CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
TWO MASTERS AND ONE BAD ATTITUDE
I was halfway to Navarre House when the
phone rang again. It was Jonah, so I flipped it open and nestled
the phone between my ear and shoulder.
“Hi, Jonah. What’s up?”
“Just checking in. How’s the investigation
progressing?”
“Well, we were able to ID the short man Sarah saw
outside the bar. Found video with his car on it. Guy named Paulie
Cermak. I just paid him a visit.”
“Get anything interesting?”
“Not really. He’s got a crappy house and a fabulous
vintage Mustang. He’s not exactly shy about his work, but his story
is that he’s a bit player. He says he’s got management running the
show. The police didn’t find anything to pin on him, so I don’t
think we’ll have much luck, either.”
“Any chance McKetrick’s in charge?”
“He seems to have no idea who McKetrick is. He also
says V stands for veritas.”
“Truth?”
“The very same.”
“That’s awfully deep for a pill pusher.”
“That’s exactly what I thought.”
“Great minds and all,” he said, with an amusing
tone in his voice. “You coming to the shindig tonight?”
“I am. You?”
“With bells on . . . and a fine Italian suit I have
no choice but to wear.”
“Just be glad you only have to pull it out on
special occasions,” I told him. “You guys get jerseys—we get fine
Italian suits every night.”
He chuckled. “Very true. Hey, speaking of Ethan, a
headsup—my story is that we met for the first time outside Temple
Bar after the incident.”
“Fine by me. Have you talked to Darius this
trip?”
“Not yet. I’ve been with the guards today. We were
training. Why?”
“Just a heads-up, he’s kind of an ass.” I regretted
the words the instant they were out of my mouth. Sure, Jonah had
done me a solid, but did I really know anything about him? Other
than his pretty-boy looks and ridiculous overabundance of graduate
degrees?
“Well aware,” Jonah said. “He and Scott went a
round about the jerseys, actually. Darius found them unbecoming of
Housed vampires.”
I couldn’t help but chuckle. “That does sound like
something he would say. I guess Scott won the battle
eventually?”
“I wouldn’t say he won it per se. More like he
wouldn’t give in and Darius eventually lost interest in the
argument.”
“That’s a risky strategy with an immortal,” I said.
“They’ve got all the time in the world to argue.”
“Speaking on your own behalf?”
“Me? Of course not. I’m not at all stubborn and
completely flexible.”
“Liar,” he slyly said. “Well, I’ll stop harassing
you and let you get back to it. Call me if you need me.”
“Will do. Thanks.”
I tucked the phone away again, a little weirded out
by the phone call. It was nice of Jonah to check in—to work from
the assumption V was a problem vamps needed to face together. All
hands on deck, as it were, instead of the Sentinel going it
solo.
On the other hand, the conversation had sounded a
little . . . datey. He was checking in, asking what I was doing
later. Maybe he hadn’t meant anything by it. Maybe he really was
warming up to me and my various charms. But there was a flirty,
friendly edge to his voice that I hadn’t heard before . . . and I
wasn’t entirely thrilled to hear now. Flattered? Yes. But I didn’t
need the complication.
I also wasn’t thrilled that I’d just given Jonah an
update I hadn’t yet provided to Ethan. I didn’t like deception,
especially not when it came to deceiving someone who’d saved my
life once upon a time. I knew why I was withholding information
from him, but that didn’t make it any more comfortable.
The irony? I’d railed against Ethan for withholding
information from me. Not that it had stopped him, but it still
drove me crazy. And here I was, doing the same thing. Were my
reasons any better? Had his been any worse?
And although we weren’t a couple, the dishonesty
felt wrong. Like a breach of the trust we’d earned, a kind of trust
that went beyond Sentinel and Master. I was also missing out on
using Ethan as a sounding board about Jonah and the RG. If there
was any possibility he could be neutral, a second opinion would
have been helpful.
