Nine Lives of an Urban Panther (12 page)

BOOK: Nine Lives of an Urban Panther
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Chapter Twelve

T
HE COFFEE SHOP
was the saddest thing I'd ever seen. Bastian had dragged out every seasonal decoration he had and hung it on the walls. Hearts and fireworks adorned the window around the Last Day Open sign stuck between the wooden blinds and the window.

I opened the door and felt the shimmer of the protection spell I'd put up six months ago. I saw the mirror that Jessa and I had put up to make sure that she could see into the shop before she magically materialized in the bathroom. I saw the spot where Chaz and I had our first fight.

Devin rose. Ever the drama king, he was dressed in all black with a pair of black sunglasses on. He stretched out his hand and pulled me to him, kissing me on the cheek.

“Whatever are we going to do, Violet?” he said as we walked to the counter.

Bastian had on three different hats with a crown over all those, all strapped with elastic bands under his chin.

I leaned against the counter. “Why didn't you tell us, Bastian?”

“Figured quicker was better. Like a bandage, my mom used to say.”

I shook my head. “This isn't right, Bastian.”

“Bank sure seems to think it is. I'm getting out before I go completely under.”

He still mustered a smile. “Last caramel macchiato on the house to my best customer.”

I sighed. “Make it a double.”

“And Stretch here?” Bastian asked.

“Something fancy,” Devin said.

We both slid down the bar to the pick-up counter.

I took one last survey of the place, burning it into my brain, into my energy. Would the magic still pull Wanderers here if they turned this place into a tire shop? Or would the magic fade when I no longer called it home?

When my eyes finally landed on Devin, there was a furrow between his brown eyes that rivaled the Mariana trench. “You look skinny.”

“Thanks?”

“No, like Kate Moss skinny. When was the last time you ate?” he reached out and pinched my bony elbow.

“I know. I've been a little preoccupied with work lately.”

“The furry kind or the writing kind?”

“I wish it was the writing kind.”

Devin slipped into doctor mode. He gently took my wrist and looked at the clock on the wall. He pressed his fingers into my throat and looked quickly into my eyes. “You're cold.”

“I'm fine.”

“No, your basal temperature the last time I checked was one hundred degrees even. You're not even burning at normal levels.”

“I know, Devin. I'm working on it and I was kind of hoping that a relaxing cup of coffee with my human friend might help with all this stress.”

Devin frowned and then slid his arm around my shoulder. “But you have all those gorgeous men around you all the time.”

“I know. It's exhausting.” I laughed.

Bastian served us up our last cup of coffee and we went back to my little table.

“I met all my pack here. Where am I supposed to go now?”

“I scope out men here. Where am I supposed to go now?” Devin fired back before he sipped his coffee. “Oh, bravo, Bastian.”

The man tipped his head to us and went to his next customer.

Devin sighed as he looked mournfully into his cup. “I'm sure you're needed back at the fort, so catch me up as quickly as possible.”

And I did, I rushed him through the pack meetings, the ghoul attacks, and ended with the piece de resistance. “So now I'm a millionaire.”

Devin's jaw dropped. “And you're still wearing those old Chucks?”

I laughed. It felt good to just be Violet for a few moments, not taking or needing anything from him.

“Then why are you bemoaning the loss of your favorite coffee shop?” And Devin uttered the most sinful words I'd ever heard: “Buy the coffee shop.”

The smile spread itself across my face. My toes curled with happiness as I suddenly saw a future that I could live with. A never-ending fount of free coffee. Now that was magic.

But then I remembered the spiel I'd given Chaz and why he wasn't going to get a yacht for his birthday. “It's not my money. It's the pack's money.”

“And didn't you just tell me that you met every single one of your pack members here?”

“Yes, but it's just a coffee shop.”

Devin leaned forward. “It's more than that. It's a special place for you. You have memories here. And now you have the means to make sure others can have those same memories. That some other crazy writer can meet a debonair book lover and form a friendship that lasts forever.”

