FUR FOR ALL
Published by:
Ellora’s Cave
Publishing, Inc. USA
Ellora’s Cave
Publishing, Ltd. UK
PO Box 787
Hudson OH 44236
ISBN
MS Reader (LIT)
# 1-84360-681-X
Other available
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FUR FOR ALL © 2003
CHRISTINE WARREN.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part without permission.
This book is a work of
fiction and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, or places, events or
locales is purely coincidental. They are productions of the authors’
imagination and used fictitiously.
Edited by KAREN
W. WILLIAMS
Cover Art by DARRELL
KING
FUR FOR ALL
By Christine Warren
Acknowledgement:
Special thanks to Bunny, who got me interested in herbs, and answered all the questions I asked, even at the oddest hours of the day and night. When I shouted them from halfway across the house. Through a couple of closed doors.
Chapter One
The minute
Rafael De Santos stepped out of the front door of Vircolac, he knew he was
being followed. He could have credited a sort of preternatural sixth-sense for
the knowledge, a combination of the heightened hearing and sight of his feline
heritage, but that wouldn’t have been precisely true. Because the fact was,
whoever was tailing him was doing a piss poor job.
Maybe Rafe’s
perceptions of this sort of thing had been colored by all the time he spent
with the Lupines of the Silverback Clan, who were renowned for their abilities
at covert actions like tails and stakeouts. It could be that the contrast
between their expert maneuvers and the bungling of the figure behind him
tonight made an otherwise perfectly adequate tail look inept. Then the tail
tripped over a crack in the sidewalk and fell sideways into a garbage can and
Rafe shook his head. No, his stalker really was that bad.
Which
begged the question, why was the person tailing him in the first place? To
begin with, Rafe was not in the sort of neighborhood where one was
likely to be mugged. Admittedly, crime in Manhattan knew no real borders, but
this swanky neighborhood in the Upper East Side was as safe as you were likely
to get without abandoning the city entirely. So he didn’t think the tail was a
common street thug.
He
supposed it could be another Felix come to challenge him for his territory, but
judging by the figure’s general size and shape—not to mention apparent
clumsiness—the upstart would be in for a rude surprise if he attempted anything
of the sort. Again, not very likely. He briefly considered the possibility it
might be another rogue Fae. After the incident a few months ago with Seoc and
Fergus and the ruckus those escapees from Faerie had caused, just the thought
made Rafe nervous. But again, this tail was way too clumsy to be one of the
Beautiful People.
So what
was left? Rogue Lupine sounded about as likely as a Felix challenger, given
their proximity to Graham Winters’ home and business. Any werewolf who
attempted to act without Graham’s consent in the heart of that Alpha’s own
territory would be three steps past stupid and not a little foolhardy, and
would likely have charged him by now. It was a puzzle, and Rafe was enough a
man of his blood to be very curious about puzzles.
Keeping
his gaze straight ahead and his pace steady, he quietly turned the tables on
his stalker and let the hunter become the hunted.
It didn’t
take much for him to win the advantage. In his tailored suit and Italian
loafers, he had the advantage of surprise. No one ever expected an obviously
wealthy man to know the first thing about defending himself or about tracking
prey. Luckily, Rafe was more than just another wealthy man.
He was
Felix.
He felt
his mouth curve at the inherent arrogance in that statement of fact. There didn’t
seem to be a way to state it without arrogance. His people had been worshipped
as gods centuries before man ever entertained the thought that a single god
might sustain the complexity of human life. That sort of thing tended to breed
arrogance in a man. Then of course, the very nature of the cat beast within him
made arrogance an indelible stamp on his nature. The jaguar occupied the top of
the food chain in its native jungles of South America. When one had no rivals
at all, one stopped seeing rivals even when they existed.
Rafe liked
to think he was more than his beast, though, more than the jaguar spirit that
slept within him. He embraced and appreciated that part of his ancestry, that
aspect of his nature, but as a modern civilized man, he liked to think of his
nature as more complex than ‘man by day and jaguar by night.’
He had,
after all, grown up in a penthouse apartment in Manhattan, not in the dense,
tropical jungles of his father’s childhood. He had attended private schools and
a prestigious university, learned how to ace an exam and order fine wine for
sophisticated companions. He knew which fork to use at even the most exalted
tables and could debate with intelligence and gusto topics ranging from
Kierkegard to Handl to the politics of eastern European nationalism. And he
could do it all with a droll wit and an urbane smirk.
But none
of that negated the feral predator lurking in his soul. The one that knew it
could turn on his would-be stalker and rip out the man’s throat before he could
even voice a scream in protest. It was the same beast that first realized his
stalker smelled like a woman. And not just any woman. She smelled like a witch.
The
fragrance roused his curiosity even higher. Witches and werefolk rarely had
contact with one another, and it had been that way for as long as Rafe could
remember. He had heard a few stories over the years about why that was the
case—tales that ranged from stories about ancient race wars inspired by divine
edict, to a magical version of the Hatfields, the McCoys and that infamous pig.
Rafe doubted either story could claim itself as the whole truth, but he
realized he’d never before bothered to wonder about it. Not until he found
himself being stalked by a female witch on a deserted street in Upper Manhattan
on a Wednesday night. Funny how that sort of thing could spring itself on a
man…
More determined than ever to satisfy his curiosity by finding out what the stalking witch wanted with him, Rafe continued to lead his unsuspecting hunter straight into a trap. He imagined things could get interesting tonight, and after a run of boring business meetings, the diversion might prove to be just what he needed.
* * * * *
Tess
Menzies stifled a snicker as she crouched in the shadows of an old brownstone,
her eyes glued to the elegant façade of the building across the street. She’d
been lurking here for close to three hours, and her muscles had long ago given
up their protests. She hoped that wouldn’t pose a problem when she tried to
force them to move again. According to her intelligence, her mark should be
making his move any second now.
The
thought inspired yet more snickering. This whole episode just screamed for the
use of language like “mark” and “intelligence” even though the closest Tess
herself had ever come to espionage or intrigue was watching old Humphrey Bogart
movies on satellite. The idea that she’d gone straight from curling up on her
sofa in Tribeca on dateless Saturday nights with a bowl of popcorn and the
opening credits of The Maltese Falcon to staking out a private club on
the Upper East Side…that just struck her funny.
She
supposed her grandfather could have picked someone less suited for carrying out
this particular favor, but she figured it would have taken a lot of time and
some serious effort. After all, she knew of one former marine, three former
police officers, a retired private investigator and a reformed thief just in
her grandfather’s immediate circle of friends. Any of them could probably have
located this man and delivered their message with a tenth of the fuss and muss
Tess instinctively knew she could cause given half the chance. She just had a
knack for these things. You’d think her grandfather would take that into
consideration before assigning her this kind of task. But no. When Grandfather
got a notion into his head, nothing short of a seismic catastrophe could shake
him from his course, and the jury still deliberated over whether even that
could do the job.
Sighing,
Tess wrapped her arms around herself and chafed her hands up and down to try
and generate some heat. The crisp October night that had felt so pleasant just
an hour ago had taken a decidedly chilly turn. She indulged in a moment of
regret that she hadn’t stopped to fill a thermos with coffee before she set
herself up here to wait, but shrugged it off. If she had coffee, she’d be
drinking it, and if she drank coffee, she’d have to pee, so it really was just
as well. She couldn’t exactly knock on the door of the building she was using
for concealment and ask to use their bathroom. She’d probably give the poor
owners a heart attack.
Since she
had read somewhere once that the best cure for boredom on a stakeout was
fantasizing, Tess let her mind wander down that path for a minute. She could
just see herself, clad head to toe in black, from her black jeans and supple
black boots, to her thin, black turtleneck sweater. She looked more like a cat
burglar than anything else. Not exactly a reassuring sight to find on one’s
doorstep at two thirty-seven a.m. She swallowed another chuckle and shifted her
weight subtly, her gaze still on the doors across the street. Her little
fantasy was probably way off base, though. Judging by the ornately carved doors
of the buildings around her, the beautiful, historical architecture and the
pricey addresses, no one on this block or the next answered his own door, even
at two thirty-seven a.m. That, she assumed with a smirk, was what butlers were
for.
In that
respect, Tess was certainly out of her element here in the land of milk and
money. Her own perfectly adequate loft a block shy of SoHo would probably fit
inside the foyers of most of the houses on this street, especially the house
she currently had her eye on. The four-story limestone building sat in the
middle of the block like a grande dame holding court. It bore no signs—unless
you counted the classic brass address numbers as a sign—or other marks that
indicated it housed one of the most exclusive and prestigious private clubs in
all of Manhattan. But then, when your club catered to vampires, werewolves and
other creatures of the night, neon was probably not that great a choice.
For at
least the last two centuries, Vircolac had easily reigned as the best kept
secret in Manhattan. The only reason Tess had learned of it was because the
Witches’ Council had a vested interest in some of the most important people who
passed through its thick, oak doors. Well, people might not exactly be the
correct term, since the membership of Vircolac consisted entirely of the less
human members of New York society. Vampires, werewolves and shapeshifters of
all kinds filled the club’s membership list, and the only humans who ever made
it past the doorman were rumored to be closely connected with the club’s owner,
Graham Winters. A werewolf himself, Winters supposedly kept a tight rein on his
club and on the Silverback Clan, the werewolf pack he led. In his spare time,
Tess supposed wryly.
Winters,
though, was not why she was crouching in the shadows of a stairway on a
Wednesday night in October. She didn’t have to deal with the werewolf, thank
the gods. Her grandfather had sent her here to bell the cat.
Rolling
her eyes, Tess shifted her weight and sighed. Right. Like she was so qualified
to chase down a werecat with nothing more going for her than a diplomatic
message and a sunny disposition. Looking back at her conversation with her
grandfather, she could recall bringing up those very salient points to him, as
well. She had mentioned that she wasn’t even a member of the Witches’ Council,
let alone a representative; that she had precisely no knowledge of or
experience with werefolk of any kind and generally tended to end up with her
foot in her mouth at any and all available opportunities. So what made her
the choice for this assignment again?
Oh, right.
Grandfather’s standard answer. “Because I said so.”
She
grumbled to herself and pressed the button on the side of her watch to
illuminate the dial. According to the information the Council had provided, the
werecat she’d come to see was already ten minutes late from his regular
timetable. Apparently he didn’t realize he had a stalker with a schedule to
keep. Sighing, she trained her gaze back on the door to Vircolac and settled in
for an extended wait. She didn’t get one. Almost as soon as she had the carved
oak doors back in her sight, the right side opened and a figure stepped out. It
paused for a moment to speak to someone on the threshold.
“Finally,”
she breathed, freezing in place, gaze fastened on the man across the street.
She got a brief look at his face while he stood in the pool of light cast by
the fixture over the club’s doors, so she knew it was her guy. His features had
the angular, slightly exotic cast of his Latin ancestors, and even in the
artificial light, she saw the bronze hue of his skin and the way his black hair
gave off almost blue highlights. Add that to the tailored fit of his suit, the
arrogant, graceful way he held himself and the liquid quality to the way he
moved, and Tess had no doubts. She had a bead on Rafael De Santos.
The
problem was that she hadn’t expected him to be gorgeous.
Tess sat
mesmerized for several minutes before a moth flying perilously close to her
cheek reminded her that not only was her mouth gaping open like the legs of a
cheerleader on prom night, her tongue was probably hanging out, too. She clamped
her jaw shut with a click, but her reaction seemed to be beyond her control.
The man
took her breath away. For some reason she’d had this picture in her head that
the man would be unappealing, sort of bestial and feral, his humanity a thin
film over his more savage nature. She knew that image didn’t exactly mesh with
his reputation as a charming if feckless rogue, more Casanova than killer, but
her mind had apparently discounted the stories as rumor. And now, here she was,
finding them to be absolute fact. The only evidence she saw of his bestial side
was the animal magnetism she could feel rolling off him, even from fifty feet
away. It made her fingers itch, her mouth dry out, and her…
Well, she
really didn’t want to think about what her other parts were doing.
Focus,
Tess. Focus.
Dragging
her eyes off the werecat’s butt—conveniently positioned toward her as he spoke
with the figure in the doorway—Tess ordered her heart to slow down and her
thighs to unclench so she could get back to the task at hand. She’d need all
her faculties operational for this one. She could just feel it.
Why
does he have to be so gorgeous? She eased herself to her feet and hugged the side of the
stairway, completely engulfed in the shadows. I’d be a lot more relaxed
about taking a message to the leader of the Council of Others if he were a
short, ugly weregopher, instead of a mouthwatering, take-me-now leopard man.
Where’s the justice in this?
She got no
answer.
Great.
Now even my own subconscious is ignoring me.
She waited
for him to wave farewell to the doorman and start off down the deserted street
before easing from her hiding space and trailing after him in the shadows. She
made it approximately three steps before she tripped over her own feet and went
stumbling sideways into someone’s trashcan. Thankfully, it was plastic and not
the old-fashioned metal kind. With that much noise, she might as well just have
shouted his name.
She felt
kind of stupid following him like this, instead of just walking right up to
him, introducing herself and taking care of business like a reasonable adult,
but not stupid enough to change anything. She told herself she was just taking
a few minutes to build up her courage before taking the plunge. She just wished
she were naïve enough to believe it.
Okay,
so how about, “Excuse me, Mr. De Santos? I have some information you might be
interested in.” No. Too Jehovah’s Witness.
Um…”Hey,
are you Rafael De Santos, the famous wereleopard and leader of the Council of
Others?” Nope. Too Bellevue escapee.
“Mr. De
Santos, I come bearing an urgent message from the High Priest of the Witches’
Council.” Ugh! Too sci-fi B movie.
Hm,
maybe, “Mr. De Santos, my name is Tess Menzies, and I’m—oof!”
The “oof!”
was never intended to be part of the speech, but it’s what burst out of her
mouth when two hundred and some-odd pounds of male muscle barreled into her
from the side and drove her deep into a service alley halfway down the street.
Before she had time to yell, “Hey!” —and she called herself a native New
Yorker! —she was pressed flat against the brick wall of one of the adjacent
buildings with her hands yanked over her head and six feet of man pinning her
in place.
“Who are
you, and why the hell have you been following me?”
His growl
rumbled through her with a menace she could feel down in her bones, and she
knew instinctively that if he’d given her a full-fledged roar, she’d be
fighting for control of her bladder right about now. Even so, his efforts would
probably have made a normal person cry. The man had intimidation down to an
art. He projected pure rage and menace, and the snarl he pressed right up
against her face did manage to make her take a hearty gulp. But she rallied
quickly and dealt with the situation the way she always did. She brazened
through it.
“Sheesh.”
She managed to get it out without squeaking and congratulated herself. “If you
usually come on to women this strongly, I have to wonder that you ever get a
date.”
What
the hell are you doing?
a voice inside her demanded.
I have
absolutely no idea,
she answered.
He snarled
again. Lower this time. More menacing. “I said, who the hell are you?”
“I heard
you.” She swallowed a knot of fear and lifted her chin. “I just didn’t think it
was any of your business.”
His
expression, which she could see clearly given its current location about a
nanometer away from hers—he had really great skin, she noticed, all smooth and
even and bronze—turned incredulous.
“Pardon
me? Unless I’m very much mistaken—and I know I’m not—you’ve been tailing me for
three blocks. That makes your name, rank, serial number and intention very much
my business.”
She
grinned and watched his golden eyes blaze. “My name’s Tess, my rank is
absolutely nothing, I’m horrible with numbers and my intentions are a little
too complicated to explain to you in a dark alley. Plus, I generally talk with
my hands, and you’re currently making that a wee bit difficult.”
He
snarled. “I have no time for smart-aleck retorts. Why are you following me?”
She
blinked up at him with wide blue eyes that generally made men smile at her
indulgently and tell her to let them handle things and not worry her pretty
little head over it. “Well, I thought that would be obvious. I wanted to know
where you’re going.”
He ignored
the eyes. How could he ignore the eyes?
“Not good
enough. Explain. Now.”
Tess
blinked, her mouth curving into a backup-plan pout. “That’s the truth. I wanted
to know where you were going. You know, for someone with such a reputation for
being a ladies’ man, you could use a little work on your manners.”
“My
manners are fine when I’m with a lady. I’m not entirely sure you qualify.”
“Hey! What’s
that supposed to mean?”
“It means
that in my experience, ladies don’t follow men through deserted streets at
two-thirty in the morning. That’s what criminals and cowards do.”
The pout
had clearly failed as miserably as the big blue eyes and suddenly Tess felt a
lot less confident about her Plan B. It didn’t seem to be working. At all.
Instead of being smitten with her, the werecat seemed to be pissed off at her.
His exotic amber eyes looked hard and impatient, and his sensual mouth looked
tight and unamused. This was not the sort of reaction she was used to getting
from men.
Shifting
nervously, she tried tugging her hands free, but his grip only tightened. She
gave a hard yank and he responded with a low warning growl. Before she could
seriously give in to panic and start struggling, he leaned into her and used
his body to keep her immobile against the cold brick wall.
“Your
explanation. Now.”
Tess
swallowed hard. It was about the only movement she could make. He kept her
hands pinned above her and now his chest crushed her flat and his hips pressed
tightly against hers. She could feel the way he bent his legs to even out their
heights, because those legs crowded against hers to keep her still. She couldn’t
move a damned muscle, which meant she also couldn’t cast any damned spells. She
was helpless. Time for Plan C—the truth. Just not too much of it.
“I already
explained, sort of. I was supposed to wait for you outside Vircolac until you
came out. Then I was supposed to deliver a message and leave. But I got curious
to see where you were going at two-forty-five in the morning.” She made her
tone and expression sullen, as if she had given in reluctantly. That much was
true. “If you hadn’t jumped me, you’d never have known I was following you. I
was just going to see if you were going to a nightclub or something. I’ve never
been to one and thought it would be fun to see where the cool ones are. I didn’t
mean anything by it.” That last part wasn’t.
“What
message?”
“Don’t ask
me. It’s written down in a sealed envelope. It’s not like I read it or
anything.” Neither was that.
She saw
his nostrils flare as he inhaled deeply. His eyes narrowed. “You’re lying. I
can smell it on you. I can smell something else, too. There’s
something…different about you.”
Tess felt
her eyes widen before she caught herself. “Well, I showered right before I left
home,” she joked weakly, trying to shift even an inch away from him. “If you
can smell me, I think I need to switch soaps.”
He didn’t
appear to be listening. Instead he leaned forward and pressed his face into the
curve of her neck. She froze as her stomach clenched. She felt the stir of his
breath against her skin and felt a swift shock of arousal. Apparently, her body
hadn’t forgotten its first impression of him. It remembered quite clearly how
attracted she’d been and it chose now to remind her.
“That’s
not it,” he muttered and she could feel the movement of his lips as he spoke. “You
smell…different…” Sniff. “Exotic…” Sniff… “Powerful…” Sniff, sniff. Then the
dart of a tongue that rasped against her throat. “Other.”
His head
turned and Tess found herself staring into golden eyes that blazed with
impossible heat.
“You smell
like a witch.”
Tess
stared up into those amber eyes and felt her first wave of fear. Suddenly she
remembered that this man wasn’t just a man. He was a Felix, the most powerful
Feline in the history of the city, and he could tear out her throat with a
swipe of his finger. With the tension radiating off of him, she wasn’t sure he
didn’t intend to do just that.
“Well? Are
you a witch?” He asked it in that rasping growl as he shook her by the hands he
held pinned. “You aren’t human. I can smell it.”
“You smell
wrong.” She could feel how wide her eyes had grown, but this time it wasn’t a
ploy. It was fear. “I am human. My name is Tess Menzies.”
He pressed
his nose against the hollow below her ear and inhaled, and she had to bite back
a moan as her pussy clenched in reaction.
“You’re
not. Humans smell…muddy. Thick. You smell clear. Sweet. Spicy.” Again that
tongue, rasping like damp sandpaper across her skin. “Taste that way, too. Not
human at all.”
Fear
prodded her into temper. “Eaten many humans, have you?”
She felt
his mouth shift into a grin. “A few here and there. Want me to eat you?”
That
sensual, amused purr had nothing to do with food, but a hell of a lot to do
with sex. Sheesh. Did the man usually come on to women when he had them pinned
against the wall during an interrogation? The image brought a flood of moisture
between her legs and she cursed.
“Hmm,
smells like you like the idea.” A lazy stroke of the tongue. The soft, delicate
scrape of teeth. “I’d love to taste that cream I can smell. I bet it’s thick
and rich and hot.” His legs shifted, forced hers apart. He settled between them
until she could feel the ridge of an impressive erection nestling against her
mound. “I’d like to lap it all up. And I will. Just as soon as you answer my
question.”
“Qu—question?”
Her
stammer made him chuckle, and she gritted her teeth.
“Yes,
question.” He nuzzled the sweet spot below her ear and pressed his hips against
hers when she tried to squirm away. “The one where I asked if you’re a witch.”
Horny was
the most honest answer, but she didn’t feel inclined to share it. “I told you.
My name is Tess and I’m as human as the next person.”
“Considering
the next person at the moment is not human at all, that fails to convince me of
anything.”
This time
when she felt the scrape of his teeth, she could feel the elongated canines and
she gasped. He didn’t sink them into her flesh, and she didn’t expect him to,
but the message was clear. He was far from human and far from civilized, no
matter what he looked like on the surface.
“It’s the
truth.”
He pulled
back at that and stared down at her with eyes that had gone molten. Even in the
darkness, she could see the way his pupils had elongated to feline slits.
“You’re
very stubborn, and very wrong. Also very unsurprised to find a man with fangs
and cats’ eyes pinning you up against an alley wall. Would you care to explain
why?”
She raised
an eyebrow. “Not really.”
“Do it
anyway.”
Stalling
for time seemed like her best bet. Well, honestly, it seemed about as hopeless
as anything else, but it made her feel better. “How about you let go of my
hands first and give me some breathing room? This Spanish Inquisition thing is
getting kind of uncomfortable.”
“I find it
comfortable indeed,” he purred, shifting his hips to press his erection harder
against her. “The way you breathe now is positively entrancing. But if you
truly wish to be free, I suggest you begin to cooperate.”
Tess had
never taken suggestions very well. “Or what? You’ll beat it out of me?”
He shifted
his grip, transferring both her wrists to one of his large hands, but though
she redoubled her efforts, she still couldn’t break that grip. “Hm, would you
like that, sweet Tess? Would you like it if I turned you over my knee, bared
that lovely bottom to the moonlight and turned it pink and glowing with the
weight of my hand?” His free hand slid around her back and cupped her bottom,
kneading the muscle and making her quiver. “Would you like that, Tess?”
Christ,
for a woman who’d never been into bondage, the mental image caused an
unexpected jolt in her pussy. She ignored it and concentrated on not wrapping
her legs around his waist. “Trust a man to resort to violence.”
“Only if
it pleases you, sweetheart.”
“What
would please me is you letting me go!”
That
damned chuckle again. “Ah, but it would not please me, sweet Tess, and since I
am currently the one in control here, it is my wish that counts.”
Tess
harrumphed. “And isn’t that just like a man.”
“Or like a
beast.” His eyes flashed and his gaze slid to her lips. “And you know the truth
about beasts and beauties, don’t you? The beasts always take what they want and
damn the consequences.”
Her only
warning was a flash of gold before his head dipped and his mouth settled hot
and hungry over hers.
Chapter Two
Rafe
purred his approval at her taste. Rich and sweet, like whipping cream, it made
him want to lap her up. Her lips parted readily beneath his, probably more from
shock than desire, but he pressed his advantage. His tongue slid inside to
tease and taste, exploring her flavors and textures like a mapmaker charting
new territory. She was more than he had expected, and the overflow threatened
to swamp his senses.
He leaned
into her, acquainting his body with hers, learning the heat and scent and curve
of her. He felt the tension in her muscles and the subtle yielding in her lips
as they began to cling to his. Christ, she tasted so good! Her flavor seemed to
deepen with each taste, flooding through him and feeding his arousal.
He’d
thought at first it was just reflex. When he’d felt himself begin to harden
against her hips, he’d written it off as a natural and unavoidable reaction to
his proximity to an attractive woman. After all, she’d been pressed up against
him like a lover, and he had a healthy sex drive. It was only natural.
What wasn’t
natural was the way her scent wrapped around him, teasing him with that
indefinable foreign quality that had started his curiosity. It tickled the
edges of his brain like a forgotten memory…the idea that he should
recognize it, whatever it was. He felt like he knew what it was if he could just
remember…
Then she
whimpered against his mouth and he felt his curiosity fading. It didn’t matter
who she was. Didn’t matter that her scent was getting stronger as her arousal
flared, getting muskier, hotter, smelling more intensely of magic—
The thought
slammed the door on his libido. He wrenched his mouth away from hers and
snarled. “Damn you. Tell me who the hell you are. What kind of witch are you?”
His
question startled a laugh out of her, curving those kiss-swollen lips in
surprise. “The regular kind, I guess. I didn’t know we came in thirty-one
flavors.”
Damn, but
he’d like to taste every flavor she did come in.
He stuffed
the thought down and lifted his body away from temptation. “So I was right.”
She must
have read the skepticism in his face because she shrugged and scowled. “It’s
not like I was lying. Just because I’m a witch doesn’t mean I’m not human.”
He wasn’t
in the mood to debate her. He’d lived among humans all his life. He knew how
they smelled, how they tasted, and he knew she was different. “So tell me why
you were following me. What does a witch want with a Felix in a dark alley in
the middle of the night?” Unable to resist, he leaned forward to nuzzle the
rapid pulse at the base of her throat. “Aside from the obvious.”
“I’m not
the one who forced us unto the alley, Einstein, so why don’t you tell me?”
He felt
her struggles, but he also heard the barely audible hitch in her breathing and
knew her confrontational façade was an act. “I asked first.”
“Oh, and
this is suddenly the third grade? Fine. Like I said, I was following you.”
He lowered
his head to snarl at her and noticed how she licked her lips and jerked away.
So his little Tess didn’t want his kisses? He smiled.
“I knew
you were following me, sweet Tess.” He bent his head, nuzzled the line of her
jaw, flicked his tongue out to taste her skin. “Now I want to know why.”
He felt
her jaw clench under his tongue. “I already told you, I was supposed to deliver
a message and I got curious.”
The hand
on her ass shifted, squeezed. “And why would you have any kind of message for
me, sweet Tess? You don’t even know me, do you?”
She
snorted, the sound less than elegant but very clear. “Your name appears in the
papers so often you practically have your own section. I doubt there’s a person
in Manhattan who doesn’t know you.”
He
digested that as he flicked his tongue against her earlobe. She quivered in his
arms. “You may be right. But with all those people who know who I am, very few
of them have ever tried tailing me through the streets in the middle of the
night. Unless they planned to mug me. Were you planning to mug me?”
“Were you
planning to check yourself into Bellevue?”
“I didn’t
think so.” He’d get the truth out of her eventually. Even if he had to keep her
here for hours. He nuzzled her ear, inhaling that intoxicating scent. Days
even. His hand stroked her truly fine ass through the snug denim. Maybe weeks. “You
need to tell me what sort of message you have for me, sweet Tess, before I find
something else to occupy myself.” He pressed his erection against her belly and
felt her freeze.
“Let me go
and I’ll tell you.”
“Tell me
and I’ll let you go.”
She gave a
credible growl of frustration that made him grin against the curve of her
shoulder. “When I get free, I am turning you into a guppy and feeding you to my
cat.”
“Tell me,
Tess, before I decide I don’t care about the answer.”
She bucked
one last time against his hold before falling into a sulk. “I told you, I never
saw the damned message. It was given to me in a sealed envelope.”
“Tess…”
She
scowled at him. “That’s the truth, damn it. I was told to deliver the message
to you, unopened, when you left the council meeting tonight.”
He pulled
back to frown down at her. “What council meeting?”
Tess
rolled her eyes. “Just because I was careless enough to let you see me tailing
you does not make me terminally stupid. What council do you think I’m
interested in that meets at one a.m. on the nights of the new moon?”
“And what
would an ordinary, very human witch know about the Council of Others?”
Suddenly
her luscious scent and feminine body slipped a few notches down on his
immediate priority list. The Council, of which he was the reluctant head, had
operated for centuries in the city without incident, mainly because it kept
itself a guarded secret from the mortal world. If this woman knew about them,
they could have a serious problem on their hands. If she had succeeded in
tracing him to the council chambers in the secret basement at Vircolac, the
consequences would be far-reaching and bordering on disastrous. The sobering
thought had his hand sliding away from her ass and bracing against the wall
beside her head.
“Not a
whole hell of a lot, or I wouldn’t have had to wait for you outside until it
was over, would I? Because everything I could find out about it told me it didn’t
officially exist.” She glared at him from big blue eyes that should have looked
innocent, but instead snapped with fire and irritation. “You seem to have
better security than the Pentagon.”
He
dismissed that. “The Pentagon has lousy security. But you knew I was on the
Council. You shouldn’t even know the Council exists.”
“If it’s
any consolation, I didn’t know until two weeks ago.”
“And what
happened two weeks ago?”
