Read Caress The Dark God [Scions of the Ankh 2] (Siren Publishing Classic) Online
Authors: Toni L. Meilleur
Tags: #Romance
“Yes,” Tessa sighed. “I need to call the airport. I’m sure everything is canceled anyway.”
“I called for you. I didn’t want to wake you. The officials will inform us as soon as flights are cleared.”
“That was very thoughtful of you.” Inwardly, Tessa rolled her eyes. Now he had to start being nice.
“This can’t be easy for you, being in a house with people you don’t know. If there’s anything I can do to make you feel more at home …”
“No, really, I’m a big girl. I’ve been in stranger spots than this.”
“You really came all this way to make sure Rene was all right?” He shook his head. “That’s admirable. I didn’t know the human race could still care about one another.”
“I know what you mean.” Tessa rubbed her arms, more for comfort than warmth. “But Rene and I are a lot alike. She keeps to herself, but she’s really sweet.”
“You seem fond of her. Besides being doctors, why do you believe you’re so much alike?”
Without thinking, Tessa answered. “We’re alone in this world. She doesn’t have any family and I don’t either. While she never knew hers, mine were killed in a stupid accident.” Tessa shook her head, trying to will away the memories of being seventeen and a disinterested cop telling her that her parents had been in a car with their friends on vacation. One of the friends had been drinking and killed them all by losing control of the vehicle. “It’s hard sometimes living every day without that special connection to family or anyone special.” The words were out before she caught them.
“But you thought you had that connection once, yes?”
“Yeah, once.” She looked out the window, desperate to change the subject. “I really could use a bath.” She couldn’t face him. She’d revealed a little more of herself than she’d intended.
“Very well. I’ll come for you later.” She barely heard his soft words as Roarden came to mind.
“Thank you,” she managed, the pain still too fresh. She closed her eyes, letting the tears that clouded her vision fall. Roarden had nearly destroyed her, but she’d fought tooth and nail and she would come out stronger. Right now she was too vulnerable, and that meant keeping Torian at arm’s length.
* * * *
A fresh shower, fresh clothes and makeup did wonders for Tessa’s mood. She pulled her hair through the elastic band and was satisfied with the ponytail. There was something about a well-worn pair of jeans and a favorite T-shirt that simply relaxed her. So maybe her plans were askew, but she could adapt. All she had to do was stay away from Torian and she could get out of this unscathed. The dream she’d had of him surfaced in her thoughts and a flush came over her entire body. Yes indeed, staying away from Torian was plan A, getting on the plane without getting hot and sweaty with him was plan B.
She opened the door to her room to find Torian waiting for her, a single perfect white rose in his hand. “I told you I would come for you,” he reminded as he handed her the rose. He stood there in a dark tailored shirt. Plan A was going to be hard to implement. “Anaise has gone through the trouble of arranging the cooks, to make,” he paused, his accent sounding adorable as he continue, “fettuccine with Alfredo sauce, and mixed greens with tomato and Italian dressing. I’m sure you can smell the homemade banana pudding. Come, I’ll lead you to the dining area.”
“How in the world did Anaise know I loved those dishes?” Tessa found herself salivating at the thought of the meal waiting for her. “My goodness, it’s as if they were plucked right out of my head.” Her stomach rumbled and she looked at Torian sheepishly. “Sorry about that. I’m starving and the menu is making me ravenous.”
“I can certainly relate to certain dishes evoking immense desire.” His words, blatantly sexual, made her smile.
“You never stop, do you?”
“Going after what I desire? No. How else would I get everything I want?” he asked in mock seriousness.
“I assumed you to be the type that took what you wanted.” Tessa lifted the rose to her nose as she watched him, waiting for his response.
“You are right,” he said right before they were about to turn a corner. Without warning, Tessa found herself pushed against the wall. One of his long legs was planted between hers, an arm on either side of her face as he looked down at her. “How about I trade a question for a kiss?” he murmured. Tessa swallowed, trying to will her mouth to say no. He smiled. “You do realize no answer is as good as a yes?” Without giving her time to respond, his lips were on hers, soft but firm. Then his tongue gently probed her lips apart.
