CHAPTER FIVE
June 23
Alexis Gray strode toward the Fish Shack,
fuming. Her long legs ate up the distance across the pier to the
restaurant, which was far more elegant than the name implied, and
her waist-length hair, which was streaky blond this week, crackled
with static electricity. That, along with a low mutter of thunder
in the distance, warned that a squall was coming in over Newport
Harbor.
If I’m lucky, the storm’ll
sink his damn yacht with his lying dick caught in the
tiller.
Alexis glanced down the marina, where her
suckfest newly ex-boyfriend, Aaron Worth—aka the Worthless Prick
who’d screwed his way through the Riviera—had tethered his pride
and joy front and center for everyone to admire. The yacht, that
was, not his dick, though it turned out both pieces of equipment
had been around the world a few more times than she’d thought.
Meanwhile, she’d been holed up in her beachside office, managing
the scum-sucking cheater’s portfolio for him and making him money
hand over frigging fist.
Which, it turned out, had just given him less of
a reason to come clean with her.
Or maybe he was right; maybe he’d tried to tell
her it wasn’t working and she’d been too stubborn to listen, too
determined to keep their sinking relationship afloat. God knew,
Isabella called her mule-stubborn more often than not.
Smiling at the thought of the godmother who’d
raised her from the age of two, Alexis shoved aside the thoughts of
her ‘‘sorry about the triplets in the bedroom; how am I fixed for
liquid assets?’’ jackass ex and opened the door to the Fish
Shack.
The smell of garlic and fresh bread greeted her
first, followed closely by the maître’d, Tony. ‘‘Your usual table,
Miss Gray?’’
‘‘Not in a million years.’’ That was another of
those front-and-center things dictated by Aaron, who liked to sit
smack in the middle of the huge window facing the boardwalk. ‘‘I’m
meeting Izzy today.’’
Tony’s smile broadened, though she wasn’t sure if
it was because she was guyless for lunch, or because her godmother
made pretty much everyone smile. He waved through the dining area
to a covered porch that faced the sea. ‘‘She’s in the bar.’’
‘‘Perfect.’’ Alexis headed in that direction,
thinking that she could always count on Izzy to know what she
needed even before she did. Today, that included a drink before
noon.
In the bar area, Izzy sat at the farthest table
down, close to the water and the incoming storm. When she saw
Alexis, her dark eyes lit and she raised an umbrella-topped glass.
‘‘Cheers. The wind just changed.’’
‘‘You have no idea.’’ Alexis hiked herself up
onto the stool opposite her and waved to the bartender. ‘‘Two of
whatever she’s having, along with a basket of fries and the catch
of the day.’’
Izzy’s lips twitched. ‘‘Hungry, dear?’’
Dark, petite, and graceful, with a wonderfully
calm way of dealing with life, Izzy was the diametric opposite of
Alexis in so many ways, both physically and emotionally, that it
was a wonder they got along. Then again, maybe it was because of
those differences that it worked so well, even though just being
near her godmother made Alexis feel huge, ungainly, and loud, like
a flatulent elephant in an antiques store. She’d long ago decided
she loved Izzy too much to mind, though, even if she still envied
her long dark hair and olive-toned skin, and the way she never
seemed to age or doubt herself.
‘‘I’m starving.’’ Alexis glanced through the
clear plastic sheets the waitstaff had pulled over the screened-in
porch, preparing for the squall. ‘‘Not much sea for such a heavy
sky.’’
‘‘Give it ten minutes.’’ Izzy paused. ‘‘How are
things?’’
‘‘Complicated,’’ Alexis said, wondering if her
godmother had somehow known early that morning, when she’d called
with a lunch invite, that her goddaughter’s life was going to have
taken a big dump in the great cosmic toilet bowl by noon. ‘‘Let’s
just say the weather’s not the only thing that’s going to be
changing around here.’’
Izzy idly rubbed her inner right forearm in a
habitual gesture, pulling the skin tight across a pair of old,
faded tattoos. One was of a disembodied hand touching a smiling
face; the other was a stylized symbol that might’ve been a vaguely
reptilian head beneath a puff of smoke.
Alexis had expected questions, or sympathy, or
something after her dire pronouncement. Instead, Izzy had a
seriously weird look on her face.
‘‘Iz?’’ Alexis asked after a moment. ‘‘Are you
okay?’’ Her problems with Aaron took a quick backseat to a spurt of
worry. She’d lost both her parents before her second birthday. If
she lost Izzy, too . . . Panic backed up quickly, closing her
throat and making her force the words. ‘‘What’s wrong? Are you
sick?’’