She paused
and he could almost see her weighing her answer. “I got hired to tail you.”
“You’ve
been tailing me for two weeks?” The thought blindsided him. Surely he’d have
noticed that kind of presence. He still had instincts. He couldn’t have gotten
that soft, not even living in the middle of a city for so long. “That’s
impossible.”
She rolled
her eyes. “And you’re so modest, too. No wonder all the ladies go for you.”
He felt
his eyes narrow and he pressed back up against her. “Shall we see how quickly I
can make you go for me, sweet Tess? Or would you like to confine your comments
to answering my questions?”
Rafe
watched her mouth open, then close again with a snap. He waited for a moment
before he continued. “Were you watching me for two weeks?”
“Not
exactly. I kept track of when you were seen in public places to get an idea of
your schedule, but I wasn’t tailing you.”
That
sounded an awful lot like being tailed to him. “If you kept turning up wherever
I was going, I should have noticed you.”
Again, she
rolled her eyes. It seemed to be a habit. “Right. Like you notice every woman
who stares at you when you’re going about your business. Sweetheart, you are so
used to being ogled, you don’t even see it happening any more. I would have
needed to slip my hand down your pants to get your attention. And I’m sure most
of the other women watching you seriously considered that option.”
He found
that to be a very distracting mental image. Not the other women, but the idea
of this woman, who smelled of spice and magic, sliding her hand down his pants.
He imagined the feel of her smooth fingers curving around his cock, and
growled. He apparently needed to keep his thoughts on a leash around this
woman.
“But there
was no reason for you to pay attention to me,” she continued. “I didn’t follow
you from place to place, just occasionally popped up where you were, noted the
time and left. I wasn’t stupid enough to think you wouldn’t have noticed if I
had been tailing you.”
“All
right, I’ll set that aside. For the moment.” He eyed her pointedly. “I still
want to know who hired you and what they want.”
“I can’t
tell you what they want.” She must have seen his mouth open to protest, because
she quickly cut him off. “I’m just the messenger. I don’t know the text of the
message, and I imagine that if they had wanted me to know about it, they wouldn’t
have given it to me in a sealed envelope. You’ll have to read it and ask them
what they want.”
He
snarled. “And just who are they?”
She drew a
deep breath, blew it out and glared at him. “The Witches’ Council.”
The
Witches’ Council?
Rafe frowned and pulled back another inch. He’d never even heard of a witches’
council. Oh, he knew there were witches in the world, and probably some in
Manhattan, but he hadn’t known they were organized. Of course, as far as he
knew, the last diplomatic contact between a witch and the Others in New York
had happened in 1627, so him being in the dark wasn’t that surprising. Given
the present distraction, he thought remembering the whole 1627 thing was pretty
damned impressive.
He looked
down at said distraction and flexed his hands around her wrists, not so much
squeezing as kneading the captive limbs. “So you’re a witch who was hired by a
Witches’ Council to follow me and confront me in a dark alley, but you don’t
know what they want with me?”
“Like I said,
they didn’t see fit to share that with me.”
Rafe gave
in to temptation enough to lean in close and taste her skin again. Her fear was
fading, making her sweeter, and her irritation increasing, making her hotter.
He could make a meal of her. If his curiosity would leave him in peace. “Would
you care to hazard a guess?”
“What, are
we playing twenty questions now?”
He had to
stifle the urge to grin at her expression. Somehow the narrowed eyes, twisted
lips and crinkled nose looked less than threatening on her. The curls that were
dark gold in the faint light and those big blue eyes just spoiled the effect.
He schooled his expression into a feral mask and scraped his teeth delicately
along her jaw line.
“Not yet,”
he purred, “but we could. I could ask you what you taste like, what you look
like spread out on silk sheets, how much it would take to make you beg me to
touch you…” He lapped at the sensitive skin beneath her chin. “Do you want to
play that game with me, sweet Tess?”
He heard
the desire as well as the defiance in her snort. “What part of this
conversation has been about what I want?”
He
chuckled. “Why don’t you tell me what you want, sweet Tess.” He paused to
inhale deeply, catching the ripeness of her scent. “Or better still, I can tell
you what you want…”
She
shivered in his arms and the telltale motion made him smile. His little witch
was just as affected by him as he was by her. That offered some interesting
possibilities.
“I have
another idea,” she said, and her voice sounded strained. “How about I just give
you the bloody message, you let me go, and we both pretend this never happened.”
He
laughed. “Oh, I don’t think so, Tess. I think we have much too much to talk
about for that to happen. No, I think you should come with me.”
He pulled
her wrists down in front of her and tugged her away from the wall and toward
the mouth of the alley. He managed to move her about seven feet before surprise
wore off and she dug in her heels.
“Wait.
Where are we going?”
“To the
building I just left. A friend of mine lives there. He’d be happy to provide us
with someplace to discuss this message of yours where it’s a bit more
comfortable. And better lit.”
She tugged
at her hands and refused to budge. “You’re going to take me to Vircolac?”
“So now
you know about the club as well?”
“I was
waiting for you outside of it a few minutes ago, wasn’t I?”
“It’s not
supposed to be common knowledge.”
“It isn’t.
That’s why I’m surprised you’d think of taking me there. I thought humans were
barred from ever setting foot inside.”
He smiled
as he remembered Missy Winters’ opinion of that particular decree. “The rules
have been…relaxed a bit recently.”
“I don’t
care. I’m not taking any more chances tonight. If you want to keep talking to
me, you can keep talking to me in the alley. I’m perfectly comfortable here.”
He turned
back to her and raised an eyebrow. “But I’m not,” he purred. “And unless you
intend to make me more comfortable—which, I feel I should warn you, would
involve taking off all your clothes and laying down under me for three or four
hours—I suggest you come with me to the club.”
She leapt
for the alley entrance with such speed, she almost ended up dragging him along
behind her.
In the
darkness, Rafe laughed and wondered how long it would take him to change her
mind about the appeal of that particular manner of getting comfortable.
Chapter
Three
“Who is
she?”
“Her name
is Tess Menzies. I found her laying in wait for me outside the club.”
“Outside my
club? And security didn’t see her?”
“They must
not have.” Rafe shrugged, handed Tess a mug of steaming coffee, and turned away
from her as if she didn’t exist. She glared at his back. “Maybe they want to be
a little more careful in the future.”
“Maybe
they want to look for new jobs.”
The man
who growled that threat was none other than Graham Winters himself, the
werewolf owner of Vircolac and supposedly one of Rafe De Santos’ closest
friends. Tess watched the byplay between the two men over the rim of her coffee
cup.
“In their
defense,” Rafe conceded, “it’s not like she’s just some random human. She’s a
witch, and apparently she’s been spying on me for awhile without me noticing,
so she’s not exactly easy to spot.”
“A witch?
What the hell does a witch want with one of us?”
“Damned if
I know. She said she had some sort of message to deliver to me. From the
Witches’ Council.”
“They have
a council?”
“That’s
what she says.”
Graham
growled something Tess didn’t catch, and Rafe laughed. Scowling, Tess set aside
her coffee cup and crossed her arms over her chest. “You know, she also
has ears, a mouth and a fully functional brain. You might want to try talking
to me, instead of talking about me as if I weren’t even in the room.”
Rafe
turned to her and raised an eyebrow. “You didn’t seem very willing to talk to
me when we were outside a few minutes ago.”
“You had
me pinned to the wall like Torquemada with PMS. I was supposed to want to tell
you my life story?”
Graham
laughed, then quickly covered it with a cough when Tess and Rafe both turned to
stare at him. “Sorry. Say, what do you think about checking out this note and
seeing what all the fuss is about? I mean, it is almost four in the
morning, so I’m guessing that whatever it is this Witches’ Council wanted to
talk to you about, Rafe, it’s got to be fairly important, right?”
Rafe
growled something that sounded remarkably similar to what Graham had growled
about his security people a few minutes ago and stalked back to Tess’s chair.
He held out his hand. “Give me the message.”
She didn’t
know how it happened, but all of a sudden she found herself looking from his
hand to his face and back again while a devil prodded her tongue to make it do
evil things. “Say please.”
Graham
practically choked to death, but Rafe just closed his eyes, drew a deep breath,
and said, “Please,” through tightly clenched teeth.
Tess
pursed her lips, reached into the pocket of her black denim jacket and pulled
out a slightly crinkled white envelope. She handed it to him with a haughty
sniff.
“Thank
you,” he bit out.
“You’re
welcome.”
Tess
watched as he ripped the envelope open and pulled out a single sheet of white
paper with her grandfather’s seal at the top and the familiar, regimented
handwriting marching across the page. She wasn’t close enough to read the text,
and when Rafe turned away, beginning to pace as he read, she couldn’t see the
letter at all. But that didn’t matter. She already knew what it said.
Not
because she’d read the actual text of the letter; she hadn’t been lying—about that,
at least—but because she had eavesdropped on her grandfather when he and a
fellow council member had composed it. Still, she kept quiet while Rafe read.
“They want
to meet with the Council,” he finally said, raising his head and handing the
letter to Graham. “With me, they say. I’m not sure if my name is simply there
because I am current head of the Council or because they have some need to talk
to me in particular. Damn Dmitri anyway.”
Graham
grinned and shook his head. “Now, now. It’s not Misha’s fault he has better
things to do now than occupy that council seat.”
“I can
still blame him. It makes me feel good to blame him.”
Tess
watched their conversation with a small frown. She didn’t quite know what they
were talking about, and she hated feeling left in the dark. “Who are Dmitri and
Misha?”
“They’re
the same person. A friend of ours.” Rafe dismissed the question casually and
turned to face her, crossing his arms over his chest. “But I think it’s still
my turn to ask the questions, Tess. Tell me why this council wants to talk to
me.”
She
shrugged, growing wary again. “I don’t know. They didn’t explain anything to
me. They just asked me to deliver the message.”
“Yes, and
that’s what has me so confused. Why you? If Graham or I were going to deliver a
message to someone we didn’t know and didn’t trust, but whom we believed might
pose a threat to our basic safety, I doubt either of us would choose someone
like you to deliver it.”
She
scowled. “Why not? Because I’m not some sort of trained spy who would have been
able to follow you all the way to the pearly gates without being spotted?”
Rafe shook
his head, his lips quirking. “No, because you’re small, soft, female and way
too appealing and vulnerable to have been sent to wait outside in the streets
of Manhattan alone at three in the morning.”
She rolled
her eyes. “It wasn’t even midnight when I started, and for gods’ sakes, I’m a
witch. It’s not like I’m the world’s easiest prey for muggers.”
“I didn’t
seem to have any trouble with you.”
“You weren’t
trying to mug me.”
“I should
sincerely hope not.”
The last
comment came from the door of the large study where the three of them had been
talking, announcing the arrival of a petite blonde woman with big brown eyes
and a pretty, gentle face. She wore a long, man’s flannel robe with the sleeves
rolled up to expose her hands and the hem dragging the floor. Tess thought she
saw bunny-shaped slippers peeking out from underneath the plaid fabric.
The woman
stepped into the room and looked from Tess to Rafe to Graham and back to Tess. “I’m
Missy Winters,” she said, smiling kindly. “I didn’t know we had visitors or I
might have stopped to get dressed before seeing what had become of my
mysteriously disappearing husband.”
Graham
crossed the room, a scowl on his face and a blanket he’d grabbed off the back
of the comfortable leather sofa in his hands. “You should have gotten dressed
anyway.” He flicked the blanket open and wrapped it around his wife. “Rafe,
close your eyes.”
Tess
watched while Missy laughed at her husband and pushed him away, settling next
to Tess on the matching leather loveseat and offering her the blanket.
“Ignore my
husband,” Missy said. “He’s a man and a Lupine and the pack
Alpha, which means he’s slightly insane. I, on the other hand, am female and
human and therefore very happy to meet you and find out what brings you here at
this time of night.”
Bemused,
Tess found herself smiling back at the werewolf’s friendly wife. “Actually, I’m
here because of Rafe. I had a message to deliver to him, but instead of taking
it and letting me go, he decided to kidnap me and ask me ridiculous questions
that I already told him I can’t answer.”
Missy
smirked. “Now that sounds like something either one of them would probably
think was a really good idea. That’s why they’re the men and we’re the voices
of reason. So you’ve already delivered your message?”
Tess nodded,
her smile broadening.
“And he’s
received it, read it and comprehended it as well as his tiny male mind will
allow?”
She nodded
again.
“Well,
then, I’d say your work here is done. Would you like me to call you a cab? Or
you’re welcome to spend the night. We’ve got loads of room, and I’d love to get
to know you better tomorrow when we’re both more awake.”
Tess
grinned. “A cab would be great. I’ve got to go to the other end of the city, so
I’d really appreciate the lift.”
Rafe
growled and crossed the room in four long strides until he stood directly in
front of the couch and glared down at her. “I’m not done with you yet. You’ll
leave when I say you can leave.”
Missy
rolled her eyes and stood. “Can the King of the Jungle routine, Rafe. It’s late
and there’s no reason to keep the poor girl awake all night while you try and
decipher the mysterious code of plain English I’m assuming her message was
written in. Let her go. If you have more questions, you can always ask her
tomorrow.”
He shook
his head. “No. This isn’t your business, Missy. This is a matter for the
Council to discuss.”
Missy
shook her head right back. “The last time I checked, Mr.
Lay-Down-Some-Asinine-Law, the Council had thirteen members, not two. So if it’s
a council matter, you obviously can’t make any decisions about it until you
speak to the entire council. And since that meeting supposedly ended at two,
you’re clearly not going to be doing that tonight. I’m sure the rest of the
council is already home in bed by now.”
Graham
laughed, but quickly schooled his face into more sober lines when his wife
turned to glare at him. “Sorry, honey, but you’re forgetting that almost half
the council is vampire. It’s barely teatime for them. I’m sure the lot of them
are still at the club drinking my brandy and telling lies about the length of
their fangs.”
“You know
what, honey? Next time, don’t help.”
Tess
laughed, feeling much better than she had before Missy had walked into the
room, and stood. “No, I think Missy’s right, Graham. It is late, and I do want to
get home. I’ve done my job and delivered my message, and I have a real job I
need to get to in the morning. So if you’ll excuse me, I’ll just thank you for
the coffee and be on my way.”
Rafe
growled. “I don’t think so, Tess. Sit back down and be quiet until I tell you
that you can leave.”
She felt
her eyebrow shoot up like a rocket. “What was that? I’m sorry, but I have this
strange sort of deafness. I can never hear it when people are horribly rude to
me. Would you mind repeating what you just said?”
“You heard
me.”
She
stepped forward until her toes practically touched his and tilted her head back
to glare up at him. “No. No, I really think I didn’t.”
She heard
the snarl welling in his chest, but it was too late to back off now. She braced
herself for his explosion, but it never happened. Instead, Graham stepped
between them and placed his hand on Rafe’s chest to hold him back.
“Come on,”
the Lupine said as he nodded to his wife, who gently urged Tess back into her
seat. “This isn’t going to get anything done. Tess, you stay here for five more
minutes while Rafe and I go see if we can round up the council members. If we
can, we’ll talk this over real fast and give you an answer to bring back to the
Witches’ Council, and if not, you’ll get to go home and we’ll contact you
tomorrow with our answer.”
Tess
pursed her lips. “I liked Missy’s idea better.”
“So did I,”
Missy said, “but as compromises go, this one could be worse. Besides, now that
I’m awake, I want a midnight snack. You can keep me company while I bug the
staff at the club and wait for them to send something over for me. I really
would like to get to know you better.”
Tess
looked at Missy’s kind and friendly face, then at Rafe’s harsh, set one. She
sighed. “Fine. But if you aren’t back in fifteen minutes, I’m out of here, like
it or not.”
“Deal.”
Graham was already dragging Rafe toward the door. “In the meantime, make sure
my wife doesn’t eat anything with chocolate in it. She’s breastfeeding, and it
gives the baby hives.”
Chapter
Four
“So,” Missy
said as she settled onto a bar stool at the island in the massive kitchen. A
huge roast beef sandwich and an enormous glass of milk was placed in front of
her. “You said you have to be at work in the morning. What do you do?”
“I own a
shop on West Ninth Street.” Tess eyed the sandwich in amazement as Missy raised
it to her mouth for the first bite. She couldn’t believe this petite little
woman intended to eat something so enormous as the sandwich a uniformed waiter
from Vircolac had delivered a few minutes ago. Although Missy Winters wasn’t
model-thin, she was by no means a heavy woman. By rights, any woman who called
this meal a midnight snack ought to weight approximately seven billion pounds. “It’s
an herb and teashop. The East Village Apothecary.”
Missy
chewed, swallowed and blotted her lips daintily with a napkin. “How fabulous.”
She drained a third of the milk in one thirsty gulp. “How long have you been in
business?”
Tess
watched her bite off another slab of cow. “About seven years. But the shop’s been
around since the seventies. I bought out the previous owners.”
“How old
were you when you did that? Nine?”
Tess
laughed and made a face. “Twenty-two. Don’t let the Li’l Orphan Annie hair fool
you. I’m older than I look.”
“You must
be, since you look about sixteen.”
“Gee,
thanks.”
“Don’t
mention it.” Missy finished the first half of her sandwich and grinned. “Sure
you don’t want some? Speak now or forever hold your peace.”
“No,
thanks.” Tess shook her head and watched with wide eyes as Missy shrugged and
bit into the second pound of roast beef. “I mean, I really don’t mean to be
rude, but…how the heck do you eat like that and not outweigh your husband?”
Missy
choked down a swallow of milk and laughed. “Don’t do that while I’m drinking.
You almost made me snort milk.” She quietly cleared her throat. “And believe
me, if I’d tried to do this six months ago, I probably would weigh more than
Graham. But this is one of the best fringe benefits of having baby werewolves.
I burn calories like a raging metabolic inferno.”
Tess felt
her eyebrows arch. “When did you have the baby? Last year?”
“Last
month. Two weeks ago, to be precise. Well, two weeks and five days.” Missy
beamed with a proud new mama smile and downed another third of the milk. “A
boy. Roark. I’d force you to come upstairs and meet him, but he was fussy
tonight and now that he’s finally asleep, I don’t want to risk waking him.”
“Two weeks
ago? You’ve got to be kidding.” Tess gestured to the tightly belted robe at
Missy’s waist. “What did you do, adopt? Because two weeks is not enough
time to lose a baby belly.”
“That’s
the other fringe benefit.” Missy pushed her empty plate away and sat back with
a satisfied grin. “I told you, I burn calories like it’s going out of style.
Have since I first got pregnant. Werewolves have really fast metabolisms. They
probably burn seven or eight thousand calories a day on average. They eat like
horses. When they’re breastfeeding, human women burn about five thousand. And I’ve
just discovered, much to my joy, that when breastfeeding a baby werewolf, a
human woman can burn somewhere around twelve thousand calories a day without
breaking a sweat.” Her grin widened. “Ain’t life grand?”
Tess
laughed. “That’s a diet plan I don’t think I’ve seen on the infomercials.”
“Not in
this lifetime. The Lupines—well, all the Others, actually—are trying to
preserve their secrecy from the human world, but it’s getting harder all the
time. They’re not about to go telling people anything about themselves until
they’ve got absolutely no other choice.”
“Is that
likely to take much longer?” Tess asked, curious. “I mean, I’m hardly an
expert, but I think that might have been one of the things my gr—the council
wanted to talk to Rafe about. I’ve heard some of the members rumbling about how
some of the Others in the city haven’t been keeping as tight a lid on things as
usual. There were rumors about some faeries being spotted over the summer.”
Missy
sighed. “Yes, there were. It was a huge mix up, and we sorted it out as soon as
we found out what was going on. But I suppose there will always be people who
aren’t happy with that. It makes me crazy, but it also makes me happy that
Dmitri’s council position went to Rafe and not to Graham. Call me kooky, but I’d
prefer it if my husband spent his time worrying about keeping me and the baby
happy, not the entire Other population of Manhattan.”
“I’m
sorry. I didn’t mean to offend you—”
Missy’s
scowl smoothed out into a warm smile so rapidly that Tess wondered if she’d
ever really seen the hostile expression. Maybe she’d just imagined it.
“Oh, you
didn’t,” Missy assured her. “I get carried away sometimes. I’m the one who
should apologize. But that subject is no fun, anyway. I want to hear more about
you. What sorts of things do you sell at your herb and teashop? Besides herbs
and tea, of course.”
Tess shook
her head and laughed. “That’s the bulk of it. The herbs range from fragrant to
flavorful, though most of what I have is medicinal in one way or another. I’m a
licensed herbalist, so I make blends for specific problems people might have,
and I tailor remedies to specific people.”
“Wow, that’s
really cool. I’ve always found the idea of herbal medicine to be a fascinating
subject. How did you get into that?”
“It’s sort
of a family business. My grandmother was an herbalist, too, though she did it
for her family and her neighbors without making a career out of it.”
“Cool. And
you said you sell teas, too?”
Tess
nodded. “Good quality loose leaf from all over the world. And I make up my own
blends to sell as well.”
“I’ll have
to come see you and try some. And maybe see if you’ve got something to put
fussy, cranky baby werewolves to sleep a little faster.” She rolled her eyes
and laughed. “So that’s it? Herbs and medicines and teas?”
Tess
started to nod, then shrugged. “Well, I do readings, too, when things slow
down. It’s a nice extra income.”
Missy
looked curious. “What kind of readings? Tea leaves?”
“I don’t
have the patience for that,” Tess laughed. “No, I read tarot cards. And the
occasional palm. My grandmother taught me that, too.”
“No way!
Really?” Missy’s eyes lit up like a teenager’s, and she almost bounced on her
stool with excitement. “Oh, now I definitely have to come visit. I’ve always
wanted to have a reading done, but I never knew if I could trust any of those readers
who put their signs out in their windows and call themselves Madam Juniper, or
whatever.”
“Some of
them aren’t bad. You just have to be careful, and take things with a grain of
salt. Like, some people think tarot tells the future. It really doesn’t and
anyone who says it does is lying. All it does it point out what sort of
circumstances are happening around you and how those circumstances could turn
out given your current way of thinking. It’s totally changeable.” Tess shifted
in her seat and felt one of her inner jacket pockets bump gently against her
side, as if reminding her what she always carried with her. Some people kept
emergency flashlights. She kept emergency divining tools. Probably because she
was a witch, not a Boy Scout.
She looked
at Missy and reached into the pocket. “Actually,” she said slowly, “I have a
deck with me now. If you want to see a really quick idea of what it’s like.”
Missy’s
expression took on a glow of excitement and she clapped her hands together. “Oh,
you wouldn’t mind? I’d hate to put you out, but I would adore that. If you’re
not too tired?”
Tess shook
her head and pulled out the velvet pouch that held her favorite deck. “Not at
all. I knew I’d be up late, so I took a long nap this afternoon. But since we
don’t know how long the guys will be, I won’t do an entire spread. I’ll just
let you ask some specific questions and throw down a few cards to try and
answer each one. If that’s okay with you?”
The other
woman nodded. “That’s fabulous. Whatever works for you.”
“Great.”
Tess handed the cards to Missy. “Then go ahead and shuffle these and just give
them back to me whenever you feel like you’ve shuffled enough.”
Missy
nodded and began shuffling the oversized cards, a frown of concentration
creasing her forehead. Tess waited patiently, letting her mind wander into the
right space for a reading. After all the years she’d been doing them, it only
took a minute. Contrary to what most people believed, tarot had a lot less to
do with the supernatural than it did with psychotherapy. Reading cards didn’t
require magic powers, just a creative mind and an understanding of the ways
people think. Tess had always found it to be a funny coincidence that she was
both a witch and a tarot reader, rather than a given.
She
accepted the cards when Missy handed them back to her and twisted them in her
hands so that the side that had been on the top when Missy held them was on the
top when she held them as well.
“Great,”
Tess said. “Now, go ahead and ask one question at a time, and I’ll lay down three
or four cards to try and get an answer. You don’t have to ask out loud if you
don’t want to, okay?”
“Okay.”
“All
right. Tell me when you’re ready.”
Missy
paused for a second, closed her eyes in concentration, then opened them again. “Okay.
Ready.”
Tess laid
down the first card. The Queen of Swords. She felt her eyebrow twitch, and
wondered what question Missy had asked. She had assumed the new mother would
want to know something about her son or her own future, but Tess didn’t really
see Missy as the Queen of Swords type. She seemed too earthy and nurturing for
swords. If she’d had to guess, Tess would have said Missy was a pentacles type.
The Queen of Pentacles, perhaps, or maybe even the Empress card. If anyone was
the swords type, it was Tess herself.
“The Queen
of Swords usually represents a woman,” she explained, “though it could be
representing an idea or a situation. Assuming it’s a woman, though, she’s
someone who is mature. Not necessarily old, but grown up. Not a kid. She’s very
intelligent and focused. Willful, but in the upright position like this, she’s
not manipulative, which is good.”
She looked
at Missy to gauge the other woman’s reaction, but the blonde just smiled and
nodded and kept her question to herself. Shrugging, Tess reached for a second
card. Who knew what Missy had asked? Maybe the card made sense to her.
“The King
of Wands. That could be your husband.” She tapped the card with one fingertip. “If
it isn’t, Graham is still a good example of what this guy is like. He’s
mature—again, not old, but grown up—and generally very charismatic. He’s
energetic and successful and incredibly charming. The kind of man who just
blazes through life on sheer force of personality. Like I said, either Graham
or someone a lot like him.”
Missy’s
mouth curved. “Yes, it does sound a lot like him.”
Nodding,
Tess flipped a third card and stared at it for a minute. “The Wheel of Fortune.
That’s interesting. One meaning is just what the card sounds like. It’s the
turn of luck in your life. Upright like this, it means good things are
happening and you’re benefiting from them, which is great. But some people also
think that when it shows up in a reading it signifies the influence of Fate on
your life. That whatever is happening or about to happen to you is something
you really can’t control. You just have to ride it out and see where it takes
you, because that’s where you’re destined to be.”
She spoke
slowly and looked back over the two other cards she’d already laid down. An
uneasy sort of feeling had begun to twist inside of her stomach. She wasn’t
quite sure why, but she thought it might have something to do with this
impromptu reading. Her hand hovered over the deck until Missy looked at her and
smiled her warm, comforting smile.
“Go ahead,”
Missy urged. “You said you’d set out four cards on the question and see what
they said.”
Tess
obediently reached for another card, slipped it off the top of the deck and
slowly turned it over. The Two of Cups.
“Shit.”
Missy
looked at the card, then back up at Tess with an amused expression. “What’s the
matter? It’s not like it’s the Death card,” she pointed out. “It looks like a
very pretty card to me. Isn’t it a good one?”
“The Death
card isn’t really bad.” Tess’s reply came automatically. Her eyes were still
glued to the fourth card laid out on the smooth, pristine countertop. “It just
means change.”
“Then what
does this card mean?”
“True
love.”
“Well
then.” Missy looked from the card to Tess as a beatific smile spread across her
pretty face. “Isn’t that just perfect?”
Chapter
Five
“Perfect,”
Rafe growled as he stalked beside Graham through the semi-hidden hallway that
connected Vircolac to the library in Graham’s neighboring house. “Thirteen
bloody members on that bloody council, and I still get stuck with the
job of making contact with the witches.”
“You are
the head of the council,” Graham pointed out, sounding amused.
“And you
are not helping.”
Rafe’s
temper had not improved during the brief, informal meeting with the rest of the
council members. He had his suspicions about why the witches would want to
contact the Others for the first time in nearly four hundred years, and none of
the possibilities he had in mind made him very happy. The only good thing he
could see coming out of the situation was having met Tess. And since she seemed
not to consider him to be her favorite person at the moment, even that couldn’t
soften the entire blow of being caught up in this political mess. He growled.
“Look, if
we’re right and the witches are considering breaking out of the Accord, it’s
important for us to talk to them before they do anything rash.”
“I know.”
Rafe wasn’t pleased about it, but he did know.
The Accord
of Silence had been reached centuries ago, long before the split between the
witches and the Others, even before humans had begun writing down tales about
men who changed into beasts or cast spells to wither flocks and tell the
fortunes of kings. Since the first time when humans began to realize there was
something different about some of the creatures walking among them, witches and
Others alike had relied on the power of the Accord to keep their existence
separate and hidden from humans. It was a formal agreement that none of the
races or powerful sects on earth would reveal their existence to humankind. To
do so would be folly, but in order to preserve their secrecy, the cooperation
of all supernatural creatures and magic users had been vital. The idea that all
of it might end because the witches were tired of hiding made him grind his
teeth in frustration. How could they be so irresponsible as to risk the lives
of so many non-humans just because they wanted the right to wear pointy black
hats in public?
“Don’t
sound so grumpy or you’ll scare the human,” Graham said, grinning.
“She’s not
human. She’s a witch.”
“Last I heard,
witches are human. So unless they’ve been doing some experimentation
that we Others haven’t heard of…”
“Bite me.”
Graham
laughed. “Nah. You’re old and tough. I’d much rather kick you out and go nibble
on my wife.” He paused, lifted his head, sniffed. “Who I see has been nibbling
on something herself while we were busy. Roast beef, I think. With extra-hot
horseradish. They’re in the kitchen.”
