“Aren’t you a rocket scientist,” Gem muttered.

Eidolon gave her an exasperated look and turned back to Ky. “Its come to our attention, yes.”

“Do you know what’s going on?”

“Why?”

“The Aegis sent me to find out what I can. Besides Tayla, I’m pretty much the only Aegi with contacts in the demon realm, and Tay can’t tell them anything without giving herself away.”

Gem snorted. “So they expect you to gather intel from demons… so they can fight demons?”

Kynan bit back a sigh. “Come on, Gem. Whatever this is… it’s going to be bad. We’d rather stop it than fight it.”

“Agreed.” Eidolon kicked his feet up on the coffee table. “But right now, we don’t have much information. Mostly rumors. Some are saying that the Reclamation is starting. Some are saying it’s not the Reclamation, but more of a takeover—demons swarming out of Sheoul. Still others think humans are leading the charge to break into Sheoul. The ones who aren’t excited by the prospect of war are going into hiding. We’re losing staff members every day.” The demon’s eyes blazed—the hospital was his baby, and the fact that it was falling apart and staff were deserting must sit on his broad shoulders like an elephant. “What do humans think is going on? I don’t get much from Tayla but rumors.”

He wouldn’t. Only the Sigil would be privy to the true goings-on, and even then, their info would be sketchy if demons couldn’t get all the facts.

“Worst-case scenario? Armageddon. What you call the Reclamation. Best case? Some kind of attack. Religious leaders and world governments are going nuts behind the scenes, spinning damage control, because no one wants the truth about demons to get out. Talk about mass chaos scenarios.”

Gem snagged a soft drink from the fridge. “You said The Aegis sent you. Why aren’t you still with the military?”

“Got tired of doing nothing. They were fine with me leaving as long as I went back to The Aegis.”

“Don’t suppose you can use your contacts at R-XR to find out everything you can about Marked Sentinels,” she said.

“I thought Wraith was already after one.”

E nodded. “Yes, but we’re pretty sure there’s a link between her and what’s going on in the underworld. Reaver is holding something back, but we do know that at the same time we felt the first stirrings of unrest, her cloak was blown.”

Interesting. “I’ll see what I can find.”

Eidolon’s beeper went off. He checked it and shoved to his feet. “I have an incoming trauma. Slayers have been busy.” He moved toward the door, his gait curiously devoid of the usual snap. He was dragging ass. “Good to see you. If you get bored, we could use a hand around here.” He took off, leaving Kynan alone with Gem.

“I should go, too.” She pushed away from the counter.

Kynan blocked the door. “Not so fast.”

“I said no.”

“Give me an hour, Gem. That’s all I’m asking.”

“Are you going to tell me why you left? All of it?”

“All of it.”

She gave him a single nod. “Be at my place tonight at six.” She shoved him out of the way. “And do not be late.”

Nine

Serena had just thrown her backpack over her shoulder when someone pounded on her hotel room door.

“Serena! Open up!”

Josh. Unsure whether she was excited or not, she opened up, a sensation of déjà vu washing over her at the sight of him standing in the doorway. Like last night, he wore jeans, but over his Hard Rock T-shirt he wore a well-worn leather duster that suited his rugged masculinity and made her breath come a little faster.

The dream she’d had last night was still so vivid, so real, that her face heated with a morning-after awkwardness. At least, what she imagined morning-after awkwardness must feel like for someone who had indulged in a one-night stand with a stranger.

“You’d better have the artifact,” she said, but he ignored her, grabbed her hand, and tugged her through the doorway.

“We’re leaving. Now.”

“What the—”

“There’s a demon in the hotel.”

“Damn,” she breathed.

“Damned, anyway,” he muttered. “Come on. We’re taking the stairs.”

A low rumble started up, sounding distant, as if it were coming from outside, but then the floor at the end of the hall began to ripple… toward them.

Josh swung around in a sinuous, effortless movement. The carpet snapped upward with such force it sliced a twenty-foot gash in the wall. “Shit.” Josh stepped back as though reconsidering his stance. “Yeah… run.”

They sprinted to the stairwell. Josh tore open the door and shoved her inside. She took the stairs two at a time. The building shuddered, and she lost her balance, coming down awkwardly at the second-floor landing—the charm protected her from injury, but it didn’t make her graceful. Above her, Josh held the steel door against something that was bashing into it, leaving massive dents.

