CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHERCHEZ LA FEMME
I dreamed it was the first day of high
school and I was an awkwardly tall twenty-eight-year-old walking
down a hallway with a new notebook and pen in hand. I’d somehow
forgotten to register for classes, and even though I had two and a
half college degrees, I’d also apparently forgotten to finish tenth
grade.
I sat down at a desk too small for me and stared at
a chalkboard filled with handwriting—quadratic equations too
complicated for me to solve. When I looked around the room,
everyone else was busily filling out the stapled pages of a
test.
One by one, the other students looked up and at me
and began pounding their fists on the desk.
Thump. Thump. Thump.
A girl with long blond hair looked over at me.
“Open the door,” she said.
“What?”
“I said, open the—”
I jolted awake, sitting straight up in bed, just in
time to see Ethan disappear from the room.
I rubbed my hands across my face until I was in his
room again—not a helpless sophomore out of place in a high school I
was too old to attend.
I heard his door open and shut. I tried to smooth
down what I’m sure was a pretty severe case of bed hair, and then
threw back the covers and padded into the other room.
“What is it?”
Ethan held out a cordless landline telephone. “It’s
Jeff for you. Apparently, it’s urgent.”
Frowning, I took the phone from him. “Jeff? What’s
up?”
“Sorry to interrupt you, but I was able to dig up
some more information about Paulie Cermak and his criminal
history.”
I frowned. “You know Celina’s already been
arrested, right?”
“And that a warrant’s been issued for Mr. Cermak
after her little confession last night. Oh—and I hear Ethan’s
warrant was torn up, so congrats on that. But that’s not the
issue.”
“So, what did you learn?”
“I found the original police report—and it listed
the vic’s name. Well, a last name and first initial, anyway. Guy or
gal named ‘P. Donaghey.’ Also from Chicago—”
Shaking my head, I cut him off. “Jeff, I know that
name.” I squeezed my eyes closed but couldn’t place it. “Can you
Google it?”
“Oh, sure.” I heard fingers flowing across the
keys. “Oh, this is bad.”
“Tell me.”
“‘P. Donaghey’ stands for ‘Porter Donaghey.’ He was
Seth Tate’s opponent in his first mayoral election.”
Now I remembered where I’d seen Paulie’s photograph
before. “Paulie Cermak punched Seth Tate’s opponent in the
face.”
Ethan’s eyes went as big as saucers.
“Wait, there’s more. I’ve got pictures. Campaign
events. Tate’s on the podium, and you can see Paulie in the
background.”
“Send the images to Luc,” I told him. “Same way you
did before.” Something else occurred to me. “Jeff, in that file you
found, did it say anything about who represented Paulie? The
attorney that got the file sealed, I mean?”
“Um, let me scan.” He went quiet for a moment but
for a little nervous whistling.
“Oh, crap,” he finally said.
Only one lawyer made sense. “It was Tate, wasn’t
it?”
“It was Tate,” Jeff confirmed. “Cermak punched
Tate’s opponent, and Tate got him off. Paulie Cermak and Tate know
each other.”
The phone still pressed to my ear, I looked at
Ethan. “I don’t think that’s the end of it, Jeff. If Paulie’s
involved with drugs, raves, and Celina, and Paulie and Tate know
each other, then how much is Tate involved with drugs, raves, and
Celina?”
“What’s the theory?” Ethan quietly mouthed.
“Tate’s under pressure to reassure Chicagoans about
vampires. He decides to be proactive—he helps create a problem; he
helps solve the problem. Wham, bam, thank you, ma’am, and his poll
numbers are up by twenty percent.”
“Oh, I gotta tell Chuck about this,” Jeff
said.
“Can you get an arrest warrant for Tate?”
“On this little evidence? No. You don’t have
anything that ties Tate to, as you said, drugs, raves, or Celina.
It’s not enough that Paulie knows him.”
“Not enough? What more do you want?”
“You’re the Sentinel. Find something.”
I hung up the phone and looked at Ethan, apology in
my expression.
“I knew it wasn’t over,” he said. “I knew just as
well as you did yesterday. I just wanted to momentarily bask in the
possibility that we could find a few hours of peace.”
“We had a few hours,” I pointed out with a smile.
“Otherwise I wouldn’t be standing in your apartment in a T-shirt
and with some serious bed hair.”
“That is true. Your bed hair is rather
serious.”
“You’re funny at dusk, Sullivan.”
“And you’re adorable. I assume it’s time for you to
wreak havoc again?”
