Rune’s fingers tangled in hers and Teresa held on, feeling his strength rushing through her. She wanted to call down the lightning, but she couldn’t risk her grandmother’s life. She wanted to simply throw energy at Miguel and watch him light up like a Christmas tree, but again, her grandmother’s life hung in the balance.
Beside her, she felt Rune tensing for an attack and she willed him to be still with a silent tug at his hand. She couldn’t risk it. As much as it pained her, they would have to go along with Miguel. For now, at least.
“Good girl,” Miguel said a moment later, when he read capitulation in her eyes. “You convince the bastard with you to play nice and everybody might live out the day.”
He signaled to one of the men with him and the man walked forward cautiously, keeping his gaze fixed warily on Rune. He held two white-gold chains and Teresa heard Rune take a long, shallow breath, hissed in between gritted teeth.
“Hold still, big guy,” Miguel said. “You make one wrong move, I’ll kill your witch first, then the old woman. I don’t care how fast you are with fire, you can’t beat a bullet.”
Teresa knew what it cost Rune to stand idly by and be hampered by a length of white gold. The man-made alloy would dampen his powers, making him easier to control.
“You risk much, human,” Rune said as the man hung the chain around his neck. “There will be payment made for this.”
For just an instant, Miguel looked worried, but his own innate sense of self-importance quickly wiped that out. “Right. Big talk for a guy who just got locked down.”
“Miguel, don’t do this.”
“Are you kidding?” he countered with a laugh. Motioning his partner to go ahead and place the second white-gold chain around Teresa’s neck, he continued. “They’re paying me a truckload of money to do this, Teresa. Though to be honest, I’d have done it for free.” His mouth twisted and his gaze swept her up and down dismissively. “Bitch. Think you can dump me? Walk away from me? Do you know what kind of shit I had to take from the boss when you walked out?”
“The boss?”
He scowled and shook his head. “Never mind.” Then to the other man he said, “Do it. Lock her down, too.”
She swayed as the effects of the white gold seeped through her. Ice seemed to soak into every pore, flooding every vein and capillary. Her powers were dampened every bit as much as Rune’s. She couldn’t have called down the lightning now, even if she had been willing to take the risk. The draining wash of white gold had closed off her magical abilities. How completely, she didn’t know, but for the moment she was left at Miguel’s less-than-tender mercies.
“Now that that’s taken care of,” Miguel said slyly, “let’s get down to business.”
He slammed the barrel of the gun against her abuela’s face. Teresa gasped as a thin trickle of blood ran along the old woman’s deeply lined cheek like a single red tear.
“You bastard! Don’t!” Teresa lunged for him, but Miguel only laughed.
Rune stepped in front of Teresa, blocking her from Miguel’s sight with his own massive form. “You will die,” he said, voice soft and strong and filled with the promise of retribution.
Miguel flinched, but shrugged off the threat. “Everybody dies, fire boy. But if your witch is smart, I’ll die rich. So, Teresa, what’ll it be? Tell me where the Artifact is or watch your precious grandmother slowly get beaten to death?”
Teresa looked from Rune to her grandmother and felt tight bands of frustrated fury tense around her insides. She couldn’t give Miguel what he wanted. She’d only just found a hint of the Artifact’s whereabouts in Serena’s journal a moment before they stumbled on to the carnage in the village. She wasn’t sure yet where it was hidden. And even if she was, she couldn’t tell Miguel. Couldn’t allow the black silver to be set loose in the world again. Couldn’t betray what she was. What her grandmother had taught her to be.
The older woman looked into her eyes and Teresa sensed that her grandmother knew exactly what she was thinking—and that she was proud.
“Teresa,” her abuela said softly, “it is no use. They will discover it sooner or later. We must tell them.”
“What? Grandmother, no.”
Rune went utterly still.
“Shut up, Teresa,” Miguel ordered, then turned his gaze on the old