“Yes.” She glanced over at him. “We’ll be at the airport in ten minutes. You call Savi, fill her in. It’ll be somewhere isolated. Probably a house, rented or leased in the past six months.” The date Katherine had bought her plane ticket to New York. “Have her cross-reference names with the campground registrations and the real estate agent who was selling the brownstone in Brooklyn.”
“She won’t find anything.”
“No,” Maggie agreed. “But it’s better than doing nothing.”
He nodded, and she listened to the one-sided conversation with her mind hundreds of miles south. You can stop me, Brunhilda. But she couldn’t anticipate James, because she couldn’t see why he was doing this.
She lowered her window to let the wind rush past her face and finish waking her up. Even this early, the August air was warm. From the cargo area, Sir Pup whined. She rolled the rear window down, and a moment later one of his heads was blocking the view in her side mirror. His tongue and ears flapped like wet flags.
His eyes were also glowing crimson, but there wasn’t enough traffic to worry about his being seen.
“Demon,” Blake said quietly. “I’ll ring you again in a moment, Savi.”
Startled, Maggie glanced over at him. Was he worried about the red eyes? But she didn’t think he’d been looking at Sir Pup.
“She’s awake, in a bedroom, and there’s a man sitting in the corner who looks like Gavin.”
His sister’s ex. But it couldn’t be him; Maggie knew Ames-Beaumont had put men on Gavin’s tail the moment Katherine had disappeared.
And a demon could shape-shift to resemble anyone.
“Oh, she’s right pissed. Her hands are waving around in that way she has. He’s attempting to calm her. Good luck with that, you bastard.” A moment passed. “And there he goes, out the door. He’s locked it. Come on, Kate, give me something I can work with.”
Maggie’s phone beeped. Seeing that it was Savi, she simply engaged the speakerphone.
“There she goes to the window,” Blake said. “She’s upstairs. It’s dark outside, but there’s a light… a lighthouse, I think it is. It must be to the north of her. The water’s on the right.”
Faintly, she heard the clacking of Savi’s keyboard. Already narrowing the search.
“The house is white. There’s a dock, and a boathouse. A good-sized sailboat tied up.”
That meant money, Maggie thought. But with a demon involved, that wasn’t a surprise. “Do you see a name on it?”
“No. She’s searching through the room now. The drawers are empty. No phone. No television. No periodicals.”
“Nothing that gives away their location.” Savi stopped typing. “Do you think they know what Geoff can do?”
“If they did, they’d have blindfolded her.” Maggie took the airport exit. “They probably just don’t want her to feel comfortable, so that leaving the room will be a reward-”
Blake gave a short laugh. “Clever girl, Kate. She’s turned over a lamp on the nightstand. On the base, there’s a label: ‘Laura’s Antiques and Design, Hilton Head, South Carolina.’”
“Which is… ” There was a moment of furious clacking. “Right on the water. It’s an island.”
“And a tourist trap,” Maggie said. “Probably not isolated enough.”
“True. I’ll concentrate fifty miles up and down the coast. I’ll also find pictures of local lighthouses for you to look at, Geoff. Once the sun rises, maybe Katherine will be able to see enough that you’ll recognize one. And I’ll have the pilot file a new flight plan that will take you closer to Hilton Head than Charleston is. And, Maggie-I’m monitoring your e-mail, so that if James tries to contact you again, I can get you a location ASAP.”
“Thank you, Miss Murray.”
“Oh my god, I wish you’d stop calling me that. Does she do that to you, Geoff?”
He aimed a grin at Maggie. “Yes, Aunt Savi.”
“And that is a million times worse. You’re six years older than I am.” The vampire sighed. “Okay, I can’t put this off anymore. I’m on my way to tell Colin that a demon has Katherine. And that the demon probably knows what she can do.”
“In other words,” Blake said, “we shouldn’t be surprised if, by the time the sun sets tonight, you and Uncle Colin have arrived in Hilton Head.”
“Yeah, that about covers it,” Savi said. “Be safe until then.”
Silence fell between them after she’d disconnected, until Maggie said, “How much do you want to bet she chartered a plane within a minute of you first saying ‘demon’?”
His agreeing laugh faded too quickly, and he scrubbed his hands over his face. “Katherine hasn’t found anything else. Nothing to write with, either. She’s sitting, waiting.”
Maggie nodded. Unfortunately, that was what she and Blake would be doing, too.
Chapter Six
“Why did he choose ‘Winters,’ Mr. Blake?”
Maggie’s gaze was focused on the lighthouse filling the laptop screen in front of her, but Geoff immediately felt the shift of her mood. Her eyes had been in hyperactive mode from the time they’d arrived at the airport, so that Geoff’s reliance on Sir Pup’s guide harness was, once again, not completely faked.
And she hadn’t let up on the drive to Hilton Head, or after they’d entered the open-air café where they’d decided to have breakfast and look through the lighthouse photos Savi had compiled.
After Geoff mentioned his difficulty using her eyes, Maggie had made an effort to let her gaze rest on each photo. But she’d still managed to give a once-over to every customer, almost every pedestrian on the sidewalk, and many of the drivers passing by in their cars.
As she asked about the nickname, however, Maggie became too focused. Though Geoff had heard the hostess seating at least two newcomers, Maggie’s gaze hadn’t yet darted to them-which told Geoff that the answer was as important to her as their security.
And he wasn’t above using that knowledge to his own ends. “I’ll tell you, but only if there’s no more of this ‘Mr. Blake.’”
Her gaze lifted to his face. Christ, he hadn’t intended for his expression to appear that tense, that dark. ‘Mr. Blake’ didn’t anger him. It just… frustrated him.
“All right. Just Blake.”
No “mister,” and so no longer something she’d use with a superior, or an employer. He watched the line between his eyebrows vanish, saw how he eased back in his chair. Watched through her eyes.
And so Maggie knew, too, how much that had mattered to him. He began to push his hand through his hair, then realized how relieved the gesture seemed-as if he’d just fought a battle and won.
He was in the process of becoming completely wrecked by this woman. And seeing himself like this wasn’t helping his confidence.
He searched for someone who was looking at her, instead. He found one, two tables away, who was either staring blankly into space or fascinated by the platinum of Maggie’s hair in the bright sun. The focus wasn’t on her face, but Geoff could see her profile well enough to know her expression wasn’t giving much away.
And that she had a beautiful, incredible mouth.
With both hands, she brought her coffee cup to her lips. From any other angle, the ceramic rim would have hidden her smile, and he couldn’t hear it in her voice when she prompted, “Winters?”
“Winters,” Geoff said, “was the name of my uncle’s valet. His first valet, his second, his third, and his fourth.”
The corners of her mouth tightened. “I see.”
No, she likely didn’t. Not yet. She assumed that Colin, the son of a wealthy British earl, had lazily taken to calling all of his valets “Winters” so that he wouldn’t have to remember their names.
“They all were of the Winters family. Sons and grandsons. One a nephew. But it was the first who was in my uncle’s employ when he became a vampire. Whenever he traveled away from Beaumont Court, he took Winters. And it was the first Winters who was with him when he was cursed.”