to home. Taking Ackmeyer hostage and possibly disrupting the tentative peace at the GNC summit would be bad enough. Involving Mira was an offense Lucan would not forgive.
Nor would Nikolai and Renata, Mira’s adoptive parents.
Or Nathan, who’d been a best friend and brother to both Kellan and Mira since the three of them were kids.
Not to mention the rest of the warriors and their mates, including Lazaro Archer, who would be ashamed of his grandson for having vanished like a coward, only to rise again nearly a decade later as a villain they’d all be within their rights to despise.
Fuck. Even the most positive endgame of this whole scenario didn’t promise a great outcome, regardless of whether he and Mira were successful tonight in tracking down Vince and getting Ackmeyer to safety.
Mira apparently hadn’t absorbed what Rune’s disclosure had just revealed. She peered around Kellan, frowning at the other Breed male. “Who told you I’d gotten reprimanded by Lucan? Where’d you hear I might have gotten bounced off patrols?”
“Make a difference where?” Rune shrugged. “Most folks I see around here have no love for the Order. People talk. I could’ve heard it anywhere.”
“Well, whatever you heard,” she said, “here I am now. And I’m looking for your help in locating Rooster. I’m not screwing around, Rune. I need to talk to him. So, if you see him in here tonight, I need you to find a way to hold him for me until I come back. I wouldn’t ask you if I knew of anyone else who might be able to help me.”
He considered for a long moment. “I don’t do favors for anyone. I sure as hell don’t do them because I want to get paid.”
“Then do it because it’s important,” Mira pressed. “And it is important, Rune. I won’t lie to you, it’s a matter of life and death.”
“Whose life we talking about?”
Although she didn’t so much as look Kellan’s way, he felt her body tense beside him. “Does it make a difference who?” she replied, echoing the fighter’s words back to him.
“Might,” he said. “Might not.”
“I need to talk to Rooster, the sooner the better,” Mira told him. “And no one can know that I’m looking for him. No one.”
Rune’s hard stare bore into her, then slid to Kellan in what felt a lot like suspicion. “What about the Order?”
“No one,” Mira stated firmly.
It took the menacing Breed fighter a long moment to respond. When he did, it was with a curt inclination of his head. Agreement, even though he started closing the door on them again, in earnest this time. “If that’s all, I’ve got more important business to attend to.”
The sharp turn of the lock punctuated his exit. Then Kellan and Mira were standing alone in the passageway once more.
“Let’s get out of here,” Kellan said, taking her by the hand to make their way back up the stairwell to the club at street level.
They had no sooner cleared the back stairwell and were on their way through the noisy crowd, heading for the door, when a low voice sounded from behind them. “Thought you got the message a few nights ago when you were in here causing trouble, warrior.”
Kellan and Mira slowed to a halt, then together turned to face Cassian, La Notte’s proprietor. His eyes were the color of peridot, shrewd and hawklike beneath his dark brows and snowy crown of short-cropped hair. No small man in stature or build, he stood with arms crossed over his leather-and-buckle-clad chest, his long legs braced in a commanding stance.
“In case there was any doubt, you’re not welcome in my club.” His mouth curved in a smile that bordered on profane. “Or are you in here slumming with your friend?”
He wasn’t looking at Kellan when he said it, but Kellan’s hackles rose at the sight of the guy. Tension seeped into his limbs, tightened his grasp on Mira’s hand.
“We were just leaving,” she replied.
“Who’s this with you?” Cassian asked now. “New recruit?”
Kellan lowered his head as the man strolled toward them, moving with a rolling, pantherlike smoothness that belied that rough edges of the rest of his demeanor. Cassian’s bright green eyes pinned Kellan in a hard stare. “I know you.”
“Don’t think so,” Kellan growled, certain he’d never met the human. He would have recalled the arrogance and the none-too-subtle undercurrent of menace that vibrated around him.
That shock of silvery white hair seemed glacial under the swirling, colored lights from the stage behind them. A huge