She’d hesitated when the mer arrived at the pier, the matte black wave skimmer idling. It’s either this or swimming, Legs, he’d informed her.
She’d opted for the wave skimmer, but had spent the last five minutes regretting it.
“Up there,” the mer male murmured, cutting the already quiet engine. It must have been a stealth vehicle from the River Queen’s stash. Or Tharion’s own, as her Captain of Intelligence.
Bryce beheld the small barge idling on the river. Mist drifted around them, turning the few firstlights on the barge into bobbing orbs.
“I count six people,” Tharion observed.
She peered into the gloom ahead. “I can’t make out what they are. Humanoid shapes.”
Tharion’s body hummed, and the wave skimmer drifted forward, carried on a current of his own making.
“Neat trick,” she murmured.
“It always gets the ladies,” he muttered back.
Bryce might have chuckled had they not neared the barge. “Keep downwind so they can’t scent us.”
“I know how to remain unseen, Legs.” But he obeyed her.
The people on the boat were hooded against the misting rain, but as they drifted closer—
“It’s the Viper Queen,” Bryce said, her voice hushed. No one else in this city would have the swagger to wear that ridiculous purple raincoat. “Lying asshole. She said she didn’t deal in synth.”
“No surprise,” Tharion growled. “She’s always up to shady shit.”
“Yeah, but is she buying or selling this time?”
“Only one way to find out.”
They drifted closer. The barge, they realized, was painted with a pair of snake eyes. And the crates piled on the rear of the barge … “Selling,” Tharion observed. He jerked his chin to a tall figure facing the Viper Queen, apparently in a heated discussion with someone beside them. “Those are the buyers.” A nod to the person half-hidden in the shadows, arguing with the tall figure. “Disagreeing about what it’s worth, probably.”
The Viper Queen was selling synth. Had it really been her this entire time? Behind Danika and the pack’s deaths, too, despite that alibi? Or had she merely gotten her hands on the substance once it leaked from the lab?
The arguing buyer shook their head with clear disgust. But their associate seemed to ignore whatever was said and chucked the Viper Queen what looked like a dark sack. She peered inside, and pulled something out. Gold flashed in the mist.
“That is a fuck-ton of money,” Tharion murmured. “Enough for that entire shipment, I bet.”
“Can you get closer so we can hear?”
Tharion nodded, and they drifted again. The barge loomed, the attention of all aboard fixed on the deal going down rather than the shadows beyond it.
The Viper Queen was saying to them, “I think you’ll find this to be sufficient for your goals.”
Bryce knew she should call Hunt and Ruhn and get every legionary and Aux member over here to shut this down before more synth flooded the streets or wound up in worse hands. In the hands of fanatics like Philip Briggs and his ilk.
She pulled her phone from her jacket pocket, flicking a button to keep the screen from lighting up. A push of another button had the camera function appearing. She snapped a few photos of the boat, the Viper Queen, and the tall, dark figure she faced. Human, shifter, or Fae, she couldn’t tell with the jacket and hood.
Bryce pulled up Hunt’s number.
The Viper Queen said to the buyers, “I think this is the start of a beautiful friendship, don’t you?”
The tallest buyer didn’t reply. Just stiffly turned back to their companions, displeasure written in every movement as the firstlights illuminated the face beneath the hood.
“Holy fuck,” Tharion whispered.
Every thought eddied out of Bryce’s head.
There was nothing left in her but roaring silence as Hunt’s face became clear.
66
Bryce didn’t know how she wound up on the barge. What she said to Tharion to make him pull up. How she climbed off the wave skimmer and onto the boat itself.
But it happened fast. Fast enough that Hunt had made it only three steps before Bryce was there, soaked and wondering if she’d puke.
Guns clicked, pointing at her. She didn’t see them.
She only saw Hunt whirl toward her, his eyes wide.
Of course she hadn’t recognized him from a distance. He had no wings. But the powerful build, the height, the angle of his head … That was all him.
And his colleague behind him, the one who’d handed over the money—Viktoria. Justinian emerged from the shadows beyond them, his wings painted black to conceal them in the moonlight.
Bryce was distantly aware of Tharion behind her, telling the Viper Queen that she was under arrest on behalf of the River Queen. Distantly aware of the Viper Queen chuckling.
But all she heard was Hunt breathe, “Bryce.”
“What the fuck is this?” she whispered. Rain slashed her face. She couldn’t hear, couldn’t get any air down, couldn’t think as she said again, her voice breaking, “What the fuck is this, Hunt?”
“It is exactly what it looks like,” a cold, deep voice said behind her.
In a storm of white wings, Micah emerged from the mists and landed, flanked by Isaiah, Naomi, and six other angels, all armed to the teeth and in legion black. But they made no move to incapacitate the Viper Queen or her cronies.
No, they all faced Hunt and his companions. Aimed their guns toward them.
Hunt looked at the Governor—then at the Viper Queen. He snarled softly, “You fucking bitch.”
The Viper Queen chuckled. She said to Micah, “You owe me a favor now, Governor.”
Micah jerked his chin in confirmation.
Viktoria hissed at her, halo crinkling on her brow, “You set us up.”
The Viper Queen crossed her arms. “I knew it would be worth my while to see who came sniffing around for this shit when word leaked that I got my hands on a shipment,” she said, motioning toward the synth. Her smile was pure poison as she looked at Hunt. “I was hoping it’d be you, Umbra Mortis.”
Bryce’s heart thundered. “What are you talking about?”
Hunt pivoted to her, his face bleak in the floodlights. “It wasn’t supposed to go down like this, Bryce. Maybe at first, but I saw that video tonight and I tried to stop it, stop them, but they wouldn’t fucking listen—”
“These three thought synth would be an easy way to regain what was taken from them,” the Viper Queen said. A vicious pause. “The power to overthrow their masters.”
The world shifted beneath her. Bryce said, “I don’t believe you.”
But the flicker of pain in Hunt’s eyes told her that her blind, stupid faith in his innocence had gutted him.
“It’s true,” Micah said, his voice like ice. “These three learned of the synth days ago, and have since been seeking a way to purchase it—and to distribute it among their fellow would-be rebels. To attain its powers long enough to break their halos, and finish what Shahar started on Mount Hermon.” He nodded toward the Viper Queen. “She was gracious enough to inform me of this plan, after Justinian tried to recruit a female under her … influence.”