“I’m sorry,” the male said. “I don’t have an appointment. I wasn’t sure where to go. I can leave. I’ll just leave—I gave her my number. I’m not looking for any trouble.”
The male lifted his fists up as if he were ready to defend himself, even against a brother—but it was clear he would prefer not to have to: His stare was level without being aggressive, his affect calm and watchful as his stance widened, and he settled his weight.
It was the classic preparation of someone used to fighting, who was also not an instigator.
“What is your name?” Rhage asked, grimly aware that people were coming around them. V, Saxton … even Wrath himself.
Don’t say it, Rhage prayed. Don’t say it, dontsayit—
“Ruhn. My name is Ruhn. My sister died about two months ago. I’m here for my niece, Lizabitte.”
Mary put her phone down again and lifted her hands to her face. As she stared at the computer screen, reading and rereading the short PM, she was screaming in her head even as she remained silent.
“Rhage …,” she moaned. “Oh, God …”
Back with the phone. Calling him again. Voice mail for the fourth time.
He had to be in with the King, but God! why now—
“Calm down,” she said aloud. “Breathe and relax.”
This could be anything. Someone who was playing a practical joke—who just happened to have the name that Bitty had used. Somebody who had heard Mary was mated to a Brother and wanted to take advantage of that by posing as Bitty’s uncle—even though … well, she hadn’t identified herself as a foster parent.
Or maybe it was a total mistake, a message for somebody else entirely.
Yeah, ’cuz that was likely.
“Damn it, Rhage.”
Her hands were shaking so badly that she fumbled the cell phone, and had to bend over and fish around the dark foot-well of the desk to find the thing.
The downward repositioning was kind of handy, really, considering she was seriously thinking about throwing up.
Righting herself, she looked—
Marissa was in the open doorway of her office and her boss seemed like she had seen a ghost. Great. Did the universe have a BOGO on potentially life-shattering events tonight?
“Mary.”
The instant she heard the grim tone of voice, Mary clamped her molars together and thought, Nope, not a two-for-one. This was about her. This was about the private message.
Or that Rhage had been hurt or killed.
Mary got to her feet. “Tell me.”
“You have to get to the Audience House right now. A young male has shown up and—”
“He says he’s Bitty’s uncle.”
Marissa came in. “Did Rhage call you?”
“No. I … it doesn’t matter.”
Mary reached for her coat. Dropped it as she had the phone. Took two tries to pick the thing up. Then couldn’t get her arm through the sleeve.
“Zsadist is outside.” Marissa helped her with the sleeves and then pulled the lapels to order as if Mary were a child. “He’s going to drive you.”
“I’ll be fine.”
“No.” Marissa handed Mary her purse. Her phone. Put her red scarf around her neck and tied it in a loose knot. “He’s going to take you.”
Marissa stepped back so Mary could go out first.
But Mary didn’t move. Somehow, the messages from her brain to her feet were getting lost in the pathways of her gray matter, the command to left-and-right it out of her office, to the stairs, and down to the front door scattering like autumn leaves in a cold north wind.
Her family. Her precious little family.
Her and Rhage, now with Bitty.
Or maybe … not with Bitty.
“I just want to go back,” she heard herself whisper through sudden tears. “I want to run the night back, I want a reverse lever, a way to back up. I want to be at home during the day, watching movies and sleeping with them both.”
It was emotions, not logic, speaking, of course. Because even if there were a magic remote that could rewind time, the private message would still have been sent … and the collision would still be occurring.
Even more to the point, if by some horrible fate the male actually was Bitty’s uncle? Mary had no right to rob the little girl of her blood relatives.
“I can’t do this.” She covered her mouth with her hand. “I can’t do this.…”
Marissa hugged her close and she clung to her friend. There were no words spoken, because what could be said? This might be a fraud.
Or this might be a rightful, totally legal parental figure coming to claim Bitty.
“Rhage is there,” she said suddenly as she jerked back. “Oh, God … Rhage … is at the Audience House.”
That’s why he wasn’t answering the phone. The uncle or whatever had shown up at the Audience House.
Mary broke into a run for the stairs, her formerly paralyzed legs putting a rush to the descent.
As she hit the front door with Marissa now racing behind her, her tears were flowing fast, streaking off her face. She didn’t pay them any mind. She tore across the lawn, feeling nothing of the cold, or the fact that her purse was slapping against her hip, or that she had her phone locked in a death grip in her other hand.
Z was right by Rhage’s GTO, his skull-trimmed hair and his scarred face glowing in the darkness like a destination.
He opened the passenger door for her, and when she jumped in and couldn’t work the seat belt, he reached inside, even though he hated being close to people, and clicked the tab into place. A split second later, he was behind the wheel and roaring the engine to life.
The tires skidded out on the pavement as he floored the accelerator, the powerful engine fishtailing the rear end before rubber tread found purchase and they exploded forward.
As they sped off, Mary was panting, panting so hard, panting—until she was dizzy and had to lean forward and brace her hands against the dashboard.
Even though they had had Bitty for such a short time, the girl was like a part of Mary’s body, and not an arm or a leg. More like an organ you couldn’t live without. The heart. The brain. The soul. Only in this case, no transplants.
God, she couldn’t do this—
Zsadist covered her hand with one of his, and stayed like that, relinquishing his hold only when he had to shift. And the sense of his strength was the only thing that kept her from screaming out loud until she shattered the windshield in front of her.
She was going to remember this car ride for the rest of her life.
Tragically.
TWENTY
“Z’s bringing her in,” someone said.
Rhage wasn’t tracking much. He was vaguely aware that he was in Darius’s kitchen, sitting at a table that was big enough to handle eight or maybe ten people, but had only one at it.
One rocked and shocked, braced-for-disaster, sorry son of a bitch.
“Mary,” he said in a cracked voice. “She was calling me.…”
Wrath’s face got right up in his as the King sat down next to him. Through those wraparounds, Rhage could feel the power and the support of his brother and his ruler. “Z has her in your car. They’re gonna be here very soon.”
“Where is …” What had he meant to say?
The back door to the kitchen opened, another blast of cold air rushing in—just as it had out front some twenty minutes ago.