Must Love Fangs (Midnight Liaisons) (21 page)

BOOK: Must Love Fangs (Midnight Liaisons)
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He grinned back at me. “Perfect.”

I flopped down on the couch, suddenly too tired to do anything else.

“Why don’t you rest? I’ll go make the kitchen look a bit more lived in and make myself a snack.”

As he left, I noticed he had one of my sleep tees tucked under his arm. What did he want with that? Interesting.

Before I could ask, there was a knock at the door and then the doorbell, just in case we hadn’t heard them the first time.

“They’re here,” I called to Josh, dragging myself off the couch. I peeped through the peephole and grimaced at Posey’s bright pink outfit.

I quelled my nervous breathing. With Josh here, there were bound to be questions. This would be the first date I’d ever introduced to my dad . . . and we weren’t even dating. Josh was just a friend helping me out. My real date wouldn’t rise until after dark, because he was undead.

That thought disturbed me.

I swung the door open and smiled brightly. “Hi, Dad, Posey.”

“Marie-Pierre!” my father said. He leaned in to give me a kiss, then stepped into the apartment. “Baby, you’re not going to believe what we got you in Vegas.”

“Oh, I’ll believe it,” I said dryly and welcomed Posey in with an awkward hug. “Hi, Posey.”

“Hello, Marie-Pierre,” she cooed in a thick south Texas accent. The way she said my full name with her drawl made it sound
Pee-uh-air,
which I’m pretty sure was not what my mother had intended when she’d named me. “How are you doing, sweetie?” She examined my pale face, then brightened. “Look at you, so pale. The gothic look is so 2009, honey. I brought you some makeup samples. There’s a new line I’m promoting, and I think it’ll bring out the apples in those cheeks for you.”

My father beamed. “Isn’t she thoughtful?”

Oh, yes. Telling me that I looked like hell was so thoughtful of her. But my dad loved her, so I smiled brightly. “That’s awesome. Thanks, Posey.”

Josh hung at the back of the room, waiting to be introduced. I looked over at him and his easy, amused grin, and felt suddenly flustered. Dad was looking at me expectantly, and Posey had a lunatic grin on her overly made-up face.

“Well?” Dad said. “Introduce us to your friend,
ma petite puce
.”

“Sure,” I said, moving to Josh’s side. “Dad, Posey, this is . . . my friend. Josh.”

Josh casually put his arm over my shoulders, and I gritted my teeth.

“Marie . . . Pierre?” Josh asked, glancing over at me, and I could hear the chuckle in his voice.

“Her mother was French-Canadian,” my father explained. “It’s a family name. For some reason, Marie doesn’t like it.”

“I think it’s lovely. And it is so nice to meet you, Josh,” Posey said, sweeping forward to hug him in a cloud of perfume. “Marie-Pierre has told us so much about you.”

“Has she now,” he said, taking the hug with no hint of awkwardness, though his nostrils flared from her heavy scent.

My dad moved forward, extending his hand. “Good to meet you, son. Have you two been dating long?”

“We’re not—” I began.

“Really keeping track of things,” Josh said with an easy grin. “Taking it one day at a time.”

“Nothing wrong with that,” Dad said and gestured at Posey. “We brought donuts and coffee and orange juice. I hope that’s okay?”

I smiled. “That sounds great. Thank you.”

Posey unloaded makeup and skin-care samples on me while Josh and Dad set out the food. They cleaned the puzzle off my dining room table, and I could hear the two men chatting in low voices. Josh was already at ease around my father. I supposed that was a good thing, but it bothered me. If they fell in love with him, it would just make things more difficult.

“Breakfast is ready,” Dad called cheerfully, saving me before Posey could start dabbing a wrinkle cream on my face.

As I moved forward, Dad threw his arm over my shoulders and hugged me close. “You look tired. You’re not working too hard, are you?”

Josh stilled, watching me.

“Just been putting in some long hours,” I told him with a faint smile. “I’ll catch up on my sleep this weekend.”

“Don’t let them work you too hard. Those overnights are rough on the body.” He turned to look at Josh. “I’m counting on you to keep an eye on her. She has a one-track mind.”

“Oh, I know,” Josh said, taking a sprinkle-covered donut from the box.

My dad chuckled.

