On the Prowl
want to find in his head, and he tried to shove it out. But it clung like a bramble to the furry underside of his mind. Humans had so many moralities, some of them contradictory.
She would be distressed, he thought. He hated to distress her.
“I know you,” he told her at last. “If you had killed for any reason, you would be a…a different version of Kai. You would still be my friend, but different than you are now.” He slowed the car as thoughts and questions pinged and bounced around inside, making his head noisy.
“Nathan,” she said in a surprisingly steady voice, “why are we stopping at a car lot?”
“I’ll get a license plate here. The car…no, I haven’t explained, have I?” His eyebrows twitched into a frown. “I’m making decisions for you. That’s wrong. I’m sorry.” He unbuckled his seat belt and turned to her. This time he went with his impulse and took her hands in his. “I want to hide you so you aren’t arrested while I hunt the real killer, but I need another vehicle. Knox saw me with you. So did the television reporter. Once Knox realizes I didn’t bring you in, they’ll look for this car.”
“But this is crazy! You can’t throw away your career, and I don’t want to be hidden away!”
He wasn’t explaining well. “I don’t have a career. I hunt. Working as an officer of the law suits me, but I can do that elsewhere, under another name, if I’m allowed to stay here. Here in this realm, I mean. If you don’t want to hide…” This was difficult. He swallowed. “I respect your right to make your own choices, but you need to know you aren’t safe. The chameleon wore your face, your form when it lured Jimmie Shaw out of the city and killed him. You may be able to help me catch it.”
C HAPTER 10
T HE house was a simple shingle-sided frame structure south of town, just off Cotton Flat Road. It was empty, had been for years. There was no heat, no electricity, no water, and the only furniture was a lopsided couch that had been a home for several generations of mice. The trash on the cracked linoleum floor announced that two-legged residents had come and gone occasionally, too.
Kai had seen all that earlier, when there was still some light and the place still stank. Nathan had done something to fix the smell before he left. Something that involved speaking in a language she didn’t know.
It was taking him a long time to get supplies. That, she knew, was her fault—or at least the result of her decision. He was on foot because she hadn’t wanted him to steal a license plate or a car, so they’d ditched his official vehicle to walk the last few miles to get here.
It was full dark now. There was a sliver of moon outside, but the grimy window beside the front door let in none of the meager light. That window might still alert people in the nearest houses to her presence, though, if she used the big police-issue flashlight Nathan had left with her. It was for an emergency, not comfort.
Emergency being, she assumed, something more than the mice she could hear scurrying around. Something bigger, like the blood-drinking creature that had worn her face last night.
Kai shivered. Nathan warded this place, she reminded herself. She’d watched him do that before he left, loping silently around the house three times. “I’m no mage to raise wards with a gesture or by singing a little song,” he’d said when she asked him about it. “But any of the wild sidhe can wrap a bit of protection around themselves. To do it over a larger area takes a bit more concentration, is all.”
The wards were good for hours; they’d keep anything and everything out. But standing in the black, filthy living room with her arms wrapped tightly around her middle, it was easy to wonder how he could be sure. Easy to wonder how she had come to this. How could she have ended up on the run from the police, cold and hungry, alone in the dark and unable to do one damned thing to change any of it?
Stupid question. “Why me” questions always were. She knew that, just as she knew how inevitable those feelings were when life turned topsy-turvy. After the accident she’d been hit by multiple bouts of “why me.” Eventually she’d accepted that she wasn’t to blame, but neither was she exempt from random tragedy. Shit happens.
If she could just do something! She took two quick steps but stopped, not knowing what she might step on or trip over. She longed for water and a rag to clean a
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