Deadly Obsession (37 page)

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Authors: Jaycee Clark

Tags: #Romance, #Fiction, #Suspense

BOOK: Deadly Obsession
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* * * *

 

When Christian opened her eyes again, she couldn’t believe what she was seeing.

"Grandmiere?" Damn her voice.

"Ah, you’re awake." The old raspy voice, held a hint of French Creole. "Don’t strain your voice. Your man explained it all to us. Scared us, Joshua showing up with that Quinlan Kinncaid in the wee hours of the morning. Knew right away we’d found you again."

A cool, weathered hand cupped her cheek.

Christian felt the slide of tears.

"Child, don’t cry. Don’t cry. The darkness has passed. All you have now is the light." The hand was as soft as she remembered, the white hair pulled back in a bun, eyes as gray as her own held the wisdom of age. "How we’ve missed you. I knew. I always knew we’d find you one day. And then there was Josh and Quinlan. That man flew down and found us, flew us back up here. Didn’t want your granddad and I, or even your brother, to hear this all on the news."

"I’m sorry," she whispered.

Her grandmother sighed. "Regrets are only good for regrets. Look forwards. Always forwards." She shifted. "I have to tell you, I love your man. Very strong, very honorable, very handsome. He reminds me of your grandfather. That one will last you a lifetime."

Christian nodded and pulled her hand out to hold her grandmother’s.

Her grandmother smiled. "Now, I should tell you the wedding plans we’ve come up with...."

The door opened.

"I’m sorry, didn’t mean to interrupt," Brayden said, pulling her attention around.

"Why, you’re not. Come over here and give me a kiss, young man, then give one to Christian."

Brayden smiled, did as she asked, then stood by the bed.

Christian smiled up at him. "Thank you."

"You’re welcome." He leaned down and kissed her on the mouth.

"Are they still fighting?" Her grandmother asked.

Christian looked to Brayden.

He was glad to see she had color back in her cheeks, but she was still too pale. It would be a long damn time before he didn’t have to know where she was and what she was doing. He held her hand, rubbing the back of it, noting how dry it was. He’d bring her some lotion.

"Dad and your granddad," he answered the question he could see on her face. "Mom and Clara--"

"That is Grandmiere to you," the elderly woman interrupted.

Brayden smiled. "Mom and Grandmiere have been making wedding plans. Your brother and I duked it out, not that I blame Josh."

Her grandmother muttered something about self-blame. Hell yes, he blamed himself. Why wouldn’t he?

If her brother blamed him for Christian getting hurt, that was fine by him. At least they were speaking to each other now. And Joshua Montreaux knew where Brayden stood with the guy’s sister.

"Anyway, Dad and your granddad are fighting over where the wedding will be. You have an opinion?"

She smiled and nodded.

"You do?"

She looked at her grandmother and shared another smile.

Clara’s eyes were as gray as her granddaughter’s. She said, "All Montreaux women wed at Montreaux Meadows. It blesses the union, or so legend goes. You don’t want to refuse a legend, or blessing do you?"

Brayden thought for about five seconds. His mother might not believe in the family curse, but he’d washed Christian’s bloodstains off his hands. "No ma’am. I think a Southern, spring wedding will be wonderful."

Christian shook her head.

"No?" he asked.

"No," she whispered. "No later than Valentine’s day."

He smiled. Fine with him.

"How about on Valentine’s day?"

She nodded and smiled.

Clara stood. "I think I’ll leave you two to iron out details." She patted Christian’s bed. "Don’t worry, I’ll be back."

Brayden waited until the door shut, then he sat on the bed beside her.

"A Valentine’s wedding. Are you sure?" he asked.

"Well, I’m not drunk, and I miss playing house with you."

He smiled. "Do you?"

She nodded and he leaned over and kissed her lips.

"Well, then it is house we shall play."

THE END

Unedited Excerpt from Ghost Cats: The Revenge

By

Coming soon from NCP

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

 

The girl was dead.

Lorenzo Craigen looked down at what remained of her and hoped to hell he was wrong. But in his gut he knew he wasn’t.

Sael was back.

And there was no damn reason the son of a bitch should be.

"What do you see?" one of the locals asked him.

