Authors: Unknown
Fingers gripped his hair and yanked his head back. A
cal used hand smacked his face.
“Wake up, damn it!”
Ty forced his eyes open and inhaled noisily. Louis Gaudet
peered at him. His face wobbled and Ty tried to blink the
apparition away.
“What the hell is in that powder?” Ty asked.
262
“Couple things. Valerian root. Poppy dust. Bones of a
pure white cat.”
“That’s messed up, man,” Ty mumbled. “You’re messed up.”
He looked Shine up and down. The man had gained
some muscle in the last five years, if that was possible. Ty’s
eyes landed on a cylinder shape in Shine’s pocket. It was
either a tube of his fucked-up hoodoo dust, or it was one of
Ty’s EpiPens from the room above the bar. Zane had dumped
them out, and Ty hadn’t been able to find them all in his haste
to pack up that morning. That meant Shine had been in that
room, which meant Ava had either given them up or been
forced to talk.
Ty closed his eyes. “How much poppy dust?”
Shine laughed, and a moment later a bucket of water hit
Ty’s face. He gasped, trying not to hyperventilate as the icy
water trailed down his arms to drip off the ropes that bound
his hands.
“Why are you back in town, Tyler?” Gaudet asked.
Ty worked hard to swallow. He shook his head. “You
wouldn’t believe me.”
“Try us, son. We got all day and all night to get the real
story from you.” He held up a syringe and waved it for Ty to
see. “We can make it a quick overdose, or we can make it a
painful one. Your choice.”
Ty closed his eyes and nodded. “Okay. Okay.” He licked
his lips and began to flex his muscles, testing the ropes. His
wrists were tied to the back legs of the chair, and his ankles
were secured to the front legs. The water had given him a little
leeway, but he still couldn’t get free. “I . . . I’m here on a job.”
“What sort of job?”
Ty opened his eyes as the buzzing in his ear continued. He
was breathless, but that was good. It gave his words an element
of truth, made it harder to detect a lie. “I hunt vampires.” 263
Gaudet stared for a few seconds before straightening with
a loud sigh. “Vampires.”
“You have a very serious vampire problem here.”
Gaudet rolled his eyes and scrubbed at one cheek. He
looked at his son. “Shine? Make him sorry for pul ing my leg.”
The big man began to wrap a strip of cloth around his
knuckles.
“No, Shine,” Ty groaned. He shook his head. “Down boy.”
Shine began to laugh. “Boy, you got bad gris-gris sticking
to you. Almost like you’re cursed.”
“That was you, huh?” Shine nodded and Ty chuckled,
even more breathless and hoarse than before. “Is this a bad
time to talk about how I fucked your sister?”
Shine backhanded him hard enough to tilt the chair.
Gaudet sneered. “You got a smart mouth on you, boy.
Always did. Shine’ll fix that right up, though.”
“He better hurry,” Ty managed to say. He gulped for
air, trying to force himself to hyperventilate. He had to be
convincing.
Gaudet bent in front of him, narrowing his eyes. He waved
at Shine. “He’s having one of those damn allergy attacks,” he
said, disgusted. “I told you not to use that damn powder, boy,
now he’s gonna die before he can talk!”
“How in the hell are we supposed to search an entire
neighborhood of ruined houses?” Owen hissed.
Zane pulled out a top shelf bottle of whiskey and didn’t
offer to share.
Nick sat beside him and leaned close so no one else would
hear him. “You want to go easy on the hooch, Garrett?” 264
“What’s it to you?” Zane whispered. He stared at the
tabletop, unable to get Ty’s face out of his mind.
“You’re sitting here drinking when Ty’s in trouble. That
doesn’t seem like the Zane Garrett I met.”
“That man died last night.”
“I get it,” Nick said. “He lied to you.”
Zane glanced at him then looked away quickly. The
last person he wanted to talk to about this with was Nick
O’Flaherty. Hell, the man was probably standing in line
waiting for Ty to be single.
“You know what, Zane, he lied to us too. In fact, I don’t
know a single person Ty hasn’t lied to, including himself.”
