“Who’s in there?” Bree asked. Faelan and Ronan’s shoulders were blocking her view.

“He’s wearing a kilt,” Faelan said, his voice hushed.

“A kilt?” Bree moved around until she could see. The body was just a skeleton, with bits of shrunken flesh and scraps of clothing attached to some of the bones. The shirt had been light colored at one time, and the kilt primarily red. “I wasn’t expecting a kilt.” She looked at Faelan’s kilt and light shirt and felt a chill. So much for the farmer or soldier theory. “Can you tell from the kilt how old he might be?”

“You’re the historian,” Faelan said.

She studied history. He’d lived it. “Oh, this might help. I found something underneath the coffin.”

Faelan glared up at her. “Under the coffin? Did you climb inside this grave?”

Ronan grunted and shook his head.

Bree lifted one shoulder. “Sort of.”

“Sort of!” Faelan said. “How do you sort of climb into a grave? You’re pregnant, carrying my bairn, and you climbed into a grave!”

“Good grief. It’s not even that deep. I’ve been in much worse places than this.”

“We know,” both men said at the same time.

This was one of those times she wanted to hit Faelan. And Ronan too. Instead, she pulled the dagger from her waistband and held it up. “Magnificent, isn’t it?”

Ronan took the dagger from her. He hadn’t examined it before. He’d been too busy pulling her out of the grave. “Looks old.”

“I figure it’s eighteenth century,” she said. “Maybe seventeenth.”

“Eighteenth,” Faelan said, his voice just above a whisper.

“That’s pretty impressive,” Bree said. Then she saw he was staring at the dagger, his face ashen. “Are you OK?”

“You look like you’ve seen a ghost,” Ronan said.

“I’ve seen this dagger before.” Faelan reached for it with trembling hands. “It was my brother’s.”

Bree’s eyes widened. “Your brother’s?”

“It belonged to Tavis. I gave it to him for his birthday.” Faelan looked back at the bones in the coffin. “I think you’ve found my brother’s grave.”

CHAPTER TWO

WE’LL GIVE HIM a real burial,” Ronan said to Faelan. Several of the warriors had met at the Albany castle to discuss the grave. The elders were in another part of the castle meeting about the same thing. The entire clan was disturbed by the discovery of the grave, but Faelan was taking it particularly hard. He’d already lost Tavis once. Lost his whole family. Now he had to deal with his brother’s death all over again. That must suck. Ronan could sympathize. It had taken him a long time to get over Cam’s death, if he had. He couldn’t imagine having to face it all over again.

“Shouldn’t we check DNA?” Cody asked. “Sam might be able to pull some strings and get it done quicker.”

Cody’s friend Samantha Skye was with the FBI. She sometimes helped the clan cover up activities that couldn’t be explained by normal means. She complained that she risked losing her job, but they all knew she loved the danger and excitement. And she had the hots for Jamie, Shay’s ex-fiancé, which made Cody happy since he was still jealous of the warrior who had almost married Shay. He watched his bride-to-be like the crown jewels in a den of thieves. Especially when Jamie and Ronan were around.

“It has to be Tavis,” Faelan said. “It’s his dagger, and the kilt was the right color. We know he was here. He helped dig up my time vault and move it.”

“Why does everyone think he was buried at sea?” Shay asked.

Ronan felt Declan move behind him. He didn’t even have to see his twin to know he was there. “Probably a cover story,” Declan said. “They wouldn’t want his grave connected to Faelan’s hiding place.”

Faelan nodded, and his hand found Bree’s. “We’ll have the funeral and put Tavis to rest.”

Bree leaned closer and put her other hand on his chest. Her eyes rolled back in her head, and she started sliding off the couch.

Ronan shot forward, but Faelan had already caught her before she hit the floor. “Bree! What’s wrong? Is it the bairn?” Faelan held her close, his face pale. “Get Tomas. Someone get Tomas.”