Rafe
already knew that. He could smell Tess’s sweetly pungent fragrance drifting to
him from down the hallway. He tried to resist the urge to inhale deeply, but
failed, and then he had to growl at Graham when he caught the Lupine eying him
with an amused expression.
“What?” he
snarled.
“Oh,
nothing.” Graham’s grin belied his nonchalant tone. “It’s just nice to see the
man who said he’d never be happy with one woman at a time be so focused on one
woman.”
“What the
hell are you talking about? Don’t confuse me with one of your bloody pack
mates. You Lupines are the idiots who think mating with one person for all
eternity is a good idea. We Felines know better. We know that variety is the
spice of life.”
“But you
didn’t always.”
Rafe gave
his friend a warning growl. “Don’t bring up that idiotic old wives’ tale. There’s
no evidence to prove a word of it. No one in the last dozen generations has
been able to remember a time when the Felines mated for life. We’re cats, not
bloody wolves.”
“I didn’t
say a thing about it. I just think it’s an interesting legend, don’t you?”
“No.”
“I mean,
think about it,” Graham continued, ignoring the way Rafe was baring his teeth
in annoyance. “It’s the stuff romantic movies are born of. A beautiful witch,
the arrogant Feline shapeshifter who broke her heart by sleeping with another
woman just days after she’d promised her heart to him. The curse she laid on
him that his progeny would grow fewer and fewer in number with every passing
generation until they died out of this world, unless one man of his blood could
find true love and remain faithful to her for a year and a day. That’s a hell
of a story.”
“And that’s
all it is. A story. With no basis in fact and no evidence supporting the idea
that it ever happened. Remember that.”
“Who are
you reminding, Rafe? Me? Or yourself?”
He shot
his friend another scowl and stalked toward the kitchen. He entered through the
swinging door to see Missy and Tess seated at the island counter looking at
what appeared to be tarot cards. His eyebrows shot up as surprise momentarily
took precedence over his annoyance. “What are you two doing?”
Tess
jumped at the sound of his voice, the deck of cards in her hand jerking
awkwardly and striking the edge of the counter. She cried out as the cards
scattered, landing all over the sprung-wood floor.
“You’re a
little jumpy,” Graham observed, stepping into the kitchen behind Rafe and
quirking an eyebrow. “Something the matter?”
Tess
blushed quickly shook her head. “No, I’m fine. Everything’s fine. I’m just
tired. It’s late. I’ll just pick these up and go.”
Rafe bent
down to help her retrieve the cards, scooping up a handful where they lay
facedown on the floorboards. “You read tarot cards?”
“I used
to,” she muttered, snatching the cards out of his hand and shoving them into a
little velvet bag the color of burgundy wine.
He looked
at her, trying to puzzle out what she meant by that. Obviously, if she’d just
been reading for Missy when he and Graham had walked in, “used to” had to be a
fairly new development. He picked up another handful of cards and handed them
to her.
“Well, at
least they all seem to have landed facedown,” he pointed out, trying to think
of something to say that would calm her. When he saw how his innocent
observation had made her stiffen, he realized he hadn’t found it. “I mean, so
you don’t have to spend all that time flipping them over. That would be a pain.”
“Right,”
she muttered, her eyes scanning the floor with frantic, darting glances. “A
pain.”
Rafe gave
her a puzzled glance, then shrugged, handing her a third pile of cards. He
looked around to see if they’d gotten them all and spied one stray card. It must
have fallen straight down the side of the counter without getting caught in any
of the air currents that had sent the other cards scattering. Instead of
falling facedown on the floor, this card had slid straight down the side of the
island and gotten lodged upright in the tiny crack between the top of the
baseboard molding and the side of the island. It stood up straight and colorful
against the white wooden background.
“Looks
like I spoke too soon.” Rafe looked down at the full-color illustration with interest.
Poised on
the edge of a cliff, ready to tumble straight over the edge and into the
unknown, the figure on the card seemed at once jaunty and pathetic, totally
unaware that he was about to leap into a situation that could easily spell his
doom.
“That’s an
interesting card.” He leaned down for a closer look. “A little depressing, but
kind of cool. The baseboard is covering the caption, though. What’s it called?”
When he
got no answer, he turned his head to look up at Tess. She was staring down at
the card in front of him with an absolutely stricken look on her face. Her skin
was pale, her blue eyes were wide and dilated and her lips had parted on a
strangled gasp.
“That,”
she said, after a long pause and a couple of silent false starts, “is The Fool.”
Tess
stared at the last card in the deck and thought she heard the faint echo of
Fate laughing at her in the background. More than anything in the world, she
wanted to deny her suspicions and tell herself that it couldn’t be true. That
reading she’d tried to do for Missy couldn’t have ended up being about herself
instead. The cards couldn’t have been telling her she was destined to have an
affair with a passionate, fiery, charismatic man with an arrogant streak and
enough charm to seduce the pink off a flamingo. They certainly couldn’t be
telling her she was the fool, poised on the brink of a journey that would
change her life and leave her a different person than she’d been at the
beginning.
No, that
couldn’t possibly be happening to her.
Except
that it was.
She swore,
silently but creatively, and snatched up the last card in her deck before
shoving the whole thing into its pouch and the pouch back into her jacket
pocket, where it would be safe until she could take it home. And burn it.
“Um,
thanks…for…everything, but I have to—um…I have to go now. Nice meeting you.”
She darted
out of the kitchen and down the hall so fast she’d practically reached the
front door before she heard them launch into protests behind her. She was just
reaching for the knob when a large, dark hand closed over hers and stopped her.
A dark
head bent toward hers, and Tess found herself feeling small and vulnerable and
surrounded by this man for the second time in one night. “What’s the matter?”
His voice rumbled in her ear, low and rough and dark, and she fought back a
shiver. “You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
Tess
laughed. “No, I’ve seen ghosts before. They’re not this scary.”
“Then what
is? I know you’re scared of something, sweet Tess. I can smell it on you.”
She closed
her eyes and shuddered. “Do you have any idea how disturbing that is?”
He
chuckled and nuzzled her hair. “You’ll get used to it.”
Tess’s
eyes flew open and she shook her head emphatically. “No, I won’t. I’m not going
to get used to anything about you, because I’m going to leave this house and go
home to my apartment and pretend that I’ve never seen you and I’m never going
to see you again. In fact, I think that’s going to become my favorite new
hobby. Pretending that you just don’t exist.”
“You can
pretend all you want, sweet Tess.” His tongue darted out to rasp at the
sensitive skin behind her ear, making her shudder. “That won’t make it true. I
told you in the alley earlier that I wanted to eat you up just as soon as I
found out what you wanted with me. Well, guess what, Tess? Now I know. And now
I’m feeling very, very hungry.”
“Tough.”
She jerked away from his hold and tugged the front door open, darting down the
steps as fast as she could. The Felix followed at her heels as if he didn’t
even have to make an effort. She growled in frustration. “Would you go AWAY?
What do I have to do to convince you I am not interested?”
Rafe
smiled and continued to walk beside her as if they were out for a casual
stroll. “If you want me to think you’re not interested, sweetheart, you’re
going to have to find a way to stop your pussy from getting wet every time I
talk to you, and your scent from heating and ripening with your desire. Until
you manage that, sweet Tess, I’m going to know that while your lips tell me to
leave, your body wants me to stay as much as I want it myself.”
She turned
on him and let out a strangled groan of frustration. “My body also wants to eat
three pounds of chocolate on the fourth Tuesday of every month. I don’t let it
have that, so what makes you think I’m going to let it have you?”
“I think
it,” he said, hooking one arm around her waist and pulling her to him until her
hips pressed close against his, “because I’m going to give you what you need,
sweet Tess, whether you ask for it or not.”
Then his
mouth cut off her protests, and she forgot what she’d been about to say anyway.
Chapter Six
He touched
her and she felt every single one of her protests melting, just like her knees,
her spine and a percentage of her brain cells she didn’t even want to contemplate.
But it didn’t matter, because the taste of him was the most perfect thing she’d
ever experienced, and the rest of reality ceased to exist when his hands
settled on her hips and tugged her closer against him.
Tess
wrapped her arms around his neck on a groan, her fingers burrowing into the
thick silk of his hair and twining themselves in the strands. She heard him
purring with pleasure and felt the rumble of it like distant thunder rolling
through her. When he angled his head and deepened the kiss on a growl, she
shuddered and forgot all the reasons why she’d intended to avoid this. All the
reasons she’d thought of to tell Fate to take a hike and stop messing with her
plans. Right now the only plans she had were to never, ever stop touching him.
He didn’t
seem likely to object to those plans. Not judging by the way his hands and
settled on her ass—again, like they had in the alley earlier. The man seemed to
have a thing for her ass, and used his grip to tug and angle her hips until she
felt his erection settle into the groove between her legs. Tess moaned and,
feeling benevolent, made it easier for him by pushing her feet off the ground,
spreading her legs and wrapping them around his hips.
She felt
him shift to compensate for her weight, spreading his own legs and getting a
firmer grip on her bottom. He shifted her higher and rolled his hips in a slow,
lazy thrust, and Tess moaned against his mouth. He was driving her crazy. And
this kind of crazy, she didn’t even mind.
She did
mind when he tore his mouth from hers and avoided her whimpering attempts to
recapture his lips in a deeper, hotter kiss. “Damn it, come back here!”
“No.” He
turned his head and arched his neck to stay out of her reach, and the frantic
tugs she gave to his hair, his cheeks, his ears, anything she could reach,
seemed not to even register with him. She bit back a curse against all
shapeshifters and their damned superhuman strength.
He reached
up to peel her arms from around his neck, pressing them to her sides and trying
to lift her away from his body. She clung like a barnacle, locking her ankles
together behind his back and tightening her thighs to clamp herself in place.
“Yes!” She
gave her own credible growl and glared at him. “Now get back here and finish
kissing me before I get cranky.”
She hadn’t
expected him to move, and sure as hell hadn’t expected him to move so fast. She
didn’t even have time to gasp before she found herself spun around and backed
up against a wall for the second time tonight. Only this time, she thought it was
a safe bet that the man pinning her there had more on his mind than asking her
some questions.
He grabbed
her wrists and slammed them up beside her head. He leaned forward, using his
weight to keep her still, and rolled his hips against hers. She cried out as
her clit throbbed to life beneath her jeans. Jeans that would probably have a
huge wet patch between the legs if he didn’t hurry up and get her out of them.
She opened her mouth to tell him that, but he cut her off with a snarl and a
sharp nip to her lower lip.
“Quiet.
Not another damned word.”
Tess felt
her eyes widen and she went still. She could see a hot, savage glow in his cats’
eyes that reminded her that for all this man’s sophisticated appearance and
urbane polish, inside he harbored a beast that could make dinner out of her
entrails. And if that thought wasn’t enough to get her hormones under control,
she was a sad, sad woman.
“I’m
sorry,” she managed, though her breath still came in ragged pants.
“Oh, it’s
way too late for that,” he informed her, eyes glinting. “You should have
apologized back when I cared. Now, I’m way beyond that. The only thing I want
to hear from you is you screaming my name when I make you come.”
Her mouth
opened, then closed and she swallowed convulsively. His hips rolled in another
lazy, taunting thrust, and she had nothing else to say anyway. All she could do
was moan at the pleasure of it.
At some
point her eyes drifted shut against her will, leaving her unprepared for the
heightening of every feeling. Each sensation—the rasp of his stubble against
her skin, the harsh sound of his breathing against her ear—was so intense she
had to fight the need to beg him to touch her.
“You know
I’m going to make you come, sweet Tess. Don’t you?” His tongue swept the pale
curve of her ear in a rasping caress and one of the hands that had moved back
to her ass moved lower, sliding between her legs to cup her from behind. “I’m
going to take you until you can’t remember your name, until you can’t lick your
lips without tasting me, until you make yourself hoarse from screaming my name.”
Her hands
clenched, nails biting into his shoulders. The heat and tension inside her
threatened to snap, and she thought she might break in half along with them.
“Your only
choice is whether you want me to take you here, where half of Manhattan can see
you writhing on the end of my cock, or take you in privacy, where I can fuck
you all night long with no interruptions.”
His teeth
closed on the sensitive skin at the curve of her throat and bit down, sending her
desire into overdrive and making her body overflow with cream. “Which is it
going to be, Tess? Here and now? Or in my bedroom until you can’t take any
more?”
In the
end, it wasn’t the idea of being seen that decided her. It was the knowledge
that one quick fuck against the side of a building, while it sounded great
right now, was not going to satisfy the hunger he’d created inside of her. She
needed more.
“Home,”
she said, and cried out when he answered with a low growl and a hard shove of
his hips. If there hadn’t been so much cloth in the way, she would have come
right then and there.
Instead,
she had to get her feet under her and try not to collapse on rubbery legs when
he withdrew the support of his body. He kept one hand on her elbow, and that
alone was probably more responsible for keeping her upright than her own wobbly
sense of balance. He never said anything to her, just tightened those fingers
around her elbow and began dragging her through the dark streets toward Park
Ave.
The very
first cab he flagged stopped for him. In any other circumstances, Tess would
have snorted at that and said something about the perks of power, but as it
was, she didn’t think she could say her name. She damned sure couldn’t remember
her address, so she let Rafe tell the cabbie where to go while she climbed onto
the big werecat’s lap and proceeded to try and undress him in the back of the
taxi.
It was a
very weird experience, almost like being drunk. There was one part of her mind
still thinking clearly, and that part sort of stood back with its arms crossed
and shook its head while all her other parts attacked Rafael De Santos as if he
were a present on Christmas morning. She fumbled with buttons, tugged at hems
and was reaching for his belt when the cab screeched to a halt. The sudden stop
sent her tumbling off Rafe’s lap and onto the floorboards where she sat panting
and dazed while the object of her lust climbed out and paid the cabbie. He
stayed right there, too, until he reached in and hauled her out, swinging her
up into his arms and striding toward the attended doorway of a posh uptown
building. She wrapped her arms around his neck for balance and set her spinning
head against his shoulder, hoping the dizziness would fade before they got to
his bedroom. She didn’t want anything at all to interfere with her ability to
sense and savor every single thing he did to her.
“Good
morning, Mr. De Santos.” A uniformed doorman with a studiously bland expression
nodded to Rafe and ignored the fact that he was carrying a disheveled blonde
with wide, unfocused eyes into the sort of establishment where these things
tended not to happen. “Nice to see you again, sir.”
“I’m not
at home, Carson.”
“Of course
you aren’t, sir.” The doorman followed them into the building and hurried to a
set of gleaming elevator doors where he pressed the up button. The doors slid
open immediately, and Carson reached inside, pressed the button for the
twentieth floor and stepped back. “Enjoy the rest of your night, sir.”
Rafe
growled something unintelligible as the doors slid shut in front of them, and
the elevator started with a smooth glide upward.
Tess
looked at the digital floor display above the bank of buttons and saw the
difference between their current location and their destination. Even if she
wasn’t capable of mathematical calculations in her current state, she was
cognizant enough to realize there was a large gap between the two. She turned
back to Rafe, blinked once, slowly, then dove for his mouth.
She caught
his lower lip between her teeth and tugged at it, as if trying to pull his
mouth into hers. When she released it, she went immediately back for more,
nudging his lips apart and plunging her tongue inside to forage for his own.
His response consisted of backing her up against the wall of the car, flipping
open the button on her jeans and sliding his hand inside her panties. Tess
screamed against his mouth and bucked her hips against his hand.
He tore
his lips from hers and swore, something low and savage and foreign. He shifted
to brace one arm under her bottom in order to raise her higher while his
fingers sliced through her wet folds to find her opening and thrust deep.
Tess threw
her head back and screamed again. Two long, wide fingers speared into her,
stretching her and filling her. The unexpected penetration made her mind fog
and her pussy clench and she sobbed for the breath he had stolen from her. Her
hips tilted and her legs climbed higher until her knees were clamped about his
rib cage and his fingers had slid as deeply as they could reach. His wrist
twisted, fingers screwing inside her, and she moaned in pleasure and need.
“God, yes!”
she panted, lips parted and eyes squeezed shut. “More…touch me…”
He leaned
closer, clamping his teeth on the base of her throat, growling like an animal.
Then his fingers moved and began thrusting, establishing a rapid, driving
rhythm that caressed her internal walls and drove her closer to the edge. She
could feel her muscles bunching and tensing in preparation for climax and she
whined at the unbearable pleasure.
Her
fingers clutched at his shoulders, creasing the fabric of his suit jacket and
biting into the flesh beneath. If he’d been shirtless, she might have drawn
blood, but she didn’t care. Her body bowed in his arms, hips thrusting
mindlessly against his hand. He shifted her again, his touch withdrawing
momentarily and tearing a frantic cry of protest form her.
“No! More!
Please, more.”
She could
barely understand herself, but she needed him to understand. She needed him to
understand that she would die if he stopped touching her. She would die.
Then his
fingers slid back, three this time, thrusting deep inside her, stretching her
entrance and driving her higher. She thought she might have screamed again,
wondered vaguely if the elevator was soundproofed, then squeezed her pussy
around him and forgot everything else. She could feel her moisture flooding his
hand and shuddered. The awkward confines of her jeans meant his hand cupped her
mound while his fingers fucked her, keeping him from the deeper penetration she
craved. She whimpered and squirmed and tried to draw the breath to beg. But he
twisted his hand and pressed his thumb against her clit and nothing else
mattered because she came, sobbing in his arms.
Rafe felt
her climax, felt the ripples of her contractions gripping his fingers and
fought for every shred of self-control he could muster. He wanted to tear off
her jeans, throw her to the floor and fuck her right there in the elevator car,
and to hell with the rest of the building. But he also knew that once he got
inside her he planned to stay for a good long time, and he could think of
better venues for that. Simmering, he let her ride out her orgasm as the car
drew to a halt and the doors slid open.
Her eyes
were closed and he doubted it had even registered that they had stopped moving.
Her arms still clung to his shoulders, her legs still gripped him like a vise
and her pussy still pulsed with aftershocks around his fingers. He didn’t
bother to withdraw them as he carried her down the hall to his front door.
There were only two other apartments on his floor, and if one of the residents
happened to see, he could damn well deal. Rafe had no intention of removing his
fingers until he could replace them with his cock.
He strode
to his door and pinned her to the wall beside it, listening to the tiny
whimpers she made every time he moved and his fingers shifted inside her. Her
face had the soft, dazed sweetness of an angel who had savored her fall and he
couldn’t resist kissing her, claiming her swollen lips and bruising them with
the force of his desire.
When he
pulled away, her eyes fluttered open, fogged and unfocused and she blinked up
at him while he reached his free hand into his pocket and withdrew his key. He
saw her teetering on the drowsy edge of sleep and growled, shoving the key into
the lock and forcing the door open impatiently.
“Stay with
me, damn it. I’m not done with you yet.”
He got no
answer, but he didn’t think she was capable of one. Growling, he peeled her off
the wall and carried her through the doorway into his entrance hall, kicking
the door closed behind them. He looked down at her, saw her eyes drifting shut
again and roared a denial. Damn it, she could not fall asleep on him
now. Fuck his bedroom. He needed to get inside her in the next fifteen seconds
before she drove him over the edge. His head jerked up and he looked around him
for one frantic moment before he saw his opportunity.
She
gasped, her eyes flying open when she heard the crash of glass shattering on
the gleaming parquet floor. He saw sleepiness evaporate and grunted in
satisfaction, causing another crash of debris as he swept his arm across the
surface of the inlaid art deco console table in the middle of his entry hall.
He saw her look around, take in the gleam of the mirror behind the table, the
smashed vase of tulips, the puddle of water and the litter of broken pottery
and dented silver at their feet. Then her gaze flew back to his and her eyes
widened.
“Rafe,”
she began, looking uneasy and hesitant, and he roared again.
“No! Now,
Tess. I’ll have you now.”
He set her
down on the edge of the table and pushed her backward, stripping off her jacket
and sweater as she went. He heard her gasp at the impact of cool wood against
her suddenly bare back, but he didn’t care. He wanted her bare to him, and he
intended to have her that way.
He
followed her down, leaning over her and setting his teeth to the narrow spot
that joined the cups of her bra. He sliced through it and the lacy fabric fell
away, exposing her nipples to his avid mouth. He latched onto one immediately,
curling his tongue around the hard little point and tugging it into his mouth
to suck hard. He heard her cry out, felt her hands bury themselves in his hair
and he grunted in satisfaction. She tasted like spice and warm cream, and he
wanted to lap her up until he lacked the strength to lick his whiskers.
“Rafe!
God, how do you do this to me?”
He didn’t
answer, just set his mouth to her other nipple and drew on it just as fiercely.
She moaned his name and cradled him to her, her body already shifting
restlessly against him. His hands insinuated themselves between their bodies
and attacked her jeans, yanking the zipper the rest of the way down and then
peeling the heavy, clinging fabric off her hips. She helped him, lifting her
hips off the table, raising her knees to bring them into reach. He snarled at
the way it put the cloth like a barrier between them, but as he took her
panties down too, her bare flesh distracted him. He tugged the whole lot past
her knees until he realized he’d have to step further away from her to pull
them the rest of the way off. And that was not going to happen.
Leaving
the fabric tangled around her ankles, he braced her feet against the edge of
the table and grasped her knees, spreading them wide to make room for himself.
Then he grabbed her hips and pulled them forward until her bottom bumped
against her heels and she perched there, completely open to him. He shrugged
out of his jacket as if it were on fire and reached down to open his pants. He
grunted in satisfaction when he felt Tess’s hands on his shirt, fumbling with
the buttons for a second before she uttered a frustrated cry and tore the
fabric open. Buttons flew in all directions, clattering against the walls and
the wood of the floor, but Rafe could see Tess’s gaze glued to his bare chest
and felt a swell of pride.
If both of
them hadn’t been so frantic, he might have taken a moment to savor the feel of
her hands on him or the appreciative look in her eyes, but he couldn’t wait
another minute to be inside her. He yanked down his zipper and freed his cock,
guiding it to her dripping entrance. Poised there for a brief moment, he looked
down into her eyes and felt an unfamiliar wave of possessiveness wash through
him. “Mine,” he growled, though he’d never said the word before in connection
to a woman.
He felt
his lip curl and his fangs extend, and he watched her eyes widen as he gathered
himself and drove hard and deep to her core with one heavy thrust.
She
screamed and parted like liquid velvet around him.
“Yes,” he
hissed, coming to rest deep inside her, buried to the hilt in her tight, hot
core. She felt like heaven. She rippled around his cock the same way she’d
rippled around his fingers, with slow, hot pulses and the slick flood of cream
he knew he wanted to taste before too much longer. But not now. Now he wanted
to fuck her until she came apart around him and he spilled himself in her
honeyed heat.
Bracing
his hands on the table beside her head and his feet on the parquet floor, he
let his muscles gather and began to pull back from her clinging heat.
“Wait!
Wait.” She gasped and moaned, shifting restlessly beneath him. “Not yet. Can’t…I
can’t. Not yet.”
He growled
and continued to withdraw, sliding through her wet channel with slippery ease.
Or it would have been easy, if she weren’t so tight and snug around his cock.
Her pussy felt like a fist gripping him, and it was driving him crazy.
“You can.
You will. Now.”
He heard
her moan, whimper, heard a breathless sob as her body struggled to adjust to
him. He knew he should go easy on her, give her time to get used to him, but he
couldn’t. He needed her too badly to be kind. All he could do was try not to
hurt her and make sure she came as violently as he intended to.
His hips
stopped when she held just the head of his cock inside her. He wanted to
withdraw all the way so he could savor that first, maddening stretch as he
entered her again, but he couldn’t bear to separate himself from her heat. This
would be easier on her anyway. Now that he was already inside, he could ride
her harder than he could if he withdrew completely and forced her to take him
all over again.
He stood
there, muscles trembling, cock just barely inside her, poised on the brink of
his next thrust with her body soft and pliant beneath him, but he wanted more.
He wanted her to look at him. To watch him while he fucked her, while he
claimed her. Ignoring the unfamiliar feeling of possession, he leaned down to
bite her lip, to get her attention. Her eyes flew open, once again dazed and
dilated, and struggled to focus on him.
“Eyes
open, Tess.” He order was gruff and harsh and he didn’t care. “Watch me. Watch
me fucking you.” She whimpered and shook her head, but she didn’t close her
eyes. He grunted and leaned more heavily over her. “Good. Now take me.”
He thrust
home with heavy force, spearing her so deeply he thought he could feel the back
of her womb. She screamed and he froze, afraid he had hurt her, but her body
trembled around him and her hips lifted toward him, so he relaxed and began to
fuck her in earnest.
Over and
over he thrust inside her, riding her hard. She felt so amazing around him,
milking his cock, squirming and writhing beneath him. Her fingernails bit into
his bare shoulders, cutting deeply, but the pain only egged him on. She cried
out with nearly every thrust now, her knees gripping his hips as he drove high
and hard inside her. He felt himself approaching meltdown and grabbed her hips
to hold her still as he threw his hips harder against her. He battered into
her, unable to be gentle, unable to hold back. All he could do was ride out the
madness by riding her hard toward climax.
He felt it
hit her unexpectedly. One moment she twisted and struggled beneath him, trying
to get closer and get away all at once, and the next she clamped around him
like a vise, arms, thighs and pussy tightening and gripping him to her. She
screamed, the sound issuing hoarsely from her raw throat, and her body arched
like a bow beneath him, coming up off the surface of the table until only her
head and her hips supported her.
Rafe
wrapped his arms around her holding her steady while he continued to drive
inside her. Thrusting was more difficult now, as her body struggled to keep him
inside, but he forced through her resistance with half a dozen savage thrusts
until the pleasure took him, too, dragging him over the edge of climax. He
poured himself into her on a rough shout, feeling his very being drain out of
him and into her warm, encompassing body. Then he collapsed onto her, pinning
her to the hard table, thinking with a sense of dread and wonder that he hadn’t
nearly finished with her yet.
Chapter
Seven
Tess kept
her eyes closed and tried to figure out what the hell had just happened. Well,
aside from the most amazing orgasm of her life, of course. Somehow her evening,
which had started with a bowl of pasta and a seven-hundredth viewing of her
copy of Best in Show on DVD had ended with mind-blowing sex on the entry
table in the front hallway of the apartment of a man she’d never met before…oh,
three hours earlier. With a man she’d never met before three hours
earlier.
The man in
question turned his head, stubble rasping against her throat, and swept his
rough, agile tongue along the tendon connecting her neck to her shoulder. Then
he purred, and Tess felt the sound rumbling through her, from where his mouth
pressed to her shoulder to where his cock still pressed hot and hard inside
her.
Her eyes
flew open. Still hard?
He stirred
on top of her, inside her and his hands slid down from her hips, over her legs,
stopping when they felt the bunched fabric around her ankles. Oh, God. She was
still wearing her jeans. She felt her cheeks flame.
He
murmured something against her throat, shifting his weight to keep her pinned
while he tugged off her short boots and stripped her jeans and panties the rest
of the way off. Now, she was left naked beneath him, with only the scraps of
what used to be her bra clinging from her shoulders. Oh, yeah. She felt
dignified.
She tried
to squirm away, but froze when she felt his teeth sink delicately into her
shoulder and heard a rumble of displeasure. Apparently he didn’t want her going
anywhere. She lay still while his hands shifted from her to his clothes and she
felt the glide of fabric against her skin while he shoved his own pants to the
floor. His cock shifted inside her when he stepped out of the fabric and she
bit back a moan. Her sensitized tissues took every shift as a caress and she
felt herself flooding around him. He gave a pleased rumble and licked her
shoulder.
Tess
cleared her throat. “Um, this table is not really all that comfortable.” She
squirmed and pushed at his shoulders. “Do you think you could let me up now?”
There was
a brief moment of silence. Then Rafe lifted his head and gazed down at her with
lazy cats’ eyes. “Sure.”
She felt
his body slip from hers and drew a shuddering breath. Okay, step one. Now for
step two. But before she could even attempt to put her feet on the floor and
lever herself out from beneath him, Tess found herself lifted, flipped, bent
forward and penetrated. He had barely let her get her feet on the floor before
he kicked them wide, pressed her hips against the edge of the table and slid
from behind into her warm pussy. She heard him groan over her own gasp of
surprise and looked up only to find her own wide blue eyes staring back at her.
She had
forgotten about the mirror, but judging by the hot, feral expression on Rafe’s
face, he had not.
When he’d
first carried her into his apartment, Tess had been a little too preoccupied to
pay much attention to the décor, so the huge, gilt-framed mirror above the
console table had barely even registered. Instead, she’d been too busy
registering the feel of his hands on her and then his body inside her. But now,
bent forward over the very same table with her hands braced on the inlaid
surface and her pussy full of insistent man, she found the mirror hard to miss.
It was about six inches from the end of her nose.
Startled,
she tried to pull back, to stand up straight and put some distance between
herself and her reflection, but Rafe would have none of it. He leaned heavily
over her, his chest against her back, pinning her in place with his bulk. He
even buried one of his big hands in her hair and used it to tilt her head back
until she had no choice but to meet her own startled, aroused gaze.
