twitching hand.
Bodies littered the concrete. Some curled into tight balls, others sprawled with their limbs flung wide.
Most weren’t moving, and I couldn’t tell if they were breathing.
“Goddess.” I accepted the elbow he offered until I found my footing. “Are they alive?”
“Most of them.” He nudged the nearest man onto his back and out of his own vomit. “What a mess.”
“The drug turned Mendelsohn and his females into giggling children with short tempers who wanted to play in a fountain.” As much as I wanted to crouch and examine the nearest victim, I didn’t dare. I might fall, and that would get me trampled or worse. “These people are comatose, not manic.”
This was either a different faction, or they had it worse for not leaving the area after their first hit.
Part of me questioned how the dealers could stomach lavish festivities after what happened to the Mendelsohns and whoever else had the bad luck to attend last night’s soiree. The rest figured they didn’t care, or they wouldn’t be dealing in illegal substances to begin with.
“I don’t recognize any of the partiers.” He cut a path to Greenleaf and the bouncer at the door. “We’re here on official business.”
The tall black man wore a fitted suit in a rich emerald fabric that shimmered under the club lights spilling onto the street. His thin tie, light shirt, and darker shoes were shades of grass, spring, and leaf. He jerked his chin toward the drunken line winding down the block. “I already heard that once tonight.”
The silver of Bishop’s eyes gleamed bright, hungry. “We’re with the Office of the Potentate of Atlanta.”
The bouncer flicked a glance past Bishop to me, took in my bleached jeans and holey tee, and smirked.
“Sure, fella.” He pointed out the queue, in case we missed it the first time. “End of the line.”
“Hadley.” Bishop stepped aside and shoved me front and center. “Assert your dominance.”
Assert my dominance, my foot. “Look, just because I’m dating Midas doesn’t mean—”
“He’s the pack prince,” Bishop said flatly. “You had to have picked up on some of his tricks.”
“That guy from earlier. He claimed he was pack.” The bouncer wet his lips. “He was legit?”
We had come to the right place if Midas beat us here, but the sensual music spilling out onto the street conflicted with the earlier techno beats. This wasn’t where his call dropped then. He must be elsewhere.
“Midas Kinase.” I waited for recognition to dawn. “What rock have you been living under?”
Gray skin mottled his fists as he clenched them. “You got a problem with stone trolls?”
A troll able to turn his fists to stone would be just the ticket for policing rowdy supernaturals.
“You’re fae.” I didn’t step back, but I shifted my weight onto my heels. “I thought this was a warg party.”
“Blithe Danann is hosting.” He adjusted his tie, which was pinned with a silver oak leaf. “This is her place.”
The name meant nothing to me, aside from the obvious nod to her heritage, but Bishop set his jaw.
“We should go.” He closed his hand over my arm. “Now.”
“What about Midas?” I jerked free of him. “We have to warn him.”
“You do not want Blithe to notice me.” He ground his teeth. “Trust me. We’re done here.”
“All right.” I did trust him, and this Blithe person was freaking him the frak out. “Let’s go.”
While Bishop watched the swirling crowd, waiting for it to eddy, I kept an eye on the bouncer.
“Repeat that.” Plugging one ear against the ruckus, he shoved his earpiece in tighter. “Are you certain?” Adjusting his tie yet again, he shifted his gaze to Bishop with a swallow. “Ms. Danann wishes to see you.”
“No,” Bishop said without turning, then stepped into the flow of bodies and dragged me with him.
The laughing crowd with their bright eyes and grasping hands shoved against us, herding us backward, toward Greenleaf, as if it possessed one consciousness and one purpose.
“Bishop.”
The single word rang with deafening finality, despite the utter chaos around us.
“Find Midas.” He shoved me through the front line into the less turbulent core. “Go.”
Flinging my arm back, I cursed him as my fingers slid free of his. “I’m not—”
“You’re leaving,” he snarled, “or I’m calling Linus.”
The threat worked its magic, and I stopped fighting the current and let it sweep me away.
“Jerk,” I muttered as I navigated the streaming bodies in search of any port in the storm.
A clammy hand circled my ankle just as I broke clear, and I almost kicked it off me on