He was an excellent kisser. He made her knees turn into melted rubber. She felt him gently stroking her curls at the nape of her neck as he deepened the kiss. His tongue slid against hers, retreated and came back, teasing her, making her taste him back. She’d never known a man to taste like him. There was a wildness to him that quickly infused her desire. Her hands found his narrow hips as she pulled him closer. It felt so familiar, him practically between her legs. His body heat enveloped her, making her need for him rage so fast it astounded her.
Slowly he broke the kiss and she looked up into his eyes. For just a second she thought she saw black tornado funnels. She blinked and when she looked again his black eyes stared at her with undiluted lust. “Again I ask you, Dr. Tessa Michaels, will you still deny you desire me?”
The beast in him came forth with unbridled desire. He broke the kiss, knowing his control was slipping fast. “Again I ask you, Dr. Tessa Michaels, will you still deny you desire me?”
Anubis could barely get the words past his raw throat. He wanted to turn her against the wall and rip the clothing from her body. He looked down at her, for the first time having to concentrate hard to ensure his eyes didn’t turn in front of her. His control slipped by an inch every time he saw her.
She put her hands against his chest and cast her eyes down. “I won’t deny there is a sexual spark between us,” she said softly. His satisfaction at her admission made him want to pursue her even harder. While he certainly couldn’t keep a storm raging in Cairo forever, he needed to devise a way to keep her here.
“Oh.” The exclamation came from Hathor as she rounded the corner and spotted them both in a very compromising situation. Reluctance hummed through him as he gathered his composure and stepped away from Tessa.
Hathor handed the cell phone to him. “Gale sounds just frantic. She said you left your cell phone at the office and she couldn’t reach you.”
“Yes, Gale.” He listened intently as his office manager began to explain. Anubis felt his mood go grim immediately. After Gale finished, he handed Hathor her phone. “I have to go.”
“Is everything all right?” Hathor asked in concern.
“A lot of patients are being admitted to the hospice.”
“I don’t understand. Isn’t that why it’s there?” Tessa asked, looking him in the eye for the first time since the kiss.
“They’re apparently being overflowed from the hospitals.” Something about the situation made him uneasy.
“The only time a hospital overflows …” Tessa’s voice trailed off. “Torian, is there a highly contagious disease flowing around Cairo?”
“Not that I was aware of. But apparently the patients are all coming in with the same symptoms, then dying soon after.”
“I see why they’re sending them to you.” Tessa began to look thoughtful. “Anaise, is it possible to get a plate of food to go?”
“Wait a minute,” Tessa said. “The weather is still disagreeable, you could get caught in it.”
Immediately, Anubis began to draw back the storm. If he traveled through the storm, she would insist on traveling through the storm to the airport.
“In case you forgot, I am a doctor. Don’t tell me my services won’t come in handy. How many doctors do you have on staff?”
Truth be known, only one, for appearance’s sake. Anubis himself saw to each and every patient. It was his job to lead the souls to the other side after they had been judged. Doctors had no place in his hospice.
“One.”
“Will that doctor be there tonight?”
Anubis looked at her and relented. He shook his head no, seeing as he made sure the doctor was always away on some conference. “Then you could use the help,” Tessa continued. “Anaise? Could I have a plate of food to go as well?”
“No problem.” Hathor immediately glided around the corner, leaving the two of them alone again.
“You don’t have to do this.”
“I know, but as a doctor I can’t sit here and not try to help unfurl a medical mystery.”
“Thank you.” Anubis smiled. The more he learned about Tessa, the more he liked her. “The storm looks like it has settled.”
“I’ll get my purse.”
“I’ll retrieve your food.” They nodded at one another, a little uncomfortably after what had recently transpired and so abruptly ended.
On his way to the kitchen, Anubis couldn’t shake the uneasy feeling that had come over him as Gale explained what was happening at the hospice. Something was wrong. It didn’t make sense for so many humans to fall ill and go comatose. He would have to examine them himself, and then he could tell if there was interference from travelers like him. And that kind of interference never ended well, for the travelers or the humans.
* * * *
“I appreciate the help, Tessa.” Anubis broke the silence in the car. Tessa was sitting as far away from him as the seat would allow. He glanced at her. “I thought you were hungry. You haven’t even touched the meal Anaise had packaged for you.”
