bounty hunter still slumped in her chair.
Remy was nowhere in sight. Dad and
Wyatt slipped in quickly, closing the
door behind them.
“It’s her, all right,” Wyatt said,
bending to move the leather vest away
and examine the crystal.
Then all at once there was an
eruption from behind the closet door.
Barking, whining . . . and then the door
flew open and Dantès burst out.
“What the hell?” Dad said, and at the
same time, Wyatt exclaimed, “Dantès?
What are you doing here?” As he
crouched to greet the ecstatic dog, who
clearly knew him, he looked up at Cat.
His eyes flashed. “What is this dog
doing here?”
Utterly
confused
and
discombobulated, Cat tried to respond
with something that made sense. “Um . . .
I just found him.” That was the truth . . .
sort of.
“Wyatt?”
The disbelieving whisper somehow
filtered over all the other noise.
“You’re . . . alive.” Remy stood at
the entrance to the closet, staring at the
scene in front of her. “I thought you were
dead
. I thought you . . . burned.”
One moment Wyatt was crouched,
petting Dantès . . . and the next moment
he was there, taking Remy by the arms,
pulling her up close. He looked down at
her as if he’d seen a ghost. “Where the
hell have you been?” he demanded . . .
but the tone was not peremptory. It was
relieved and thick, filled with emotion.
“You’re supposed to be dead, you
jerk,” Remy said, shoving at Wyatt’s
chest. He didn’t release her arms. “You
have no idea what I’ve gone through in
the last—” She threw herself into his
embrace, fairly melting into that
powerful torso.
And as Cat watched, openmouthed,
Wyatt’s arms curved around her and he
drew Remy up against his chest, filtering
his fingers through the hair at her neck.
She was sniffling and shaking, clutching
at his shirt as if drowning.
Wyatt’s
expression
changed.
Softened. Cat saw the way his arms
tightened, pulling Remy closer. Noticed
the way he brushed his cheek against the
top of her head . . . and even as he
loosened his hold, releasing her, he
dragged his hand over her head, buried
his nose in her hair for the briefest of
moments. Taking a good sniff before
setting her away from him.
Well. There goes my chance for the
hot guy.
“I’m definitely not dead,” he said in
the most bland understatement of all
time. Once again he gazed at Remy, this
time as if he’d just found an entire cache
of that rare thing called duct tape.
“I can see that,” Remy responded,
swiping the back of her hand under her
eyes. “You are such a jerk.” But she was
smiling behind the words, and Cat
understood she was missing a whole lot
of subtext between them. She actually
felt hot and light-headed, seeing how
Wyatt looked down at Remy. If someone
ever looked at her that way, she didn’t
think her knees would hold up.
“Ahem.” Dad’s bemused but pointed
interruption drew their attention. “I think
there’s more of a story here about this
bounty hunter than what Cat told us,” he
said, his eyes settling on his daughter
purposefully.
“Well, yes,” Cat admitted, glancing
at Remy.
Then the most extraordinary thing
happened. Wyatt, whose attention had
been completely focused on Remy,
looked at Dad, then at Cat, and all at
once he changed. He stilled and the
expression that crossed his face was
fleeting, but raw and uncomfortable.
Then his features settled into something
else. Harshness—stony and cold.
He moved away from Remy and
returned to Lacey’s side, examining her.
“Well? How did she end up here?
Knowing you,” he jerked his head
toward Remy without looking up, “it
was no accident.”
“Of course not,” she replied. Her
voice was just as brisk as his and her
expression revealed nothing of her
feelings. A subtle chill had descended
on the room, filling the space between
Remy
and
Wyatt,
leaving
Cat
bewildered. Her attention bounced from
one to the other as her new friend
explained what happened.
To Cat’s mild surprise, Remy told
the entire story of how they’d come to
meet up and how Lacey came to be in
this room.
“You pulled a gun on a bounty
hunter?” Dad turned toward her.
She wasn’t sure if he was pleased or
shocked, but she grinned anyway.
“Maybe now you’ll let me join your
secret group,” she said.
“Fat chance,” her father replied.
“Someone in the family has to stay safe
and sane.”
He and Wyatt exchanged glances and
grim smiles. Once again Cat was struck
by the fact that they not only wore the
same expression, but they bore a
resemblance to each other.
Someone in
the family.
A prickle slid down her
spine. Her grandfather’s name had been
Wyatt. Was that just a coincidence?
“So Lacey came into the room, and
almost immediately after, she began to
show the symptoms of her illness?”
Wyatt
asked.
His
voice
was
businesslike, clearly directed at Remy
. . . but he was looking at the dead
woman again.
“It was the presence of the crystal,”
she explained. “At least, that was what
Lacey said—and I believe her. It was
sitting on the table there, hidden in a pile
of clothes. I actually felt a little zing in
the air, and Lacey must have, too,
because she reacted immediately. I don’t
think she realized what happened right
away, but it didn’t take long before she
was in pain, grabbing at her crystal.”
“It’s opaque gray now,” Wyatt said,
lifting the vest. “Not blue, like they
normally are.”