• • •

I watched as Josh charmed Posey and my dad. He told them funny anecdotes about his security job, never mentioning that he bodyguarded vampires, of course. He told them about his big family, all brothers, and how Beau had raised him as a teenage boy when their father had passed away. How we’d met while I’d been at work, and how he’d talked me into going out with him.

My dad loved him, of course. It was impossible not to when Josh was on full-charm offensive. He made Posey blush with his obvious compliments, but she didn’t mind those in the slightest. And they laughed and chatted as Josh devoured almost a dozen donuts on his own. They didn’t seem to find that unusual.

After my dad and Posey left, Josh turned and grinned at me. “They’re really nice. I like them.”

I said nothing.

“I think they like me, too.” He sounded almost smug about it.

“Of course they do,” I said crankily. “You charmed their socks off.”

He ignored my bad mood and cleared the plates off the table. “You should really tell your dad, you know. It’s not right to keep a secret like that from someone.”

I gritted my teeth. “It’s for the best.”

“No, it’s not,” he said, coming to my side. He put his hands around my waist, tugging me in close. “It’s not okay. You’re sick and you’re hiding it from him.”

“That’s right,” I snapped, jerking out of his grip. “And it’s none of your business.”

He looked at me in surprise. “What’s wrong with you?”

“All of this,” I told him, gesturing at my dirty apartment, the empty plates. His dirty shirts tossed over the couch. It bothered me, just as much as his ease sliding into my personal life did. “Just because you met my father doesn’t mean you have the right to . . . to . . . ” I struggled to find the right word for exactly who Josh was to me.

“To act like we’re a couple?”

“Yes,” I exploded. “We’re not! We can’t be!”

His eyes glinted, hard. “So what was last night about?”

I stared at him, surprised. “You, of all people, should know that it wasn’t anything serious.”

“ ‘You, of all people’?” He raised an eyebrow, and I got the distinct feeling that I’d hurt him. “Is that some sort of jab at me?”

It was, and it wasn’t nice of me. I deflected. “You know this thing between us can’t be. Set up shop in Greenland permanently? Destroy the Alliance? Ruin your brother’s life and Bathsheba’s? Force the agency to close? No, thank you.”

“How about you try trusting me?” Josh said with a growl.

“How about you trust
me
to decide what’s best for me?” I fired back. “What’s best for my father? You don’t know us. You only think you know me. Just because we slept together once doesn’t give you the right to decide my life now. I told you that
this couldn’t be anything. I never lied about that.”

He glared at me. “You’re making a mistake.”

“Why? Because it doesn’t fit your plans?”

“My plans—”

“—can change now that you’ve nailed me. Congratulations.”

Josh’s gaze darkened. “You think that’s all I was after?” he said in a harsh voice. “That I just wanted to get a little tail?”

“You said yourself that you’re a predator and you like to chase the prey. What else could it be?”

His mouth curved in a sneer. “What else when it comes to
me,
right? Is that what you wanted to say?”

I didn’t reply. It was.

The realization dawned on his face, and I watched his expression harden. “You know what your problem is, Marie? You say that you don’t want to hurt others, but I think that’s not it. You don’t trust anyone not to hurt
you,
so you just cut everyone out of your life.”

“You have me all figured out.” I gave a slow, mocking clap of my hands. “Way to go.”

He shook his head and picked his cap off the counter. “You want me to go? Fine. I’m gone.”

“Fine! Then go.”

Josh gave me one last hard glare before slamming out my front door. I watched him go, arms crossed over my chest, feeling righteous in my indignation.

It was only after he’d gone that I wondered if he was right.

In pushing everyone away, was I protecting me . . . or them?

Chapter Twelve

M
innie. It is good to see you again,” Andre said, standing up as I approached the table. “You look beautiful, as always.”

Such a thoughtful lie. I looked like hell and knew I did. No amount of makeup could cover up the hollows under my eyes, and I looked weak because I was too tired and sick to even contemplate eating. I just wanted a long damn nap. Maybe a good cry. Unfortunately, I had to sit here and romance a vampire. I gave him a smile, hoping it looked more enthusiastic than I felt.

It wasn’t Andre’s fault that he wasn’t Josh, after all.

I’d taken care to look as good as I could. I’d worn a black cocktail dress that tied behind my neck and left a lot of shoulder and cleavage bare. I’d paired it with tall, open-toed heels and worn my hair twisted up, a few tendrils curling at my neck. When his glance went there, I knew that it didn’t matter how big the circles under my eyes were. I might as well have waved a red flag in front of a bull.

