Once Bitten, Twice Shy
Before she joined Reaper
in hunting Gregor's gang of rogue bloodsuckers,
privileged princess Topaz was gunning for just one
vampire: Jack Heart. The gorgeous con man had
charmed his way into her bed, her heart and her bank
account, taking her for half a million dollars and
vanishing without a word.
Now she and
Jack--maddeningly attractive as ever--are supposedly
on the same side. As Reaper's ragtag outfit
scatters, Topaz sets out to solve a mystery that's
plagued her all her lives, mortal and immortal:
what really happened to her movie-star mother, who died
when Topaz was just a baby? With four men claiming
to be her father, why has she always been alone?
And what stake does Jack have in discovering the truth
about her past? Topaz is sure he's up to
something--but her suspicions are at war with her
desires.

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LOVER’S BITE
Maggie Shayne
Copyright 2007: ANY copying in ANY form of ANY portion
of this text will be prosecuted to the full extent of
the law.
Chapter One
Mirabella DuFrane exited the beach-front, adobe mansion
as if she were floating, rather than walking. The
skin-tight gown—paisley print, plunging halter neckline,
slit up to her slender hip--clung to every perfect
curve, despite that she’d only given birth three months
ago. You wouldn’t have known it to look at her.
Speculation about the identity her baby
girl’s father was rampant, but no one knew for sure.
And Mirabella wasn’t saying. It just added to the
mysterious allure of Hollywood’s brightest star.
She was the silver screen’s flavor of the
year. An exotic blend of Italian and Spanish, with
copper skin, almond eyes, a figure most women would die
for, and many men would kill for—she was the ideal. And
that she was so elusive—never married, and promising
that she never would be—only added to her mass appeal.
She was fond of telling the press that she was too free
a spirit to ever be tied down, that no man could ever
own her, possess her, or even hold her for very long.
She would never be tamed. The tabloids were constantly
pairing her with one man or another. Politicians,
businessmen, actors. Any photo of her with a male was
fodder for gossip in the rags. She never denied or
confirmed any of it. Just smiled her mysterious smile
and answered questions with more questions when the
reporters cast their lines into her waters on fishing
expeditions.
That was Mirabella.
And yet, there was something else about
her. Something frail and otherworldly that rarely
showed. It lingered beneath the surface, like a fragile
seashell resting on the ocean floor and hoping no rough
currents stirred it up to the surface. It wouldn’t
withstand much movement.
Mirabella floated toward the black stretch
limousine that waited at the curb, her gown’s hemline
skimming just above the sidewalk, creating that airborne
illusion she so loved. Papparazzi swarmed, held at a
distance by Bella’s ever-present bodyguards.
It
was unusual for the press to be in Santa Luna in such
droves. Normally, this small coastal town, twenty-five
miles south of Los Angeles, was a haven for the rich and
the famous. Too expensive for common folk, too remote
for fans, it had become the hot spot for celebrity
getaways--quick ones, when there was no time to go on a
real trip. Mirabella had been a guest at an exclusive
party at the mansion know as Avalon. Its fanciful and
somewhat pretentious name had been thought up by its
former owners, a Hollywood pair who’d peaked in the
fifties and retired there. The Avalon Ball had become
an annual event, and Hollywood’s elite hungered to see
their names on the guest list. Because being invited
was such a coup, no one complained too much about the
press. It was the one time of the year when their kind
were tolerated in Santa Luna.
Cameras flashed in the night as Mirabella made her way
along the clear path to the waiting car, smiling and
waving all the way.
Then, there were different kinds of
flashes. Three of them. Bella’s smile froze in place
as her body jerked in perfect synch with those flashes.
Her milk chocolate eyes fluttered, lashes lowering as
she looked down. Blood flowers blossomed in slow motion
like a Hollywood depiction of an acid trip, or the
animated transition graphics from TV’s Laugh In,
over the front of her designer gown. She lifted her
head, the huge gold hoops in her ears jangling. One
hand rose, as if reaching out for help, and then
Mirabella’s heavily lined eyes fell closed, and she
folded over herself and sank to the sidewalk, graceful,
even with three bullets in her torso.