But as a Master, he couldn’t be neutral. So as much
as I didn’t like it, there was no clear path to the truth right
now.
I nibbled on that conclusion for a while, working
it over and over in my mind. I lost myself in my thoughts and the
drive.
It wasn’t that vampires were antithetical to
mansions. The vampire design aesthetic was far from chains, skull
candles, and black lace, and it wasn’t as if Cadogan House was a
hovel. It had been elegant before the attack, and it was becoming
elegant again.
But Navarre House set a new standard for vampire
opulence. First, it was tucked into the Gold Coast neighborhood,
one of Chicago’s ritziest areas, full of Gilded Era mansions and
celebrity retreats. Second, the interior was awe inspiring. Giant
spaces, weird art, and the kind of furniture you saw in design
magazines. (The kind of furniture you thought was neat in a museum
kind of way, but wouldn’t actually want to sit on when watching a
game on the flat screen on a Saturday afternoon.)
Did I mention Navarre had a reception desk?
Having parked the Volvo and freshened up as much as
possible in the rearview mirror, I went inside and prepared to face
the three dark-haired women who controlled access to Navarre and
its Master.
Ethan and I had dubbed them the three Fates, à la
Greek myth, because they exercised a similar amount of power. They
looked petite, but I had the sense that one false move—or one
unauthorized step past the reception desk—and you’d be in
trouble.
Today they mostly seemed overwhelmed. The House’s
lobby was swamped with people. None fit into obvious categories—no
reporters, no vampires, no one who seemed like a member of
McKetrick’s crew doing a little in-House surveying. Most wore
standard black suits, more of the accountant variety than the
Cadogan House variety, and they carried notepads or nondescript
black bags.
I maneuvered through them to the reception desk and
waited until I got the attention of the Fate on the left.
After a moment, she looked up at me, obviously
frazzled, her fingers flying across the keys even as she made eye
contact.
“Yes?” she asked.
“Merit, Sentinel, Cadogan, here to see Morgan if
he’s available?”
She blew out a breath, finally glanced down at her
screen, and continued her marathon typing. A man bumped beside me
at the desk and looked down at her.
“I had an appointment fifteen minutes ago.”
“Nadia is working as quickly as possible, sir.
She’ll be with you shortly.” She pointed a long-fingered nail at
the benches behind the desk. “Have a seat.”
The man clearly didn’t like her answer, but he bit
his tongue and squeezed back through.
I leaned forward a bit. “What’s going on in here
today? I thought Tate wasn’t allowing humans in the Houses?”
She rolled her eyes. “He’s offered an exception to
that rule. We’re in the process of selecting our vendors for the
next calendar year. The mayor suggested Nadia talk with
representatives of the human businesses in town to get their
bids.”
Nadia was the Navarre Second, Morgan’s vice
president. She was also supermodel gorgeous, which was a shocking
thing to learn the first time you walked into your ex-boyfriend’s
abode.
The Fate cast an unhappy glance out across the
crowd. “I seriously doubt they can meet our needs.”
I’d assumed we had a cleaning crew and a grounds
staff, and I knew one of the House chefs. But it hadn’t occurred to
me that vampires needed vendors. But someone had to stock the House
kitchens, keep folders and highlighters in the Ops Room, and ensure
the crystal decanters in Ethan’s office were filled with fine
liquor. Here, that duty fell to Nadia and a boatload of vendors
vying for the privilege of selling their wares.
I wondered if Malik did the same thing for Cadogan
House, interviewing vendors, considering bids and quotes, and
reviewing contracts. It certainly would have made sense. Ethan was
the House’s chief executive officer, which made Malik its chief
operating officer.
A blonde with tightly hot-rolled hair and a lot of
black eyeliner stepped up to the desk. “Is Mr. Greer available?
Perhaps I could just speak with him if Nadia is too busy?”
Expression flat, the Fate glanced at me. “Do you
remember where his office is?”
