CHAPTER SIX
Andre watched Dr. Finch wipe the
last of the glitter from Em-ma’s skin with a damp cloth and
struggled not to think about how many times he’d done the exact
same thing. He’d lost count of the times he’d sponged Katie down
after an especially nasty spark had left her weak and boneless on
the bed in their apartment.
The Hollywood glitterati—movie stars famous for
sparking in public—got only the best Hamma. The rest of the world’s
addicts had to take their chances with claws gathered and ground by
people who had no idea how to process them safely.
One in every dozen or so batches of Hamma claws was
steeped in lye too long, transforming the chemical compound in a
way that caused shakes, sweating, vomiting, and occasionally a
deadly heart attack or stroke in those unlucky enough to ingest
it.
In the end, that’s what had killed Katie—a bad
bunch of claws had been too much for her emaciated, wasted body to
handle. What had started off as a way to stay awake a few extra
hours to get in a little more study time before the bar exam had
taken her life and destroyed her dreams. Their dreams.
They were planning to get married the summer after
the bar and move upstate somewhere to practice together. They were
going to get out of the city, away from the demons and the Conti
family and start fresh, just the two of them.
Instead, Andre had attended her funeral one week
and taken his bar the next, determined to hang on to something in
the wake of Katie’s sudden death. In the years since, he thought
he’d put the worst of the grief and sadness and bitter
disappointment behind him. But watching Emma twist and moan on the
narrow couch outside Little Francis’s office as the antivenom
worked its way through her system brought back every feeling he’d
ever buried—like zombies bursting out of the ground looking for a
pound of human flesh.
Emma didn’t look a thing like Katie—a curvy redhead
with bright blue eyes—but something about Emma reminded him of the
only woman he’d ever loved. She fascinated him, just as Katie
had.
Maybe it was the way Emma walked like she was ready
to take on the world that drew him, making him wonder if she might
be the kind of woman who could give as good as she got—in bed and
out. Maybe it was the fragility he sensed beneath that tough
exterior that made him long to protect her, to stand between her
and danger and let her know that she didn’t have to be alone. Maybe
it was simply how good she’d felt in his arms that compelled him to
stay by her side. Carrying her out of her wrecked apartment had
awakened feelings he hadn’t known he was still capable of.
Protective feelings ...
As well as a mess of anger and hurt. He was
hurt that she’d lied to him, which was absolutely
ridiculous. He and Emma were nothing to each other and probably
never would be. He had no reason to expect her honesty, and even if
he did, there was always the chance that she wasn’t lying.
She could simply be so strung out on claws that she’d convinced
herself she had magical life-sucking powers and the ability to take
out Death Ministry members three times her size with her
killer—
Emma screamed, her back arching as another jolt of
pain ripped through her body.
“I’ll be right back,” Andre mumbled under his
breath. The antivenom was really doing a number on her, worse than
anything he’d ever seen. He couldn’t stand helplessly by and watch
her suffer anymore. He had to do something.
He turned and slipped through the heavy door
leading into Little Francis’s office. Crazy or not, Emma hadn’t
trashed her own apartment. She hadn’t had time to wreck the place
so thoroughly. Someone else had been there and been determined to
find something. But what?
Even if Emma had hidden a body behind the pub that
had later been picked up by fellow gang members, the Death Ministry
wouldn’t have trashed her apartment and left. If they were looking
for answers, they would have stayed and cut them out of Emma’s
body—piece by piece.
So it must have been someone else. But who? And
why?
“How’s Miss Emma?” Little Francis asked around a
mouthful of cashews. Andre’s cousin—an exact replica of Uncle
Francis minus twenty-odd years, right down to the curly black hair
and barrel chest—had a passion for cashews that was probably
unnatural and definitely unhealthy.
“She’s going to be okay.” Andre silently willed the
words to be true as he gestured toward the bowl of nuts on
Francis’s desk, changing the subject. “You know how much fat is in
those, right?”
“Yeah. I heard, gym rat.” Francis smiled. “Real men
don’t care about fat. Real men don’t even know what foods have fat
in them and which don’t.”
“Real men are ignorant. Good to know,” Andre said,
unable to resist the dig. He and Francis had been digging on each
other since Andre joined the family business as an apprentice
bounty hunter when he was sixteen.
