to myself.
‘Then stop letting your issues with your own childhood mess with Lisandro’s ability to do his job,’ Edward said.
‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.’
‘Anita,’ he said, and just looked at me.
I wanted to pout, or get unreasonably angry, all things I’d done for years as a coping mechanism. ‘Fine, but I still want a third guard to come with them.’
‘Will you trust Nicky to pick the third guard?’ Edward asked.
I sighed and then said, ‘Yeah, sure.’
‘Me, too,’ he said.
I looked at him. ‘Really?’ I said, and didn’t try to keep the surprise out of my face.
‘Lisandro and who?’ Nicky asked.
‘Edward and I agree that you can pick whoever else comes with the two of you.’
‘You used his real name,’ Nicky said.
‘Sorry, he just surprised me.’
‘What’d he do to surprise you that badly?’
‘I’ll explain later,’ I said. ‘Just be ready. We’ll pick you up on the way out of town.’
‘Will do. Love you,’ he said.
‘I love you, too,’ I said, and it was automatic, because I was still studying Edward’s face. When Nicky had hung up, I said to Edward, ‘You trust Nicky’s judgment that much?’
He gave one nod.
‘High damn praise,’ I said.
‘You know me, Anita; I like working with sociopaths who are willing to do anything to get the job done.’
‘What’s that say about me?’
He grinned, and it was all back to good-ol’-boy Ted. ‘You’ll never be as good a sociopath as I am, Anita, and neither of us will be as good at it as Nicky. It means he won’t let emotion color his choice. It isn’t that his feelings are hurt about Socrates not trusting him, it’s that the lack of trust makes Socrates hesitate to follow Nicky’s lead in a fight, and that makes for a bad team, and more than any sport, combat means you need a good working team.’
I stopped arguing, because Edward trusted Nicky. It was unprecedented that he had that much faith in one of my lovers. He liked Micah and Nathaniel. He didn’t dislike Jean-Claude, but that wasn’t the same thing as trusting any of them. I shoved it all away, put in a box to look at later, because we were running behind. I admitted to myself that the reason I’d argued about Lisandro had been about me losing my mother when I was eight. I knew how much damage that had done to me, and I didn’t want to do the same thing to Lisandro’s kids; there, that was the truth. I hated when my own issues interfered with me doing my job. They’d gotten in the way of my personal life for years, but my job was usually safe from my neuroses – well, most of the time.
We got Hatfield and went for Edward’s SUV. I told her we were picking up some deputies on the way out of town. She didn’t argue, just asked, ‘Are we picking up the two blond men?’
‘One of them,’ I said.
‘And new friends?’ she asked.
‘New to you,’ Edward said.
‘I look forward to meeting them,’ she said.
I glanced in the rearview to see if she was being sarcastic, but her face looked open and honest.
‘What?’ she asked.
‘Just trying to decide if you meant that.’
‘If there’s anyone, or anything, that can help me do my job better, I’m all for it. I got those people killed last night. I can’t bring them back, but I can get better and not do it again.’
‘You didn’t kill them, Hatfield,’ I said.
‘Neither of you would have stored the body parts in the morgue of a hospital. If either of you had been in charge last night, all five victims from last night would be alive now. Tell me how my ignorance didn’t cost them their lives.’
I didn’t know how to answer her.
‘We all make mistakes until we know better,’ Edward said.
‘Exactly, and I’m going to follow you both around like your fucking shadows and learn all I can before you leave.’
I wasn’t sure I wanted Hatfield following me that closely, but I couldn’t tell her no. Edward and I exchanged a look. He didn’t tell her no either. I guess we had a third wheel. I wondered how she’d like Lisandro and whoever else Nicky picked. For that matter, I wondered what they’d think of Hatfield.
59
We were at the third house on our list. If someone had come down the two-wheel track by accident and driven past, the house would have looked ordinary from the front. You had to get out and walk around to the