“Watch.”
His mouth pressed against her ear as he gave the raspy order. “I want you to
see what it looks like when I’m taking you.”
She moaned
helplessly and watched as his dark form began to move behind her.
The woman
in the mirror looked nothing like Tess. Her eyes looked wide and wild, pupils
dilated, expression dazed. Her hair was an undisciplined tumble of curls, all
sense of style long gone. Soft tendrils had become glued to her skin with sweat
from their exertions, and the rest of the unruly mop curled and bounced with
the impact of his thrusts. Her pale skin looked slick and flushed with sweat
and arousal, and it contrasted a bright, milky white against his darker, bronze
complexion. It made her look even more vulnerable and him, even more powerful.
He looked,
actually, like a conquering barbarian. His dark, angular features were drawn
and tense as he thrust himself deeply into her body, then recoiled to thrust
again. His own dark hair was damp and mussed from her fingers, and his skin
gleamed hot and slick in the dim, golden lights of the entryway. His body
curled around hers, chest pressing against her back, thighs braced against
hers, hands braced against the table beside hers, caging her. And all the
while, his cock plunged in and out of her like a piston, hard and deep and
relentless.
Tess cried
out and felt her eyelids drift shut. Her head dropped back against his shoulder
and she moaned in heated arousal.
“No! Eyes open.”
He punctuated the order with a hard thrust that nearly toppled her onto the
table. Tess screamed breathlessly, her eyes flying open and meeting his in the
mirror. He looked savage and dangerous, and she cried out again, in fear and
desire. “Watch. Watch me taking you.”
She couldn’t
do anything else, fascinated by the contrast of his big body overwhelming hers.
She saw his hands shift from the tabletop and slide upward to cup her breasts.
“Watch
your pretty breasts swinging while I fuck you.” He pinched the taut nipples and
she moaned helplessly. “Watch the way your body shakes under mine.”
One of his
hands released its grip on her breast and glided over her belly and between her
legs, fingers scissoring around her clit and sliding through her stretched
folds until he brushed her entrance. His fingertip rubbed against the tight
ring of muscle at her entrance, felt how it stretched to accommodate his thick
shaft, and the caress made Tess burn. She felt her pussy clench and sobbed his
name.
“Rafe!
Please!”
He leaned
closer, teeth tugging at her ear as his finger simultaneously closed over her
nipple and her clit. “Watch,” he repeated. “Watch your face while I make you
come.”
Then his
fingers tightened, pinching delicate flesh and Tess screamed.
This
climax hit her like a Mack truck, and it didn’t slow down after impact. She
watched her own face in the mirror. Saw her lips part on the scream, saw her
eyes go wide and frantic, saw her skin flush red. Then she couldn’t see
anything as the pleasure blinded her. All she could do was feel. The pinching
pleasure-pain of the fingers on her nipple and clit. The hot, slick press of
his bare skin against hers. The violent contractions of her pussy milking Rafe’s
cock. The brutal impact of his thrusts as he raced toward his own climax. It
lasted for the rest of her life, and then she melted onto the table like warm
cream and tried to remember how to breathe while Rafe gave one last, hard
thrust and began emptying himself inside her.
Eventually,
Rafe pulled out of her body—which made her wince and whimper at the same
time—and peeled her off of the entry table. She felt him swing her up in his
arms again, but she didn’t even have the strength to open her eyes to see where
he was taking her. She didn’t think she could survive another taking, anyway.
Her head
bobbled against his shoulder as he carried her through darkened rooms to the
other end of the apartment. She felt the rush of cool air against her sweaty
skin as he shifted her away from his body and laid her down on a set of cool, smooth
sheets of incredibly soft cotton. She murmured in pleasure at the feel of them
against her bare skin and stretched out, flexing sore muscles and testing to
assess the damage. Nothing permanent, she was happy to note, and curled back
onto her side to snuggle into a fluffy pillow.
She felt
the bed dip as Rafe crawled in beside her and she frowned as a wisp of thought
drifted into her exhausted mind and teased at her. She struggled briefly to
recall what it was, then felt his arms curve around her waist and gave up. She
let him pull her limp body back against his and sighed sleepily. She was warm
and comfortable and more tired than she could remember being in her life, and
nothing in the world sounded better than sleep. Giving up the struggle, she let
herself slip into unconsciousness, lulled by the deep rumbling rhythm of a big
cat’s contented purr.
When Tess
woke, she remembered just enough to know she wasn’t in her own bed or her own
apartment, but it took a few minutes of lying absolutely still and taking very
deep breaths before she remembered any of the rest of it. The thing that
finally brought it all rushing back was the feel of long, masculine fingers
gliding up her thigh and toward an ache in a place that didn’t usually ache.
Her eyes
flew open and she found herself looking into the amused face of Rafael De
Santos.
Oh,
shit.
“Good
morning.” His voice sounded even huskier than usual, and she could feel it
rasping over her skin almost like his clever tongue. “I thought about letting
you sleep some more, but I wasn’t sure if you needed to be at work.”
He bent
down and pressed a warm kiss to her lips, seeming to savor her sleepy, helpless
response.
“What time
is it?” she asked when he finally pulled away.
“Ten after
ten.” He grinned. “And if you’re already late for work, I apologize, but I only
woke up a few minutes ago myself. Something wore me out last night.”
Tess
cleared her throat and reached out for a sheet to pull over herself. There wasn’t
one. She looked around but couldn’t find a single cover, so she yanked her
pillow out from under her head and clutched it to her chest. She also pinned
her thighs together to discourage the fingers that were currently wandering
higher and higher up the sensitive patch of skin.
“Sorry,”
she mumbled, watching him warily. “I didn’t mean to sleep so late. Actually, I
didn’t mean to stay at all.”
He
shrugged and flexed his hand to squeeze her thigh. “It’s just as well. I had no
real intention of letting you go.” Reaching out with his free hand, he tugged
the pillow out of her grasp and threw it across the room. “I’m still not sure I
will.”
Her eyes
widened as his head bent toward her now-exposed breasts. When his hot mouth
closed around a nipple, she yelped.
“Hey! Stop
that!” She pushed at his shoulders, which he apparently misinterpreted as a cue
to suck harder. She bit back a moan and tried to pretend her body was neither
stupid nor masochistic enough to actually be getting wet for him. Again. “Are
you insane? Get off me!”
He raised
his gaze to hers without releasing her nipple and quirked one dark, eyebrow.
She saw his eyes glint, but barely had time to get properly worried before his
teeth closed delicately around the base of the peak and began to nibble.
“Ayiiiee!”
The noise
came from her, much to her astonishment, since she wasn’t quite sure how she
had made it. In any case, she had one brief, astonished moment of desperate
arousal before her pussy throbbed sullenly and she came to her senses. Burying
her fingers in his hair, she spent a few minutes gathering her strength—the
fact that she was moaning and cupping her breast for him like an offering at
the time meant nothing—before she tugged hard enough to get his attention.
Rafe
lifted his head, her nipple slipping from his mouth with a pop, and she stifled
the urge to whine a complaint.
“Thank
you,” she said instead, mustering up a half-hearted scowl. “Now I think it’s
time you let me up so I can go home.”
“Home?”
Rafe dragged his avid gaze away from her glistening nipple and raised an
eyebrow. “What makes you think I’m letting you go home?”
Tess
stiffened. “Um, because I want to and there are laws?”
“What does
that have to do with it?”
“A whole
hell of a lot, considering it’s the difference between whether or not the
police come swarming around your building like a plague of locusts.”
Rafe
ignored her furious scowl and sat up. “Since no one is going to be calling the
police, I doubt they’ll have any reason to come to my building and eat all the
crops.”
“I damned
well will call the police, if you don’t let me go.”
“How?” His
tone was idly curious as he stood and crossed to an enormous closet, emerging a
moment later with robe and a pair of casual linen trousers. The robe he tossed
to Tess and the trousers he pulled on, covering up a tragic amount of bare,
bronzed muscle. “If I decide not to let you call the police, Tess, it’s not
like you’re going to be able to defy me.”
Tess
blinked at him, eyes wide, mouth opening and closing with shock. “You mean—you
won’t… you’re going to… you can’t just…”
Rafe
grinned at her. “Hurry up and put your robe on, Tess, before I get so
distracted that I forget about making you breakfast.” He gave her an arrogant,
indulgent look and swaggered out of the room.
Tess
stared after him for a good long minute before her shock faded enough to let
the anger bleed through. Shoving her arms into the sleeves of the massive
terrycloth robe, she didn’t even bother rolling them up before she snatched the
phone off the bedside table and held it to her ear. She didn’t get a dial tone,
but she did get an annoying masculine chuckle and the infuriating sound of, “I’m
not stupid, sweet Tess. Now come out to the kitchen—where I have the phone off
the hook, by the way—and have some breakfast. After last night, you can use the
protein.”
Click.
Tess
slammed the phone down on a strangled scream and headed for the kitchen, fully
prepared to do battle with an arrogant, trouble-making werecat.
She wasn’t
prepared for French toast.
She couldn’t
have been more than five minutes behind him, yet when she stepped into the gleaming
pine, black and chrome kitchen, he was already laying the first thick slice of
batter-drenched bread onto a sizzling griddle. It wasn’t possible. And it
damned sure wasn’t fair.
“What do
you think you’re doing?”
He looked
up from slicing another slab of bread off a thick loaf of Challah and smiled at
her. “Making breakfast. Do you want syrup or jam with your French toast?”
She braced
her hands on her hips and glared at him. “What sort of dirty rotten trick is
this? How dare you!”
“How dare
I feed you?” He shrugged. “I guess I thought you’d be hungry. I know I’m
starved. And waffles would have taken a lot longer, but if that’s what you
want…”
“That’s not
what I want. What I want is for you to act the way you’re supposed to, damn it.
Stop being so nice!”
“I’m not
supposed to be nice? How am I supposed to be?”
“You know.
You’re supposed to act like a man. Tell me how much you enjoyed spending time
with me last night, and you hate to rush me out because it makes you feel so
sleazy, but you really do have an appointment in a couple of hours. And can you
get me a cab? You’ll definitely call me if your schedule clears up so we can
have dinner tonight, okay?” She paused for breath. “Aren’t you supposed to be
the Don Juan around here? Shouldn’t you know how to do all this?”
She
watched as he dipped a slice of bread into the bowl, then held it up to let the
batter drain off. His movements were economical and expert and rather annoyed. “I’m
afraid not. Somehow I must have missed the asshole training when I was becoming
such a ‘Don Juan.’ You’ll just have to forgive me if I’m not acting like a
total prick.”
“That’s
not what I said.” She shifted her weight and tugged the sleeves of the robe
down to cover her hands.
“Actually,
that’s exactly what you said.”
“Well then
it’s not what I meant.”
“Then tell
me what you did mean.” He set a filled plate down in front of her, handed her a
glass carafe of syrup and pulled out a stool on the opposite side of the island
from the cook top he was working on. “And eat your breakfast while you’re at
it.”
She sat
down reluctantly and picked up a fork, more to have something to do with her
hands than because of an actual desire to eat. She didn’t say anything while he
finished cooking his own serving and sat down beside her with an impressively
heaping plate.
“Okay, I
told you to eat your breakfast and tell me what you meant. Would you care to
try for one out of two?”
Tess
glared at him and speared a bite of toast, swirling it around in a puddle of
maple syrup. “I just meant that you’re…not acting quite like I expected.”
He
swallowed a mouthful of breakfast and sipped from a huge glass of milk. “What
were you expecting? For me to boot you out of bed the second I rolled off of
you?”
She
squirmed in her seat. “Well, a little.”
“You
really think I’m that kind of man?”
“You do
have a—a…reputation, of sorts.”
“Christ
Almighty, Tess, if you thought I was that big an asshole, why the hell did you
go to bed with me to begin with?”
Tess
rolled her eyes. “Right. Like I had a choice about that.”
His brows
drew down into a dark storm front across his face. “Are you implying that I
somehow forced you to have sex with me?”
“Of course
not. We both know it didn’t happen that way. But Fate is Fate. And when it
comes down to it, there’s not much use in fighting what’s meant to be.”
Tess
stared at her plate while Rafe pushed his empty one aside and cleared his
throat. “So you’re saying that we were—somehow—Fated to sleep together last
night?”
“I can’t
say for sure that it had to be last night in particular, but I didn’t see any
point in waiting. I figured if we got it over with, it would be a lot easier
for both of us to relax from now on.”
He
snorted. “Right. You look really relaxed.”
She opened
her mouth to retort, but closed it again when she saw a decidedly off look
cross Rafe’s face. “What’s the matter?”
He looked
at her, his face a carefully blank mask. “Your cell phone plays Turkey in
the Straw?”
She flew
off her stool and out of the kitchen so fast she should have left skid marks on
the parquet floors. “Granddad!”
Chapter
Eight
She
sprinted toward the entry hall like it was an Olympic event, then wasted
valuable seconds picking her way through shards of broken pottery in order to
get to her denim jacket and the cell phone she kept in the inside pocket. She
flipped it open just before the last strains of the square dance classic faded
from hearing.
“H’lo?”
Pause. “Tess?”
“Yes,
Granddad, it’s me,” she said, stepping gingerly back into Rafe’s living room
and checking the bottoms of her feet for shrapnel. “How are you?”
He ignored
her question. “Is something the matter? You sound out of breath.”
“I’m fine.”
She looked up when Rafe appeared in the doorway, but she didn’t tell him who
she was speaking with. “I left my cell phone in the other room and I had to run
to answer it. Is everything all right?”
“I had
called to ask you the same question.” His voice cooled and began to take on the
tone of disapproval and censure that was a Lionel Menzies trademark. “I
expected you to call me first thing this morning to tell me how everything went
last night.”
“Last
night?” Rafe clearly intended to give her no privacy. Instead of leaving her to
finish her call in peace, he perched on the arm of the chair nearest her and
watched her with interest while he sipped from a mug of steaming coffee.
“Yes. Of
course, last night,” Lionel snapped into her ear. “When you were asked to
deliver a message to the head of the Council of Others. Did the task prove to
be too complex for you?”
“No. Not
at all.”
“Then I
assume you delivered the message without incident.”
Tess
pursed her lips and looked away from Rafe’s curious stare. “I delivered it just
fine to the head of the council, just like you asked.” She didn’t intend to
discuss any of last night’s incidents for her grandfather.
“And was
there a reply?”
“A reply?”
Lionel
sighed over the phone, his voice ringing with impatience and condescension. “Yes,
Tess. A reply. You were instructed to wait to see if their leader would offer a
reply to our message. Did he give you one?”
Tess
looked back at Rafe and saw him nodding. He was no longer perched on the arm of
the chair, but stood in front of her, watching her intently and nodding
meaningfully.
“Um, yes,”
she said, eyes fixed on Rafe’s face. “Yes, their leader did offer a reply.”
“And what
did they say?”
Tess
frowned and bit her lip. “They said…um…that is, they told me to tell you…” She
looked back to Rafe for guidance and saw him once again nodding his head with
deliberate meaning. “They, uh… they said…’yes’?”
Rafe
grinned at her and nodded one last time. Tess blew out a relieved breath and
turned her attention back to her grandfather’s voice.
“…like to
see you as well. Is seven convenient for you?”
Tess
caught the tail end of what sounded like an invitation and frowned. “I’m sorry,
Granddad. There must have been a little static. I’m afraid I missed what you
just said. Would you repeat it, please?”
Lionel
sighed again. It was his customary response whenever Tess spoke to him. “I do
wish you would listen more carefully, Tess. I said that the council chairs
would like to speak with you before the meeting in order to get your
impressions of this De Santos fellow. I’ve invited them to dinner tonight and I
asked if you would join us. At seven, please. And be sure to dress
appropriately.”
Before she
could accept or decline, Lionel hung up and left Tess scowling at her silent
cell phone.
“You didn’t
tell me your grandfather holds a position on this Witches’ Council,” Rafe said,
standing to guide her back into the kitchen. He filled a new mug with coffee
and set it down before her. “I gathered that was what your phone call was
about. The council wished to hear my response to the message you delivered last
night.”
Tess
nodded, wrapping her hands around the warm mug, but not drinking. “He doesn’t
actually sit on the council. Not any more. He stepped down last year. But he is
still active in the politics of it. Some of his close friends are still chair
holders.”
“Then they
want to question you about me.”
“Yeah,
probably.”
There was
a brief silence while Tess contemplated the coming evening. Dinner at her
grandfather’s house always made her nervous, and dinner there with the inner
circle of the Witches’ Council would likely leave her with an ulcer before she
finished her soup course.
“So what
are you going to tell them about me?”
Tess’s
gaze flew to his face and her eyes went wide as saucers. “Well, I’m certainly
not going to tell them that!”
Rafe
laughed, a deep, throaty rumble that echoed through the kitchen. “I didn’t
expect that you would. That’s between the two of us.” He winked at her. “I
meant, what do you plan to tell them about your first impressions of me?”
“I can’t
tell them those, either,” she mumbled. He heard her though, because his grin
widened and he chuckled into his coffee. Tess straightened. “I honestly don’t
know what they’re expecting to hear from me. It’s not like I know you all that
well—”
“Except
biblically.”
“—so I can’t
think what they’re going to ask about. All I can tell them is that you seem
pretty human, you’re fairly intelligent and you’re friends with a werewolf. Oh,
and you make killer French toast.”
He shook
his head. “I’m fairly certain that’s not precisely the sort of information they’ll
be looking for.”
“Me, too.
But like I said, I don’t know what they will be looking for. Except to
know that I probably don’t know, you know?”
“I know.”
Tess
sighed and looked at her watch, then compared her findings to the digital
readouts on his space-age microwave and built-in double oven. All sources
agreed. She was way late for work.
“Look, thanks
for…er…breakfast,” she said, sliding off the stool and cinching the belt of her
robe even tighter, “but I really have to run. It’s my assistant’s day to open
the shop, but I still have a ton of work to do. I should get going.”
Rafe set
down his coffee cup and nodded. Walking around the island, he placed his hand
in the small of her back and ushered her toward the bedroom. “Of course. Why
don’t you take a quick shower while I gather your things together? You’ll feel
much more ready to start the day after you’re clean and dressed in your own
clothes. All right?”
He didn’t
wait for her answer, just pushed her through the bedroom and into the master
bath, showing her where to find clean towels, instructing her on the vagaries
of his shower and offering her his toothbrush. Then he smiled at her and left,
shutting the door firmly behind her and leaving her alone in the sea of richly
earth-toned tile and gleaming porcelain.
She
blinked and reached for the shower faucet. Maybe he was right. Maybe a shower
would clear her head. At this rate, it damned sure couldn’t hurt.
Rafe
waited until he heard the water start to run before he picked up the phone and
dialed from memory.
“Yeah.
“Graham. I
need you to get some information for me.”
“Thank you
for choosing the Silverback Clan for all your investigative needs. We sniff out
all the news you need to know.”
“Cute. You
should get business cards printed up.”
“I’m way
ahead of you. The press had this really cool generic logo of a wolf baying at
the moon, too. They’re gonna be great.”
“I’ll take
ten. But in the meantime, this is important. And it’s a rush job.”
Graham’s
voice snapped into serious mode. “Name it. I’m listening.”
“I need
you to find out everything you can about someone. I’ve got a phone number for
him, but I don’t know much of anything else.” Rafe flipped open Tess’s cell
phone and pressed a button to bring up her address book. Sure enough, memory
slot number two read, “Granddad.” He read the number back to Graham. “The name
should be Menzies.”
“Hm. Any
relation to your adorable little stalker?”
“Just dig
up the info for me. I’ll fill you in on the rest later.”
“You got
it. When does this rush job of yours need to be done?”
“Before
seven tonight.”
Graham
sighed. “Done. But you owe me, buddy.”
“I’ll pay
up. Call me when you have something.”
He hung up
just as the shower turned off. Standing, he tucked the cell phone back into
Tess’s jacket pocket and added the garment to the neatly folded pile of clothes
in his hands. Then he schooled his expression into blandly pleasant lines and
headed toward the bedroom. Maybe if he were fast and lucky, he’d get one last
look at Tess’s luscious little body before she left for work. A man could
dream.
Chapter
Nine
Tess made
it into the shop just after twelve-thirty, partly because she didn’t have to
bother stopping home to shower, and mostly because Rafe had called a car
service to drive her back to the East Village so she wouldn’t have to take the
subway. For that courtesy alone, Tess was prepared to forgive a multitude of sins,
especially since the October weather had turned rainy and chilly sometime after
dawn.
She
thanked the driver of the car service, took him at his word that his tip was
included in the service, and tried to ignore the way he stared very
surreptitiously at her braless chest. She debated spending her day with her
arms crossed over them, but wasn’t sure that wouldn’t defeat the purpose of
circumspection. Instead she tugged her jacket more firmly shut and turned away.
Cheeks flaming, she headed down the five steps to her basement shop on West
Ninth Street. The sleigh bells over the door jingled as she entered, and the
familiar, soothing smell of the shop greeted her as soon as she closed the door
behind her. She inhaled the crisp, herbal fragrance and looked around for
Bette.
“Well,
well. Looks like I can call the National Guard and tell them it was a false
alarm.”
Tess
turned to the back of the shop at the sound of the familiar voice, and she
smiled. Elbows deep in a huge paper sack of loose peppermint stood a young
woman in her early twenties with more facial piercings than she had fingers and
a head shaved to a blonde stubble. She had a talent for herbalism, a mind for
numbers and didn’t mind working lousy hours, which was what qualified her to be
Tess’s one and only employee. “Sorry I’m late. It was a long night.”
Bette
grinned. “Ooh, that sounds promising. Was the cause of the long night long as
well?”
Tess
blushed. “What makes you think I’m late because of a man? Maybe I got caught up
in a good mystery novel or something.”
Bette
sniffed the air, raised an eyebrow and shook her head. “Nice try, but unless
you’ve decided to switch from your usual honeysuckle soap to,” she paused and
sniffed again, “mint, sandalwood and myrrh, no dice. That’s a hell of a nice
masculine blend though. Maybe we should try a new line of it.”
“I don’t
think so.” Tess started to shrug off her jacket and hang it on the coat rack
behind the door, but thought better of it the second she felt herself shimmy. “I
think it would be a better idea if we just finished up those custom tea blends
for the Sanderson wedding reception, don’t you?”
“No, but
you’re the boss.” Bette finished emptying the last of the peppermint into a
huge amber glass jar and screwed on the lid before replacing it on the shelf
behind the counter. “So I guess that means you get to keep your naughty little
secrets. Want me to go get the Sanderson trays now so we can get started?”
Tess
appreciated that Bette took her refusal to talk gracefully, as she took most
things, but it still made Tess feel a little guilty for being snappish. She
shook her head. “No, that’s okay. There’s not all that much left to do for
them. Why don’t you take a break and go and get lunch. I’ll watch the shop ‘til
you’re finished, and we can do the Sanderson order this afternoon, okay?”
Bette
shrugged. “Sure. I think I’m going to run down to that new café on Seventh.
Want me to bring you back anything? They have killer veggie wraps.”
“No,
thanks. I had a big breakfast.”
“I see. So
you’re back to taunting me about the secrets of your debauchery last night.
Well, no matter. I’m a big girl. I can take it.” She wriggled her eyebrows at
Tess as she grabbed her coat and opened the front door. “But if I die of
curiosity over my avocado and tomato sandwich, I hope you know who’s to blame.”
Tess
laughed and shooed her out the door. “Get lost, you little drama queen. I’ll
see you in forty-five minutes.”
Bette
called out a cheerful good-bye and disappeared into the world above, leaving
Tess in peace and quiet. Which, she soon learned, was not all it’s cracked up
to be.
She found
that if she had something engaging to do, like bookkeeping, that required all
her concentration and considerable cursing, she could go almost forty-two
seconds in between thoughts of Rafael De Santos. If she tried to get by with
just placing orders, filling orders, or organizing the shelves, she topped out
at around fifteen. Which meant she had all her bookkeeping done twenty-five
minutes after Bette left and was going crazy after another five.
When the
shop door jingled for the first time that afternoon, it caught her once again
staring into space like an idiot with a dust rag in one hand and the other
itching to touch Rafael De Santos one more time. Swearing at herself, Tess
turned toward the entrance, glad of the distraction and more than a little
curious. The Apothecary did a good, steady business, but it wasn’t the sort of
store that drew crowds, and the five customers who piled into the shop at the
same time definitely constituted a crowd.
“Hi,” she
said to the room at large, offering them all a smile. “Can I help you
with—Missy?”
One of the
women, a petite, curvy thing with auburn hair and dark sunglasses, laughed as
she furled a black umbrella. “You’re very sweet to offer, but if you want to
help us with anyone, let it be Ava. We’ve been trying to find a way to deal
with her for years, but no luck. I think Ava is beyond help.”
Tess
looked from the redhead to the tall, elegant woman in the tailored pantsuit and
back toward the only face she recognized. “Missy? What are you doing here?”
The petite
blonde smiled and hurried over to give her a hug and a kiss on the cheek. “You
got me so curious last night that I had to come out to see your shop. I hope
you don’t mind. Especially since I told a few friends about it this morning,
and they insisted on coming to see you and your shop for themselves.”
Tess’s
eyes widened and she shifted uncomfortably. “Um, just so I understand, what
exactly about last night did you tell your friends about?”
Missy grinned
and winked at her. “Why, that you own an herb and teashop and give a mean tarot
reading, of course. What else would I tell them?”
Those big,
innocent brown eyes gazed back at Tess, twinkling so brightly that she
instantly stopped wondering how this woman went about managing a man like
Graham Winters. She clearly had the power to wrap him around her little finger
without breaking a sweat. He probably thought his wife was sweet and innocent
and malleable, too.
She
snorted.
“I hope
you’ve not too busy for us?” Missy asked.
Tess
looked pointedly around the small shop, empty except for her and Missy’s
friends. “Well, I think I can squeeze out a few minutes for you in between
pressing nothings.”
“Good.
Then let me introduce you to my friends.” Missy smiled and turned toward the
four other women. “Ladies, I’d like you to meet Tess Menzies. Tess, this is
Regina Vidâme, Ava Markham, Danice Carter-Callahan and Corinne D’Alessandro.”
Tess
offered each woman a smile in turn and made mental notes to help her remember
who was who. Regina was the one who had made the joke about Ava, and Ava seemed
to be the tall, elegant woman with the silky dark hair and exotically shaped
eyes. She was the sort that usually intimidated Tess, but at the moment, her
expression looked perfectly pleasant, if a little remote. It was odd, actually,
because while Tess would have to say Ava was more beautiful than Regina,
something about Regina’s pale skin, auburn hair and Mona Lisa smile gave her a
striking quality Tess couldn’t quite define. It niggled at the back of her mind
while she turned to the other two women, quickly filing away that Danice had
the gorgeous café-au-lait complexion and Corinne had the exotic, Mediterranean
coloring and features.
“It’s nice
to meet you,” Tess finally said, nodding to them. “Did you all come in looking
for something in particular?”
Danice
snorted. “You might say that…”
Missy
stepped in front of her friend and gestured to the shelves of huge amber jars
that lined the walls of the shop. “I just wanted them to get an idea of the
sort of things you have to offer. Maybe let them sample a few of your blends.”
“Absolutely.”
Tess never let curiosity keep her from making a sale, though she did look back
at Missy and hoped she hadn’t misinterpreted the woman’s reassurances. “Let me
put a kettle on and we’ll have some fun.”
She kept
an electric kettle on a shelf behind the counter, next to the sink and water
cooler. Being able to brew up her wares for customers to sample made sense to
her and had earned her a reputation for being friendly and accommodating. In
the retail business, those qualities counted for a lot. Getting the kettle
ready only took a second, and when she turned back to her customers, she found
them watching her intently. She blinked and stifled the urge to touch her hair.
If they were staring at her wild, strawberry-blonde curls, they’d just have to
deal. Her hair didn’t do tame.
“So what
sorts of qualities were you looking for?” She began scanning her shelves and
pulling down jars, placing them on the counter. “I need to know if I have the
right stuff.”
She
thought she heard a choking sound coming from one of Missy’s friends, but when
she looked up, they all wore suspiciously bland expressions.
“Oh, we’re
sure you do,” Missy said. “It’s just a matter of getting you to show us.”
Now that
sounded significantly odd. Tess shook her head and pulled out a mesh tea
basket. “Okay, let’s try it this way. Who are we aiming to please here?”
This time
she was watching closely enough that she saw Danice’s shoulders jerk and her
hand come up to cover her mouth.
“Sorry,”
the woman said, looking not at Tess but at Missy. “Allergies.”
“Well,
that’s a good place to start.” Tess forged right through the odd energy in the
room and reached for a jar of mullein. “Do you have high blood pressure?”
Danice
gave a puzzled laugh. “Only when my husband is giving me grief. Why?”
“If you
did, I’d be blending up a different formula. No Ma Huang with high blood
pressure.” Tess dragged out her small electronic scale. She laid a creased square
of parchment paper on it and zeroed it out. “Does that cough ever go anywhere?