It was how they showed their cousinly love ... and
made sure the other knew the competition for future alpha dog was
still ongoing, despite the fact that Little Francis’s father was
the commander in chief. Andre would never want to run the
family—women and practicing law kept him plenty busy—but he was
among the increasing number of Contis who thought Jace would be a
better replacement for Francis when the time came, even if he
was technically a Lu. Jace had roamed the Southie streets
for nearly a decade. He was skilled at dealing with thugs and was
the smart choice to lead the Contis in this new era of gang-mob
cooperation. If they didn’t learn to work together and keep the
bounty numbers high and the death toll of innocents down, the
police and the National Guard would be swarming all over Southie
the way they had in the early days of the emergence.
And that would be bad business for everyone.
Little Francis had picked up on the shifting winds
of favor, but you’d never guess it bothered him. He was an expert
at keeping his emotions close to the chest, at least whenever Andre
was around to observe them.
“Real men aren’t ignorant; they just keep their
heads full of things that matter. Like running their businesses and
knowing who’s doing what in their territories.” Little Francis
paused and reached for another handful of cashews. “So why don’t
you tell me what you know about Emma? How’s she involved with the
Death Ministry?”
“What?” Andre asked, feigning ignorance even as he
cursed Mikey for opening his big mouth. Why did today have to be
the one time Michael felt compelled to give his older
brother the complete scoop? “I don’t know her that well, but I
seriously doubt Emma’s involved with a gang. Pretty girls like her
get their drugs from other places, small-time dealers.”
“Yeah. So I heard.”
Andre ambled over to the window, watching the hot
summer sun glint on the peaceful waters of the river, taking his
time before responding to the unspoken question in Francis’s tone.
“And I’m sure Jace made it clear to her that the Contis and friends
of the Contis stay out of Death Ministry business as long as they
stay out of ours.”
“Probably,” Little Francis agreed, though when
Andre turned back to look at him, he didn’t seem any more certain
than he had a second ago. “I bet he made it clear the Contis don’t
care for demon drugs, either, but it don’t look like that lesson
took.”
Andre shrugged. “I guess it’s like eating too many
nuts, Francis. People don’t always make healthy choices, no matter
what people tell them.”
“You’re a smart-ass, Andre.”
“No, Francis, I’m just smarter than you,” Andre
said with an easy smile.
Francis scowled, actually looking pissed for a
second before his expression cleared. “Well, cousin, if you’re so
smart, why don’t you tell me why a bunch of Death Ministry stopped
by our training warehouse near the old park this morning looking
for the blonde who works at the Demon’s Breath?”
“Looking for Emma?” Shit. Maybe the Death
Ministry were the ones who’d trashed her apartment. And maybe
Michael hadn’t talked to his brother, after all. This was why it
paid to play dumb and never assume the person questioning you had
all the facts. “You’re kidding.”
“Nope. Not kidding.” Francis abandoned his cashews,
wiping his greasy hands on his dark jeans. “I don’t kid about
assholes with knives threatening my employees.”
“Of course not. Was anyone hurt?”
“Not this time, but they promised to come back and
leave a few bodies behind if some guy named Greg didn’t show up
soon.” Francis rose from his chair, crossing to the liquor cabinet
in the corner. “This could ruin that peace treaty we’ve been
cooking up. If they go after our people, we’ll have no choice but
to retaliate.”
Andre couldn’t help but notice that he looked
tired. The stress of running the family business in his father’s
absence was taking its toll. With the Conti history of heart
disease, he should be getting more sleep and staying away from the
cashews and the alcohol. Especially at six o’clock in the
morning.
“You want something?” Francis asked as he poured
himself whiskey on the rocks.
“It’s breakfast time, Francis. I think I’ll
pass.”
“It’s happy hour when you’ve been up since two
o’clock yesterday, smart-ass. If you hadn’t called with your list
of demands, I would be at home in bed right now, so don’t give me
any shit.”
“Wouldn’t think of it,” Andre said, waiting until
Francis took a sip of his drink before steering them back on topic.
“So the Death Ministry lost track of some guy named Greg. What does
that have to do with Emma?”
“Seemed Greg went missing last night, right after
he stepped outside the Demon’s Breath to have a few words with
her.”
“That’s crazy.” Andre shook his head in confusion,
trusting his ability to pull off a lie with the best of them.
He was a lawyer. He usually made it a habit
not to lie to family, but today he would make an exception. He
didn’t want Little Francis finding out Greg was dead, not missing.
