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There
were many things in this world that Pax guarded with a tenacity all
his own. One was the sanctity of his convictions centered around what
he saw as corrupt and vile within the world. The second was his undeniable
love for a thick, Angus hamburger. And rounding off the top three was
his devotion to certain man and his laughable dream—a mission not
even the devils of the night could rip from him. Pax was more than happy
to join the fight at his side. But now that very fire within Alex smoldered
into pathetic embers, all because of one brainless girl.
In the back seat,
Pax listened in on Alex’s phone call, while Jonathan steered the van
away from the manor. Like any seasoned traveler, Pax knew how to pack
light. Jonathan and Alex, however, carried six suitcases between them,
most of the items based on “what if” scenarios. What if they had
engine trouble out in the field? Jonathan knew the pain of grease on
clothing all too well. Or what if they were splatter with the blood
of some stray vampire or werewolf? Again, Jonathan detested thought
of any stains on his clothes. Or what if the SEVEN headquarters in London
called for a last minute meeting? Armani be damned if Alex entered the
room in department-casual. Pax rolled his eyes at the possible excuses.
After an hour on
the winding roads, the small airport came into view. Though Pax believed
it would’ve been faster to take the helicopter, Alex’s word was
final.



Pax
walked past the door to Evonne’s room, carrying one of Alex’s bags.
The planned trip to England came as a shock to Jonathan, who tried many
fruitless times to talk his boss out of it. His main point of argument,
as valid as it was, rested in their lack of evidence, a theory with
nothing concrete to back it up. Alex agreed, but added, “If he is
so desperate to hide, then he will be there.”
On the
other hand, Pax didn’t second guess Alex’s decision. He knew there
would be nothing to say that could change his stubborn mind once an
idea had taken root. But if they happened to find them, then Pax’s
next stop would a convenience store to buy lottery tickets.
Pax
entered Evonne’s room and sat the bag on the bed. The bedroom hadn’t
been touched since that night. He didn’t know what he hoped to find,
but if there was anything he could use against her: a journal, a picture,
or even a stuffed animal, anything he could use to gain a foothold,
then he was willing to use it. The girl wasn’t thinking straight when
she left, so if he could find a small pebble to crack through that shell
of hers, then Alex’s task of bringing her back would seem a less daunting.
The plan was weak at best. But it would be a piece in Pax’s arsenal.
Looking
through the dresser drawers and closet, Pax saw the proof of her planned
escape. The missing clothes and duffle bag shown that she went willingly.
But the largest piece of evidence was visible on the security footage.
Gabriel was in and out of the house in less than five minutes, most
of that time spent confronting Alex as he tried to leave. There was
no way she could have packed the bag in the allotted time. But how did
she know?
Pax
sat down at the desk and turned on the computer. As the machine loaded,
he glanced through each drawer and thumbed through every scrap of paper,
looking anything of interest. The girl had nothing. It was sad, actually.
Most teens and young adults had photos of friends or even a scrapbook
filled with useless memorabilia. But this room had nothing of the sort.
The
computer’s monitor displayed an image of a dragon battling a knight,
followed by a slew of icons. Evonne’s room may have been kept organized
but her computer was a mess. Pax began a quick search of the internet’s
history, half hoping to find an online journal or any email accounts
still logged in. He was wishing now that Alex had listened to him and
installed the spyware. But the foolish man saw it as an invasion of
her privacy, one of the few things he never compromised on.
Pax
clicked on a list of the computer’s programs. Though there were a
few pirated items, nothing stood out. He clicked back to the desktop
and noticed one odd icon. The shortcut’s image was a yellow smiley
face wearing sunglasses with the words “Say Cheese” underneath.
He double clicked the icon.
A familiar
loading screen greeted him.
“Son-ova-bitch!”
Pax
tore himself from the chair and hurried down the hall to Alex’s personal
study. He found Alex in the adjoining bedroom, packing his last bag.
“Sir,”
he began, remaining in the study’s doorway. He tried not to stumble
over his words. “We may have another serious problem on our hands.”
Alex
continued packing as he replied, “What is it?”
