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Claws and Fangs Page 14
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“I am.” The man was terrified but he didn’t plead for his life.
“What is your name?”
The guy sealed his lips, refusing to answer. Lethal put some power behind his glare. “Tell me your name.”
“Jeffrey Pars.”
Jeff. “You are Lacey’s team leader?”
The male attempted to resist the power of his gaze, but couldn’t. “Yes.”
“What did you do with the video from the warehouse? Tell me where to find it. How many copies are there?”
“Just one. It’s on a file drive in the glove compartment of my car.”
“Where is your car?”
“Two streets over. Red Mustang.”
Lethal growled loudly. A moment later a wolf appeared. He ordered him to retrieve the drive from the vehicle and the wolf took off at a run. Lethal glared down at the hunter again. “Does anyone besides you and the hunters with you know about this club? Have you told them Mooning is a run by vamps?”
“No.”
“That’s lucky,” Blaron sighed.
“Were you able to get inside the heads of the other two? I hate running across humans with a natural immunity to mind control.”
“Notice how quiet they’ve been?” Blaron frowned. “It amazes me that they’re hunters at all. They are clearly shitty ones, since only a glare silenced them.”
“They hunt from a distance.” He’d never forget how he’d been shot—but Lacey wasn’t going to work for Jeff anymore. He’d make sure they didn’t take down any more vampires. “Let’s just wipe their minds.”
“These are hunters,” his friend reminded him. “They probably have a lot of stuff around their homes as reminders of what they do.”
“True.” A mind wipe could fail if something triggered distinct memories.
“We’ll need to ask your human.”
He really wanted Lacey kept out of it, but then again, now she’d have proof that he’d kept his word by not killing her team. At least...he hoped they’d all survived. He should have asked the wolf who’d come, but his priority had been securing any video of him and Lacey in that warehouse. He kept hold of Jeff as he hauled him up to his feet.
“I’m going to take this one to see Lacey. Round up the survivors and bring them all in here. We’ll handle this situation even if we have to question each one, make a list of anything that might trigger their memories, and send the wolves to destroy it.”
“What if they’ve told their friends or their women?”
Lethal bit back a curse. “We’ll have to wipe a lot of minds.”
“For sure.” Blaron didn’t sound any happier at the prospect. “What a mess.”
He couldn’t agree more.
“It’s probably for the best we aren’t killing them all.” Blaron chuckled. “Despite my instincts prodding me to.”
“The old days.” Lethal could remember how satisfying it had felt taking out an enemy. “We’ve evolved though.”
“Aye. A shame, isn’t it?”
Lethal flashed him a toothy grin. “I plead the Fifth. I’ll be back.” He spun the human, holding him by the back of his neck and pushed him forward.
Blaron unlocked the door to the basement and opened it. “Good luck.”
“He’s alive. That will score me some points.”
The human struggled but was no match for Lethal’s strength as he forced him down the stairs. Mora lowered the gun when she saw that the hunter was controlled by Lethal.
“Let me in there and then go home. Things are calm upstairs.”
She removed the bar across the door that had kept Lacey locked inside and pushed it open. “Thank you.”
He winked and shoved the hunter through the door, into the office. Lacey was standing in the middle of the room, holding the knife. She relaxed only slightly when she saw him but her focus returned to the human he held.
“Jeff.” Her tone was soft.
“You backstabbing bitch.”
Lethal’s temper flared as he snarled at the hunter. “Don’t call her names.” He wanted to break the jerk’s neck but refrained.
Lacey was stunned to see Jeff, but she wasn’t surprised by his accusation. Lethal stood behind him, his fingers wrapped firmly around her boss’s throat. They wore similar furious expressions. She lowered the knife and placed it on the edge of the desk.
“I didn’t kill him. We’re going to interview them to see what we need to do to make sure their memories don’t return.”
“I don’t understand.” She looked at Lethal for clarification.
“Any triggers they might have around their homes or anywhere they frequent could prompt flashbacks. We don’t want them recovering memories.”
“That could happen?”
“Yes.” He didn’t look pleased either. “Hunters keep souvenirs and other possessions that are a constant reminder of what they do.”
She bit her lip, thinking about it. “Why don’t you just make them think that they were paranoid and a bit crazy but they’re getting better? You know? Like they made up vampires but now they know the truth. Make them believe you don’t really exist.”
Lethal smiled. “It could work.”
“Damn you to hell, Lacey!” Jeff spit out. “We trusted you.”
She stepped closer. It was doubtful he’d listen to reason but she wanted to try. “These aren’t the vamps who killed your brother or my sister. Not all of them murder humans. You’re still alive, right? Why? Think about it. Mindless monsters would have taken you out. You wouldn’t be standing here right now. You’d be dead.”
He glared at her.
“They are people, Jeff. Some are good, some are really bad. I’m not so blinded by Beth’s murder that I’m willing to annihilate an entire race for what one of them did. We got it wrong. Can you understand that? They hunt murderers too. We’re on the same side.”
“Bullshit. They got to you.”
“You’ve known me for three years. Can’t you just think about what I’m saying? No one has gotten to me. I just listened to reason.”
“Your sister would roll in her grave.”
“No. She wouldn’t. Beth wouldn’t want me to blindly hate them all for what a single one of them did to her. Don’t tell me anything about my sister. She had a big heart and would be proud that I’m not living with bitterness anymore.”
“Sir?” The male voice came from the doorway.
Lethal turned his head. “What?”
“Ten of them survived. One shot himself in the head. We couldn’t stop him. He died from the injury. I apologize.”
“It’s all right. Thanks for the information, Danny. Take all of them to the dance floor. I’ll be up with this one in a moment.”
“Yes, sir.” He disappeared through the door.
“Did you hear that?” Jeff spat. “It’s all right that one of ours is dead. These are the bastards you’re working for now.”
“I also heard that he shot himself. He was probably scared.” She hated that a life had been lost but she wasn’t going to blame the vampires or werewolves for it. They could have killed everyone but hadn’t. “It’s horrible, but they didn’t pull the trigger.”
“You turned your back on your own kind, for them.”
Jeff refused to listen. She could see he’d already made up his mind that anything she said would be tainted somehow. He honestly believed she’d betrayed the team and had become a player for the other side. She wasn’t surprised. It had been a lot for her to take in, too, and she’d seen more, had more time.
“I’m sorry you don’t believe me.” She looked at Lethal. “Go ahead and take him upstairs. Nothing I can say will do any good.” She paused. “Thank you for not hurting anyone.”
“It matters to you, so it matters to me. I’ll try your suggestion when I get inside his mind. I’ll plant the thought that they should get rid of all reminders of their past fantasies that vampires are real.”
“I won’t forget!” Jeff swore. “I’ll come back and