Not until he had a chance to talk to Emma and get her side of the
story. The real story this time, not some drug-inspired
hallucination.
“So they think she had something to do with his
disappearance?”
“They do,” Francis confirmed. “And they want to
talk to her. Real bad.”
His cousin’s words made his blood rush in a way it
hadn’t in years. That part of him that had once been a
card-carrying, gun-toting bounty hunter itched to have a weapon. If
the Death Ministry was after Emma, he might have to be prepared to
kill to keep her safe. Strangely, he knew he would, without a
second thought. Sometime in the past few hours, Emma had become
more than a casual acquaintance or a family obligation. He felt
compelled to help her. Not just out of this mess, but with the
demon drugs, too.
No matter how many times he’d taken Katie to the
doctor or begged her to check herself into rehab, he hadn’t been
able to save her. But things with Emma could be different.... She
was stronger than Katie; she had it inside her to kick the drugs if
she had a little help, even just one person who believed she could
do it. Andre hadn’t expected to be anyone’s “one” anytime soon, but
despite the sister who loved her, this girl obviously felt very
alone. She needed him, and the good man buried deep inside him
couldn’t turn his back on her.
“I don’t have to tell you that this could start a
street war between the Contis and the Death Ministry if it isn’t
handled properly.” Francis collapsed back into his chair with a
sigh. “We need to smooth this over, get the Death Ministry to agree
to our terms, and get back to making some serious money. Miss Emma
needs to tell us everything she knows or thinks she knows about
this Greg guy.”
“I’ll question her myself,” Andre said. “But first
I’ll need to get her to a safe house as soon as she’s ready to
travel. I want her out of Southie.”
Francis nodded. “Already got a room reserved at the
place near Columbus Circle, right next door to her friend.”
“You got in touch with Ginger?”
“Douglas, my new assistant, got her on the phone
about twenty minutes ago. She’s going to meet Antonia and Kelly at
the diner down the street from the safe house. They’ll get her
settled in within the hour. Hopefully.”
“Why hopefully?”
Francis downed the last of his drink before
answering. “I’m not sure this chick is going to show up. She might
end up passed out in the street somewhere before she gets there.
Douglas said she sounded wasted. He couldn’t understand half of
what she was saying.”
Andre sighed. “Great.”
Now he had two messed-up young women on his hands.
Not that Ginger was really his responsibility, but she was someone
Emma cared about, and so he felt ... obligated. Just like he’d felt
obligated to help Katie’s sad-sack group of druggie friends every
time they ended up on the wrong side of a bar fight or carted down
to the city lockup to sweat out their spark.
It would be stupid to get sucked into that kind of
situation again, no matter what his gut said about Emma being tough
enough to kick the Hamma habit. Katie’s death should have taught
him that addicts couldn’t be saved. He should turn around, walk out
of this office, and keep walking until he was back on the right
side of the barricade. Let Little Francis handle Emma.
But he wasn’t going to do that. There was a part of
him that still believed that people like Emma, like himself, could
turn their lives around. He had to keep believing that, or all
those nights he’d sat through twelve-step meetings and prayed to
get his own compulsions under control would be for nothing. He had
to have hope. For himself, and now for Emma.
Besides, he didn’t want Francis anywhere near her.
He didn’t want his cousin handling her. He didn’t want anything
male “handling” Emma except himself.
“I’m going to check with Dr. Finch and see how much
longer he’ll need to monitor Emma’s progress with the antivenom.”
Andre ambled toward the door, casually throwing his next words over
his shoulder. “You want to catch a ride uptown with me when I’m
done?”
“Nah, I’m going to stay at my new place.”
“New place? Where?”
“I got an apartment on the Southie side,” Francis
said. “Figured it was time for me to come back where I belong. The
head of the family has always lived in Southie. It’s
tradition.”
“Right,” Andre said, ignoring the implication in
Francis’s words. There would come a day when Andre would have to
tell Francis to his face which way he’d be voting, but today wasn’t
that day. He had other priorities. “Then I’ll stay here and wait.
I’ve already had to cancel my court date, so—”
“I bet she’ll be here another few hours. Dr. Finch
doesn’t mess around with his private clients. He likes to make sure
they’re good to go before he leaves,” Francis said. “You’ve got
time to head uptown and attend to some business. Why don’t you go
check and make sure Antonia and Kelly don’t need any help with this
Ginger girl.”
