Darkness Hunts(209)

"Nothing that will kill him just yet."

 

I closed my eyes in relief, but it didn't last long. Not when the madman at the other end of the phone had Rhoan's life in his hands—and no doubt wanted mine.

 

"How did you even know—" I stopped, suddenly realizing the answer to my question before I'd asked it. "The cameras at the warehouse. You deliberately revealed yourselves so that we could find you."

 

"Yes," he said. "I had worried that the Directorate might catch on to our little trap, but, as usual, I overestimated them."

 

Because no one in his right mind would expect a suspect to deliberately parade about in front of security cameras. But then, Taylor and sanity weren't exactly chummy.

 

"Rhoan isn't the one you were hunting, so why are you even bothering to keep him captive?" My voice shook as I spoke, and I took a slow, deep breath in an attempt to remain calm. Clearheaded thinking was what this situation needed, not panic, not fear—even if there was plenty of both.

 

"He and I were playing this game before you came onto the scene, and would no doubt have arrived at this situation sooner or later." He paused, and I could almost feel the satisfaction oozing from his pores, even though the screen was blank and he was nowhere near me. "As to why he is still alive, that's simple. I believe he might be a much better lure to capture you than anything else I could have come up with."

 

He had that right. God, if anything happened to Rhoan, I wouldn't be able to live with myself—let alone face Aunt Riley. He might be a guardian, and this might not be my fault but rather a danger Rhoan willingly faced every day, but that still didn't alter one fact. I was involved, and I'd bear the brunt of guilt if he was hurt. Or worse, killed.

 

Oh please, don't let it be worse.

 

I took another deep breath that did nothing to ease the queasiness threatening to overwhelm me, then said, "So what do you want?"

 

"Why, dear huntress, you, of course."

 

I closed my eyes. Even though I'd expected the answer, the thought of willingly walking into this man's trap horrified me. "Why? I'm not one of your so-called aberrations you're destined to destroy. Why hunt me, when your calling gives you so many other options?"

 

"Good question." There was an edge in his voice that spoke of amusement. This bastard was sick. Sick, sick, sick . . . I thrust the mental chant away. That way lies madness. He continued. "The simple answer is boredom. That is why I originally started playing my game with the Directorate. In a life as long as mine, a challenge is sometimes needed."

 

"You're killing these women because you're bored?"

 

He sighed. "Huntress, that is not what I said. I kill the women because that is my calling. I taunt the Directorate because it is fun."