The press closed in as her bodyguards fought
to hold them off. Police on crowd control duty closed
in to help, and within a minute, sirens could be heard
as more police and an ambulance arrived.
“It was too late to save Mirabella DuFrane,”
a familiar male voice said.
It
was some retired news anchor, Jack thought, hired to
narrate A&E and History Channel documentaries. He
couldn’t remember the guy’s name.
“She
died in the hospital that very night. But that’s far
from where this
story
ends. The starlet’s body was stolen from the hospital
morgue, and to this day, it has never been found, and
her murder, never solved.”
There was a knock at the motel room’s door.
Jack looked up, irritated at the interruption. Then he
sensed who was on the other side. Topaz.
Jumping to his feet, he popped the DVD out of the
player, returned it to its case—a case that bore
Mirabella’s image, and the title, DEATH OF A GODDESS,
the Mirabella DuFrane story—and closed the lid. “Just a
minute.” He quickly stuffed the documentary into his
backpack, zipped it closed and tossed it into the
closet. “Come in, Topaz,” he called as he closed the
closet and turned to greet her.
She opened the door and stepped inside, and
for just an instant, Jack’s gaze was stuck fast on her
face. The resemblance was subtle, but it was there. It
was in the delicate bone structure, the cheekbones, the
jawline, even the eyebrows. Her skin wasn’t as dark and
her ethnicity wasn’t as obvious as it had been in her
mother. But she was every bit as stunning.
More.
“What are you staring at?”
He rolled his eyes. “I was just thinking
it’s a shame your insides don’t match your outsides.”
“Oh, I’m the one who’s not what I
pretend to be? As I recall, you’re the one who
professed your undying love right up until you vanished
with a half million of my hard earned dollars.”
“Inheriting is not earning.”
“It was in my case.” She narrowed her
eyes. “And how do you know I inherited it anyway?”
He averted his eyes. Topaz was under the
impression that none of her vampiric friends knew who
she had been in life. And maybe none of them did—other
than him. He knew. Now.
“Lucky guess,” he muttered.
“Yeah, well. I don’t suppose the other half
of my money appeared to you in your sleep, did it?”
“I gave you back the half I had. I told
you, Gregor has the rest. I’ll get it from him,
somehow, as soon as we track him down. I promise.”
“Sadly, I know just how much your promises
are worth, Jack.” She shrugged. “And I’m pretty sure
we’ve reached a dead end as far as tracking your former
boss down.”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean he got away. Reaper’s calling a
meeting in an hour. I’m pretty sure he’s going to
disband the gang—send us all our separate ways. At
least until he can get a line on Gregor again.”
He let his gaze move down her body as she
spoke, barely listening to her words and instead,
tracing her curves with his eyes. Tight jeans, tiny
silk blouse, her breasts beneath it, straining against
the fabric. Even while he stared at them, her nipples
stiffened, as if they could feel his gaze like a
physical touch. He got up, and walked toward her.
She
tensed, her brown eyes wary, watchful, but she wouldn’t
back away. No, she was too proud for that.
Jack
traced her cheek with a fingertip. “I kept some of my
promises—when I promised to make you scream, to play
your body like no one ever had or ever would—I didn’t
break any of those vows, Topaz.”
Her
eyes fell closed, and her breath sighed from her lips in
a slow, soft
release.
He
bent his head until his lips were only a breath away
from hers, and he whispered, “If you stick around a
little while, I’ll keep them all over again.”
He felt her body respond. Felt it tugging
at his, felt her yearning, her desire. Even heard it in
the breathy quality to her wavering reply, and the way
her lips trembled as she gave it, while his eyes fell
closed and he swayed closer, about to kiss her.
“I could do that. Or you could just eat
shit and die,” she whispered.
He frowned, and opened his eyes.
Hers were coated in a sheet of solid ice—one
that concealed a riot of emotion, he was certain. “I
hate you, Jack.”
“You want me,” he said, straightening away
from her.
“One doesn’t negate the other.”
“Okay. Fine. I’ll be ready for Reaper’s
meeting in a half hour.”
