Read Taken by the Beast (The Conduit Series Book 1) Online
Authors: Conner Kressley,Rebecca Hamilton
“A club,” he answered flatly. “Or it will be in two weeks.”
“A club?” I asked, looking around at the dark, dank void, thinking about how big of a turnaround two weeks would have to bring for this to be anything even close to such a thing.
“Yes,” he said, setting me on a lone, dusty stool. “For dancing, mingling … you know, general merriment.”
“
General merriment
?” I asked, giggling inwardly. “Why would you even want a club in a town like this? There’s no market for it.”
“There are young people here,” he answered. “This will give them someplace to go. Someplace safe,” he finished under his breath. “Let me get you ice and get you on your way.”
“You’re a ray of sunshine, aren’t you?” I said as he disappeared off into a backroom.
Looking around the space, I saw it was even more pathetic right side up. There was no way this guy was going to turn this place into a club in two weeks. It would take someone of immense taste and talent to pull that sort of thing off. It would take someone who had been around the block a time or two, someone who knew what she was doing and had the foresight to get it done, someone like …
My gaze fell on a ‘Manager Wanted’ sign.
While it was true I didn’t want to stick around, this was the sort of thing that could really help me out. I could help Mr. Deadpan get this place up and running, make a little scratch, and then take off once I got my legs back under me. Plus it would give me something to do so I wouldn’t feel like such an anchor around Lulu’s neck.
“You’re looking for a manager,” I yelled into the distance.
“No,” he yelled back.
“You’re not?”
“I am, but it’s not you,” he answered, still in the other room. “There’s a form and protocol. But that aside, you wouldn’t be a good fit.”
“Me?” I asked, narrowing my eyes. “I spent my formative years in New York hobnobbing with Hollywood starlets and athletes. And you think I wouldn’t be a good fit? I can’t see why, given that it would take me all of fifteen minutes to give this place a fighting chance.”
“Look, I understand you’re—”
A loud rumbling noise came from the back, like thunder or a large machine malfunctioning.
There was silence for a long time after that—so long that I leaned forward and shouted, “Hey, bud, you okay?”
The noise amplified and a muffled “Goddamn it!” came from the back room. Then there was a loud clanking and crash, as if a set of dishes had shattered against the floor. This guy was going to get himself killed.
I slid off the stool, careful not to put much pressure on my ankle. I moved forward. Sure, it ached a little, but if you could walk a runway with half a placemat and light bulbs on your head (thank you, Fall line 2011), hobbling around on a banged up ankle was cake.
I inched toward the backroom, following through the hallway the man had disappeared into. It stretched out a hundred feet and then split off left and right. Making my way to the ‘fork’, I passed a room on the right with a huge padlock on it. The door was wooden and looked even older and more neglected than the rest of this place. But that wasn’t the strangest part. There a symbol, like a crescent moon, painted red with a few dots on the inside.
“Damn!” came another shout from the left.
I turned to find him on his knees, soaked to the bone, jabbing at what looked like an ice machine. A plastic bag, no doubt where my ice was intended to reside, lay empty on the floor.
He growled. “This blasted contraption!”
“Blasted contraption?” I asked, arching my eyebrows.
“You shouldn’t be standing,” he said, giving me the briefest of glances. “I don’t have the time or resources for a lawsuit, so if you could kindly limit the amount of damage you inflict upon your body, I would appreciate it.”
“I bet you’re popular,” I said, leaning against the wall and taking the pressure off my foot.
He stood, his dripping shirt clinging to his hulking chest. Well, damn. He probably actually
was
popular, regardless of how he treated people.
He pressed his hands against his knees and shook his head. “I can’t get this ridiculous machine to work.”
“I gathered that.”
“There are so many buttons, and so many different kinds of ice. Who would want their ice to be crushed, anyway?”
“Me.”
“Figures,” he muttered.
“So how are you going to run an entire nightclub if you can’t even fill a bag of ice?”
He threw his hand toward the machine. “No one could work that stupid thing.”
“Press power twice,” I said, “
then
hit crushed, and then enter.” I hopped over to the machine and filled the bag the way I had a million times back when I was still working at that restaurant before my agent landed me my first real gig. “It’s pretty standard. It works the way you think it would.” I gave him a quick look over and amended, “Well, maybe not the way
you
think it would.”
