Born in Blood (The Sentinels #1)(80)



“Me?” Tony looked horrified. “Frank hates my guts. Calls me a blight on the family.”

“Understandable,” Zak drawled, tossing the remote onto his desk so he could turn to frown at his companion. “Tell him that you have information regarding Leah. Information that you’re willing to sell.”

“I suppose that might work,” Tony said slowly, reluctance etched on his pudgy face.

“Have him meet you here tomorrow morning.” Zak frowned, abruptly realizing that having a cop car on the property might not be the best idea. Didn’t they have some sort of . . . GPS system? “Actually, it would be better if you pick him up.”

The reluctance became more pronounced as Tony began to sweat. “You want me to bring him here?”

“Isn’t that what I just said?”

“But he’ll be able to tell the cops where you live,” Tony blurted out.

“He won’t tell anyone.”

Tony grimaced. “I know Frank, and trust me, you can’t bribe or intimidate the man. He’s a real prick about the rules.”

Zak shrugged. “He won’t tell anyone, because he’ll be dead.”

“Dead?”

“Is there a problem?”

“I . . . no.” The henchman managed a sickly smile, backing toward the door. “No problem. I’ll go to my rooms and give him a call first thing in the morning.”

Zak let him creep away like a mouse trying to evade a stalking cat. Tony might be a bully, but he was a coward at heart.

He wouldn’t have the courage to try and escape.

“Tomorrow,” he whispered softly, the power that swirled deep inside him vibrating with an awareness of the chalice that was hidden only a few inches away. “It begins.”

Callie was exactly where she wanted to be ... snuggled on Duncan’s bed with his arms wrapped around her and her head resting above the steady beat of his heart.

Unfortunately, while her body was sated from the passion that had exploded the minute they entered the apartment, her mind churned with a restless frustration.

She felt tense. Jumpy.

As if she was hurtling toward a car crash she couldn’t avoid.

“You’re quiet.”

She tilted back her head to meet Duncan’s steady gaze, easily reading the concern that shimmered in the hazel depths.

“I’m worried,” she admitted in low tones.

“I promise, I don’t snore,” he teased, clearly hoping to distract her.

Her finger brushed an absent pattern on his chest, savoring the feel of his warm satin skin even as her thoughts remained dark.

“If the necromancer has the coin, we might already be too late.” She spoke her fears aloud, hoping it might lessen the knot of dread lodged in the pit of her stomach.

It didn’t.

Duncan brushed his lips over her furrowed brow. “We’re not too late.”

She smiled wryly at his confident tone. Somehow she’d assumed that no one could match a Sentinel for arrogance.

Duncan was proving how wrong she’d been.

“How can you be so sure?”

“Hektor said something about the coin being needed to unlock the door to the underworld where there’s a mysterious chalice,” he explained. “Whatever the hell that means. Unless the door to the underworld is hidden in Kansas City . . . god forbid . . . the necromancer will have to travel to get to it.”

Ah. So not just arrogance.

She sucked in a deep breath, trying to ease her seething anxiety. “I suppose you’re right,” she said, wrinkling her nose at the persistent sense of danger. “Fane made sure to warn the monks to keep an eye open for a diviner with diamond eyes. If he tries to travel with a Sentinel he’ll be easily spotted.”

“Clever Fane,” her companion muttered.

Callie blinked at the unmistakable edge in Duncan’s voice. “Would you be happier if he was stupid?”

With a swift move, he rolled on top of her, his expression hard with a jealousy he made no effort to hide. “I would be happier if I was your guardian.”

Her legs instinctively parted to allow him to settle against her. She swallowed a small sigh of satisfaction. It felt so right to have his heavy weight pressing against her, the scent of his maleness teasing at her nose and the feel of his warm skin branding her with pleasure.

Here, in this bed, she felt protected. Safe.

Loved . . .

Her heart slammed against her ribs as the perilous word whispered through her mind.

Oh, gods.

A part of her knew that this wasn’t the time to add yet another layer of complication to their relationship. It was already a minefield of disaster that threatened to blow up in her face when she least expected it.

Hadn’t her afternoon at the police station proved that?

But the L word wasn’t as easy to dismiss.

Not when Duncan’s hand was running an intimate path down the line of her collarbone and his hazel eyes were shimmering with flecks of molten gold.

“Only a Sentinel can be a guardian,” she reminded him, not surprised when her voice came out a breathy whisper instead of the stern warning it should have been.

“Says who?”

Hmm. Good question.

“Tradition,” she at last suggested.

“Screw tradition,” he growled, lowering his head to stroke his lips down the line of her jaw. “We can make new ones.”

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