Izzy shook her head but remained silent as the
bartender delivered their drinks. When he was gone, she said
quietly, ‘‘You know all those stories I told you growing
up?’’
‘‘Of course,’’ Alexis said, puzzled. Granted, the
first words out of Izzy’s mouth weren’t I went
to the doctor, or I have cancer, but
she wasn’t sure she was relieved yet. Her godmother’s expression
was too strange. ‘‘What about the stories?’’ she asked, then as a
thought occurred: ‘‘Are you finally thinking of getting them
published? ’’
Izzy had all these great stories about gods and
ancient magical warriors. More detailed than Tolkien, more
mythos-based than Star Wars . . . Alexis
had always thought the book would sell in a heartbeat. God, she
could practically see the cover, with a handsome, dark-haired
warrior who wore a hawk’s insignia at his throat, and—
She jolted, then coughed and grabbed for her
drink to cover the depth of her response to the image. Where the
hell had that come from? More important, where can I meet him?
‘‘Not exactly.’’ Izzy reached over and took her
god-daughter’s right hand, turning it palm up to show the lighter
underside of Alexis’s forearm, where she’d neglected her tanning.
‘‘What if I told you that all of those stories were true?’’
Cara Liu frowned at her father, Carlos. ‘‘I’d
say, ‘Bullshit, ’ but you raised me better than that.’’ She pulled
off her Stetson and messed with her long, dark hair, feeling the
different texture of the white section in front, the one her
friends called a skunk stripe. Beneath her, Coyote, the blue roan
gelding she’d raised from a foal, shifted his weight and flicked an
ear back as though sensing her distress but realizing she wasn’t in
any immediate danger under the wide-open Montana sky.
The horses stood on a low ridge that sloped down
to the farthest fence line of the Findlay Ranch, which Carlos had
managed for more than two decades. It was Cara’s home. Her
sanctuary. She’d come back for the summer intending to take stock
of her life. Instead, it looked like she needed to deal with the
distinct possibility that her father was losing his mind.
She glanced at him, searching for a sign that
this was some sort of elaborate setup, maybe for a welcome-home
party. Hell, she’d even settle for one of his famous ‘‘I feel like
you’re going in the wrong direction’’ talks.
At sixty-three, Carlos sat straight in his
saddle, his spine stiff as always, as if he were forever trying to
combat his five-foot-nine-inch stature. His dark hair was short and
gray-shot, his skin deeply tanned with the color neither of them
lost completely even during the long winter months. Now, as she’d
seen him do so many times before, he stared off toward the horizon,
where blue-gray mountains rose up to touch the low-hanging clouds,
and the look in his eye made her think he was seeing something else
entirely.
‘‘This is a joke, right?’’ she said. ‘‘I’m being
Punk’d. Where are the cameras?’’
Carlos shook his head. ‘‘No cameras, baby, and no
joke. Twenty-four years ago King Scarred-Jaguar and the
Nightkeepers sacrificed themselves in order to close the
intersection, but in the last minutes before the spell took hold,
terrible creatures came through and killed all but a few of their
children.’’ The faraway look in his eyes darkened. ‘‘I was there. I
saved and raised the child entrusted to me. Now the king’s son has
called the survivors home.’’
‘‘This is home,’’ Cara
protested automatically.
‘‘Give me your hand.’’
‘‘Seriously, where are the cameras? Who put you
up to this? It was Dino and Treece, wasn’t it? They haven’t
forgiven me yet for that thing with the goat.’’
‘‘Your hand, Cara Liu.’’ He was deadly
serious.
A tremor started deep down inside Cara’s stomach
and spread outward. She’d known her father had been depressed since
her mother’s death eighteen months earlier, but she hadn’t realized
it’d gotten this bad. She should’ve come home more, should’ve
called more.
What the hell was going on? And what was she
supposed to do with a grown man who’d confused fiction with reality
but otherwise seemed like his old self?
Using her knees, she cued Coyote to move up
alongside her father’s sorrel, so the two horses were nose-to-tail
and she faced her father squarely. She saw sadness in his eyes, and
regrets. She didn’t see craziness, but what exactly did crazy look
like?
Wishing she’d taken Abnormal Psych last semester
instead of Ancient Mythology—most of which she’d already known
anyway—she held out her right hand, expecting him to grab it, maybe
give her something he thought proved what he was saying.
