Home > Moment of Truth (The Potentate of Atlanta #5)(9)

Moment of Truth (The Potentate of Atlanta #5)(9)
Author: Hailey Edwards

“I can’t both be naked and have pants.”

Hadley paused to consider this, and he sprung again, closing the distance.

“How dare you use logic against me.” She twirled out of his grasp, threw the front door open, then darted into the private hall that led to the elevator. “Um.”

Midas caught up to her, naked and aroused, framed in the doorway while he took in the scene.

Bishop stood on the threshold of the elevator, a paper cup in hand, his eyes on the ceiling.

“This is not what it looks like,” she assured him. “We were just horsing around.”

“I don’t care what your kink is as long as you keep your stud in his stable.”

“Bishop.” Hadley gasp-laughed then snickered at Midas. “You’ve got to admit, that was funny.”

“Yet I stand here.” Midas resisted the overwhelming urge to cover himself. “Not laughing.”

Gwyllgi weren’t as comfortable with nudity as their warg ancestors, Midas less than most.

“We have eight drones left.” Handing over what he guessed was a café mocha to Hadley, Bishop averted his gaze once again. “The coven is shooting them out of the air when they can catch them.” He backed into the elevator, which had yet to close with him blocking the doors. “You two find a saddle, and giddyap. We’re waiting on you.”

To keep from laughing, Hadley rolled in her lips until they disappeared off her face, but her eyes danced.

Lunging toward her, Midas snapped his teeth, and she yelped with surprise that almost made him laugh.

As if he could hurt her. As if his inner beast would allow it. As if the man wouldn’t rather worship her.

Bishop looped an arm around her waist and hauled her back into the car with him.

Midas glared at them, careful to keep the amusement off his face, until the doors slid closed. Then he shook his head and padded into the apartment. He dressed, brushed his teeth, rubbed a palm over his bristly scalp, and called it done.

He checked his phone on his way down to the lobby and noticed one of the enforcers who kept tabs on Ares for him mentioned she had filed a request for information on Liz’s condition. Midas authorized him to pass along that she was well and safe. That was all the update they could afford to give her.

He also mentioned her being twitchier than usual, more agitated and aggressive toward the enforcers.

That was unlike Ares, the one he had known, but maybe her true colors were starting to shine through.

A text from his mother asked him to call after he woke, but first he wanted the full update from Bishop.

Downstairs, Midas found Hadley with Bishop, who had commandeered the enforcer’s on-site HQ.

Bishop sat at the keyboard, Hadley stood behind him, and Ford leaned against the wall to their right.

Six enforcers, all captains, lined the walls, their expressions somber. They viewed the live footage Bishop had pulled in from the OPA camera feeds with dark gleams in their eyes. They nodded to Midas when he entered the room but then went back to watching the screens.

“Sleeping Beauty,” Ford teased. “How will you ever land a proper princess without your golden locks?”

All of a sudden, Midas didn’t feel bad he missed out on helping his friend unload his cargo.

“The only way a proper princess is landing near him,” Hadley threatened, “is if I toss her out a window.”

“Dang, girl.” Ford whistled. “That’s cold.”

With a nod, she confirmed, “Ice water in my veins.”

“Iced tea in your veins would be better.” He rubbed his jaw. “What kind of vampire would it make me if I wanted a drink? A vampea? A teapire? How could you tell who was sweet or unsweet? Would it come down to types? Like A, B, AB, or O?”

“Stop looking at my mate like she’s a Capri Sun,” Midas warned, “and you’re searching for her straw.”

Ford huffed a laugh as Bishop cleared his throat to bring the room to order.

“What’ve you got?” Midas positioned himself behind Hadley so he could rest his hands on her shoulders and rub the knots tensing her posture. “That looks like the building next door.”

The screen showed a single coven member flat on their belly on a roof. The man gripped either side of a rectangular wooden frame and panned it back and forth while peering through its empty center. There was no reflection, so no glass, but the carved edges glittered with a spark of magic.

“There’s a man on each roof, forming a ring around the Faraday,” Bishop said absently. “Four in total.”

“All armed with those frames?” He leaned over Hadley’s shoulder. “Any idea what they do?”

There were only so many tactical uses for an enchanted looking glass, none of them good.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if it was an X-ray device,” Hadley quipped. “One that grants the ability to see through the building to who occupies each floor.”

“Can they do that?” Midas studied the picture harder. “It’s possible?”

“Science fiction says yes.” Her lips quirked to one side. “Science fact, I’m not sure.”

Whatever was in their hands had nothing to do with science, but her jokes made him smile.

On the inside.

Where she couldn’t always see it.

Otherwise, his life would become a one-woman standup routine.

“There’s someone I can ask.” Bishop rolled his chair away from the desk. “I need to make a call.”

“Vasco?” A hard line formed across Hadley’s brow. “Again? So soon?”

“Who?” Bishop thought on it. “Oh. Yeah. Him.”

Hadley once knew the fae’s true name, but she had given it back to him, traded it for the sight.

All fae guarded their true names with their lives, but most held on to their chosen names for decades at a time. That Bishop had forgotten the most recent nom de plume told Midas that Vasco changed his identity with a frequency that left Bishop ignoring the whole production in favor of using his true name to summon him.

“Let me try Linus first.” Hadley rested her hand on his arm. “He might know or have a best guess.”

Tension spiked through Bishop’s shoulders. They both understood what it cost her to make the offer.

“Are you sure you want that?” Bishop searched her face. “You hate leaning on the boss.”

“Linus won’t charge me for answers.” She smiled for him. “He gives his knowledge freely, without cost.”

Except for the ding to her pride.

“Okay, kid.” Bishop pinched her cheek. “Go make your call.”

The phone wilted in Bishop’s hand, and Midas got the distinct impression he was disappointed not to have a reason to call Vasco. Their interactions might cost him, but he seemed more than happy to pay.

Over and over again, Bishop had turned to Vasco, and Vasco was always willing.

Soon Bishop would have to admit he was a gambling addict, as all fae bargains carried a measure of danger, or that he was in love.

Midas watched Hadley exit into the lobby, where there were fewer ears to overhear her conversation.

“That’s a good one, right there.” Bishop’s voice softened. “She loves so hard one day it might break her.”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)