177647.fb2 Twice Bitten - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 65

Twice Bitten - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 65

It was Nick.

“Oh, my God.” I ran to him, ignoring the pain as my knees hit the tile floor. I dropped the dagger and began scoping out cuts and bruises. “Are you okay?”

He groaned in response.

“What happened to you?” I asked. And, more important, how? Nick was a shifter. He may not have been an Apex, but I’d felt the wake of his magic, knew he had power of his own. Who had the power to hurt Nick?

“Gabriel,” Nick muttered, then coughed hoarsely. “It was Gabriel.”

I blinked back confusion. “Gabriel?”

“He thinks I—,” Nick began, but before he could finish, my dagger skittered to the other end of the room. Shocked, I froze, one hand at Nick’s temple, my heart suddenly pounding in my chest, as I watched it spin in the far corner.

“Too late,” Nick muttered.

Swallowing down a thick rise of fear, I glanced beside me at the booted foot that had kicked my dagger into the corner, and the shape-shifter it belonged to.

Golden eyes glowed.

Gabriel.

My heart began to thud. Improved sparring skills or not, I felt as puny and weak as ever, huddled on the ground before a man who was piqued enough to make the air prickly with his magic.

“It was me,” he confirmed.

He’d done this? To Nick? One of his own Pack members? I tried to play catch-up but couldn’t make sense of it. What could Nick have done that would prompt Gabriel to this kind of violence?

Without words, Gabriel walked to the door and flipped on the overhead fixture with a loud click, flooding the room with light. I blinked back white spots, then stood up and looked him over. His knuckles were raw, and a bruise bloomed over his right cheekbone. Nick had gotten in a hit, then, but had ultimately been bested by the alpha in the room.

And here I was in a room with him, my colleagues miles away, my dagger on the other side of the room. It was time to use the only weapon I had left—a good, old-fashioned vampire bluff.

I adopted the haughtiest tone I could muster. “What did you do to him?”

Gabriel arched an eyebrow, as if surprised I’d challenge his authority, his right to deal with a member of his Pack as he saw fit. After a moment of staring at me, he turned and slid a chair out from the table, then sat down. His posture was negligent—slouchy, legs sprawled, one elbow propped on the table. I wasn’t sure if he was really that unconcerned that a vampire had just walked into . . . well, something, or if it was some kind of ploy.

“You lied to me, Merit.”

“Excuse me?”

Gabriel crossed his legs at the ankles, then traced a circle on the tabletop with a fingertip. My skin began to itch with the pins-and-needles effect of his magic. I fought to hold back my fangs and the silvering of my eyes even as my genetics screamed out, Run, or prepare to fight. Now.

“You told me you learned about the contract on my life because you’d received an anonymous phone call.” He looked up at me, the color in his irises swirling with obvious fury. “That was a lie.”

I met his penetrating gaze with a neutral expression.

Gabriel bobbed his head toward Nick. “In fact, I’ve learned Mr. Breckenridge here was your not-so-anonymous source. A man with whom you’ve had a lengthy personal relationship.”

I frowned at Gabriel. Nick had given me the information because he’d gotten an anonymous phone call. And, yes, I’d had a personal relationship with Nick . . . but in high school.

Confused, I glanced at Nick, who shook his head. “He thinks I did it. Thinks I planned it—the hits. The attempts on his life.”

“You did have the knowledge,” Gabriel said dryly.

Nick barked out a strangled laugh. “With all due respect, Apex, I’m a goddamned reporter. I get tips. It’s my job.”

“He was trying to help you,” I added. “He told me so I could pass along the warning, so you’d know there was a risk of a hit at the conference. That’s why we told you. That’s why we were prepared when the chaos started.”

“I’m now regretting that I called the convocation, that I didn’t just pull the shifters back to Aurora. One shifter—a leader—is dead, and there’s now a division between the rest of them. Do you have any idea how frustrated that makes me? When I trusted you?”

Given the angry magic in the air—and the sulfurous smell of it—I had a pretty good sense of it.

“Nick didn’t do this. He couldn’t have done this. You know he does everything possible to protect you, to protect the Pack. Do you recall a few weeks ago when he tried to bring down our House because he had just a suspicion that we might harm shifters? And you have no right to question my or Ethan’s motivations after what we’ve done this week.”

“We know what you call us,” Gabriel said. “Pretenders.”

I lifted my eyebrows. “I don’t call you that. Ethan doesn’t call you that. And even if there are vampires who use that term, we certainly don’t have a monopoly on prejudice. There are plenty of shifters with some grade-A hatred of vampires.” Nick used to be one of those shifters. And here I was protecting him.

“You lied to me. I do not take kindly to treachery, Merit. I do not take kindly to being set up. Why should I let you escape that with impunity?”

Screw this, I thought, and darted for the dagger. Gabe let me get it; he didn’t lift toe one from the floor as I came back and stood in front of Nicholas, weapon in hand.

I moved around, keeping my body and blade between Gabriel and Nick. It’s not that I had a lot of lost love for Nick, but Gabriel was higher up on my shit list at this point. I was going to have to figure out what was going on, but I was damned sure going to do it with steel in my hand.

“Don’t come any closer,” I warned him, my dagger tipped out toward his chest. “I don’t want to have to hurt you.”

He grinned at me, wolfishly. “I’m amused you think you could hurt me, Merit. You’ve fought some shifters, sure. But they weren’t alphas.” As if to prove his point, he stood up and threw out a hand. I think he meant to casually disarm me, to push the dagger from my hand, but he underestimated my speed.

I slashed at him and made contact, a crimson line appearing across his forearm. His eyes instantaneously widened, and he looked down, surprised that I’d done it, but still not intimidated.

I, on the other hand, was feeling pretty damned intimidated.

“As you’ll no doubt recall, I got shot yesterday. This is only a scratch. I’ll just have Berna bring in a Band-Aid. Berna,” he called out, his head half tilted back toward the door.

There was no answer.

“She’s not out there,” I told him. “The bar’s empty.”

“The bar’s not empty,” he said. “They’re still working out there. Berna,” Gabriel yelled again, but his call was met with silence.

He looked back at me, bewilderment in his expression.

The pieces fell together. “Adam,” I whispered.

Gabriel’s voice wavered. “What about Adam?”

“He picked me up at the House in a limousine and drove me here. He said you wanted to talk to me. He showed me a text message you sent. He dropped me off and said he was going to circle the block to give us a few minutes to talk.”

“I didn’t send a text message.”