Zane huffed and took another drink of whiskey. “You
must be one hell of a loyal bastard.”
“He’s earned it.”
“Has he? Has he really earned that from you, O’Flaherty?
Because I thought he’d earned it from me too, and then I
found out the truth. I found out he uses things like love and
loyalty as tools.”
“You have no idea what love and loyalty mean to him if
that’s what you really believe.”
“No?” Zane took a gulp of whiskey. “Why don’t you
educate me then, O’Flaherty, because you know him so
fucking well.”
“I know Ty’s not all there,” Nick said, tapping his temple
with a finger. “He has always been a step away from the wrong
path. One screw comes loose, and he’s gone. The only thing
keeps him on the side of the righteous is his loyalty. His sense
of purpose. You take that from him? And you’re looking into
the eyes of a monster.”
Zane glanced at Nick, surprised by how hard the words
hit him.
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“So you question his motives. You question his tactics.
But you be damn sure you know what you’re doing before you
question his loyalty.”
“Two days ago, I was trying to decide how to ask him to
marry me,” Zane whispered. “Tonight I’m trying to figure out
if I can even love someone like him.”
Nick was silent for a long while, long enough for Zane
to drain his glass. Then he leaned closer. “You ask yourself if
you’re in love. You’re not asking the right question.”
Zane laughed bitterly. “What’s the right question?”
Nick pressed a finger onto the table. “Would you bust
him out of prison?”
“No,” Zane answered immediately.
Nick sat back, eyebrows climbing high. “No?”
“No,” Zane said again. He poured another glass, gritting
his teeth. “I wouldn’t let him make it to a cell.”
“How is that not enough?”
Zane glared. “Look, I know you’re the team mother or
whatever, but stop. I’m not part of your team.”
Nick tilted his head. “You are now. And I know if Ty were
here, he wouldn’t want to see you like this.”
Zane slammed a hand on the table and grabbed Nick’s
shirt col ar. “Well Ty’s not here!”
Nick didn’t retaliate or try to break his hold. He just put a
hand on Zane’s shoulder. “So help me find him. And I’ll help
you break him out of jail.”
Zane wanted to lash out, to shout again or to shove him
away. But it was nearly impossible to remain angry and sullen
under Nick’s calming influence. Besides, Ty needed them. He
let go of Nick’s shirt and sat back. Nick reached slowly for the
bottle, giving Zane a chance to stop him; Zane shook his head
266
and stood up, running both hands through his hair. “Just put
it where I can’t find it.”
Liam cleared his throat loudly. “Now that that crisis has
passed, can we focus here?”
Zane glowered at him, but Liam merely leered in return.
“Okay, we can narrow it down,” Digger said. He took out
his combat knife and gouged a deep line across the table. “This
is the canal. When the levees broke, the barges in the canal
and the storm surge took out most of the houses alongside it.
What’s left in these first few blocks,” he said, slashing the table
into a grid, “is nothing but empty lots or rebuilt homes.”
Zane studied the grid closer. “So we can narrow it down.”
Digger nodded.
“It wouldn’t be near the canal then, nor would it be near
businesses or large thoroughfares,” Zane said.
Digger scratched his cheek with the large knife, then
marked the approximate areas Zane had mentioned. “Also,
most of the houses with no one living in them will still have
markings on the sides.”
“What sort of markings?”
“A spray-painted X. Little markings in each quadrant.
They were used when rescue crews went through the houses
to show when they were there, which crew it was, what sort of
dangers there were. And the body count.”
Zane nodded, wincing. He remembered Ty talking
about the rescue efforts he and others had been involved in
after Hurricane Katrina hit. He couldn’t quite wrap his mind
around the horrors.
“Some of those houses still have their markings. Means
the owners haven’t been able to return to rebuild. Or they
ain’t coming back. We find a marked house with a vehicle near
it, I guarandamntee you that’s our spot.”
267
“So we can find him,” Owen said. He was standing behind
Digger’s chair, unable to sit still.
