CHAPTER 3
MINUTES DRIPPED BY, COLD AND SLOW. FIVE. SIX. Eight.
A loud knock echoed through the door. “Kate?” Andrea’s voice called.
“Yeah?”
“I have paramedics with me. Let me in.”
I unbarred the door and swung it open. Four paramedics sprinted into the room. Andrea followed them. She was short and blue-eyed, and for some reason the tips of her short blond hair were frosted with neon blue. The barrel of a rifle protruded over the shoulder of her jacket. Knowing her, she probably had two SIG-Sauers under that jacket, a combat knife, and enough bullets to take on the Golden Horde.
Normally Andrea’s face wore a nice easygoing expression that made random strangers want to pour their hearts out to her. One look at her now, and they would cross to the other side of the street.
Tension locked her face into a rigid, strained mask, and she moved like a soldier in enemy territory, expecting a bullet between the shoulder blades at any moment and ready to fire back in a split second.
Behind her two cops in PAD uniforms waited at the door, giving me their best versions of a cop scowl.
Strangely, I felt no urge to quiver in terror.
Andrea stepped closer and kept her voice low. “I leave you alone for eight weeks and you get into a pissing match with the PAD.”
“That’s just how I roll,” I told her.
Emily screamed.
“Excuse me.” I went over to where the paramedics had lifted her onto the stretcher. She reached out and gripped my hand.
“It will be okay,” I told her. “You’re going to the hospital. They’ll take care of you.”
Emily didn’t say anything. She just clutched my hand and didn’t let go until they loaded her into the ambulance. A stretcher with Ghastek followed into the second vehicle, and then the dark-haired woman came out, wrapped in a blanket, led by two paramedics. The ambulance doors closed and the two emergency vehicles took off wailing like banshees.
When I came back into the office, it was empty, except for Andrea and a puddle of blood on the floor.
“Where are the cops?”
She shrugged. “They cleared out.”
We looked at each other. She’d saved my bacon. That didn’t change the fact that she’d disappeared for two months. And now something was wrong.
“What the hell?” Andrea glared at me. “How in the world did you end up with three navigators in your office with the PAD outside? They were ready to storm your office. Are you nuts?”
“What the hell back at you. Where have you been? Did you forget how to use the phone?”
Andrea crossed her arms. “I wrote you a letter!”
“You wrote me a note that made my hair stand on end.”
The phone rang. Now what? I marched to my desk and picked it up. “Yes?”
Curran’s voice filled the phone. “Are you okay?”
It was completely absurd, but hearing him instantly made me feel better. “Yeah.”
“Do you need help?”
His voice was perfectly even. The Beast Lord was a hair away from charging to my aid.
“No, I’m good.” For some reason my insides clumped into a painful knot. I could’ve been shot and I would have never seen him again. That was a new and unwelcome feeling. Great. Now I had anxiety.
Maybe if I slapped myself real hard, I’d snap out of it.
I forced the words out. They sounded strained. “Who snitched?”
“We have people monitoring police radio frequencies. They gave Jim a heads-up in case our security had to storm the PAD offices and bust you out of there. I found out when I saw Jim walking down the hallway snickering to himself.”
I made a mental note to punch Jim in the arm the next time I saw him. “Thought it was funny, did he?”
“I didn’t think it was funny.”
I bet. “People were about to die and I could save them. There was a girl . . . Anyway, I’m not hurt. I’ll be home for dinner.”
“As you wish,” he said.
My heart made a little jump. I love you, too.
The tension in his voice eased. “You sure you don’t need your Prince Charming to come and save you?”