Stolen Kisses
We reached the house just before nightfall.
Chance seemed subdued. If I knew him, his mood
related to Saldana coming to his rescue. That had to be a blow to
his ego. There was no telling how he’d react to finding out I died
in the woods; if it hadn’t been for Jesse, I would have still been
lying there.
After a quick perimeter check, we went inside.
The place seemed secure, but I was glad we’d taken care of the
wards. It occurred to me that we might want to mark the windows
too. I didn’t know if it would prevent glass breaking—probably not,
in fact—but it might keep bad things from crawling over the
sills.
I put Butch down, and he went into the kitchen
to see if there was any food in his dish. Shortly thereafter, I
heard crunching, so I guessed there was. No question, I should tell
Chance what had happened.
Instead I mumbled, “I’m going to see if I can
coax some hot water out of the shower.”
“I’ll check the water heater,” Saldana offered.
“The pilot light may have gone out.”
“Thanks.”
Jesse knew I didn’t care about the shower. I was
beyond that. I needed comfort and privacy, but I leaned toward the
latter because the former would involve choosing someone to console
me, and then I would feel guilty about the guy I didn’t turn to. And it was hard enough for me to
open up in the first place.
I found a pair of worn jeans in my backpack and
a clean shirt, a pink cotton gauze blouse that should’ve clashed
with my hair, but didn’t. Then I unearthed my polka-dotted cosmetic
bag. I’d need soap and shampoo if I went through with the notion of
cleaning myself up. Too bad I couldn’t hose myself off where it
counted. I could still feel the dark thing’s presence, like it was
peering at us from the forest.
The house is warded, I
reminded myself. Nothing can get in.
Then I remembered the way the warlock had sent
the undead thing to crawl around and around the house, breaking our
wards at Chuch’s place with its fetid blood. I shuddered. Surely
Butch would let us know if anything like that arrived. The one good
thing I could think of about being in Kilmer—we were so far off the
grid, I couldn’t imagine Montoya tracking us down via mundane
means, and it would take him a while to hire a decent practitioner
to employ any finding spells.
Thinking along those lines just gave me another
set of worries. Did we leave blood at the scene
back in Laredo? Anything they could use to track us? But the
crime scene at the compound had been such a mess that it would take
a CSI unit weeks to sort out the bodies. There shouldn’t be any
mundane clues.
When I went down the hall toward the
old-fashioned bathroom, I saw Chance sitting in the parlor. He
stared at his folded hands, much as he’d been doing on the cot in
the makeshift jail. I knew something was bothering him, but I
lacked the emotional fortitude to help him through his issues when
I had so many of my own.
I stripped out of my clothes and left them piled
on the bathroom floor. For long moments, I let the water run and
stood staring at my left palm. The blisters around the brand looked
oddly like petals adorning the flower pentacle, and the mark
throbbed steadily in time with my heartbeat.
It meant something. When I’d touched my mother’s
necklace, it triggered a spell, but I didn’t know exactly what it
had done to me—or who left it for me to find. I wanted to think it
must be something good, and that it came from my mother, but given
the dark place where it sat waiting, I couldn’t rid myself of the
fear I now carried a taint.
In response to that thought, I stepped into the
shower beneath tepid water, taking my soap and shampoo with me. The
water felt strange and soft; it lathered too much and took at least
two minutes to rinse out of my long hair. Soon the stream went from
lukewarm to chilly, so I soaped up quickly and got out even faster.
This wasn’t the place to sit down under the hot water and fret. I’d
have to do that somewhere else.
When I emerged, dripping onto the cold tile
floor, I realized I didn’t have a towel. In this place, we’d been
lucky to find any linens at all. I didn’t want to wiggle into my
clean clothes all wet, and I shied from the idea of drying off on
the dirty clothes I’d just removed. Dammit, I was tired of living
like a squatter.
Someone rapped twice on the bathroom door. I
cracked it and found Chance waiting, face averted. In his hands he
held a fluffy white towel; I recognized it from the Kilmer Inn. I
could feel a smile building at the corners of my mouth. As I lusted
for that symbol of civilization, I pretended nonchalance.
“You stole a towel?”
“Three,” he corrected with a half smile. “They
owe me more than three towels too. I paid three hundred and forty
bucks for one night! You want this or not?” He held it beyond my
reach so I’d have to open the door to get it.
“Oh, I want it.” Maybe he didn’t think I’d do
it, but I swung the door wide and stood there, water trickling from
my hair, running in rivulets along my bare skin. I showed nothing
he hadn’t seen before, but I succeeded in shocking him.
Chance went still as I snagged the towel and
wrapped it around myself. “You have no shame,” he said
huskily.
“None,” I agreed with a smile that felt
wicked.
I shouldn’t tease him. I really, really
shouldn’t.
“And a mean streak wide enough to put the
Mississippi to shame,” he went on, still studying the curve of the
white cotton covering my breasts.
I nodded. “That’s true too.”
Life sparked through him. I couldn’t explain it,
but he shook off whatever had been bothering him before. A smile
shaped his sinfully lovely mouth.
“You have ten seconds to close the door,
Corine.”
“Or what?”
I watched his mouth move as he counted. Nerves
clenched my stomach in a good way. I needed the distraction, and
I’d probably like whatever he meant to threaten me with.
Nine.
I didn’t shut the door.
Quick as a lightning strike, he knotted his hand
in the slick rope of my hair and spun me toward him. Breath left me
as he buried his face in the damp skin between my neck and
shoulder. As he nuzzled, he let out a little growl that thrilled me
in ways I shouldn’t allow.