It was as close to an order as anything Francis had
ever said to him, and it made Andre inexplicably angry, despite the
fact that he’d done his share of ordering this morning. “I do the
lawyering, Francis. That’s why I went to college.”
“Of course. You’re the big-shot smart guy, Andre;
everybody here knows that.” There was enough sarcasm in his tone to
make Andre’s jaw clench. “But if Ginger is sparking like the one
out there, Antonia and Kelly might not be able to handle her. You
might need to bring her back here to see the doc, too.”
“Don’t you have someone who—”
“A bad batch of claws isn’t something to mess
around with.” Francis shook his head. “But I don’t need to tell you
that, right?”
“No, you don’t.” Andre fought the urge to cross the
room and punch the look of concern off his cousin’s face. Real or
not ... the fact that Francis had the balls to bring up Katie made
him crazy. “I’ll go by Columbus Circle and be back in a few hours.
Will you be here when I get back?”
“You bet. I wouldn’t leave Emma alone, even with
Dr. Finch. I don’t trust men with pretty young girls,” Francis
said. “Especially family. You consider Emma family, right?”
“Of course.”
Francis smiled. “I figured you must. That’s
probably why she called you when she was in trouble, because she
knew she could trust you.”
“What can I say? I’m a trustworthy guy.” Andre
tried to infuse the words with his usual lighthearted tone and
failed. He didn’t like where this conversation was going or the
predatory look in his cousin’s eyes.
“Yeah. I’d say so.” Francis leaned forward in his
chair. “And I could trust you to tell me if there was anything
going on between you and Miss Quinn? Couldn’t I?”
Andre stared hard at Francis, considering his next
words carefully. There was a chance his cousin knew more than he
was letting on, that Michael had indeed spilled the beans about the
body he was supposed to pick up that morning. But if that was the
case, Andre couldn’t believe that Francis wouldn’t have said
something sooner. Surely his cousin would have been demanding
answers about the missing corpse from the moment Andre walked in
the room.
So he had to assume Francis meant something else
entirely, something that made Andre’s hands itch once again for
that weapon he’d been craving a few minutes ago. “There’s nothing
sexual between us, if that’s what you mean.”
“And no intentions on your part?”
“Why do you want to know?”
Francis smiled again. “Why wouldn’t I want to know?
You know me. I’ve always had a thing for blondes. I just wanted to
make sure I wasn’t going to be getting your seconds. With as many
women as you ‘date,’ that can be a challenge.”
“Don’t touch her, Francis.” Andre barely kept his
tone civil.
“I wouldn’t think of it ... until she’s recovered.
After that, I think that will be her call. She’s a big girl.”
“She’s twenty years old.”
“Last time I checked, eighteen was legal.”
Andre literally bit his tongue. He had no reason to
feel so possessive of Emma. One kiss didn’t mean anything. It
didn’t matter that it had been the most intense kiss in recent
memory, or that holding Emma as he carried her out of her apartment
building had awakened all his sleeping protective instincts.
“Okay. Fine. Just promise me something, okay?”
Andre managed a deferential tone that actually sounded sincere.
“Leave her alone until I get back. I want to make sure she’s up to
answering questions before I ask her about the Death Ministry
stuff.”
“No problem.” Francis sat back in his chair and
reached for another handful of cashews. “See, we can get along
great when we cooperate.”
Andre forced a tight smile before he turned and
strode from the office. Outside, Emma was still sacked out on the
couch, but she was at least lying still on her side. Dr. Finch was
getting coffee at the station a few yards away, looking calmer than
he had since the tiny, white-haired old man had arrived. The good
doctor had sold his practice several years ago to become one of the
two docs on twenty-four-hour call to the Conti family. He was a man
who was used to pulling out bullets and sewing up knife wounds, but
he’d still paled when he saw Emma. By the time they reached Conti
Bounty’s offices, she’d barely been breathing.
If they hadn’t gotten the antivenom when they had
...
Andre squatted down by Emma’s face, wondering
whether she was really seeing him through her slitted eyes, and
whether she would be able to understand the words he leaned forward
to whisper in her ear. He prayed to all the saints his mother loved
that she could. Because if she started talking to Little Francis
while he was gone, they were both going to be in a shitload of
trouble.