Riding the Storm (14 page)

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Authors: Candace Blevins

BOOK: Riding the Storm
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Chapter Twelve

 

 

 

Kendra had an email from Eric when she awakened, asking if
they could make arrangements to tell Ranger what she was, noting it was going
to be hard to explain why she was only around at night, and why she didn’t eat
with them.

Eric was the one who’d need to be told about the existence
of werewolves, and she’d have to get the local Alpha’s permission before
telling him. Not to mention, she couldn’t tell him about Ranger, specifically,
no matter what. Only Ranger could tell his own secret.

With a sigh, she replied to the email, saying since Ranger
would only be in town a few days, it might be better for her to just stay away,
to cut down on questions.

Thirty minutes later she felt the buzzing vibration she’d
get when someone bound to her was considering telling the secret. She followed
it, knowing where it would lead before she tracked its origin.

Since Kendra didn’t have a mind link with Eric and couldn’t
warn him without phoning him, she let Abbott know what was going on and asked
him to let Eric know he was treading on dangerous ground.

And then it hit her. Eric was just another form of the bad
boy she used to be attracted to. The danger element was different, as he got
his jollies by hang gliding and parachuting instead of breaking laws and rules,
but the need to defy society’s norms was still there, as was the need for the
thrill of an adventure, the jolt of adrenaline.
Damn
, maybe she hadn’t
outgrown her bad boy fascination, after all.

She also realized she didn’t have anything to do tonight,
and decided to take a trip to The Library and check on progress.

As she was pulling out of the driveway her cellphone rang,
it was Eric. “I didn’t tell him anything, I was just thinking in my head that
if I let him test the game for me it might be obvious to him what you are. As I
was telling him the storyline, I considered how he might figure things out,
since he’s so suspicious of you. I wasn’t going to tell him.”

“You were laying the foundation for him to figure it out.
It’s like Abbott said, the binding keeps you from telling in any way —
even by dropping clues and hints. Look, if Ranger’s going to be here long term,
we’ll figure something out, but he said he’d be here less than a week. Please
trust me not to intentionally put you in a position to keep an impossible
secret.”

“Okay, I just really wish I could talk to him about…
everything.”

“I’m sorry, Eric. Abbott will say it’s out of the question
unless Ranger moves here. Okay?”

He sighed as he said, “Okay. I thought I might take him to
TBC tonight for some pool, want to join us?”

“Sure. I’m going to run downtown and check on The Library,
and then I’ll come back to TBC.”

As she hung up, Kendra wondered if Eric would ever feel
comfortable allowing her to bind him enough for a mind link. She hadn’t liked
having to ask Abbott to talk to him, but she’d also known a phone call right
then would’ve put Ranger on edge, because he’d have heard both sides of the
conversation with his supernatural hearing. As it stood right now, Ranger
didn’t know whether Eric knew she was a vampire, but if she’d called him, he’d
have known. For now, she was playing her cards close to her chest and giving
the werewolf as little information as she could get away with.

If she were honest with herself, she also wanted the mind
link with Eric because she was so used to having it with people she was
intimate with, and she missed the connection. However, Eric had asked her not
to do anything else metaphysical, and she would honor his request.

She shook her head as she drove, reconsidering her decision
to stay away from Norris. Perhaps she should’ve taken him up on his offer to
visit New York. He was less likely to break her heart than Eric, and Norris had
almost undone her with their last kiss.

An hour and a half later she pulled into TBC, pleased with
the way The Library was coming together. The sight of Eric’s Range Rover in the
parking lot made her all warm and fuzzy inside, and she chided herself for her
emotions. She needed to keep a little more distance, so she wouldn’t get hurt
so bad if he decided he couldn’t deal with the realities of a relationship with
a vampire.

She smelled him as she walked in the door, and her gaze
followed the spicy sent of testosterone and sunshine. He was leaned over the
table, lining up his shot, so fluid, graceful, strong, and confident. She was
suddenly ravenous, so she only gave him a quick peck on the lips, and told him
she wanted to go in the back and check on things, and would return in about ten
minutes.

