Unleashed by Shadows (By Moonlight Book 10) (26 page)

BOOK: Unleashed by Shadows (By Moonlight Book 10)
8.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A cold knot of dread started tightening. “And?” He could sense there was more she was dying to spill.

“And she’s here in New Orleans to be with her mate, Cale. Otherwise known as Mick Terry.”

He disconnected the call just as he tried to disconnect from the awful bite of betrayal. Mick Terry was Cale Terriot. Leader of the Terriot clan. He wasn’t shocked. Just terribly, terribly wounded by that truth.

A pain quickly overcome by cold fury.

He reached into his nightstand for the silver blade he kept there. Not even bothering to dress, he carried it into the living room, thoughts fixed upon one question.

Throat, heart, or balls?

He didn’t have the opportunity to decide. Because his deceitful guest wasn’t there.

*

Philo Tidbideaux rubbed at his eyes. Three in the morning? What the hell could be that damned important? He pulled open the door to his apartment to glare out at Mick—no, Cale Terriot who wasted no time on pleasantries.

“We’ve got business.”

“Come in. Coffee?”

“No time.”

“Can I at least get dressed?”

He didn’t wait to see the quick nod, gathering his clean clothes for the day from the arm of the sofa and heading to the bathroom. In less than three minutes, his teeth were brushed, he was deodorized, dressed, and undecided if he was more worried or annoyed by Cale’s shrewd gaze jumping between the bunch of covers on the couch and his closed bedroom door.

“Okay, tell me why I shouldn’t kick your ass for waking me from a good dream?”

“I was going to wait until morning to tell you Rueben Guedry is in town.” He flashed a feral smile at Philo’s gasp. “But something even better came along. Martine Terriot, drug designer from hell. Want to go knock on her door with me?”

“Is your brother with her?”

“No. I don’t think so. But I’d know the scent of those two bitches anywhere. And they’ll tell us everything we want to know. Eventually.”

That cold ferocity let him glimpse a whole new side to his employee. A very dark and scary side.

“We’re wasting time. I’m not about to let them get away.”

“It’ll take a few minutes to gather up some Patrol members.”

“No.” Cale’s tone brooked no argument. “I think we can handle two females.”

Philo understood. A trust issue. They’d have to discuss his reason for worry another time.

“Philo?”

A soft, feminine voice drew their attention to the slightly opened bedroom door and the partially concealed face of an angel. Tib’s every waking dream.

“Sorry to disturb you,” he said with a reassuring smile.  “Just some trouble at the docks. Go back to sleep. I shouldn’t be too long.”

A nod. “Be careful.”

That soft petition melted his insides like gelato on a blazing summer day. “I will. Don’t worry.”

“I will if I want to.” The door closed before she could see his grin.

“The girl you were with at the wedding,” Cale remarked. “Detective Caissie’s friend.”

“And mine,” he added before Cale could make more of it. “Do we want to talk about my sad love life or get down to business.”

“We can walk and talk.”

Tib scowled at that glib suggestion and shoved him toward the door.

*

The two story white house with its stately columns, lacy wrought iron railings, and haughty dormers sat back from the street behind a bristling iron fence. No lights were on.

“Are you sure?” Philo grasped Cale’s shoulder as he was about to vault to the top of the fence.

“I scouted it out earlier. The back yard and solarium are full of plants and herbs. I can smell their greedy stench.”

“They’re alone?”

“One or two guards. Nothing we can’t handle.” With a crouch and bunch of leg muscles, he was up, balancing between the menacing iron spears. He put down a hand, and Philo joined him. They jumped silently to the lawn.

“Our best bet is in back. Less chance of being spotted.”

When Tibideaux nodded, Cale started out at a brisk jog, ducking low and hugging the shrub line. His adrenalin rush suppressed the shakes for the moment, keeping his head clear and his thoughts focused. Or was that his thirst for retribution?

Martine had slowly poisoned his father in hopes of manipulating the crown. Her daughter Sylia had trapped him in a distasteful deal, herbs to grant him strength and sight for money and favors. But mostly for sex. The cost hadn’t mattered then, when being with Kendra wasn’t a possibility. But now it did, very much so. And thinking of it, thinking of her brought a fierce angry beat to his blood.

Cale slipped through an arbor of dormant vines to enter the back yard. The odor of peat and organic fertilizers from regimented raised planting beds momentarily disguised those of his surroundings.

