"O'Neal, be careful!" Beth said, as if she'd read his mind.
The cop pressed his gun muzzle into Wrath's neck. "So how about a name?"
"Are you arresting me?"
"Yeah. I am."
"For what?"
"Let me think. Trespassing. Concealed weapons. Do you have a permit for that handgun? I'm betting no. Oh, and thanks to all these throwing stars, I'm thinking murder, too. Yeah, that should do it."
"Murder?" Beth whispered.
"Your name?" the cop demanded, glaring up at him.
Wrath smiled tightly. "You must be clairvoyant."
"'Scuse me?"
"About the murder charge." Wrath laughed softly and dropped his voice. "You ever been inside a body bag, Officer?"
Rage, pure and vibrant, came out of the man's pores. "Don't threaten me."
"I'm not."
The left hook came through the air fast as a baseball, and Wrath did nothing to avoid it. The cop's meaty fist caught the side of his jaw and kicked his head back. A sunburst of pain exploded in his face.
"Butch! Stop it!"
Beth ran forward, as if she intended to put herself between them, but the cop held her off, strong-arming her.
"Jesus, you're a pain in the ass! You want to get hurt?" the human said, pushing her away.
Wrath spat out blood. "He's right. Go inside."
'Cause this was going to get ugly.
Thanks to catching a blurry eyeful of that makeout session, he didn't like the cop to begin with. But if the guy addressed Beth one more time in that tone of voice, Wrath was going to show the man's front teeth the joy of liberation. And then he was going to kill the son of a bitch.
"Go on, Beth," he said.
"Shut up!" the cop yelled at him.
"You going to hit me again if I don't?"
The cop crawled up into his face. "No, I'm going to shoot you."
"Fine with me. I like bullet wounds." Wrath lowered his voice. "Just not in front of her."
"Fuck you."
But the cop covered the weapons and cash by throwing his coat over them. Then he grabbed Wrath's arm and started walking.
Beth felt as though she were going to be sick as Butch led Wrath away.
Aggression was flowing between the men like battery acid, and even though Wrath was handcuffed and being held at gunpoint, she wasn't exactly sure Butch was safe. She had a feeling that Wrath was letting himself get taken into custody.
But Butch must know that, she thought. Otherwise he would have holstered his weapon instead of having its muzzle pressed up against that temple.
She knew Butch was tough on criminals, but was he crazy enough to kill one?
Going by the deadly expression on his face, she had to think that was a big yes. And he might just get away with it. Violent ends came to those who lived hard lives, and Wrath was clearly not a white-collar law abider. If he turned up with a bullet in his head in some back alley, or floating facedown in the river, who would be surprised?
Giving in to a shrill instinct, she ran around the side of the building.
Butch was marching toward his car as if he were carrying an unstable load, and she rushed to catch up with them.
"Wait. I need to ask him a question."
"You want to know his shoe size or something?" Butch snapped.
"Fourteen," Wrath drawled.
"I'll remember that at Christmas, ass**le."
Beth leaped in front of them so both men had to stop or run her over. She stared up into Wrath's face. "Why did you come to find me?"
She could have sworn that his gaze softened behind his sunglasses. "I don't want it to come out like this."
Butch shoved her away with a heavy hand. "I have an idea. Why don't you let me do my job?"
"Don't touch her," Wrath snarled.
"Yeah, I'm going to listen to you." Butch yanked the other man forward.
When they got to the car, Butch wrenched open the rear door and pushed Wrath's towering weight down.
"Who are you!" she yelled.
Wrath looked at her, his body becoming perfectly still in spite of the fact that Butch was all over him.
"Your father sent me," he said distinctly. And then he got into the backseat.
Beth stopped breathing.
She was dimly aware of Butch slamming the door and running around to the driver's side.
"Wait!" she called out.
But the car was already in gear, tires leaving strips of rubber on the asphalt.
Chapter Fifteen
Butch picked up his handset and asked Dispatch to get someone over to the courtyard immediately to pick up the weapons and cash that were under his coat. As he drove, he kept one eye on the road and the other in the rearview mirror. The suspect stared back, a slight smile on his evil-looking face.
Jesus, the guy was huge. He took up most of the backseat, his head bent at an angle so it didn't smack the roof as they sped over potholes.
Butch couldn't wait to get him out of the damn car.
Less than five minutes later, he pulled off Trade Street and into the parking lot of the station, driving up as close to the back entrance as possible. He got out and opened the rear door.
"Let's play nice, shall we?" he said as he grabbed the guy's arm.
The man rose to his feet. Butch gave him a yank.
But the suspect stepped backward, away from the station.
"Wrong way." Butch threw his anchor out, digging his heels into the pavement and pulling hard.
The suspect was inexorable. He just kept backing up, dragging Butch along with him.
"You think I won't shoot you?" Butch demanded as he reached for his gun.
And then it was all over.
Butch had never seen anyone move that fast. One second the guy had his arms behind his back; the next, the handcuffs were on the ground.
And with total economy of movement, Butch was disarmed, put in a blistering choke hold, and hauled into the shadows.
The darkness swallowed them. As Butch fought back, he realized he was in the thin alley between the station and the office building next door. It was only about five feet wide, but some sixty feet long. And it was unlit. With no windows.
When Butch was spun around and slammed into the bricks, what little breath he'd been able to steal got kicked out of his lungs in a rush. Inconceivably, he was lifted off the ground, the man holding him by the neck with only one hand.
"You should have stayed out of it, Officer," the man said in a deep, accented growl. "You should have gone along on your way and let her come to me."
Butch clawed at the iron hold. The massive hand locked around his throat was squeezing the life right out of him. He gagged, desperate for air. His vision went checkerboard, consciousness slipping out of his grasp.
He knew without a doubt that there'd be no walking away from this one. He was going to be carried out of the alley inside of a bag. Just like the man had promised.
A minute later he stopped resisting altogether, his arms dropping and hanging loose. He wanted to fight. He had the will to fight. But no longer the strength.
And as for death? He was okay with it. He was going to die in the line of duty, albeit like an idiot, because he hadn't asked for backup. Still, it was better and quicker than ending up in a hospital bed with some nasty, slow growing disease. And more honorable than shooting himself. Which was something Butch had contemplated once or twice before.
With his last lick of life, he forced his eyes to focus on the man's face. The expression staring back at him was one of total control.
The guy's done this before, Butch thought. And he's very comfortable with murder.
God, Beth.
What the hell would a man like this do to Beth?
Wrath felt the cop's body go limp. He was still alive, but barely.
The human's total lack of fear was remarkable. The cop had been pissed to get jumped, and he'd fought back admirably, but he'd never been scared. And now that the Fade was upon him, he was resigned to his death. Maybe almost relieved by it.
Damn. Wrath could imagine feeling the same way.
And it was a shame to kill someone who was able to die as a warrior would. Without fear or hesitation. Such males were few and far between, be they vampires or humans.
The cop's mouth started moving. He was trying to speak. Wrath leaned down.
"Don't... hurt... her."
Wrath found himself answering, "I'm here to save her."
"No!" A voice rang out down the alley.
Wrath turned his head. Beth was running toward them.
"Let him go!"
He loosened his grip on the cop's throat. He wasn't going to kill the guy in front of her. He needed her to trust him more than he wanted to help the cop meet his maker.