“I can find my way up,” I assured her, walking away
to the unhappy squeals of the woman I’d displaced in line.
Not that she’d had any chance.
I walked across the House’s gigantic first floor to
the arching staircase that led to the second floor. Morgan’s office
was there, a modern suite with a garden view. The door was closed,
so I rapped my knuckles against it.
“Come in.”
I stepped inside . . . and nearly lost my
breath.
Morgan was half-naked, clad only in black trousers,
pulling a short-sleeved white undershirt over his head, the muscles
in his stomach clenching and bunching with the effort. When he was
clothed, he pulled his dark, shoulder-length hair back and tied it
at his nape.
It wasn’t until then that he glanced over at me.
“Yes?”
I opened my mouth, then shut it again, having
completely forgotten the speech I was prepared to make. Honest to
God, my mind was completely blank, all rational thought having fled
at the sight of his body. God knew, physical attraction was never
the problem. Nothing about Morgan was the problem. I was the
problem. Ethan was the problem.
I had to shake my head to clear it. His expression
went smug; I assumed he was happy he’d been able to fluster
me.
“Not expecting company?” I finally managed.
Morgan sat down on the edge of a chair, pulled on
socks, then lifted fancy square-toed shoes from the floor and slid
his foot into one. “I just finished a workout, and we’ve got the
dinner in an hour. What do you need?”
Realizing I was still standing in the doorway, door
askew, I stepped into the room and closed it behind me.
“I wanted to update you on the
investigation.”
Halfway through the second shoe, his hands stilled,
and he looked up at me. That’s when I noticed the blue shadows
under his eyes. He looked tired. It couldn’t have been easy for him
to fill Celina’s shoes, especially given the unrest. I didn’t envy
a Second forced into the role of a Master . . . and I’d helped put
him there.
“Then by all means, update me.”
I managed not to roll my eyes, and repeated what
we’d discovered in Streeterville, what we’d learned at the bar, and
what we’d learned from Paulie. By the time I was done, Morgan was
fully clothed and was sitting back in the chair, fingers linked
across his stomach.
“You came across town to tell me all that?”
“We’ve identified the guy who’s been selling V to
vampires. His name’s Paulie Cermak. I need to know if he looks
familiar.”
“Yeah, well, I don’t generally hang around with
addicts.”
The attitude wasn’t unexpected. That’s why I’d
asked Jeff for the picture—this was about evidence, not irritation.
I pulled out my phone and called up Paulie’s picture. “He’s not an
addict. He’s a salesman, at least as far as I can tell.”
I walked closer and held out the phone, then
watched to make sure he glanced over at it.
I’d expected Morgan to roll his eyes and tell me he
hadn’t seen Cermak. I’d expected him to wax sarcastic about my
investigation.
I hadn’t expected the wide-eyed expression. He
tensed, his shoulders squaring, his jaw clenching. He knew
something.
“You’ve seen him,” I said, before he could deny it
or make his features blank again. But it still took him a minute to
answer.
“Six months ago. Celina never allowed humans in the
House, even before Tate issued the mandate. I was on my way up here
to talk to her—I don’t remember what we were meeting about.
He—Cermak—was on his way out of the office. I asked her who he was.
It was . . . strange that he was in the House.”
So Celina had met with the man who sold V in her
own House. That was all well and good, but it was completely
circumstantial.
Circumstantial or not, Morgan was clearly
flustered, clearly bothered by the links he was beginning to put
together. Morgan closed his eyes, then scrubbed his hands over his
face and linked his hands over his head. “It really, really pisses
me off when you’re right.”
“I don’t want to be right,” I assured him. “I want
to be the one with ludicrous theories. I don’t want Celina making
your job—or mine—harder.”
He grunted and looked away, not ready to share the
details of whatever he knew. I gave him space, walking to the other
side of the office where a giant window overlooked a smartly
designed courtyard.
“What did Celina say about him?” I asked after a
moment.
“That he was a vendor for the House.”
