I brushed my thumb along her jaw, tilting her face up to mine. “Your dad loves you, Penny. Very much. But it’s best that we’re on the other side of the country. The detective is working hard to arrest the man who hurt Lana, and until he does, we will be safest, far away from there.”* * *I jolted upright to the alarm blaring through the house. I tossed off the covers, on my feet in a flash. I darted out my door, through the living area of the suite, and into my children’s room.
Relief blasted through me when I found Greyson hadn’t even budged. Penny rolled over on a long moan, lost to a deep, deep sleep.
The door to the suite blew open. Lyrik stood there, black hair wild, expression raging. “Are they okay?”
“Yes.” I tried to keep the tremor from the words. “They’re safe.”
He gave a tight nod before he was flying back out. He raced the rest of the way down the hall and out the same door Leif had found me through earlier in the night.
Warily, I followed him.
Trepidation in every step.
Fear in every heartbeat.
A thunderous pound, pound, pound that blasted through my being. I thought it had to be louder than the alarms that blared through the house.
I slipped along the floor-to-ceiling windows that ran the hall and the big playroom. Through them, I watched as Lyrik darted out into the yard.
His head whipped from one direction to the other.
Every inch of his posture on guard.
The protector.
My eyes scanned, and I heaved out a breath when I saw a second man bolting across the yard.
Leif.
His posture was entirely different than my brother’s.
An avenger.
A dark destroyer.
A demon that seethed in the night.
An aura of chaos swirled around him as he sprinted along the pool and headed toward the back of the lot.
Lyrik got in line behind him.
My pulse skidded and shook, fear taking me hostage as I watched the scene play out through the windows as if I were watching a movie playing out on the screen.
Leif scaled the wall. So fast it seemed inhuman.
A creature that had come to life.
Born of carnage.
Or maybe that was just what he threatened to bring.
He disappeared over the top, and Lyrik jogged right, following the back of the wall before he was climbing over it at the farthest end.
As if the two of them were boxing in their prey.
And I wondered who it was that was hunting who.
Warily, I eased out of the door.
The night was at its thickest.
Darkest.
Held just before the break of dawn.
Humid air scraped my flesh, and shivers rolled as I listened to the distant shouts.
All of them were familiar voices.
Lyrik.
Leif.
Lyrik again.
My gaze moved to the balcony that overhung the third floor of the main house. Tamar stood at the railing, clinging to it as she stared down.
Black hair whipped around her face that was held in morbid fear.
Our eyes met, and my mouth moved in whispered silence, “I’m sorry.”
Her head shook.
No.
We were in this together.
Family.
But I was sure she and Lyrik had already endured enough pain.
I hugged myself over my middle like I could gather back up the pieces that I could feel finally slipping away.
I’d tried.
Tried so hard to pretend.
Tried to pretend that I wasn’t going to crumble.
Tried to pretend it was all going to be okay.
That we were going to make it through this unscathed.
This was only a vacation, right?
What a joke.
Even my eleven-year-old child could see right through it.
Because there was no way to believe the lies you kept telling yourself when you had nothing left to support it.
Foundation cracked.
After what seemed like an eternity, the back gate buzzed and Lyrik came storming back through.
Agitation fizzed across the surface of his skin.
Immediately, his attention landed on me, tone gruff, “It was nothing. Probably a fuckin’ cat set off the sensors or something.”
The words left him like spite. Like he wanted to be sick for letting go of the greatest deception.
My lips trembled. “Are you sure?”
I didn’t even know why I was asking it because I could feel the sick reality racing to catch up to me. Seeping in from under the fortified walls, clawing its way over the bricks.
His head shook, black hair whipping up a disorder. Frustrated, he brushed it out of his eyes. “We didn’t find anything, Mia. It was a false alarm. Go back to bed. You should get some sleep.”
With the way his eyes darted around the yard, I knew that wasn’t going to be an option for him. He didn’t come close to believing a thing that he was telling me.
“Is there footage?” I asked instead of agreeing.
“We’ll see if anything was captured. But there’s no one out there. There is no danger.”
His words were hard. Angry. I wondered if he was trying to convince himself.
“Okay,” I conceded, my hand curling in the neckline of the tank of my pajamas.