Craigen didn’t answer. He tuned the young man out and looked around at the blood-soaked ground.

His gut tightened. This should have been a sacred place and was, once upon a time, long ago, and forgotten my most. The strong scent of pine and clear air was muffled and wrapped in the smell of death.

Cool New Mexico winds blew down off the Sangre de Cristos and he zipped his jacket against the early autumn air.

"Chief Neilson said we should call you in," the young officer continued.

Craigen looked over his shoulder at the earnest and worried face. The nametag read White.

They seemed to get younger, smarter in some ways and completely naïve in others. It was in the still soft features of the officer’s face.

"This your first?" he asked White, turning back to study the ground around what remained of the victim.

"Y-yeah."

Craigen studied the break in the branches and weeds along the ground, all around the victim as if she’d been circled. The grasses were flat. The twigs of bushes were broken until about thigh high on him.

He stood. "You gonna tell the me where you tossed your breakfast so we don’t waste time or money running tests on your puke?"

"Yeah," he said with an edge of belligerence to hide shame.

Craigen walked around the clearing, heard the stream gurgling. Too damn peaceful of a place to have killed her. Or it should have been. Where the water ran off the mountains. Not too far from Sipapu, or any of the many little tourist rest stops along the way.

"Good. My captain reamed my ass for not doing that on my first. It was in a meeting that I remembered that what they were listing was what I’d had for breakfast. Smarter than I was starting out." He stopped and looked over at White. "How the hell did you find her?"

White’s blond brows beetled. He looked like he should be on a poster ad for some designer underwear or some such shit. Kid looked out of place in the black uniform of the Taos Police Department.

"Got a call into the station, said there was a body out here near this mile marker by the stream."

"Man or woman."

"Hell if I know. Janice, the Chief’s secretary answered it." He shrugged. "I live out here and Chief called me to ask me to check it out. I called him, he called you."

And he’d be here shortly, Craigen was sure. Neilson would want this wrapped up quickly, and he had no qualms turning a murder investigation over to the state boys. Fine with Craigen. Neilson had enough to keep him busy by keeping the mayor of a tourist-economized town happy.

"You did good securing the scene, White."

"Thanks."

Craigen walked toward the gurgling brook, watched as the sunlight shot white streams of light off the ripples.

Should have peaceful.

He took a deep breath, and caught the faint whiff he’d thought to never smell again.

Nothing would be peaceful until Sael was caught.

 

* * * *

 

Reya hurried into Horizons. "What? What the hell is going on?" She flipped a strand of her long, straight black hair behind her shoulder and dropped her bag by the register area.

Mica sat crying on the stool behind the counter. Charlie leaned over from a display case and whispered,

"Her friend was killed."

She started to say, "Oh is that all?" But thankfully thought better of it. The way Mica had blubbered all over the phone, she’d thought someone had been found dead here in the gallery, or maybe everything had gotten stolen, or perhaps something had happened to Mica herself.

Not to seem insensitive, but live as long as Reya and deaths came and went. She’d lost too many in her life to be truly affected by the inevitable.

However, she could say none of those things. Once, in a time forgotten, Reya would have felt Mica’s pain.

Instead, she walked to the girl and pulled her close. "I’m sorry, Mica. Is there anything I can do?"

Mica shook her head, the short mess spiked and tousled from Mica’s hands running through it. It was the ever-popular bedhead look that Reya would never understand nor like, not that hairstyles mattered at present.

"It was her roommate at the Institute," Charlie whispered.

"Oh, honey." She awkwardly patted the young girl’s back. She wasn’t the best person in these sorts of situations. "Why don’t you take the day off? Tomorrow too, and the next day. As much time as you need."

Charlie nodded. "Yeah, you don’t need to be here."

"But I-I just can’t go back to the dorms. Everyone is so upset and they all want to ask me questions.

Like I know anything. And the policeman said they’d stop by and talk. I’d probably have to answer some more questions." She shuddered.

Reya studied the girl, stepped back and went to get her a cup of coffee. When she returned, Charlie, bedecked in his normal Docker pants and pullover, was cleaning the display cases.

He looked up and rubbed the back of his hand over his short goatee.

