Read Lover At Last Page 54

Chapter Fifty-three

  Even though Qhuinn was hardly an arbiter of taste when it came to meetings of the Council, it was pretty damn clear to him that the assembled group had come to the house expecting one thing, only to get something else entirely.

  Wrath didn't waste or mince words and, after laying the smack-down, wrapped things up within five or ten minutes.

  This was a good thing, actually. The faster he finished, the quicker they could get him home.

  "In closing," the king said in his bass voice, "I appreciate the opportunity to address this august group. "

  In this case, "august" clearly meant "a-hole-ish. "

  "I have other commitments at this time. " Namely, staying alive. "So I will be departing. However, if you have any comments, please direct them to Tohrment, son of Hharm. "

  A blink of the eye later and the king left the building with V and Zsadist.

  In the wake of the departure, all the fancy-pants in the dining room stayed sitting in their chairs, shock and now-what playing across their attractive features. Clearly, they had expected more. . . but also less. Kind of like children who had pushed their parents too far and finally gotten a wooden spoon on the ass.

  From Qhuinn's perspective, it was pretty fucking amusing, actually.

  The party finally began to break up after the hostess rose to her feet and yammered on about what an honor it was to have had all the yada, yada, yada.

  Qhuinn cared about one and only one thing.

  And that was the text that came through on his phone about a minute later: Wrath was home safe.

  Exhaling slowly, he put his cell back in the inside pocket of his leather jacket and thought about setting off a couple of rounds into the floorboards to get this bunch of stiffs to dance a little. He'd probably get in trouble for that, though.

  Bummer.

  The crowd started to file out shortly thereafter, to the clear dissatisfaction of the hostess, as if she had gotten dressed up and rearranged her house with the expectation of a long, socially prominent evening - only to find that all she got were two seconds of celebrity and a bucket of KFC for eats.

  Sorry, lady.

  Tohrment lorded over the exodus, standing in front of the fireplace, nodding his head, saying a few words. In this delegation, Wrath had made a wise choice. The Brother had the appearance of an ass-kicker, with all his weapons, but he'd always been willing and internally inclined to be a peacemaker, and that was no different tonight.

  He was especially nice to Marissa when Butch's mate left, his face showing a flash of genuine affection as he hugged her and nodded as the cop escorted her out. That slice of real was immediately replaced by his professional mask, however.

  Eventually, the hostess helped her ancient hellren to his feet, and made some noise about taking him upstairs.

  And then there was only one.

  Elan, son of Larex, lingered before the bank of draped windows.

  Qhuinn had had an eye on the guy the whole time, counting exactly how many of the Council members came up to him, shook his hand, murmured in his ear.

  Each and every one.

  So it was not exactly a surprise that instead of leaving like a good little boy, he made his way up to the fireplace like he wanted an audience.

  Great.

  As Elan approached Tohr, the closer he got, the more he had to lift his chin to keep eye contact with the Brother.

  "It was quite an honor to have an audience with your king," the gentlemale said gravely. "I hung on his every word. "

  Tohr murmured something in return.

  "And I've been struggling with something," the aristocrat hedged. "I was hoping to speak with him directly about this, but. . . "

  Yeah, don't hold your breath for that, buddy.

  Tohr stepped in to fill the silence. "Anything you tell me will go straight to the king's ears, without filter or interpretation. And the fighters in this room are sworn to secrecy. They will die before they repeat a word. "

  Elan glanced over at Rehv, clearly expecting a similiar pledge from the male.

  "The same goes for me," Rehvenge muttered as he leaned into his cane.

  Abruptly, Elan's chest puffed up as if this kind of personalized attention was more what he'd been hoping for out of the meeting. "Well, this has lain heavily upon my heart. "

  Certainly not your pecs, Qhuinn thought. You're built like a ten-year-old boy.

  "And that is," Tohr prompted.

  Elan crossed his arms behind the small of his back and paced a bit - as if he were taking time with his words. Something told Qhuinn that they had been prepared beforehand, however - though he couldn't have said what it was.

  "I expected your king to address a certain rumor that I have heard. "

  "Which is?" Tohr said in an even tone.

  Elan stopped. Turned. Spoke clearly. "That he was shot back in the fall. "

  No one showed any reaction. Not Tohr or Rehv. Not the remaining Brothers in the room. Certainly not Qhuinn or his boys.

  "What is your source for this?" Tohr asked.

