“Get . . . it . . . away . . .” she
breathed, clutching at her leather top.
“Take it away.”
Remy had moved forward with the
intention of loosening the vest to find out
what was happening. Maybe Lacey’s
immortality-giving crystal was burning
like hers had. But at the woman’s
agonized words, she stopped. Did Lacey
mean her own crystal? That she should
take it out of her skin?
Or . . . she looked over at the small
bundle of clothing she’d taken from
Vaughn’s room, in which her crystal was
wrapped. It was on the table right behind
Lacey, a mere yard away.
“It’s here,” Lacey gasped, her eyes
wide with pain. “Take it . . .
away
.”
Feeling Cat’s curious eyes on her,
Remy walked over and retrieved the
small orange crystal. It had come to life
and was burning and warm, but not with
the same ferocity as before.
She walked around to Lacey, who
was still panting, and had unlaced her
vest and pulled it away enough so the
crystal embedded in the soft skin below
her collarbone was exposed. Normally,
the small round gem would have been lit
with a soft ice-blue glow—just as when
Remy had seen it a few days ago. But
now it was gray and cloudy, like a
moonstone.
“What . . . have . . . you . . .
done
,”
Lacey whispered, looking down at it.
Fury and loathing blazed in her eyes
when she lifted her face, and Remy knew
if she had the energy, the woman would
be out of the chair and coming for her—
Dantès or no. “You’ve killed me.”
“I’ve done nothing,” Remy replied.
“Tell me about this. Tell me about this
crystal. I don’t know what it does or
where it came from. Is it really the
Mother crystal?”
“You . . . don’t . . . know?” Lacey
managed an unpleasant laugh, even in the
midst of her pain. True character,
blazing through. “Joke’s on me,” she
added bitterly. “I didn’t . . . know
either.”
“Know what?” Remy pressed. Was
the woman really dying? Or was she just
in pain—as if it were a sort of kryptonite
or asthenia that made her weak while in
her presence? She experimented by
stepping back and away from Lacey,
putting distance between the bounty
hunter and the crystal. “Does this make a
difference? If it’s farther away?”
“It’s too late,” the other woman said
from between gritted teeth. Sweat
trickled down her face. “It’s dead. My
stone’s . . . dead. And I will be . . .
soon.”
“Then tell me what you know,” Remy
said again. “And I’ll get Elliott here.
He’ll help you.”
Lacey’s smile was bitter. “No one
. . . can help . . . me . . . now. Once the
stone . . . dies . . .”
Remy knew her only chance to get
more information was to drag it from the
woman. Dying or no, she wasn’t going to
give it up without a fight. “So you’ve
been chasing me—and this crystal—for
years, and now that you’ve located it . . .
what? Its proximity kills you? That’s
kind of a kick in the teeth, isn’t it?”
The bounty hunter’s lips were a flat
white line. Her face was as pale as
Goldwyn’s, matching her hair. The
sweat of agony collected at her temples
and dribbled down her cheeks, gathered
at the bony hollow of her throat,
glistened everywhere on her skin. Her
eyes were two dark orbs, sunken in
hollowing sockets, the circles beneath
them were darkening even as Remy
watched.
“Never . . . knew . . . that,” the
woman replied. “Never . . . was told.
Don’t know . . . if . . .
they
even know
. . .” Her lips twisted in an evil sneer.
“Hope . . . they . . . don’t. Hope . . . they
find . . . you. Take . . . the . . . stone. And
all . . . fucking . . .
die.
”
This impassioned speech seemed to
cost too much effort, and she sagged
lower in her chair, her head falling
against the back. Her corded neck
bulged with blue veins, her pulse
throbbing visibly in her throat.
“Did they send you here to get me?
After they made the threat last night?”
Lacey opened her eyes, fixing them
on Remy. “
I . . .
knew you were here.
Guessed . . . followed . . . Ian.
I . . .
told
. . . Hegel . . . son. Not Ian.” Her lips
stretched in a tight, pleased smile. “I
wanted . . . reward. Ian . . .” She shook
her head, closed her eyes.
“You knew I was here, and so Liam
Hegelson—yes, I know the name,” Remy
said when she saw the flare of surprise
as Lacey’s eyes shot open, “sent you to
follow up on their threat. To take me to
them, after they promised to destroy
Envy. What will they do when I don’t
go? When I don’t appear? What do they
plan to do to Envy?”
But Lacey had closed her eyes. Her
labored breathing rasped in a silence
broken only by Dantès vigorously
scratching his side.
“Lacey.” Remy prodded the woman
with her voice. “What are they going to
do?”
“Destroy . . . Envy,” she replied. And
showed a malicious hint of teeth.
“Yeah, I got that. But how? More
bombs? A fire? An invasion?”
Lacey didn’t respond. She just
watched her through black, blank eyes,
malice exuding from her even as the life
drained away.
“Okay, let’s try this: why do they
want the Mother crystal? What does it
do?” Remy brandished the stone, holding
it up for Lacey to see.
“Very . . . powerful. Too . . .
dangerous . . . for anyone.” Her
bloodless lips twisted in a parody of a
smile. “Didn’t know . . . how . . .
dangerous. Want to have . . . control.”