And things had come full circle. “And as Second,
selecting vendors was your job, right?”
Morgan glanced back and nodded ruefully. “That’s
another reason it was strange that he was here. I just guessed it
was a special project. I checked the books—they were fine. All the
House’s funds were accounted for. But there weren’t any extra
vendors listed.”
“So she hadn’t actually gotten anything from him.
On the books, anyway.”
Morgan nodded.
“What else would she want with Paulie Cermak? I
mean, even if they were in the drug game together, why would she
want to be involved in selling drugs to vamps? Does she need
money?”
Morgan shook his head. “She gets a stipend from the
GP for being a member, and she’s been alive for a very long
time.”
“Compound interest?”
“Compound interest,” he confirmed.
No dice there, then. “Maybe it’s the drug itself,”
I suggested. “Cermak said it stood for veritas, which is
Latin for ‘truth.’ He said it’s supposed to make vampires feel more
like themselves.”
Morgan furrowed his brow, considering. “Celina has
always believed relations between humans and vampires were going to
come to a cataclysmic end. She just thought she’d come out on
top.”
“Which is why she’d worked to ingratiate herself to
humans—to usher in the end of their reign?”
He shrugged. “Maybe. But as for V, I don’t know. If
she wanted ‘truer’ vampires, why not allow Navarre to drink?”
Because if she’d allowed drinking, I thought, she
wouldn’t have been able to demonize Cadogan. In any event, we could
ferret out her motivations later. Right now, we needed
evidence.
I stared at the floor for a minute, trying to
figure out if I was missing anything. But nothing occurred to me,
as much as I wanted there to be an ultimate answer to all my
V-related questions. When I looked up at Morgan again, I found his
gaze on me, his expression surprisingly unguarded.
“What?” I asked him.
He gave me a flat look, the implication being that
he’d been reminded of the affection for me that I didn’t share. No
time like the present to cut off that train of thought.
“I should get going,” I said. “I need to get
changed.”
“You bringing a date?”
“Is there ever going to be a time that you don’t
ask me about Ethan?”
“Only when it stops irritating you to ask.”
“Unlikely to happen.”
“And there you are.”
We stood there for a moment, and I caught the hint
of a smile on his face. If he could manage to work through his
anger, I could manage to have a good attitude about it.
I headed for the door. “You’re such a
comedian.”
“I try, Merit. I really do.”
“Good night, Morgan.”
“Only for an hour,” he reminded me as I closed the
door and walked back to the stairs.
When I reached the first floor, the cadre of
vendors still stood in the lobby, milling impatiently about as they
waited for their turn with Nadia. I hoped they had more patience
with the Navarre House staff than I did.
When I returned to the House, Ethan and Luc met me
at the door.
I looked at Ethan, prepared to tell the tale one
last time. Frankly, being a proactive Sentinel involved repeating
the same information over and over and over again. But the tale
needed to be told, so I sucked it up and did my duty.
“Paulie Cermak is probably involved in the drug
trade, and he’s not especially shy about it. He says he’s only a
bit player. His digs are in pretty bad shape, but there’s a shiny,
vintage Mustang in the garage.”
I almost spilled out the rest, but thought ahead
enough to glance at Ethan, a question in my eyes: Could I tell him?
Could I implicate a member of the GP after the tongue-lashing I
assumed he’d received from Darius? Or was I putting him in an even
worse position?
“At this point,” he said quietly, “there’s no harm
in candor.”
“In that case, I went to Navarre House and showed
Morgan the picture of Cermak. Six months ago, Morgan saw Paulie
coming out of Celina’s office. She called him a ‘vendor.’”
I watched Ethan’s expression carefully, and I’m
still not sure whether I saw relief or anxiety there. The news was
equally bad and good—we had a witness who could link Celina to the
man who sold V, but it was Celina. She was hands-off as far as the
GP was concerned.