“He’s not here,” Marcas said. “I’ll find Coira.”

Shay knelt beside her sister. “Her pulse is strong. I think she’s had one of her visions. Bree, can you hear me?”

“She did get that distant look on her face.” Faelan’s voice was hopeful. He was terrified of losing the baby. And Bree. Like he’d lost everyone from his life before. Ronan was doing everything he could to see that Bree and the baby remained safe.

“These spells affect her more now that she’s pregnant,” Sorcha said, her tone edgy. “It can’t be healthy for the baby.”

She wasn’t even flirting with Lachlan, who sat next to her. Of course Duncan wasn’t here to witness her show.

“What do you want me to bloody do about it?” Faelan asked, scowling.

Ronan shook his head at Sorcha. “You’re good with a sword, Sorcha, but you don’t have crap for tact.”

Brodie scoffed. “Sometimes I wish I lived back in Faelan’s day, when we didn’t have to deal with female warriors.”

“I can fix it so you don’t have to deal with a female anything,” Sorcha sneered.

“Back off, Sorcha,” Ronan said. “Go yell at Duncan.”

“That’s her problem,” Brodie muttered. “Duncan’s not here, so we’re taking the brunt of her bitchiness. I wish they’d just jump in the sack and get it over with so the rest of us could live in peace.”

Sorcha’s face turned red. She clonked Brodie on the shoulder and left.

“Now what’s this?” Coira asked, entering the room as Sorcha swept out. “Marcas said Bree fainted.”

“We think she had a vision,” Shay said.

“Or it’s the bairn,” Faelan added, stroking Bree’s cheek.

Before Coira could reach her, Bree gasped and bolted upright. “Anna.” She tried to stand, but Faelan held her still.

“Don’t stand up,” he said. “You might fall.”

“He’s right,” Coira said. “You need to sit still.” She checked Bree’s pulse.

“I’m not going to fall. I just had a vision. Anna’s in trouble.”

“Do you know where she is?” Ronan asked. He’d been the last to talk to her.

Bree put one hand protectively over her stomach, something she did unconsciously these days. “I think she’s in a castle.”

“Scotland?” Shay asked.

“She didn’t mention going to Scotland when I talked to her,” Ronan said. “She’d just gotten back from there.” The clan had two castles. The Connor castle in Scotland, the clan seat, and this one near Albany, New York, which Druan had used. They were still trying to find out how the demon had a castle that was identical to the clan’s.

“Jamie called Scotland earlier,” Declan said. “She wasn’t there.”

Cody’s arm slipped around Shay’s shoulder. “Where is Jamie?”

“Had something to do,” Declan said. “He’ll be back.”

“Huh,” Cody replied.

Shane stood several feet away, quietly observing as usual. “We should check the secret passages here and in Scotland. I’ll take a look at these. Niall can help.”

“Me? You know I hate those damned passages,” Niall said. “They’re made for dwarves.”

“I thought it was fairies,” Shane said. “Stop complaining and come on.”

“I can’t imagine Anna trapped inside,” Ronan said, “but stranger things have happened.”

“Like vampires,” Brodie muttered.

Shane and Niall walked to the fireplace and disappeared through the secret door.

“I’ll call Scotland and have someone check the passages there,” Cody said.

“What about the jet? Has Anna taken it anywhere?” Brodie asked.

“I don’t think so,” Lachlan said. “I talked to the pilot this morning. I’m going to cover one of his shifts next month.”

Bree groaned and held her head. Faelan held her closer. “What is it now, love?”

“It’s you.” She clutched his arm, her green eyes wide.

“Me?”

“You’re probably crushing her,” Ronan said.

Faelan relaxed his hold, and Bree turned worried eyes toward Faelan. “You’re in danger too.”

“Who’s he in danger from now?” Ronan asked. “Druan is dead.” He was the demon Faelan had been assigned to destroy.

