“No. I didn’t.” Trent set his pen down. “Ms. Morgan was a surprise. But I did offer her a job,” he said, and Francis seemed to sink in on himself. His mouth worked, but nothing came out. I could smell the fear on him, sour and sharp.
“Not your job,” Trent said, his disgust obvious. “Tell me what she is afraid of. What makes her angry? What does she cherish most in the world?”
Francis’s breath came in a relieved sound. He shifted, going to cross his legs but hesitating at the last, awkward moment. “I don’t know. The mall? I try to stay away from her.”
“Yes,” Trent said in his liquid voice. “Let’s talk about that for a moment. After reviewing your activities the past few days, one might question your loyalties—Mr. Percy.”
Francis crossed his arms. His breathing increased and he began to fidget. Jonathan took a menacing step closer, and Francis tossed his hair from his eyes again.
Trent went frighteningly intense. “Do you know how much it cost me to quiet the rumors when you ran from the I.S. records vault?”
He licked his lips. “Rachel said they’d think I was helping her. That I should run.”
“And so you ran.”
“She said—”
“And yesterday?” Trent interrupted. “You drove her to me.”
The tight anger in his voice pulled me out of my hut. Trent leaned forward, and I swear I heard Francis’s blood freeze. The businessman aura fell from Trent. What was left was domination. Natural, unequivocal domination.
I stared at the change. Trent’s mien was nothing like a vamp’s aura of power. It was like unsweetened chocolate: strong and bitter and oily, leaving an uncomfortable aftertaste. Vamps used fear to command respect. Trent simply demanded it. And from what I could see, the thought never crossed his mind that it would be denied.
“She used you to get to me,” he whispered, his eyes unblinking. “That is inexcusable.”
Francis cowered in his chair, his thin face drawn and his eyes wide. “I—I’m sorry,” he stammered. “It won’t happen again.”
Trent’s breath slipped into him in a slow gathering of will, and I watched in horrified fascination. The yellow fish in the tank splashed at the surface. The hair on my back pricked. My pulse raced. Something rose, as nebulous as a whiff of ozone. Trent’s face went empty and ageless. A haze seemed to edge him, and I wondered in a sudden shock if he were pulling on the ever-after. He’d have to be a witch or human to do that. And I would’ve sworn he was neither.
I tore my eyes from Trent. Jonathan’s thin lips were parted. He stood behind Francis, watching Trent with a slack mix of surprise and worry. This raw show of anger wasn’t expected, even by him. His hand rose in protest, hesitant and fearful.
As if in response, Trent’s eye twitched and his breath eased out. The fish hid behind the coral. My skin eerily rippled, settling my fur flat. Jonathan’s fingers trembled, and he made fists of them. Still not looking from Francis, Trent intoned, “I know it won’t.”
His voice was dust upon cold iron, the sounds sliding from one meaning to the next in a liquid grace that was mesmerizing. I felt out of breath. Shuddering, I crouched where I was. What the blazes had happened? Had almost happened?
“What do you plan on doing now?” Trent asked.
“Sir?” Francis said, his voice cracking as he blinked.
“That’s what I thought.” Trent’s fingertips quivered with his repressed anger. “Nothing. The I.S. is watching you too closely. Your usefulness is beginning to fade.”
Francis’s mouth opened. “Mr. Kalamack! Wait! Like you said, the I.S. is watching me. I can draw their attention. Keep them from the customs docks. Another Brimstone take will put me in the clear and distract them at the same time.” Francis shifted on the edge of his seat. “You can move your—things?” he finished weakly.
Things, I thought. Why didn’t he just say biodrugs? My whiskers quivered. Francis distracted the I.S. with a token amount of Brimstone while Trent moved the real moneymaker. How long? I wondered. How long had Francis worked for him? Years?
“Mr. Kalamack?” Francis whispered.
Trent placed his fingertips together as if in careful thought. Behind him, Jonathan furrowed his thin eyebrows, the worry that had filled him almost gone.
“Tell me when?” Francis begged, edging closer on his chair.
Trent pushed Francis to the back of his chair with a three-second glance. “I don’t give chances, Percy. I take opportunities.” He pulled his datebook closer, paging a few days ahead. “I would like to schedule a shipment on Friday. Southwest. Last flight before midnight to L.A. You can find your usual take at the main bus station in a locker. Keep it anonymous. My name has been in the papers too often lately.”
Francis jumped to his feet in relief. He stepped forward as if to shake Trent’s hand, then glanced at Jonathan and backed up. “Thank you, Mr. Kalamack,” he gushed. “You won’t be sorry.”
“I can’t imagine I would.” Trent looked at Jonathan, then the door. “Enjoy your afternoon,” he said in dismissal.
“Yes sir. You, too.”
I felt as if I was going to be sick as Francis bounced out of the room. Jonathan hesitated in the threshold, watching Francis make obnoxious noises at the ladies he passed in the hall.
“Mr. Percy has made himself more of a liability than an asset,” Trent breathed tiredly.
“Yes, Sa’han,” Jonathan agreed. “I strongly urge you to remove him from the payroll.”
My stomach clenched. Francis didn’t deserve to die just because he was stupid.
Trent rubbed his fingertips into his forehead. “No,” he finally said. “I’d rather keep him until I arrange for a replacement. And I may have other plans for Mr. Percy.”
“As you like, Sa’han,” Jonathan said, and softly closed the door.
“Here, Angel,” Sara Jane coaxed. A carrot wiggled through the bars of my cage. I stretched to take it before she could let it drop. Aspen chips didn’t season them at all.
“Thanks,” I chittered, knowing she couldn’t understand me, but needing to say something regardless. The woman smiled and cautiously extended her fingers through the cage. I grazed my whiskers across them because I knew she would like it.
“Sara Jane?” Trent questioned from his desk, and the petite woman turned with a guilty swiftness. “I employ you to manage my office affairs, not be a zookeeper.”
“Sorry sir. I was taking the opportunity to try and rid myself of my irrational fear of vermin.” She brushed at her knee-length cotton skirt. It wasn’t as crisp or professional as her interview suit, but still new. Just what I’d expect a farm girl would wear on her first day on the job.
I chewed ravenously on the carrot left over from Sara Jane’s lunch. I was starving, since I refused to eat those stale pellets. What’s the matter, Trent? I thought between chews. Jealous?
Trent adjusted his glasses and returned his attention to his papers. “When you’re through ridding yourself of your irrational fears, I’d like you to go down to the library.”
“Yes sir.”
“The librarian has collated some information for me. But I want you to screen it for me. Bring up what you think is most pertinent.”
“Sir?”