“Because we are,” he admitted reluctantly, “but I see no alternative.”
She hated bringing this up, but they were going to the building where the mayor was. “Do you think this has anything to do with Penelope?”
Beckham shook his head. “I doubt it. I would have heard if her condition had changed. She was stable when I left. This sounded personal.”
Reyna frowned. “Personal how?”
“He asked me to bring you.”
“What does that mean?” she demanded. She did not want to see Roland. If she had to face him down eventually, she would. She wouldn’t cower, but she had hoped that time would come in a distant future, not today.
“I guess we’ll find out once we get there.” He took her hand in his and kissed the top softly. “Don’t worry. I won’t let anything happen to you.”
They made it to about a mile from the city hall building before their car was stopped in bumper-to-bumper traffic. People filled the streets for as far as the eye could see toward the main intersection.
“What the hell?” Reyna said, craning to see what all the traffic was from.
“This will do for now. We’ll have to go on foot the rest of the way.”
Beckham told their driver their plans, and then they hopped out of the town car into the middle of the gridlocked intersection. They jogged over to the sidewalk and past the people mingling around the road in confusion. Reyna was glad that she wasn’t in some ridiculous high heels in that moment. If she didn’t have her Converse on, she never would have been able to keep up with Beckham. As it was, she still lagged behind.
He reached back for her, and after another ten minutes, they finally made it in front of city hall. Reyna leaned over to a couple who were chatting animatedly.
“Excuse me. What’s going on?” she asked.
The woman glanced worriedly at Beckham before saying, “The mayor is about to make a big announcement. We’re finally going to get the change we needed. After those horrible fires and all the unnecessary death, we are so eager for what the mayor is going to be heralding in with these policies.”
“What policies?” Reyna asked, astounded. She had only been gone a couple of days. How could all of this have passed so quickly? What was the media saying that was convincing these people that it was a good idea?
“Human and vampire equality, of course.”
“Of course,” Reyna deadpanned. She looked up at Beckham as the couple disappeared into the crowd. “I don’t like this. Something seems wrong.”
He nodded. “I can feel it, too.”
“You didn’t hear anything about this?”
“No. That’s what worries me.”
Reyna and Beckham pressed in closer to the city hall. A stage had been erected in front of the building, with a podium and a row of chairs on it. Even with Beckham’s height and bulk, they could only get so far into the crowd before it was impossible to move forward. Reyna couldn’t see a thing. Not that she really would have been able to see much at this distance anyway. But Beckham could see to the stage with his enhanced sight.
The crowd was bustling with activity. Everyone was excited to hear what the mayor was going to say and had their own opinion about what they thought that meant. All Reyna knew was that whatever the big announcement was, it couldn’t be good.
A group of people walked out on the stage in a single-file line and took their seats. As a man approached the podium, the audience quieted down.
“Welcome,” the man called into the microphone.
“Harrington is seated to the left of the speaker,” Beckham whispered down to Reyna.
“Do you think this has something to do with Visage?”
He pressed his lips firmly together. She could tell it was killing him not to be in the know. As a senior official, he should have been informed of what was about to happen, especially if it had something to do with Visage.
“Stick close to me.” He pulled her closer to his body and reached for her hand. “There are too many people out right now, and I don’t want us to get separated.”
“Thank you all for coming this afternoon. It is my pleasure to introduce our very own Mayor Sky.”
As the mayor stepped up to the microphone, the audience broke into applause. He was well-liked and had been elected over and over and over again by the people. Reyna didn’t really feel like he had ever helped. While she felt bad for Penelope’s situation, she and her father were both beyond wealthy in a world where the poor were quite literally starving. Living on the inside with Beckham had really shown her the difference, and if she had the chance, she would vote him out of office in a heartbeat. Though there would never truly be a better alternative in today’s environment.