People like him, butchering in the night.
She tried to yank her finger back, and he let go, remembering her wariness of male Vanir. Of alphaholes.
Bryce’s throat bobbed, and she peered around his wing. “I want to go to the scene of the crime.” He waited for the rest of it. She blew out an uneven breath. “I need to go,” she said, more to herself. Her foot tapped on the concrete floor, in time to the beat of the still-thumping music. She winced. “But I don’t want Ruhn or his friends seeing me like this.”
“Like what?” It was normal, expected, to be screwed up by what she’d endured.
“Like a fucking mess.” Her eyes glowed.
“Why?”
“Because it’s none of their business, but they’ll make it their business if they see. They’re Fae males—sticking their noses into places they don’t belong is an art form for them.”
Hunt huffed a laugh. “True.”
She exhaled again. “Okay,” she murmured. “Okay.” Her hands still shook, as if her bloody memories swarmed her.
It was instinct to take her hands in his own.
They trembled like glasses rattling on a shelf. Felt as delicate, even with the slick, clammy sweat coating them.
“Take a breath,” Hunt said, squeezing her fingers gently.
Bryce closed her eyes, head bowing as she obeyed.
“Another,” he commanded.
She did.
“Another.”
So Quinlan breathed, Hunt not letting go of her hands until the sweat dried. Until she lifted her head. “Okay,” she said again, and this time, the word was solid.
“You good?”
“As good as I’ll ever be,” she said, but her gaze had cleared.
Unable to help himself, he brushed back a loose tendril of her hair. It slid like cool silk against his fingers as he hooked it behind her arched ear. “You and me both, Quinlan.”
Bryce let Hunt fly her to the crime scene. The alley in the Asphodel Meadows was about as seedy as they came: overflowing dumpster, suspect puddles of liquid gleaming, rail-thin animals rooting through the trash, broken glass sparkling in the firstlight from the rusting lamppost.
Glowing blue magi-screens already blocked off the alley entrance. A few technicians and legionaries were on the scene, Isaiah Tiberian, Ruhn, and his friends among them.
The alley lay just off Main Street, in the shadow of the North Gate—the Mortal Gate, most people called it. Apartment buildings loomed, most of them public, all in dire need of repairs. The noises from the cramped avenue beyond the alley echoed off the crumbling brick walls, the cloying reek of trash stuffing itself up her nose. Bryce tried not to inhale too much.
Hunt surveyed the alley and murmured, a strong hand on the small of her back, “You don’t need to look, Bryce.”
What he’d done for her just now in that shooting range … She’d never let anyone, even her parents, see her like that before. Those moments when she couldn’t breathe. She usually went into a bathroom or bailed for a few hours or went for a run.
The instinct to flee had been nearly as overwhelming as the panic and dread searing her chest, but … she’d seen Hunt come in from his mission the other night. Knew he of all people might get it.
He had. And hadn’t balked for one second.
Just as he hadn’t balked from seeing her shoot that target, and instead answered it with a shot of his own. Like they were two of a kind, like she could throw anything at him and he’d catch it. Would meet every challenge with that wicked, feral grin.
She could have sworn the warmth from his hands still lingered on her own.
Whatever conversation they’d been having with Isaiah over, Flynn and Declan strode for the magi-screen. Ruhn stood ten feet beyond them, talking to a beautiful, dark-haired medwitch. No doubt asking about what she’d assessed.
Peering around the glowing blue edge to the body hidden beyond, Flynn and Declan swore.
Her stomach bottomed out. Maybe coming here had been a bad idea. She leaned slightly into Hunt’s touch.
His fingers dug into her back in silent reassurance before he murmured, “I can look for us.”
Us, like they were a unit against this fucking mess of a world.
“I’m fine,” she said, her voice mercifully calm. But she didn’t move toward the screen.
Flynn pulled away from the blocked-off body and asked Isaiah, “How fresh is this kill?”
“We’re putting the TOD at thirty minutes ago,” Isaiah answered gravely. “From the remains of the clothes, it looks like it was one of the guards at Luna’s Temple. He was on his way home.”
Silence rippled around them. Bryce’s stomach dropped.
Hunt swore. “I’m gonna take a guess and say he was on duty the night the Horn was stolen?”
Isaiah nodded. “It was the first thing I checked.”
Bryce swallowed and said, “We have to be getting close to something, then. Or the murderer is already one step ahead of us, interrogating and then killing anyone who might have known where the Horn disappeared to.”
“None of the cameras caught anything?” Flynn asked, his handsome face unusually serious.
“Nothing,” Isaiah said. “It’s like it knew where they were. Or whoever summoned it did. It stayed out of sight.”
Hunt ran his hand up the length of her spine, a solid, calming sweep, and then stepped toward the Commander of the 33rd, his voice low as he said, “To know every camera in this city, especially the hidden ones, would require some clearance.” His words hung there, none of them daring to say more, not in public. Hunt asked, “Did anyone report a sighting of a demon?”
A DNA technician emerged from the screen, blood staining the knees of her white jumpsuit. Like she’d knelt in it while she gathered the sample kit dangling from her gloved fingers.
Bryce glanced away again, back toward Main Street.
Isaiah shook his head. “No reports from civilians or patrols yet.”
Bryce barely heard him as the facts poured into her mind. Main Street.
She pulled out her phone, drawing up the map of the city. Her location pinged, a red dot on the network of streets.
The males were still talking about the scant evidence when she placed a few pins in the map, then squinted at the ground beneath them. Ruhn had drifted over, falling into conversation with his friends as she tuned them out.
But Hunt noted her focus and turned toward her, his dark brows high. “What?”
She leaned into the shadow of his wing, and could have sworn he folded it more closely around her. “Here’s a map of where all the murders happened.”
She allowed Ruhn and his friends to prowl near. Even deigned to show them her screen, her hands shaking slightly.
“This one,” she said, pointing to the blinking dot, “is us.” She pointed to another, close by. “This is where Maximus Tertian died.” She pointed to another, this one near Central Avenue. “This is the acolyte’s murder.” Her throat constricted, but she pushed past it as she pointed to the other dot, a few blocks due north. “Here’s where …” The words burned. Fuck. Fuck, she had to say it, voice it—
“Danika and the Pack of Devils were killed,” Hunt supplied.
Bryce threw him a grateful glance. “Yes. Do you see what I see?”