Ever bring anything up, or is it usually dry like that?”
“Dry.”
“And it
ends up irritating your throat after a while, doesn’t it?”
Danice’s
eyes widened and she stepped up to the counter to watch Tess more closely as
she dipped into several jars, weighing each addition to the parchment with
precise care. “Yeah, especially at night. I used to just blame it on the cigars
the senior partners smoke in the lounge at work, but since they instituted the
no smoking policy it hasn’t really gotten any better.”
“It will,
but smoke is a stubborn irritant. It’ll take a bit for your lungs to recover
from a long period of exposure.”
“And in
the meantime?”
“Well, if
you like this tea, I’ll make up a batch for you to take home. But try these,
too.” Reaching under the counter, Tess withdrew an opaque plastic bag that
rattled slightly when she set it on the counter. She smiled at Danice’s curious
expression. “Horehound candies. They taste pretty darn good, and they’ll make
your throat feel better and soothe your bronchus. Give ‘em a try.”
Tess
automatically poured her herbal mix into a small pan, added water and set it on
a portable burner, but her eyes were on Danice. The other woman broke the seal
on the bag and shook out one of the small lozenges, examining the rather
unappealing brown candy with its powdery coating. Tess grinned.
“They’re
better than they look, I promise. The dust is powdered sugar. It keeps them
from sticking together in the bag.”
Giving her
a doubtful look, Danice took a deep breath and popped the small candy into her
mouth. She sucked for a moment before her eyes widened. “Hey! These are pretty
good. They taste sort of…mapley.”
“I add
extract to the syrup when I make them. The horehound itself doesn’t taste all
that bad, but it’s not exactly exciting, either. Take the bag. They really will
help your throat.”
“How much?”
Tess shook
her head as Danice reached for her purse. “On the house.”
“That’s no
way to run a business.”
“Don’t
worry about it. If you like them, you can buy the next batch.” She grinned. “Besides,
I can always over-charge you for the tea.”
Regina
laughed. “Now I know why Missy likes you so much. You’ve definitely got the
goods to handle…whatever crosses your path.” She cleared her throat. “You got
anything behind that counter to help a woman deal with a ridiculously Alpha
male husband?”
“Sorry,
but I don’t think so. Well, not unless you want to try some damiana.”
Reggie
leaned her forearms on the counter and watched as Tess filled the tea basket
with loose, black leaves and set it in a ceramic pot. “What’s damiana do?”
“He’ll be
so busy thinking about sex, he’ll probably forget about being king of the
mountain for a few hours.”
Corinne
laughed out loud. “Oh, yeah. That’s all Reggie needs. For Misha to have an ever
harder time keeping his hands off her.”
“I can
always add some valerian. He won’t know whether he’s coming or snoring.”
Her offer
met with a brief silence, then an explosion of laughter from every party in the
room. Even Reggie appeared to be smiling just a bit. “Um, thanks, but I think I’ll
pass.”
Tess
thought about the results of feeding Rafe some damiana and shuddered. After
last night, she’d have to be insane to try and up that man’s libido. Not unless
she wanted to make it impossible for herself to walk for a week. “Right, then.
That’s totally understandable.”
She
grabbed the boiling kettle, half filled the teapot, then made up the rest of
the liquid volume with the boiled herb mixture from the sauce pan. A second
teapot got a basket filled with pure Darjeeling and a few bits of lemon peel
and the rest of the water from the kettle. Carrying both pots over to the table
in the back corner of the shop normally reserved for tasting, she plunked them
down and crossed her arms over her chest.
“So,” she
said, leveling a glance at Missy. “Why don’t you tell me what you’re really
here for and how much of what happened last night you shared with your friends?”
She
watched as the other woman weighed her options carefully and seemed to choose
ignorance as a tactic. “What makes you think we’re not here for tea?”
Tess sat
down at the table and poured herself a cup of Darjeeling. “You mean aside from
the fact that you all are giving off so much nervous energy it’s like being
trapped in a room with twenty thousand hamsters on speed? Call it a hunch.”
Missy
paused for a moment before pulling out a chair and joining Tess for tea. “That’s
a hell of a hunch. You get those often?”
“Not as
often as you’re apparently going to try and avoid answering any of my
questions.”
Corinne
flipped an empty teacup over and nudged it toward Tess to be filled. “It’s not
so much a matter of ignoring your questions as easing into the answers.”
“Is that
what you call it?” Tess lifted the other pot and poured a cup of the herb and
tea mixture. She handed it to Danice. “I was just going to call it annoying. I
mean, my first reaction is naturally to tell you to mind your own business, but
since I think that’s probably kind of rude, and I also think I might genuinely
like you all with a slightly better acquaintance, I figure rude might not be my
best strategy.”
Missy
sighed. “Don’t be mad, Tess. I really didn’t tell them all that much about last
night. I just mentioned that you and Rafe seemed to have a…connection of sorts.
That’s all.”
Tess
raised her eyebrows. “And for that you all came down to the East Village in the
middle of a work day in the rain? What makes this thing you seem to think Rafe
and I have that important?”
“It’s
Rafe,” Corinne announced. “He’s been driving us crazy, so we’ve been keeping an
eye on him.”
“Well, it’s
Rafe and the fact that we really like you,” Missy added.
“And the
fact that Rafe seems to really like you.” Danice grinned over her teacup. “Or
so I hear.”
Regina
nodded. “And then there’s the fact that whatever you had to talk to Rafe about
affects the council as a whole, which means it affects our husbands.”
“But
really, it all boils down to the curse.” Ava dropped that bombshell with her
usual aplomb, then sat back in her chair and crossed her long legs. She saw her
friends glaring at her and raised one elegantly arched eyebrow. “Well, it does.”
Tess shook
her head and looked at each of the women. “Okay, in order. One, why is Rafe
driving you crazy? Two, it’s not really anyone’s business how much he likes me.
Three, I know nothing about what I had to talk to Rafe about. All I did was
deliver the message telling him the Witches’ Council wants to meet with him.
And four, what the hell? What curse?”
Missy
shifted in her seat and set aside her teacup. She folded her hands neatly in
front of her and said, “Look, Tess. Let me be blunt. I like you. I liked you
from the minute I set eyes on you yesterday. I also like Rafe. He’s one of my
husband’s best friends, and he’s a wonderful man to boot, but he is driving us
all crazy.”
“How?”
“He won’t
settle down. Well, he seems to think he can’t. What man wouldn’t resist the
idea of finding the right woman when he has such a perfect excuse not to?”
Corinne rolled her eyes. “It’s the dream of every male non-Lupine on the face
of the earth.”
Tess
groaned and got up to throw handfuls of two new herbs into her brewing pot. She
set it on to boil. “Okay, not only have you lost me again, but now you’re
giving me a headache. So please, speak slowly and use small words. At least
until my willow bark is finished brewing.”
Ava hooked
one arm over the back of her chair in what should have looked like a sloppy,
masculine sprawl. Instead, it looked like a Vogue cover pose. “I think
we need to backpedal a little. The first thing we need to find out is how much
our little Tess knows about shapeshifters in general and the Felines in
particular. Then maybe we can pick the proper small words to get our points
across.”
“I know
about as much as I found out talking to Missy last night. Which had more to do
with human-Lupine procreation than with social customs.” Tess saw Missy blush
and smiled at her. “No, it was really interesting. It just didn’t exactly leave
me in the know.”
“Didn’t
you learn any of it in school, or something?” Danice asked. “I mean, you’re a
witch, right? So don’t you all just grow up knowing about all this supernatural
stuff?”
“Afraid
not. Witches are a bit…xenophobic, as a group. They know that a lot of things
exist, but they don’t see any point in actually going and meeting them. I’d
heard shapeshifters existed, but the only things I’ve ever learned about them
are from books and movies. And somehow I’m not sure Rafe has that much in
common with Nastasia Kinski.”
“He’s got
a better body,” Ava countered. “But no. I think we can safely assume that
Hollywood has yet to render an accurate portrayal of any shapeshifting breed.”
“Well,
then I’m in the dark. Who wants to enlighten me?”
Everyone
looked at Missy. She sighed. “Right. That’s my job.” She paused for a bracing
sip of tea. “Okay, first of all, I should say I’m not an expert in Feline
society. I’m not an expert in Lupine society, and I live in that one. Part of
the problem, though, is that Felines don’t really have a society to begin with.
Oh, in modern times they’ve gone ahead and appointed leaders in all the major
cities just to keep the peace. They call each one a Felix, and he acts sort of
like a Lupine Alpha. But that’s where the commonalities end. I mean, Lupines
are all Lupines. We’re all wolves, and like wolves, even the subspecies share
fairly common pack structures and social systems.
“But the
Felines are totally different. From what I’ve been able to pull out of Rafe and
Graham, the Felines are hugely varied. There are as many different kinds of
Feline as there are big cats. Lions, tigers, panthers, leopards. They’re all
distinct species, and their Feline equivalents are all distinct groups as well.
And just like the cats, werelions are the only ones with any sort of group
dynamic among them. The others tend to be loners and live separately from each
other. Which is probably why Rafe is the only Felix I’ve ever met.”
Tess
supposed that made a sort of really disturbing sense to her. Maybe she was
going off the deep end. “What kind is Rafe?” She winced, thinking that question
sounded awful, but Missy didn’t seem to take offense.
“A
werejaguar,” she answered with a smile. “I’ve only seen his cat form once, but
he was beautiful.”
“Careful,”
Regina teased. “Remember, you’re a dog person, Miss.”
“Okay, so
that’s the basics of Feline society,” Tess said. “But what does it have to do
with him, me and curses?”
“It has to
do with…context.” Missy shifted in her seat and fiddled with her wedding band. “When
I say most Felines are loners, I mean they’re really loners. It’s
unusual to see more than one at a time without a fight breaking out. That
includes couples. Felines don’t come in mated pairs.”
Tess
paused, digested. “Then how do they have little baby Felineses?”
“Not very
easily,” Ava said. “Which is where the curse comes in.”
That
little interruption earned her a glare from Missy, but Ava just shrugged,
leaving Missy to explain. “The curse is…ancient. It’s a legend, really. No one
remembers if things were any different before it happened, so…”
“Spill it.”
“The
legends say that things did used to be different with the Felines.
According to the stories, Felines used to mate for life, just like Lupines do.
At that time their human and animal natures combined in such a way that they
loved with the ferocity of the beast and the devotion of the man. But that was
before. At some point so long ago no one is sure if it’s fact, a Felix
supposedly met and became infatuated with a non-Feline woman. They had an
affair and the woman feel deeply in love with him. But after the initial burst
of passion faded from their relationship, the Felix realized that he wasn’t
really in love with this woman, and he began to worry that a non-Feline mate
would be unable to bear him the healthy cubs he wanted. So he left her to find
a mate among his own people.”
“Let me
guess. She got kinda pissy about that, right?”
Missy
nodded. “She cursed him. Not just him, but all the Feline people. She vowed
that if one male Feline could be so fickle, so would they all. And until one
male Feline could find a non-Feline mate and remain faithful to her for a year
and a day, they would bear fewer and fewer children until their entire race
withered away.”
“Gah! Did
she sow their fields with salt while she was at it?”
“She does
sound like quite the bitch, doesn’t she?” Ava drawled. “Even I was impressed.”
Tess
shuddered and lifted her herbs off the boil, straining the liquid into a mug
and adding a dash of straight tea and a lump of brown sugar. She stirred
thoughtfully. “Okay, so I get the gist of the curse. I’m just still not sure
what any of it has to do with me.”
The five
women at the table looked at each other, seemed to reach some sort of unspoken
agreement, and turned back to Tess. She felt a little bit like a science fair
project, some sort of strange bug pinned to a corkboard. She sipped her tea
while she waited for an answer.
It was
Missy who finally spoke.
“Well, you
see, Tess, the woman who cursed the Felines, she didn’t just make it a
non-Felines who could break the curse. She wanted her justice more poetic than
that. She wanted a Felix to have to mate with someone just like her.”
Tess
arched an eyebrow and took another sip of tea.
“Tess, she
was a witch.”
Chapter Ten
It took
Tess all afternoon to clean up the tea from where she’d sprayed it after
hearing Missy’s final bombshell. She spent the whole time with a bottle of
Windex in one hand, a wad of paper towels in the other and a dazed expression
on her face. Bette had tried to get her to confess what was going on, but Tess
just shook her head and kept cleaning. She didn’t even really understand it
herself. There was no way she could explain it to anyone else.
She went
through the rest of her day on autopilot, cleaning up her mess, filling orders
and serving customers. And when closing time rolled around, Bette had the doors
locked, the register counted and the kitchen area cleaned before Tess even knew
it was five.
“That’s
it, then.” Bette shrugged into her coat and pulled out her key chain. “Everything’s
put away. I locked the back door, too, but if you’re staying late, I can go run
and unlock it.”
Tess’s
head snapped up and she shook it to clear away her fog. She glanced at her
watch, saw the time and shook her head. “Um, no, that’s okay. I’m having dinner
with my grandfather tonight, so I’ve got to run home and get ready before I
head over there. I’ll leave with you now. Just let me get my stuff.”
She
hastily put away her cleaning supplies, grabbed her jacket, patted the pockets
for her keys and then followed Bette out the front door. She started up the
stairs and stopped when her assistant called her name.
“Hey,
Tess! Earth to planet Menzies. Were you planning to lock the front door
tonight, or did I miss the sign saying, ‘Burglary Special! Come rob us now and
save!’?”
Tess swore
and jogged back down the stairs, but Bette was already using her key to lock
up. “I’m sorry, Bette. I don’t know what’s with me today.”
“Me,
either.” Bette pocketed her keys and urged Tess back up to the sidewalk. “At
first I thought it was the aftermath of great sex last night, but now I’m not
so sure. You seemed even weirder when I got back from lunch than you’d been
when I left.”
“I know. I’m
sorry. It’s just been…a really strange couple of days.” Tess skipped right over
the mention of great sex and hoped Bette would, too.
“Hm, well
as much as I’m dying to question you about that, and about the potentially
great sex you had last night, I can’t. I’m meeting my roommate at Veniero’s for
dessert debauchery before the show tonight. Her boyfriend’s in a band. Along
with the other three-quarters of lower Manhattan.” She gave Tess an assessing
glance and sighed. “But I’m on tomorrow closing, so I’ll get it out of you
then. Just see if I don’t. Bye!”
She
hurried off down the sidewalk in the opposite direction from Tess’s walk home
and disappeared into the crowd. Tess sighed in relief. Right now, she had more
than enough worrying her as it was. She did not need the Bettish
Inquisition adding to it. Not when she was still freaking over Missy’s news and
scared half to death about the idea of having dinner with her grandfather and
the high chairs of the Witches’ Council. That seemed like plenty of worry for
one person at one time.
More than,
if you asked her.
She really
tried not to stew about it during her half hour walk back to her apartment, but
of course, she failed miserably. It seemed a bit much to ask for her not to
indulge in a minor freak over the idea that she might be the only thing
standing between a species and its extinction. Especially given that donating
to the World Wildlife Fund was not going to cut it. She still hadn’t completely
dealt with the idea that she’d slept with Rafe to begin with, so the thought
that Missy and the others expected her to become his mate for a year and a day
had her head spinning.
“It wouldn’t
be permanent,” Missy had said. “It’s not like we’re asking you to marry him.
Just…be nice to him. For the next three hundred and sixty-seven days. It’s a
leap year.”
Tess could
almost feel her eyes rolling back into her head again.
“It’s not
as if we’re going to force you into it,” Ava added. “We’re not barbarians. We
understand if the idea of spending the next year schtupping one of the most
gorgeous men in Manhattan would be such a trial to you that you can’t even
stomach the idea. Just let us know, and we’ll go let the Feline world know it
was too much to ask.”
At least
Regina had protested that. “Ava, come on. Give the girl a break. It’s not your
responsibility, Tess, so don’t feel like it is. And it’s not like Rafe even
knows about us talking to you. It was our idea, not his.”
“Right.”
Tess scoffed at the memory. “‘Cause that makes me feel so much better.”
She let
herself into her apartment a little before six and wanted nothing more than to
change into flannel jammys and sit in front of her television with a big bowl
of popcorn and a four-pack of Guinness. Unfortunately, she only had forty-five
minutes before she had to be out the door and hailing a cab to take her to her
grandfather’s house for the requested audience. If she rushed, she might have
just enough time to make herself presentable to the point of passing
inspection.
Lionel
Menzies had really missed his calling as King of the Universe, instead becoming
a successful investment banker, the same as his father and grandfather before
him. But he still liked to call people into his throne room from time to time,
just to keep his instincts sharp. Tess, for instance had been called upon the
carpet of his intimidating library so often, she thought she might have worn
through the pile. Since Lionel had raised her after her parents’ death when she
was just four, she’d had ample time to try his patience and disappoint him on
all possible fronts. She’d been mediocre in school, dropped out of college and
forgone a career in banking to open “that hippie dive in the ghetto.” Unless
she declared herself a lesbian, converted to Buddhism and went to live in a
commune in California, she didn’t think she could fail more miserably in her
grandfather’s eyes. Which meant dinner promised to be as much fun as elective
root canal without anesthesia.
With such
a fine incentive, she hurried through her shower, rinsing away the scent of
Rafe’s soap that had been driving her crazy since Bette first mentioned it. As
soon as she stepped out and wrapped herself in a towel, she ruthlessly
blow-dried her hair and set it in hot rollers to try and tame it. It never
worked completely, but she was hoping to instill enough discipline to keep her
grandfather from commenting on it the way he usually did.
While the
rollers cooled, she slathered herself in lotion and pulled on bra, panties and
stockings before rummaging through her closet to find the Dinner with Granddad
section—the one that contained all her most suitable and therefore least
favorite dresses. She pulled one out without really looking and laid it out on
the bed. They all looked alike to her, all with conservative cuts in
traditional fabrics and dull, understated colors. She hated them all, so she
didn’t figure it mattered which one she wore.
She tugged
the dress over her head and padded back into the bathroom to take care of her
makeup and finish her hair. The makeup took less than five minutes, but the
hair decided to fight with her and took nearly fifteen before it settled into
semi-respectability on top of her head. She gave it a securing spritz of
hairspray and prayed for the best as she dashed back into the bedroom to grab
her purse and slip on her shoes. She made it out the door at six-thirty on the
nose and prayed traffic wouldn’t be too bad. She did not want to have to make
excuses about being late on top of everything else. She thought her head might
explode.
She was
fairly sure it would by the time the taxi let her out at her grandfather’s
doorstep. After paying the cabbie, she paused for a moment on the steps of the
elegant, understated brownstone and took a few deep breaths. She wasn’t sure
what it was supposed to do, but figured as long as she didn’t hyperventilate it
probably couldn’t hurt.
She
ignored the feeling of being stared at by random passersby and climbed the last
two steps to the heavy brass doorknocker. She gave it a precisely spaced two
taps and dropped her hand to wait.
The door
opened, as always, in front of a moderately tall, moderately thin, moderately
gray and moderately polite man who had looked precisely the same age since Tess
had been four.
“Good
evening, Howard. I believe my grandfather is expecting me this evening.”
“Miss
Menzies.” The butler bowed and stepped aside to let her in. “Mr. Menzies and
his guests are in the drawing room.”
Tess
resisted the urge to roll her eyes and stepped into the foyer. Only her
grandfather had a drawing room in this day and age. Of course, only her
grandfather had a butler that could have posed for a treatise on stereotypes.
Personally, she preferred her modest little lifestyle on the other end of the
island. She’d rather be poor than pompous. “Thank you. I’ll show myself there.”
“Very
good, miss.”
This time
Tess did roll her eyes, but only after she handed Howard her coat and stepped
past him. Not that she would have been surprised if he could see the gesture
anyway. The man had strange and unsettling butler powers, made even more
unsettling by the fact that he wasn’t even a witch.
Tess
paused for a second on the threshold of the drawing room—or the living room, as
normal people liked to call it—before she convinced herself to just go in and
get it over with. She figured if she approached this evening in the same way as
she approached ripping off a bandage really fast so the pain would be over and
done quickly, she might just survive.
Call me
an optimist.
Three
people looked up when Tess entered the room, none of them appearing very
pleased to see her. Not that she’d expected anything different. “Good evening,
Granddad. How are you tonight?”
She
crossed to where the old man stood in front of the fireplace and extended her
hands to him even as she reached up to kiss his weathered cheek. Lionel Menzies
was a tall man, a hair over six feet, and still had the posture of a general.
He didn’t bend down to make it easier on Tess.
“I’m fine,”
he dismissed. “Gentlemen, I don’t know if you remember my granddaughter, Tess.
Tess, this is Jeremy Knowles and William Bambridge.”
Tess
nodded to the two men, both of whom had been at her grandfather’s seventy-fifth
birthday celebration just six months ago. The one she had planned, executed and
hostessed. “It’s a pleasure to see you again.”
The men
nodded at her and turned back to the conversation she had clearly interrupted.
Tess sighed. She had known it would be that kind of night.
Rafe
memorized the information Graham got for him before he left his apartment that
evening, but in the end, his nose led him to her.
He
followed Graham’s directions to a very nice neighborhood on the Upper West
Side, setting out once dark had fallen and making good time sticking to shadows
and traveling silently through mostly deserted alleyways. He preferred to
remain hidden while he tracked her, since he hadn’t told her of his intentions
to spy on her during her meeting with her grandfather. Somehow, he didn’t think
she’d appreciate the gesture.
He did not
intend, however, to let that stop him from following her. After the information
Graham had dug up on Lionel Menzies, Rafe wasn’t quite sure he wanted Tess
getting all that close to the man, blood relation or no.
According
to the Silverback Clan’s huge network of information, Lionel Menzies wasn’t
just a former member of the Witches’ Council. He was the former High Authority,
and in spite of having stepped down some time ago, rumors claimed he had merely
gone behind the scenes, where he continued to manipulate people and events to
suit his own purposes. And right now, his purposes had something to do with
Rafe.
Last night’s
note had certainly come as a surprise, and Rafe still hadn’t quite been able to
pin down the motive for it. Why, after nearly four hundred years of diplomatic
silence, did Menzies want to reopen relations between the two council bodies?
Why now? And why contact Rafe the way he had? Why not approach the council as a
whole, or approach Rafe himself? It’s not like Rafe would have turned Menzies
away if the man had appeared on his doorstep.
Rafe shook
his head and crouched deeper into the shadows. There was something odd going on
here, and he intended to find out what it was. He had already agreed through
Tess to appear at the next Witches’ Council meeting, but until then, he wanted
to gather as much information about them as he could. It never hurt to be
prepared.
He just
wished he’d been more prepared for Tess.
Helpless,
Rafe sighed as his thoughts drifted back to the same place they’d been all
day—on Tess. And come to think of it, that was right were he wanted to be, and
where he intended to be again before the night was over.
Her taste
had lingered in his mouth all day, and as soon as he’d scented her again this
evening, his body had begun aching to have her. He hadn’t been prepared for his
reaction to her. How could he have been when he’d never felt this way about
other woman in his life? Tess was unique, and so was his response to her.
Rafe wasn’t
a man to put much store in legends. He considered himself a modern fellow, and
he lived his life according to modern principles. He paid little attention to
stories told by old men over pipe smoke and chess boards, but he knew something
about his reaction to Tess set her apart from other women. Maybe the part where
he didn’t get bored with her the minute he’d had her. That might be a clue that
she was different, but it didn’t have anything to do with the ridiculous legend
Graham had seemed compelled to bring up. Of that, he was sure.
He shifted
restlessly in his hiding spot and tried to gauge the time. He’d arrived around
eight-thirty when Tess’s scent had already begun to fade from the air and he
estimated he’d been waiting for somewhere just past an hour. He pushed aside a
rise of impatience and sat back to wait some more. He wasn’t sure just how long
the meeting would take, but he was prepared for another hour at least. Either
way, he would be waiting when Tess came through that door.
Graham had
warned him that information on the Witches’ Council was scarce, but what the
Lupines had discovered painted an interesting picture.
Insular,
secretive and bordering on paranoid, the council had been operating in
Manhattan since just after the time of the last diplomatic relations between
witches and Others. They had formed from the most respected elders of the
community at the time, and created a sort of governing body to police the
affairs of their own kind. Viewing mundane humans and Others alike with deep
suspicion, the thirteen-member council—quite traditional of them—saw to it that
the secrets of true magic remained hidden from the outside world and that any
crimes perpetrated by witches were answered by witches. It became a xenophobic
little culture, simultaneously progressing with society and shunning it.
“From what
I hear, they aren’t fans of ours, either,” Graham had said. “When they’re not
pretending the Others don’t exist, they’re letting their kids get their
educations about us the same way the humans do. Which is to say, not at all.
They have some limited contact with Faerie, though. To tell you the truth, most
of the good info I got, I got from Luc. You ought to talk to him yourself, when
you have the time. He says he’s met this Menzies guy—Lionel, by the way—once or
twice. Doesn’t seem all that wild about him either. He called him, and I quote,
‘an arrogant, unbending old bastard with a stick up his ass and the sense of
humor of a three-day-dead golum.’ So, I’m assuming by that he didn’t like the
guy.”
Rafe tried
to reconcile the image of Lionel that Graham and Luc had painted with what he
knew of the man’s granddaughter and found himself baffled. How in the world
could someone as quick and lively and vibrant as the Tess he’d known last night
possibly be a blood relation to a man like Lionel Menzies? Not only that, but
have been raised by the man, according to Graham.
“He’s her
only living relative,” the Lupine reported with a grin. “Which means that when
you petition for her hand in marriage, he’s the one you’ll be petitioning to.
Good luck. Hopefully he’ll take the news better than Missy’s dad did. She still
claims I nearly gave him a heart attack. Humans.”
Rafe
waited for the instinctive denial he always felt when someone uttered the words
marriage and him in the same sentence. It hadn’t come when Graham had first
said it, and it didn’t come now. What was wrong with him? He’d check himself
for fever if it wouldn’t make him feel like an idiot.
No,
scratch that. He knew very well he had a fever. He’d been burning for Tess
since the moment he saw her. Even when he’d taken her, he’d burned.
Shit.
Something weird was happening to him.
Chapter
Eleven
By the
time Tess let Howard help her into her coat, her face ached from maintaining
the polite smile and her jaw ached from clenching it. If she didn’t get out of
her grandfather’s house in the next fifteen seconds, she thought she might
scream. She felt like she’d been questioned by the CIA, and thought she might
just have the bruises to prove it. The mental scarring went without saying.
“Thank you
for dinner, Granddad.” She gave him a polite peck on the cheek as they stood in
the foyer. “You didn’t have to see me to the door, but I appreciate it. I’ll
call you next week.”
Lionel
waved that aside. “Yes, yes. I wanted to have the opportunity to remind you of
what we said, Tess. Establishing a relationship with the Others is very
important to us just now. The seers are certain that the time when we will all
be exposed to society is getting nearer. Unless we all band together now, we
risk a very unfavorable reaction to our existence.”
Since her
grandfather, Senator Knowles and Judge Bambridge had spent nearly every minute
of the past three and a half hours impressing that very point upon her, Tess
didn’t feel she was likely to forget. “I know, Granddad, and like I said, I got
the impression that Rafe was not averse to the idea of speaking with you. I’m
sure when he meets with the council, you’ll all get things sorted out.”
Lionel’s
head turned and his gaze sharpened on Tess’s face. “Rafe?”
Tess swore
at herself, and fought the urge to blush. Like that would go over well. “Yes.
Like I said, I spoke to him and to several of his acquaintances last night.
Rafe seems to be what he prefers to be called.”
Lionel raised
an eyebrow. “It sounds very familiar.”
Not as
familiar as I’m sure it sounded when I was screaming it last night…
“Don’t be
silly, Granddad.” She lifted her wrist to glance at her watch. Pointedly. “Now
it’s getting late and I have to open the shop tomorrow morning. I’m sure you’ll
forgive me if I rush home.”
The
mention of the shop had the desired affect. Lionel’s mouth twisted in distaste
and he nodded briskly. “Fine. Just remember what we’ve told you, Tess. We
expect to hear from you if you have any further contact with De Santos or the
Other council members. Is that clear?”
“Perfectly,”
Tess assured him, nodding to Howard who opened the door for her. “I’ll call if
I hear anything, or failing that, I’ll call as usual next Sunday. Good night.”
Her grandfather
didn’t respond, but Tess considered that a good thing. She hurried down the
stairs, taking her first deep breath when she heard the front door close behind
her.
“God, I’m
glad that’s over!”
Her
statement was accompanied a low growl, too loud to be her stomach and too quiet
to be a passing motorcycle. Besides which, her grandfather’s cook had prepared
an excellent rack of lamb, and the only traffic she could see on the street
consisted of an elderly woman and the Pomeranian she held on the end of a six
foot leash. That growl had definitely not come from the Pomeranian.
Tess
pulled her coat more snugly around her and looked up and down the street.