“My file’s already annotated. Better more demerits
in my file than more pressure on the House.” I moved up on tiptoes
and pressed my lips to his cheek. “Call Luc and Malik and get them
ready for the fallout. I’m going back to Paulie’s house.”
“One moment,” he said, and before I could ask him
why, he was tugging my T-shirt to pull me closer. He kissed me
brutally, and then pulled back so abruptly I nearly stumbled
backward.
“What was that?” I asked, my voice suddenly
hoarse.
He winked. “That was the kiss you owed me. Now go
get your man, Sentinel.”
Twenty minutes later I was dressed, katanaed, and
on my way to Garfield Park. Ethan, Luc, and Malik were in the Ops
Room, ready to send out troops, but hoping to save the House any
more involvement than necessary. They’d also conferenced in Jeff in
the event I needed computer assistance.
Unfortunately, I knew something was wrong when I
pulled into Cermak’s driveway. The garage door was open and the
Mustang was gone. The house was dark and empty, even the cheap lace
curtains stripped from the windows.
I pulled my car to the curb just past the
house.
“I was this freakin’ close,” I cursed, pulling out
my cell phone and dialing up the crew.
“He’s gone,” I told him as soon as Luc answered.
“The Mustang’s gone, and the house is empty.”
But then, my luck changed.
“Hold on,” I said, turning off the car and slinking
down in the seat, my eyes on the rearview mirror. The Mustang
pulled up to the curve. Paulie hopped out of the car and hustled
toward the garage.
“What’s going on, Sentinel?” Ethan asked.
“He’s back. He’s running into the garage. Maybe he
forgot something.”
Sure enough, not ten seconds later, Paulie hustled
out of the garage with . . . a steering wheel in hand.
“He forgot a steering wheel,” I dryly informed the
crew, wondering if Paulie had any idea he’d soon be brought down by
a car accessory. Ah, well. His loss, my gain.
After a moment, he pulled the Mustang back into the
street. I waited until he’d passed me, then turned on the car and
pulled out behind him.
“He’s leaving again, and I’m on his trail,” I told
them. “I’m about two blocks back, so hopefully he can’t see
me.”
“Which direction?”
“Um, east for now. Maybe toward the Loop?”
I heard Malik’s voice. “Maybe he’s trying to bust
out Celina?”
“If he and Tate are friends, he wouldn’t need to do
any busting. In any event, I’ll keep you posted.”
I hung up and put the phone down again, and then
concentrated on tailing Paulie through the city. He was the kind of
driver that irritated the crap out of me: he had a fine car with
undoubtedly a solid engine, but he drove like his license was on
the line. Too slowly. Too carefully. Of course, there was a warrant
out for his arrest, so it made sense for him to avoid giving the
cops any reason to pull him over.
It took twenty minutes for him to reach the Loop,
but he didn’t stop there. He kept moving south, and that was when I
got nervous again.
I dialed up the crew.
“We’re here,” Luc said.
“Send out some backup,” I said. “He’s heading for
Creeley Creek.”
I didn’t bother entering Creeley Creek through the
front gate; I didn’t want to give the mayor and his apparent crony
that much warning. Instead, I parked a few blocks up, buckled on my
katana, jumped the fence, and snuck across the grounds. I’m sure
there must have been security somewhere, but I didn’t see any, so I
moved around the house, peeking through the low, horizontal windows
until I saw them—Tate behind his desk while Paulie chatted
animatedly from the other side of it.
But they weren’t alone. Who was perched on the edge
of Tate’s desk?
Celina Desaulniers.
I closed my eyes, ruing my naïveté. Why would
Celina have confessed to horrible acts in front of humans? Because
she had a relationship with the mayor that ensured she’d get off
scot-free.
This must have been part of her big plan. Seduce
the mayor, make friends with a drug distributor, and create a drug
intended to remind vampires of their predatory roots. When the shit
hit the fan, she could take credit for giving vamps the time of
their lives, and invite humans to join the party. And she could do
it all with impunity.
It wouldn’t surprise me to learn that she’d
glamoured Tate into doing it. He was a politician, sure, but he had
seemed to genuinely care about the city. Had Celina created the
entire ruse and wooed him with polling data?
I really, really hated her.
Irritation pushing aside my fear, I moved back to a
nearby patio, crossed it as surreptitiously as possible, and tried
the door. My luck held—it was unlocked. I padded quietly down the
hallway to the room where I’d seen them, then pushed my way
inside.
They all glanced at the door.
