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Teag let go of my arm and we ran over to Sorren. The only thing that kept me from throwing my arms around him in relief was concern that I might hurt him. He held himself more stiffly than usual, and I realized he was walking with a bad limp. I wondered if he had broken bones, and whether a vampire’s skeleton healed as rapidly as skin and tissue. Sorren managed a wan smile.

“Your concern is deeply appreciated,” he said, and then glanced up at Teag. “As is your good sense in keeping her from running to the rescue.” He held his arms away from his body as if to present himself for my inspection. “As you can see, I am still here.”

Covered in blood, his clothes tattered and his hair matted with dirt and sawdust, he looked more like the victim of a bomb blast. One glance made it clear that no mortal could have survived his injuries.

“You were under the crates when they fell,” I said.

Sorren nodded. The moonlight was enough for me to see that just in the time since he had made his appearance, the gash on his face was nearly healed.

“And it was a good thing you were not,” he replied. He went to take a step and his leg buckled under him. I reached forward to steady him, but Teag beat me to it, helping Sorren to the ground.

Teag put his hand on Sorren’s shoulder and knelt down beside him. “You need to feed. You’re hurt and it’s almost dawn. Let’s not make this one of our usual arguments – we don’t have time,” Teag said, holding his arm in front of Sorren’s mouth. I had seen this before.

Unfortunately, we’d had a couple of bad encounters that had given Teag and Sorren the chance to hash out this feeding thing. The good part was since that first time, Sorren treated Teag with a whole new level of respect and there was no question now that he was ‘family’.

The fact that Sorren didn’t argue let me know just how badly he was hurt. He bit into Teag’s wrist, and took several gulps of blood. Then he drew back, leaving two neat, small punctures that were already healing. There were just a few small flecks of blood on Sorren’s lips. “Thank you,” he murmured. Up close, I could see the tautness in Sorren’s face and guessed that the pain was excruciating.

Even such a short feeding seemed to give him strength, but Sorren faltered when Teag and I helped him stand.

“Sorry. Bones take a bit longer to heal,” he said. With Teag under one arm and me under his other, we helped Sorren stand and moved as quickly as possible toward where we had left the car.

I glanced at my watch. Dawn was only a few hours away. “Can you get to your safe resting place?” I asked. I don’t know what other threats lurked in the Charleston night for vampires, but if there were other would-be predators – human or supernatural – that were looking for prey, I doubted very much that Sorren would be up to the fight right now. “Let us take you back to the shop.”

To my surprise, Sorren nodded. “I was thinking the same thing,” he admitted. The gash on his face had healed without a trace, and I guessed the same would be true for his scalp wounds, but from the way he slid into the back seat of the car, I could tell that every motion hurt. Teag and I shook out our jackets and splinters rained down on the road. I felt prickly all over, and I figured we had been peppered with tiny bits of wood and packing material.

“There’s a package of hand wipes under the seat. You’d better wipe the blood off your face. If we get caught, you look like death warmed over,” I said, and winced at the utterly tactless, if true, description.

“Indeed,” Sorren said, but I could hear amusement in his voice. “It would not do to attract attention.”

Maybe it was my imagination, but I felt eyes on us until the car was outside the Navy yard perimeter.

Could the supernatural reaction at the Covington building have activated ghostly activity at other locations? I wondered. If the demon could make objects with a bad history into maliciously haunted weapons of magical destruction, I figured it was possible.

It didn’t seem smart to stick around long enough to find out. I made sure I was driving the speed limit, and I knew my headlights and tail lights worked, so there was no reason for anyone to stop us. Even so, I didn’t really start to breathe until we were back on King Street.

Downtown Charleston was nearly deserted at this hour. I hoped that held for police patrols as well. I reminded myself that as the owner of Trifles and Folly, I had every right to be at my own shop any hour of the day or night, but I also knew that any cop worth his badge would wonder about three people showing up in the dead of night looking like they’d been in a gang war.

A glance in my rearview mirror told me that Sorren was even more pale than usual. The wet wipe had removed the blood from his face, but there was no getting around his blood-soaked hair and stained clothing. Teag and I were cut and bloodied, our clothing torn, and we were bruised and covered in splinters and grime. No matter how hard I tried, I wouldn’t be able to come up with an even halfway plausible explanation for our appearance. I hoped it wouldn’t be necessary to give one.

Just to be on the safe side, I pulled into the alley behind the shop. Going in the front door was almost certain to attract attention. In the car, Teag gave Sorren his hoodie, which I hoped would obscure his features as well as his appearance from any of the security cameras keeping vigils over my neighbors’ rear doors.

Teag stayed slouched in the car as I opened the door to the shop and let Sorren in. I hoped that meant anyone watching the tape would assume that if two figures entered, it would be Teag and me. No one knew Sorren, and we tried to keep it that way. Those questions were better avoided.

“I can make it from here,” Sorren said. He smiled at me. “Thank Teag for me, and thank you for being willing to rescue me. It was foolhardy, but brave.”

“Good partners are hard to come by,” I replied. “No one will bother you if you need to be down there for a while to recuperate.”

He moved toward the steps to the shop’s basement where he had a hidden windowless room. I could see that he was still limping. “Don’t worry – when I’m ready, I’ll let myself out. Good night, Cassidy. Be careful.”

I locked the door behind me and got back in the car. Teag didn’t sit up until we were out of the alley, just in case. “Think he’ll be okay?” Teag asked.

I shrugged. “As you said, in almost six hundred years, I imagine he’s seen worse. He said to tell you ‘thanks’.” We rode most of the rest of the way in silence, exhausted.

“Do you think other victims were killed at the warehouse?” Teag finally asked as we pulled up in back of his apartment.

I frowned, then shook my head. “I don’t think so. We didn’t see evidence of other murders and I didn’t get any sense of them. I think Sorren was right – that was where Moran summoned the demon. Maybe he’s got a reason not to go back there. One thing’s certain: If those ghosts could have gone outside the building, I’m quite sure, with as angry as they were tonight, they would have done it.”

“Then that means that somewhere else has got to be the site linked to the killings, and to whatever it was that the salvage crew found.” Teag said. I could hear the weariness in his voice. Now that the life or death drama was over, the adrenalin crash had taken a toll on me as well. I couldn’t wait to crawl into bed.

“Maybe,” I replied. “All I know is, if it’s more dangerous than the warehouse, I vote for bringing more back-up.”

Chapter Seventeen

JUST MY LUCK: the next day was bright and clear, not too hot, and a perfect day for tourists to explore the Historic District. Teag and I were exhausted from the previous night. It had taken me an extra half an hour and a whole container of concealer to cover up the visible evidence of the fight at the warehouse.