Luc glanced around warily, then lowered his voice,
as if expecting Darius to come waltzing in at any moment,
receivership papers in hand. “So Celina and Paulie are
acquaintances,” Luc said. “That makes it more likely Celina was the
‘Marie’ seen by the human, and the woman in the car.”
“But we can’t prove that,” Ethan said, tucking his
hands into his pockets. “And as much as it pains me to say it, that
Paulie and Celina had a meeting half a year ago doesn’t mean she’s
actively involved in setting up the raves or distributing V.”
“And it’s unlikely she’s going to come forward and
offer the evidence on a platter,” Luc said.
“True,” I agreed, a plan already forming. “Which is
precisely why we need to draw her out.”
Ethan’s gaze snapped to me. “Draw her out?”
“Prove that Paulie and Celina are connected. Use
him to get to Celina, to draw her out, and to prove that she’s
involved in distributing V and organizing the raves to help that
endeavor.”
“And how do you propose to do that?” Ethan asked.
“What bait could we offer that would entice Celina?”
The answer was easy. “Me.”
Silence.
“You have certainly grown into your position,”
Ethan dryly said. “And your willingness to take risks on behalf of
the House.”
“I’m well aware that she can thoroughly kick my
ass. That makes it less a risk—if more of an inevitability.”
“You are stronger than the last time you met,” he
pointed out. “You’ve bested shifters since then.”
“She knocked me out with a single kick to the
chest,” I pointed out, my ribs aching in sympathy. “But that’s not
the point. For whatever reason, as we’ve discussed, she’s
fascinated by me. If Paulie tells her I’ll be waiting, she’d
probably take advantage.”
Ethan frowned. “That is probably true.”
“I have to do it,” I told him. “We’ve identified
Paulie, and we know he’s involved with Celina. But we can’t close
down V—halt the distribution—until we have proof, at least enough
evidence to take to Tate. We don’t have to take it to the GP,” I
reminded Ethan. “We only need to give Tate enough information to
nail Paulie and Celina so the CPD can close the loop. If we can’t
rely on the GP to bring her down,” I quietly added, “then let’s
help Tate do it.”
“She has a point, hoss,” Luc quietly agreed. “She’s
our best means to pull Celina out.”
After a moment, Ethan nodded. “Work your plan,
Sentinel.” He tapped his watch. “But first, go get dressed.”
I only just realized that he was already prepped
for dinner in a slim-fit black suit and narrow black tie. That
meant he’d be waiting on me.
“I’ll go change,” I agreed. I was also going to
head upstairs and use the phone number Jeff had given me to send a
message to Paulie Cermak.
One way or another, I was going to find her. GP be
damned, I was going to bring her down.
Much to my surprise, I found no dress hanging on
my door when I returned upstairs. The last couple of times I’d had
to make social appearances with Ethan, he’d given me decadent
couture gowns, presumably so I wouldn’t embarrass the House with my
usual jeans and tank tops. At first, I’d been offended by the
gesture. But even a girl who cut her fangs on denim and Pumas could
appreciate good design when it presented itself.
This time, the door was empty of all but its small
bulletin board, and the closet bore only the usual pieces of my
wardrobe.
Oh, well. It was probably for the best. I didn’t
really have time to be the girl who needed Lanvin just to leave the
House.
Without a new option, I cleaned up and stepped into
one of the other dresses Ethan had supplied. It was a knee-length,
black cocktail dress, with a sleeveless bodice and swingy skirt,
the fabric tucked into horizontal pleats from top to bottom.
I opted for the black heels Ethan had provided with
the dress, as well as a holster that went beneath the skirt and
held my dagger in place against my thigh. My Cadogan medal was my
only accessory, and I left my hair down, my bangs a dark fringe
across my forehead.
When I was made up, I sent a message to Paulie
Cermak.
“TELL MARIE I’M READY TO MEET HER.”
The message sent, I slipped the phone into a small
black clutch. It was time to go play with the boys.