“What did it do to you?” Remy
asked. “The crystal. What happened?”
Lacey shifted her head weakly in a
negative movement. She was going.
Remy could almost see the life draining
from her.
“Is there a way to destroy the crystal?
What if I get rid of it . . . then the
Strangers won’t be able to get it.”
Somehow, the dying woman was able
to force a rough, wheezing laugh. “Yeah
. . . do it . . . destroy the crystal. That
. . .” She moved her lips up at the
corners. “. . . would . . . serve . . . right.
All . . . die . . . then. All connected to . . .
crystal . . . would . . .” Her voice trailed
off and she closed her eyes. For a minute
Remy thought she was gone.
But then she heaved back into motion
with a deep, shuddering breath. One of
her fingers twitched as if to emphasize
something she’d said.
I’m losing her
. Damn. Then a thought
struck her. “Who’s Liana?”
To Remy’s surprise, Lacey opened
her eyes and fixed them on her. A blaze
of consciousness shone through the
dullness for a moment. “How . . .” She
shuddered a breath and lifted a trembling
hand as if to ward off some threat. “. . .
do . . . you . . . know . . . about . . . Li . . .
ahh . . . na . . . ?”
And then her eyes went blank. Her
hand fell. And she was gone.
W
yatt was pacing Vaughn’s office
because he sure as hell couldn’t sit. He
ached everywhere from holding his
muscles tense, from doing
nothing
. His
head pounded. His belly gnawed.
Where
the hell are you, Remy?
At the moment, he didn’t even know
where their so-called fearless leader
was either. During his reunion with
David,
the
group
scattered
to
temporarily
handle
other
pressing
matters, and afterward Wyatt had gone to
look for Vaughn, in vain. And now the
mayor had yet to arrive at the appointed
time for the meeting’s continuation.
Thirty-one hours. Closing in on less
than a day.
The door opened and everyone
looked up.
“New development,” said Quent as
he came through the door and Wyatt
gritted his teeth. Where the hell was
Vaughn? Quent slid onto a seat next to
Zoë. “Sorry I’m late. But one of our
questions
has,
unfortunately,
been
answered.”
Fuck that.
The only question Wyatt
wanted answered was for Vaughn Rogan
to tell him
where the hell Remy was
.
The longer the mayor kept her
whereabouts hidden—and even the
knowledge that he had it—the less Wyatt
was inclined to trust him. He’d always
liked the man, respected his leadership,
and even enjoyed chatting with him over
a cold one. But as Vaughn had already
clearly said: his priority was the mass of
Envyites as a whole.
Wyatt’s,
on
the
other
hand,
surprisingly enough, had become the
personal safety of one woman.
And therein could lie an ugly
conflict, especially if the rest of the
group sided with the mayor. Or even if
they didn’t.
Vaughn could be keeping her
imprisoned somewhere as a last ditch
bargaining chip if every other option
failed—not that anyone had presented
any other fucking options. They were all
just sitting here, waiting, trying to clean
up, trying to
guess
at what to do.
They needed reconnaissance. They
ne e de d
action
. He wanted to punch
someone. He wanted to shout and get out
of this room and tear the damn place
apart until they found her . . . and yet, he
knew that any searching or tracking had
to be done very carefully.
Because if the general public became
aware of the fact that Remy, a young,
beautiful woman, was Remington Truth,
everyone
would be looking for her.
“What’s the new development?”
Elliott asked. “And where’s Vaughn? He
was supposed to be back here by now.
Are things getting crazy out there?”
“The new development is that we
have the answer to one pressing
question: how to communicate our
response to the Strangers,” Quent
replied. “They sent a team of bounty
hunters—a bloody fright of a woman and
her albino partner. Walked right up to
Fred Newbergh at the gate and bloody
announced they wanted to see the
mayor.” He ran a hand through his hair
and looked at Fence. “Remember when
Seattle put that damned bullet in Theo?
That blond wench who was with him?”
“She visits me regularly—in my
damned
nightmares,”
Fence
said.
“Lacey. That was her name. Couldn’t be
a worse choice for a name, if ya’ll ask
me.”
“Spoken by the guy who goes by
Fence,” muttered Ana. “What happened?
Did they see Vaughn?”
“Don’t know. Last I heard they were
looking for him.” Quent turned his
attention to Wyatt. “Simon’s—”
Before he could finish, the door
opened and Vaughn strode in.
’Bout
damn time.
Wyatt narrowed his gaze on
him, taking no care to hide his precise
feelings about the situation. If the others
hadn’t been present, he’d have the damn
man—mayor or no mayor—by the throat
until Vaughn told him where Remy was.
He might anyway.
“How is it out there?” asked Sage.
She flickered a glance at Wyatt as if to
ease his mood. He gritted his teeth and
looked away.
“Getting
unpleasant,”
Vaughn
replied. “There’s a group of about two
dozen being whipped up into a frenzy by
Susan Proudy, about finding Remington
Truth. She’s trying to get them on board
to start searching every damn room and
home in the whole city until they find it.
Yes,” he added, his mouth in a wry
grimace, “they are searching for
it
—not
her. Or even him. Got people leaving
too. Packing up their things and taking