Instead, he drew the jade-handled knife he’d worn
at his waist for as long as she could remember, and sliced the
blade sharply across his palm. Blood welled up as Cara gasped.
Before she could recover, he grabbed her hand and cut her as
well.
‘‘Daddy!’’ She tried to
jerk away but he held her fast, gripping her wrist tightly as she
struggled. ‘‘Stop it. Let go!’’
Coyote shied sideways, but her father hung on to
her wrist, dragging her from the saddle as the blue roan bolted
off. She fell in slow motion, her father lowering her to the ground
and following her down, still holding her wrist. Once they were
both kneeling, he shifted his grip and clasped her bloody hand with
his.
She thought he whispered, ‘‘I’m sorry.’’ But she
couldn’t be sure, because there was a sudden roaring noise in her
head, and the grass seemed to surge beneath her as he spoke in a
language she’d never heard before, but that seemed to call to
something deep inside her when he said, ‘‘Aj-winikin.’’
No cameras, she thought,
gasping for breath as an invisible pressure grabbed onto her,
holding her in place. It’s for real. Oh, God.
Oh, shit. Oh, shit.
Terror flared alongside pain.
Carlos lifted his face to the sky and raised
their joined hands so their mingled blood ran down the insides of
their forearms, where he wore a couple of old tattoos. ‘‘Gods!’’ he
shouted now in English, maybe for her benefit, maybe for his own.
‘‘Accept this child as your servant!’’
Wind erupted from nowhere, lashing the hot summer
air against them, around them, forming a swirling vortex with them
at its center. Cara’s straw Stetson blew off and her hair whipped
free, plastering itself to her face and getting in her mouth when
she screamed, ‘‘Daddy!’’
Then, as if that scream were a sign, the wind
funnel abruptly reversed itself, sucking upward into the cloudless
sky. And disappearing.
In the utter silence that followed, which was
undisturbed by even the rustle of branches or the cry of a hawk,
Cara scrambled up, eyes bugging. ‘‘You’re losing it. Or I am. Maybe
both of us. Mass hallucination.’’
‘‘Hallucination?’’ He took her hand and turned it
palm up, then held it beside his. The cuts were gone, leaving only
long, thin scars.
Cara gaped. ‘‘That’s impossible.’’
‘‘It’s magic,’’ he said simply. ‘‘Push up your
sleeve.’’
Numbly, dumbly, she did as she was told,
unfastening the single button that held the bloodstained cuff of
her denim work shirt in place and rolling it up, part of her
knowing what she was going to see before she saw it.
Her forearm, which had been bare that morning,
was now marked with the perfect outline of a canine head, a tattoo
where there hadn’t been one before. Its nose was rounded, its
tongue and teeth pointed, its mouth slashed in a snarl. Below it
was the image of a hand touching a face. Her father made a sound of
utter satisfaction and held his own forearm next to hers. There, he
had the same two marks, along with a newer mark she didn’t remember
having seen before, shaped like a bird of some sort. Maybe a
hawk.
His voice was gruff with emotion when he said,
‘‘Welcome to the family, Cara.’’
She struggled to breathe normally, struggled to
do anything normally as her heart pounded
in her chest and low-grade nausea twisted in her gut. She looked
around and saw that the ridge and fence line looked as they always
had; the sky was blue and the sorrel grazed peacefully nearby.
Coyote was long gone, but he’d always been spooky like that.
Luckily, he also had a good homing instinct. No doubt they’d find
him in his pen, chowing down on his evening ration of
pellets.
That thought, that normal, everyday thought,
lodged a ball of emotion in her throat, part panic, part . . .
excitement. She glanced at her father and saw pride in his eyes, as
though she’d just done something wonderful, just become something wonderful. Which she had, she
realized. If her father was telling the truth, she’d woken up half
a semester away from a journalism degree she wasn’t sure she wanted
anymore, and in the space of the past five minutes she’d become
Wonder Woman. A magic user. Holy
crap.
Her lips curved and she touched the marks on her
arm, feeling a faint buzz jangle through her system at the contact.
‘‘Does this mean I can do all those things you used to tell me
about? It’s all real? I’m a . . . a Nightkeeper?’’
‘‘Um. Not exactly.’’
She narrowed her eyes. ‘‘What do you mean, ‘not
exactly’?’’
Quick hurt flashed across his face and was just
as quickly masked. ‘‘You’re my true daughter. My heart. My blood.’’
Then he waited, as he’d done ever since she was a little girl when
he wanted her to figure out something for herself rather than
telling her the answer straightaway.