Kendra went straight to the vampire room and ordered eight
ounces of blood. She drank it quickly, and then downed a double-shot of bourbon
before getting a bourbon on the rocks and heading back out to Eric and Ranger,
to watch them finish their game.

“Do you play?” Ranger asked as he racked the balls after
beating Eric.

“I can hold my own.”

Eric handed her his cue, and she motioned for Ranger to
break as Eric pulled her a few steps away, wrapped his arms around her, and put
his mouth to her ear to ask, “You fed after you got here, didn’t you?”

She glanced at Ranger, wondering if he’d heard. The music
was loud, and there were a lot of people, so it was a toss-up.

Either way, she needed to answer Eric. She was surprised he
could already tell, as most human partners and companions took months to learn
someone enough to tell when they’d recently fed. “Yes, and I’m impressed you’ve
learned so quickly how to tell.”

“Who did you feed on? I was here, you could have fed on me.”

Was he jealous? Or did he just want the experience? She put
her hand on his arm, gave it a small squeeze. “We have bagged blood in the
back. I poured some in a glass and drank it. I didn’t feed on anyone —
not like you’re thinking, anyway.”

“Oh. You have blood stashed at all the bars? The health
department would have a fit.”

Kendra laughed. “No, just the ones that employ a lot of
vampires, and the health department will never know.”

Kendra walked back towards Ranger and smiled at him. “Go
ahead and break, let’s see what you’ve got.”

She couldn’t tell by his look whether he’d been able to hear
their conversation. She had a feeling he hadn’t broke because he was trying,
though.

Kendra played a good game, but Ranger won. While Eric and
Ranger were playing the next game, Kendra heard a disturbance and looked across
the room to see two girls arguing. The bouncer was paying attention, but she
knew Mike would have trouble if the girls started fighting, as he wasn’t good
at restraining girls so they couldn’t hurt him — he was always too gentle
with them.

Mike headed towards them, using the right voice and words to
try to calm the situation, but it wasn’t working. When one of the girls jumped
the other, Kendra headed over to help, arriving as one of them clocked Mike in
the jaw. When he grabbed her to restrain her, the girl’s boyfriend jumped in as
well, and Kendra told Mike to handle the boyfriend as she grabbed the girls.

Within a few seconds she was twisting an arm behind the back
of both girls, forcing them both to bend forward, unable to do anything else.

After a bit of a scuffle Mike had the boyfriend handled in a
similar fashion, and the rest of their party had decided to stay out of it.

Kendra told the group, “We aren’t throwing all of you out,
just these three, but if they rode with any of you then you’re pretty much
obligated to get them out of here. The options are to leave quietly, or we call
the police and press charges.”

She tried hard not to roll her eyes as the group decided who
was staying and who was leaving, and then she walked both girls out, their arms
still held high on their back. When they started fussing again, she twisted
their arms a little more, and they shut up.

Mike stood with her and watched the cars pull out of the
parking lot, and then the two went back inside.

When Kendra returned, Eric was trying to explain to Ranger
how Kendra was used to working as a bouncer, and perhaps this was why she’d
been able to take Ranger down the other night. Ranger glanced at her, and
Kendra was almost certain Ranger had figured out Eric knew she was a vampire.

“Eric,” she said as she neared, “don’t try to soothe his
ego. I had the element of surprise, it isn’t likely I’d be able to take him
again. Finish your game, and try to beat him this time so I can play you.”

She pinged Abbott, and when he responded, she asked him,
What
did you find out about Ranger from Aaron?

Top level guy. Aaron couldn’t tell me what Ranger had
done for the government, but said he pays him nearly as much as Nathan, which
means Ranger has serious skills, contacts, or both.

We should probably ask Randall for permission to tell
Eric about werewolves, so we can let Eric know Ranger is aware of what I am.

Since he’s one of Aaron’s guys and isn’t a member of the
local pack, we can do it with Aaron present, and won’t technically need
Randall.

Can you set it up?

I’ll see what I can do.

Kendra played Eric in the next game of pool and beat him,
which meant she got to play Ranger again. She decided to let Ranger win, so he
was playing a game with Eric when Abbott walked in with Aaron and Nathan.

