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I had just taken a bite of my burger when Menolly handed the phone to me. I stared at it, hoping it wasn’t Chase. Menolly shook the receiver at me, and I finally wiped my hands on my jeans and took the damned thing.

“Yeah?” Not too friendly, but it might be Chase, and I wasn’t ready to play nice-nice. But I shouldn’t have worried; it was Zach.

“I’m in town, and thought I’d see if you were up for a movie.” His pleasantly growly voice was thick and rich as usual, and my body responded to the deep baritone.

I sucked in a deep breath. “No can do. Not tonight. Say, how would you like to take a trip with us? We can use all the help we can get.”

A pause, then a low sigh. “Spirit seal or demon or both?”

“Spirit seal. Demons aren’t quite onto this one yet, and we’d like to keep it that way. You feel like taking a road trip out toward Snoqualmie?”

He laughed. “Delilah, by now you should know that if you’re involved, I’m up for anything. I’m about twenty minutes from your house. I’ll be there as soon as I can. Don’t start without me.”

As I handed the receiver back to Menolly, I felt a smug sense of satisfaction. Zachary wasn’t scared to help us. Zach wouldn’t let us down. I told the others we’d have another pair of hands on board.

“Good,” Camille said, licking the ketchup off her fingers and reaching for a napkin. “Iris, if we have any cookies, now would be the time to spring them. I always crave sugar when we’re on a job.”

Job . . . I blinked. “You know, I never thought of it before, but you’re right. That’s what all this has become, hasn’t it? More so than the bookstore, than my supposed PI business . . . more than the Wayfarer Bar & Grill. Your mission, D’Artigo sisters, should you choose to accept it: Hunt down and procure the magical spirit seals before the demons get to them. If you should fail or be caught, Earth and Otherworld will suffer a horrible fate . . . ”

Menolly snorted. “Not quite as poetic as Jim Phelps, but hey, it works in a pinch. Look at it this way, Kitten. At least we’re not stuck behind a desk. Now, that would be hell.”

Good to his word, Zach arrived fifteen minutes later as we finished tracing out the route. I opened the door to find him standing there, looking all tidy and polished. Zach was tall. Even taller than Smoky, by an inch. At six five, he towered over my six foot one. His blond hair was cut into a collar-skimming shag, and he sported a perpetual five o’clock shadow.

Lean and muscled, Zachary was one of the golden boys: good-looking, rugged, all-American. Except for the fact that he was a werepuma on the Council of Elders for the Rainier Puma Pride.

I leaned toward him, inhaling his mingled scents of leather and dusty sunlight. We’d slept together once, and though I had sworn it wouldn’t happen again, now I found myself considering him from a whole new angle.

He seemed to sense something was up, because he leaned down and softly kissed me on the forehead. My knees quivered. His lips found their way to my lips. My pulse revved like an engine on steroids. He brought his hand up to my hair and gently pushed it away from my face.

“What’s going on?” he said. “Is it over between you and Chase?”

We were ready to go. We had work to do. Not the right time for a long, insightful talk.

“I don’t know,” I said. “Right now, help us retrieve the fourth seal. Then, if you don’t mind a late-night dinner, we can talk.” I knew I was inviting Zachary to play more than tea party, and I knew that he knew it. It was my choice. Chase had chastised me for doing the exact same thing he’d succumbed to. Double standards weren’t on my menu, and if he now felt free to play without permission, I’d take my cue from him.

He stroked my cheek. “Whatever you desire.”

As he pulled back, Camille slipped by, smiling brightly when she saw him. “Good to see you, Zach. Glad to hear you’re joining us. We can use all the help we can get.”

We clattered down the steps and converged on Morio’s SUV. Menolly shoved Zach toward the back door. “Get in, puma boy. Fight now. Talk later. You, too, Kitten.”

With a last look at the house, where Iris stood holding Maggie in her arms, I scooted into the backseat next to Zachary, shivering as the warm, musky bulk of his thigh pressed against mine. Oh yeah, it was going to be one hell of a night.

CHAPTER 14

We’d made the drive out toward Snoqualmie before, to a battle involving some butt-ugly werespiders and an ancient shaman who put the E in evil. This time I prayed we wouldn’t be facing anything quite so gruesome. After all, spirits and ghosts couldn’t be as frightening as werespiders, could they?

Then I remembered the revenant and what it was capable of. I shrank back in the seat, wondering if there was any chance in hell we’d catch a break and get through this without a fight.

At least the night wasn’t as cold as it had been in December. And we knew we were on the tail of a spirit seal. That alone cheered me up. If we could find the rest of the seals before the demons did, maybe we could put a stop to Shadow Wing’s plans. Relieved to see my optimism wasn’t dead after all, I leaned back and closed my eyes, enjoying the feel of the car as it purred along the miles.

Thirty miles east of Seattle, Snoqualmie was nestled in the foothills of the Cascades, towering mountains of fire and ash. The Cascades were the home of Mount Rainier, a majestic volcano who was merely biding her time until she blew again. Her sister, Mount St. Helens, had lost her peak back in 1980 with a thunderous explosion that killed nearly sixty people. When Rainier went, if she blew big, so would a huge swath of the population who lived right in her path. The land around the Pacific Northwest was alive, all right. Alive and churning beneath the layers of rock and soil and forest.

Snoqualmie’s main claim to fame, other than a mountain pass by the same name and a ski resort, was that the city had played host to the filming of Twin Peaks, an odd show I’d watched on reruns a few times and found disconcertingly spooky. Considering what we faced on an almost daily basis, I couldn’t explain what about the show creeped me out so much, but it was a good scare, unlike the kind in which we always seemed to get entangled.

We had to pass through the Eastside in order to get to Snoqualmie. A conglomeration of cities—Redmond, Bellevue, Woodinville, Kirkland, Issaquah—each had their unique charm. The Eastside was the heart of high-tech in the Northwest, with software companies dominating the area, led by Microsoft. And the area itself was developing at a rapid rate. Bellevue’s skyscrapers were giving Seattle’s tall towers a run for their money. As we drove through the glittering wash of lights and concrete, I held my breath, thinking how different this was from my home.

And yet . . . and yet . . . Otherworld had its own brilliance and towering palaces and marbled buildings that we seldom saw over Earthside. And the magical lights of the eye-catchers glittered as brilliantly, though not quite so neon, as the scattered lights within the glass-and-steel buildings. Just replace the hum of electric wires and cell phone towers with the buzz of magical energy, and the two realms weren’t so different after all.

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