Authors: Jenna Black
bothered by the fact.
For the record, standing in a corner by yourself in a snooty country club watching the
filthy rich strut around in their one-of-a-kind designer gowns and ostentatious jewelry is not my
idea of a good time. The wine helped a bit, taking the edge off, but after I’d finished my first
glass, I didn’t dare get another. I’m a bit of a lightweight when it comes to drinking, and I did have to drive home when the evening’s fun and games were done.
Steph and Blake, young and good-looking, were quite a striking pair in the midst of the
decidedly older crowd. Steph flitted around like an anxious hummingbird, making sure she
talked to everyone, smiling and vivacious. Blake stuck close to her and I was pleased to see that,
while he made social when necessary, he spent most of his time scanning the crowd, alert for any
threats. I’d checked the guest list against the list of known Olympians Anderson had given me,
but just because I hadn’t identified any Olympians on the list didn’t necessarily mean none
would show up. After all, Konstantin had made it abundantly clear that the Olympians had
money to burn. Someone with that kind of money could probably find a way to get themselves
on the guest list at the last minute. So, much as I didn’t like Blake, I had to reluctantly admit I
was glad he was there.
The cocktail party was only an hour long, but it felt like an eternity. My feet were killing
me, and I was bored out of my skull. I wasn’t exactly looking forward to the dinner and auction
parts of the evening, but at least then I would be able to sit down.
When eight o’clock finally rolled around, I followed the herd into the sumptuously
appointed dining room. Annoyingly, there were assigned seats, so I had to either wander around
the tables looking for the place card with my name on it, or stand in line to ask the nice man by
the doorway to check his alphabetized list. I chose to wander.
Steph knew how much I enjoyed these affairs. She also knew I didn’t like mingling with
the sort of people who attended them. I made an educated guess that she would have been her
usual considerate self and seated me at her table. I scanned the room, figuring that red dress of
hers would stand out like a beacon, but I didn’t see her.
At first, I wasn’t even remotely concerned. She was, after all, in charge of this event, not
a guest. I figured she was taking care of administrative details, or just talking to the stragglers
who hadn’t come into the dining room yet. But as the seats at the tables filled up and I still saw
no sign of her, a niggle of alarm ran through me.
I located the table that Steph and Blake were going to be sitting at—right at the front, of
course—and I found my own place card directly opposite hers. But still no Steph. No Blake,
either. Maybe that meant they’d slipped away for a quick make-out session, but I didn’t think so.
Steph wasn’t what I would call a control freak, but she did put a lot of time and energy into these
events, and she wouldn’t just wander away for a little me-time. Unless Blake used his nasty
power on her, but that was a thought I could hardly bear to contemplate.
Telling myself I was being paranoid and overprotective, I slipped out of the dining room
toward the bar and lounge. There were still a few people out there, ignoring the signals that
dinner was nigh. But no Steph. I was going to start questioning the staff to see if they could tell
me her last known location, but my cell rang, sending a shiver down my spine. True, the call
could be completely innocuous, from anyone. But in my heart, I knew it was bad news.
My instinct was confirmed when I pulled out my cell phone and saw the caller ID:
Alexis. What were the chances I would mysteriously lose sight of Steph, Alexis would call me
moments later, and the two were not related? I prayed for a miracle as I reluctantly answered.
“What do you want?” I asked, my voice harsh with a fear I couldn’t hide.
Alexis laughed. “What’s the matter, Nikki? You sound tense.”
“I’m not in the mood to banter with you. What do you want?”
“Do exactly as I tell you, and I promise no harm will come to dear Stephanie.”
I swallowed a cry of anguish as he confirmed my worst fears. “You can’t hurt Steph!” I
said. “My family and I are under Anderson’s protection.”
Alexis laughed again. “Is that how he told you it would work? Or just wishful thinking on
your part?”
“He and Konstantin have a deal!” Oh, please, God, let that be true, let me not have been a
complete dupe.