Kendra saw them first and said, “Aaron, Nathan, it’s good to
see both of you. It’s been a long time.”

Aaron hugged her and said, “It’s good to see you as well,
lovely as always. Is there somewhere we can take Eric and Ranger to talk?”

Abbott stepped forward and offered his hand to Ranger. “I’m
Abbott Hamilton, I own the place and have an office in the back. Why don’t we
let Eric finish your game with Kendra while the rest of us have a chat in
private?”

Ranger gave Kendra an appraising look before answering
Abbott, and as the group walked away, Eric asked, “They’re going to tell him?”

“I assume, but I don’t know. Let’s finish the game.”

Five minutes later, Abbott was in her head.

Ranger doesn’t want Eric to know he’s a werewolf. The
official story will be we’ve told Ranger what you are. If Eric asks about why
the other two men were here, you’ll say they know of the existence of vampires,
and since Ranger knew them, I figured it would be easier if they were present
when Ranger found out. Give us another five minutes so it’ll seem we had enough
time to do the binding, and then bring Eric back.

As soon as they walked in Abbott’s office, Ranger stood and
faced Eric. “You’re dating a vampire, Eric? Have you thought this through?”

“Yeah, I have.” Eric reached for Kendra’s hand as he said,
“She’s still a person, Ranger, and I care about her.”

“You care about a bloodsucking vampire? Really? Can you hear
yourself? Does she bite you? Drink your blood?”

Kendra’s temper didn’t flare often, and if Ranger had been
human and saying this, it wouldn’t have bothered her. However, coming from a
werewolf? Someone also not human? She wanted to pummel him. Instead, she told
him, “Those are personal questions, Ranger, and none of your business.”

“You know what I am to him. I have a right to try to talk
sense into my flesh and blood.”

The rules about outing people were pretty specific, and the
consequences dire, but in this instance, Kendra saw a way to manipulate Ranger
into outing
himself
as supernatural. Ordinarily, she respected people’s
privacy, but he wasn’t going to stand there and slam her for being a vampire
when he was a fucking werewolf.

So, she stepped forward and took a swing at him, knowing his
instincts would kick in before he considered the ramifications of fighting her
in front of Eric. She moved slow enough Eric would be able to keep track of
what was going on, and would give Ranger time to react.

The werewolf didn’t disappoint, and he reached up to catch
her fist as he swung with his other arm. Kendra ducked and swept his legs, but
he jumped and managed to stay on his feet as Kendra aimed to punch through his
stomach.

Ranger sailed eight feet through the air and hit the wall as
Aaron and Abbott stepped between them to be sure the fight was over.

Kendra held her hands up and took a few steps back, smiling
at Ranger as he glared at her.

“Ummm, Ranger?” Eric asked. “I’ve seen you in the sun, and I
know you eat food, so you can’t be a vampire, but I don’t think a human
could’ve done what you just did, or still be breathing after that punch.” Eric
looked to Kendra and asked, “Can someone explain what I just saw?”

The entire room looked to Ranger, as he was the only one in
the room with the authority to explain.

Clever
, Abbott told her telepathically, but she
didn’t respond.

The room was silent for a solid minute, and Eric asked
again, “What just happened?”

He was looking at Kendra, and she chose her words carefully.
“I told you my secrets, Eric. That’s all I’m at liberty to share.”

“You did that on purpose,” Ranger growled. “I could have
your ass for this.”

“Lost my temper and took a swing? Nothing purposeful about
it, Ranger. I apologize for losing my cool — it’s a rare occurrence, but
you managed to push my buttons.”

Ranger sat heavily on a chair, looked at Aaron, and said,
“Since I’m here with Randall’s permission, one of you should be the one to tell
him.”

Nathan raised his eyebrows and said, “To be clear, you’re
saying you’ve changed your mind and wish for us to divulge your secret?”

Ranger nodded and said, “Yes.”

Aaron looked to Eric and said, “What we’re about to tell you
will fall under the binding Abbott put on you.”

Eric nodded, and Aaron continued. “If vampires exist, it
probably doesn’t take a stretch of the imagination to realize other
mythological beings are also real. Your uncle is a werewolf.”

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