Reya handed a cup of coffee to Mica. "I thought you didn’t like your roommate. Is this the same one?

Or was it another?"

School had started several weeks ago. Mica had complained about the new roommate, but Reya didn’t know if that one had been replaced or not. Last year, Mica went through three.

She shook her head. "No, this one was new. Just moved in last week after Holly moved out."

"Oh."

"Her name was Tanna." Mica wiped her eyes again, her face crumpling. "She was really great and we’d already gotten really close, ya know? Same interests and classes. Her mom called here a bit ago and was crying."

Reya took a deep breath. "Tell ya what. If you don’t want to go back to the dorms, then why not go through the boxes of inventory in the back? See what all we need and check the emails for any interesting queries or photos that Horizons might be interested in."

Mica nodded and slid off the stool. Her sandals slapped against the hardwood floors, echoing in the shop.

Charlie huffed out a breath. "She’s been like that since the phone rang earlier. I think it was the roommate’s mother."

"Understandable." Reya bent and picked up her purse, briefcase and bag. "Anything interesting as of yet?"

Charlie shook his head and went to the next display case. "Nope. But then, technically, we’re not open yet, so who knows what else the day may bring."

"If we’re lucky, hopefully, nothing."

"Funny thing about expectations and days and what fate deals out. They rarely all work together as we’d like them too."

Charlie had the annoying habit of spouting off sage advice as if he memorized little Confucius quotes.

And Reya hardly needed Charlie to let her in on that little secret. She’d been around plenty, long enough to know that life, or in her case, lives were never what was expected. They were filled with twists and turns and unexpected surprises.

Her motto--expect the unexpected.

She worked through another hour, rearranging things, setting things as she wanted them, then rearranging them again. She needed to change the bedding in the window display case to something lighter. The sun had already faded the black to gray in places. Then again... Something shimmered along her nerves. She glanced out the window, scanning the street, but nothing alerted her.

"What is up with you? Is it this thing with Mica?"

Reya pulled herself back and rolled her eyes. "You’re such a sympathetic soul, Charles."

He hated his proper name. Which was why she wasn’t surprised to see his frown. "I am sympathetic. I just meant--"

"I know and no that’s not.... At least..." She shrugged. She couldn’t explain it to Charlie. He was--she tilted her head--normal, as far as the locals went.

The man had worked for her for three years since she bought the property from him. He’d leased the spot as an art gallery, but she’d wanted more, a shop, a jewelry boutique. But she had liked that he was settled and somewhat established even if he was tired of the day to day and wanted something else.

Strange. He’s just sort of stayed on.

He was the same height as she, had that distinguished, gray-templed and character-lined male face that could fall anywhere between forty and sixty. His eyes were a sharp hazel.

If she were guessing, she’d have to say almost fifty. Maybe a couple years older.

"What?" His salt and peppered brows beetled.

"Oh, um..." Reya shook her head. "You look nice today."

He flashed her a smile full of charm and the hint of the devil. "Black and beige are my colors, I’ve always said."

"How old are you?"

"Is that a come on?"

"Charles."

"Fifty-two." He straightened one of the black velvet busts that held a strand of citrine and topaz, wrapped and linked in bronze. He licked his lips. "Care to go out to dinner with a fifty-two-year-old?"

If she were what she appeared, the man was old enough to be her father. But then things were never what they appeared to be.

She grinned and ran a hand down her tunic jacket. "I’ll think about it."

The bell above the door chimed and energy tingled along her skin. She knew without turning around who stood there. Like a bolt of lightning, electricity arced through her, shooting from her head, swimming along her nerves, and twisting her gut to pool at the base of her spine.

Reya swayed and closed her eyes, taking a deep breath. And she smelt him.

Slowly, she turned. He stood there in his starched Wrangler jeans, boots and button down, a gun clipped to his belt along with a badge. His hair was a bit longer than most, just grazing the top of his collar. His face was still the same, not too narrow, nor wide or blunted. It was a strong face, chiseled with sharp angles and lines. The dark of his eyes shimmered as his gaze met hers, and she couldn’t help running a look down the long, lean lines of him.

She sighed.

"Hello, Reya."

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