“I
was looking around on Evonne’s computer and found a copy of the Watchtower
client.”
Alex
looked up, understanding the seriousness in his voice. He left his bedroom
and entered the study, his focus on the portrait. Glancing behind it
he found the flash drive missing. Alex then headed for Evonne’s bedroom
with Pax following. He sat down at the desk and looked at the prompt
screen. He typed in the entry codes used by his computer. The program
came online.
“Your
computer is off, right?”
Alex
answered as he looked through the client’s recent searches. “I turned
it off this morning.”
“Good,”
he said, leaning over Alex’s shoulder, “cause I don’t want to
hear Maurice go on about false alarms and junk.”
Typing
in a few commands, a list of searches appeared on the screen.
“How
did she know about this?” asked Alex, seeing a few familiar names.
“My
guess is David. I told you the boy went native.” Standing straight,
Pax crossed his arms. “This could explain the reports of the abandoned
havens.”
“I’ll
inform SEVEN to add more security to the database. That’s all I can
do for now.”
“Two
times. Two times we’ve had a breach in security involving Watchtower.
We need to redo the system.”
Alex
rubbed the tension away from his face. “We can worry about it later.”
He exited the program and stood up to leave the room. Nearing the door
he stopped as he remembered something else. “What were you doing in
here in the first place?”
Pax
gave a shrug, hiding his nervousness. “Trying to see if there’s
anything we overlooked.”
Alex
grew distant. “The van’s already out front. Let’s finish loading
it up, shall we?”
With
his lips curled in a smug look, Pax watched him leave the room. “Aye,
aye, Captain,” he muttered.
“William
and Thomas are in charge until I return,” Alex said into the cell
phone. “It’s business, of course… All right. If you need me, you know how
to reach me.” He hung up the phone as the van passed through the front
gate.
Pax
noticed Alex’s eyes glancing at the side mirror and at the shrinking
image of the gate. The man hid his emotions well, but in the reflection
of the small mirror, Pax could see the endless pit he tried to cover.
He took in a deep breath and stretched his arms before folding them
behind his head. “I don’t know about you guys,” he said, “but
this is exciting! I’ve never been away from the States before.”
“Like
Alex said,” reminded Jonathan, “it’s business, not pleasure.”
“As
long as I get some souvenirs, you’ll hear no complaints from me.”
Alex
opened a leather bound case from between the seats and removed a dark
folder stuffed with papers, information faxed to him from London.
Pax
continued talking. “You’re originally from England, right? Any chance
of seeing your hometown?”
Keeping
his eyes on the papers, Alex spoke to Jonathan. “Turn on the radio,
please.”
Jonathan
did as he was told.
Slumping
in his seat, Pax made a painful observation. “This is going to be
a long trip.”
“We
must give no indication of our urgency.”
Pax
looked on the bright side. The trees were beginning to show their fall
colors, something people came from miles to see. And he had to agree
with them. The scenery wasn’t all that bad once you took the time
to appreciate it.
The
van pulled onto the tarmac where a fueled jet and a handful of people
waited. Jonathan stopped the van as a dark haired woman approached.
Pax instantly beamed upon seeing her. He stepped out of the van, refusing
to shield his happiness.
“Miss
Sophie J. Bromley, looking lovelier every day.” He smiled.
The
woman returned the smile. “Nice to see you too, Paxton.”
Sophie
once worked with Pax in Los Angeles, and had been the epitome of beauty
in his eyes ever since. Like everyone who came to work for SEVEN or
Alex, their stories were saturated with misfortune. Sophie’s life
was no different. Her mother’s family came from the country of Vietnam,
while her father’s family had a rich history in Hawaii. But she never
knew her parents outside the stories she was told. At the age of four,
Sophie lived in San Francisco with her godmother and took the last name
Bromley. It was an incident fifteen years ago that sent Sophie on the
path to become one of SEVEN’s elite.