I smiled and reached across the table to take his hand. It was so warm. “This is why I need you, Devin. A fresh perspective. All those pretty boys and no one thought just buy the coffee shop to keep them safe.”

Devin flashed me an award-winning smile and I was just about to comment on his debonair attitude, when a cold rush of energy washed over me like an ice-cold bucket of water down the back of my shirt.

“Violet?” Devin put down his cup of coffee but kept a tight grip on my hand.

And then there was a flood of roses. I took in a deep breath and pulled out my cell phone. It rang in my hand.

“What is it, Jessa?” I asked. I was already on my feet. Devin followed quickly.

Her voice was tight and rushed. “Rip in the Veil. Not a tear. I'm trying to find it now.”

“I'll be there in . . .”

I stopped when I saw Waylon walking through the door. He wasn't Waylon though. He was a cold stony energy down my back and there was something wrong with his eyes.

I dropped the phone from my face and tore at the charm around my neck. Freed from its dampening spell, I truly knew his power. Son of a motherless goat, the man was powerful, like me-on-a-bad-day powerful.

“Waylon?”

His wild eyes landed on me, and they weren't the light brown I was used to, but a white cloudy look, like a saucer of milk. “Blood, Violet. I saw blood and this big friggin' snake thing.”

I gulped. “Waylon?”

He ran his shaking hand through his hair and the cool rivulets of power dissipated as I watched his brown eyes return to normal.

“I didn't want you to find out like this, Violet. But it was bad, there was a . . .” His eyes landed on my coffee companion.

“Devin,” Devin stuck out his hand quickly.

“Devin, this is cousin Waylon. Waylon, this is Devin.”

Waylon shook the man's hand quickly and I turned to Devin.

“It's hitting the fan right now, isn't it?” Devin asked.

I shook my head. “You've been hanging out with me too long, but yes,” I looked over at Waylon, the man I thought I knew, and then back at Devin, the man who knew me too well. “I think it's a keep-your-cell-phone-on kind of night.”

“I love you,” Devin said as he kissed my cheek and grabbed his coffee. I watched as he put a twenty in Bastian's tip jar, which seemed extra full tonight.

With a jaw of steel, I grabbed Waylon's arm and pulled him toward the quiet back corner of the shop. Even though there were only a few patrons there, I didn't want them talking about blood and snakes over their coffees.

“Slowly, Waylon.”

As he spoke, his power sunk so deep inside him that I couldn't feel anything emanating from him except his regular body heat.

I listened to him like I'd never listened to anything else in my entire life. Knowing that whatever he said was going to redefine my entire world.

“I got the Jourdaine Legacy after Aunt Lily died, Violet. Her future visions.”

My stomach churned over on itself. My mother's legacy went to Waylon?

“I wanted to tell you. God did I need to tell you. But . . . when I found out about the panther, I knew I had to find you.”

“What?” I looked deep into Waylon's brown eyes.

“I had a vision about you being attacked. I knew you'd been changed over.”

Thoughts spun through my head. Waylon a psychic? Waylon, who we had gone searching for his daughter with? Waylon, who used to give me Indian burns? One of the most powerful psychics in the country?

I did the only thing that made any sense right now. I punched him as hard as I could on the arm.

“Oww,” he whined as he held his arm.

“That's for keeping it from me. And this . . .” I said before I stomped on his foot. “That's for not coming sooner. Do you know how many times I could have used a psychic in the past six months?”

“Do you know how many times I knew that?”

His tone, his eyes killed me. He really had been trying to get here. He really did want to be here with me.

I threw my arms around him and hugged him. It finally made sense why he was here. Why now. And it wasn't any of the sinister things we'd thought. He wanted to be here because he was my cousin. My family. And he wanted to protect me just like all those years ago.

I released him and he sucked in a huge breath. “You're a little stronger than I remembered.”

“I'm a little more of a lot of things than you remember. Now what's going on with the blood and the snakes?”

Waylon didn't falter with my quick change of pace. It really was a Jordan thing. “It was horrible. You were there and there was this huge snake and then there was blood . . . and why are you taking this so well?”

