"Like hell. Sisters first."
He shoved me forward. I staggered a few steps, caught my balance, then ran like hell back through the machine room, heading for the loading bay and the half-open door. Hoping, of course, that it wasn't now closed. Although the lasers would soon take care of that.
Rhoan grabbed my arm, his grip tight, bruising. "Faster."
We pounded through the shadows, ducking and weaving as the remaining guards came at us, shoving them out of the way more than fighting them.
We reached the steps and pounded up them. I thrust open the door and ran inside. We'd gained precious seconds on our pursuers. Part of me wondered if it was going to be enough, simply because we had no idea what waited in the loading bay. I certainly didn't trust the silence coming from that room, that was for sure.
"Push the shelving unit down," Rhoan said, pointing to the unit on the left while he headed right.
I moved quickly to one side and shoved it with all my might. The unit made an odd sort of groan then slowly began to topple. Machinery bits and tools scattered, clanging across the floor and making enough noise to raise the dead. Or another alarm. Though I guess that was a pretty pointless worry when they were obviously more than a little aware of the fact they had uninvited guests.
Rhoan shoved a heavy-looking desk in front of the shelves. "That'll hold them for a few seconds."
I restrained the impulse to point out we'd actually wasted seconds creating the block, and just headed for the other door. There was still no sound coming from the loading bay, but awareness tingled across my skin as I gripped the door handle.
I glanced at my brother, saw him nod, then thrust the door open. Rhoan flowed through it, a shadow rilled with deadly intent. The man on the other side didn't have a chance.
I leapt over his body and followed my brother's fleeing form, my gaze on that bright patch of sunshine and the freedom it represented.
From the corner of my eye I caught the hint of movement. I risked a glance and saw the man with the gun.
"He's armed," I yelled, reaching for my own weapon.
But I was too slow. Far too slow.
Something hit my shoulder and spun me around. Somehow, I retained my balance and kept running. That batch of sunshine was close, so close.
Ahead, Rhoan stumbled, his fingers brushing the concrete as he balanced and went on. Something silver glittered in his shoulder. Fear hit me. I reached back, feeling my own shoulder. Felt something small and metallic sticking out from it. I pulled it free.
A dart.
He'd goddamn darted us.
Oh, fuck...
It was my last conscious thought as the concrete rushed up to meet me. s another three hours before the doctor managed to drag his overworked butt into my room. After a quick check - during which he marveled over the pink scar on my leg and healing capacity of werewolves in general - he declared me fit enough to go home. To say I limped out of there in record time would be the understatement of the year.
Once in the car, I rang Kellen to let him know I was out. He invited me to lunch the next day, and I accepted happily. No matter what he might have said, he still wanted to be with me. Right now, that was all that mattered.
When Rhoan and I got home, I had a shower and something decent to eat. With body and belly happy, I went into Rhoan's room, grabbed his laptop, then hobbled over to the sofa.
Rhoan plopped a coffee on the table next to my feet, the heat of the cup warming the side of my foot even though it wasn't actually touching, then sat down on the sofa opposite.
"What are you looking for?"
"I asked the cow to do a full background search on Jorn and Yohan Duerr, the owners of Mirror Image."
"Do you think the man you smelled at the club was Jorn or Yohan in disguise?"
"Possibly. And if he was also the man Adrienne ran into at the club, then it would certainly explain her rushing off to the island."
He frowned. "How?"
"Apparently she has a psychic gift that allows her to see images of the past or future when she touches people."
"Oh, that would not be a fun one to have."