her hand had almost closed, and she washed off the dried blood. Her side still hurt.
The tense, angry look he so often wore began returning to his face, and he picked up the long shoulder bag with his sword. Good. Maybe watching Jessenia die again might actually help. As long as he didn’t get careless.
“You make sure he misses,” she said. The train slowed to a stop. As they moved out into the hall, she said, “What makes you so certain he’ll be here?”
“He’ll be here. This is how he hunts.”
They moved down the hall and through the long aisles to an exit, stepping off into the loud train station. People hurried all around them, and no one even glanced their way.
“Excuse me,” Robert said to a young baggage attendant pulling a cart. “Where is the nearest rental car office?”
“There’s a Hertz about three blocks away,” the attendant answered. “I think it’s open until one a.m. Just go out the main doors, turn left, walk two streets down, and then take another left on Baker.”
“Thank you.”
They walked away, looking around.
“Over there,” Robert said, pointing to large glass doors across the station floor.
She followed him outside into the darkness, and he turned left. But now anxiety was beginning to build inside her. If Robert was correct—and he probably was—Julian could be anywhere. The thought made her sick, and she hadn’t expected that, or at least not to this degree.
“Wait,” she said.
He turned around.
“Give me a second.”
His brow wrinkled when he saw her face. “Can you do this?”
She looked down the dark street, and all she could see were shadowy awnings and blackened doorways and the entrances to alleys. But she’d seen the sword coming back in the train yard, and she hadn’t been expecting it. Now both she and Robert would be watching.
“Yes,” she answered. “Just don’t walk so fast.”
“Stay right behind me. You know what to do.” But he didn’t move away yet, hesitating, and then he said, “No matter what happens, I’m glad you and Rose started all this. I’m glad she found me. I’m glad I came.” His voice held no inflexion or emotion, but she believed him.
“Let’s get this done,” she said. “We’ll be home tonight.”
They were far enough from the station crowds now that he unzipped his bag and took out his sword, gripping the hilt.
The sight of it gave her a jolt. Although she never would have admitted it anyone, even Wade, she was experiencing an unfamiliar scratching at the back of her mind every time she pictured herself helping Robert to kill Julian—as if some part of her rebelled against destroying her own maker.
But she wouldn’t let this stop her.
Julian had killed his maker. So could she.
They walked two blocks down, keeping an eye on all the doorways, and turned on Baker Street, which was dark and empty at this hour.
Robert paused only briefly before beginning this final stretch.
Up ahead, she saw a deep blackened doorway with a balcony above it, and Robert’s voice flashed into her mind.
There. Get ready.
He didn’t break stride or show any sign of having noticed a thing.
She tensed, ready for Julian’s swing . . . when Robert would swerve and she would need to get hold of Julian’s mind in the same instant.
Shaking inside, she cursed herself. She had not expected to be this frightened.
She focused her thoughts, gathering a command to make Julian freeze, and Robert walked past the black doorway.
Eleisha looked for the glint.
And then someone screamed from the doorway. A brightly colored form blurred out from the darkness, screaming, and Robert stumbled back in shock.
At the same time, something large dropped down from the balcony, landing behind him, and a glint flashed with a whooshing sound.
Before Eleisha could even follow what was happening, Robert’s head came off his shoulders, and his body fell forward. Julian was standing behind him, and the magenta-haired girl ghost was still screaming.
She fell silent as Robert’s body landed on the sidewalk.
His psychic energy burst out and hit Eleisha. She didn’t even remember falling beside him.
Wave after wave of memory kept hitting her, and she’d seen so many of them before. Thomas Howard. Battles in Scotland. Lady Elizabeth. Angelo. Countless feeding victims left asleep. Memory after memory of Jessenia and their journeys and the feel of her mouth on his.
Then she saw Rose and Seamus and Wade . . . and she saw herself. Only in almost every memory of herself, she was with Philip, talking to him, borrowing his clothes, sleeping