Authors: t
thoughts. “I was just—um, what were we speaking of? Oh! Excalibur.” For a
moment, she thought Gavin looked annoyed. She turned to Mr. Smith. “I’ve
always wanted to write a romance. Maybe I could use these dragons in an
urban-fantasy story?”
“Oh, my dear! That would be wonderful!” Mr. Smith clapped his hands,
looking pleased. Gavin didn’t look pleased at all.
Chloe glanced at her watch and then jumped up. “It’s almost 2:00 am! If I’m
going to get this story in by the time the presses roll at 3:00, I’d better get
going.” She looked down at Mr. Smith’s notes. “I would really like to take a
better look at your research. Could I come back tomorrow?”
“Of course you may! I’d be delighted!”
“Thank you.” Chloe turned to Gavin who was nearly glowering at her. “And I
intend to work with you too.”
“I work better alone,” he said, “but if I find out anything about your friend, I
will let Mr. Smith know. Ye can check with him.”
She smiled sweetly. He wasn’t going to get away that easily. “Have you
forgotten that I told you I’m not letting this go? You may be able to get all
the police help you need, but as a reporter, I have leads that are—ummm,
perhaps a bit shadier, if you know what I mean. I can ferret out
information—”
“I will not allow you to put yourself in danger, Miss Whitney. I will take care
of this situation.”
For a moment, she wasn’t sure she’d heard correctly. Gavin wanted to
protect her? OMG, it was like he really had stepped out of a romance novel!
Her fanciful imagination won out over her practical side. “Are you some kind
of knight-in-shining-armor come to save helpless damsels?”
Gavin looked startled and then a corner of his mouth lifted up. “I suspect
you are hardly helpless, in spite of your swoon earlier.”
Her swoon? Swoon? Who used words like that in real life? She was hardly
helpless either, having taken care of herself while her mother painted, wrote
poetry, and waitressed. She knew what the real world looked like—maybe
that was why she loved romances. Things always turned out the way they
should.
“You are right. I am not helpless, which is why I will be an asset to you in
finding Jake’s killer. And now I must go.” She turned, catching her heel on
the frill of an Oriental scatter rug. She lurched left, managing to right herself
at the last minute before bumping into the sofa—not exactly an alluring,
sensual exit for Gavin to remember.
But it wasn’t until she was in her not-so-reliable old car that she realized he
hadn’t answered her question. Then she shook her head, laughing at herself.
Knights-in-shining-armor only existed in romance novels.
If she kept mixing it up, she’d be the one at John-Peter Smith hospital.
****
Smith’s mansion the next evening and paused at the top of the stairwell. His
sharpened vampire senses told him she was still here. He had taken the
manuscript and cloistered himself in Smith’s basement vaults all day—a
place he naturally preferred to the suite of rooms that Smith had given him
when he insisted that Gavin be his guest for the duration of the search for
Lucas and the other missing persons—hoping to avoid Chloe Whitney.
He wasn’t being a coward—God’s Blood! He fought in more battles than he
cared to remember over the centuries—but it was better to err on the side of
caution while he studied the enemy.
Not that the girl was the enemy, exactly. She was unnerving. He had tried
mesmerizing her for her own good so she wouldn’t remember any ghastly
details, but she’d been unfazed. Only once had he been able to interrupt her
train of thought and that had been temporary. She’d come back at him
every time, instead of submitting to his mind.
Maybe submitting was not the right word to use, considering he’d seen the
invitation in her eyes. He’d have to be a blind mortal to have missed that.
But he was on a job here and he didn’t mix business with pleasure. Ever.
Gavin couldn’t afford to be exposed for what he was. Besides, the minx
wasn’t even his type—all gamin, with those huge, waif-like aqua eyes that
reminded him of the North Sea and that wild, orange-spiked hair! He
preferred older women—refined, regal, elegant—who understood discretion
and were quite content with being sated when he was finished. Women who
succumbed to his ability to make them forget who he was and remember
only vague pleasure. He always left them with that.