Between the puddles of light cast by the streetlamps, the sidewalks looked
ominously dark and deserted. Tess snorted at her own fanciful thoughts. This
was not the sort of block that deserved a description like ominous. Besides the
fact that it was solidly upper class and well patrolled by the police, it
housed three high-ranking witches, including her grandfather. It had wards up
the wazoo.
Shaking
off her paranoia, Tess shoved her hands in her pockets and turned toward the
corner to catch a cab. If she was lucky, and the taxi gods were looking out for
her, she might just make it home in time to watch the episode of Good Eats
she had on tape before she called it a night.
She
listened to the rhythm of her heels clicking against the concrete as she strode
up the block. Maybe she listened too hard, because she didn’t hear anything
else. She certainly didn’t hear the sound of a three hundred pound jaguar
leaping out of the cover of two parked cars and herding her sharply into the
mouth of a service alley.
If she’d
had the breath, she probably would have screamed, so maybe that was why the
jaguar made sure she hit the wall squarely between the shoulder blades, driving
the wind out of her and rendering her momentarily breathless. It backed off as
soon as it had her where it wanted her, sitting back on its haunches in front
of her and watching her with intent golden eyes.
Tess
stared at it while she struggled for breath, and it was the eyes that clued her
in. Well, the eyes and the statistical chances of any other jaguars roaming the
streets of upper Manhattan on any given evening.
“Rafe?”
The jaguar
didn’t say anything, of course, because that would have really freaked her out,
but it licked its whiskers and got up, crossing the narrow space separating
them to nudge her hand with its broad, furry muzzle. She laid a wondering hand
on his skull and felt the rumbling vibration of the mother of all purrs
coursing through him.
Oh, my
God. It’s really Rafe.
He stared
up at her, amusement somehow clear in his feline expression. He looked like he
was laughing at her, and the purr suddenly made Tess very suspicious.
“Get your
chuckles while you can, buddy,” she warned, though she couldn’t stop her hands
from stroking his thick, velvety pelt. “I’m going to get you for scaring me
like that. You will pay for it.”
He purred
louder and a long, familiarly rough tongue swept out to lave the inside of her
forearm while she learned the textures and planes of his new form. He sat
patiently before her while she stroked his head and shoulders, running her
hands down his muscular back and legs. He felt like velvet-covered granite,
muscles hard and solid under her fingers, even more powerful than they were in
the man. She found out quickly that he purred louder when she rubbed the base
of his ears or stroked his throat or the incredibly soft patch of fur on his
chest and between his front legs. When she tried to pet his tail, though, he
pulled it away and she found it quickly wrapped around her, flicking teasingly
against her legs.
She let
out a deep shaky breath and stepped backward, dropping her hands while she
tried to register how huge he really was. The top of his head came up to her
breasts, and if he were to stand on his hind legs, he would have towered over
her. His paws were nearly the size of her head, and his forelegs were almost as
thick around as her thighs. He was massive and very nearly terrifying. If she
hadn’t spent all of last night with him, she figured she’d be running away
screaming right now, for just about as long as it took him to chase her down
and rip her throat out with those sharp, white teeth of his.
Tess took
a deep breath. “Okay, I’m going to assume you’re here for some reason, like
wanting to talk to me or something, but that’s a little difficult while you’re…um…furry,
so how about you change back to normal and we can go somewhere for a nice cup
of coffee. Or saucer of milk.”
The jaguar
Rafe butted his head against her breasts, which nearly sent her sprawling, and
then took her coat sleeve delicately between his teeth. He tugged until she
took a few steps forward, then turned and padded toward the back of the alley.
He paused there, and turned to look back at her.
She rolled
her eyes, gathered her courage and began to follow him. “If this is about Timmy
being stuck in the damned well again, I’m going to turn you into a throw rug,”
she muttered. “Just see if I don’t.”
She heard
a rumble that might have been laughter, but decided to ignore it as she
followed Rafe deeper into the service alley. It was a darned good thing he knew
where he was going, because Tess certainly didn’t and by the time they reached
the end of the alley, she was following blindly. Reaching down, she buried her
hand in the thick fur at the back of his neck and let him guide her around a
corner and into another light-deprived alley. Occasionally they left the dark
to dart across a street, but in general, they walked through the backside of
New York all the way from her grandfather’s brownstone to Rafe’s modern
apartment building. She noticed that this time, they didn’t use the front door.
Rafe
stopped at an unmarked entrance at the rear of the building and jumped up on
his hind legs to bat an enormous paw against the service bell. Several seconds
later, the door opened and a scruffy-looking young man wearing three days’
worth of stubble and a pair of dark blue coveralls opened the door and looked
down at them. He didn’t say a word at the sight of a jaguar and a woman in
heels and pearls standing at the door; he just stepped back and let them
inside, holding out a key on a leather strap which Rafe politely took between
his teeth. The jaguar stalked forward, easily navigating a narrow corridor to a
dented set of elevator doors. He pressed the call button with his paw, and
stepped inside the service elevator as soon as the doors dinged open. Tess
followed, shaking her head.
“I guess
you do this all the time. I wonder if the building has a no pet policy?”
Rafe just
sat on his haunches and watched her while the car climbed up to the twentieth
floor. Three minutes later, they entered his apartment with the help of the key
from the janitor. Tess actually took charge of that, snatching it from his
mouth and fitting in the lock herself while she kept a weather eye on the other
end of the corridor. She had every ounce of faith that Rafe could have handled
it himself, but just then, she wanted the security of a private, secure space
and she wanted it as quickly as possible. She shoved open the door as soon as
the lock turned and darted inside, slamming it behind them.
“Okay, two
feet, De Santos, right now. Because I want some answers, and an enigmatic King
of the Jungle stare is not going to cut it.”
She heard
another rumble of that feline laughter, then the air seemed to shift and
shimmer in front of her. One minute she was glaring down at a stubborn,
three-hundred-pound jaguar, and the next she found out that the line of sight
that put her eye-to-eye with the enormous cat put her
eye-to-something-else-entirely with the equally intimidating man.
A naked,
intimidating man.
Tess
blinked, tore her gaze from Rafe’s impressive erection and found herself
looking into a wicked smile as it spread slowly across his face.
“Oh, you’ll
get answers,” he purred, and his voice sounded somehow even deeper and harsher
than usual. “Right after I get what I want.”
Tess’s
eyes widened and she stepped backward, right into the edge of a very familiar
console table. Jumping as if she’d been burned, she skittered out of Rafe’s
path and began backing toward the living room. “Just what is it you want?”
His grin
turned hungry and feral and savage. “Guess.”
Then he
pounced.
Chapter
Twelve
She darted
away so fast she wasn’t quite sure how it had happened. Apparently her
instincts were quicker than the rest of her because she managed to slip just
outside of his reach and go tumbling over the back of the sofa and onto the
plush, art-deco-inspired carpet. Thank God the man didn’t have a coffee table.
She landed
on the carpet with an oof!—and quickly rolled to her side. Before she
could even get her legs under her he was on her, leaping over the sofa and
landing lightly beside her before he climbed on top of her and busied himself
with peeling her out of her coat.
“Layers!
Why the hell do you always have to be wearing layers?”
Tess
sputtered and let him drag her coat off her arms and toss it aside because it
gave her better leverage when she swung a punch at him. “None of your business!
Now get your bloody hands off me, you jerk! I said I wanted answers, not a
private screening of When Creatures of the Night Attack!”
He caught
the blow easily and grabbed both her wrists in one of his big hands, pinning
them to the floor over her head. He ignored her struggles, slipping his free
hand under the hem of her conservative knit dress and grabbing the waistband of
her panties. “It’s all right,” he said, his tone casually cheerful. “We’re
running a special. Free attack before every conversation. Just sit back, relax
and enjoy the show.”
His hand
tightened and he ripped the panties off her, tossing them behind him, then
began to push her skirt up toward her waist. Tess gave a strangled scream of
frustration and tried to kick him, but he had already settled between her legs,
so she wasn’t landing anything anywhere that would do her any good. He ignored
the blows pelting the backs of his thighs and pushed her skirt the rest of the
way up until it pooled at her waist and out of his way.
“If you
lay a frickin’ hand on me, you asshole, I swear to you, I will—”
“Scream?”
He
released her dress, shifted his body and plunged two fingers to the hilt inside
of her.
Tess
screamed.
Her head
flew back and she found herself staring blankly up at the white plaster ceiling
while her body arched and bucked under his hands. Those two fingers filled her
full, reaching tender places that ached to be touched and making her flood his
palm with thick cream. It stole her breath, leaving her aching for more. His
fingers flexed and shifted, beginning to plunge in and out in a fast,
relentless rhythm that made her desperate. His touch drove her crazy, but what
she really wanted was his cock, big and thick and stretching her to the limits
of endurance, then driving her hard over the edge. She forgot all about her
irritation, her questions and her identity, other than as the body currently
pressed to the floor beneath Rafael De Santos.
“That’s
it, baby,” he murmured, thrusting his fingers deeper, flicking his thumb over
her straining clit. “Christ, you feel good. Hot and tight and wet around my
fingers. You’re dripping with cream for me. I want a taste.”
She cried
out again, almost in protest, but she didn’t fight when he released her hands
and slid down her body until his shoulders pressed her knees wide apart and she
could feel his breath on her damp, swollen folds. “Rafe!”
He
answered her with a long slow lap of his tongue, from one end of her slit to
the other. She screamed and bucked under his steadying hands. The warm, rough
texture of his tongue drove her crazy, driving her up the slope of arousal and
leaving her panting for more. Her fingers flew to his head, burying themselves
in his hair and holding him to her while his tongue dipped into her pussy and
began lapping up her cream.
“Good,” he
growled, voice sounding rougher and harsher with need. “Sweet.” Lick. “Rich.”
Nibble. “Hot.” Thrust. “Want more.”
Tess gave
him more.
She didn’t
have a choice. Her body had taken over, no longer operating for herself, but
for Rafe. She breathed, moved, existed solely for the pleasure he provided and
for the moments when he would ease himself into her body.
“Please.”
She tugged at his hair, trying to drag him away from her pussy and up over her.
“Please, Rafe. I need you so badly.”
He growled
in answer and drove his tongue deep inside her. She screamed in pleasure, but
it just made her redouble her efforts to pull him away. She wanted his cock
inside her. Now. Before she died.
Desperate,
she braced her hands on the floor and heaved herself backwards with all her
strength, leaving an unsuspecting Rafe staring at her ankles and growling
ferociously. His head snapped up and he glared at her, his golden eyes bright
and savage with lust.
“No more
playtime,” she panted, holding out a hand when he shifted to his knees and
began to stalk toward her on all fours. She could see the echo of his jaguar
self like a mirage shimmering behind him, and she shuddered, but she stood her
ground. “If you want to lay a hand on me again, it better be after you’re
inside me. Understand?”
“Careful
what you wish for,” Rafe growled, low and menacing. “Because you’re about to
get it.”
He leapt
for her again, but this time she wasn’t backing away. She met him halfway,
returning every desperate kiss, every frantic caress. She felt him tug at her
dress, yanking the fabric from her waist to her shoulders so he could see her
breasts. His eyes fixed on her nipples and he gave a hungry growl, reaching for
them.
She
slapped his hands away. “No. Not until you give me what I want.”
“Fine,” he
growled, seizing her hips and lifting them off the floor. He sat back on his
heels and tugged her into place, maneuvering her like a doll until he had her
where he wanted her. Her ass perched on his thighs and her knees settled
against the small of his back, digging into the sensitive flesh. She couldn’t
care less. She braced her hands on the floor while he swung her legs up high,
bracing her ankles on his shoulder so that when he leaned forward, he forced
her knees back against her chest, bending her almost in two. He set one hand on
the floor beside her head and reached between them with the other to grasp his
cock. Looming over her like a great, dark shadow, he bared his fangs and
growled.
“You want
me, sweet Tess? Then take me.”
He drove
deep with one hard thrust and sent Tess over the edge before she even realized
she was teetering.
He didn’t
slow down for her climax, just leaned against her folded legs and began
thrusting wildly against her, riding her through her crisis. She thought she
might have begged him to stop, but he ignored her. His hips worked like a
piston against her, slicing through her tight sheath to reach the heart of her,
then gliding back and plowing into her again. When she slumped weakly to the floor,
too wrung out and breathless to do more than lie there and accept his thrusts,
he just growled and kept up the steady, possessive rhythm. Her legs slipped off
his shoulders and he caught them in the crooks of his elbows, keeping her legs
spread high and wide for him. His eyes burned like yellow flames above her, and
she felt the harsh glide of his cock against her internal walls beginning to
force her back up toward another peak.
She began
to struggle, anxious to get away, not from him, but from the unbearable
pleasure-pain of his possession. No one in her life had ever made her feel like
this. She hadn’t even known feeling like this was possible, and it terrified
her. She could see, behind her tightly closed eyelids, the absolute perfection
of their togetherness. In that moment, she knew, with a certainty that went
beyond tarot cards, beyond magic to the fabric of destiny itself, that this man
would be the air in her lungs until the day she died. He went beyond being her
lover or her mate to being the one person in all the world who could make her
whole for the rest of her life. The beauty and terror of the knowledge filled
her, and she cried out, shaking her head in denial.
“Yes!”
Rafe roared, shoulders hunching, arms shifting to force her legs even wider for
him, as he thrust even more fiercely into her welcoming pussy. “Eyes open,
Tess. Look at me. Look at me, damn you!”
Her eyes
flew open and locked with his just as he gave one last, mighty thrust and began
to pour his seed inside of her. She stared into those pools of molten gold
while her body came apart in his arms, and she knew she would never be the same
again. From now on, she would be his. Whether either of them liked it or not.
Rafe came
back to himself feeling simultaneously like he’d been beaten within an inch of
his life, and like he’d just told a roomful of five-year-olds that there was no
such thing as Santa Claus. How one man could feel so beat down and so bloody
evil at the same time was beyond him, but that’s how he felt.
He shifted
gingerly and found Tess still lying beneath him, and judging by the feel of the
pile beneath his hands, they still lay on the living room carpet like victims
of an eight point earthquake. He shifted again and heard her groan softly.
Shame flooded through him and he began to ease his weight off of her.
She looked
pale as cream and still as death as she lay there, eyes closed, beneath him.
The only sign of life he could see was the rise and fall of her chest as she
drew in shuddering gulps of air and the glistening tracks of moisture that slid
down her cheeks and into her golden-copper curls.
He felt
his stomach clench. “Oh, baby, I’m so sorry,” he whispered, reaching for her
but snatching his hands back before they touched her soft skin, afraid of
hurting her even more. “Sweet Tess, I swear I didn’t mean to hurt you. Come on,
baby. Open your eyes and look at me. Let me know if you’re okay. Tess?”
She
shuddered and laid a hand over her eyes, shoulders shaking as she struggled to
catch her breath.
Rafe
swore. “Shit. Okay, stay right there, baby. I’ll get a blanket to wrap you up
in, then I’m taking you right to the hospital. God, baby, I’m so sorry.”
“Sheesh,
will you calm down, you big baby? I’m fine.” She lifted her hand from her face
and smirked at him, looking more amused than traumatized. “You didn’t hurt
me—well, not really—and it’s not like I didn’t ask for it. Hell, I think you
made me beg for it, before it was over. So chill, okay?”
Rafe felt
his tension deflate like a popped balloon. He thought his sigh might sound like
one, too. “Okay. Sorry.” This time he did reach out and touch her, tucking a
stray curl back behind her ear and stroking his thumb over the curve of her
cheekbone. “So then you’re not mad at me?”
She shook
her head. “Not about the sex. But we have more than sex we need to talk about.”
“Right.
You need to tell me about your meeting with the council members.”
“No. You
need to tell me what the hell is going on, and why you were lying in wait for
me when I left Granddad’s house.” She crossed her arms over her chest and
glared at him. “I don’t spill ‘til you do, buddy.”
Rafe
grinned. He couldn’t help it. Her expression looked so fierce, but with her
dressed bunched up under her arms like that, she looked too ridiculous to take
seriously and too cute for words. When her eyes narrowed, he schooled his
expression into more serious lines and reminded himself she probably didn’t
want to know he was struggling to take her seriously. That was the kind of
thing Tess would certainly take exception to.
“Right.”
He scooped her up in his arms and got to his feet, and felt a surge of pleasure
at the way her arms automatically curled around his neck to hold him close. “And
I’ll spill whatever you want. Just as soon as I get you into a nice, hot bath.”
She rolled
her eyes at him. “Would you stop treating me as if I were made out of glass? We
had rough sex. So what? In case you hadn’t noticed by now, I like when
we have rough sex. Now will you stop trying to coddle me—”
“It’s a
Jacuzzi tub.”
“Right. We’ll
talk about it in the bath.”
Chapter
Thirteen
She would
never admit it to Rafe, but the bath did feel wonderful. She could practically
hear her sore, aching muscles sighing in relief as he lowered her into the
steaming water. And when he turned on the jets, she was too busy whimpering
happily to mind when he climbed in behind her and pulled her back against his
chest. The tub was more than big enough for two, after all. Whether or not it
would be big enough for the two of them and the erection she could feel swelling
against her back was another matter entirely, but she’d give it the benefit of
the doubt for now.
Her head
fell back to rest against his shoulder. The water swirled and bubbled around
them and the damp heat made their skin stick together. It felt like heaven.
Tess murmured in pleasure as Rafe lathered a washcloth and began dragging the
nubby fabric over her skin.
“Now why
don’t you tell me about dinner tonight.”
Tess
opened her eyes and sighed. “I’d really rather you tell me what the deal is
between the Council of Others and the Witches’ Council first. That way I might
have a clue about what parts of dinner tonight were important.”
“But I’m
bigger.” He nipped at her earlobe. “That means I get to decide who goes first.
And I’ve decided that you should.”
“You
realize it’s the mark of a barbaric mind that you would use your size as a
threat to intimidate me.”
“Yes.”
She
sighed. “I really don’t get it. Why don’t you all just forget about using me to
spy on each other and have your meeting, already. Wouldn’t that be a whole lot
easier and more straightforward?”
Rafe
rubbed the washcloth over her stomach and flicked her earlobe with his tongue. “Who
else was there besides you and your grandfather?”
She
sighed, trying to sound as put-upon as possible. Which was very. “Jeremy
Knowles, Republican, New York, and William Horatio Bambridge IV, New York State
Supreme Court.”
“Hm. They’re
both council members?”
“Yeah.”
She arched her neck when he began to nibble down the side toward her shoulder.
No sense in making things difficult. “Knowles holds the current High Chair, and
Bambridge holds everybody’s dirty secrets.”
“There’s
always one of those.” He nibbled his way across her shoulder, laving the skin
in his wake. “What sorts of things did they make you tell them?”
She
steeled herself against an attack of shivers. “I don’t remember. Once they
broke out the rubber hoses, things get a little fuzzy.”
He bit
down and growled.
“Ouch!
Sheesh, if you’re that hungry go fix yourself a snack.” She jerked away and
turned halfway around to glare at him. “They asked me what I thought about you,
where you took me, what Graham seemed like.” She paused and changed her voice
to a mumble, her gaze shifting away. “If I used magic to read you.”
The
silence in the room sounded louder than the tub jets. No one moved for a long
minute, then he took her chin in his hard and forced her eyes to meet his. “Did
you?”
“No! Of
course I didn’t. I don’t do that kind of thing. Magic isn’t there to be used
like a pair of psychic X-ray glasses.”
She scowled
at him, offended, and he smiled back at her. “Glad to hear you think that way.
Not everyone is so ethical, though. Think about it, Tess. How many people who
have the power to do something they want to do also have the power to resist
the temptation?”
“What, you
think all witches are unethical?”
He
hesitated. “I never said that.”
“You didn’t
have to!” Tess scrambled to her knees and crossed her arms over her dripping
chest. “You’re nearly as bad as they are, aren’t you? You think that anyone who’s
different or separate from you must be somehow morally lacking. What is
it with men?”
Rafe
blinked and shook his head. “Okay, I think I missed a step in there somewhere.
How did we go from talking about what happened when you had dinner with your
grandfather to accusing me of racism?”
“You’re
the one who accused me of being all amoral and sneaky and manipulative.”
“No, not
really. As I recall, I simply asked you to qualify a statement you’d already
made.” He raised an eyebrow. “I think I’d remember if I called you amoral and
sneaky and manipulative. Because those aren’t the first words that come to mind
when I think of you.” He stroked a hand down her water-slicked thigh. “It’s
more like luscious and tasty and…lickable.”
He suited
actions to words, leaning forward and tracing his tongue along the seam between
her hip and thigh. When she felt his breath against her damp curls, she jerked
away and nearly fell backward into the water. He caught her before she hurt
herself, and Tess found herself pinned between his hard body and the hard
porcelain of the tub.
“Let me
go.”
“No.” He
shifted his weight to keep her in place. “We’re not done talking yet.”
“Aren’t
we? Because I told you everything I know, and you seem determined not to tell
me a damned thing. So what else do we have to talk about?”
“It’s not
that I don’t want to tell you things…”
“Then try
telling me things. It’ll be a refreshing change of pace at least.”
He sighed.
“I really didn’t want to get you into the middle of this.”
“Oh. My.
God. Don’t try and pull that protective crap with me. You put me in the middle
the minute you started asking me questions about my grandfather, the same way
he did by asking me questions about you! Sweetheart, it don’t get any
more middle than I am right now.”
“All
right. But let’s get dry first.” Rafe pushed himself out of the tub and reached
in to scoop her out, wrapping her in a fluffy towel before knotting another
around his hips.
Tess gave
a wistful look back toward the tub and sighed when he turned off the jets.
“Minx,” he
laughed, pushing her out into the bedroom and out again toward the living room.
‘Don’t worry. I have plans for that tub, too. We’ll get to those later.”
“Spoil
sport.”
“Maybe,
but right now I’m a hungry spoil sport.” He deposited her on the couch and
headed back into the kitchen. “You want anything to eat?”
“I just
came back from dinner!”
“Is that a
yes, or a no?”
Tess
rolled her eyes. “No. Thank you.”
“Okay. I’ll
be right in. Why don’t you go ahead and light a match in there? The fire is all
laid out, it just needs to be lit.”
She found
the matches on the mantel where everyone should keep some, she thought, and
struck flame to tinder, watching as little fatwood sticks began to burn. The
small fire began to give off heat almost immediately, and she settled into the
chair closest to the hearth to wait for the werecat with the munchies. When he
returned, he carried a tray piled high with sandwiches, pretzels, what looked
like oatmeal raisin cookies and a gi-normous glass of milk.
“I said I
wasn’t hungry.”
Rafe
looked up from setting the tray on the end table beside her chair. “That’s why
I didn’t bring you anything.” He missed the widening of her eyes as he settled
himself down on the carpet near her feet and reached for a sandwich. “Now, what
exactly do you know about the Accord of Silence?”
“I know
what it is. It’s the agreement under which all Others and magic users have
agreed to keep their silence to avoid being recognized by human society at
large.”
Rafe
nodded and popped a pretzel nugget into his mouth. “Right. It’s been operating
well for nearly fifteen hundred years now. But there are rumors starting to
float around that it might not survive another fifteen months. Some groups are
even advocating that it be done away with entirely so that the witches and the
Others can begin to take a…more prominent role in world affairs.”
“You mean
there are a few crazy Others out there who want to take over the world.”
“Pretty
much.”
“Okay, I
get that.” She nabbed a pretzel and crunched into it. “I mean, I don’t get
it, but I get it. But what I mean is, why now? And why is the idea such a bad
one?” She cut him off when he started to answer. “I can guess that the idea of
werewolves being your kid’s gym teacher and vampires and witches moving into
the neighborhood might upset some humans, but aren’t they going to have to find
out eventually? Fifteen hundred years is a damned long time to keep a secret.
By now shouldn’t there be enough witches and Others in prominent positions in
society to cushion the blow somewhat?”
Rafe
nodded. “There nearly are. More than a few people, myself included, believe
that the time when humans are going to have to learn about us is not very far
off. Whether we like it or not, we can’t hide forever, but the preparations
that have begun just aren’t done yet. We need another year or two to hedge as
many bets as we can. And that’s why the Accord is so damned important right
now. Without it, we’ll lose control of our own revelation. And that could
backfire on us. Badly.”
“I’m not
sure the Witches’ Council feels any differently.” Tess tucked her feet up in
the chair under her and frowned. “From what I gathered from Granddad, they’ve
foreseen the same thing. He mentioned that some of the seers on the council
believe that time is coming very soon. Maybe even sooner than you do.”
Rafe
drained the last of his milk and licked the stray drops from the corners of his
mouth. “Then we should have a very smooth meeting when I appear before them
next week.”
She
studied his expression. “But you don’t think that’s going to happen.”
“Not
really.”
“Why not?”
“Because
something weird is already going on. People are beginning to believe in things
they would have dismissed as their imagination even five years ago. A Fae
friend of mine said that his wife’s newspaper got nine thousand calls in a
ten-hour period this summer, all people reporting having seen a leprechaun. The
Times recently ran an article on Manhattan’s best spots for ‘vampire and
wolfman sightings.’ Those are all signs that humanity might be closer to the
veil than we think, and that they may even be developing the ability to see
through it.”
“Even I
can’t see through it, and I’m a witch.”
Rafe
raised an eyebrow. “Don’t take this the wrong way, but you’re the least
magic-using witch I’ve ever met.”
She made a
face at him. “How many witches have you met?”
“Well…one.
If I count you.”
“So how
would you know how much magic I should or shouldn’t be using?”
He
shrugged and grinned. “I guess I wouldn’t, right?”
“Right.
Mr. Smartypants.” She tossed a pretzel at his head and laughed when he caught
it in his mouth. “That’s the problem with cowans. They all think—”
“Cowans?”
“Non-witches,”
she clarified. “They all think we walk around waving our magic wands or
wrinkling up our noses every time we want to fill the tea kettle. But magic isn’t
like that. It’s not about making life more convenient for us. It’s about
exploring the mysteries and serving the greater good. Or at least, it should
be.”
“Does that
mean you won’t clean my apartment by making the broom dance across the floor?”
“Hire a
cleaning service. Though I’m sure you already have one.” She shook her head. “Yeah,
I probably could pull a Fantasia if I wanted to, but I’d be abusing the
magic, instead of using as it was intended to be used. Not that I’m not
occasionally tempted to put a hex on someone…”
“No boils,”
he insisted, shuddering. “You can turn me into a toad if you want, but no
boils. Skin conditions creep me out.”
“I’ll
remember that.”
“So if you
don’t use your magic to do your dishes or to make all the traffic lights turn
for you, what do you use it for?”
Tess
shrugged. “I suppose it depends on what sort of magic you have. It’s not all
the same, you know. Some witches couldn’t do a hex if their lives depended on
it, and some could turn your private parts twelve shades of green without
breaking a sweat. Granddad is a spell caster. If someone has written it down,
he can cast it. He’s amazing.”
Rafe
stood, scooping Tess up in his arms and taking her chair, then settling her
down into his lap. “What sort of magic do you have?”
She
grimaced. “Not much, if you ask most people.”
“I asked
you.”
She never
had been able to explain it worth a darn, which might have been one of the
reasons why her grandfather never understood it or appreciated it, but she took
a stab at it. “I see things, usually stuff that’s about to happen,” she said. “Not
like a real seer does. I don’t have visions, or anything. Sometimes I just know
the way things are going to work, almost like it’s been blocked out for a play
or something, and I’ve already rehearsed it. And I don’t see it ahead of time
like a seer, either. It’s usually just a few seconds, like fast-forward déjà
vu.” She made a face. “It’s not really all that impressive.”
His gaze
on her was intent and inscrutable. “Oh, I don’t know. I think it’s fascinating.”
Then he grinned and she braced herself against the charm of that look. “But
lets try a little experiment.”
“It almost
never works on command.” She tried to push aside the twinge of disappointment
she felt that he’d dismissed her so easily. Not that she could blame him,
really. Most witches found her meager talents just as uninteresting.
“Humor me.”
He rose
abruptly to his feet, carrying her with him, lifting her high against his
chest. She gasped in surprise. “Where are we going?”
His grin
curved like a pirate’s and a chuckle purred out of his chest. “You tell me,” he
said, darting forward to nibble her earlobe. “Then tell me what’s going to
happen once we get there, because I believe it will only be a few seconds
before it does.”
Tess
laughed and shook her head, her disappointment not standing a chance against
the feeling of arousal that the look in his eyes ignited inside her. “Please.
You could at least make it challenging.”
He carried
her through the bedroom door with a low growl. “It would be my pleasure.”
Chapter
Fourteen
His
pleasure also apparently involved licking every square inch of her body with
that rough sandpaper-velvet tongue.
He laid
her on the bed as if it were an altar, leaving her towel piled on the floor
halfway across the room. His eyes glinted in the darkness while his hands
skimmed her flesh, not so much touching her as waking her up to his touch.
Where his hands went, they left her skin aching and sensitive until she
wondered if maybe he was the one with the magic.
“Keep
still,” he purred. “That should be challenging enough for you.”
Tess
shivered when he moved away, the loss of his radiant heat chilling her. She
stayed where he had placed her while he moved to either side of the bed,
lighting the lamps that sat there to dim golden glows. The light made his skin
glow almost copper in places, and shadowed it in deep, aged bronze in others.
