Read Bitten 2 Online

Authors: A.J. Colby

Tags: #Urban Fantasy, #Vampires, #Werewolves

Bitten 2 (9 page)

BOOK: Bitten 2
12.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Marvin?” she asked, blinking wide violet eyes in confusion.

“Yes. He’s a creeper.”

“Oh, I’m sure you just misread him. He’d never do anything like that,” she replied, her surety written in the furrow of her brow.

I wasn’t sure how she could live with a perverted phoenix and not know it, but I sure as hell didn’t want to be the one to burst her oblivious bubble. She’d done more for me in the short time I’d known her than I would ever expect from anyone, and for that I was more grateful than I knew how to express. If remaining her friend meant I had to deal with Marvin the perv, so be it. Glancing past her to the doorway, I saw the creep in question lean his head around the doorframe to watch us, something in his gaze making me think that I should choose my words carefully. Swallowing the lump of irritation and unease that stuck in my throat, I nodded.

“You’re right. I think I’m just nervous about meeting the pack master.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

CHAPTER EIGHT

 

SWEAT POOLED IN the small of my back as I crept along the street, looking for an open parking spot. When I’d picked the Escalade, I hadn’t spared a thought for how I would park the monster on the crowded streets of downtown Denver. It took far longer than I’d expected to wedge the gleaming black behemoth into a parking spot, leaving me to jog the last four blocks through the lunchtime crowd.

Tugging on the hem of my shirt for what felt like the hundredth time, I hurried along the street all the while wishing I’d opted for the navy sweater. The ruched hem refused to stay in place on my hips, the silky fabric riding up to reveal my stomach while gaping around my chest, exposing skin in all the wrong places. As I had many times throughout my life, I cursed the gods who had jipped me in the boob department while being overly generous when it came to my hips and ass.

I swear this damn thing fit when I left Alyssa’s.

Dodging people on the sidewalk like a salmon swimming upstream, I wove through the masses, sidestepping patches of ice and loitering hipsters filling the air with the stink of their fancy flavored cigarettes. A sharp elbow to my ribs had me spinning around in a tight circle, forcing out a curse for my faceless assailant who had already disappeared into the steady flow of pedestrians bundled up against the cold.

Turning back to face the way I was headed, I told myself that I didn’t really care if I was late.

Yeah, and that’s why you just almost mowed down a homeless guy on the last block.

My heart rate ratcheted up another notch as I rounded the corner onto 16
th
Street and the café came into view, sandwiched between a jazz club that wouldn’t open for several more hours, and a used bookstore. A copper sign above the door, turned green and blue by the patina of time, declared that I had arrived at The Vine. Large windows reflected the bright early afternoon sunshine, appearing as golden portals into some unknown land.

A flicker of anxiety roiled in my stomach as I stopped in the middle of sidewalk, pedestrians flowing around me. I’d spent the last nine years avoiding other weres—and people in general—and now was about to come face to face with one of the most powerful weres in the entire state.

The urge to turn and run was strong, but the wolf balked at the idea of such weakness. She knew as well as I did that if I wanted any chance of figuring out what was happening I needed to talk to the pack master.

“Suck it up, Buttercup,” I muttered to myself, giving my shirt one last futile tug before pushing my way through the crowd to the door.

Opening the door I was met by a dizzying array of scents. The rich aroma of brewing coffee pulled me forward before I even realized what my feet were doing. Beyond the mouthwatering smell of coffee and fresh pastries, was the hot spiciness of weres, the earthy scent of magi, and the scents of a dozen other supes I wasn’t familiar with. It was a heady perfume that, although foreign, somehow felt like home.

The Vine was considered a bastion of the supernatural community. Lauded as being the first business in the state to be owned and run by a supe, it had been featured multiple times on recent news reports talking about the push for equal rights. More importantly, I’d also heard that they had the best damn coffee in town.

Though the coffee I had at Cordova’s might give them a run for their money.

Moving into the hot press of bodies just inside the door, I cast my gaze over the random spread of tables. I’d seen pictures of the pack master splashed across the news over the last couple years, but it was the aura of power he gave off that made it easy to spot him in the crowd.

