“I can?” She seemed surprised.
“Yes, silver doesn’t weaken you.”
“No, you’re right. Silver doesn’t bother me.” Still, she seemed astonished that, with one simple tug, she was able to wrench open the shackles that had contained him.
The chains fell away with a clank, and he was free, looking wildly dangerous and threatening, those pale blue eyes burning so hot and fierce as he stepped toward her.
“What’s your name?”
Her question stopped him cold in his tracks again. “You know my name,” Dante said, jaw clenched.
“Maybe once but not now. I don’t remember. I hit my head. I don’t remember any of you.”
He stared at her intently then said, “I’m Dante.” When she showed no reaction to his name, he nodded toward Roberto. “What about him?”
“He’s the bad guy, right?”
A cold, deadly smile lit Dante’s face. “Yeah, he’s the bad guy.” He moved toward Roberto, who fell back, mumbling frantically, trying to force words out past his gag.
“Wait.” She gripped his forearm. “What are you going to do?”
“I’m going to kill him.” He had fallen back into that eerie calmness. Said it as if it were a foregone conclusion. As if it was normal practice for him—and her—to kill the bad guy. But whatever Mona Lisa didn’t remember, she couldn’t have changed that much. The thought of killing Roberto made her instinctively recoil.
“No, leave him! We have to go. There were other guards coming to the house. I took off before they arrived. They may be on their way here.”
The sound of a car pulling up and people getting out, weapons being readied, filtered down from outside.
“Too late, they’re here,” Dante said and ran up the stairs as fast as his wounds allowed, cursing the silver still lodged within him limiting him to only human speed.
He grabbed a knife from a fallen guard and one of those automated pistols—.22 caliber, Dante noted, why the bullets hadn’t blown through him like a more powerful 9 mm weapon would have. Mona Lisa followed behind with Roberto. Stuffing the pistol in his waistband, Dante grabbed Roberto, bringing the naked blade to his throat. “Knife, I think. A more visual threat. You’re going to tell your men to throw down their weapons, understand?”
Roberto nodded frantically as Dante ripped off the mouth tie, allowing him to spit out the gag.
Dante glanced around for Mona Lisa, but she was gone. He felt his heart give a frantic thud at the discovery. “My lady doesn’t want you dead,” Dante snarled in fluent Spanish as he jerked Roberto outside, using him as a human shield. “But give me a reason and you will be. Tell them to drop their weapons now!”
Roberto yelled out the order. There were four men, all armed with automatic pistols. Two of them started to drop their weapons, but the two others farther away still held their guns trained at Dante. In a fast, blurry motion, Mona Lisa came up behind them, knocked the two armed men unconscious, and followed suit with the two surrendering guards.
“I did what you said!” Roberto babbled in English as his men thudded to the ground.
“Pity,” Dante said, removing the sharp knife from his neck. He shoved Roberto down onto his knees. “Stay here. You move, you die.” He strode to Mona Lisa, stopping two feet away from her. Any closer and he would be tempted to grab her and shake her. “What the hell did you think you were doing?” he gritted out as fear and adrenaline pounded madly through him.
“Disarming them.” She started gathering up the weapons, handling them with dainty distastefulness.
“You should have stayed safely inside instead of risking yourself,” he growled.
“I didn’t want any more bloodshed, yours or theirs,” she replied softly. Only a discerning ear would pick up the faint, trembling edge in her words. She was not as calm as she appeared. That sign of nerves oddly calmed his own fear and rage.
Dante watched as she went to the car parked farthest out in the driveway. Popping the trunk, she hastily dumped the weapons she had collected in there.
“You should kill them,” he said with calm practicality.
“No.” Just one soft word.
“They’ll follow us.”
Slowly, carefully, she took the knife from Dante’s hand. “Not if I can help it.” Going to the other cars, she slashed their tires with quick efficiency. “Let’s go,” she said, sliding behind the wheel of the last car, the only functioning vehicle left.
“What about him?” Dante asked, casting a hard glance back at Roberto.
“Just leave him, please.”
She scrambled out of the car in alarm as Dante went back to the other man. “I’m just getting his wallet and leaving him a warning,” he said. Crouching down, Dante whispered low into Roberto’s ear, “Be grateful for your miserable life. Come near her, or any one of us again, and I will kill you slowly and very painfully. Comprende?”
Roberto nodded frantically.
Dante returned to the car and they drove off.
TEN
GOD, WHAT AM I doing, leaving with someone even more dangerous than Roberto, the asshole drug lord?
My eyes couldn’t help glancing down at Dante’s hands. At where those long and lethal claws had sprouted out from his fingertips. He’d used them like knives. Fought with them calmly, as if he’d done it many times before. It was hard to tell how old he was under all that hair, beard and mustache covering his face.
“How old are you?” I finally asked.
“Twenty.”
Twenty to my twenty-one. Jesus Christ, I’d thought him ten years older. He was one year younger than I was but only in physical years. His eyes were those of a much older soul. That of a hardened soldier’s.
I eyed him warily as he slumped back against the seat. “You’re injured,” I said, feeling silly stating the obvious, but in the midst of all the fighting he’d acted with such competence and menacing purpose I had completely forgotten the fact that he had been shot twice.
“Yeah, the bullets are still in me,” he said, eyes closed. “You have to get them out.”
“I’ll take you to the hospital.”
“No, too long. You’ll have to take them out.”
“With what? My fingernails? Unfortunately, they don’t grow out long like yours do.”
He grinned, actually grinned. A slight, brief upward tug at the corners of his mouth. “You can dig them out with the knife.” The knife he had held to Roberto’s neck.
I didn’t know whether to believe him or consider it a joke. It didn’t sound like the latter despite that brief grin. I drove blindly, wondering if my companion was a madman.
I made random choices whenever the road forked or intersected, but some deity must have been watching over us because after several minutes of blind driving, we somehow found our way back onto the highway. Ten miles later, smelling the ocean, I exited onto a smaller road, following the briny scent.
“What are you doing?” Dante asked, opening his eyes.
“Getting rid of the guns.” Nodding to the blue ocean looming up before us, I parked and popped open the trunk.
Dante silently watched as I grabbed the guns and tossed them one after the other into the crystal blue seawater.
“Keep one for yourself,” Dante instructed.
“I’m not too familiar with guns,” I said, watching as he pulled out his own automatic pistol and competently popped the clip to check the ammo.
“My father trained you. You can shoot a gun.”
“I can? Well, that’s certainly news to me.” Gingerly, I took the gun he handed to me.
“How much memory did you lose?” he asked.
“Six months. The last thing I remember is being a nurse working in Manhattan.”
“You were a nurse? I didn’t know that.” The gun was shoved back into his waistband.
I stopped fiddling with my gun and glanced at him. “So you weren’t in Manhattan? You didn’t help me move out of my apartment.”