Possession-Blood Ties 2
knife and slit my wrists?”
    “No!” She grabbed for him again, and he evaded her, though his bones ached with fatigue.
    “So, you’re charged with watching out for my well-being, at the cost of your life. Yet you’ve done little to keep me from harming myself. There’s a razor in the bathroom, knives in the kitchen drawers. Which tells me you don’t care whether you live or die.” He studied her face as she absorbed his words.
    She looked down, her voice barely a whisper when she spoke. “Would you kill yourself?”
    Would he? It would end this miserable human existence. But they’d brought him back once from the realm of the dead, apparently with purpose. They could likely do it again. And it wasn’t as though he could lift a razor to slash himself. “No. I don’t wish to die.” He slipped down the next step, resigned not to look at her again.
    “Neither do I,” she whispered. “At least, I don’t think I do.”
    That gave him some hope, something to use against her if need be. “Then you’d better keep me alive.”

    “This is it,” Max announced, dropping his duffel bag on the plushly carpeted floor. Only the faint, hollow sound resulting reminded me we were in an airplane. “Air Fang

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    One?”
    “Oh, that was bad.” Max flopped onto the cream-colored, silk sofa and kicked his feet up, as if he were on a secondhand couch in a college dorm. “Have a seat. It’s a long flight.”
    I couldn’t tear my eyes from the sumptuous decor of the private jet. The walls, carpet and furniture were all in muted, neutral shades. Warm light spilled from recessed fixtures to compliment the dark wood finish of the tabletops and sprawling entertainment center at the end of the cabin. “This is nicer than my apartment.”
    “There are a lot of places nicer than your apartment.” Max flipped open a console on the arm of the couch. A remote control slid up smoothly. He snagged it and turned on the television. “Like my apartment, for one.”
    I eyed the small, round table and two sturdy-looking wing chairs on either side of it. They were visually appealing, especially with their color-coordinated seat belts, but probably not very comfortable. “Are you just going to hog that sofa the whole time?”
    “What?” He pulled his gaze away from what appeared to be a Japanese game show with topless contestants, and sat up. “Oh, no. Sorry. You want the tour?”
    “There’s more?” I would have been impressed with just this room. Max rose and gestured to one of the fabric-covered panels in the wall. “Come on.”
    Sure enough, there was a hidden door handle worked into the ivory molding. Max pulled it open to reveal a small galley, not unlike a commercial airliner’s, and beyond that, a cockpit with all manner of flashing buttons and lighted dials. Two pilots in standard uniform conferred with the tower through headsets as they flipped switches and checked instruments. They were perfectly normal. Human, even.
    “The Movement has humans working for it?” I asked under my breath when Max led me back to the passenger area.
    “Werewolves,” Max fairly growled. “You’ll see a lot of that at headquarters. They’re antivampire, too, so the Movement thinks it’s just great to have them on board. Wanna see the bedroom?”
    “That’s subtle.” I elbowed him in the ribs. “There’d better be twin beds, or pray the flight doesn’t last long.”
    “The flight probably won’t,” he admitted. “It’s the waiting for sundown on the tarmac that’s the real problem.”
    At the thought of sunup, I panicked. It was one thing to be in the big, sturdy shelter of a house or even Ziggy’s old Ford Econoline van when dawn broke, but a plane seemed terribly risky. “We’re gonna be in this thing with the sun up?”
    “Well, yeah.” Max seemed annoyingly unconcerned. “Long flight, short night. Especially since

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