Heat of the Moment - Lori Handeland Page 0,69

that they mean to bring Roland back, and they’ve got a rocking head start.”

“Why does he want to come back?”

“Wouldn’t you? Hell can’t be much of a picnic.”

“What does he hope to accomplish? His family’s gone.”

“But the family he blames for that isn’t.”

“Henry’s a ghost. That’s pretty gone. Pru’s a wolf.” I wasn’t sure what that was.

“Roland wants to end the Taggart line, as his was ended.”

“By Taggarts you mean Pru and Henry?”

“And their three daughters.”

“The amazing, disappearing babies who were born four hundred years ago. I doubt they’re still around.”

“Henry and Pru are still around.”

“Not the way they once were. And why is that?”

“We don’t know for sure. They performed a spell that sent the girls to a place where no one believes in witches any more. The sacrifice of their lives fueled the magic. But the spell was to save their children not themselves.”

“Yet here they are.” Kind of.

“Maybe once the Venatores Mali were revived, so were Henry and Pru.”

“Why are the Venatores Mali revived now?” I asked. “Why not go after the Taggart descendants ASAP? The longer they waited the more of them there would be. By now, there are probably hundreds. Thousands even.”

“Not quite,” Raye said. “What he’s really after, and has been from that night in the woods, is us.”

I blinked. “Us?”

“Triplet girls,” she said. “One dark.” She fingered her hair. “One redhead.” Her gaze touched on my braid. “One blond.” She spread her hands. “Sent through time to a place that doesn’t believe in witches any more.”

“You’re saying we’re those babies?”

“You didn’t see that coming?”

I hadn’t, and here’s why.

“I’m not adopted.”

* * *

The door to the clinic was open when Owen arrived. Light spilled into the gravel parking lot, pushing against the threat of night.

Two voices rose from within. One was Becca’s. She didn’t sound angry or frightened. She didn’t sound thrilled either.

At least Owen had had the sense to bring his gun. Before he could pull it out of the holster, Reggie nosed open the door and trotted inside.

“Whoa!” Becca ordered, as the wolf growled. “She’s not ready for prime time yet.”

Owen stepped inside just as Reggie slid back toward him as if he’d run across the slick tile floor and lost traction.

“Henry!” someone—not Becca—exclaimed.

The dog bumped against the wall and scrambled to his feet, ruff lifted.

“Bly’b,” Owen ordered. Reggie stayed, but he didn’t look happy about it.

When Becca and the other woman turned toward him, Owen had to lean against the wall as the weird washed over him. He’d made fun of Reitman for saying they looked exactly alike except for their hair and eyes, but the man had been right. They were almost twins.

“Who are you?” he asked.

The dark-haired Becca clone offered her hand. “Raye Larsen. You must be Owen. I didn’t catch your last name.”

The only way she could have “caught” his first name was from Becca. That Becca was still alive and not stabbed, strangled, smothered, or branded meant this woman wasn’t her attacker. Not to mention that while she had dark hair, it only brushed her shoulders and she wasn’t anywhere near six feet tall.

“Owen McAllister.” They shook. “This is Reggie.”

“Hello, Reggie.”

She didn’t try to pet him. Good choice. The dog appeared both spooked and annoyed. For some reason he stared at the empty corner next to the wolf as if an invisible pork chop danced the tango there.

“Why did you call him Henry?”

“I didn’t.”

Owen opened his mouth, then snapped it shut. Not an argument he needed to have at the moment.

“The wolf seems fine now.” Or as fine as a wolf got. Her eerie green eyes flicked from person to person as if she were listening.

“I took out a bullet,” Becca said. “Considering the infection, it had been in there a while.”

“About a week,” Raye said. “Give or take.”

“You shot her?” Owen asked.

“No!” She sounded horrified. “She’s my—” Her lips tightened.

“Pet?” That would explain her constant proximity to people. An explanation Owen liked much more than rabies.

“Wolves aren’t pets.”

“Okay.” He waited for her to explain what the wolf was, but she didn’t. From the silence that followed she wasn’t going to.

“Is your mom all right?” Becca asked.

“She’s in the wind again.”

Quickly he explained what had happened, not even caring that a stranger was hearing the details. She looked so much like Becca she didn’t seem like a stranger at all.

“This Peggy was attacked and branded?” Raye asked.

“Just like the animals.”

“What animals?”

Becca explained.

“Animals won’t raise the dead,” Raye said. “Only people do.”

Owen flicked a glance at Becca. Reitman

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