Steal the Light (Thieves) (27 page)

Read Steal the Light (Thieves) Online

Authors: Lexi Blake

Tags: #romance, #Lexi Blake, #Urban Fantasy, #Vampire, #Fae

“Sorry,” he said, rolling off me. He got to his knees, his arms struggling to remove the pack from his back. His clothes were a ruined mess. Bullet holes riddled his jacket and there was a huge tear in the front where Stewart had gotten off his lucky shot. “I can’t keep it up. They’ll see us now. You have to run, Zoey. I’m done. I can’t even walk.”

He laid his head down on the concrete. He’d used all of his strength to fly and shield us from pedestrians. He was no longer capable of fighting or even getting away. The bleeding stopped as his body managed to heal the wound, but he was so weak there was no way he could get somewhere to feed. If Stewart found us, Daniel would be a sitting duck, ripe for the plucking.

“The Benz is on the third level, and the keys are in my pocket.” Daniel’s voice was beyond weary. He shoved the package into my hands. “Take it and go. No arguing.”

I kissed his forehead and got up. He was right. Arguing was useless, and I would just do what I wanted to anyway. I took the keys and found the stairs. My legs burned as I climbed, lungs straining, but I didn’t stop. Couldn’t stop. I needed to get back to Daniel before someone called the cops. The last thing I needed was a Good Samaritan calling an ambulance. I had no idea what a defibrillator would do to a vampire, but I figured it wouldn’t be a good thing.

When I reached the third floor, I went to the middle of the level and punched the alarm button on the keys. There was a shrill beep, and I ran for Daniel’s car.

“Miss!” I heard a voice call. Before I thought about it, I stopped and turned.

A tiny elderly lady stood in the middle lane. She was dressed in a pale blue skirt and white shirt, a hat perched on her gray head as though she was ready for a Sunday sermon and fellowship gathering. She looked perfectly harmless. The enormous orange and black tiger twitching its tail as it paced back and forth behind her did not look harmless.

“Do you like this meat? It’s the fourth one I’ve gone through tonight. They just don’t last anymore. Don’t feel too bad for her, girlie,” Stewart said through the old lady’s mouth. “She poisoned two of her husbands, and she is really mean to her grandchildren. She was going to Hell soon anyway.”

The car was behind me, and I pushed the button to unlock the doors. I had to take the chance that I could make it into the car before that freaking tiger ate me.

“Oh, does my little friend here bother you?” Stewart petted the cat lightly with the old lady’s little white gloves. “I did mention I was a cat person.”

Further conversation with Stewart gained me nothing. I pivoted and jumped for the car, my hands shaking as I tossed the pack inside and threw my body into the driver’s seat. I slammed the door just as the tiger hit the roof. The car buckled and swayed, but the roof held. My hands shook as I shoved the key into the ignition, and the car came to life.

I slammed it into reverse just as the weretiger shoved his paws through the roof. Razor sharp claws skimmed my cheek. He pulled a decent-sized chunk of the roof off as I floored it in reverse and slammed on the brakes, dislodging him. I watched in the rearview mirror as his huge body tumbled on the concrete.

I shifted the car into drive.

The only problem was that little old lady standing right where I needed to go. Stewart smiled a sweet grandma smile with black-as-night eyes. If I went forward, I killed an old woman. If I went back…well, the tiger was already on his feet.

A familiar howl shook the air of the garage. I looked through the rearview mirror and saw a white wolf riding the tiger’s back, his teeth firmly planted in the tiger’s neck. Neil held on as the tiger tried to shake him off.

I turned back, ready to play a little game of chicken with a possessed old lady. Neil could handle one tiger all on his own. Hell, he’d probably get upset if I interrupted his fun. Stewart snarled my way. His eyes were firmly on me. He didn’t even notice that Dev moved behind him. I gave the now spectacularly angry demon the bird in order to keep those rheumy eyes focused my way. Dev held a nice tire iron in his hand. Stewart started walking my way just as Dev brought it down on his head. Stewart’s fourth body of the day crumpled and went limp. Dev hauled the now unconscious old lady out of harm’s way.

Dev jogged up the lane and slapped his hand against the hood of the car. He had a reckless grin on that gorgeous face.

“Get in!” I yelled through the open window.

“Can’t. I have to kill a tiger. Did I mention I love this job? Go!” He pulled his gun and ran back to help Neil.