He backed away a few more inches, mostly to
give himself relief. Yes, she was just a mark, albeit
the only one he’d ever regretted. But he wanted her
like he’d never wanted another woman. And he was
determined to get her out of his system once and for
all.
“Why
are you here, Topaz?”
“To
give you this.” She fished a slip of paper from her
jeans’ pocket and handed it to him. “And to say
goodbye.”
He
opened it, glimpsing an address, and quickly refocusing
on her. “You’re going somewhere?”
“I’m
going there.” She nodded at the paper in his
hand.
“And
you couldn’t leave without coming to say goodbye,
letting me know where you would be, in case –”
“In
case you manage to keep a promise for the first time in
your life, and get me back the rest of my money. I
wanted you to know where to send it. And you’d
better, Jack. Because if you haven’t by the time I
finish my business in California, I’m gonna track you
down and I’m gonna hurt you. And not in the good
way.”
She turned on her heel, reached for the
doorknob.
Jack
gripped her shoulder and spun her back around to face
him. “That’s bullshit and you know it. You couldn’t
leave without saying goodbye to me because you still
have feelings for me.” His arm slid around her waist,
hand cupping her ass, and he jerked her against him.
“Admit it.”
“Oh,
I have feelings for you all right,” she hissed.
“Contempt. Disgust. Fury.”
“Lust, passion, desire—”
“Desire to do murder, at least,” she confirmed.
He
ground his hips against her, and she closed her eyes,
unable to suppress
the
shiver that passed through her. “Back off, Jack.”
He
released her, staring into her face in search of
confirmation that she still felt the things he did—the
physical things that made sense, not the other ones.
Before he could find it, she was out the door, slamming
it behind her.
Sighing, Jack pushed a hand through his hair in utter
frustration. But then reason returned, and he lunged
toward the door and peered through the peephole.
Topaz stood on the other side, her hands
pressed to either side of her bowed head. She looked as
if she wanted to scream.
He just wasn’t sure if it was with anger or
with desire. Hell.
Jack wondered why she was really leaving.
To get away from him, he would wager. But why go all
the way to Calif . . . .
He
turned slowly, gazing at the closet door, but seeing, in
his mind’s eye, snippets of the film he’d just been
watching, and hearing echoes of the narrator’s voice.
He gazed down at the piece of paper she’d given him.
Avalon Mansion
Santa
Luna, California.
Good
God, she was going to the very place where her mother
had been killed. She was going to try to solve
Hollywood’s most compelling mystery.
It
could be dangerous.
Maybe
he should tag along. If only he could think of a
plausible excuse. Reaching for his backpack, he
unzipped it and reached inside. The bag full of money
he’d claimed he didn’t have was still there, still
intact. He might need to give it back to her sooner or
later, he supposed, as a way of convincing her of his
sincerity and good intentions. The very reasons he’d
given her back the first half. It hadn’t work entirely,
but it had seemed to take a chink or two out of
that brick wall she’d erected around her heart to keep
him out.
He might need to return the rest to win her
trust.
He
probably shouldn’t waste his time. But then again, he
had to stick closely to one of the members of the gang,
because he had bigger fish to fry this time around, and
having access to Reaper would be crucial. Sticking like
glue to the big guy would be too obvious, though. And
since the gang was splitting up, for the moment, he was
going to have to pick one member to latch onto. Why not
Topaz?
And
so what if he had to give her back the rest of her
money? He was pretty sure there was a lot more than 500
K to be made this time.
He
fingered the manilla envelope that rested inside the bag
with the cash and the DVD. It was stamped with the
words CLASSIFIED: PROPERTY OF THE U.S. CENTRAL
INTELLIGENCE AGENCY. He’d found it in his former boss’s
safe along with Gregor’s half of Topaz’s money.
Maybe—just maybe, if he played his cards
right—Jack could make whatever there was to be made of
what he’d found in that envelope, and keep half
of what he’d conned from Topaz.
That notion made his collar feel a little
tight, his stomach, a little queasy. He cleared his
throat and shook off the unaccustomed sensations. Guilt
was nothing but wasted energy.
He pulled out the DVD and told himself he
really ought to slip it back into Topaz’s belongings
before she discovered it missing. If she found out that
he had been snooping through her stuff, she would really
be unhappy to see him when he showed up on her
ocean-front doorstep.