“It’s hard for me to retain an appetite when my mind is working overtime.”
“You let your work consume you?”
“I wouldn’t say consume.” Even in the darkness of the car, he could see her smile. “When something puzzles me it’s hard for me to concentrate on anything else. It’s just odd that so many people would get sick so quickly and die.”
“I agree. Let us hope it is something that can be brought under control quickly.”
“I wonder if this has spilled over into the States.”
“That is definitely something we need to find out,” Anubis agreed. Cairo was a city visited by many tourists, and tourists went home. It was well within reason to think that this thing, whatever it was, could have already spread worldwide.
As they pulled into the parking lot of his hospice, Anubis caught the faint scent of something vaguely familiar. He sniffed the air, concentrating, but the memory eluded him. Of course, the faint smell of death always surrounded him, but there was definitely something foreign mixed in with this scent. But then the thought nagged at him that it wasn’t foreign.
“Is something wrong?” Tessa asked, gripping a plate of food in each hand. She looked around nervously and it was then he realized she could pick up on his emotions. That fact astounded him.
He shook his head no, slowly, and wondered just how sensitive Tessa was. Though prone to falling under compulsions, she’d proven that she could shake them off. Now it seemed she could read his emotions. He motioned for her to follow him into the building. He planned on taking his time finding out everything about the beauty that he could, but right now he needed to get to bottom of what was behind the humans dying.
* * * *
“The first wave came last night,” Gale explained, placing files in his outstretched hands. A small, mousy woman, Gale was a giant when it came to efficiency. “They all have the same classic symptoms.” He indicated that she give some of the files to Tessa. “So far they all have been dying within three hours of arriving.”
“Three hours?” Tessa asked incredulously.
“Yes,” Gale answered, looking Tessa up and down. Anubis was well aware of Gale’s feelings towards him and he had repeatedly sent compulsions to turn her attentions elsewhere. One thing Anubis had found was that compulsions had no power over obsessions. So he simply ignored the woman’s fixation on him, since she really wasn’t hurting anyone.
“They come in comatose, with fever, bleeding from the ears and eyes. Difficulty breathing, and this.” Gale took the opportunity to lean on Anubis and point out the picture of the skin lesions one of the patients. “They appear ten to fifteen minutes before death, right above the heart. It’s how we know when they’re about to die.”
Anubis looked at the lesion and his gut dropped. They weren’t exactly lesions, but tags. “Gale, from now on, don quarantine scrubs.” He scented her and was relieved she wasn’t infected. “Have this place scrubbed down. Tessa, follow me and don’t touch anything.”
“The symptoms don’t sound familiar,” Tessa said. “It seems to be a hodgepodge of different ailments.” Her long legs easily kept up with his strides. “Obviously, this is highly contagious. I would guess this was airborne as well as passed by touch. Hell, I believe any damn way one human can spread germs to another, this disease is transmitted. Question is, what is it and where did it come from?”
“I don’t know where this is originating.” Anubis answered, bringing her into the lavatory to scrub up. “But it ends here.”
“We should be so lucky.” Tessa set the files down and began to wash. “Is there a lab in here?”
“Yes, state of the art.”
“Should I ask why a hospice has a full state-of-the-art lab?”
“I allow research to be done out of this facility. Many patients die from incurable diseases. This is as good a place as any for research.”
“Makes sense. I would like some samples from the live patients as well as the ones recently deceased.”
“There’s quarantine suits behind that door. After you scrub up, put one on.”
“Seeing as I’ve already entered the premises—”
“Doesn’t mean anything. We don’t know what we’re dealing with, so every precaution needs to be taken. I’m going to call the local hospitals and find out what exactly is going on and how long it’s been happening. There’s a fire escape map on the back of the door where the suits are. It should lead you to the lab. I’ll get you the samples you need.”
“You know how to procure samples? You sound like more than just a counselor, Torian.”
“Trust me when I say I am more than meets the eye.” He went over to her, and surreptitiously sniffed. She didn’t smell of impending death or even that familiar scent that assailed him when they first arrived. She wasn’t infected. “Don’t take any chances.”