And I went because I was no longer arguing with the men in my life.

I drove like a bat out of hell to get to Daniel, barely avoiding a Ford. The owner shook a fist at me as he drove by. He was headed to the third floor, so I was the least of his problems. I brought the car to a screeching halt at the entryway just in front of the unmanned security station.

He was so still, but I didn’t hesitate. I threw open the back door. He couldn’t be dead. He just couldn’t.

I got to my knees and put a hand to his face.

“Zoey, I told you to go.” He was weak, but I could still see the fire in his eyes. As long as he was pissed with me, there was still hope.

“Yes, you did.” He was so freaking heavy. I pulled at his jacket, trying to force him into a position where I could gain some traction.

“Damn it, Zoey, I can’t move.”

He could certainly move his mouth. I put my arms under his shoulders and tried to push. I managed to get him to sitting, but he was all muscle, and muscle is heavy. “You have to get into the car.”

“I can’t.” His jaw was a stubborn line, and his eyes drifted closed.

“Yes, you can.” The whole flying thing worked out, so I decided to play the damsel in distress again. “You either get into the car or a tiger is going to eat me.”

His eyes flew open. “What? What tiger?”

There was a sudden roar, and Daniel’s mouth dropped open. I took the opportunity to push harder against his broad back. “Yep, that’s a weretiger. Stewart brought kitties to the party, so if you don’t want to watch me become tiger food, you’ll get your ass in that car.”

“I hate you sometimes, Zoey,” Daniel said sullenly as he struggled to his feet. “I’m tired. I want to die. I can see the light, but does Zoey Wharton let me walk into the light? Hell, no. She has to go and find a tiger to piss off.”

“It’s florescent, Danny.” I draped his arm around my shoulder. It hung there limply as he started to shuffle. “I seriously doubt the light of the universe is florescent.”

He didn’t walk so much as fall into the car. I pushed his feet in and slammed the door. I got into the front seat and punched the gas.

“Hey,” I heard from the backseat. “When the hell did I get a sunroof?”

I turned on to the street and was about to whip out some witty comeback when suddenly there was a body in the seat beside me. It was a big, hulking body dressed in an expensive suit, and I couldn’t help the short scream that escaped my lips.

“Did I surprise you?” Lucas Halfer asked.

“Damn you,” I said under my breath as I got it together and turned left. I needed to get to Daniel’s club. They would be able to help him. I would take him home, but I couldn’t be sure that Michael and Jack the Ripper would be both in residence and willing to help. The club was required to help.

“You’re several millennia too late for that, dear,” Halfer said smugly. “I see you have the Light of Alhorra. I congratulate you on a job well done.”

“No thanks to you. You could have warned me I was getting into a freaking demon turf war.”

“Them’s the breaks, kid. When you steal for a living, you should count on coming in contact with all sorts of unsavory characters.” Halfer gave me a smirk as he motioned to the back seat. “Your vampire is worse for the wear.”

Daniel had gone utterly silent. His body didn’t move.

“I don’t have time to play these games with you. I have to take care of Daniel. Take the bag and go.” I tried to shove the backpack at him as I took the ramp to the freeway. I say tried to, as the pack hit the passenger side door and fell uselessly to the floor. It went right through the demon’s body, which flickered slightly as the object passed through.

“No can do.” Halfer shrugged. “I’m afraid this is a call, not an in-person meeting. I have a few things I need to take care of at home before I can collect my package. Nem…well…let’s just say the little prick you met earlier tonight, has been wreaking havoc down under as well. I can’t leave just yet, so I placed this intimate little call. Protect the box. I’ll take possession at one a.m. tomorrow. Don’t worry about the location. I can find you wherever you are.”

A horrible thought struck me. “Can Stewart find me?”

There would be no place to hide.

Halfer chuckled a little. “Not unless the two of you have a contract.”

“All right.” I glanced down at the clock. It was just after midnight, so all I had to do was play keep-away for twenty-four hours and some change. I took the exit I needed. I was close to the club. I just hoped I could get them to come to the car because Daniel probably wasn’t walking far.

“He’s near death, and not the temporary kind.” The demon looked into the back seat and shook his head. He looked almost concerned. “You don’t have long at all. He needs blood.”