#
After she left Jack’s room, Topaz held her
head in her hands and waited for the hunger that had
suffused her veins to ease, for the trembling that had
possessed her body, to stop. She wanted him. God, she
wanted him so badly it was like an addiction.
She
knew he was no good. And yet she wanted him. No good
for her, and no good period. And yet she ached for
him. He was a con man. And yet she hungered for his
kiss. If she fell back into those strong arms again,
knowing what she knew about him, then she was the most
pathetic, self-destructive, stupid woman on the planet.
And Topaz was none of those things.
“You okay?”
She lifted her head, met Roxy’s eyes.
Roxy. The wild, irreverent, redheaded mortal whose age
was fathomless. The Belladonna antigen in her blood
made it unlikely she would live as nearly as long as she
already had, and she showed no signs of slowing down.
Roxy. The most trusted mortal Topaz could imagine. One
of the sexiest, most beautiful women she’d ever seen of
any age. And easily, the wisest.
“You still love that asshole, don’t you?”
Roxy asked, coming to a stop very close to her in the
hallway.
“That would make me a complete idiot. I’m
not an idiot, Roxy.”
“No, you’re not. But we can’t always help
how we feel.”
“I can. I’m the least likely person in the
world to fall for a con in the first place, much less
twice by the same person. No way.”
“Well, good. Don’t let him con you again.”
Roxy shrugged. “Doesn’t mean you can’t enjoy him,
though.” She glanced toward Jack’s closed motel room
door. “Hell, if I didn’t know you were into him I might
give him a tumble myself. ’Course it would spoil him
for all other women, but you know, some things can’t be
helped.” She winked at Topaz.
Topaz smiled, grateful for Roxy’s always
uplifting influence. “Is everyone else in the van
already?”
“Vixen and Seth are--probably making out in
the back if I know those two. Raphael’s on his way
there. The devil only knows about Briar. I haven’t
told Ilyana about the meeting yet. On my way to do that
right now, actually.”
“Let’s tell her together.”
Roxy nodded and the two of them strolled
down the hall of the Super 8 Motel, toward the room the
newcomer, Ilyana, had taken. They’d found the
mortal—one of the Chosen, like Roxy, though far
younger—locked in a cage in Gregor’s suite during their
latest encounter with the rogue vampire. They’d rescued
her, but she was afraid of them, and no wonder, if that
monster had been her only experience with the Undead.
She’d told them almost nothing. Not why he’d held her
captive, nor for how long. Topaz could only imagine
what she might have suffered while in Gregor’s care.
Though she bore no illusions that it had been less than
horrific.
Roxy tapped on the door. “Ilyana, it’ s
Roxy.”
The door opened, and the mortal, with her
pixie short, platinum blond hair and striking blue eyes
stared out at the two of them. Her eyes were warm and
welcoming on Roxy’s, but when they fell upon Topaz, they
cooled considerably. “What do you want?” she asked.
“Group meeting,” Roxy told her. “We’re
gathering in the van.”
Ilyana searched Roxy’s face, her gaze
darting past it, to Topaz’s, but never lingering there.
She was still wary. “Are we giving up the search for
Gregor?” she asked at length.
“Taking a break, maybe. Giving up? No way.
Raphael is way too stubborn for that.”
Nodding, Ilyana turned. “I’ll gather my
things. Give me a few minutes.”
“That’s fine.” Roxy pulled the motel room’s
door closed, and linked arms with Topaz. “You know,
he’s got it just as badly as you do.”
“Who’s got what?” Topaz asked, pretending
she didn’t know exactly what Roxy was trying to say.
“He.” She pointed toward Jack’s
room. “Has got it.” There she pumped her fists
at her sides and thrust her hips a couple of times.
“For you.” She poked Topaz in the chest with a
forefinger. “Just as badly as you.” Poke.
“Have got it.” Thrust. “For him.”
Point.
“Okay, okay. I get it. Enough with the
pantomime already. It’s creepy.”
Roxy frowned. “Men usually find it more
sexy than creepy, but I suppose being a straight girl—”
“And you’re wrong. He doesn’t feel a
damn thing for me.”