When it clicked, Cara shot to her feet, elation
morphing to betrayal, anger, shame—a sickening mix of emotions that
cranked her volume as she shouted, ‘‘You’re fucking kidding me! I’m
a winikin?’’
He didn’t chide her for her language, which just
proved she was right.
She wasn’t Wonder Woman. She was a sidekick. Even
worse, she was a sidekick to—
‘‘Oh, no.’’ She backpedaled, nearly falling when
she stumbled on a rock. ‘‘Oh, hell, no. You’re shitting me.
Sven?’’
But if—even for an instant—she bought into the
delusion that the winikin were real, then
her adopted older brother fit the description of a Nightkeeper all
too well. Where she and her father were small and olive-skinned,
with dark hair and eyes, Sven was their exact opposite in every
way. He was over six-three and as wide as two of her father
standing side by side. His skin was fair, his dark blond hair prone
to bleaching in the sun, and where she had always been happy with
the small pleasures of ranch life, he’d lusted for bigger and
better, for the next challenge, the next conquest.
Sven lived life right out loud and loved being
the center of attention. He was the true golden boy. At least, he
had been. She hadn’t seen him in close to five years, and that
wasn’t nearly long enough for her.
Her father nodded. ‘‘Yes. Sven is a
Nightkeeper.’’
‘‘How fitting,’’ Cara said, looking at the mark
on her wrist. ‘‘He’s a dog.’’
‘‘The Coyote bloodline is old and respected, as
are its winikin,’’ he said, voice
chiding.
‘‘Don’t call yourself a servant, and don’t call
me one, either,’’ Cara snapped. ‘‘I’m nobody’s slave.’’
‘‘A winikin is no
slave,’’ her father said with quiet dignity. ‘‘We protect the magic
users, and help them stay the moral path.’’
‘‘News flash. You didn’t do so hot on the
morality thing.’’ No wonder he’d never wanted to face the truth
about Sven. That would’ve meant accepting that the child—the
Nightkeeper child—he’d raised wasn’t perfect. Far from it, in fact.
Sven had been a spoiled, mean-tempered brat who’d grown into a
moody teen, and from there to a young man who’d been far too
attractive for his own good, and did his own thing regardless of
how it affected others.
‘‘Cara—’’
‘‘I don’t want this,’’ she said, scrubbing at the
mark on her arm. ‘‘Take it back.’’
‘‘I can’t . . . I need you. The Nightkeepers need
you. The king has recalled the survivors, but one among them has
lost his winikin. They’ve asked me to teach
him, which means I need you to take my place watching over
Sven.’’
She glared at him, furious that he’d done
something like this without asking her. ‘‘Fine. I’ll slap some
makeup on it, or get a coverup tattoo. Maybe scrub it with some
bleach first.’’
‘‘That won’t change anything.’’ He didn’t even
have the grace to look ashamed. He seemed calm now, calmer than
he’d been since the funeral, or maybe even before that. It was like
he knew where he was going for the first time in a long, long
while.
The realization terrified her.
This shit was for real.
‘‘Daddy,’’ she whispered, her heart breaking a
little when she realized that nothing would be the same ever again.
‘‘I don’t want this. I can’t . . . work for him, whatever you want
to call it. I can’t be around him.’’
He looked sad. ‘‘You don’t have a choice.’’
She didn’t argue with that, because there was a
hum in the back of her brain that hadn’t been there before, an
impulse that made her want to walk, to pace, to jump on the sorrel
and ride hard, covering ground, headed southeast to the Carolina
coast, where—the last they’d heard, anyway—Sven was wreck diving
for conquistador gold.
‘‘I won’t go to him,’’ she whispered. ‘‘You can’t
make me.’’
Her father stood and strode toward his horse, and
for a half second she thought he was going to ride away and leave
her there. Instead, he leaned down and retrieved her hat from where
it had snagged on a thick stand of heavy grass. He dusted off the
straw brim and crossed to her, holding out the Stetson like a peace
offering. ‘‘Please. He needs you. We all need you. There are so few
of us and so little time.’’ He paused. ‘‘Remember the stories I
told you about the end-time?’’
She stiffened, thinking back to the darkest of
his dark stories. ‘‘The apocalypse?’’
He nodded, glancing once again up into the sky.
‘‘It’s coming, baby. You and me and the others . . . we’ve got a
little over four years to save the world.’’
Patience White-Eagle lowered the phone and
pressed her palms to the kitchen countertop.