“A deal that doesn’t include Stephanie. She isn’t
really
your family, after all.”
“She’s my sister!”
“But adopted. Not related by blood. A technicality, perhaps, but one we mean to exploit.
Because you chose to seek asylum with Anderson, we cannot touch you. But Stephanie is fair
game.”
“Let her go, you bastard! She has nothing to do with this.”
“I’ll be happy to let her go. No one has to get hurt in this scenario. Come to me, renounce
Anderson’s protection, and she’ll go her own merry way, none the worse for wear.”
What were the chances I could trust Alexis’s word? Slim and none. The problem was, I
didn’t see that I had any alternative. Alexis had Steph, and that left me with precious few
options.
“How do I know you really have Steph?” I asked. I knew deep down in my gut that he
was telling the truth, at least about that. But stalling for time seemed like a better alternative than
rolling over.
There was a little scuffling noise on the other end of the line. Then I heard Alexis’s voice
in the background, saying “Let your sister know you’re all right.”
My entire body went tense as I braced myself for the impact of my sister’s terrified voice.
But Steph is made of sterner stuff than that, and she was every bit as protective of me as I was of
her.
I knew she was there, knew Alexis wasn’t lying, but she didn’t make a sound. My throat
tightened as I understood what she was doing: keeping her mouth shut in hopes that by not
giving Alexis proof that he had her, she would keep me from coming after her. My eyes teared
up.
“I’m not going to let him hurt you,” I said, the words feeling hollow. Even
I
didn’t
believe I could protect her from Alexis. Why should I expect
her
to be convinced?
Alexis didn’t like her show of defiance. I heard a harsh slap, and Steph’s involuntary
gasp of shock and pain.
“You’d best learn to do as you’re told,” Alexis growled in the background.
Steph still didn’t say anything, though her gasp had already given her away. I cursed
myself for asking Alexis for proof when I had believed him all along.
“I believe you!” I shouted into the phone, hoping my voice was loud enough for Alexis to
hear.
There was a little more shuffling around, and his voice came back on the line. “You have
thirty minutes to get to 28 Hillsboro Road in D.C. The door will be unlocked, so you just come
right in. You come in, your sister goes out. If you don’t get here in thirty minutes, the party will
start without you.”
I recognized the address from my list of Olympian properties. It was in Woodley Park
and, if memory served, it was up for sale. I mentally calculated the distance and fought another
jolt of terror. “That’s not enough time,” I told him. Maybe if I drove like a maniac and hit every
light green, but…
“You’ll have to
make
it enough.”
“Please,” I said, hating to beg, but willing to do it for Steph’s sake. “It’ll take me ten
minutes just to get my car. Give me forty minutes to get there.” I was already hurrying toward
the exit. “I’m on my way now. Please don’t hurt her.”
“All right,” he answered in an almost sensual purr, “I’m feeling generous tonight. You
have your forty minutes. I look forward to seeing you again.”
I turned my phone off before I was tempted to answer him with too much honesty.
SEVENTEEN
Forty minutes gave me
a fighting chance of making it to the rendezvous on time, but I
was still going to be cutting it damn close. Despite the wintry temperature, I slipped my heels off
as I burst through the front door and ran toward the parking lot. I’d run faster carrying them than
wearing them, even if I ended up with a collection of pebbles buried in the balls of my feet. I
stayed on the grass instead of the sidewalks whenever possible.
It was a long sprint to the parking lot, made longer, no doubt, by my fear. The cold air
burned my lungs and stung the skin of my bare arms. I hadn’t even considered stopping to pick
up my coat on the way out, and little black dresses with spaghetti straps aren’t great cold-weather
gear.
Where the hell was Blake? I wondered belatedly. He’d been sticking to Steph like glue
the whole evening. How had he let Alexis snatch her out from under his nose?
My gut cramped with fear again. Had Blake sold her out? Had he come with her tonight
so he could more easily separate her from the crowd and hand her over to Alexis?
