Margrit watched Cam go, then brought the phone to her ear. "This is Margrit. Mother?"

"Oh dear," a pleasantly light-voiced man said, his voice infused with mirth. "No, I'm afraid not. I'm sure I could arrange to have her call, if you'd like, but it seems as though it would be rather melodramatic. To do it properly I'd have to kidnap her and make her call, angry and frightened, from the wa -"

"Janx." Margrit closed her bedroom door and slid down it, digging her fingers into her hair to hold her head up. "God forbid anybody should ever subpoena my phone records. Why are you calling the house instead of my cell? How in hell could I explain getting six o'clock phone calls from someone like you?"

She avoided more descriptive terms deliberately, though they danced through her mind. Crimelord was the only one she was willing to give voice to, but it didn't scratch the surface of what Janx really was. The handful of times Margrit had been in a room with him, it had been all she could do to keep breathing, his presence burning up the air. As well it should have: she'd gone in knowing he was of the Old Races, but not that she was dealing with a dragon. A red dragon, if ginger hair and flame-green eyes told the truth, though Margrit had no idea if it did, or if it mattered.

"It's six-thirty," Janx said in injured tones. "And I tried calling your cell, but you didn't answer. I thought young people today were connected twenty-four-seven. I'm very disappointed. But I could kidnap your mother," he offered. "If you need the phone records explained, I mean. Or I could-"

"You may not kidnap my mother, Janx." The absurdity of chiding a man of Janx's position-either crimelord or dragonlord-struck Margrit, and she steeled herself to keep a trace of laughter from her voice. "What do you want?"



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