His mouth fell open, but he snapped it shut it before mumbling, “I have a soda machine on the way.”
“I can work that.”
“And an espresso maker.” This time his raised his eyes to me. He looked defeated and hopeful all at once.
“I can work that, too.”
“What if I put a stipulation in your contract saying you can’t sue me for throwing yourself down the stars?”
“I didn’t throw myself anywhere, but sure, I’ll sign it.” I grinned. “Boss.”
He picked himself up off the floor and stepped out of the room and into the hall with me. “Abram Canavar,” he said gruffly—or perhaps he was just bitter over conceding I knew my way around a club. “When can you start?”
“I can’t believe you,” Dalton said, taking a sip of his coffee and staring at me over the brim of his mug. His blond hair hung lazily in his eyes, and though I couldn’t see his lips, there was no doubt in my mind he was smiling.
I tried a swallow of my cappuccino, but it was way too hot. “I’m not sure what you mean.”
“Yeah, you do.” He wiped his mouth. “Not to toot my own horn or anything, but it isn’t every woman who’d make me wait two weeks for a date.”
He swept his hand to indicate his body, and I couldn’t argue there. He was dressed down, in a gray t-shirt and corduroys; his pistol dangling visibly from his hip sure as hell didn’t hurt. He was, indeed, not the type of guy you expect to wait for you. But I wasn’t going to tell him that.
I lifted my eyebrows and grinned. “Did you really just use the phrase ‘toot my own horn’?”
“I know. It’s sexier than you thought, right?”
Coming from him, yeah, just about anything would be sexier than I expected. But the whole situation was still strange. I mean, this was Lulu’s little brother. I basically watched him grow up. He’d at least traded in his tastes for earth worms for expensive coffee. And seeing how we were flirting shamelessly, apparently my tastes had changed, too.
“Who said this was a date?” I asked, half toying with him and half genuinely not sure if I wanted to commit to that idea.
“Nobody,” he admitted, plunging a stirrer into his coffee and twirling it. “But nobody came out and said the sun was up, either. Doesn’t mean we don’t need shades. We’re both grown now, Char. Let’s not pretend we don’t know what’s going on here.”
He bit his lip, which was admittedly much sexier than I would have liked it to be.
“I’ve been busy,” I said, trying—and failing—not to
stare at him. “That’s why it’s taken me so long. It’s not because—” I cleared my throat. “I don’t know if Lulu told you, but I got off my ass and actually found a job.”
Well, the truth was that I
fell
on
my ass and got the job, but he didn’t need to know that.
“She said something about it,” he answered, his tone firmer than I expected.
“Something wrong?” I asked, leaning in ever-so-slightly.
“That night club, right?” he asked, running a hand through his hair.
“That’s the goal,” I answered. “The truth is, it was barely a pit in the ground when I got there. The guy who owns the place wouldn’t know contemporary from alt contemporary if the theming slapped him in the face.”
Dalton’s eyes glazed over, and he blinked. “I have no idea what you’re talking about.”
“Which is why
you
shouldn’t open a night club, either,” I said with a reprimanding point of my finger. “But I’ve made good headway since I got there. I actually need to get back before long. Tonight is the grand opening, and there’s—”
“I don’t think you should work there anymore,” he said, then he swigged his coffee again.
I narrowed my eyes. “Excuse me?”
“I mean, I’m sure you’re good at what you do—great, probably. But I’ve been around since the last time we’ve seen each other, Char. I know things now—things I sometimes wish I didn’t. Places like that and girls like you … they don’t mix.”
Suddenly, I felt acutely aware of what I was wearing, of every inch of exposed skin and every fleck of makeup. I was right back there with that drunkard, being judged by my clothes and appearance.
“
Girls like me?
What the hell is that supposed to mean?”
“I’m sorry. That came out wrong.” He shook his head and pushed his coffee aside. “This case I’m on … it’s getting to me more than it should.”
“The girl on the missing poster?” I asked.
“I’m not really allowed to talk about that,” he answered.
“Do you have any idea who did it?” I asked, my heart racing. He knew about this more than I did, and we were both avoiding the elephant in the room—that the missing girl looked a helluva-lot like me.
