“ Stafford,” she breathed. And James hadn’t known Stafford was a demon. An American citizen, on American soil. Oh, God. She
“A promotion, and a desk.”
Disgust poured through her. She didn’t attempt to conceal her reaction.
James sat back. “Goddammit, Maggie. I was tired of seeing my-our-friends shot in the field. Tired of seeing them killed. And it was a
One that Maggie would have killed herself, if she could have. But James hadn’t known Stafford had been a demon until after he’d tried to kill him.
Not that it mattered now. Katherine did.
Maggie swallowed, forced herself to relax.
“A demon, yes. Okay. And another demon has you in this bargain now.” And if James didn’t fulfill it, his soul would be trapped in Hell. Which was, she thought grimly, enough incentive to make James do almost anything. “You just have to help him, is that right? You don’t have to actually give him whatever it is he’s looking for?”
“Right.” Almost tiredly, James nodded. “Just help. But he decides what ‘helping’ is.”
“Then we’ll make it simple. I’ll go after Katherine when you aren’t there, so that you don’t have to help him stop me. Like now.”
His lashes flickered. “I’m due back in a few minutes. If I stay much longer, he’ll be suspicious, and ready for you. This evening, I’m supposed to pretend to argue with him, leave the house angry and stay away for several hours. I’ll contact you then, and give you the address.”
Maggie straightened. “All right. Tonight.”
She waited at the picnic table until she saw the Land Rover pull out of the parking lot. The ocean seemed louder than it should have, filling her head with noise. The sand was deep and soft. Her feet were hot inside her boots and her body bathed in a light film of sweat by the time she made it to Geoff’s side.
Geoff was cold, pale with anger, his voice ice. “What the bloody hell was that?”
A small directional microphone lay in his lap-no doubt from Sir Pup and the supply of equipment in his hammerspace.
Well, that made everything easier. She wouldn’t have to repeat her entire conversation with James; she’d just have to explain it.
Geoff stood. “You let James go. Might as well have told him to tell the demon we were coming.”
No, he wasn’t cold. He was close, and he was pissed, and she could feel the heat coming off him as well as she could the sun. Sweat trickled down her back, between her breasts.
Maggie glanced at Sir Pup. “Follow him. Detain him
White still edged Geoff’s mouth, but color was returning to the rest of his face. A breeze pushed at his dark hair and cooled the back of her neck. “What was that, Maggie?”
“He’s bound to help the demon.
“He doesn’t break it.”
“Exactly.”
She turned toward the parking lot. Geoff caught her arm. “And the rest?”
Langan, Stafford. Kill orders that Langan must have known would never be completed. And the certainty that she had narrowly escaped the trap James was ensnarled in now.
“I… can’t,” she said. “I can’t think of it now. It’s too much, it’s too big. Maybe after we get Katherine.” She closed her eyes. “And for just one moment I need to… this.”
She leaned in, buried her face in his throat. Tension held Geoff stiff for a second before his arms slid around her.
“I’m tired,” she admitted, and let herself rest against him. Not physical exhaustion. Emotional. As if she’d been slowly wrung out since receiving that e-mail. “I haven’t been this tired since I left the agency.”
His voice was a soothing rumble against her cheek. “We’ll be finished soon.”
“Yes.” She stepped back. Her hand drifted down his arm until her fingers linked with his. Then she let her hand drop back to her side. “We need to go.”
Chapter Eight
Maggie drove just above the speed limit, her gaze constantly returning to the device tracking Sir Pup’s location. He and James weren’t too far ahead-but not, Maggie had said, so close that James would spot their vehicle.
Geoff nodded, casting ahead in an attempt to find Sir Pup, and was surprised when she admitted, “It’s almost a relief. To know I was wrong about him.”
She’d said that she couldn’t talk about it yet, that it was too much. But maybe, Geoff thought, too much
“Yes. That’s not what I-Not exactly.” She checked Sir Pup’s position, still on a steady course north. “I was afraid I’d have to choose.”
“Choose what?”
“I didn’t know.” He heard the long, shaky breath she drew. Saw her hand make an open gesture, grasping at air. “Choose