Pax
couldn’t pick out what he liked the most about this woman. She wasn’t
a girly-girl, or clamored over the latest fashion craze; she actually
hated wearing skirts or dresses. But when she was decked out in her
hunter’s garb, with rifle in hand, he realized there was something
tangible to his admiration. And even looking at her now, dressed in
casual clothes and black, steel-toed boots, he hated the fact that he
was leaving the country.
“Sporting
your first battle scar proudly, I see,” said Pax, nodding at the scar
on her neck, a present given to her by Gabriel over a month ago.
“More
than I can say about you,” Sophie shot back. She buried her hands
in her pockets against the gust of cold air. “Ever plan on breaking
your skin for the cause?”
“Who
says I haven’t?”
Alex,
with leather case in hand, stepped from the van as Jonathan began to
grab their bags. Alex looked at Sophie and repeated the orders given
to her earlier over the phone. “I want to keep this visit off the
record. Only a select few will know of this trip, and I want to keep
it that way.”
“Of
course, sir,” she said.
Jonathan
carried two suitcases as he followed Alex to the plane where the crew
waited to greet them. Sophie went to the back of the van and helped
Pax with the remaining bags.
“Is
it true what I hear?” she asked, her voice low.
“Depends
on what you’ve heard,” he said. “If it’s what I think you’re
talking about, then yes, it is the biggest on the east coast. Why do
you think I was shipped all the way out here from LA? They were too
intimidated by me.”
“Ah,
no. That’s not it. I’ve seen your”—she glanced below his waist—“and
it’s nothing to brag about.” She grinned.
“Ouch.
You cut me deep.”
Sophie
grew serious. “It’s about his daughter.”
Pax
lowered his voice as he saw Jonathan returning. “We’re not hundred
percent on that.”
“Well,
how sure are you?”
He lowered
his voice even further. “Ninety-nine point nine percent.”
Sophie
shook her head. “Stupid girl.”
“Reckless,
not stupid,” he corrected, grabbing the last bag.
“Pax!”
snapped Jonathan. “Quiet.”
“It’s
Sophie, man,” he defended. “Inner circle here.”
She
smiled at the inclusion. “Nice to know.”
Jonathan
grabbed two more bags and headed back to the plane, his body language
showing his eagerness to be off the ground before the sunset.
Sophie
watched Pax for a moment before speaking. She tried her best to read
his body language, as well. But the man had proven many times in the
past that he could mask anything, whether it was a splinter under a
fingernail, a broken bone, or a shattered ego, he let nothing outwardly
show unless he allowed it.
“I
highly doubt you’ll stand by and let Alex self-destruct like this,”
she said, her eyes on the activity around the airplane. “People are
starting to talk.”
Pax
closed the van’s doors. “A delicate situation. But I’ve made my
peace with what needs to be done.”
Sophie
looked at him, the first signs of concern showing. “He’ll kill you,
you know.”
“Alex
knows I trust him. He won’t kill me.”
“But
are you sure you can kill her?”
“I
can kill anything with fur or fangs. The key is not to dwell on it.”
Spotting
Jonathan as he walked toward them, Sophie picked up a bag. “Watch
yourself. She’s not alone.”
Picking
up his own bag, Pax followed Jonathan and Sophie to the plane. He handed
his bag to a crew member as they finished securing the luggage. On board,
he saw Alex already in his set, still looking over the papers. The jet
was much nicer than the one he used to come here from California. He
even spotted a table, kitchenette, and a mini-bar.
“Well,
children,” Sophie said, standing by the front of the cabin, “Be
good boys and play nice over there. We don’t want to fuel any of those
crazy American stereotypes, now do we?” She looked at Alex and nodded.
“I’ll head to Eden and await your return. Have a safe trip.”
As she
left the plane a crew member closed the door and returned to the cockpit.
Alex’s
eyes settled back on the papers. “I wish people would stop calling
it that,” he mumbled. Though the estate was never given a proper name,
many liked to argue that Eden was a perfect name.
“You
think she likes me?” Pax wondered out loud as he took his seat.
Jonathan
looked at him, genuinely interested in the question. “Who? Sophie?”
“Yeah,
I think she likes me. But I’m not sure if she’s ready for that next
level.”