Paulie was the first to move. He backed up a few
feet, moving closer to the corner of the room—and farther from the
angry vampire.
I stepped inside and shut the door behind me. “This
looks like a cozy meeting.”
Tate smiled lazily. “These young vampires have no
manners these days. Didn’t even wait for an invitation, did
you?”
The faux cheer worried me—and made me wonder if he
was still under the influence of Celina’s glamour. I flipped the
thumb guard on my sword, unsheathed it, and moved closer. No point
in pretending we were here for fun.
I pointed the katana at Celina. “You set us
up.”
Celina picked at a fingernail. “I did the right
thing, as the GP has made clear to you time and time again. Why are
you even here?” She rolled her shoulders, as if irritated.
I squinted at her in the mood lighting. “Lift your
head, Celina, and look at me.”
Remarkably, she did as she was told. I could
finally see her eyes—which were wide, her irises almost completely
silver. She wasn’t running the show—she’d been drugged.
I’d had it wrong. Again.
I looked up at Tate. “You’re controlling her with
V?”
“Only partially. I assumed you’d come calling when
you figured out the connection between Mr. Cermak and me. When the
police report was accessed, I received an alert. In the meantime, I
thought we might amp up the drama a bit. I understand Ms.
Desaulniers was quite a warrior; I decided to test V’s effects on a
woman already known to be skilled. Does it make her a better
fighter? A worse one? As a former researcher, you must appreciate
my approach.”
“You’re crazy.”
Tate frowned. “Not even a little,
unfortunately.”
Celina hopped off the corner of the desk and walked
along its length, trailing a fingertip across the desktop. I kept
my sword trained on her, and one eye on Tate.
“You said you were only partially controlling her
with V. How else are you controlling her?”
He just sat there and smiled at me—and in that
moment I felt the telltale prickle of magic in the air. But not the
mildly irritating stuff Mallory and Catcher threw off. This was
heavier—oilier, almost, in the way it suffused the room.
I swallowed back a burst of fear, but solved
another bit of the puzzle. “You added the magical binder to the
V.”
“Very good. I wondered if you and yours would
discover that. Call it a signature, of sorts.”
“What are you?” I asked, although I knew
part of the answer: he wasn’t human. I don’t know why I had never
been able to feel it before, but now I knew it was true. The leaden
magic he was throwing off was nothing like Mallory’s or
Catcher’s.
Frowning, he sat forward and linked his hands on
the desktop. “At the risk of sounding incredibly egotistical, I am
the best thing that’s happened to this city in a long time.”
Was there no end to this guy’s ego? “Really? By
creating chaos? By drugging vampires and putting humans at risk?” I
pointed at Celina. “By releasing a felon?”
Tate sat back again and rolled his eyes. “Don’t be
melodramatic. And you’ll recall Celina took the fall for the drugs.
Very tidy how that wrapped up. The least I could do was reward her
a bit—here in the privacy of my own home, anyway.”
I guess he’d been in on the plan to fake Celina
into a meeting at Street Fest—and to make a confession. She
confessed because she knew Tate would let her off the hook; the
confession served Tate by “solving” the V problem. I glanced over
at her. She seemed to be completely unaware Tate was talking about
her. She’d stopped moving at the side of Tate’s desk and begun
drumming her fingers nervously across the top. It looked like the V
was beginning to kick in, to give her that irritating buzz.
“Frankly, Merit, I’m surprised you don’t appreciate
the tremendous boon that V offers to vampires.”
“It makes you feel like a vampire,” Celina
intoned.
“She has a point,” Tate said, drawing my gaze back
to him. “V lowers inhibitions. You may think me callous, but I
believed V would help weed out the less agreeable portion of the
vampire population. Those willing to use V deserve to be
incarcerated.”
“So now you’re entrapping vampires.”
“It’s not entrapment. It’s good urban planning.
It’s self-selection for population control. I understand you aren’t
susceptible to glamour. Doesn’t that make you different? Better?
You don’t have the same weaknesses. You’re stronger, with better
control.”
I swung the katana in Celina’s direction. “Make
your point, Tate.”
“Do you know what kind of team we could make? You
are the poster girl for good vampires. You save humans, even when
the GP would seek to bring you down, to punish you for your deeds.
They love you for it. You help keep the city in balance. And that’s
what we need, if there’s any hope for vampires and humans to
survive together.”
“There is no way in hell that I’d work with you.
You think you’re going to walk away from this? After setting up
vampires and contributing to the deaths—to the endangerment—of
humans?”
His stare went cold. “Don’t be naïve.”
