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“So, what?” he asked while tossing the phone back to Paige.

“So,” she replied, “this means there’s one less Full Blood in the world. As far as we know, there may only be half a dozen of them on the planet at any given time. Losing one of them will throw the others into a tizzy as they readjust.”

“They’ll probably start a war with the Mongrels,” Rico said, as if mentioning the possibility of getting free tickets to the Super Bowl. “Kayla’s pack took one Full Blood down, so they’ll have the taste of blood on their tongues. They may already be out hunting them down as we speak. Either way, we won’t need to worry about those shaggy sons of bitches for a while. Considering how busy the Nymar are keepin’ us, that’s a goddamn blessing. We may even be able to get some pointers from Kayla in dropping the big boys.”

Paige looked at her phone again as though seeing the picture for the first time. “You don’t know how huge this is, Cole. This may even be Mr. Burkis we’re looking at. The coloring on the coat is right. There haven’t been any other Full Bloods spotted in these parts that I know of other than him and Liam. Kayla may have just cleared out an entire territory.”

“And what if it isn’t Burkis?”

“Then Rico’s still right. The shapeshifter community will be in ten kinds of upheaval, and we can scratch them off the list for a while. We don’t get to scratch many things off our list, Cole. You should learn to enjoy it when it happens.”

“So what’s next on the list?”

“That Nymar from the tunnels said Hope and the rest of them were headed out to Denver, Boston, Miami, and … somewhere else.”

“San Antonio,” Rico said.

“That’s right.” Cole’s thumbs flew over his phone’s screen as he tapped through several different Web pages. “And as far as I can tell, none of those cities have been hit in this crime wave.”

“So that could mean Hope was heading out there to get the ball rolling.” For the first time in what seemed like a decade, Paige grinned. “Sounds like a good prospect for ‘Next on the List.’” Slipping into the kung fu master voice she’d used for a good portion of their weapons training, she added, “I see the pupil is finally worthy of his teacher.”

Cole barely looked at her before dryly replying, “Yeah. Sure.” When he arrived at the right note in his phone’s planner, he sat up a little straighter and turned it around in case anyone else wanted to examine the screen. “Prophet’s boss, Stan Velasco, already knows about these Denver Nymar and will pay us to bring them in. Not only does he have information we don’t already have, but his men aren’t Skinners, so they probably flew under their radar.”

“Screw that,” the big man snarled. “Last thing I wanna do is bring a Nymar in. It was too much fun gouging that striped bitch’s eye out. After tonight, I’m comin’ around to Lancroft’s thinking. Only good bloodsucker is a dead one. No offense, Daniels.”

The balding Nymar tossed an offhanded wave at the Skinners and said, “I’ve learned to stop taking offense to what you guys say a long time ago. Keeps my nose from being permanently out of joint.”

“But some Skinner somewhere would have put a red flag on Hope by now if they knew she was gathering this sort of a following, right?” Cole asked hopefully.

Unfortunately, Rico could only grunt, “Not necessarily.”

“Do we at least know something about the Denver Nymar?” Cole asked.

“I’ve done a little checking since Prophet’s been talking them up and found out they’re into a lot of different things,” Paige told him, “but nothing worth the trip to put them all down. They are organized enough to be ready for an attack.”

“How can you be sure about that?”

“Because there used to be a Skinner who worked in the Rockies,” Rico said. “Went missing some time ago—and before you ask, yeah, that is pretty common. Also before you ask, yeah, it mighta been the Denver Nymar who did it.”

Cole tapped his phone some more as he said, “So they’ve been busy and have still managed to keep from being taken out by Skinners. Sounds to me like they’re more organized than you think.”

“What do you mean by that?” Paige asked.

“Well, we’ve got MEG. What’s keeping the Nymar from using some sort of hub for their communications?”

“They’re all over the Internet,” she reminded him.

“But those are just the sites we know about. If anyone’s going to put a system like that to use, it’s going to be someone with plenty of reason to want to stay hidden.” Jabbing a thick finger at Cole, Rico said, “I like the way this boy thinks.”

“And not only that,” Cole continued, “Denver was mentioned as a stopping point for Hope, and she obviously hasn’t set off whatever’s about to pop there. If it’s anything like what’s already happened, there’s bound to be more innocent humans there to take a fall. Possibly more cops. And if we’re right about any of what they’re doing, the Nymar are going to want to make this public.”

“Or,” Paige said, “it’s a trap.”

“They fucked us good,” Rico sighed. “Got us to stop looking for markings, jammed the place with bloodsuckers so we couldn’t tell who was who, even got us riled up enough to go in guns blazing. Not that that’s tough to do, right, Bloodhound?”

“Yeah, you got me there,” she snapped. “What was it you got arrested for again?”

Dancing around that particular land mine, Rico said, “We fell into a trap, so Denver’s probably a trap that just ain’t been sprung yet.”

“We deal with plenty of traps,” Cole said. “We set them up. We set them off. We stumble into them like idiots. What’s one more if it could mean saving some cops’ lives?”

“Those cops could be crooked,” Paige said.

“Does that mean we should let them be executed?”

Visibly shaken by the sharp, accusatory tone in Cole’s voice, Paige blinked and said, “Of course it doesn’t. I’m just saying they may be ready to kill us the moment we walk in the door. Who knows what the Nymar told them?”

“I can tell you there’s a reason those four places were saved for last,” Cole said.

Rico studied him with a critical eye. The other was pinched shut in a grimace of pain as he reached under his jacket to examine a wound he’d picked up somewhere during the night. “How do you know that?”

“Because otherwise the thing Hope was setting up would have happened by now. It would have been lumped in with all the smaller incidents instead of being saved for the next act, whatever that may be. I know what you’re thinking, and yes, this is coming from the part of my brain that plots video games. It still makes sense, doesn’t it?”

Although he obviously hated to admit as much, Rico nodded.

“We might be able to defuse some of this, though,” Cole continued. “Paige happens to be friends with a cop in Kansas City. Maybe even real good friends.”

“Not that good, Cole,” she replied sternly. “I told you that already. Besides, Stanze’s just a city police officer. And in case you need me to remind you, it’s the wrong city.”

“Stanze’s a smart guy. Plus, he’s got to be in someone’s sights since he’s the one other departments have been going to regarding all the wild dog attacks, right?”

Although Paige’s nod started off like Rico’s, it was soon accented by a crooked little smile. “Right.”

“You’re the one who’s so close to Stanze, so why don’t you have a chat with him and see what he can tell us. At the very least, he might know how to get a message to any undercover cops in those four cities to let them know what they might be in for.”

“What do you want her to do?” Rico asked. “Have her cop buddy type up a memo in regards to Skinners and any Skinnerlike activities?”