illegal gladiatorial combat to a shady import/export business. He charged exorbitant prices for his services, but because I amused him, he had offered me a discount in the past. I had consulted him a few times, but he kept trying to entice me into his bed to prove a philosophical point. I’d put up with it until he had the stupidity to parade our connection in front of Curran. The Beast Lord and I had been in a rough spot in our relationship, and Curran didn’t take that exhibition well, which he expressed by turning a warehouse full of luxury cars Saiman had slipped past customs into crushed Coke cans. Since then, Saiman, who feared physical pain above all else, lived in mortal fear of Curran.
Saiman maintained a VIP account at the Mercenary Guild for times when he needed to use brute force, so when some thugs decided it would be a good idea to hold him for ransom, his accountant put the call in to the Guild, which in turn called me. I’d dealt with the kidnappers and rescued Saiman. In return he owed me a favor. Yesterday I’d called him and told him that I would like to collect.
I had successfully managed to hide the incident from Curran precisely because I knew he would go ballistic. Explaining all this now proved a little complicated.
“The clerk called and said Saiman was kidnapped. What the hell was I supposed to do, leave him there?”
“Let me think . . . Yes!”
“Well, I didn’t.”
“He doesn’t care about you. If you died saving him, he wouldn’t give a shit. Nobody even knew where you went.”
“Jim knew where I went.” Aaand I shouldn’t have said that.
Curran stopped and stared at me.
“I took backup,” I told him.
“Like who?”
“Grendel and Derek.”
Curran’s eyebrows came together. He realized that Derek knew and hadn’t snitched. I shouldn’t have said that either.
The best defense is a vigorous offense. “You’re overreacting.”
“You left in the middle of the night to rescue a man without any shred of conscience who cares nothing about your safety, who schemed and manipulated to seduce you, and when he found he couldn’t, acted like a coward and put you in danger. How am I supposed to react?”
“Last time I checked, I was a big girl, all grown up and able to put on my shoes and swing my sword all by myself. You don’t have to like it.”
“Kate!”
“He owes us a favor. A big favor.”
“I don’t need any favors from him,” Curran snarled.
“Yes, you do. Do you remember that warehouse of luxury cars you demolished?”
Curran just looked at me.
“How did those expensive foreign cars get into the country?”
The realization hit Curran like a ton of bricks. His scowl vanished. “He shipped them in.” He started down the hallway, accelerating.
“Exactly.” I matched his stride.
“And he avoided customs because they came in on his vessel. He owns a fleet.”
“Bingo.”
We turned the corner. A shapeshifter heading in our direction saw our faces and tried to abruptly reverse her course. Curran pointed at her. “Get Jim for me, please.”
She broke into a jog.
“We don’t even know if his ships go to the Mediterranean,” Curran said.
“Yes, we do. During the Midnight Games he brought in a minotaur from Greece.”
We reached the door and I opened it.
A beautiful Asian woman waited for us in the North Conference Room. She was on the cusp of thirty, of average height and flawless build, with a slender, delicately curved waist and long legs. A dark green sweater dress, complete with a draped cowl and a sash, hugged her figure, showcasing her beautiful dark hair.
A male shapeshifter was watching her the way one would watch a rabid dog cornered in an alley.
Curran didn’t miss a bit. “Saiman, you look lovely. Thank you for dressing up.”
The woman looked up and I saw the familiar air of disdain in her eyes.
“Did you come as a woman so Curran wouldn’t hit you?”