“Go!”

She couldn’t. This was wrong. Whatever was chasing them was after her, not Josh, and she was protected by the charm. He was the one in danger, not her.

“I’m not going without you,” she shouted. “Don’t argue or I’m coming back up there.”

His curse echoed through the stairwell. He hesitated, and then he leaped down the flight of stairs and landed lightly in front of her in the most amazing feat of athleticism she’d ever seen.

Not to be outdone, she launched herself to the next landing and grinned up at him.

“Show-off,” he grunted, joining her.

They exploded out of the door at the bottom of the stairwell and into the lobby. People milled in alarm, disturbed by the shaking building, but she and Josh cut swiftly through them, out the front entrance, and into the blinding sunlight. At the curb, a man was just opening a cab door.

“Sorry, dude,” Josh said, slipping in front of the guy and pushing her into the back seat. “Medical emergency. My wife here is having a baby.”

The guy blinked, mouth dropped open, no doubt because Serena looked about as pregnant as a Popsicle stick, but he backed away as the cab pulled out into traffic, nearly side-swiping a bus. Though her heart raced and she was more than a little rattled, she gave instructions to the cabbie and tried to ignore the blaring horns outside and Josh’s heat as he settled next to her on the seat.

“I really, really want to know why you’re a demon magnet,” Josh said.

“I want to know what that thing was.”

“No idea.” He swiveled around to watch out the rear window, menace rolling off him in dangerous waves. He was still poised to fight, and she got the feeling he’d go right through the window if he had to.

“How did you know it was in the hotel?”

“Smelled it when I stepped into the hall.”

She watched him, slightly distracted by the way the hourglass tattoo on his neck seemed to be draining sand. “Your sense of smell is pretty amazing.”

“Leftover from Aegis training.” He shifted to face forward, sitting back and spreading his legs wide so his knee touched hers. “Looks like we’re clear. Were you okay last night?”

Very. “What do you mean?”

“Any visits by demons?”

“Oh. No. Everything was fine.”

“Did you sleep well?”

Her heart shot into her throat, which was insane, because he couldn’t know what they’d done in her dreams. “Why?”

His eyes took a bold, leisurely ride down her body and back up. “Just wondering if you dreamed about me.”

“Why in the world would I dream about you? Just because you kissed me? It wasn’t even that great of a kiss.” Liar. He’d kissed her into an aching frenzy.

“You’ve had better kisses?”

No. “Yes.”

“In that dream you’re denying you had about me?”

She huffed. “You’re really full of yourself, aren’t you?”

He shrugged. “Hey, every guy wants a gorgeous woman to dream about him.”

Gorgeous? He was buttering her up, and even though she recognized the flattery for what it was—an effort to get her to do those other things he wanted to do with her—she still got warm and fuzzy. But two could play at that game.

“Fine,” she said, with a saucy bat of her eyelashes, “I confess… I did dream about you.”

He cocked an eyebrow. “Was it good?” He leaned in and whispered against her ear, “Tell me.”

Desire shivered over her skin. “It was crazy,” she whispered back. “I dreamed you were a vampire. A very sexy vampire.”

“Huh.” His teeth latched on to her earlobe, nipped tenderly. “You have a thing for vamps?”

More than a thing. She’d indulged her curiosity even before she’d learned vamps were real, reading everything—fiction and non-fiction—she could get her hands on. She’d even spent months in several European countries, including Hungary, Germany, and Romania, researching Dracula and the Vlad Tepes origins.

“They fascinate me,” she admitted.

Josh withdrew. “They’re monsters. There’s nothing fascinating about them at all.”

She glanced out as they passed Pompey’s Pillar, the tallest ancient monument in Alexandria, but today the impressive granite structure failed to move her. “You sound like Val.”

“Val’s right.” He shifted his gaze out the window at the palms lining the street. Beyond the trees, new, modern buildings contrasted with older, pockmarked structures, between which she caught glimpses of the Mediterranean. “Tell me you aren’t one of those nut jobs who dresses up like an Anne Rice character and hangs out in vampire bars.”

She tried not to squirm, because she had done that. Only once, and it had been in the name of research. Really.




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