The driver nodded as she climbed inside and took the seat opposite Dillon, who was wearing a white shirt, charcoal gray pantsuit, and black leather heels, and was, as usual, neck deep in the Wall Street Journal. The veana clearly loved the news.
“You’re getting smarter by the minute, human,” Dillon drawled.
Sara settled back against the leather seat and yanked off her scarf. “Gee, thanks, Dillon.”
“Don’t get me wrong—I admire your commitment to being a pain-in-the-ass renegade, but not having to force you into the car makes way less work for me.”
“Well, I aim to please.”
“Really?”
“No.”
Dillon snorted, then tossed the paper on the seat beside her. “So what do you do in that hospital all day? Shrink heads?”
“That’s a human joke. You sure you want to fall that far?”
“Can’t help it. It’s the company I keep these days.”
“Well, you’re watching me. You see what goes down, what I do.”
Dillon shrugged. “Looks like a lot of pushing paper and pill-popping nut jobs to me.”
Sara cocked her head to the side, narrowed her eyes. “Where are you actually going when you should be watching me? Starbucks?”
The veana grinned. “The one on 34th and Lex makes a mean carotid frap.”
Sara laughed. “Nice. Vampire humor. I like that.”
Dillon’s grin flickered. “You do spend a lot of time with that man.”
“What man?” Sara asked, glancing out the window as they passed one of her favorite delis.
“The young one,” Dillon continued. “With the dark blond hair and impatient eyes.”
Sara turned back. Normally, people described Gray by the burns on his hands, never by the expression in his eyes. But then again, Dillon was neither a person nor normal. “He’s a patient, and some patients need a little bit more of my time and attention than others.”
“That all it is, huh?” Dillon said, her tone casual.
“Of course. What else would it be?” Before Dillon could speculate, Sara changed the subject. “So, how’s the training going?”
“With the guys?”
“Yeah.”
She shrugged again, looking bored. “They’re not totally inept.”
Sara laughed. “That’s good. So did you work the whole time or did they have some downtime? Do they get breaks?”
The veana’s eyes narrowed. “The Romans don’t require ‘breaks.’ ”
“Okaay. Good to know.”
“They stopped to change weapons, however.”
Sara brightened. “Any chatting going on during that time?”
“Chatting?” Dillon repeated, pronouncing the word like a high-class Brit. “Sure there was chatting. It was during teatime and right before instruction on skipping.”
The heavy sarcasm in Dillon’s tone made Sara smile and shake her head. “I just wanted to know if he said anything about me, okay?”
“Who?”
“Alexander.”
“Oh, fuck me.” Dillon dropped back against her seat as the car made a quick stop at a light. “I don’t owe him for this.”
Sara put up her hands in surrender. “Forget it. Sorry I asked. And before you even go there—yes, I am ten.” She turned away, stared out the window.
They drove the last five blocks in silence, and when they came to a halt in front of the house, Sara got out quickly and hightailed it up the sidewalk. Dillon followed. When they reached the door, she released a weighty breath. “Hey. Human.”
Sara glanced over her shoulder. “What?”
The veana shook her head as though she couldn’t believe she was actually about to say what she was about to say. “He said, ‘Let anything happen to her and I’ll shackle your fangs and leave your ass in Mondrar for the next century.’ ”
“What’s Mondrar?”
“It’s like jail for vampires. Controlled by the Order.” She shook her head and uttered tightly, “It’s not good.”
Sara grinned with pleasure. “Really? He said that? He said he’d do that to you?”
Dillon snorted. “As if he could manage it.”
“Thanks, Dillon,” Sara said with a laugh.
Cursing, the veana pushed past her and opened the front door. “You know, you’re both fools,” she muttered, waiting for Sara to enter. It wasn’t a question.
“Yes, I know.” Sara lifted her brow as Dillon shut the door. “See you later?”
“Not if I see you first,” she called back, heading into the living room.
At nine o’clock that night, Brooklyn hummed with traffic and pedestrian life, but on Clark Street in Boerum Hill the only ones driving or walking past Ethan Dare’s residence were prostitutes and those looking to score drugs. His three-story town house appeared to be a boarded-up crack house, complete with pipes, plastic baggies, and dirty spoons that littered the snow-covered front yard.
Alexander stood across the street in the shadow of a cherry tree admiring the half-breed’s ability to not only vanish with a group of dinner guests, but to mask the exterior of his home so well. How the little Impure prick was managing something only a morphed Pureblood was capable of was anybody’s guess—maybe he’d ask him before he killed him.
“I say we go in weapons drawn,” said Lucian, who was beside him. “I doubt anyone on this block would give a shit.”
Nicholas snorted. “Might even think we’re cops.”
“We go in fast and quiet,” Alexander said in a clipped, authoritative whisper. “One goal. Ethan Dare. I want his body brought before the Order tonight.”
Jaw tight, Nicholas nodded.
Lucian too. “Yes, sir.”
They nearly flew across the street. Avoiding the front of the house, they hustled around to a side window, where Nicholas made quick use of his blade, cutting through a thick layer of cardboard. He yanked the brown paper back, revealing a wall of wood planks that looked damn sturdy. He growled low in his throat. Yes, this would keep the crackheads out and the vampires in . . . He gestured to Lucian, and when Nicholas stepped back, Glock at the ready, the pair kicked the shit out of the boards until they had a hole wide enough to get through.
In a flash, Nicholas had the head of his gun inside the hole, ready for whatever lay in wait. Detecting heartbeats, Alexander twisted his mouth into a wicked grin and he gestured for his brothers to follow him.
“Aim well and spare all innocents,” he whispered as he stalked, hunched over, through the crawl space and into the room. Courtesy of his species, his eyes quickly adjusted to the darkness, his retinas flipping on their internal light.
“Un-fucking-believable,” Lucian uttered, taking in the art-deco room with its polished fixtures, expensive furniture, and crystal chandelier. “Just like our place. Wreck outside, palace inside.” He turned to glare at Alexander. “How is this possible? Dare’s got to be getting help from a Pureblood.”
Alexander agreed, but he didn’t have time to toss out ideas right now. He was sensing activity, slow heartbeats above him. Purebloods had no pulse, but Impures did. And humans too—he could scent them. He motioned to Nicholas. “We take each floor together; cover me. Lucian, take Nicky’s back.”
Grabbing the Glock from the small of his back, Alexander took the lead as they inspected each room on the first floor, just in case Dare was hiding. When they found nothing and no one, they headed for the stairs. Yes, Alexander mused, his fangs twitching as he climbed, heartbeats and scent were stronger this way. His finger hovered near the trigger. He was a perfect shot, no way could he miss unless Dare and his recruits pulled another disappearing act.
Silent as shadows, the brothers moved up the stairs. When they hit the second floor, they ran smack into a large Impure. The male was so damn shocked to see them, he turned to run, but Lucian grabbed him by the arm and knocked him unconscious before he had a chance to react or call out a warning to his buddies. Unfortunately, the sound of his body hitting the floor reverberated down the hall, and in seconds, there were three Impures hauling ass toward them.