“No,” I said. “Don’t justify your evildoing with
some bogus, trite ‘this is just the way the world works’ lip
service. This is not the way the world works, and my grandfather is
proof of it. You’re egotistical and completely crazy.”
Celina’s finger drumming increased in pace, but
whatever magical control Tate had on her was effective. She
wouldn’t act without his permission. “Can I kill her now,
please?”
Tate held up a silencing hand. “Wait your turn,
darling. And what about your father?” he asked me. “He isn’t crazy,
is he?”
I shook my head, confused by the non sequitur.
“This isn’t about my father.”
His eyes wide with surprise, Tate let out a
belly-raucous, mirthless laugh. “Not about your father? Merit,
everything in your life since you became fanged has been about your
father.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
He gave me a look best saved for a naïve child.
“Why do you think that you, of all people in Chicago, were made a
vampire?”
“Not because of my father. Celina tried to kill me.
Ethan saved my life.” But even as I spoke the words aloud, my
stomach knotted with fear. Confused, I dropped the sword back to my
side.
“Yes, you’ve told me that before. Repeating the
lies doesn’t make them truth, Merit. Awfully coincidental, wasn’t
it, that Ethan happened to be on campus when you were?”
“It was a coincidence.”
Tate clucked his tongue. “You’re smarter than that.
I mean, truly—what are the odds? Don’t you think it would have been
beneficial for your father to have a vampire in his pocket—his
daughter—when the riots ended? When humans became used to the
concept of the fanged living among them?”
Tate smiled tightly. And then the words slipped
from his mouth like poison.
“What if I told you, Merit, that Ethan and your
father had a certain, shall we say, business arrangement?”
Blood roared in my ears, my knuckles whitening
around the handle of the katana. “Shut up.”
“Oh, come now, darling. If the cat’s out of the
bag, don’t you want the details? Don’t you want to know how much
your father paid him? How much Ethan, your father’s partner in
crime, took from your father to make you immortal?”
My vision dimmed to blackness, memories
overwhelming me: the fact that Ethan and Malik were on the U of C
quad at the precise moment I’d been attacked. The fact that Ethan
had known my father before we met him together. The fact that Ethan
had given me drugs to ease the biological transition to
vampire.
I thought he’d drugged me because he felt guilty I
hadn’t been able to consent to the Change.
Had he actually felt guilty because he’d changed me
at my father’s bidding?
No. That couldn’t be right.
Like I’d imagined him into being, Ethan suddenly
burst into the room, fury in his eyes. He’d come to back me
up.
Tate was still in the room, but he all but
disappeared from view. My gaze fell on Ethan, the fear powerful,
blinding, deafening as blood roared through my veins.
Ethan moved to me, and scanned my eyes, but I still
couldn’t find words to speak the question. “Are you all right?” he
asked. “Your eyes are silvered.” He looked back to Tate, probably
suspected my hunger had been tripped. “What did you do to
her?”
I gripped the handle of my sword tighter, the
cording biting into the skin of my palm, and forced myself to say
the words.
“Tate said you met with my father. That he paid you
to make me a vampire.”
I wanted him to tell me that it was a lie, just
more falsehoods thrown out by a politician grasping at
straws.
But the words he said broke my heart into a million
pieces.
“Merit, I can explain.”
Tears began to slide down my cheeks as I screamed
out my pain. “I trusted you.”
He stuttered out, “That’s not how it went—”
But before he could finish his excuse, his eyes
flashed to the side.
Celina was moving again, a sharpened stake in hand.
“I need to move,” she plaintively said. “I need to finish this
now.”
“Down, Celina,” Tate warned. “The fight isn’t yet
yours.”
But she wouldn’t be dissuaded. “She has ruined
enough for me,” Celina said. “She won’t ruin this.” Before I could
counter the argument, she’d cocked back her arm and the stake was
in the air—and headed right for me.
Without a pause, and with the speed of a
centuries-old vampire, Ethan threw himself forward, his torso in
front of mine, blocking the stake from hitting my body.
He took the hit full on, the stake bursting through
his chest.
And through his heart.
For a moment, time stopped, and Ethan looked back
at me, his green eyes tight with pain. And then he was gone, the
stake clattering to the ground in front of me. Ethan replaced
by—transformed to—nothing more than a pile of ash on the
floor.
I didn’t have time to stop or think.
Celina, now fully feeling the effects of the V, was
moving again, a second stake in hand. I grabbed the stake she’d
thrown, and praying for aim, I propelled it.
My aim was true.