“Not even . . . ” She pumped her hips
again, more subtly this time, though.
“Well, sure, that. I mean, who
wouldn’t?”
“Exactly.”
“But that’s physical. He’d jump my bones if
I’d let him. He’d also just as soon take my money and
run again as look at me.”
“Then why do you suppose he’s here?” Roxy
stared into Topaz’s eyes for a long moment, almost as if
she expected an answer to what she had to know was an
impossible question. “He already took the money,” Roxy
went on at length. “So why hasn’t he run?”
“He only came back to me when it looked like
our gang was going to kick his gang’s ass.”
“He could have gone anywhere to get away
from Gregor and the rogues, Topaz. He didn’t have to
join up with us. I think you should keep that in mind.”
“Probably figured I had a few bucks left in
the bank he hadn’t scammed yet. Or maybe he’s planning
to run a con on one of you.”
Roxy lifted her brows and looked over her
shoulder toward his room. “Hot damn, it would be worth
it. I wonder how much is in my IRA by now?”
“Fuck you, Roxy.”
Roxy grinned from each to ear. “I don’t
swing that way, Topaz. Though I compliment you on your
taste in women.”
Topaz felt her frown dissolve as she elbowed
Roxy lightly in the ribcage, and the two of them laughed
together as they made their way across the dark motel
parking lot toward a canary yellow conversion van named
Shirley.
#
Jack waited until everyone else had headed
out to the van, to creep out of his room and down the
hall to Topaz’s. He picked the locks with the power of
his mind, hands on the knob, ear to the door, willing
the tumblers to—well—tumble. And when they did he
opened the door and slipped inside.
Her things were packed and her cases
stacked. A half dozen of them, at least. Designer
luggage, all of it matching, made by Coach. He thought
they only made handbags and shoes. And those cost a
fortune. What must an entire set of Coach
luggage have set her back?
Damn, he must have left too much of her
money behind if she could still afford to blow it like
this.
Sighing, he gazed at the rumpled blankets,
and his throat closed up. She hadn’t made up her
bed--left that for the maid, and a hefty tip on the
nightstand to thank her for her trouble. The covers
were untidy, and folded back to reveal the faint outline
of her body on the sheets, the imprint of her head on
the pillow.
Damn.
Before he could stop himself, Jack was
crawling onto that bed, pressing his face to the place
where she’d rested, inhaling her scent, and wishing it
were her flesh he was lying upon and not just her bed.
Intoxicating, the essence of Topaz that
lingered there.
He sat up, put his hands in his hair and
tousled it vigorously. “Snap out of it, Jack.”
It was easier said than done, but he did
manage to roll over and get off her bed and onto his
feet. He reminded himself of his reason for being here
and the fact that the others were probably waiting for
him in the van, and might send someone looking for him
at any moment. Okay then. He slid the DVD into one of
her bags, and exited the room, remembering to lock the
door behind him.
He stiffened his spine, hoped his yearning
didn’t show on his face, and then thought so what if it
did? He wanted her, that was all. It was physical.
Sexual. Lustual, if that was a word. And if it wasn’t
it should be, because it described to a T what he felt
for the luscious, lovely Topaz-formerly-known-as-Tanya
DuFrane, daughter of a movie star.
A dead movie star.
He headed along the hall to the exit,
crossed the parking lot and joined the others in the
van, climbing in through the already open side door, and
giving the interior a quick visual sweep. The back row
of seats held Vixen and Seth, sitting so close together
you could have fit a lumberjack on either side of them,
but instead Ilyana sat there. In the front seat, Reaper
sat in the passenger side, Roxy behind the wheel, just
like always. Middle row was hosting Briar, who sat
there with the same brooding, inwardly focused
expression she’d been wearing since they pried Gregor’s
shock collar off her neck. Prior to that she’d been
wild, fighting them every step of the way, hissing and
scratching at every opportunity like feral cat. She’d
been dangerous, untrustworthy and probably bad right to
her soul. And frankly, he had preferred that to this .
. . this shell.
He
supposed she would snap out of it sooner or later. And
he’d lay odds they would all be wishing her back to this
state of silent brooding again once she did.
