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I put the long sword back into its slot on the wall, then turned to face him.

"No," I replied. "I wasn't there to play poker. I was there to kill Elliot Slater. "

Chapter Nineteen

Owen Grayson stared at me. He tensed at my blunt words, and emotions flashed in his amethyst eyes. Wariness. Curiosity. Caution. But surprisingly, no fear. And no condemnation.

Seconds ticked by as he looked at me. Ten, twenty, thirty, forty-five. . .

"I could use a drink," he finally said. "How about you?"

I nodded. "Sure. "

Owen walked across the room and opened a tall wooden cabinet, revealing a variety of expensive, colorful liquor bottles tucked away inside. "What do you want?"

"Gin. On the rocks. With a twist of lime too, if you've got it. "

Owen fixed my drink and poured himself a healthy amount of scotch. I watched him while he worked, but his hands didn't tremble or shake the way most folks' would have when they realized they were alone with someone who'd just announced her murderous intentions. But Owen Grayson seemed as calm as ever.

I could have lied, of course. Could have told him some fairy tale about carrying the knives for protection or other such nonsense. But Owen had heard what I'd said to Finn, Roslyn, and Xavier, and he'd seen the vamp's confrontation with Elliot Slater. Owen hadn't become one of the richest businessmen in Ashland by being stupid.

If I hadn't told him, he would have put two and two together and come up with five on his own. At least this way, I could judge his reaction to my dark intentions-and decide what I was going to do with him. Because fuck potential or not, if I thought Owen Grayson was any kind of threat to me, Finn, or the Deveraux sisters, I'd pluck one of his own weapons off the wall and gut him with it.

Owen handed me the drink and held out his own glass. "To new friendships," he murmured.

An odd thing to say, given my revelation, but I clinked my glass against his and took a sip of the gin. It went down cold, then spread a sweet heat through my stomach. It still tasted bitter, though. Or perhaps that was just because of my own sour mood-and the fact that I was about to drive away another man by confessing my deepest, darkest secret to him. Might as well get on with it.

I threw back the rest of my gin, set the empty glass on the desk, and walked around to the other side. The bitter taste filled my mouth and spread down my throat. "I've got a long night ahead of me, dealing with Roslyn, Xavier, and everything else. So go ahead and ask me whatever you want to ask me. "

"Fair enough. " Owen drained the rest of his scotch and put down his own glass.

We stood there, staring at each other across the desk, him behind it, me in front of it. The steady tick-tick-tick of an elaborate iron clock on the wall filled the silence.

"So you were there to kill Elliot Slater," Owen finally said. "I suppose I don't have to ask why, given Roslyn Phillips's reaction to him. "

I shrugged. "That's one of the reasons. But don't think I'm doing it purely out of the goodness of my heart. I've had some problems with the giant myself. Figured I'd do myself and Roslyn a favor at the same time. "

Owen's lips flattened into a thin smile. "So you're a practical sort then. "

"Always. " I drew in a breath. "Assassins have to be. "

Silence.

To his credit, Owen didn't flinch or grimace or even look away. He just kept staring at me, his violet eyes sharp and shrewd in his cold face.

"Assassin, eh? I thought as much, given the knives," he said. "That much silverstone is hard to come by, especially when it's that well crafted. "

"You're only as good as your tools. "

He nodded. "Of course. "

More silence.

"So do you have a name, Gin?" Owen asked, crossing his arms over his chest. "What do people call you?"

"Ah, you want to know if you've heard of me. "

Assassins went by code names, for a variety of reasons. The good ones, anyway. You weren't much of an assassin if you let yourself get caught after the fact. Something that would happen sooner, rather than later, unless you adopted some sort of anonymous moniker. A code name made things so much easier. Booking jobs, getting paid, keeping the po-po in the dark, living long enough to spend the money afterward.

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