“Not Druan. It’s another demon.” Bree frowned. “I think.”

“You’re not sure?” Ronan still didn’t understand how Bree’s visions worked, but he knew enough not to discount them. She’d been right about too many things.

“He’s powerful. He must be a demon,” Bree said.

“Maybe this is what Jamie was talking about,” Shay said.

Jamie was afraid something was brewing. He’d just destroyed a demon who had attempted to assassinate the President of the United States.

“Two of the ancient demons that make up the League are dead. Druan and Malek,” Ronan said. Shay and Cody had destroyed Malek together, each giving him a killing blow at exactly the same moment, something that had never happened before as far as Ronan knew. But Shay and Bree weren’t normal. They’d done things no warriors had ever done, like moving as fast as vampires. The clan believed it was something genetic they’d inherited from Edward, their father, since they had different mothers.

Shay had let go of Bree’s hand but stayed close to her sister. Cody stood behind her. After she’d almost died, he never let his bride-to-be far from his sight. He was as bad over Shay as Faelan was over Bree.

“Maybe it’s a vampire,” Brodie said. He hated vampires almost as much as Ronan did.

“Voltar and Tristol are still out there,” Ronan said. Both were bad news, really bad news. Voltar was a hate machine. He hated women, warriors, humans, even halflings—anything that wasn’t pure demon. And Voltar was behind some of the worst atrocities humans had ever seen.

“I don’t know,” Bree said, “but we need to protect Faelan and Anna. She’s in terrible danger. I sensed trouble before, but then I found the grave and I thought that must be it. I’m going to look for her. If I drive around, maybe I can pick up some sense of where she’s—”

“You will not.” Faelan put on his fierce, nineteenth-century warrior face. “We’ll look for her. You will stay put.”

“Faelan is right,” Coira said. “I want you to rest. No activity for at least a day.”

Faelan nodded. “That’s just what she needs. Rest.”

“You’d better put a lock on her door if you don’t want her sneaking off,” Ronan said. “Better yet, tie her up. And keep her away from Shay, or they’ll be off trying to save Anna by themselves.” This got him a frown from the sisters and worried looks from Faelan and Cody. Ronan envied both men and felt sorry for them too. The sisters were a handful, in more ways than one. Beautiful and reckless as hell. “I’ll start looking for Anna. But I think we need to call a Seeker.”

* * *

Two days earlier…

Anna let Bree’s phone ring five times, and then she picked it up. “Hello.”

It was Ronan. “Anna. What the hell? Where have you been?”

“Scotland. New York. Looking for Angus’s notebook.” Sitting beside his grave. Regretting that she hadn’t been with him.

“You could have called and let us know you’re still alive. We’ve got ancient demons on the loose, and you just up and vanish.”

“I’m sorry. I should have called.” But the grief had caught her off guard. It had hurt when she first found out Angus was dead. But the real pain had hit when she sat in his room and looked at all his things. Saw all the research he would never finish. All the puzzles he’d never solve. And when she stood in the infirmary where he’d whispered the last words to her that he would ever say. I love you. She cleared her throat. “I haven’t replaced my phone.”

“I know you needed to be alone, but you have to check in. We were worried.” Ronan’s voice softened. She’d heard it even softer once. That wouldn’t be repeated. Not that it wasn’t good. Relationships didn’t work for her. She was just damaged goods. According to him, so was he.

“Time got away from me.”

“I know it’s been tough since you were so close. If you need a shoulder to cry on—hell. I guess you’d better find someone else,” he said sheepishly. They were trying to forget their mishap, but it hadn’t been long enough to erase the awkwardness. “Did you find his notebook?”

“Not yet. I’ll keep looking. That notebook was like his right arm. Whatever he found out he’ll have written down. How’s everyone?”

“Alive. But Shay almost died. She did die, but we revived her.”

“My God. What happened?”

“Malek happened. He was her stalker. You’ve missed a lot.”