All planes and angles, he was gorgeous in her eyes, the perfect figure of a
man. She shivered again, this time in anticipation.
“If you
don’t hurry, I’ll be really still.” Her voiced sounded husky in her own ears. “As
in asleep.”
He
chuckled and rounded the end of the bed, climbing onto it and prowling toward
her on all fours, looking a lot like he had earlier that evening, when he’d sported
three-inch fangs and a thick, plush layer of fur. “Oh, I don’t think so, sweet
Tess. I think you’ll be wide awake for as long as I want.”
She
wondered if her own eyes could flare as brightly as his, or if that was just a
Feline thing. “Really? I guess that’s up to you, then. If you give me a reason
to stay awake…”
“I’ll give
you plenty.”
That’s
when he set his tongue to the skin inside the arch of her foot and licked.
Tess
moaned.
She’d
heard of foot fetishes, of course, but she’d never really taken them seriously.
After all, how sexy could a foot possibly be? For heaven’s sake, she spent most
of her time walking on them. Aside from providing a means of locomotion to get
her to a chosen partner, what the heck could they possibly have to do with sex?
Under the
stroke of Rafe’s tongue, they had everything to do with it. They felt like
satellite sex organs, each flick and rub and nibble sending pleasure shooting
directly from her feet to her pussy. He bit delicately in the middle of the
arch, and she got wet. He scraped his teeth across her sole, and she quivered.
He licked the base of her toes and she could feel her clit throbbing in
response. The man had more magic in the tip of his tongue than she had in her
entire, aroused, aching, needy body.
“Reason number
one, sweet Tess.” His growl had the same rough-smooth texture as his tongue and
drove her almost as crazy. “Shall we move on to number two?”
She
whimpered in reply, then stuffed her fist into her mouth to stifle any more
embarrassing and revealing sounds.
“Ah-ah,”
he chided, dragging her hand slowly back to the mattress. “I said stay still.
And I want to hear those noises. They’re part of the fun.”
“I’ll give
you more than noise in just a minute if you don’t—”
Her
useless threat strangled in her throat when he closed his teeth around the back
of her ankle and began nibbling his way north. “Ah!”
He
chuckled and massaged her calf with long, thorough strokes of his tongue.
Tess lay
back on the bed and tried to think of England, but all she could really think
about was the shift and slide of his mouth up toward her knees. His teeth and
lips and tongue all conspired to cause her downfall. What else could she think
when he found a particularly sensitive spot at the back of her right knee and
proceeded to exploit it with nibbles and scrapes and sweet hot suction until
she actually cried out. From having her knees nibbled!
“Rafe!
Stop it! Just stop!” Her breath was coming fast now, and she sounded panting
and eager. Probably because she was both. “Stop teasing me and get up here.”
He shook
his head, his thick, dark hair caressing her thighs as he laved his way around
her knee to her inner thigh. “Can’t. Busy.”
“Argh!
Busy my ass!”
He lifted
his head, grinned at her and shook his head again. “Not yet. I’ve got other
things to do first.”
Then he
lowered his head, and she felt his tongue glide in one, long drag from her knee
across her thigh to her waiting slit.
He might
as well have killed her.
She cried
out like a murder victim, a long, high wail that begged for mercy. He showed
her none. His tongue slid between her swollen folds, seeking out her core and
drinking from her like she was a fountain of cream. She could feel the
vibrations of his rough purr traveling from her pussy to her very heart. She
groaned in response and whimpered when he dipped inside, tongue penetrating and
thrusting into her in a breathtakingly intimate kiss.
Orders be
damned. She buried her hands in his hair, desperate to have something to hold
onto while her world spun dangerously out of control. She couldn’t even feel
the mattress beneath her. All she could feel was Rafe’s mouth and teeth and
tongue and hands and breath and purr wreaking havoc inside her.
“Please!
Rafe, please. I need—” She arched into a bow as his tongue curled around her clit
and tugged with agile precision. “God, I need you! Please—”
“I am
pleasing you,” he murmured, shifting a hand between her thighs. “And you’re
going to come for me. Now.”
He thrust
two fingers high and deep inside her and she had no choice but to obey. “More,”
he growled.
She rained
down on him like April, flooding his hand with cream and his ears with a
torrent of gasping cries. She screamed his name. She screamed to God. She
screamed for mercy. But mostly she screamed for more. He gave it to her.
More.
Eyes
feasting on her, Rafe gave her another finger and watched a new wave of
convulsions seize her. He could feel her pussy clenched around his fingers like
a fist, then the tense and release of her climax. Her moisture slicked his
palm. He bent his head to lap it up, thick as cream, sweet as honey and rich as
her scent. He couldn’t get enough.
More.
He ignored
the cries for mercy, the way her ragged breath soughed in and out of her lungs.
He could hear her exhaustion, and he didn’t care. He wanted more. Leaning down,
he drew her clit into his mouth and suckled it like a nipple. Her pussy
clenched around his fingers again, a new wave driving her back into climax
before she’d barely begun to descend.
More.
Her
fingers knotted in his hair and jerked painfully. Rafe ignored them. He ignored
the burning in his scalp and the ringing cries in his ears. He ignored the bite
of her nails into his shoulder when one hand clutched at him, frantic and
grasping. He just bit down on her clit and drove her over another peak.
More.
She began
to cry, gasping sobs shaking her as tears tracked down her cheeks to the sheets
beneath her head. He saw it and he knew he should ease off on her, but he
couldn’t. His instincts rode him hard, ignoring the reason of the man in favor
of the hunger of the beast. The beast wanted him to mark her, mark her and keep
her forever, permanently hot and wet and aching for him. He flexed his fingers
and touched her deeper.
More.
Her hands
curled into fists and beat at his shoulders, and still he pressed her. Up and
up and up until she stopped coming down. Her climax had become one, huge,
unending orgasm from which she couldn’t break free, because he was constantly
there to drag her back. Her voice went hoarse from begging, but it seemed to
make no difference. He had no mercy. He growled at her pleas and pushed her
higher.
More.
Then,
abruptly, she stopped struggling. The fight went out of her and she lay still
on the sweaty, tangled sheets. Her thighs fell open, leaving her totally
exposed. Her hands dropped to her sides and her eyelids fluttered closed. Her
dry lips parted, and it was her whisper that brought him back to reason.
“I love
you, Rafe.”
He froze,
three fingers buried to the first knuckle inside her, tongue dancing across her
clit. Her words flashed a lightning bolt of pride and fierce satisfaction
inside him, and they brought him a new and unexpected peace.
Gently, he
eased his hand away from her, sliding up the mattress until their bodies were
aligned and he could take her into his arms, cradling her close. Grasping her
top thigh in his hand, he lifted it over his and pulled her hips against his
until he could slip inside gently and easily. Her hands came up to push him
away, but he refused her. He shushed her with soothing whispers and soft
promises and rocked slowly against her, not thrusting, but reveling in the
connection between their two bodies. When the climax came this time, it was the
gentle ripple of a pond, no more violent than a heartbeat and just as natural.
He hugged
her to him and tried not to panic.
Then he
tried not to love her and panic became inevitable.
“Rafe,”
she breathed.
“Shhh.” He
brushed her hair away from her forehead, smoothing the tousled curls and
pressing a soft kiss to the damp skin beneath. “I’m right here, my sweet Tess.
Right exactly here.”
She
slipped breathlessly into sleep, and he followed soon after, still joined, body
to body, skin to skin, heart to heart.
Chapter
Fifteen
“East
Village Apothecary. This is Tess. Can I help you?”
“Are you
pregnant?”
Tess
dropped a three-hundred-dollar bag of saffron on her foot. Luckily, it weighed
less than a pound. “What?!”
“Are you
pregnant?” Missy’s voice sounded breathless and very excited. Even the phone
lines couldn’t hide it. “I know it’s a weird way to start a conversation, and I’ll
get to the hellos and how are yous later. First, I need to know if you’re
pregnant.”
“What the
hell kind of question is that?” She scooped up the bag—which had thankfully
remained tightly sealed—and stuffed it back under the counter. She could divide
it up later. When her heart stopped beating three hundred times a minute.
“The kind
you need to answer. Just tell me, Tess. Pregnant. Yes, or no.”
Her denial
was instant, vehement and totally unfounded. “Of course not.” She hadn’t even
considered the possibility. Because it was impossible. Ridiculous.
Laughable. Terrifying. “Why would you even ask me something like that?”
“Aside
from the fact that you and Rafe have been fucking like rabid bunnies for seven
and three-quarters of the last eight days?”
“For God’s
sake, Miss! You don’t have to shout it.” She looked around at the Friday
afternoon browsers in the shop as if she thought some of them might have
overheard the other half of the conversation she was conducting on the cordless
phone. Hell, Missy was yelling so loud, some of them might have. They all
continued to shop, though, and she turned her back, heading for the small,
semi-private alcove where she usually did her tarot readings. Not that she’d
done any since the one with Missy.
“Even if
such a thing were remotely possible—which it isn’t,” Please, God! “how
the hell would I know? You said yourself, it’s only been eight days. It would
take fourteen, minimum, before I even had time to skip a…period.” She hesitated
and lowered her voice before she said that last bit. Bette was already eyeing
her too warily from behind the lavender stalks.
“When you’re
knocked up by a shapeshifter, you know. Come over. Now.”
“Now?
Miss, I can’t just up and leave work in the middle of—”
“Now.”
“Missy,
tonight is the meeting—”
“Now.”
Wow. Tess
hadn’t realized the other woman could growl like that. She must have been
taking lessons from her husband.
“Fine,”
Tess said. “I’ll see if Bette minds closing for me. If it’s okay with her, I
can leave in an hour, right after I—”
“Now.”
“All
right! Sheesh. Give me thirty minutes—”
“Now.”
“It will
take me at least fifteen, even if I hijack the first cab on the avenue.”
“Fine.
But leave NOW!”
Sixteen
minutes and forty-seven seconds later, Tess shoved her fare into the cabbie’s
hand and leapt out of the taxi. Another three seconds later, she was pounding
on the Winters’ door and wondering if maybe she needed to see someone about her
blood pressure.
Missy
jerked the door open before the echo of the first knock faded and hauled Tess
inside by the front of her shirt.
“Holy
shit, Miss! What the hell do you do in your spare time? Bench press Volvos?”
The blonde woman ignored her. She was too busy sticking her nose up against
Tess’s neck and inhaling deeply. “What the hell…?”
Missy
jerked back, her eyes wide. She blinked up at Tess. “I don’t get it. You’re not
pregnant.”
Tess threw
up her hands and contemplated joining a remote Buddhist monastery in Tibet.
Someplace where everyone took vows of silence. And no sniffing. “I know
I’m not pregnant. In fact, I tried to tell you so over the phone. So what gives?”
Missy just
shook her head and turned, heading toward the same sitting room Tess had
visited unwillingly last Wednesday night. “I really don’t get it. You have to
be pregnant. There’s no other explanation.”
Torn
between offering to call Missy a doctor and trying to wring her neck, Tess gave
an exasperated cry and chased after her.
“What
don’t you get?” she demanded. “That I’m not pregnant? I hate to burst your
bubble, but there’s a very good explanation for that. It’s called wild carrot
seed. I’ve been taking the tincture since the first time your friend laid his
grubby little paws on me!”
Missy
stopped at the entrance to the living room and whirled around, one hand on her
hip, the other curled around the shining brass doorknob. “That still,” she
growled, “doesn’t explain this!”
With
impeccable timing, perfectly synchronized to her shout, Missy turned her hand
and threw open the door to reveal three very confused looking women. Who otherwise
looked completely normal.
Tess
blinked. “Um, oooookay. What do they have to do with anything? And who are
they?”
“They,”
Missy stabbed a finger through the doorway, “are all pregnant. Just like you
should be.”
“Huh?”
“Every
single one of those women has gotten knocked up—in the past week—by a werecat.”
Tess’s
head snapped around, searching for the nearest butcher’s knife. “You mean to
tell me that Rafe—”
“No! Of
course not. I didn’t mean Rafe personally got all these women pregnant.”
Tess
watched the red haze recede.
“The fact
that they’re all pregnant is definitely your fault.”
“Missy, I’m
not sure how different the reproductive biology of the shapeshifting species
is, but I only know of a limited number of ways to get pregnant, and they all
involve at least two sexes…”
“Stop
being such a moron. I wasn’t speaking biologically. I was speaking mystically.
Magically. You know, like the stuff curses are made of.”
Tess
jerked back as if she’d just been stabbed with a hot poker. She almost wanted
to check for singeing. “Whoa. Curse? As in Rafe’s curse? The one you ambushed
me with last week?”
“It wasn’t
an ambush. It was a strategic covert operation.”
“What are
you? The Joint Chiefs of Staff?”
“That’s
not the point. The point is that these three women are pregnant today because
of you.”
Tess
winced. “I really wish you’d stop saying it like that before one of them
decides to sue me for child support.”
“Oh, we
wouldn’t do that,” a tall, leggy blonde said in a breathless Marilyn Monroe
voice. “We didn’t even know you existed until the Luna said something. We just
came to report the upcoming births to the Felix. That’s what we’re supposed to
do, isn’t it?”
Missy
nodded at her, leading her to the sofa and urging her to sit. “You did just
fine, Fawn. Everything is fine. Just sit here until Tess and I finish talking.”
Tess
tugged Missy back out into the hallway and looked into the living room with
suspicious eyes. “Does carrying a shifter’s baby suck brain cells, or has she
always been like that?”
“No, that’s
just Fawn. We think she got her name because she’s about as smart as one. But
do you see what I mean?”
“About
what?”
“About it
being your fault?”
“Missy!
No, I do not see what you mean. I don’t even see what language you’re
speaking.” She realized she was shouting and lowered her voice. “I am so beyond
confused, I don’t even think I could find my way back with a map. Why does it
matter that these three women are going to have kittens?”
“Didn’t
you listen to anything we told you last week? Felines don’t just get women
pregnant. It doesn’t work that way.”
“Actually,
what you told me was that the birth rate was declining. Clearly it’s not dead
yet, or the whole race would be extinct.”
Missy
growled in exasperation. She sounded a lot like Graham. “Yeah, but it’s
been declining for hundreds and hundreds of years. Last year there were seven
Feline births in New York. Seven! All year. And now we have three pregnancies
in one week? What does that say to you?”
“Nothing!”
Tess threw up her hands. “It says nothing to me, because I have no idea what
you’re getting at! Last week you told me about a curse on the Feline shifters
that said that couldn’t happen until a Felix stayed faithful to a witch for a
year and a day. Rafe has only been with me for eight bloody days! And even if I
have kept him too busy to sleep with anyone else, that’s still not enough time
to undo your bloody curse! So what the hell are you trying to tell me?”
The blonde
woman took a deep breath and spoke again, slower and more softly this time. “I’m
trying to tell you that maybe the legend is wrong. Maybe the year and a day
thing isn’t really necessary. Maybe once you get pregnant, anyone can
get pregnant. Or maybe Rafe only needs to fall in love with you to lift the
curse. I’m not sure. But I am sure that you have something to do with the
answer, and that’s why I dragged you all the way across town.”
“Missy, I
can’t—”
“Just
listen. I have a theory.”
“Miss—”
“Listen.”
The Luna took a deep breath and began pacing. “I was thinking about it after
lunch, while I was nursing Roark. See, until he’s weaned, I still have some
Lupine abilities. Not like I did while I was pregnant, and not like a real
Lupine, of course, but echoes of the things they can do. I love it. I’ll be
sorry to stop nursing, because I know that’s when it will really fade away.
See, at the moment, I have the most amazing connection to Graham. I can see
things the way he does. I can smell them. It’s like looking at the world
through Lupine eyes. I mean, I know he still sees and smells and tastes things
so much more clearly than me, but I’m only human. At least I get to see the
echoes. And I got to thinking about that. About echoes, and the connection that
forms between a shifter and a non-shifter when she’s carrying his child.”
Tess
sighed impatiently, but she listened.
“And I
started to think maybe that was the secret to the curse,” Missy
continued. “What if it wasn’t about being faithful to a non-Feline for a year
and a day, but about having that connection to one. I figured, what if all the
witch wanted was for a Felix to experience that connection to non-Feline, to
become almost like the same person for the time that the witch he mated with
was pregnant. That’s why I called to ask if you were pregnant. I thought you
must be, if it had managed to lift the curse.”
“Well, I
hate to disappoint you, but I’m not.” Tess made a face. “Look, I know you’re
only trying to help the Felines, and I do understand, Miss, but I just don’t
have time for this right now. Tonight is the meeting of the Witches’ Council, and
I need to get home and get ready to go with Rafe.”
Missy
sighed. “I know. I just got so excited when I thought I figured it out.”
Tess
reached out and hugged the other woman impulsively. “I know, and I appreciate
it. And as soon as this business with the council is over, we’ll figure it out
together, okay?”
Missy
hugged her back. “If you say so. But I honestly thought I had it. I mean, if it’s
not about Rafe knocking you up, what is it about?”
Chapter
Sixteen
Tess had
just slipped on her most conservative pearl earrings when she heard Rafe let
himself into her loft. She’d given him a key on Monday after he broke in twice
over the weekend, but she’d been smart. She’d attached a small bell to the key
chain so that she’d always be able to hear him coming.
Hearing
the sound of the cheerful little bell, she shoved her feet into her kidskin
pumps and stepped out from behind the screen that divided her bedroom area from
the rest of the apartment.
“Hello,
dear. How was your day?”
She felt
very June Cleaver, meeting him at the door in pearls and a snappy dress, with
her hair styled and heels on her feet, so she couldn’t resist the classic
greeting. She was betting, though, that June never laid one on Ward like she
was kissing Rafe. The censors would have had a field day. Case in point: the
way he kneaded her ass before setting her away from him and reaching down to
adjust the fit of his tailored charcoal trousers.
“Not as
good as I’m hoping my night will be.” He frowned and reached out to tug at a
severely styled curl. “What happened to your hair?”
Tess
reached up to feel it self-consciously. The normally wild profusion of
corkscrew curls had been brushed, rolled, set and sprayed within an inch of its
life in preparation for their appearance in front of the firing squad—a.k.a.
the Witches’ Council.
“Nothing.
I just tried to make it behave,” she said. “Granddad hates when it looks all
undisciplined.”
“But I
like it undisciplined. I especially like when it misbehaves. Like when I have
you under me, and you’re tossing your head against the pillows…”
Tess
cleared her throat. Loudly. “Um, shouldn’t we be going?”
He sighed.
“I thought I was doing pretty well there for a minute.”
“Down,
boy. The council will not be happy if we show up late, or with our nice
clothes all wrinkled.”
He eyed
her nice clothes, taking in the way the midnight blue dress clung to her
curves, all high-necked and short sleeved like something Audrey Hepburn would
wear. And she thought of that as one of her “unsexy” dresses. With the way he
looked at her, she was beginning to think wearing her sexy dresses around him
would be like pouring gasoline on a forest fire.
“All
right,” he agreed. “I’ll be good. But only if you promise I can muss you later.”
Tess
ignored the way his smile always made her stomach clench, and the way he never
talked about any emotions that weren’t sexual. Like she’d told Missy, she would
figure it all out later. After the council meeting. “Show me you can earn it,
and I just might.”
He laughed
and guided her to the elevator, then down to his waiting car. He’d left it
running, with the keys in the engine in Tribeca, and Tess just shook her head.
It would never get stolen, that was for sure. But how the criminals knew Rafe
was the driver while he was up in her apartment, she could never get quite
clear.
He was
unusual just for having a car in Manhattan. Tess had long ago decided they
weren’t worth it, but Rafe had offered an easy explanation. “There’s no room in
the city. When I need to run, I head upstate.” It explained the four-wheel
drive, too.
Rafe drove
like he did everything, lazily, gracefully and with such a complete lack of
haste you never realized what was happening until it was all over. All she did
was give him the directions and he had them across town and back on the Upper
West Side before she really had time to get worked up about the coming meeting.
But in the fifteen seconds between reverse and park, she more than made up for
that.
He pulled
into a completely miraculous parking spot, cut the engine and turned to face her.
“Stop freaking.”
“I’m not
freaking. I’m thinking.”
“You’re
thinking freaking thoughts then.”
“My
thoughts are none of your damned business.”
“Sure they
are. Especially when I’ve already told you not to freak.”
“I don’t
take orders well at the best of times. In case you hadn’t noticed.” She looked
at him. “And this isn’t the best of times.”
“Why not?”
She looked
harder. “Let me think. Maybe because I’m about to see my granddad for the
second time in a month, which is never good; I’m going to discuss an issue of
grave social, psychological and martial import, and said issue is likely to
prove divisive and heated. Oh, and I’m introducing my grandfather to my lover,
who happens to be the very spokesman for the opposite side of said issue. And
is a member of a different species.” She pasted on a sickly false grin. “Sheesh!
What have I got to worry about?”
Rafe
chuckled and leaned forward to brush a kiss across her smiling mouth. “Relax. I
told you, everything will be fine.”
He slid
out of his seat and walked around to her side to open her door. While she
waited for him with her hands clenched into fists inside the long sleeves of
her jacket, Tess snorted. “Right. Now if only you’d told the same thing to my
grandfather.”
Tess had
been to the council’s meeting rooms a couple of times before, but never during
an actual meeting. They were located in the basement of a series of row houses
on a quiet street in not the best block of the Upper West Side. Not that the
neighborhood was bad, but it bore an air of shabby gentility that stated it had
seen its share of wealth, but that had been a while ago. The slightly
downtrodden situation of the local inhabitants meant that no one saw it amiss
that an anonymous presence had bought their homes and rented them back again with
the basements tightly and irrevocably sealed off. With the exception of one, of
course, and that’s where Tess led Rafe.
She
preceded him through the unmarked alley entrance around the side of the fifth
house on the block. Down a dark, steep, narrow stairway, they stepped out into
a small open area with floors and walls of bare concrete. A single, bare light
bulb swung from a wire in the ceiling. Tess felt Rafe’s eyes on her as she
walked to the only door in the room and raised her right hand to touch it precisely
in its center. It swung open, and she waved him through, ignoring his raised
eyebrow and curious stare.
“I thought
you said you didn’t do much magic?”
“I don’t.”
Ignoring any further comments, as well as the huge knot in her stomach, Tess
closed the door again behind them. By physically pushing it shut. “This way.”
She felt a
sense of urgency she couldn’t define. Something told her she needed to hurry,
but she’d glanced at her watch just a moment ago, and she knew she wasn’t late.
So what was going on?
Taking the
lead once more, she hurried along the dingy corridor with its cement block
walls until she came to a choice of passages. Straight ahead, she knew, lay an
old wine cellar that now served as a storage room. The left passage led to a
maze of corridors that never seemed to end, even if Tess knew it was an
illusion meant to confuse anyone who happened to get past the door and wander
down here uninvited. The council chamber was just a few dozen feet down the
right-hand path. So why didn’t Tess want to take it?
Rafe
noticed her hesitation and frowned. “Is everything okay?”
Tess
nodded her head. “Fine. I was just thinking for a second.”
He raised
an eyebrow. “You can’t remember which way to go?”
“No, I
remember. I’m just remembering something else, too.”
“Like
what?”
“Like, duck!”
Faster
than she would have thought possible, Tess moved, throwing herself against Rafe
so suddenly that she actually managed to knock him off balance. And that was
good, because if he’d been on balance, there would have been a great,
big, smoking hole right where his head had been. Tess knew that for a fact,
because she could see it in the cement wall just beyond where his head and
been.
“What the
hell?!”
That was
just what Tess wanted to know, too, but at the moment she was too busy tugging
Rafe down the center passage to bother asking. “Would you come on?” she hissed.
“Something really weird is happening here.”
Rafe
growled and pushed her in front of him as they raced down the hall. “I figured
that out when someone shot at us. That was someone shooting at us,
right?”
“Well, he
didn’t have a gun, but otherwise, yeah, I’d say that was pretty accurate.”
“Who is ‘he,’
anyway?”
Tess
shoved the door of the wine cellar open and darted inside, urging Rafe in after
her. As soon as he made it in, she slammed the door shut and began backing away
from it.
“Tess,”
Rafe repeated impatiently. “Who is the ‘he’ who was shooting at us?”
She
blinked. “My grandfather.”
Chapter
Seventeen
Rafe just
stared. He could not have just heard what he’d thought he’d heard. “Did you
just say your grandfather is trying to kill us?”
He watched
her jerky nod. She’d gone ghostly pale, and he thought he could see her skin
glistening. He knew he could smell her fear. “Yeah. I mean, technically, with
that blow he was just trying to kill you, but the me part of us was definitely
next on his agenda. Providing I’m remembering what I’m remembering fairly
accurately.”
“Do you
usually? Remember accurately, I mean?”
“God, I
hope not!”
“Why not?”
“Because I
think I remember him killing me.”
Rafe swore
and shook his head. He refused to even contemplate the idea of Tess dying. It
was not going to happen. Not for another sixty or seventy years at
least. “What are you talking about? What are you remembering, Tess?”
She shuddered.
“I told you when I see things, it’s like seeing déjà vu a few seconds ahead of
time. It’s not enough time to change anything, just to get really scared. And
to warn you that he won’t hesitate. He won’t think twice, so you can’t count on
him to.”
“Tess!
What the hell does that—”
He never
got to finish his question.
The door
slammed open as if it had been kicked, catching Tess in the hip and sending her
sprawling right into the path of the bolt of sickly green energy that shot from
her grandfather’s fingers in time to his half-chanted words. She took the blow
directly to her chest, and Rafe saw the singe marks on her clothes when she
went down. She hit the floor like a crash test dummy and he roared in denial.
“She’s not
dead yet,” Lionel Menzies drawled as he stepped into the small room. He had the
sour smell of the mentally unbalanced and the rich, earthy fragrance of someone
who was very clever indeed. “I might get to that later, depending on how things
go between us. Right now, though, you and I need to do a little negotiating.”
Rafe tried
to step toward Tess’s limp form, but Lionel said a few words and suddenly there
was a shimmering, malevolent green wall between Rafe and Tess.
“Ah,
forbidden love,” Lionel said. “Isn’t it tragic? But I’ll warn you to stay away
from her. I want to talk to you.”
Rafe froze
and let his hands drop back to his sides. He assessed his options and found
most of them sucked. “Isn’t that why I’m here? To talk to the council?”
“Fuck the
council. You’re here to talk to me.”
And that
was news. Rafe had, perhaps naïvely, believed that being invited—well, maybe
summoned was a better word, now that he recalled the letter—to appear before
the Witches’ Council meant appearing before the Witches’ Council. “Okay. About
what?”
“Don’t
play dumb, Mr. De Santos. It doesn’t suit you.” Lionel watched him with cold
pale blue eyes that looked nothing like his granddaughter’s. “We’re here to
talk about the Accord. It’s always been about the Accord.”
Rafe
shifted, eyes watching Menzies warily. “Tess seemed to think that our opinions
about the Accord aren’t that different. We’re both out to preserve it until we
can find the time that best suits revealing ourselves to the human world.”
Lionel
laughed. “Don’t assume you know my goals, boy. I’ve been working to set my
plans in motion for longer than you’ve been alive. I certainly don’t intend to
let you derail them now.”
“Is this
the part where you share your nefarious schemes while the conveyor belt carries
me closer to the spinning saw blades?” Rafe glanced behind Menzies to where
Tess lay silently on the floor. God, she looked still. And pale. He bit back a
curse.
“You watch
too many movies, boy. I’m not planning to kill you. At least, I only plan to
kill you as a last resort. First I’m going to tell you why you need to help me
make sure the Accord fails here and now.”
“Fails?”
Rafe shook his head, frowning. “But why would you want the Accord to fail now?
Another two or three years and it will be obsolete anyway. All you have to do
is be patient.”
“I’ve been
patient for forty years. I have no more time for patience.”
“Then what
do you have time for?” He could feel the impatience building inside him, the
frustration at being unable to get to Tess and the rage at the man who had hurt
her. “Aside from attacking the people who trusted you.”
“They are
expendable. And if my granddaughter had been half the witch I had hoped for,
she never would have ended up this way.” He glanced down at her still form, lip
curling in a sneer. “It makes me wonder if her mother was quite honest with my
dear son, Geoffrey.”
Rafe
ignored the insult to Tess and reconsidered his options. They still sucked.
Until he could get to Tess to protect her, he didn’t feel comfortable ripping
out Menzies’ throat. Not that the image didn’t beckon to him like a siren’s
call, but he wouldn’t risk Tess’s safety. Not even for that. He couldn’t shift
while Tess was vulnerable and unarmed and alone, and shifting was about the
only thing he could do. A frontal assault would be a really dumb idea.
Of course,
it might be his only idea…
“Don’t
look so glum, De Santos.” That cold voice snapped Rafe back to attention and
frustration. “I’m willing to refrain from injuring her, and you. You just need
to agree to cooperate.”
“With
what?”
“Pay
attention,” Lionel snapped. “With dismantling the Accord. As I just said.”
“But you
still haven’t said why.”
