Born in Blood (The Sentinels #1)(75)



Spinning around, she came face to face with the gray-haired coroner she’d seen at more than one crime scene.

“I need to speak with you, necro.”

Her heart sank even as her chin tilted. She’d known this was coming. Duncan’s friends weren’t going to be any more pleased with their relationship, no matter how brief it might be, than Fane and her friends.

Still, she’d hoped it could be avoided until after they’d captured the mysterious Lord Zakhar.

As unlikely as it might seem, there was the possibility that they would need the humans.

Resisting the urge to tell him to go to hell, she instead calmly met his dark scowl. She would try not to be a total bitch, but then again, she wasn’t going to be a damned wimp.

“I have a name,” she pointed out in deliberately cool tones.

“Brown, right?”

“Callie.”

“Callie.” He shrugged, clearly not interested in becoming BFFs. “I’m Frank. I’m a friend of O’Conner.”

“I know who you are.”

“I think we need to have a little talk.”

She nodded, her expression bland. “So talk.”

The cop frowned, almost as if caught off guard by her calm reaction. Maybe he assumed all freaks were raised by wolves and incapable of common manners?

“Do you want to sit?”

“No.” She had no sympathy for his sudden unease. “Say what you have to say.”

He hesitated before he squared his shoulders. “Did you know O’Conner’s ex-wife just got remarried?”

Ah. So that was the direction this was going to take.

“He told me,” she said.

“He was gutted when his marriage ended,” Frank informed her, the sincerity in his tone revealing he truly believed what he was saying. “It was even worse when he found out she was going to become another man’s wife. Susan was his soul mate.”

Callie might have been devastated by the stark claim if she didn’t know the truth. Now she merely shrugged. “Why are you telling me this?”

His mouth thinned at her refusal to react as he expected. “A man does crazy things when he’s been hurt,” he pressed. “Things he later regrets.”

“By crazy, I assume you mean spending time with me?”

“I’m sorry, but if he was in his right mind, he would never be with a—”

“Freak?” she helpfully supplied.

Heat crawled beneath his skin, his gaze shifting to the rows of chairs that faced the podium at the far end of the room.

“I’m not a fanatic. I don’t hate high-bloods,” he said in gruff tones. “I just know that you sort of people aren’t meant to mix with humans.”

She made a sound of disgust. How many people over the centuries had been made to feel isolated by those precise words?

“Separate but equal?” she said in a cold voice.

He hunched his shoulder. “Something like that.”

Her lips twisted. Okay. Maybe not so equal.

Jerk.

“I appreciate your concern for your friend, but Duncan is a big boy,” she said, hiding her disgust behind a mask of indifference. This man was Duncan’s friend and colleague. If their relationship continued then she would have to at least pretend she didn’t find him a total tool. “Don’t you think he should be allowed to make his own decisions?”

Frank’s expression hardened. Like most cops, he was used to people falling in line when he gave an order.

“Around here we take care of each other; it’s the only way to survive,” he growled. “If you truly care for O’Conner, you’ll walk away and let him find a woman who fits into his life.”

“His life or yours?”

“Think about it,” he warned before turning to leave the conference room, slamming the door behind him.

Callie rolled her eyes, wryly wondering why she hadn’t returned to Valhalla where she so obviously belonged.

“Welcome to the real world, Callie Brown,” she muttered.

Duncan returned to the interrogation room in a mood that was on the wrong side of shitty.

Studying the smug little bastard, he wanted nothing more than to shove his foot up his ass. Or maybe he would shove a few of his too-white teeth down his throat . . .

Unable to do either, he folded his arms over his chest and met the dark gaze that was studying him with blatant suspicion.

“What the f**k are you staring at?” he snapped.

The dark eyes narrowed, his nose flaring as if he was sniffing the air. Or could he be sensing that Duncan wasn’t entirely human?

“Are you—”

“You have until the count of five to tell me what you know about the coin before I throw your ass in jail for obstruction of justice,” he abruptly interrupted.

As much as he wanted to beat the fool to a bloody pulp and leave him for the trash, he needed whatever information he might have about the coin. And he wasn’t going to get anything out of the man if he feared Duncan was a high-blood.

Hektor bristled, but thankfully accepted that Duncan was human.

“I came here for your assistance, not to be threatened,” he said stiffly.

“I don’t give a shit. Tell me about the coin”

The man licked his thin lips. “It has a long history.”

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