“Been through a couple of these prophecies now. The first of them was laid down by our ancestor, actually. Most of them have my blood all over the place. What else was there? A mirror maybe?”

The blood drained from Waylon's face and he nodded. “It was a museum of sorts and there was this mirror thing, I think.”

“Any clue on the location?”

“Don't know.”

“Can you try?” I pushed.

He furrowed. “I don't know Dallas. There was a garden with statues and the mirror was outside.”

I closed my eyes and searched through everything I knew about Dallas, which, thanks to my freelancing articles, was more than the average person knew. “Nasher Sculpture Center. Wrote an article on the installation of a new reflecting pool.”

I started for the door. I grabbed my bag and coffee and headed out of my favorite coffee shop. I smiled at the possible new possessive:
my
coffee shop.

Waylon caught up to me on the sidewalk outside. “What is going on, Violet?”

“Do you really want to know?” I asked as I got my keys in my hand.

“Yes. I came here to help you.” His brown eyes started to water. “I've seen the future, kid. And without you, it's grim on a good day.”

I licked my lips. He wanted the truth. I laid it out for him. Let him choose to fight.

“My sire Spencer Haverty is in the Neveranth. For a long time now, I think he's been trying to get back, or at least learning how to get back. He can use a pond or a mirror to break the Veil and get across but not without a sacrifice. Jessa and I can fix it if we get there in time.”

Waylon's jaw hung open.

“So go home, keep Lexie safe and I'll see you for dinner on Tuesday.”

He licked his lips. “Who are you?”

“Just Violet,” I shrugged as I jumped into my Miata and sped off toward the Nasher.

J
ESSA MADE IT
there first. Her penthouse was only a few blocks from the sculpture center. The spring night was warm and there was the slight scent of a storm on the horizon. Got to love those April showers.

“Why'd you call in the cavalry?” she whispered as we hid in a dark corner of the parking lot waiting for the big guns. “It's just another rip in the Veil.”

“Turns out innocent cousin Waylon is a full-blown psychic. Gave me a little heads-up that it's not just another rip.”

Jessa went cold. “What?”

“My cousin got my mother's legacy. So all that psychic stuff that I can do is just genetic predisposition.”

“Holy cow, Violet.”

“Yep. We are going to have a major family sit down after this.”

Jessa leaned against the wall. “So Lexie is special.”

“More than we knew. What kills me is that I couldn't feel him. I mean, he was human by every sense I had.”

“Fairy blood might cover it up.”

“What?”

“Fairy blood could explain why he's hidden from Wanderers. We are pretty good at hiding in plain sight.”

“Are you saying that his father was a fairy?”

“Wouldn't take much,” Jessa shrugged. “What do you know about him?”

I tried to remember. “Nothing. I'm not sure I ever knew.”

“Scandal.” Jessa wiggled her eyebrows, but as soon as Tucker's truck pulled up, she got all serious.

Tucker had brought everyone from the house. Kandice and Jane looked scared out of their minds, Nash looked a little too excited to play hero, and Tucker was armed to the teeth with every piece of weaponry Chaz had brought to the house so far.

“What is it?” he asked.

“Rip in the Veil,” I said. “And possibly a cross over.”

“You didn't say that,” Jessa said as she punched my arm.

“It's said now. So the plan is to sneak in and stop it before it gets even worse.”

“Got it.”

I looked at the others' faces. “No. Kandice and Jane need to go home.” I pulled out my car keys and handed them to Kandice.

She backed away from them like they were a snake. “No, Prima. I'm in this. If nothing else, I can provide surveillance.”

My gaze fell to Jane. “You don't have to do this.”

The woman ran her hands up her arms. “I know, but I still came.”

I gave her a small smile. “Thank you.”

I turned to Tucker. “Vision said it was a big snake thing.”

“Great. Know how to kill one of those?”

“Generally, I'm finding that decapitation works for most things.” I shrugged.

As I turned toward the sculpture center, I felt like I was missing something important. I had my Riko, the Key Holder, my wise man, and a horse.

BOOK: Nine Lives of an Urban Panther
6.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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