Beside Briar sat the object of his desire, Topaz. He
met her eyes briefly, just to remind her that she felt
it too—this longing, this hunger—she felt it and he knew
it, and she knew he knew it. No use tiptoeing around
the facts.
Finally, he lowered himself onto the seat in between the
two women.
“About time,” Topaz muttered.
Briar said nothing. She’d really had very
little to say since they’d rescued her from Gregor,
who’d been torturing her the same way she’d personally
helped him to torture Vixen. Reversal of fortune, big
time. It tended to mix a girl up, he would bet.
Her eyes were haunted.
He couldn’t help but chuck her under the
chin just a little. “Don’t look so glum, wildcat.
Gregor had us both fooled.”
She lifted her black eyes to his, but they
never really locked on. “He never fooled you,”
she said. Her voice was dull. A monotone that echoed
for lack of emotion the way an empty room echoed from
lack of furniture. “You knew what he was the whole
time. You were just playing him.”
He shrugged. “Well, I’ve been around longer
than you have. You live and learn, you know.” Then,
uncomfortable with the turmoil swirling just beneath the
surface of her eyes, he shifted his focus to Reaper.
“What’s up? We throwing in the towel?”
“Only temporarily. Until I get a handle on
where Gregor has headed, there’s no point in us all
staying together.”
“Nor any particular point,” Seth cut in,
leaning forward in the backmost seat, “In us splitting
up.” He looked around the van. “Is there?”
Just as the others were muttering in
agreement, Reaper said, “There is, actually. I um . . .
I believe I’m being followed.”
Jack gasped louder than any of them. Hell.
Probably overkill. Topaz cut him a narrow-eyed look but
he pretended not to notice. “By whom?” he demanded.
“I don’t know for sure, but they seem
awfully familiar to me.”
“You think they’re spooks?” Seth asked.
“No one says ‘spooks’ anymore, kid.” Reaper
swallowed hard, then nodded. “But yeah. I think
they’re Agency. They can be dangerous, and there’s
really no point in all of us being at risk.”
Roxy smacked the steering wheel. “Right.
You’ll just send us on our merry way while you take the
heat alone,” she snapped. “And if you get your ass
killed, then no great loss.”
He glanced her way, and his eyes softened.
“Rox, I’m not gonna get my ass killed. I’ll drop out of
sight for a while. Lay low until the heat’s off. And
it’ll be a hell of a lot easier for me to do that
without a half dozen soldiers, no matter how loyal,
marching along behind me. Don’t you think?”
She lowered her head and sighed, probably,
Jack thought, in frustration that she couldn’t argue
with his logic.
“So then you’re not going to continue
tracking Gregor?” The question came from Ilyana, who
sat close behind Jack.
“Oh, I’m going to. Just quietly and
discreetly. I might lay low for a few days before I put
forth too much effort, just to try to shake these
agents, first.”
Everyone looked at him, Ilyana, waiting, as
if she didn’t think he was finished. He hesitated, then
went on. “Look Gregor admitted he was working for the
CIA. His rogue activities had a purpose. He and his
gang have been murdering and feeding upon the innocent
with the full knowledge, approval and support of the
Agency, all just to lure me in. Everyone knew I was the
one the vampires would send to shut him down, to take
him out.”
“Because you were an assassin when you worked for them,”
Ilyana said, her voice soft. “Before you became a
vampire.”
“Yes. And because they’re aware I’ve continued in that
roll, when necessary, ever since,” Reaper told her.
“Gregor was supposed to capture me and hand me over to
my former employers. But he got greedy, decided to kill me
and try to drain me and take my power instead.”
Jack nodded. “I picked up on that much
before I switched teams,” he said. “Gregor developed a
real lust for killing, for taking whatever he wants
without remorse or repercussions. And the money he’s
been gathering in the process. You feed on the wealthy,
you tend to make a profit in the process. He’s been
raking it in, pillaging, really. And I think he’s drunk
on the power. All he wants is more.”
“Absolute power corrupts absolutely,” Reaper quoted
softly.
