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The Wolf (Black Dagger Brotherhood: Prison Camp #2)(70)

Author:J. R. Ward

Lucan didn’t respond to that. How could he tell her that she was so much more than special— Wait, what was he thinking here?

“How did you end up in the business?” he blurted. So he could get out of his own head.

“How did you,” she countered as the smell of cedar bloomed in the humid air.

“Touché.”

The sound of the water was variable, and he imagined she was running that bar over herself. He’d never particularly loved any kind of soap, but he could get used to the smell of this particular bar in his nose.

“I was drafted into the business,” he muttered.

“How? By who?”

“Long story. Now it’s your turn.”

“What, like this is strip poker, but without the cards and the clothes?” There was a pause. Then she laughed. “Guess I already lost part of that one. The strip part, that is.”

“You’re avoiding the question.”

After a moment, she said, “I don’t know. Everyone has to be somewhere doing something.”

There was resignation in her voice. And as the water was cut off, the dripping was loud.

“Here,” he said as he pulled his sweatshirt off. “Use this as a towel.”

“Oh, you don’t have to—”

Lucan stretched his arm out again. And when she took what he offered, he realized he’d just screwed himself.

Her scent was going to be on the sweatshirt, and he couldn’t afford to have that smell in anyone else’s nose. To vampires, humans were easy to pick up on—and the other species was most definitely unwelcome in the prison camp.

Plus the Executioner liked fresh meat for his trophy wall.

“Let’s get you back in bed,” he heard himself say. “Quickly.”

José went back to the trap house as soon as he’d logged enough sleep to be competent to drive without endangering public safety. As his unmarked rolled to a stop, he looked through the foggy car window at the facade of the walk-up. It was so cold that his breath and his hot coffee had sweated everything up, but he couldn’t say that he needed a big visual refresher course on what the place looked like.

He’d been staring at it in his mind all night while he hadn’t been sleeping.

Opening his door, he got out. The air was straight-up November, about thirty-five degrees, with a bite of humidity that in a month would mean snow was coming. As it was, there was a drizzle hovering just below the cloud cover. He didn’t think it was going to turn into a full-on rain, but what the hell did he know.

As he walked across the road, he stopped in the middle and looked down. A compelling sense of loss made it impossible to keep going, and as that headache from the night before came back with a vengeance, he decided it was a good goddamn thing he was retiring.

He was wearing out, the chassis of focus and determination that he’d built his professional life on top of now rickety and unreliable from mental fatigue.

Cursing, he started up with the footwork again, and as he came to the walk-up’s door, he slipped a Rolaids into his mouth. Maybe if he could take some time off and eat better, he’d be able to quit the chalky savior stuff.

Although to be fair, he had sucked back a lot of leftovers at two a.m. last night because he’d had so much to think about. That undercover cop had still not shown up, checked in, or been found, alive or dead. But at least his buddy in CSI had done a great job at Officer Hernandez-Guerrero’s place and documented everything like it was a crime scene.

Because he knew in his gut it was one.

Nothing much to go on, yet. The bloodstains were likely the missing officer’s, and the fingerprints had been hers and hers alone. Although maybe something would turn up. All downtown patrols last night had been on the lookout. They still were. And they would be until they found . . . whatever they did.

With a yank, he pulled things open—

“What the fuck.”

As his eyes focused on the trail of blood down the stairs, his nose got filled with a crap ton of not-right. The smell was sickeningly sweet and totally overpowering, to the point where he recoiled.

Recovering fast—like he wasn’t used to bad stenches?—he took some booties out of the pocket of his sports coat and slipped them over his shoes. Then he snapped on two gloves. Stepping up to the blood, he looked down the hallway to the back entrance. He guessed whoever had been leaking badly had headed out that way—because why would you come to a place like this if you needed medical help?

José got his phone and put in a call to dispatch as he walked down the corridor, making sure he didn’t step in anything.

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