Page 88 of Heartless


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Instead of going straight, Flynn turned right at the corner. He was surprisingly candid, telling me how he bounced from one convenient relationship to the next. He bragged about the penthouse suites he’d stayed in and cautioned me to avoid Breed apartment living like the plague. Not unless I enjoyed Shifter fights, Vampires complaining about noise, broken doors, and juicers passed out in the halls.

“Where do you live now?” I asked.

“A swanky little place, but I’m running out of time. You see, my last relationship ended in a flood of tears. Hers, not mine. She left but had already paid the lease for six months. It’s mine for another five weeks.”

“I thought you got paid good money for recruiting?”

“Keep your voice down,” he murmured. “And take off that bloody mask. You look like an invitation.”

I removed the mask and tucked it in the long pocket of my duster, which had no buttons to cover up my provocative outfit. We walked for twenty minutes. Flynn revealed he didn’t have a car or a driver’s license, not that he wanted to drive on our crazy American roads. Between relationships, he used public transportation or his two feet. Flynn was quite the chatterbox. I could see why he had no trouble moving from one relationship to the next. He had a gift of making you feel like you’d known him all your life, and that was something he could do with any random stranger.

“Aren’t we going to be late to work?” I asked.

The sun had set, but a wonderful early-evening glow filled the world, giving the colors more contrast and depth.

“Never you mind about that. This is far more important. I hope you make a better first impression on my associate than you did with me.”

“As long as he doesn’t grab my arm.”

Flynn chortled. After crossing another street, he began telling me all about his hometown in Manchester.

Just when we reached the curb, my heart accelerated. A scruffy biker strutted toward us, tattoos up and down his arms and a goatee on his chin. When he locked eyes with me, my breath caught. Flynn’s voice faded into oblivion, and as I stared at Crush, all I could think of was how this mission was teetering on the brink of disaster.

Looking down at my nonexistent outfit, he practically had flames shooting out of his eyes. Then he gave Flynn a baleful glance.

Oh God, not now.

With every step, I realized my father wasn’t going to walk on by. He looked troubled, and maybe it was because I hadn’t called him since this mission began.

“Bloody hell!”

I stopped to look at Flynn. His black shirt had a large splatter of bird droppings, more than the average pigeon could deliver. I spied Blue’s falcon perched on the ledge.

Flynn held up his arms as if they too were soiled. “Wait for me. I’ll be in the loo.” He jerked open the glass door to the shop and growled, “Bollocks!”

I stormed past the windows to my father. “What are you doing here?”

“Taking a walk.”

“One, you don’t exercise. Two, you sure as hell don’t hang out in the city.”

“Maybe I’m concerned about where my little girl has been.” His face was flushed and unusually sweaty, as if he’d been running.

I lowered my voice. “You can’t be here. Do you realize the danger you’re putting me in?”

He reached inside his pocket and pulled something out. “Put this on. Don’t ask questions.”

I accepted the onyx-looking pendant and gave him a quizzical stare.

“Hurry up before peabrain comes back.”

I quickly slipped it over my head. “What’s it for?”

Crush tapped his eye, hinting it was a camera.What the hell?Had Keystone put my father on assignment?

I’m going to kill them.

“So it’s five blocksthatway?” he said gruffly, pointing up the road. “Son of a bitch. That’s what I get for listening to a fucking tourist with a map.”