“We didn’t ask. We took.”
I raised my eyebrows. “When?”
“Two nights ago.”
“And?”
“He came down to Melbourne almost immediately.”
So he had been down here, just as I’d guessed. The bastard couldn’t even give me one honest answer.
I was better off without him in my life. Truly.
So why did the thought of never seeing him again hurt so much? It wasn’t as if I had a future with the man, for heaven’s sake. A vampire could never be my soul mate.
“Then he suspected it was us?”
“His security was better than we thought.”
I rolled my eyes. “How often have you told me never to underestimate the enemy?” I stopped at the streetlights and looked around. A tall brown-haired woman in pale gray stood near the park’s famous laughing-mouth entrance. “Spotted my quarry. Try not to jabber in my ear for the next few minutes.”
Jack’s snort was loud enough to make me wince. “I have done this before, darlin’.”
I grinned and crossed with the green light. A quick look at my watch said I had seven minutes to go.
I hitched my pack, took a deep breath, then slipped into Poppy, letting her identity, her attitudes, fill my surface thoughts. Then I strode directly toward Dia.
“Don’t tell me the great Dia Jones has been reduced to hawking her wares on the streets,” I said, voice low and sarcastic. “Always knew you were a fraud.”
Her startled gaze swung around to mine, and in that minute I realized two things. The first was the fact that Dia Jones was completely blind. And second, the unearthly sense of power that had been evident in the photograph didn’t even begin to do justice to the true power of her gaze. Even unfocused, her blue eyes were magnetic, unforgiving. All-seeing.Which was an odd thing to think about a blind woman.
“Excuse me?” she said, voice soft yet hinting at ice.
Which suited the complexion that lay underneath the makeup.
“People like you make a living from ripping off the gullible. It disgusts me.”
“And is a thief any better?”
I raised my eyebrows, wondering how she’d guessed. Wondering what else she’d guessed. “At least I don’t make a living on the suffering of others.”
She raised an eyebrow. “And you think I do?”
“Well, what else do you call feeding false hope to suckers?”
She regarded me for a moment, her luminous blue eyes seeming to see right through me. Those butterflies stirred again, though I had no idea why.
“And you do not believe in hope?”
I snorted. “Hope is a fool’s desire. I deal with realities.”
“Really?”
With a suddenness, and an accuracy, that surprised me, she reached out and grabbed my hand. My instinctive response was to pull away, but I checked the strength of it almost immediately. Partly because I was curious about what she was doing, and partly because the minute her fingers touched mine, an odd sort of energy seemed to run over them. It felt like the power that caressed the air right before a summer storm.
She didn’t say anything for several minutes, just gripped my fingers and frowned as the energy of her touch flowed between us. Then she sighed, and smiled as she released me.
“You will save us,” she said softly.
Us? What the hell did she mean by that? Her and me? Did that mean she knew about the planned attack? Somehow, I didn’t think so, but before I could ask what she actually meant, awareness surged, prickling like fire across my skin. With it came the stench of unwashed, unripe flesh.
Jack’s stray vamp had shown up ahead of time.
And he’d brought a couple of friends along.
Chapter 4
There were three of them, all skinny excuses of flesh and bone. The vamp in the middle was the obvious leader—he was two steps ahead of his compatriots, and had one of those perpetual sneers so often found on those who think they’re tougher than they truly are. His two mates were of Asian descent, though the blue eyes on one suggested there was something else in his mix.
“Well, well,” the leader said casually, “look at what we got here, boys.”
“Breakfast,” blue eyes said, expression alight with anticipation.
I slipped off the backpack and placed it in Dia’s hands. “You might have to hold this while I tend to this pond scum.”
“But—”
I held up a finger, realized what I was doing, then touched her arm lightly and said, “It’s okay.”
She fell silent. While these three didn’t look particularly old, they were still vampires, and I was going to need every ounce of concentration against them.
“In case you haven’t noticed, little girl,” the leader said, amusement rich in his harsh, annoying voice, “there’s three of us, and only one of you.”
