Hands clamping around her ankles.
Looking down, she saw that Venom had her in a powerful grip, his own feet braced against the base of the chopper. “What the—” Fol owing the direction of his gaze, she felt the air whoosh out of her lungs. The other side of the concrete pier was just . . . gone, a gaping hole in the earth with jagged insides that would tear apart her wings—and she was a bare two inches from the edge. Nodding at Venom, she let him pul her toward him as the earth continued to rol .
In any other situation, it would’ve felt disturbingly intimate to have his hands on her calves, her thighs, her hips as he pul ed her down until she could brace her own feet against their transport, her wings spread over them both. “The chopper might tip!” she said in his ear, fighting to be heard over the roar of the quake.
His hair whipped off his face. “I’ve been in other quakes! This one feels like it should be over soon!” Under her wing, his hand dug into her hip as another wave struck.
With it came a whisper of scent that was darkly familiar.
Then, as suddenly as it had begun, the quake was over, taking the scent with it before she could even begin to break it down. But she knew she’d sensed it above the Hudson.
Scrambling away as fast as she could—her wings were screaming with sensation—she got to her feet.
Venom flowed to a standing position with that strange reptilian grace an instant later, not commenting on her jerky escape. “We need to get away before another tremor strikes.” He was already reaching for the cockpit door.
“Wait.” Her blood turning cold, she was running even as she yel ed out instructions over her shoulder. “Start the engine! I need to find Ransom!”
Venom was by her side before she finished speaking. She didn’t bother to curse. Fol owing Ransom’s familiar scent, which though not as clear to her as a vampiric trail, was more so than it would’ve been to the majority of humans, she sprinted down the narrow lane he’d taken to get out onto the main road. “There!”
The bike lay smashed on the retaining wal opposite the lane, Ransom’s body unmoving in the street. Going down beside him, she checked for a pulse.
“Thank God.”
Ransom groaned. “El ie?”
“Can you move?” she asked, running her hands over his body. “Any broken bones, problems with your back?”
Fisting his hands he pushed himself up into a kneeling position. “I’m okay, just stunned. Wasn’t going very fast when the quake hit.” His eyes were dilated, huge in his face.
“You’re coming with us,” she said, pul ing him to his feet, his arm slung over her shoulder.
“My bike.” Stil dazed, he glanced back at his pride and joy.
Venom took Ransom’s other side. “I’l cal one of the local vampires once we’re in the air. He’l store it for you.”
There were no more words as they half ran, half dragged Ransom back to the chopper. They’d barely gotten inside when the earth began to pitch and rol again. Not bothering to put on his headphones, Venom just said, “Hold on!” and lifted the bird.
They shook precariously under an insufficient amount of rotor action, but jaw locked and hands steady, Venom managed to get them airborne. Elena looked down as they rose. “My God.” The city was literal y bucking under them, parts of the road rising up in a rol ing wave, buildings crumbling into newly created canyons. The only good news was that instead of shaking Boston as a whole, the quake seemed oddly localized—to an approximately fifty-meter radius around the spot where they’d parked the chopper.
Hardly a natural phenomenon.
She is waking.
If this was what she could do while asleep ...
Having bullied Ransom into getting himself checked out at the hospital, Elena refused to leave until his librarian arrived. Nyree was a surprise—
because Elena had had no idea what to expect. The woman couldn’t have cleared five feet two inches, and had curves so lethal the prim blue cardigan she wore buttoned up to her neck was probably an attempt at camouflage. It didn’t work, even paired with a ful skirt straight out of the 1950s and simple flats, both in plain black.
As Nyree neared Ransom’s cubicle, Elena saw that her skin was a light brown, her features so unusual it was difficult to pinpoint ethnicity—but it was her eyes that stole the show. Huge and chocolate-dark, and overflowing with worry.