“There are a lot of awful people in the world, Char.” His hand fell and hovered over his pistol. I wondered if he even realized he was doing that. “And they tend to congregate in those sorts of places … clubs...the nightlife scene.”
“I meant it when I said I could take care of myself,” I said, splaying my hands across the table. “It’s cute that you’re worried about me. Really, it is. But if you’re curious about what kind of girl I am,” I said, harkening back to his earlier phrase, “I’m going to tell you that I’m not the sort who gets scared off easily. All this talk of missing girls and howling things in the woods—it just doesn’t do much for me.”
“Doesn’t much matter what it does for you. Still poses a threat to the women in our town.”
“Uh-huh,” I said, ticking my head to the side. “Well, buddy, let me tell you. I’ve lived in scarier places than New Haven.” I had to hold back a giggle at the thought.
Big Bad New Haven
.
Yeah
. This single murder was the most action they’d had in decades. “I’ve lived in the city, Dalton. I’ve worked the graveyard shift for a year and a half. Had pervs glaring at me with every step down the runway—”
“This is making me feel better, Char,” he said, his mouth setting into a grim line.
“My point is, this ‘small town gird your loins’ nonsense isn’t going to change the way I sleep at night.” I huffed. “Now this might not be the best job in the world, and Lord knows Abram is far from the best boss,” I said, thinking of his cold attitude and barking nature, “but the pay is good, and it gives me something to do besides take up space at your sister’s house.”
“Okay, okay,” he said, spreading his hands. “I get it, and I totally respect your decision. Now get back to that part where you were calling me cute.”
I chuckled out loud, surprising myself. “I didn’t
call
you
cute. I said what you were doing was sort of cute. Sort of.”
“Potatoes, tomatoes, Char. Don’t run from your feelings.” He smiled and rested his chin flat against his hands, which were folded on the table. Suddenly he looked like a puppy—cute, harmless, and ready to show submission.
“Don’t give me that look,” I told him, noticing the way his bright eyes got wider, rounder, and even more adorable.
“You didn’t mind it when we were kids,” he teased.
“It didn’t have the same effect back then.” I nearly choked on my words. I was determined not to let him affect me. At least not until I knew where these feelings were leading us. “Look, I don’t like to talk about this, but it’s been a rough year for me. Losing my mother, losing my job—it took a toll on me. And while your sister has been better to me than I have any right to expect, coming back here hasn’t been the best thing in the world for me, either. Everyone’s moved on around here. Their lives are different … fuller. I have to find something to do with myself. This might not be the place I want to be forever, but it looks like the place I’m going to have to be for a while. And I can’t just keep mooching off your sister.”
“You could always move in with me,” he said, wiggling his eyebrows. “I’m sure I could find
something
to keep you busy.”
“Slow your roll, Puppy Dog.” I leaned back, resting my arm on the back of my chair. “Usually, a guy takes me to dinner before inviting me to move in.”
“Deal!” Dalton said, snapping his head upward. “I’ll pick you up Friday night at seven.”
“Hey, wait a minute!” I said, sitting forward again. “That wasn’t—”
“Too late. I already accepted.” He finished off the last of his coffee. “And I don’t like to be disappointed.”
“Fine,” I mumbled, following him to the door, “but—”
Before I could finish my thought, he turned toward me, putting us inches apart. The tension rendered whatever I was about to say pointless. My breath caught in my chest. I couldn’t deny my attraction, even if whatever was happening between us felt … wrong. Would I ever be able to see him as something other than my best friend’s little brother?
“There’s something about you, Char, hiding right under the surface,” he said quietly into the silence between us. “I’m not sure how I missed it before.”
I could say the same for you
, I thought, blushing uncontrollably.
His arm reached past me, bringing his face a hair’s breadth from mine. Oh, no. This wasn’t good. He was going to kiss me, and I so wasn’t ready for that.
My hands shot up to stop him. “Dalton, wait!”
He pulled his arm back, coat now in hand where it wasn’t before. “Just had to grab my jacket, Char.” He winked. “See you soon.”
Then he left, and I stood at the door for a good ten minutes waiting for my heart to stop beating so wildly in my chest.