The energy radiating from him lapped at the edge of my consciousness as if he were scenting me, gauging my strength. I knew so little about other weres and the full breadth of their talents that I wouldn’t have been surprised if he really
was
scenting me, hoping to get a rise out of me. As much as I hated to admit it, I was intrigued by him and could already feel the wolf stirring inside.

Moving towards him, my footsteps faltered when our eyes across the café. There was a flicker of recognition in his gaze and in that fleeting instant our wolves reached out and scented each other. It felt as though the world had dropped out from beneath my feet, leaving a feeling of weightlessness in the pit of my stomach. No one else existed beyond him, and I was overcome by the urge to fall down to my knees and pledge my undying allegiance to him.

What the fuck?
I thought, finding even that small glimmer of coherence hard to hold onto.

Another, stronger wave of energy flowed over me, driving the air from my lungs, compressing them into useless fleshy bags in my chest. I would have toppled over then and there if I hadn’t been surrounded by a half dozen other people waiting for a table to open up. The shoulders and backs of strangers pressing against me was the only thing keeping me on my feet. Breathless from the immense weight of his power, I struggled to clear my thoughts but found my body unwilling—or unable—to obey my commands. A panicked sweat bloomed on my skin, covering me from head to toe while the hairs rose on the back of my neck.

Time stopped, leaving me suspended in the moment, unable to breathe and barely even able to think. I knew inaction meant death, but I had no idea what to do, or how to fight against him. Thankfully, I wasn’t alone in the prison of my body.

My wolf stirred, and relief swept through me. She was a reassuring entity in the back of my mind, full of strength and confidence. Where I was afraid and soft, she was bold and unmoved by his display of authority. Her presence leant unfathomable strength that made human emotions seem frail and small.

Invigorated by her presence, I grit my teeth and pushed back against the weight of his energy. I had no idea if it was the right thing to do; all I knew was that if I didn’t fight back he would squeeze the life out of me. My muscles were sluggish and slow to respond at first, but by some miracle I was able to tear my eyes away from his, breaking the connection between us.

The sudden absence of his presence pushing down on me left me lightheaded. My first breath was a ragged gasp that drew curious looks from the people around me, but I didn’t have the energy to worry about what they thought. Drawing another blessed breath, the air burning all the way down into my lungs, I sagged with the relief of being in control of myself.

Gradually, other sensations crept back into my awareness. I felt the stinging burn in my palms where my skin was healing the quartet of crescent shaped cuts my nails had dug into my flesh. Flexing my stiff fingers I dared to meet the pack master’s gaze again and found an expression of mild surprise reflected in their pale blue depths. I got the impression I’d just experienced some kind of test, but I had no idea if I’d passed or failed.

At any other time I might have spared a thought for why he’d tested me and what the results meant, but all I could think about was the fact he’d violated me without provocation. My knowledge of the supernatural world was limited, but even with my paltry understanding of were culture I knew that what he had done was a big no-no. It wasn’t uncommon for a dominant were to exert his will over a lesser wolf; being able to control the wolves under his rule was an essential part of being a pack master. Without someone to keep them in-line, chaos was sure to break out in the blink of an eye. Trying to control a wolf outside of the pack, however, was both bold and against the rules of etiquette. The wolf’s simplistic view of black and white colored my thoughts, unleashing a surge of anger that warmed my blood.

Pushing through the people between me and the pack master, I wove a path between the tables, ignoring the way my knees trembled and the fresh layer of sweat cooling on my back.

The name Hank conjured up images of a middle aged man with a pot belly and receding hairline, but I knew from the glimpses I’d seen of him in the news that the pack master was anything but the stereotype. The bronze skinned giant that sat at the small café table belonged on the cover of a trashy romance novel, but even his chiseled features couldn’t erase my irritation at his little display of superiority.

Why do the hot ones always have to be such assholes?

It wasn’t hard to see why he’d become the poster child for weres—his angular jaw, expressive eyes ringed in thick lashes, and dark gold hair pulled back into a short ponytail placed him somewhere between handsome and beautiful. It took little effort to imagine him stretched across the pages of a beefcake calendar. I’d caught a few of his interviews, and even I had to admit that he was far from the gorgeous dimwit his looks made him appear to be.

