“Auntie, perhaps you should speak with Uncle—”
“I hated her.” The female snapped the skirt free of its clips and threw it to the carpet. “And I hate her even more in her death.”
“I’m sure you don’t mean that—”
“Oh, but I do. She was a filthy whore, then and always. She got what she deserved—”
“You’re her mother,” Elise blurted. “How can you say that?”
Her aunt moved down and made a fist out of one of the safety-pinned blouses. Ripping it off the rod, the hanger popped free and ricocheted right into her face. Not that she seemed to notice.
“Look what she’s done to us! After we lost our son, we now have a murdered daughter! Who was found bloodied and half-dead in front of a domestic abuse house! How could she have embarrassed us like that!”
All Elise could do was stare into that ashen, emaciated face as her aunt began to tear the closet apart.
She was the reason for the disorder—not Allishon. She was the one who had trashed the clothes—and she was going to do it again, right here and right now.
Abruptly, Elise wanted to cry. The idea that social expectations had so completely ruined any even biological connection between mother and daughter was just … unfathomable.
And yet she never would have guessed at the splintering. Before the death, everything had been kept under wraps, her aunt and uncle showing up dressed beautifully and smiling at events, ever the perfect couple … as their daughter had self-destructed after her brother’s death, first by inches, and then by yards … until the fracturing of the family unit had become obvious to the other people in this house.
The others in society.
“We are not welcomed anymore,” her aunt gritted out as she pulled more and more off the rods, throwing the clothes down, trampling over them with her bare feet. “We are invited nowhere! We are outcasts and it is her fault!”
Elise swallowed hard and eyed the escape.
She was fairly certain she was going to throw up.
“Have I shocked you with my honesty,” her aunt sneered. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
“No,” Elise whispered. “Not a ghost. I’m looking at a version of evil that I never expected to see in my own family.”
Stumbling by, she shoved her corpse of an aunt out of the way and ran not just out of Allishon’s room, but the mansion itself.
Out on the front lawn, she braced her hands on her knees, leaned over … and dry-heaved in the bushes.
And then she kept running down the drive, not even caring she had nowhere to go.
TWENTY-NINE
As Butch signaled for go-time, Axe and the Brother entered a cramped service lane behind the abandoned buildings, Axe falling in tight behind and sticking with the warrior as they efficiently progressed down toward God only knew what.
Fucking hell, it was darker than he’d thought, although Axe recognized that this was because he had no goddamn clue what was going to happen and it was reflexive to think that illumination would put him in a better defensive position.
The sounds of fighting soon echoed in the distance and got more intense, as did the scents of spilled blood … both of vampire and slayer.
The first of the writhing lessers showed up about eight blocks from where they’d rerouted, and Butch barely paused as they went by the damn thing. He merely unsheathed a black dagger, lifted it over his head, and stabbed the undead right in the chest, the pop!-and-smoke show the first time Axe had ever seen it done.
No dwelling on the shit, though: the reality that he could get shot in the head at any second kept Axe focused on what was living and not what was being sent back to the Omega.
Farther down, black stains that gleamed like spilled oil showed up on the worn pavement … and then came the red splatters on the brick walls of the walkups—
Gunshots went off.
Pop! Pop! Rat-a-tat-ata-ta—
With a burst forward, they redoubled their speed until they got to yet another alley-artery, skidding around the corner and dropping into shooting position, Butch facing forward, Axe facing the other direction at the guy’s six.
Axe shot a quick glance over his shoulder—oh, hell, he was never going to forget the image of the cluster-fuck going down about fifty feet away.
Rhage was in the center of three lessers, all of which had knives—and the Brother was fighting them without weapons in his hands, in spite of the fact that he had daggers strapped right to his chest.
There was also the clear indication, if that red waterfall down his left arm was anything to go by, that he had been shot at least once, probably more.
It was as if he’d had red paint poured all over him—
A lesser came running around the same corner Axe and Butch had just ridden hard, and thank fuck for training. Instead of wasting a crucial nanosecond thinking Holy fuck!, Axe went beast with his guns, hitting those triggers—
Jammed. Both of them.
“Fuck!”
Butch started shooting in the direction of the fight, trying to pick off the slayers without hitting Rhage—which was proving impossible because the Brother was still trying to fight even while bleeding out.
“Dagger!” Axe shouted. “Now!”
Again, the training worked. Butch glanced behind for a second, knew there was no choice but for Axe to engage in tight quarters, and the Brother took out an actual black dagger.
“Don’t showboat! Get the fucking job done!”
With that, he flipped the weapon back and Axe caught it on the down arc, leaping forward and going right for the slayer’s chest.
He didn’t miss.
That fucking black blade went right where it needed to, like there was a homing device in the forged steel.
There was no celebrating, though.
A stray bullet, either on a ricochet from Butch’s gun or from one of the two new slayers who’d suddenly shown up in the alley, caught Axe in the thigh, the blaze of pain as if someone had taken a red-hot fireplace poker and jammed it into his upper leg.
And then yet another slayer came around the corner.
No time to think.
Axe leaped on the fucker, taking the soulless human down to the pavement and rolling him over. But the bastard was smart, or really into survival, because he managed to grab on to Axe’s fresh wound and squeeze.
Axe’s vision went in and out, his switchboard momentarily overrun with so much electrical impulse that it went on the fritz.
But then he got pissed. Clamping a hand on the lesser’s throat, he had a snapshot of bared human teeth with those weird flat-tipped canines of theirs, and the tattoo of a tear under one brown eye, and shaggy hair that looked like it hadn’t been cut in a month.
And then he lifted that dagger over his shoulder, just as Butch had done, and stabbed it right through the frontal lobe, driving the blade through the skull and into the cake of gray matter behind the bone.