“No shit. I’m trying to get him someplace where I can get just that. I didn’t think to keep a spare bag of blood hanging around, though now that I hear myself saying it, I probably should have.”

The demon ignored my panic-tinged rantings. “If you’re thinking of taking him to the vampire club, you should know it’s the first place the other one would have thought of, too. I know it’s the first place I would look for you.”

“You mean Stewart has men there?” The question came out of my mouth as a desperate plea.
Please don’t let the club be compromised.
I pleaded silently with whoever would listen. I needed to get Daniel someplace filled with people who knew what the hell they were doing.

Halfer struck me down with a laugh. “If by Stewart you mean my demonic version of
Single White Female
, then, yes, Stewart has men there. You’ll have to try again, and don’t say your father’s house because that would be location number two on his list. You’ll find Daniel’s place difficult as well. Stewart may be a prick, but he usually has all of his bases covered. He managed to hide his involvement in this enterprise from me until tonight. I tortured some really close friends because of the false trail he laid out.”

Dad’s place had been my next brilliant idea, but what the demon said made sense. Stewart struck me as a guy who would have a plan. Cutting me off from resources was a logical step if he couldn’t take me out at the hotel. Panic welled like bile in my belly. I had nowhere to go and no one I could trust to know what to do. Daniel was dying in the back seat. I was going to fail him. I was going to be driving around and around I-35 when Daniel expired because I couldn’t come up with a way to save him. I was out of options.

“No, you’re not, dear,” Halfer said softly, his voice cajoling, the only bit of calm in my head. “You still have the best option of all. It’s time to step up to the plate, companion. It’s time to do what you were born to do.”

“How did you know?” I was a little unnerved that he had read my mind.

His voice was silky smooth with just a hint of sympathy. “I feed on doubt and indecision. I can read your doubts. They call to me. If you want me to go away, Zoey Wharton, then get off your ass and make a decision.”

“What did you mean I was born to do this? I was born to do what?”

“Feed the vampire,” Halfer said, his eyes darkening. “If you want him to live, you will feed him yourself. It’s the only way he will survive this. He needs you. Only your blood will do.”

I turned the car away from the club and back toward the freeway. I had to put some distance between us and Stewart and his zoo of hired killers. My mind raced, but the panic was gone, replaced with cool decision. Daniel needed blood. I had blood.

It really was far more simple than I’d made it out to be.

I needed someplace quiet and out of the way. Someplace no one would think to look for. I started for the suburbs to the west.

When I looked again, Halfer was gone.

 

* * * *

 

I was shaking by the time I closed the door to the motel room I’d paid cash for. I forced myself to drive out of the city and past the first of the countless suburbs between Dallas and Fort Worth. I’d gotten off the freeway and found a small highway and then a tiny motel. It was what I liked to call a murder motel because I couldn’t imagine that people didn’t die there on a regular basis. But it was off the beaten track and they didn’t ask for ID or a credit card. The parking lot was hidden from the street. It was the perfect place for someone who didn’t want to be found.

Getting Daniel through the door was the hard part though I found getting him out of the car so much easier than getting him in. I had to pull him out by shoving my arms under his shoulders and dragging him an inch at a time. At least I didn’t have a weretiger practically breathing down my neck this time. He was dead weight, and there was a lot of him, but I was determined. He was well over six feet and he was somewhere around two-twenty, all of it muscle, but I got him inside.

There wasn’t much to the room. There was just the king-sized bed, a TV that had to be a veteran of the eighties, a small desk, and the bathroom. When I was certain nothing was hiding in the shadows, I forced myself to secure the package and pulled a sharpie out of the backpack. I always carried a couple. I drew a ward exactly as I’d been taught on the door. I proceeded to repeat the exercise on all four walls – north, south, east and west. The ward prevented witches from using locator spells to track us. It was a simple design, and I was hopeful it would hold.

When that was done, I finally let myself look at the man I’d loved most of my life. He was so still lying there on the floor. I turned on the light and couldn’t stop a short, startled cry. He was ashen, as though I was too late and nothing could bring him back from the second, final death.

Other books

By Jove by Marissa Doyle
More Than This by Patrick Ness
To Be Free by Marie-Ange Langlois
Royally Lost by Angie Stanton
The Boston Girl by Anita Diamant
Time for Eternity by Susan Squires
Metal Angel by Nancy Springer