It struck her heart, and before a long second had
passed, she was gone, as well. Just as Ethan had fallen, there was
nothing left of her but a pile of ash on the carpet. My instinct
for preservation replaced by shock, I glanced down.
Two tidy cones of ash lay on the carpet.
All that was left of them.
She was dead.
He was dead.
The realization hit me. Even as others rushed into
the room, I covered my mouth to hold back the scream and fell to my
knees, strength gone.
Because he was gone.
Malik, Catcher, my grandfather, and two uniformed
officers burst into the room. Luc must have called them. I looked
back at Tate, still behind his desk, a peppery bite of magic in the
air but no other sign that he was even vaguely worried by what had
gone down in his home.
No way was I letting this go unpunished. “Tate was
distributing V,” I said, still on the floor. “He drugged Celina,
let her out of jail. She’s gone.” I looked down at the ash again.
“She killed Ethan—he jumped in front of me. And then I killed
her.”
The room went silent.
“Merit’s grieving,” Tate said. “She’s confused the
facts.” He pointed at Paulie, who was now rushing toward a window
on the other side of the room. “As I believe you already know, that
man was responsible for distributing V. He just confessed as
much.”
Paulie sputtered as the officers pulled him away
from the window. “You son of a bitch. You think you can get away
with this? You think you can use me like this?” He pulled away from
the uniforms, who just managed to wrestle him to the floor before
he jumped on Tate.
“This is his fault,” Paulie said, chest-down
on the floor, lifting his head just enough to glare at Tate. “All
of this was his doing. He arranged the entire thing—found some
abandoned city property for the warehouse, found someone to mix the
chemicals, and set up the distribution network.”
Tate sighed haggardly. “Don’t embarrass yourself,
Mr. Cermak.” He looked over at my grandfather, sympathy in his
expression. “He must have been sampling his own wares.”
“You think I’m dumb?” Cermak asked, eyes wild. “I
have tapes, you asshole. I recorded every conversation we’ve ever
had because I knew—I just knew—that if worse came to worst,
you’d throw me to the wolves.”
Tate blanched, and everyone in the room froze, not
quite sure what to do.
“You have tapes, Mr. Cermak?” my grandfather
said.
“Dozens,” he said smugly. “All in a safe-deposit
box. The key’s around my neck.”
One of the uniforms fished inside Cermak’s shirt,
then pulled out a small flat key on a chain. “Found it,” he said,
holding it up.
And there was the evidence we needed.
All eyes turned to Tate. He adjusted his collar.
“I’m sure we can clear this up.”
My grandfather nodded at Catcher, and they both
stepped toward Tate. “Why don’t we discuss this downtown?”
Four more officers appeared at the office door.
Tate took them in and nodded at my grandfather.
“Why don’t we?” he said politely, eyes forward as
he strode from the room, a sorcerer, an ombudsman, and four CPD
officers behind him.
The first two uniforms led Paulie away.
Silence descended.
Probably only minutes had passed since I’d thrown
the stake. But the minutes felt like hours, which felt like days.
Time became a blur that moved around me, while I—finally—had become
still.
I stayed on my knees on the lush carpet, hands
loose in my lap, completely helpless before the remains of two
vampires. I was vaguely aware of the grief and hatred that rolled
in alternating waves beneath my skin, but none could penetrate the
thick shell of shock that kept me upright.
“Merit.” This voice was stronger. Harsher. The
words—the base, flat, hopeless sound of Malik’s words—drew up my
eyes. His were glassy, overlaid with an obvious sheen of grief, of
hopelessness.
“He’s gone,” I said, inconsolable. “He’s
gone.”
Malik held me as the ashes of my enemy and my lover
were collected in black urns, as they were sealed and carefully
escorted from Tate’s office.
He held me until the room was empty again.
“Merit. We need to go. There’s nothing more you can
do here.”
It took me a moment to realize why he was there.
Why Malik was on the floor beside me, waiting to escort me
home.
He’d been Second to Ethan.
But he was Second no longer.
Because Ethan was gone.
Grief and rage overpowered shock. I’d have hit the
floor if Malik hadn’t put his arms around me, holding me
upright.
“Ethan.”
I struggled, tears beginning to stream down my
face, and pushed against them to get away.
“Let me go! Let me go! Let me go!” I whimpered,
cried, made sounds better suited to the predator than the girl, and
thrashed against him, skin burning where his hands clamped my arms.
“Let me go!”
“Merit, stop. Be still,” he said, this new Master,
but all I could hear was Ethan’s voice.