Energy’s low. I was in that damn coffin for days. And killing Len drained whatever I had left. I need to feed.” He glanced at her. “Want to volunteer?”
She widened her eyes. He was joking, right? “Umm, no.”
He looked away and picked up his pace. He was walking so fast now that she almost had to run to keep up.
“Too bad.” He didn’t sound as though he was joking.
She could see him studying a man who was outside emptying his trash. Don’t even think about it. She wouldn’t survive watching him chug down a human energy drink. Cassie rushed into speech. “Where’re we going?”
“To my house. Three of my friends are staying there with me.” His eyes narrowed. “None of them answered when I tried to call.”
Please, no more life-or-death moments today. Sudden weariness washed over her. Her adrenaline supply must be running low. “Won’t Garrity check there first?”
“He didn’t capture me there, so he might not know about it.” His smile was a mere baring of teeth. “And if he does, he’ll think I’m too smart to go home. He vastly overestimates my intelligence.”
“But what if he has people watching the place?”
“I’ll kill them.”
His answer would’ve horrified Cassie this morning. Now? It made perfect sense.
He finally slowed down and moved into the shadows. Silently, he pointed at a brick row house with a green rocker on the back porch. She covered her mouth to keep from giggling at the image of a vampire rocking on his porch. Or maybe the urge to giggle was the first stage of hysteria.
Sliding along fences and gliding around trash cans—he slid and glided, she shuffled and tripped—they drew close to the house. Then he raised his hand to stop her. He grew still again, and she held her breath. She wanted the house to be empty so they could leave for somewhere safe.
“There’s one person in there.” He sounded grim.
She didn’t question how he knew. “Anyone you know?”
“Yes.” With no other explanation, he guided her to the back door. He did his magic door-opening thing again and slipped into a darkened kitchen. He beckoned her inside.
Cassie was beyond thought, beyond feeling, beyond everything. Right now he was the only real thing in her life. So she followed him.
He moved quietly into what must be the living room. She couldn’t hear his footsteps. Behind him, she was an elephant tramping through a field of bubble wrap, announcing her presence with every step she took.
For the first time, she noticed the smell. It was coppery and too familiar.
He stopped so suddenly that she almost slammed into his back.
“Hello, Ethan.” The male voice came from whoever was sitting in an overstuffed chair she could see silhouetted in the darkness.
“Dan. What’re you doing here?”
Ethan’s voice might sound neutral, but she sensed tension, and something else.
“Trying to figure out who the hell to call.” The man’s, or maybe vampire’s, voice sounded terrified. “I couldn’t reach you on your cell. Then I came here. I used the key you gave me. No one was here, but . . .” His voice trailed off.
Cassie moved up beside Ethan. Her eyes had adjusted to the dark and there was a tiny bit of light filtering in through the slats of the blinds. She could now see that the room was trashed—furniture overturned and pictures knocked from the wall. There were dark stains on the walls and carpet. “Is that . . . ?” Blood.
The other man said it for her. “There’s freaking blood everywhere. Fresh blood. What’s going on, Ethan?”
That explained the coppery scent. The rising panic in his voice mirrored her own emotions. She wished someone would turn on a light so she could see both of them. Then she thought of Roland Garrity hunting them and decided the darkness was just fine.
“I’ll explain later. Do you have your car?”
Cassie didn’t have to be particularly sensitive to feel Ethan’s rage. It didn’t seem aimed at the man in the chair. She thought that Roland Garrity should be very afraid.
“No. There was nowhere to park, so June just dropped me off. I told her I didn’t know how long I was staying, and I’d call her when I was ready to leave.”
Cassie had kept silent as long as she could. “Who is this, Ethan?” Using his name sort of moved him a little out of the mythic-monster column into the almost-human one.
Ethan turned to look at her. In the darkness, his face became a stranger’s again, all sharp planes and dangerous