“It wasn’t before. I can’t say when it
changed, but when she and Goldwyn had
me, I—”
“Had you?” he interrupted, glancing
over. “Oh. The bruising. On your face.”
His mouth tightened but he continued his
examination of the body.
“The crystal was definitely blue
then,”
Remy
continued,
her
tone
matching his. “Four, five days ago.”
Then she drew in her breath sharply.
“Oh my God. Marley. Someone needs to
find Marley Huvane.”
R
emy couldn’t help gawking at the
room lined with banks of important-
looking machines that hummed and
whirred in a constant rumble. Theo and
Lou Waxnickis’ secret subterranean
computer lab was windowless, brightly
lit, and also furnished with desks, chairs,
and a collection of mismatched sofas. A
blue and yellow license plate with WIXY
98 and California stamped on it hung on
the wall. A
Lord of the Rings
poster
was the only other decor.
“This looks like something from a
movie,” she said to Wyatt as Sage stood
from the chair at which she’d been
furiously typing on a keyboard.
Finding and entering the laboratory
had made her feel like she was in one of
those James Bond DVDs too. In order to
get here, they went to the abandoned,
decrepit-looking part of the hotel
building and located a particular
elevator. Wyatt pushed the up and down
buttons in a certain pattern and moments
later the elevator doors opened. Then
they descended a short distance and he
punched in a code using the floor
numbers. The rear door opened to reveal
a stairway that led down into the actual
room.
Remy looked around the room and
realized she knew everyone here. Elliott
and Jade, Quent and Zoë, Simon and
Sage, Fence and Ana and George, plus
Wyatt, David, Cat, and herself.
What a
group
.
Again she thought, there was
something very special about the
cohesiveness of these people. Something
that went beyond simple camaraderie.
And then with a start she realized:
these are my friends.
These are people I
trust. And they’re going to help me.
I’m not going to be doing this alone.
She looked at Wyatt for the hundredth
time, drinking in the sight of him. How
could he still be alive? She’d
seen
him
go into that flaming building. She’d seen
the roof collapse on top of him. But here
he was, and he didn’t appear to have a
scratch or a burn anywhere on his
smooth, golden skin.
“Shouldn’t Vaughn be here?” she
murmured to him.
She couldn’t read Wyatt’s expression
as he replied, “He’s a little tied up right
now. Besides, he wasn’t invited.”
“Hey everyone—I’ve got Theo and
Lou connected,” Sage said. “They’ll be
joining us on that monitor there.” She
pointed to a large flat screen that looked
like a television. As she did so, the faces
of the two computer geeks appeared.
“Can you hear us?” Theo said.
“Yes,” Sage confirmed.
Just then Selena appeared in the
screen behind the Waxnickis, and Remy
thought it was very cool when her friend
actually waved to her.
She waved back, feeling a little odd
to be greeting a picture of someone. But
then she realized this was just as if they
were in the room with them, even though
the Waxnickis and Selena were more
than fifty miles away in Yellow
Mountain.
“We are gathered here today—”
Fence intoned in a deep voice, then
snickered as Ana elbowed him in the
gut.
“All right, Wyatt,” Elliott said. “The
floor is yours. Tell us what you’ve got.”
“Remy has the Mother crystal,”
Wyatt announced. “Which is what the
Strangers have been searching for since
her grandfather procured it fifty years
ago and, presumably, is why they want
her turned over to them in the next—”
He looked at one of the computer
monitors. “—twenty-eight hours. We’ve
got hardly more than a day.”
Despite his sobering words, the
reaction from the others couldn’t have
been more surprised, particularly Ana’s.
“You have the Mother crystal?
Seriously?” Her voice was reverent,
hardly above a whisper. “Here? Could
we see it?”
Remy glanced at Wyatt, who said,
“I’m not sure it’s safe for Ana to get too
close to it. Right now, it’s in the other
room, wrapped in asbestos. The crystal
has already destroyed Lacey merely by
being in the same room. It seems to have
killed her crystal, and she died shortly
after.”
“And
something
happened
to
Marley,” Remy added, “this morning,
when she came into—into close range.
She seemed fine when she left, but . . .”
She worried her lip, looking around.
“Has anyone seen her? I hope she’s
okay.” She’d already raised the concern
to Wyatt, who said he’d send someone to
find her, but there’d been no word yet.
“I saw her just a while ago,” Jade
said. “She seemed all right. A little
distracted, but healthy. She was talking
to a family who was leaving the city.”
Remy’s concern for Marley relaxed as
Jade’s
elegant
features
tightened.
“People are going in droves.”
“Like I said,” Wyatt glanced at
Remy, “the mayor’s tied up, trying to
keep his city under control.”
“And Marley knows you have the
Mother crystal?” Quent interrupted.
Remy shook her head. “She didn’t
actually see it. I don’t think she knows.
But Lacey did. She realized almost right
away what happened.”
“What did happen?”
Remy explained about the little
sizzling pop and how Lacey’s life
simply drained away.