He took my hand, and I felt that disconcerting
oddness of his cool flesh against my warm skin. He leaned in to kiss me and I panicked, averting my face so he kissed my cheek. “It’s good to see you, too,” I said, air-kissing his cheek in response.

He pulled away and gave me a scrutinizing look, but he didn’t comment on my reluctance to kiss him on the lips.

It was stupid, I knew. But the thought of kissing him again made me uneasy. Josh wasn’t here tonight to stop him if he drugged me again. I glanced around the crowded restaurant. “No bodyguards tonight?”

“Oh, I have one,” Andre said easily, moving to pull my chair out for me. As I sat, he leaned in and whispered in my ear. “But I didn’t think you liked the last one, so I changed things up a bit. I want you to feel easy in my presence, Minnie.”

I smiled, not sure if I was relieved or saddened that Josh wasn’t here. I hadn’t seen him and he hadn’t called, but why should he have called? I’d been horrible to him. “That was sweet of you to think of me, Andre. But he didn’t make me nervous.”

“Didn’t he? You watched him all night.”

My cheeks felt hot. Well, now. How to answer that? “Just wary, I suppose. Most men don’t need a bodyguard for their dates.”

“I am not most men,” he said and gave me a disarming smile.

“No, you’re not,” I said boldly and gave him my most direct, intense smile. Time to kick things up a notch. “That’s what I like about you.”

“Is it?” he chuckled, as if amused by my response. “You’ll be pleased with tonight’s bodyguard, I think.”

“Oh?” I scanned the wine menu. I’d need something strong soon. My stomach was churning and my head ached, a sure sign that I was going to start hallucinating. It made me anxious, and alcohol would help that.

“Yes,” Andre said, distracting me. “I’m surprised you didn’t notice him right away.”

I glanced up. “Why?”

“Because he’s one of the otter clan. Should be a cousin of yours.” His dark eyes watched me intently.

Oh, shit. I scanned the restaurant again. It was small and elegant, but the tables were only half full. There was no one seated by himself, and no one that seemed like a bodyguard. Unease fluttered in my stomach.

“Is there a problem,
Minnie
?” Andre asked coolly.

I looked back at him and realized he was no longer giving me that charming smile. Damn it. The gig was up. He’d figured me out. Or he knew something was wrong. Either way, I was fucked.

Utter panic shot through me, and I felt the urge to burst into tears.

Instead, I took a deep, calming breath and laid it all out on the table. “I lied,” I told him quietly. “I’m human and I’m looking for someone to turn me. That’s why I looked you up.”

“I see,” he said mildly. “And your real name?”

“It’s Marie.”

He studied me, leaning back in his chair as if he’d been the king of the world, deciding what to do with one of his subjects. After a long, long pause, he said, “Marie is a better name than Minnie.”

That . . . didn’t sound like rejection. “I like to think so.”

“Are you the Marie that works at the agency?”

“I am. That’s how I found you. I am a member of the Alliance, if you want to see my ID.”

He flicked a hand, as if brushing away a ridiculous thought. “So, tell me, Marie, what am I going to do with you?”

“I still want to date you,” I told him quickly.

“Correction. You want to be turned.”

I swallowed. Now I felt like a supplicant instead of the one in control of the date. And I felt like a whole lotta prey at the moment. But I needed to be turned. “Yes.”

“I am four hundred years old, my dear girl,” he said, and gone was the soft, laughing notes in his voice. In its place was utter boredom. Sheer jadedness. It struck me how well he’d been masking it all this time. “And in all that time, I have never turned someone to be my companion.”

My heart seized painfully. No! I refused to give up. “You hadn’t met me, though,” I said boldly, taking a page from Josh’s book. “I’d be honored to be your first.”

“Would you?” he said, and I thought I saw a hint of amusement on his face.

Before I could say more, the waiter dropped by, all pleasantries and smooth rolling voice as he began
to recite the evening’s specials. Andre, who was all lazy smiles now, ordered an expensive bottle of wine for us and sent the waiter on his way.

“For someone who wishes for me to turn her, you were quick to avoid my kiss, darling Marie.”

“You didn’t tell me before that it was an aphrodisiac,” I pointed out.

“No, I did not,” he admitted, still amused.

“Then you’ll understand why I avoided it tonight. I need my wits about me.”

BOOK: Must Love Fangs (Midnight Liaisons)
2.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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