Chloe hadn’t succumbed to any of his efforts last night. Why was she
immune to mesmerization? He would have to tread warily. Maybe she would
be gone in a day or two.
But that hope was dashed when he entered the dining room.
“I’d love to help you on this project!” Chloe was saying.
Gavin blinked. Were there streaks of pink in that short, orange hair tonight?
And what in all that was indecent was she wearing? Shorts that barely
covered her delectable little behind, revealing slender legs and a cropped top
that exposed her midriff when she moved her arms, which was frequently
since she punctuated her conversation with animation.
The effect wasn’t lost on the other man in the room. Gavin’s instincts alerted
to the stranger with her and Smith. The man had the build of a football
player without the bull neck and classical good-looks that would make most
women notice him. Self-assured, he was smiling at Chloe. “It’s always nice
to meet a fellow writer.”
‘Yeppers!” she said excitedly. “I can get you some publicity in the paper
about your book and I’ll use your research on the history of these weapons
and turn it into a historical romance!”
Mr. Smith noticed Gavin. “Come in, Inspector Myles. I’d like you to meet
Alan Caldwell, my biographer.”
Caldwell studied him, a bit too closely. “Inspector?”
“Yeppers,” Chloe said again. “He’s with Scotland Yard. Isn’t that just too
much?”
Caldwell’s blue gaze turned cool. “Why would someone from Scotland Yard
be in Texas—if I might ask?”
Gavin wished that Chloe had not blurted out that piece of information, but
before he could reply, Smith interceded.
“My dear boy,” he said to Caldwell, “I am hiring only the best to try and find
dear Sara and Sophie—and the men.”
“I see. Have you had any leads?” Alan asked casually.
There was nothing casual in his appraising look though or the tenseness of
his body. Gavin felt the fine hairs at his nape prickle and his fangs poked at
him. Repressing them, he inhaled subtly. The man was human and he
detected no trace of tainted
blood. Still, there was something about the man that he didn’t trust—and it
had nothing to do with Miss Whitney’s friendliness with him. Her spicy scent
wafted toward him—warm, rich blood coursing through her veins—with an
effort, he kept his fangs retracted.
“I have not had time to pursue any,” Gavin replied and diverted the subject.
“What kind of book are you writing?”
“It’s going to be Mr. Smith’s memoir!” Chloe answered instead. “It actually
started out as a magazine piece on the medieval weapon collection, but
there’s a treasury of collectibles and Alan thought putting it all together
would be a good read!” She smiled at Alan. “I’m excited to help you edit it
too!”
They must have had quite a while to talk if they’d agreed to work together.
Caldwell looked extremely pleased and Gavin wondered if editing was all he
had in mind. Not that it was Gavin’s business. Still, Lucas had said Smith
used an alias.
“Isn’t a memoir going to give your real identity away?” he asked.
“That’s the best part!” Chloe interrupted again. “Alan’s going to keep Mr.
Smith’s name and make everyone wonder who he might really be!!!” She
smiled at the man again and turned back to Gavin. “Intrigue always helps
sell books!”
Gavin wondered what Miss Whitney would do if she had any idea of how
much ‘intrigue’ was really going on. Lucas was a werewolf, McCain was a
warlock. Sara was a witch and the vet must have had some paranormal
abilities to have attracted Pendragon. They all disappeared. Had they found
the spear and the sword? Were those weapons safe or still hidden? Balor
was very much aware that Smith was connected to the search or he would
not have had Sigurd lurking in the vicinity.
The phone rang, cutting off his thoughts. Mr. Smith glanced at the caller-id,
grimacing. “It’s the police,” he said. “I’ve already told them all I know.” With
a sigh, he answered, and then handed the phone to Gavin. “They want to
speak to you.”
Gavin listened a moment. “I will be there immediately,” he said and ended
the call.