He never sensed anything out of the ordinary until a strong arm hooked about his neck to yank him off balance. Instinct overcame surprise. Gripping that sturdy forearm, Cale kicked his feet up and over his assailant’s shoulder, twisting free as he landed lightly on the grass behind the taller Shifter. Even before he’d settled into a combative stance, the figure whirled, foot hooking behind his ankles, one hand clenching in his hair while the other covered his mouth.

“Shhh! Cale, it’s me.”

The instant he went slack with relief, Cale was freed, and he quickly threw his arms about his attacker, not to grapple but to hug tight.

“I see you’re still alive.”

Cale laughed softly at that mild claim. “I am.”

After a long moment, he stepped back, one arm still banded about the other’s shoulders as he turned to a wary Tibideaux.

“Philo, this is my brother Turow. Row, my . . . boss.”

Turow Terriot was a middle prince, as solid as their mountain top and as mysterious as its whispering pines. As a relentless hunter, he was unparalleled. No one had heard from him since Kendra had sent him to find James, Martine, and Sylvia while Cale lay bleeding. If he was here, so was his quarry.

“Can we do the meet and greet later?” Philo hissed. “Someone’s moving inside.”

“I’ve been following Sylvia,” Turow told them quietly. “She led me here earlier tonight. I was just about to look for you. Good timing.”

“James?”

“Just missed him last night.”

“Martine?” Cale asked, gesturing toward the house to confirm what he already knew. At Turow’s brief nod, Cale growled, “I want them alive.” Then a grim addendum. “For now.”

They breeched the rear of the house swiftly and silently, like smoke through a crack under the door. Two guards were taken down in the hallway, another at the top of the stairs, all without noise or bloodshed. Turow snatched Sylvia Terriot from her bed, a hand over her mouth to shut off her shriek as he tucked her squirming, kicking form under his arm and toted her back to the main floor.

Martine, who claimed she had shamanistic powers, wasn’t as easy to apprehend. She’d managed to slip down a rear flight of stairs into the glass solarium. Armed with pruning shears, she put one of the massive bedding tables between them, snarling defiantly even though she had nowhere to run.

“What have you done with my daughter, runt of the litter in an undeserved crown?”

Cale regarded her with equal animosity. Despite being on the run and now cornered, she retained her stunning beauty and regal disdain, even in her night dress. His father’s mistress. His would be murderess.

“Nothing. Yet. I guess that depends on you, scorcer-bitch. Where’s Jamie?”

“Taking care of business. Then he’ll take care of you and your insipid mate.”

Cale bristled at her threat, wise enough to be wary. “Is this where you make your poison for Casper Lee and Warren Brady?” At the flicker of alarm in her eyes, he bared his teeth. “Is this where you brew the destruction of our clan?”

She hoisted her head to glare down her thin nose at him.

“Where you spin your web and snare the innocent to destroy them for the amusement of the Guedrys and those cold monsters in the North?”

Realizing how much he already knew, a sudden caution seeped into her expression.

“What do they give you to mix in with your weeds? What do they give you in return for the betrayal of your kind?”

“My kind,” she sneered. “You are as beneath me as stale tobacco spit on the sidewalk, you and your pig father with your arrogance and your cruelties. You’re getting what you desired, what you deserve. A clan of unstoppable supermen, the ultimate warriors, until they self-destruct. How close are you to cutting your wrists, Cale? To throwing yourself into the fire for a chance to burn just a bit brighter for just a bit longer? To believing the lies your father told you and now tell yourself?”

Cale ignored her taunts. “You’ve tormented us with your diseases. Now, if you and your daughter want to live, you’ll give us the cure.”

A narrow smile. “What makes you think I have a cure?”

“You’re too smart and selfish to create a plague without a way to destroy it if the tides turn in a different direction.”

“Why would I share it with you?”

Cale lunged forward, eyes blazing as his fists pounded the tabletop between them, making the soil and Martine Terriot jump. “Because if you don’t, I’m going to shred your bitch daughter in front of you. Then, I’m going to do the same to you inch by inch until you beg for the chance!”

“You won’t! Wesley will damn you to hell.”

“I’m already damned by this curse you put inside me. There’s nothing I won’t do to save my people from your greedy manipulation.” When Martine remained unconvinced, Cale whirled to roar for Turow. “Bring her here.” Then to Martine, he said with a silky menace, “Let’s see how long you can keep your secrets while I’m tearing the flesh from her bones.”