I shoved that thought out of the way. For the moment, it didn’t matter. What mattered
was getting to that damn house before Alexis went to work on Steph, and it was going to be a
close call. Gravel tore the bottoms of my feet, and my breath formed frosty clouds in the night air
as I continued to sprint. I was so focused on my ultimate goal that I didn’t immediately notice
that all four streetlights in the lot were out, not until the waxing moon slid behind a bank of
clouds and made me suddenly aware of the darkness.
I stumbled to a halt just as my feet hit the asphalt. This was a country club, not some
neglected inner city parking lot. If even
one
streetlight had burned out, they’d have fixed it
within the hour. For all four to be burned out at the same time seemed so unlikely as to be
impossible.
The little hairs at the back of my neck prickled, but I decided I didn’t have time to be
cautious. My silver rental was parked in the rear corner of the lot, and I started forward again at a
brisk jog, too winded to manage another sprint.
I made it about halfway across the lot before I ran into something like an invisible wall. I
hit it full force, rebounding wildly. My arms flailed for balance, and the shoes I’d been carrying
in my left hand went flying. The impact had knocked what little wind I had left in my lungs out
of me, and my legs were too quivery from the long run to hold me.
I sprawled inelegantly on the asphalt, my dress making an alarming ripping sound as the
skirt hiked up my thighs. I broke the fall with my hands, scraping the skin off the heels and
grinding dirt and pebbles into the wounds.
When I looked up to see what I’d hit, Jamaal’s body seemed to coalesce out of thin air. I
belatedly recognized the uniquely yielding properties of flesh and bone that had characterized
my invisible wall.
Jamaal grinned down at me, the expression fierce as any snarl. “Going somewhere?”
I tried to draw some air into my lungs, but I hadn’t recovered from the impact yet and
could only stare up at him, imploring him with my eyes to get out of my way.
“You shouldn’t have fucked with us, Nikki,” he said, the grin/snarl growing wider.
I had no idea what he was talking about, of course. I also didn’t give a damn, not now,
not when Steph was in danger.
I finally filled my lungs enough to get some words out. “We can do this later,” I gasped.
“My sister’s in trouble.”
He snorted, the cold air making his breath a soft white cloud like the puff of smoke from
the fire-breathing dragon’s nostrils. “You don’t get to decide when we do this.”
He reached for me, and I rolled violently to my left, scraping more skin off my bare arms
as I avoided his grasp. I’d torn my dress enough when I’d fallen to give me some freedom of
movement, and I managed to lurch to my feet.
“Alexis has my sister!” I tried again, though I didn’t have high hopes of getting through
to Jamaal. Maybe he and Blake were in this thing together, Blake to hand Steph over to Alexis,
Jamaal to delay my rescue attempt and give Alexis time to …
I didn’t want to think about what he might do to Steph if I didn’t make it there in time.
“Please, Jamaal!” It came out a sob, but he didn’t strike me as the kind to be moved by feminine
tears. “Let me go!”
“You think I believe a single word that comes out of that lying mouth of yours?” he
asked. “You’d say anything to get out of taking your medicine.”
Because of my profession, I’d taken pains to learn a fair amount of self-defense.
However, I knew I couldn’t defend against Jamaal, at least not for very long. If he were an
ordinary person in an ordinary situation, maybe I’d be able to fight him off long enough to make
a run for it, but I couldn’t
afford
to run for it. I
had
to get to my car, and he was in my way.
“I don’t have time for this,” I muttered under my breath as my heart kicked frantically
behind my ribs. I had no hope that I could fight Jamaal off in hand-to-hand combat. That meant I
had to try to reason with him. But how could I reason with a half-crazed death-god descendant
who was convinced I was the enemy?
I held up my hands in a gesture that was supposed to indicate surrender, hoping Jamaal
would take a step back from the edge. “Look, I don’t know what you think I’ve done this time,