Bryce glanced away again, back toward Main Street.
Isaiah shook his head. “No reports from civilians or patrols yet.”
Bryce barely heard him as the facts poured into her mind. Main Street.
She pulled out her phone, drawing up the map of the city. Her location pinged, a red dot on the network of streets.
The males were still talking about the scant evidence when she placed a few pins in the map, then squinted at the ground beneath them. Ruhn had drifted over, falling into conversation with his friends as she tuned them out.
But Hunt noted her focus and turned toward her, his dark brows high. “What?”
She leaned into the shadow of his wing, and could have sworn he folded it more closely around her. “Here’s a map of where all the murders happened.”
She allowed Ruhn and his friends to prowl near. Even deigned to show them her screen, her hands shaking slightly.
“This one,” she said, pointing to the blinking dot, “is us.” She pointed to another, close by. “This is where Maximus Tertian died.” She pointed to another, this one near Central Avenue. “This is the acolyte’s murder.” Her throat constricted, but she pushed past it as she pointed to the other dot, a few blocks due north. “Here’s where …” The words burned. Fuck. Fuck, she had to say it, voice it—
“Danika and the Pack of Devils were killed,” Hunt supplied.
Bryce threw him a grateful glance. “Yes. Do you see what I see?”
“No?” Flynn said.
“Didn’t you go to some fancy Fae prep school?” she asked. At Flynn’s scowl, she sighed, zooming out on the screen. “Look: all of them took place within steps of one of the major avenues. On top of the ley lines—natural channels for the firstlight to travel through the city.”
“Highways of power,” Hunt said, his eyes shining. “They flow right through the Gates.” Yeah, Athalar got it. He aimed for where Isaiah stood twenty feet away, talking to a tall, blond nymph in a forensics jacket.
Bryce said to the Fae males, to her wide-eyed brother, “Maybe whoever is summoning this demon is drawing upon the power of these ley lines under the city to have the strength to summon it. If all the murders take place near them, maybe that’s how the demon appeared.”
One of the Aux team called Ruhn’s name, and her brother merely gave her an impressed nod before going over to them. She ignored what that admiration did to her, turning her gaze to Hunt instead as he kept walking down the alley, the powerful muscles of his legs shifting. She heard him call to Isaiah as he walked toward the commander, “Have Viktoria run a search on the cameras along Main, Central, and Ward. See if they catch any blip of power—any small surge or drop in temperature that might happen if a demon were summoned.” The kristallos might stay out of sight, but surely the cameras would pick up a slight disturbance in the power flow or temperature. “And have her look at the firstlight grid around those times, too. See if anything registered.”
Declan watched the angel stride off, then said to Bryce, “You know what he does, right?”
“Look really good in black?” she said sweetly.
Declan growled. “That demon-hunting is a front. He does the Governor’s dirty work.” His chiseled jaw clenched for a second. “Hunt Athalar is bad news.”
She batted her eyelashes. “Good thing I like bad boys.”
Flynn let out a low whistle.
But Declan shook his head. “The angels don’t give a shit about anyone, B. His goals are not your goals. Athalar’s goals might not even be the same as Micah’s. Be careful.”
She nodded to where her brother was again speaking with the stunning medwitch. “I already got the pep talk from Ruhn, don’t worry.”
Down the alley, Hunt was saying to Isaiah, “Call me if Viktoria gets any video of it.” Then he added, as if not quite used to it, “Thanks.”
In the distance, clouds gathered. Rain had been predicted for the middle of the night, but it seemed it was arriving sooner.
Hunt stalked back toward them. “They’re on it.”
“We’ll see if the 33rd follows through this time,” Declan muttered. “I’m not holding my breath.”
Hunt straightened. Bryce waited for his defense, but the angel shrugged. “Me neither.”
Flynn jerked his head toward the angels working the scene. “No loyalty?”
Hunt read a message that flashed on his phone’s screen, then pocketed it. “I don’t have any choice but to be loyal.”