And I bet he’s got a harem of nubile young wolves throwing themselves at his feet.

He rose from the table as I approached, a mountain of rippling muscles contained in a tight, dark grey t-shirt and low slung, hip-hugging jeans.

“Nice party trick,” I sneered before he had a chance to say anything. “Now that I’ve passed your little test, can we get down to business?”

“Who says you passed?” he asked in reply, the warmth of his smile the only thing keeping me from taking his words as an outright insult. Noticing that my frown was still in place, he had the decency to look a little chagrined. “Forgive me. I’ve heard rumors and had to see for myself.”

“See what? Whether I’d kneel like all the other good little wolves? Is this what you do to make up for your small dick?”

As soon as the words left my mouth, I felt a flicker of regret. It didn’t matter that he was being a jerk and deserved it; it was beyond stupid to bait the pack master of Denver. As I waited for him to decide whether or not he was going to rip out my throat for such blatant disrespect, I momentarily wished I had a filter for my verbal diarrhea. Before I could sink too far into regret I decided that I didn’t care after all. He really was being an ass.

A long moment, fraught with tension and uncertainty, stretched out between us. He was assessing me as much as he had with his little power trick, and it was anyone’s guess which way he was leaning. After a slow blink that I was sure was designed to test my nerves, he let out a low rumbling chuckle.

“The famous Riley Cray of course,” he said with a smile that gracefully dismissed my insult, though the tightness around his eyes let me know he was holding something back.

I wasn’t in the mood to play some screwed up game to prove if I was worthy of his time. The events of my life had proven without a doubt that I wasn’t some doe-eyed little girl. I’d been through hell and lived to tell the tale. I’d be damned if I’d let him—or anyone—make me feel the need to prove myself.

Making no move to sit down in the empty chair opposite him, I said, “Looks like we’ve both earned ourselves a small amount of infamy.”

“Yes it does.” He almost sounded proud of the fact.

From anyone else it would have come across as cocky, but there was something in the unapologetic tone of his voice that led me to believe he accepted the limelight that came along with his status without arrogance. I envied him that level of comfort. Even after almost ten years, I still wasn’t sure I’d accepted the fact that my life would never be wholly my own again.

His smile deepened, losing its tightness, as he extended his hand across the table towards me, and for a moment I let it hang there. After the obvious display of power, I was leery of touching him and wondered if it would be anything like the prickling energy I felt every time Holbrook and I touched. Or worse yet, that I would feel the pull of his energy again, and have to fight for breath. I was still shaking from his earlier display of power and wasn’t sure I had the strength to beat him back again.

Reaching out to him made my heart thump harder in my chest. I watched my fingers disappear into his massive hand and braced myself for the flood of his energy to flow into me. I felt a tendril of his power slip into my fingers, but it was little more than a faint tingle along my arm. Bearable, and not entirely unpleasant. I wasn’t overcome with the need to bow to him and declare my allegiance, nor did I feel the air being sucked from my lungs, but I didn’t release my breath until he let go, and I withdrew my hand to wipe my damp palm on my jeans.

A faint but unmistakable grunt of disgust drew my gaze to the man standing behind Hank’s right shoulder, watching our interaction with narrowed eyes, gleaming wolf gold. While Hank was all golden skin and dazzling smiles, the other man was a portrait of severity. Smooth ebony skin gleamed under the overhead lights, his golden eyes appearing to glow. Thick, dark dreadlocks decorated with beads made of wood, bone, and leather hung down his back and were secured by a simple leather tie. He didn’t look like the kind of guy I’d want to mess with, and he didn’t seem at all happy to see me.

BOOK: Bitten 2
12.08Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

700 Sundays by Billy Crystal
Tea with Jam and Dread by Tamar Myers
Area 51: The Mission-3 by Robert Doherty
Eyes of a Child by Richard North Patterson
Dos mujeres en Praga by Juan José Millás
Celeste Files: Unjust by Kristine Mason
Letters From My Windmill by Alphonse Daudet, Frederick Davies
The Masquerade by Rebecca Berto