  "Well, in all honesty, I thought he would be here tonight. "

  "Really. " Tohr glanced at the empty chairs and shrugged. "You want to tell me what you heard?"

  "The male made reference to a visitation by the king. Similar to when Wrath came and saw me at my home over the summer. " This was reported with self-importance, as if that was the highlight of Wrath's year, right there. "He said that the Band of Bastards shot at the king whilst on his property. "

  Again with the no reactions.

  "But obviously, your king survived. " The pause suggested Elan was expecting details to be filled in. "He's doing rather well, as a matter of fact. "

  There was a long silence, as if both sides of the conversation were expecting the other to put the quiet to good use.

  Tohr cocked his brows. "With all due respect, you haven't told us much of anything, and gossip has been going on since the beginning of time. "

  "But here's the odd thing. He also talked to me about it before it occurred. I didn't believe him, however. Who would arrange for an assassination attempt? It seemed. . . simply the boasting of a male otherwise dissatisfied with the way things were being handled. Except then, a week later, he said that the Band of Bastards had followed through, that Wrath had been shot. I didn't know what to do. I had no way of getting in touch with the king personally, and no way to verify that the individual was speaking the truth. I let it all go - until this meeting was called. I wondered if maybe it was. . . well. It clearly wasn't, but then I wondered why he wasn't here. "

  Tohr stared down at the smaller male. "It would help if you gave us a proper noun. "

  Now, Elan frowned. "You mean you don't know who is on the Council?"

  As Rehv rolled his eyes, Tohr shrugged. "We have better things to do than worry about Rehvenge's membership. "

  "In the Old World, the Brotherhood knew who we are. "

  "There's an ocean between us and the motherlands. "

  "More's the pity. "

  "That's your opinion. "

  Qhuinn took a step forward, with the intention of stepping in, in the event the Brother locked hands on the SOB's skinny neck: Someone should probably catch the head before it bounced all over their hosts' rugs. And the deadweight of the body.

  Seemed only hospitable.

  "So who are you talking about," Tohr pressed.

  Elan looked around at the still, deadly males who were focused on him. "Assail. His name is Assail. "

  Deep in downtown Caldwell, where the darkened streets formed a rats' maze, and the sober humans were few and very far between, Xcor swung his scythe in a fat circle about five and a half feet up from the slushy, black-stained ground.

  The lesser was caught in the neck, and the head, now freed from its spinal tether, flew chin over temple, chin over temple, through the cold, gusty wind. Black blood spiraled ou
t from the severed arteries as the rudderless lower half of the body collapsed forward into a pratfall.

  And that was that.

  Rather disappointing, really.

  Spinning around, he held his beloved over his shoulder so that she curled behind him protectively, watching his back as he braced himself for whatever was coming next. The alley he had entered to chase that now incapacitated slayer was open at the far end, and behind him, the three cousins were stationed shoulder-to-shoulder should more arrive from that direction -

  Something was coming.

  Something was. . . on a fast approach, the din of an engine growing louder and louder and -

  The SUV skidded into the alley, its tires finding little or no purchase on the icy roadway. As a result of the lack of traction, the vehicle slammed into the wall, its high-beams blinding Xcor.

  Whoever was behind the wheel didn't hit the brakes.

  The engine roared.

  Xcor faced off at the vehicle and closed his eyes. No reason to keep his lids peeled, as his vision had ceased to function. No real concern who was driving, whether it was slayer, vampire or human.

  They were coming at him, and he was going to stop that. Even though it was probably easier to get out of the way.

  He had never particularly cared for easy, however.

  "Xcor!" someone yelled.

  Grabbing a deep breath of that icy air, he let out a battle cry as he tracked the approach, his senses reaching out and positioning the SUV in space as it traveled forward. His scythe disappeared in a moment, and his guns, eager to participate, came out in both palms.

  He waited another twenty feet.

  And then he started pumping off rounds.

  With his silencers on, the bullets made only impact sounds as they blew out the front windshield, pinged off the grille, took out a tire. . . .

  At which point those blinding headlights swung away, the back end of the vehicle hinging around, the overall trajectory unchanged thanks to that tremendous acceleration - even as everything went haywire.

  Just before the side panel took him out, Xcor leaped off the ground, his boots springing up, the roof just barely going under their treads as three thousand pounds plus of out-of-control streaked beneath his airborne body.

  As Xcor's combats landed back on the ground, the end of the car's forward momentum came at the expense of a Dumpster, the trash receptacle stopping the vehicle better than any set of brakes could.