“What’s going on?” Chloe asked.
“They just want to tie up a few loose ends about the murder,” he said as he
walked toward the door. “I’ll probably be late,” he said to Mr. Smith, “so I’ll
let myself in.”
Chloe got to the door before he did. “I’m going with you.”
“You are not.”
“I am. Just try and stop me.”
If she only knew how easily he could do just that. He could even mesmerize
the whole bunch of them until he got back, but then there would be time-
perception problem. “It is only procedures we’ll be going over.”
Her lower lip puffed out and Gavin was suddenly aware of how entirely
kissable her pouty little mouth was. He looked away. “It is official business.”
“It has to do with my friend, Jake. I am going.”
“I’ll be glad to drive you to the station,” Caldwell said, coming up alongside
them. “I’m parked right out front.”
Gavin narrowed his eyes. There was something off about Caldwell that he
did not trust. It wasn’t wise, either, to let Miss Whitney be alone with the
man in a dark car—especially not dressed like she was. She was too tiny to
ward him off if he got physical.
“All right,” he nearly growled. “The police will not appreciate a circus
arriving. Do nit blame me if they make you wait outside.”
She smiled sweetly. “I will nae,” she said and took his arm, sending an
alarming sense of blood-lust searing through him. That hadn’t happened in
centuries—he’d thought he’d conquered that emotion with the rigorous
Templar training he’d gone through.
Squelching the urge to taste her, he opened the door and they walked out
into the night.
****
lot. The floodlights cast long shadows in the car, catching his face partially in
light and partially dark like some stark painting. With his inky hair and
nearly black eyes, he looked almost other-worldly which was highly erotic.
Her breasts grew heavy, her nipples tightened, and he hadn’t even touched
her. Anywhere.
In fact, Gavin had been silent the entire drive over. He hadn’t looked her in
the face when she spoke to him either, although she supposed his excuse for
keeping his eyes on the road since he wasn’t used to driving on the right
side was plausible. Still, when she laid her hand on his arm, she felt his
muscles tense.
“Hey, I won’t bite,” she teased.
He started, jerking his arm away and nearly jumped out of the car. She
frowned and reached for her door handle, only to find him there, opening it.
How had he gotten around the car so quickly?
Captain Johnson was waiting and waved them through security. Gavin
gestured to a bench across from the captain’s office. “You can wait there.”
Chloe didn’t move. “No.”
“Yes.”
She shook her head stubbornly.
“Be a good girl,” he coaxed. “Do not make trouble for me.”
“Be a good girl?” she asked incredulously. “Should I just wag my tail and
wait for you to toss me a bone?” Geez. For a guy who looked so hot, how
could he be so dense? “This is America. Women here do not take orders
from men.”
The captain looked from one to the other and raised a brow.
Gavin sighed. “It was a request,” he said in the patient tone a parent would
take with a petulant child. “Police matters are confidential.”
“Like hell. We’ve got a Freedom of Information Act.” She fumbled in her
purse, searching for her news credentials. “Here, hold this,” she said as she
shoved a cosmetic case, hairbrush and mirror into his hands before he could
protest. She rummaged some more. “I know they’re in here.” She began to
remove a book and a scarf when the captain cleared his throat.
“Are you a reporter, Miss—?”
“Yes, I am. Aha! Here it is.” She pulled the identity out and held it up.
“Chloe Whitney. The Morning Sun. Jake Baxter was my friend—“
The captain gestured her inside before she finished. With a triumphant
smile, she proceeded Gavin into the office and sat down . He loomed over
her, bending down close enough that she could feel his warm breath tickle
her neck. Chloe had the wild thought that maybe he was going to kiss her.
Her stomach fluttered and she instinctively licked her lips. For a moment, his
dark penetrating gaze lingered on her mouth and then he laid her cosmetics
on her lap. “I will not be needing these.”
She flushed. Of course he wouldn’t. Chloe quickly stuffed them back in her