Shan, the name rang a bell, though Jesse didn’t immediately realise why. The following name cleared it up and the pieces fell into place. Jesse stiffened, his whole demeanour morphing from relaxed and devil-may-care to alert, wary—sharp around the edges, ready to strike. He’d summoned this woman into his home, and now he had to somehow figure out how to get her the **** out and never let her back in again. That was his immediate reaction, though he forced himself to hear Arauchia out to the end.
Five years. How had he not heard of her? No one had mentioned her. He must have been drawn into Andras just after Arauchia’s disappearance. But then, he hadn’t started in Andras. He’d started in Tytonidae, and Andras had followed. Even thinking about either family or faction, now, left a bitter, sour taste in his mouth. It gathered on his tongue until he physically had to spit it out. The spittle glistened on the ground; it’d landed to the left of his feet. He at least had enough respect left not to spit at the woman in front of him.
”Families can be difficult. Some claim to be family but really they’re not. I’d agree—they’re not family, they’re a pit of vipers. I generally like vipers, but they’re not the good kind,” he said, remaining tensed. ”If you have any notion that you will return to that pit, despite your current anger, then I’ll gladly walk you to the door and say goodnight,” he said, tone sharp and curt. That he had inadvertently helped one of them… ****, from the way she talked she’d have been one of the first to try put a bullet through his skull when **** went down with him and Andras. She’d have followed like the sheep they were, grovelling at the feet of their leaders without bothering to try see anything from the other’s perspective. No, they’d thrown him to the curb and kicked him while he was down, all after he’d sought help. They’d given none, so what should they expect?