“We don’t even know if they have him,” Nick said. “If the
Colombians got him first, he’s dead.”
“And if he got away, he’s sitting in a casino, drinking a
cocktail in front of a security camera,” Zane said.
“In that case, our only avenue is to search for him here,”
Liam said, tapping the table. “If he’s dead, we’re no use to him.
And if he’s sitting somewhere safe, he’s no use to us.”
Nick tucked his gun into the back of his jeans. “So we go
to the Lower Ninth Ward and split up.”
“No, the hell we will,” Owen growled. He pointed at
Liam. “Last time we split up, this bastard ran away, Doc got
shot, and Grady disappeared. We stay together.”
Nick studied him for a long moment and finally nodded.
“We need a plan if we find the place. How do we take it?”
Zane gripped the back of a chair. “Shock and awe.”
“Care to explain?” Nick asked.
Zane nodded and locked eyes with Liam “I want it. Right
now.”Liam raised both eyebrows and sat forward. “Pardon?”
“Your jacket is armored and your boots are for riding.
Where’s your bike?”
Ty worked the ropes at his wrists as Gaudet and his son
argued, taking fast, shallow breaths, trying desperately to fake
an allergic reaction.
“Hey!” he finally croaked. He shook his shoulders from
side to side. “Get these ropes . . . off my chest . . . so I can
fucking breathe!”
268
“The hell you say,” Shine growled. “Let him die, what’s the
problem? We’re going to kill him anyway!”
Gaudet smacked Shine on the side of the head. “I need
information before I can let him kick off. Where’s that
doohickey Ava gave you?”
Ty groaned. A woman scorned was nothing to mess with.
He’d remember that if he lived.
Shine began to dig in his pockets. “She found it in his
room at the bar,” he said, pul ing out one of the EpiPens.
“Shoot him with it,” Gaudet ordered.
“Oh hell no,” Ty gasped. He shook his head violently as
Shine turned the cylinder over and frowned at it. “Might as
well . . . let him loose . . . with a Ginsu!”
“You’re awfully particular for someone who’s dying.”
Shine put his hand on Ty’s shoulder and flicked the cap
off the EpiPen cylinder. He pulled it back, preparing to stab it
right into Ty’s chest.
“No, no, no!” Ty wheezed. “Jesus Christ!”
“What?”
“You can’t inject . . . adrenaline . . . right into my heart.
You dumb fuck!”
Shine turned it over in his hand and glanced at his father,
who rolled his eyes. “Let me have it. You got to take it out of
the case.”
“I thought you just stab it in.”
“But that’s just the case, boy. Let me have it.” Gaudet took
it from Shine and slid the EpiPen from its case.
“Blue end,” Ty told him.
“Shut up.”
“It ain’t a needle,” Shine muttered. “Let’s just give him a
sack to breathe in.”
“His throat’s closing up.”
269
“So we put a hole in his throat and he can breathe again.”
“Instructions . . . on it!” Ty managed. “Flip the blue . . . jab
the orange . . . hold it—”
“Shut up!” Gaudet turned it over and tapped it.
Ty took a deep, rasping breath.
“Fuck it, untie one of his hands,” Gaudet finally ordered.
“You sure about that?”
Gaudet nodded, and Shine pulled a large hunting knife
from a sheath at his thigh. He waved the knife in Ty’s face.
“Try anything, I’ll gut you.”
Ty nodded jerkily. Shine cut through the rope around his
left wrist and stepped back. Gaudet handed him the EpiPen.
He flipped the end and gripped it tight, raising it above his
thigh to jam it in. But instead of his own thigh, he swung his
arm out and jabbed the injector into Gaudet’s chest.
The man stumbled back, pawing at the EpiPen. Shine
followed, taking his arm to steady him.
“Oh, that’s gonna do so many bad things to your heart,”
Ty said as he began laughing. He reached across his lap to pull
at the rope that bound his right hand.
Shine yanked the EpiPen out. He threw it to the ground
and it shattered as it skidded across the floor. Gaudet grabbed