Night's Master (Children of The Night 3)
Page 72I blew out a sigh and closed my eyes. I was getting awfully tired of being used as bait. I just hoped Rafe wasn't foolish enough to try to rescue me again, because if they got him in here with me, I didn't know how we would ever get out.
Chapter Thirty-Four
Rafe stood in the doorway of the motel room, his hands clenched at his sides. He had known before he opened the door that Kathy was gone, just as he had known that Edna and Pearl had been there. He caught the scents of five men, two that he recognized from the lab.
He swore softly, thinking he had been a fool not to end this sooner. He had intended to settle things with Edna and Pearl the night before, but then he had heard Kathy's voice in his mind. Her unhappiness had been more than he could bear. That, coupled with his own need to see her, to hold her, to make sure she was out of danger, had sent him to the motel in River's Edge. He should have gone back to Oak Hollow as soon as he knew Kathy was all right. Instead, he had spent the night making love to her, and now, because of him, her life was in danger again.
It took only minutes to follow her scent to the deserted meat-packing plant on Oak Tree Road. Muttering an oath, he paced the shadows, then dissolved into mist and slid under the door. He sensed Kathy's presence immediately.
Hovering near the ceiling, he saw Edna and Pearl sitting at one end of a long table, several notebooks and folders spread out in front of them. At the other end of the table, six men were playing poker. A number of rifles, handguns, and wooden stakes were piled on a smaller table, along with several glass bottles that Rafe assumed held holy water.
“I still don't know what they did to Travis,” Pearl was saying. “But they're going to pay for it. He was the best hunter in the business!”
“Except for you and me,” Edna remarked.
Pearl smiled fleetingly, then slammed her fist on the table. “I can't wait to get my hands on Cordova! I'm sure he's behind this. All our records in Texas have been destroyed, and all our files at the lab. Damned Vampire, sticking his nose in places where it doesn't belong! Well, he won't get away this time. As soon as we take care of him, we'll find Cagin and the McGee woman, and that'll be the end of it.”
“Almost seems a shame to destroy Cordova,” Edna said. “Such a good-looking man.”
“Oh, for heaven's sake, Edna Mae Turner, you're just saying that because you think he has a cute butt!”
“It's a good thing I had the formula in my head,” Pearl muttered. “It made it a lot easier to concoct the new one. You know, instead of destroying Cordova, maybe we should just try the new formula on him and the girl.”
“Whatever you want,” Edna said agreeably, “but I still think you should write the new formula down.”
“Maybe later.”
“Do you think whatever Vampire whammy Cordova put on Travis is permanent?”
“I don't know. Did you see how he acted last night? One mention of the word Vampire and he practically went into hysterics.”
Pleased with what he had heard, Rafe left the building and assumed his own form, then reached for his cell phone. All the rats were in one trap. All he needed now was a little backup.
Susie ran her hands over her face, then glanced at Cagin. “Does it look as bad as it feels?”
Joe shook his head. “No, it looks a lot better.” He ran his finger down her cheek. “There's only a small red place here.”
“What about the other side?”
“It's healing.”
When her cell phone rang, she picked it up, expecting it to be her mother or Kathy.
Instead, she heard Rafe's voice on the line.
“Susie, is Cagin there?”
Rafe stepped out of the shadows when Cagin and Susie arrived. “Thanks for coming.”
“Wouldn't miss it,” Cagin said with a grin.
“Is Kathy all right?” Susie asked.
“Other than being cold and scared, she's fine.”
“So, how do you want to handle this?” Cagin asked.
“Like I told you, there are six men in there with Edna and Pearl. Lots of hardware.” Rafe glanced at Susie. “And holy water. I figure the best way to play it is to go in hard and fast. We should be able to break down the door and take out the men before they know what's happening. Once the men are out of the way, we'll take the women. Cagin, you'll have to dump the holy water.”
Cagin nodded. “No problem.”
She lifted a hand to her face. “Are you kidding? After what they did? Just try and keep me out. Besides, Kathy's in there, and good friends are hard to find.”
Rafe winked at her. “Let's do it.”
It went like clockwork. Cagin undressed and then shifted, Rafe kicked in the door, and the Were-tiger sprang inside, with Rafe and Susie right behind him.
The people inside the building looked up as the door flew open, the surprise on their faces quickly turning to fear. Edna and Pearl scrambled away from the table, apparently trusting that the men would protect them, but the men were too slow. By the time they reached for the guns on the table, it was too late, although one of them managed to fire a round that struck Cagin in the thigh. With a growl, Cagin sprang across the table. Three of the men went down amid a flurry of growls, teeth, and claws; Rafe dispatched two of the men, leaving Susie to deal with the last one. It was swift and brutal and over in a matter of minutes.
Shifting back into his own form, Cagin grabbed the bottles and dumped the holy water outside while Susie and Rafe backed Edna and Pearl into a corner.
When Cagin returned, Rafe noted that he had taken the time to get dressed again.
“Now what?” Cagin asked, glancing from Rafe to the two women.
“Keep an eye on these two while I get Kathy,” Rafe said, “and then we'll decide what to do next.”
Chapter Thirty-Five
I was pacing the floor, my mind in turmoil, when the door swung open. At first, all I saw was a dark silhouette that looked familiar.