“You wouldn’t dare.” But her voice trembled in uncertainty.

“The prince who became king’s conscience wouldn’t allow it. But the monster you made me will enjoy every fucking bite.” His arm swept the table clear of pots and planters. Panting, seething with rage, he commanded, “Lay her down and hold her.”

While Philo paled at the thought of such savagery, he didn’t interfere as Turow dragged a struggling Sylvia to the table. She wasn’t as frightened as she was furious. Not yet.

“I’m not afraid of you,” she spat. “You won’t hurt me.”

“Is that what you know?” A fearsome smile. “Prepare to be re-educated.”

When he grabbed her from his brother’s hands, she screamed and fought in earnest, realizing he was no longer her lover or even a powerful king. He was vengeance, and he was death.

“Stop!”

Martine’s cry brought everything to a halt. She stood straighter, composing her features into a lovely mask of superiority. “There’s no need for brutality.”

Cale calmed, but was no less resolute. “Give me the cure, and I’ll spare her life.”

Her lips quivered slightly then firmed. “What of me?”

“You’ll spend the rest of your days in a room next to my father where you can do no further harm to anyone. Not because I’m merciful, but because I gave Wesley my word.”

“What you describe is hell,” she said flatly.

“Live in it there, or burn in it here.”

“You don’t give me any choice.” She took a resigned breath and smiled slightly at her daughter. “Don’t forget who and what you are, my dear. And what they made me do.”

She’d been ruffling the greenery of one of the plants on the table, subtly stripping off its leaves and crushing them between her fingers to release a pungent smell. Then, before anyone could guess what she planned, she quickly chewed and swallowed them down.

“Mother, no!” Sylvia wailed as foam appeared on Martine’s lips. She began to convulse then dropped dead to the floor.

Before a hysterical Sylvia could throw herself down upon her mother’s body, Cale seized her arms and pulled her close to demand, “Tell me you know about the cure or die with her.”

Features pale, her eyes huge with sorrow and defiance, she told him, “She took that secret with her.” A taunting smile unfurled. “Do your worst.”

“You haven’t seen my worst. Where are her papers, her books, her notes?”

“She never wrote anything down. She didn’t trust anyone with her knowledge, not even me.”

He released her, letting her fall beside her mother’s body to shed silent tears as he told Turow and Philo, “That bitch isn’t going to get the best of me by dying.” Then he met Sylvia’s mocking smile.

“Will you kill me now, after all we’ve been to one another?”

“You’re nothing to me,” he spat. To Turow, he ordered, “Take her.” To Philo, “Call in your Patrol. Question those men. Tear up every board, sift through every inch of soil. Take samples from everything. Then burn it down over her. All of it.”

 

CHAPTER TWENTY

Max Savoie returned to River Road with his new bride.

The Shifter king of New Orleans swept Oscar up in a fond embrace while Tina and Brigit crowded around Charlotte Caissie to exclaim over her healthy tan and gorgeous wardrobe, leaving Giles to bring in their luggage from the rental.

Kendra observed the excitement from a curious distance. She knew them only from Cale’s descriptions. Her mate admired Max, the tall, rather rangy leader with his unruly black hair, shrewd green eyes, and air of cool control, considering him a worthy opponent and cagy ally. She could sense that edge even as Max released a broad white smile and rather startlingly loud laugh over something Giles said. Then those wary eyes touched on her, a stranger in his home. Max Savoie wasn’t someone who trusted easily or accepted on face value.

His wife, Charlotte or Cee Cee as the others called her, she knew was a New Orleans detective. Tall, curvy, exotically attractive with her flashing dark eyes and aggressively styled short black hair, she had the same response to a new face. Guardedness, questions, and probably a quick background check for priors. Cale called her tough, smart and fiercely loyal to her friends. Kendra wasn’t among them at the moment. While Tina hurried Oscar up to get ready for school, Brigit caught Cee Cee’s arm, tugging her over to Kendra by the stairs.

“This is Kendra, my cousin and best friend forever.”

Cee Cee regarded her for a long, gauging moment then offered a small smile. “Cale’s queen.” She put out a hand. “Not quite what I pictured.”

Other books

Making Waves by Lorna Seilstad
Forbidden by Jacquelyn Frank
India Discovered by John Keay
The Winter Horses by Philip Kerr
The Seventh Secret by Irving Wallace
Brushed by Lionne, Stal
Cautionary Tales by Piers Anthony
The Price of Discovery by Leslie Dicken