“You smell so good,” he whispered.
I hadn’t even put on the frangipani perfume he
loved yet. This was just me, and somehow, his reaction stirred me
all the more, making me feel like he craved the unadorned essence
of me. What woman didn’t want to feel she could drive a man wild
with only her skin and her smile? Power thrummed through me in a
heady rush.
I used to find him an immensely civilized lover.
I used to fret about making myself attractive to him, making him
desire me. Right then, he didn’t seem remotely in control. Molten
gold sparked in his tiger’s eyes. Maybe I wasn’t ready to commit,
but I wanted him. I always had.
Chance backed me into the bathroom, spun me, and
pressed me up against the bathroom door. I felt every inch of my
nakedness in contrast to his sleekly clothed muscles. He’d grown
even harder since I left.
When his mouth took mine, he didn’t ask if I
wanted it, or if I’d permit it. Heat sparked between us like two
live wires, and I came up on my toes.
Part of me knew how easily he could finish
it—rip off the towel, unfasten his pants, and do me up against the
door. He kissed me, all urgency and raging need. As our lips clung,
he rocked against me, letting me know how close he was to doing
just that.
A kiss became ten, and then twenty. He kissed me
like he had nothing better to do for the rest of his life, and I
twisted against him. I didn’t know if I wanted more or to get away
from his wonderful, merciless mouth. He ran it down my throat to my
shoulder, alternating lips and teeth, and I wanted him to do that
everywhere.
I shook, but he trembled
too.
His breath came in great, harsh gulps as he
pulled me against him, tighter. My hips moved. I probably wouldn’t
have objected if he had raised me up and finished us. But he
didn’t. He continued to tantalize us both with sweet, slow
movements, hip to hip.
“I want you so,” he whispered. “You have the
softest damn skin”—he ran his fingertips down my bare arm—“and your
hair, I haven’t had you with this hair. You’re fire and ice, and
everything about you is burning me up.”
I think he wanted me to give permission to take
the last step, but I couldn’t. Before that happened, I needed him
to tell me things it would never occur to Chance to say. He’d
broken his sexual restraints, but he had emotional bonds to slip as
well.
I also needed to know his gift wouldn’t kill me
before breakfast the next morning.
No matter how much we wanted each other—and I
could no longer deny that was the case—we had issues to resolve. I
let out a shivery breath and couldn’t resist taking one last bite,
right behind his ear. He’d always been a sucker for that. Chance
tensed, letting out a sound that half excited, half alarmed
me.
He dropped his head on my shoulder and groaned.
“You’re not going to say yes, are you? Heartless. You’re a
heartless woman.”
“I’m not the one who knocked on the bathroom
door while you were naked. Seems like you shouldn’t have put
yourself in line to be tempted.”
“That happens when you breathe,” he muttered.
But he stepped back, taking my hand instead of my whole body.
Before I could warn him, he pressed a kiss to my newly branded
palm.
A whimper escaped me. “That’s not good for
me.”
“Jesus, Corine. What happened? Did you handle
something? Didn’t Saldana know to get you the salve?”
I barely refrained from snapping at him,
No, we came to save your ass instead. I
didn’t want to tell the story naked. Some things were bad enough
without being made worse by extraneous circumstance.
“I’ll tell you later,” I muttered.
Secrets that I shared with Jesse didn’t sit well
with him. Jealousy flared in his lambent gaze, quickly suppressed.
“Just . . .” His hands fisted at his sides. “Don’t let me catch you
making out with him again, or I swear to God—”
Talk about a bucket of cold water. “So that’s
what this is about. Jesus, Chance.”
Apparently he hadn’t been overwhelmed with
desire. This was vintage Chance. He wanted to mark his territory,
so he put on a passionate display. And I should have known the
difference. After all, he found me plenty resistible until Jesse
showed up.
“That’s not why I kissed you.”
I flung open the bathroom door. “I need to get
dressed.”
I never learned. I berated myself as I rubbed
the towel all over, trying to forget how easily he’d made me want
him. I hated being stupid, and I never seemed to learn from my
mistakes where Chance was concerned. By the time I had my clothes
on, I only wanted to smack him a little bit.
I stomped out of the bathroom, hoping Jesse had
told him about our encounter in the woods by now. By Chance’s dead
expression, he had. My ex looked cut to the core that I hadn’t
bothered telling him what happened. I’d died and hadn’t seen fit to confide in him.
And it hurt him. I saw the shadow of it in his
eyes. It was more than the fact that I’d shared something with
Jesse—that he’d saved me. Chance felt iced out, treated as
peripheral when he wanted to be center stage with me. Well, good.
Let him see how it felt to be manipulated and kept in the
dark.
And Jesse was a son of a bitch too. He would’ve
sensed what was going on in the bathroom, so he’d informed his
rival how he saved my life, a talent Chance seemed to lack. In
fact, sometimes he actively endangered it. He’d probably also
reminded Chance how he rode to my rescue, coming a thousand miles
to save me.
“You’re both assholes,” I said aloud.
They jumped. There was oil in the next room if
they wanted to play at Greco-Roman wrestling. Hell, if they enjoyed
it, they could always settle down together, and leave me
alone.
Before either of them could reply, three things
happened at once.
Thunder boomed so loud it shook the house, but
there was no resultant lightning, no onslaught of rain. The night
felt deadly quiet.
A young girl’s voice called out, “Is anyone
there?”
And a dead man’s radio began to play.