Lionel
stepped forward, his tall frame casting a long, disfigured shadow as he passed
under the single, bare light bulb in the small, cluttered storeroom. “Because
now is the last chance I have. We’re nearing the end of the secrecy. You said
it yourself. Soon, vermin like you and the damned werewolves will be able to
walk among human society. And witches—the true heirs to the world—will be
viewed as nothing more than another kind of freak. We’ll be lumped in with you
degenerates. If we’re going to act to seize our power, the moment is now. If we
strike now and reveal everything to the public immediately, I can control the
situation. I can make sure the masses see the distinction between witch and
Other. We will become their allies in the struggle against the rise of the
unnatural creatures—”
“Holy
shit,” Rafe breathed. “You’re absolutely insane.”
Cut off
from his vitriolic rant, Lionel’s eyes narrowed. “I take it this means you plan
to decline to assist me willingly?” The witch stood almost directly under the
light now, and the angle cast his face with strange planes and angles. Rafe saw
the contrast between dark and light and tensed. Lionel raised his arm, pointing
his fingers at Rafe’s chest. “If you won’t do it willingly, I can make you do
it unwillingly. Which will it be?”
Rafe
paused, weighing the risk of one rash act.
“Do you
think I’m hesitant to bespell you, De Santos?” Lionel’s voice became louder and
more strident. “I won’t, you know. I’ll do whatever I need to, no hesitation at
all.”
Hesitation.
Rafe
remembered Tess’s words and stopped hesitating. He leapt forward. Straight at
the light bulb above the old man’s head.
Tess woke
to the sound of glass breaking and opened her eyes to see not much more than
she could see with them closed. The room around her was pitch dark.
She
started to sit up, hoping it would help her get her bearings, but ended up
diving right back to the floor, rolling out of the way as two large forms
collided in the spot where she had just been sitting. She heard a curse and the
rowling scream of a big cat and added a curse of her own. Just as soon as she
got out of the way.
Stopping
when she felt a stack of folding chairs at her back, Tess frantically tried to
get her eyes to adjust to the darkness. Her grandfather would have made some
comment about if she’d been a better witch, she’d have been able to cast a
spell and get some light, but he was otherwise occupied. Trying to keep a
three-hundred-pound jaguar from feasting on his intestines.
She could
hear the sounds of the struggle, but it was quieter than she expected. This was
the closest she’d ever gotten to an actual physical fight, and she’d always
pictured them being louder, with lots of screaming and shouting and bellowing
and the roar of the crowd. Instead, all she heard were grunts and harsh
breathing and the sound of flesh and bone making impact. And since the crowd
consisted of her, and the last thing she felt like doing was cheering, the
scuff of bodies against the concrete floor provided the only accompaniment.
Her eyes
followed the sounds and finally picked up a flicker of golden light in the
blackness. Rafe’s eyes. They glowed with a predatory fury as he wrestled across
the floor with her grandfather. Thankfully he was managing to keep Lionel’s
arms occupied and too busy to cast, or things would have been even more
difficult for him. As it was, fighting Lionel Menzies wasn’t like fighting an
ordinary seventy-five-year-old man. Her grandfather had the strength of magic,
and had probably cast some sort of protective spell on himself before coming
after them. Tess would have. If she could have.
Damn it,
but she felt useless. Here she was cowering up against a row of metal
auditorium chairs while the man she’d fallen in love with—damn it again—tried
to save their lives. Couldn’t she at least do something? Damn it a third time,
but why couldn’t she have been born with some real talent instead of this
stupid, useless, no-good, insignificant, nuisance-making—
She broke
off and stepped to the side three seconds before her grandfather managed to
pull away and stagger back against the spot where she’d just been standing.
Operating on the strange autopilot of her mini-talent, she grabbed a folding chair
and lifted it over her head. She was waiting when her grandfather raised his
hands and pointed toward Rafe’s glowing eyes.
He opened
his mouth to sneer, “Now, De Santos,” he shouted, “you’ll—”
The metal
chair smacking down across the back of his head kept him from finishing his
sentiment.
“Shut up,
Granddad,” she whispered.
It might
have been a more dramatic moment if she hadn’t followed him to the floor.
Thankfully,
she wasn’t out long. Probably only a couple of seconds. She came to, feeling
the warm, rough scrape of a Feline tongue against her cheek.
“Um, if I
needed to exfoliate,” she said, eyes still closed, “you could have just said
something.”
The rumble
of his amused purr vibrated right down to her toes, which she flexed
experimentally. At least they still worked. Now if only she could get them on
the floor under her, she’d be cooking with gas.
She was
about to brace her hands on the floor and try it when the door to the storage
room swung open and light flooded in from the hall. Followed by a very amused
male voice.
“Rafe,
Rafe, Rafe. How many times do I have to tell you not to play with your dinner?”
Chapter
Eighteen
“Your
grandfather tried to kill you.”
“I’m
trying to focus on the possibility that he only intended to maim me.”
Missy
collapsed into the sofa cushions beside Tess and shook her head, her brown eyes
wide. “But… I mean, your grandfather.”
“Well, it’s
not like we were close. And I really don’t think he knew what he was doing. I
think he’d gone a few steps off the sanity trail.”
“How do
you sound so calm?”
“I’m not
dead.”
“And where’s
your grandfather now?”
Tess
sighed and rubbed the back of her neck. “After Graham showed up with the
cavalry, we found out there was no council meeting tonight, so we had to take
him to the home of one of the council members. He can be watched there until
they can have a formal vote on how to handle him. He’ll be taken care of, but
he won’t be getting into any more trouble.”
Missy
leaned over and hugged her. “I am so sorry, Tess. Is there anything I can do
for you?”
“Thanks,
but I’m fine.” She laughed and sagged back against the sofa cushions. “Actually,
it seems almost anticlimactic, until I realize there was no climax to anti. I
mean, no one had any idea what was going on until it happened. It was weird. It
was like he just snapped. But somehow I still feel like there’s something left
unresolved.”
Missy
cleared her throat. “Well, there is the little matter of the curse.”
“Do you
even want me to get started with how not in the mood for that I really
am?”
“I don’t
think that matters much. It seems to be in a heck of a mood for you.”
“What are
you talking about? Have the preggo triplets come by for another visit?”
“They’ve
become septuplets.”
Tess
blinked. “They’ve what?”
Missy
nodded. “Seven. Four more of them crawled out of my woodwork this afternoon.
That makes seven new Feline pregnancies in the week since Rafe met you.”
“Which is
still so not my problem.”
“Yes, it
so is, actually. Until you came along, there were no Feline pregnancies in
Manhattan this year. Zilch. Nada. Not a one. Yet one week after you, a witch,
start boinking Rafe, the local Felix, no fewer than seven new women show
up to report their pregnancies to the Council of Others. Can you think of a
single other logical explanation?”
“Fertility
clinics.”
Missy
threw up her hands, “Tess, I swear—”
“Don’t,
okay?” Tess jumped up from the sofa and glared at her new friend. “Don’t swear.
Don’t swear, don’t vow, don’t promise—don’t frickin’ tell me. I don’t wanna
know, do you hear me? This is a Feline thing. An Others thing. Shit, it could
be an alien abduction thing for all I know, and that’s just it. It’s none of
my business. If you want to know what’s going on, go ask Rafe. Or better
yet, present him with the evidence, and then ask him what he thinks. I’m going
home.”
“I already
did.”
Tess
looked up from using her wrap to cover up the sweatshirt and yoga pants she’d
borrowed from Missy. Her unsexy dress had been ruined in the ruckus. “What?”
“I already
sent Fawn and the others in to see Rafe. While you were changing. In fact, they
should have found him by now.” Missy looked toward the doors of the living
room. “I can’t think what’s keeping—”
“TESS!”
Missy
smiled. “Ah. I think they found him.”
“TESS!”
“Missy,
one day I’m going to make you—”
“TESS!”
“—pay for
this. Don’t you—”
“TESS!”
“—realize—”
“TEEEESSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS!”
Missy
raised an eyebrow. “Did that sound closer to you?”
“—what he’ll
be like?”
The door
to Graham’s library, where they had been sitting, slammed open and Rafe loomed
in the entrance, chest heaving, eyes glowing, hands clenched into fists at his
sides. “Tess Bryony Menzies.”
“Yes,”
Missy said, grinning over Rafe’s shoulder at Graham. “I do believe that last
one was louder, wasn’t it?”
“I think
it was, yes. But I’m a bad judge. I think he permanently deafened me. But at
least he didn’t wake Roark.”
The couple
stood there and grinned at each other until Tess had to restrain herself from
slapping the both of them. She could only watch them from the corner of her
eye, anyway. The other one was trained warily on Rafe.
“I think
you two need to leave,” the Felix growled, never taking his eyes off Tess’s
face. She wondered if he could see her swallow convulsively. “I want to talk to
Tess. Alone.”
The menace
in that statement made Tess dig in her heels. “That’s ridiculous. We’re in
their house. They don’t need to leave. Besides, what do we need to talk about?
The stuff with my grandfather is resolved, and the rest of the council said
they’d be happy to talk with you at their next meeting. Everything is resolved.”
He
half-roared. It made him sound like an irritated…well…jaguar. “Fine. You don’t
want privacy? You don’t get it. Now tell me why you never mentioned you were
pregnant?”
Missy
blinked and sidled around Tess and toward her husband. “Right. And on that
note…” She pushed against Graham’s chest to force him out of the room and away
from the door. “I believe that’s our cue to leave these crazy kids to
themselves.”
Graham let
her tug him down the hall, but before the door closed behind him, he turned to
look over his shoulder. “The carpet in there is not too uncomfortable,” he
said, laughing. “But I recommend you try the sofa if you’re allergic to wool.”
Missy
dragged him away, scolding as she went.
Tess
considered running and hiding behind them, but it wasn’t polite to cause the
deaths of one’s hosts in their own home. Still, she couldn’t keep her gaze from
sliding longingly toward the door.
“Tess!”
Rafe stalked closer to her, looking almost more like a cat than when he was a
cat. Something about that loose, deliberate way he moved. “Why the hell didn’t
you tell me?”
“Tell you
what?” She stared at the center of that loose-hipped stride and forgot about
paying attention.
“Tess…”
His growl rumbled a warning. “Why did you not tell me you’re pregnant?”
That made
her gaze snap back to his face. “Not you, too.”
“Not me,
too, what?”
“You’re
not going to go on about curses and destiny and me getting seven women
pregnant, are you? Because that’s, like, all Missy can talk about these
days.”
“Stop!” He
shouted it loud enough to make Tess jump. “Stop trying to distract me and
answer the damned question. Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because I’m
not.”
He opened
his mouth to pour another tirade, but stopped short in surprise. “What did you
say?”
“I said I’m
not pregnant.” She pushed herself up from the sofa and glared at him. “I keep
telling people that, and they keep not believing it, but I’m here to tell you
that it’s true. I. Am. Not. Pregnant.”
“Are you
sure?”
If Tess
had been holding a brick right then, she’d have thrown it at Rafe’s head with
no hesitation. And a great deal of satisfaction. “What is it with you
people? Yes! I am positive I am not pregnant. Are you happy? Or do you
have a rabbit you want me to kill to prove my point?”
His eyes
narrowed. “How about you just let me check?”
He was on
her before she could tell him what she thought he could check. He caught her in
his arms and tumbled her to the floor, twisting in midair to land on his back
and cushion her fall with his body.
“This is
all very helpful of you, and I appreciate your offer,” she bit out, already
squirming to get away and struggling to ignore the way his slightest touch
always made her crazy. “But get your hands the hell off me!”
“Not yet.”
He yanked aside the collar of her sweatshirt and buried his nose against her
skin. “Checking.”
He inhaled
deeply.
Tess
cursed and began to struggle. She felt the way her stomach turned over at his
slightest touch and knew she needed to get away from him. Touching him turned
her willpower into something out of Mission: Impossible. It self
destructed after fifteen seconds.
“Hands
off, you furry bastard!”
He moved
to the hollow of her throat, sniffed again. This time, his tongue darted out to
taste her skin. She fought harder.
“I mean
it! Get away, you lecherous lycanthrope!”
His teeth
closed gently on her throat and her pussy melted.
“Stop
that!”
He didn’t
stop that. Instead, he brushed aside the tail of her sweatshirt and slipped his
hand inside her waistband, fingers gliding across her stomach and burrowing toward
her already damp pussy. Damn him. She whimpered and tilted her hips forward.
She felt his fingers dip between her slick folds and find her entrance. They
slid deep, pumped twice, just to get her hips twitching, then pulled away. She
suddenly realized she’d stopped struggling to get away. She was just about to
kick him in the shins when he raised his fingers before him and inhaled. Then
he frowned and licked them, savoring them like a spoon coated in cake mix.
He sucked
the sheen of moisture off his fingers and purred with pleasure. Then she saw
his eyes narrow and he glared back down at her. “You’re not pregnant.”
“Argh!”
She felt her eyes rolled back in her head and hoped it wouldn’t start spinning
around while she spat pea soup. “What the hell have I been trying to
tell you? The same thing I told Missy when she wouldn’t believe me
either! Well, to hell with all of you! I don’t need this shit!”
It would
have made a great exit line, except that Rafe wasn’t about to let her exit.
When her squirming became almost violent, he simply flipped them over and
pinned her to the floor, making sure to settle between her legs where she
couldn’t effectively kick him. The sneaky bastard.
“Calm
down.” He said this while he had her hands pinned to the floor beside her head
and his erect cock was nudging against the flimsy material of her yoga pants. “Don’t
get so upset. I was just surprised. I really thought you were pregnant.”
“Everybody
seems to think I’m pregnant. Bad luck for all of you.” She tried bucking him
off, but realized that was a very bad idea when all it did was slide his
erection against her already damp pussy. She went very still and contented
herself with glaring at him. “But I’m not apologizing for taking care of things
when you were so hot to trot you didn’t even mention the word latex.”
He reared
and those amber Feline eyes glared down at her. “What do you mean you, ‘took
care of things’?”
“I mean I
took care of things,” she snapped, not liking the way his eyes narrowed at her
words. “Just because you’re irresponsible with sex doesn’t mean I intend to be.
For Gods sake, if I hadn’t called Missy in a panic at two in the morning, I’d
still be worrying about STDs. You never even bothered to tell me that shifters
don’t get them.”
“You
thought I might have infected you?” He was a picture of wounded dignity, but
Tess saw his gaze soften. “I would never take a chance with your health, sweet
Tess. Don’t you realize that?”
“But you
did. You took a chance on getting me pregnant, which I had to take care of, and
then you act like I’m some kind of villain when I tell you I did the
responsible thing.”
Oh, shit.
His eyes went all narrow and glaring again. “So you did do something to cancel
my seed, then. Tess—”
“No! And
what the hell kind of phrasing is that? Cancel your seed! It’s not like I had
an abortion! For God’s sake, we had sex for the first time less than ten days
ago.” She tried to reason with him, still holding onto the naïve hope that he
was in the mood to be reasonable. “All I did was make sure that if one of your
marauding little sperm happened to breach my defenses, that he’d quickly be
shown the door. That’s it. It’s the responsible thing to do when two adults who
should have known better didn’t talk about protection before they got down and
dirty.”
“We will
discuss responsibility later,” he said, looming over her like a personal black
cloud. “Right now I wish to discuss what you used to ‘show my marauders the
door.’ Explain.”
She sighed
and glared right back at him. “Wild carrot seed. I took a tincture every
morning after we…had sex.” She found herself looking away, and realized she’d
wanted to say “after we made love,” but she didn’t think one person could make
love. “It makes the lining of the uterus too slippery for an egg to attach. So
no pregnancy.”
He hissed
in displeasure. “And you did not think to discuss this with me? You did not
think I had a right to be a party to this decision?”
She
uttered a strangled scream. “What decision?! Rafe, there was no decision. All
that happened was me realizing I’d done the stupidest thing in my life and had
unprotected sex with a man I’d just met! I realized that, and I took steps to
make sure I wouldn’t end up paying for it for the next eighteen years. That is
not something you needed to be involved in. If you wanted the right to voice an
opinion, you should have voiced one before you decided it was okay to come
inside me.”
He
growled, sputtered and growled again. “That’s all well and good for the first
time, but what about after that? It never occurred to you to discuss it with
me?”
“Yeah,
about as much as it occurred to you to discuss it with me. Don’t
try to lay this on my shoulders, Simba. You’ve got just as much obligation to
think these things through as I have.”
“I have
obligations you haven’t even considered,” he snarled. “I have an obligation not
to let my race die out. And that brings me neatly back to the topic at hand. If
you’re not pregnant, would you care to tell me why the seven women who just
paid me a visit are?”
She set
her jaw and met his glower with one of her own. It was either glower at him or
let him see how much it hurt that he never considered the idea that she might
be his mate. “Not my area of expertise, buddy. It’s your species and your
curse. Figure it out for your damned self.”
“That is
not an acceptable answer, sweet Tess.” His eyes did that glinty thing and took
on the distinct glow of mischief. “You have clearly become involved in my
curse, or we wouldn’t be having this conversation. There haven’t been seven
Feline pregnancies in one month in Manhattan since before I was born, yet now I
see that many in one week. And the only explanation I can think of centers
around you. I find that to be very interesting.”
“I find it
to be a pain in the ass. That seems to be all anyone can talk to me about.
Apparently, that’s why all your Other friends like me—not because of my
charming smile and gift for witty repartee, but because if you knock me up,
your cousins can all do the same with the women they’re boinking.”
He raised
an eyebrow, amusement ghosting across his features. “Boinking?”
Tess felt
herself blush. “You know what I mean. It’s hardly flattering to know the rest
of the world sees me as your saving womb, or something. Especially since that’s
not even one of the terms of your damned curse.”
“And you
know the terms, do you? Would you care to refresh my memory?”
“Shouldn’t
you know it by heart? Isn’t that sort of your job?”
He leaned
down until his lips brushed hers as he spoke. “Humor me.”
“Fine.”
The self-control she exerted to stop herself from licking his lips should have
qualified her for some sort of medal. A Purple Clit, or something. “From what
Missy told me, since you never bothered to, one of your tomcatting ancestors
made the dumb move of trifling with the heart of a witch and needed to be
taught a lesson.”
“Tess…”
His
warning rumble probably had something to do with her editorial comments, but
she didn’t particularly care. “Since the witch was suffering from loving a man
who didn’t love her enough to stay faithful to her, kittens or no kittens, she
cursed him. She said that from then on, no Feline would have an easy time
getting the kittens her lover wanted so desperately. Until a Felix found a
witch mate and stayed faithful for a year and a day, there would be fewer and
fewer children born to the Feline people. That’s what Missy told me, and it
looks like that’s just the problem you have now, isn’t it?”
He purred,
his mouth curving into a smirk. “Not any more.”
Tess
rolled her eyes. “You don’t honestly still believe that I have anything to do
with those women getting pregnant, do you?” She knew she was in trouble the
moment she said that. Because by this point, it sounded normal to her. “Let’s
think about this logically for just a moment, shall we? The curse states that
in order for the curse to be lifted, a Felix—which could conceivably be
you—would have to mate with a witch—and I will concede that I qualify—and
remain faithful to her for at least a year and a day. Well, I can tell you
right now, Pete Puma, that two out of three does not cut it when it comes to
lifting curses!”
His smirk
shifted into a grin, wide and pleased and toothy. “You don’t get it, do you?”
“Get what?”
That’s
when he laughed. Laughed! As if he didn’t have her pinned to the floor, and she
wasn’t mad enough at him to chew through his hide. “For a witch, you certainly
seem to lack a basic understanding of magic.”
“What do
you mean by that? Do you think you’re some sort of expert?”
“Not at
all, but I believe I see what has happened, and I’m surprised that you do not.”
“Do you
work at pissing me off, or is this a God-given talent?”
He shifted
her wrists to one hand and used the other to sneak beneath the hem of her
sweatshirt again. When she bucked against him and tried to wriggle out of his
grasp, he had the nerve to purr with pleasure and angle his hips to hers so
that every time she moved, she stroked herself along the ridge of his erection.
“What do
you consider to be the basis of all magic?” he asked.
She
gargled in frustration. “Don’t even tell me you’re going to lecture me on
spellcraft now?! Listen, Sylvester, I’ve heard all this from my grandfather and
he went insane. I don’t need to hear the Magic 101 speech from you, too!”
He leaned
down and nibbled at her neck, his hand gliding up to close, rough and warm,
around her breast. “Just answer the question, sweet Tess.”
“Will!”
She bit it out from between her clenched teeth. What she wouldn’t have given
just then for the will to keep her nipple from beading eagerly at the first
brush of his fingers.
“Very
good.” He shifted to her throat and licked the hollow there. “And what is it
called when you exercise will in order to cause a desired outcome?”
She felt
his fingers close around her nipple and pinch and she couldn’t keep her hips
from rolling invitingly against his. She felt her folds parting beneath the
soft cloth of her yoga pants and his cock bumped against her clit, making her
moan. “In—intent.”
“Very
good, Tess.” He purred it against her throat while he pressed his pelvis into
hers, grinding against her and making them both shudder. “Having discussed the
topic of magic more than once with my Fae friends, I had been laboring under
the impression that the key to spells, and therefore, one assumes to curses, is
to have a clear intent.”
Suddenly
impatient, Rafe lifted his torso from hers and stripped off her sweatshirt,
leaving it tangled around the wrists he still gripped in one hand. Then he
leaned close to her, pressing skin to skin and sighed at the feeling.
Well, he
sighed. She moaned. Damn it.
Then he
eased down, his hand slipping beneath her waistband and his teeth tugging her
bra out of the way, leaving the cup bunched beneath her breast. He lapped once
at her nipple and she shuddered.
“So if
intent is the key to a curse, my sweet Tess…”
God, is
he still talking?
“…what do
you suppose was the intent of the witch when she cast her curse?”
He
punctuated his question by closing his teeth around her nipple and nibbling.
She almost came right then and there.
“Stop
dicking around and just tell me what you’re talking about!” She might have
screamed it, but she didn’t care. Despite the fact that she was laying half
naked on the carpet in the middle of the library of a couple she’d met less
than two weeks ago.
He laughed
and lifted his head, abandoning her breast but plunging his fingers between her
legs to tease her soft folds. “You really don’t know? Tess, Tess, Tess. What am
I going to do with you?”
“I don’t
know,” she hissed, “but if you don’t do it in the next thirty seconds, I’m
going to have to hurt you.”
Her threat
made him laugh harder. “We can’t have that.”
The phrase
“quick as a cat” sprang to her mind as he shifted off of her, stripped them
both and tumbled her back to the carpet. He had her hands pinned again before
she realized they were free, but this time when she struggled against him, her
shifting hips only succeeded in helping his cock position itself at her
entrance. She felt her pussy welcome him with a flood of moisture.
“Rafe.”
She murmured his name and twisted her body restlessly beneath him. She needed
him inside her again. After all her lectures on responsible sex, he once again
had her hot enough to worry about it tomorrow. “Please.”
“Of
course, my sweet Tess.” He slid home with one smooth thrust, driving to the
hilt inside her, and making her body arch beneath him. “Is that better,
sweetheart?”
She heard
the amusement in his dark rumbles and set her jaw. “It will be better…once
you…move!”
She tried
to set the rhythm herself, but he held her still. He released her hands to grip
her hips and hold her in place. His cock filled her, pressing high and hard
inside her and he kept her from riding him the way she wanted. She cried out.
“Hush,” he
soothed, fingers flexing against her skin. “You’ll get what you want in just a
minute, baby.” He paused, his grin flashing. “Then we’ll see if you get a baby.”
She
stilled. “A baby?” she repeated carefully.
He flexed
his hips, his cock shifting inside her, making her moan. “Do you not want to
have children?” He watched her warily.
“It’s not
that,” she said, finding it nearly impossible to concentrate while he stayed
buried inside her. “I just didn’t think…that is, you never said you wanted to
have them. Especially not with me.”
His eyes
glowed as he leaned down to kiss her. “You’re the key to everything,” he told
her, his raspy voice suddenly tender. “You lifted the curse. How could I not
want you, and a child with you?”
She felt
the joy and heat drain out of her at once. Suddenly he no longer felt like a
welcome part of her finally back in place, but like an invader trying to
conquer her body. “Right. The curse. I’d forgotten. It’s all about the curse,
isn’t it? That’s all you care about.”
“You’re
wrong.” He grabbed her hands again when she raised them to his chest to push
him away. He pinned them down next to her head and forced her gaze to meet his.
“I can’t believe you don’t understand this, but let me explain.” His voice was
rough and hard, but his thrusts were gentle as he began rocking his hips
against hers. “What you don’t seem to see, my sweet, thick-skulled Tess, is that
the important part of the curse was not the words with which it was spoken, but
the intent with which it was cast.”
She heard
him, but she also felt him, and she damned her body for betraying her by
softening around him and welcoming him deep inside her. If he continued, she’d
be lost again, and another little piece of her heart would break off, knowing
that she loved him and he just wanted to fuck her.
He leaned
down to kiss her softly, and she closed her eyes against the glow of his. If
she continued to look at him, she would almost be able to convince herself that
the light in his eyes was love. She didn’t want to lie to herself like that.
“The
intent is everything, sweet Tess, and the witch’s intent was not to force a
Felix to remain faithful for only a year and a day. She didn’t care about time
limits.” He bit her lower lip, then soothed the tiny pain with the rasp of his
tongue. “She cared about love.”
Tess’s
eyes flew open and she gazed up at him. Had Rafe De Santos just said the “L”
word?
“The curse
was never meant to withstand love.” His cock rode smoothly inside her, sliding
across slick tissues. In and out. In and out. “The minute that old witch got
her wish, the curse ceased to have meaning. And that happened the minute the
Felix fell in love with his own witch.”
He nudged
deeply inside her and stopped, resting against the mouth of her womb, so much a
part of her that Tess thought she would die if he separated from her for a
moment. She stared up at him and felt her heart stop. She knew then what he was
going to say. Whether it was her gift or a different kind of power entirely,
she couldn’t say, but she knew, and she began to smile.
He kissed
her softly, sweetly, lovingly, and pulled back to gaze down at her with
a tender golden gaze. “It happened the minute I fell in love with you.”
Tess felt
her heart expand until it threatened to burst. It pressed up into her throat,
making it difficult to breathe, and down into her belly, making her stomach
turn a happy somersault. She had to wait for the first wave of joy to recede
before she could speak. “I love you too, Rafael.”
He smiled
at her like sunshine and resumed his strokes, sliding in and out of her with
long, lazy thrusts that soothed even as they aroused. She could feel her climax
nearing, more like the gentle swell of a deep ocean wave than like the breakers
that crashed over her and threatened to drag her under. She had already gone
under, and she didn’t mind drowning in him.
She stared
up into his eyes as they moved together. He released her hands and she wrapped
her arms around him, clutching him to her. Her legs curled around his hips to
cradle him close to her. And as she stared up into his eyes, again she knew.
She felt
the smile curve her mouth, saw his head tilt and his own smile in response.
“What?” he
whispered, brushing his mouth over hers in another of those tender, drugging
kisses.
“Just a
little déjà vu,” she murmured, laughing.
He stilled
and his gaze sharpened. “About what? What do you see?”
She slid
her hands down the length of his back to his ass where she squeezed playfully. “All
sorts of things,” she teased. “But if you come in the next five minutes, you’ll
get to make your own mark on repopulating the Feline world.”
Rafe’s
eyes widened, his mouth opened, and the joy that flooded his expression made
Tess’s heart expand once more. “Really?”
“Really.”
She smiled through the happy sting of tears and lifted her head so she could
tug his lower lip between her teeth. Her pussy clenched tightly around his cock
and her fingernails scraped teasingly across his ass. “But if you don’t make
sure I come with you, I’m naming him Hubert.”
The baby,
born a standard Feline six months later, was named Gabriel.
About the author:
Since her early days of hiding the luridly covered paperbacks under her pillows so her parents wouldn’t catch her reading past her bedtime, Christine Warren has suffered an addiction to romance novels. Discovering Ellora’s Cave turned her into a positive junkie by introducing her to the world of Romantica, but it also proved to be an inspiration for the long-time writer. After penning everything from poems to short stories to screenplays, she discovered her real calling in erotic romance and happily penned her first e-book about a sexy Russian vampire and a woman with too many friends.
Christine spends most of her time thinking about sex—which is really no different from what she’s always done—but now she puts those thoughts into her computer screen and hopes her audience enjoys reading them as much as she enjoys writing them! She loves to hear from readers...
Christine welcomes mail from readers. You can write to her c/o Ellora’s Cave Publishing at P.O. Box 787, Hudson, Ohio 44236-0787.
Also by Christine Warren:
Fixed 1 – Fantasy Fix
Fixed 2 – Fur Factor
Fixed 3 – Faer Fetched
Fixed 4 – Fighting Faer
Pleasure Quest
Discover for yourself why readers can’t get enough of the multiple award-winning publisher Ellora’s Cave. Whether you prefer e-books or paperbacks, be sure to visit EC on the web at www.ellorascave.com for an erotic reading experience that will leave you breathless.