  Xcor wasted no time in closing in, both guns up, triggers ready. Although he had discharged a number of rounds, he knew he had at least four left in each gun. And his soldiers had once again fallen in behind him.

  Coming up to look inside, he didn't care what he found: one of his own kind, a man or a woman, a lesser, it mattered not to him.

  The smell of spoiled meat and treacle informed him which of his many enemies he confronted, and indeed, as he leaned in through the blown-out front windshield, two new recruits, who still retained their dark hair color and ruddy skin tones, were lolling in the front seat.

  Even with their seat belts engaged, they were in rough shape. Aside from being riddled with bullets, their visages carried the wear and tear of their having banged around in the sedan's cabin, slammed into the dashboard, and been pelted with shattered glass: Black blood greased up their busted noses and lacerated cheeks and chins, the shit dripping onto their chests as water from faucets in the bath.

  No airbagas. Mayhap a malfunction.

  "I dinnae think ye were gonna make it," Balthazar muttered.

  "Aye," someone else agreed.

  Xcor threw off the concern as he holstered his guns, grabbed hold of the driver's side door, and yanked the thing clean off its mountings. As the squeal of metal torn asunder echoed in the alley, he tossed the panel aside, unsheathed his steel dagger, and leaned in.

  As with all lessers, these denizens of the Omega still moved and blinked in spite of their catastrophic injuries - and would continue to do so in perpetuity if left in this state, even as their forms decayed over time.

  There was one and only one way to kill them.

  Xcor drew his right forearm across over his left shoulder and buried the blade of his dagger square in the chest of the one who had been behind the wheel. Turning his head aside and shutting his eyes so he wasn't blinded again, he waited for the pop and flash to fade before leaning over the seat and doing the same to the passenger.

  Then he turned to go over and dispatch the beheaded, squirming corpse. . . that had tire tracks across its chest, thanks to the car's path through the alley.

  Stalking through black-stained slush, he lifted his dagger hand again over his shoulder and buried the blade into the sternum with such power, the point of the weapon went into the asphalt.

  When he rose to his feet once again, his breath left his nose in locomotive puffs. "Search the vehicle, and then we must needs depart. "

  He checked the time. The Caldwell police were disappointingly responsive, even in this part of town - and the constant threat of human involvement that he lived under was, as always, a bore. But with all luck, they would be gone as if they had never been in a matter of minutes.

  Sheathing his blade, he glanced up to the sky, cracking his neck and loosening his shoulders.

  It was impossible not to think of that Council meeting which had been scheduled; it had been on his mind all night long. Had Wrath shown? Or had it only been Rehvenge and representatives of the Brotherhood? If the king had in fact been in attendance, Xcor could well imagine the agenda: show of strength, warning, then a quick departure.

  As mighty as the Brotherhood was, and as much as Wrath would want to flex his muscle before that group of faithless aristocratic sycophants, it was hard to imagine that a male who'd nearly been killed so recently was going to take any chances: If solely through self-interest, the Brotherhood would want him alive, as that was their seat of power, too.

  And that was why he'd chosen to stay away.

  There was no harm in letting Wrath attempt to regain some of his lost stature, and much to lose in a direct confrontation with the Brotherhood in front of that particular audience: The potential for collateral damage was too great. The last thing he wanted was to spook the glymera into retreating from him. . . or kill them off altogether in the process of taking out the king.

  But he had in fact discovered, thanks to Throe's contacts, exactly where and when the assembly was occurring. Which would be now. . . and at that female's estate, the one from whom his soldiers had fed in that little cottage.

  Evidently, she was willing to allow others the use of not only her garden, but her halls as well.

  And soon enough, he would have a transcript of what had transpired provided to him by the mouthpiece that was Elan - if for no other reason than that the male would want to enjoy the access that he'd had and show off a bit -

  A whistle of appreciation by the back end of the ruined car brought his head around.

  Zypher was standing by the open trunk door, his brows high as he bent in and brought out. . . a cellophane-covered brick of something white.

  "'Tis quite a bounty they have," he said, holding it high.

  Xcor marched over. There were three more like it, just tossed into the back loose as if the pair of slayers had been more concerned with their physical safety than the disposition of the drugs.

  At that moment, sirens began to sound from the east, mayhap related to the crash, mayhap not.

  "We take the packages with us," Xcor ordered. "And depart the now. "