“Unfair odds, I agree,” I said. “You want me to keep one hand behind my back?”
They glanced at each other, then broke into laughter.
That’s when I dropped my shields and hit the minds of the backup vamps, stripping through their meager shields and ordering them to run away, as far and as fast as they could. Their laughter stopped abruptly and their eyes went wide, the whites seeming to gleam brightly in the darkness. Then they turned and retreated into the night.
Even as they ran, pain lanced through my head, needle sharp and fiery hot. I wasn’t entirely sure why, especially given I’d done similar things in the past and hadn’t felt a reaction like this. But right then, I didn’t have time to worry about it. Even as tears touched my eyes, the air stirred, brushing anger and the force of movement past my nose. I ducked away from the last vamp’s fist, letting it skim past my cheek, then dropped and spun, kicking his legs out from underneath him. He grunted as his rump hit the ground, and his look of surprise might have been funny if it wasn’t for the murderous expression that almost instantly followed.
He snarled, then scrambled to his feet and launched at me. I dodged, but his fingers caught my arm, his nails needle sharp and tearing into flesh. I yelped and he laughed, a sharp sound that was quickly cut off when my fist slammed into his mouth. He staggered backward, arms flailing, spitting out blood and teeth as he did so. I followed the force of my punch with another, this time chopping into his throat, crushing his larynx and dropping him to the ground. He didn’t stay down, but scrambled on all fours toward Dia Jones. Blind or not, she seemed to sense his approach, because she gasped and backed away.
I grabbed his leg and dragged him away from her. He struggled like a madman, his kicks landing heavily on my already bloodied arm and bruising the hell out of my fingers. A growl of fury rumbled up my throat, and without thought, I dropped my shields again and let him have it. His mind fled before mine like a pebble before a landslide, and just as uselessly. Within seconds, I had him still and unmoving.
But, oh God, how it hurt.
I dropped to my knees and, for too many seconds, did nothing more than try to breathe as the pain in my head intensified, and all I could see were pinpoints of bright lights flashing before my eyes. They eased after a few seconds, but the pain didn’t.
Why was this happening? When I’d controlled the two lab-made werecats in Moneisha, there’d been pain, but nothing as intense as this. Even when I’d attacked Quinn, there hadn’t been a backlash like this—had there?
I frowned, and remembered the wash of pain that had briefly hit before I’d picked my panties up off the floor and stormed into the other room.
Maybe it was a simple matter of being too angry to even notice just how bad the pain actually was.
A hand touched my elbow, helped me to my feet.
“We must go,” Dia said. “Before he recovers enough to attack again.”
He wasn’t going anywhere until I released him, but given the blinding pain, that was probably going to be sooner rather than later. I stumbled along after Dia, guided more by her touch and the sound of her footsteps than my own sight, which was at best blurry, and filled with heated white spots that danced about crazily. A situation that wasn’t helped when the control I had on the vamp snapped. The pain of it rebounded through me, as sharp as glass. I gasped, stumbling and almost going down. Dia’s grip tightened on my arm, and with almost inhuman strength, she kept me upright and kept me going.Of course, Dia Jones wasn’t exactly human, so inhuman strength wasn’t exactly surprising. What I really wanted to know was how the hell she was moving so surely when she couldn’t see and hadn’t even a cane or a guide animal to help her.
A car loomed through the blurriness ahead. A man in a dark suit opened the rear door of a car that seemed to go on forever, then I was being shoved inside. I crawled across the soft leather, then leaned my head back against the thick seat cushioning and closed my eyes. Doors slammed shut, twin sounds that seemed to reverberate through the silence, through my head, then the car was moving.
Silence reigned for several minutes. I could feel Dia’s gaze on me—it was a weight that was at once both curious and cautious—but she didn’t touch me. Of that, I was glad. I had a feeling that she might learn far too many secrets if she did so right now.
“Telepathy is new to you, isn’t it?” she said eventually.
I opened my eyes. Even though the limo was dark, the glare of the streetlights as we passed them was a brightness that was hard to stand. My eyes watered, and the ache in my head briefly intensified.