“I
thought she had a girlfriend.”
A smile
graced Pax’s lips. “Rumors, my friend. Designed to keep the fellas
at bay.”
“Or
work extra hard to ‘convert’ her,” Jonathan pointed out.
Pax
turned to Alex, honestly confessing, “I didn’t start those rumors,
if that’s what you’re thinking.”
Alex
answered without looking up. “They’re not rumors.”
A look
of confusion trickled over Pax. “Explain.”
“She
started seeing Denise, then ended things as she started seeing Ryan.”
Pax’s
lips contorted at the gossip. “Is Ryan another girl?”
“A
guy. Sophie plays for both teams.”
Leaning
forward, Pax’s confusion flipped into perversion. “Really? Cause
I’m getting some serious x-rated thoughts right now.”
Giving
in, Jonathan pleaded with Alex. “Quit screwin’ with him.”
Pax’s
eyes went from one man to the other. “What? What?”
Alex
finally looked at him and explained, “The three ‘S’s, my boy.
She’s single, straight, and celibate.”
Taking
in his words, Pax relaxed back in his seat. “Oh…
Wait a second. ‘Celibate’ starts with
a ‘C.’ ”
“Do
you break land-speed records with that brain of yours?” Jonathan joked.
Pax
brushed off the insult as he cracked his knuckles in a dramatic pose.
“She doesn’t know it yet, but that girl has become my Holy Grail.”
Avoiding
where the conversation was heading, Alex placed a series of pages on
the table, piecing them together like a puzzle. Jonathan changed seats
to gain a better view of the map the pages formed. Pax left his seat
to see the map, as well.
“The
werewolf territories of Great Britain,” informed Alex. “Their history
goes back centuries before the discovery of the New World. And their
structure seems to have more political tones—a welcomed, yet sometimes
hated infection given to them by the humans. If Gabriel is there, he
will most likely be within one of these territories.”
“Clever,
I’ll give him that,” admitted Pax.
“We
just need to narrow down our search. We need to look at houses built
around the 1700s.”
“Or
not,” corrected Jonathan. “He could’ve bought the house.”
Alex
turned down the idea. “Not for that time period. He would’ve had
the house constructed.”
Pax
crossed his arms as he stared down at the map. “So, it’s a house
built in the 1700s and renovated in 18-something.”
“We
also need to look at family owned property,” Alex pointed out. “He
many have an ongoing contract with them—people to take care of the
house while he is away.”
Pax
looked at his boss, an eyebrow raising. “You should work for the FBI.”
“This
territory here: Summet,” Jonathan said, pointing at the western side
of the map. “That looks like a good place to start.”
“Or,”
said Pax, scanning over the information, “we could go for the largest
and most powerful”—he leaned down to read the name—“Theodore.”
Again,
Alex turned down the idea. “The oldest and most stable seems like
a better candidate.”
For
the sake of his own sanity, Pax chose not to argue. “Ya know, I’m
always that guy that says, ‘I told you so.’ But you know what else?
It never gets old.”
“You
were the one who wanted to bring him along,” Jonathan reminded Alex.
His boss glance at him but didn’t reply.
“Like
you didn’t want me to come along,” said Pax, returning to his seat.
Swiveling the other seat around, he propped up his feet. He heard the
papers shuffling as Alex cleared the table. An amusing thought struck
him as he sat there, waiting for the jet to begin taxiing. “Boy, won’t
David be pissed when he finds out that you crossed an ocean for her
but didn’t lift a finger for him.”
Alex
felt that certain nerve being tested once more. The hunter never knew
when to shut up. But as much as his words sounded rude, they were the
truth, and Alex chose not to scold him for it. But the situation with
David was different. It was Saros who stole him away. Going after an
Original was next to impossible. And he belonged to her now. At least
with Evonne, he had a good chance at locating her, and even bringing
her home. But was this really the case? If David had been taken by another,
would he had gone after him? The possible answer sickened him. At times
he once thought of David as a son. But now, the tether once prominent
between them felt more like tissue paper when compared to the steel
chain holding him to Evonne.