“What
do you think the CIA intends to do with you, if they
ever do get you back,” Jack asked him. “I mean, what do
they want with you?”
“I was the best assassin they ever trained,
Jack. Imagine how much better I’d be now that I’m a
vampire. And they’ve already mucked up my mind to the
point where they can control me by dropping a single
word. You’ve seen the results of that.”
“They probably think of you as a valuable
secret weapon,” Roxy whispered.
Jack lowered his head, unable to look any of
them in the eye for a moment.
“They’ll stop at nothing to get me back,”
Reaper said. “And that includes kidnapping or even
torturing any one of you. I can’t have that on my
conscience. I’d have to turn myself in if that
happened. So do me a favor and take off, so I won’t
have to.”
That too, was impossible to argue with, Jack
realized. Reaper was good.
“I’m willing to go off on my own,” Ilyana
said softly. “But I intend to continue the search for
Gregor. If you like, I can contact you when I find
him.”
Every eye in that van focused on her. She
had only just joined them, and had no reason to be so
into their mission.
“Is it vengeance you seek?” Vixen asked.
Ilyana shot her a look.
Vixen seemed to shrink a bit more deeply
into her long, copper hair, and began playing with its
ends, as she tended to do when nervous. “I mean, he
held and tortured me, too. But . . . honestly, for your
own sake, it’s better if you can look ahead, rather than
behind you.”
“I don’t want vengeance,” Ilyana said
softly.
“Then why—”
“He has something of mine. That’s as much
as I’m going to say. I won’t rest until I get it back.
So if any of you want me to call you once I find him—and
I will—then give me a means of reaching you before I
leave.”
Topaz dipped into her pocket, scribbled a
number on a scrap of paper, and handed it to her. Roxy
did the same.
“I intend to stick with you, Reaper,” Seth
said from the back seat.
“Not this time,” Reaper said, and he quickly
slanted a look at Roxy. “Or you, either. Come on,
guys, cut me some slack here. Just for a little while.
Scatter and wait. I’ll call you back when things cool
off, and it won’t be long.”
They all sighed. Topaz finally spoke. “I
actually have some personal business to attend to. I’ll
be in California. Jack has my contact info.”
“Can you get me a copy, hon, before you go?”
Roxy asked. “I’ll make sure everyone else gets it too.”
Topaz slanted him a look and he returned a
sheepish shrug. “They don’t trust me anymore than you
do, I guess.”
“Can’t say as I blame them.”
“Here,” Roxy said, reaching past Reaper to
open the glove compartment. “Why don’t we all just jot
down some info? A contact number, a cell phone, a
friend, an address, an email, anything. As long as we
each have one means of communication that we can commit
to checking often, and not changing.” As she spoke she
pulled out a small notepad and a handful of pens, and
passed them around the van.
Everyone jotted, scribbled, wrote and
passed, until they all had copies of each other’s
emergency contact info. Then, finally, Seth said, “Can
I take the Mustang?”
“Yep,” Reaper said. “And Roxy will keep
Shirley. She and I can drop the rest of you wherever
you want. But let’ s get on it. I want us scattered to
the winds before dawn. Okay?”
“Not exactly,” Jack said. And he shifted
his gaze from Reaper to Briar, who sat beside him in
silence. “I think Briar should stay with someone.”
“I
can take care of myself,” she said softly.
“I
know you can. No one said you couldn’t. But uh . . .
well, you can’t be trusted on your own, can you? You
know the one word that can be used to send turn our
friend Reaper here into a whirling dervish of death. We
can’t just have you running around all alone.”
She
narrowed her eyes on him. “I could kill you as easily
as looking at you.”
Jack
actually felt his lips pull at the corners, though he
didn’t exactly smile. “There you are,” he whispered.
“Where have you been, Briar?”
She
crossed her arms over her chest, quickly covering the
flash of anger
with
her new expression of bland disinterest. “You can
assign me any babysitter you like. I’ll stay until I
want to leave. And when I want to leave, nothing’s
going to stop me.”
“She stays with me,” Reaper said.
And Briar’s staid expression showed a hint,
a very brief hint, of panic. She covered it quickly,
lowering her head and letting her wild black hair
conceal her eyes.
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