His lips thinned as he looked away, his gaze focused outside the large windows of the café. When he turned back to her, the animosity wasn’t there, but neither was the friendliness she was used to seeing in him.
“You should stay out of the forest at night, especially if there’s something going on up there concerning Breeds and the Deadly Dozen,” he finally said, his voice pitched low as he leaned forward. “Listen to me, Cassa, these mountains are brutal, and I’m not just talking about the nature of them. Whatever you’re looking for here, let it go.”
Cassa sipped at her coffee as she gazed back at him. There was a darkness in his gaze, a warning that she couldn’t ignore. When she set her coffee back on the table, she made certain her expression reflected the determination she could feel inside to figure out what the hell was going on in Glen Ferris.
“You know me better than that, Myron,” she warned him firmly. “Just as I know you. You know what’s going on up there, don’t you? Is this something you’re working on yourself? We’ve worked together before; we could do it again.”
He had to know. She could see it in his face, in his eyes. And he wasn’t mentioning his first wife, or her death. He never had. Suddenly, she had a feeling that Myron was covering up much more than he had ever revealed to her about the Breeds. She knew he was.
“I stay out of those mountains now,” he snapped, his voice still low. “And that’s the advice I’d give anyone else. Stay the hell out.”
“And ignore the fact that people are dying. Again. Just as your first wife died.”
Myron flinched before he breathed in slowly as she spoke. She watched his nostrils flare, watched the dilation of his eyes and the flicker of his gaze toward the Breeds in the room.
No doubt they could hear exactly what was being said. A Breed’s hearing was excellent, much more sensitive than a human’s and she had a feeling they were there just to listen in on this particular meeting.
“People or monsters?” he snapped back. “I’m not worried about the death of something evil, so don’t look at me as though I should be. The Deadly Dozen should have been exterminated before they ever came together. You know that as well as I do. And I don’t discuss my first wife. Ever.”
“And if a Breed is doing the killing?” she hissed back at him. “What happens when he’s caught, or when that Breed sends the proof to a reporter who doesn’t care about anything but flashing it across every paper in the nation? Does that make up for your wife’s death, Myron? Or will it just see more Breeds murdered?”
His lips thinned. “Justice, Cassa. It would be no more than justice. You know that.”
“And if that justice is going to be used against the Breeds?” She lowered her voice further as his eyes narrowed on her once again. “What if I told you that the killer intends to frame the Breeds with certain murders? That there are pictures of the victims, their throats ripped out, their bodies clawed? What if, Myron, there were pictures of a Breed cleanup crew?” She nearly mouthed the last question. “What do you think that would do to everything we’ve both fought to save?”
She watched his expression closely. All emotion seemed to have been wiped from it, as a bleak anger flickered in his gaze.
“You know what’s going on here, don’t you, Myron?”
His lips parted.
“Myron.” A deep male voice voice piped up from behind Cassa. “There you are. Your wife’s looking for you, buddy.”
It seemed his wife was always looking for him.
Cassa watched, eyes narrowed, as the older gentleman slid into the booth beside Myron. “She was getting a little irate that you weren’t answering your cell phone.”
“Cell phone’s turned off,” Myron muttered as he slid out of the other side of the booth and stood up. The look he cast Cassa was that of warning, and concern. “If you need a ride to the airport tonight, let me know.”
With that, he grabbed his jacket and stalked from the booth. That was the warning. To leave now. It did nothing but make her more determined to stay.
“More coffee, Debra, if you don’t mind and a slice of that banana cream pie if you have any left.”
Cassa watched the stranger silently. In his fifties, with a wide, friendly smile and dark brown eyes. Thick, coarse gray hair was brushed back from his face, revealing strong, prominent bones.
Farmer Brown. A country boy in his maturity. He was the epitome of the strength and endurance of the mountains.
“A few slices, Walt, and it’s fresh.” The youthful Debra flashed the stranger a smile before turning to Cassa. “Anything else for you?”
“I’ll take the pie as well,” Cassa said. “And more coffee.”
Debra moved off as Cassa turned and glanced over at the Breeds still sitting several booths away from them.
“You have excellent timing,” she told Walt with a mocking smile. “Though I doubt Myron was going to tell me anything more than he already had.”
Walt arched a brow. “Really? Most people say my timing sucks. But that’s okay, whatever you think.” He leaned forward slowly. “Don’t change nothin’ though. Myron’s wife is lookin’ for him. And I think he said something about you needing a ride to the airport.”
Cassa almost grinned.