Gods, why now? After all
those years she’d wished the magic worked, wished she really were
the person Hannah claimed, why did everything have to change
now?
She lifted the phone again. ‘‘Are you
sure?’’
‘‘I wouldn’t have made this call otherwise,’’ her
godmother replied simply, and with quiet dignity. Hannah was more
mother to Patience than godmother, having raised her from infancy.
She’d insisted on the distinction of being called ‘‘godmother,’’
though, just as she’d insisted on so many things relating to
Patience’s biological parents. Some days it had seemed stifling and
unnecessary. Other times, like when the winikin had started teaching Patience about the
responsibilities of her bloodline, the rules had made sense.
Now, though, nothing made sense. Or, rather, it
did, but Patience didn’t like the sense it made. Not one bit, which
left her standing in her utterly normal-looking kitchen outside
Philadelphia, talking on a disposable cell phone about things that
were far from normal.
She’d believed Hannah’s stories . . . or at least
she’d thought she did. Now, though, she wondered whether on some
level she’d seen them as a lovely fantasy, fairy tales that made
her feel special without really changing anything. Because if she’d
believed in the Nightkeepers and their purpose, really believed it
deep down inside, she wouldn’t have made some of the choices she’d
made, would she?
Maybe, she acknowledged.
Maybe not.
She glanced at the gleaming toaster she’d bought
just the week before, catching her reflection in the chrome and
wondering how she could still look like a normal, if overly tall,
blonde-and-blue twenty-four year-old, when she was, apparently,
also something more.
‘‘Where and when?’’ she asked finally, because
there had never been a question of whether she’d come when her king
called—she had a king; how messed up was that?—it was purely a
question of how to juggle the other responsibilities Hannah knew
nothing about.
‘‘I’m flying out tonight. If you like, we can
meet at the airport and drive over together.’’ Hannah always made
everything seem so matter-of-fact, regardless of whether she was
talking about a quick swing through Jiffy Lube, or the end of the
world.
Patience mentally ran through her options, which
were pretty limited. ‘‘I’ll have to check into flights and stuff,
and get someone to cover my classes for the foreseeable future.’’
Fortunately, as the owner of White-Eagle Martial Arts, she didn’t
have to ask for the time off. She could just make it happen. Other
things, however, weren’t so easy. ‘‘How about you e-mail me the
directions and I’ll meet you there?’’
‘‘Sounds like a plan,’’ Hannah said. Patience
expected her to hang up without saying good-bye, which was her way.
Instead, the older woman’s voice softened. ‘‘Are you okay with
this?’’
Do I have a choice?
Patience thought, but she didn’t ask the question aloud, because
she’d been raised knowing that she wasn’t like the other kids—she
needed to be better, faster, smarter, a little more of everything.
‘‘I’m fine,’’ she said, willing herself to believe it. ‘‘I’ve
waited my whole life for this call.’’
‘‘Good girl,’’ Hannah said. And hung up.
Patience just stood there for a long moment,
staring at the toaster.
She was a magic user. A Nightkeeper. Her king was
calling her home.
Thing was, she already was home.
Keep yourself apart,
Hannah had taught her. Be ready to disappear at
a moment’s notice. Once the end-time has passed you can live the
life you want. Until then you belong to the Nightkeepers. There is
no other attachment more important than that.
She hadn’t listened, though. Or, rather, she’d
listened, but an impulsive spring-break trip to Cancún and way too
much tequila had dictated a change in plans.
As though called by the thought, her husband’s
footsteps sounded in the hallway. Moments later, he filled the
kitchen doorway, all broad shoulders and rippling muscles, graced
with thick sable brown hair and a sharply angled, handsome face
that should’ve been in magazines but instead was hers. All
hers.
Lips curving, she crossed the kitchen, slipping
the cell into the pocket of her jeans as she went and hoping he
wouldn’t notice it wasn’t her usual phone. Heat rose when she
bumped her hip against his, then moved in for a kiss.
They’d been together a little more than four
years and it was still the same heat, the same addiction. She
craved him like a drug, with an aching intensity that seemed, if
anything, to grow stronger as time passed.
Just as she was thinking of backing him down the
short hallway to the master bedroom of their split-level, he broke
the kiss and touched his forehead to hers, leaning down so she saw
his gold-flecked brown eyes up close, and saw the shadows deep
within them.
She leaned back in his arms and frowned. ‘‘What’s
wrong?’’
‘‘I just got off the phone with Taylor. There’s
been a major cluster fuck with the zoning on the Chicago project.
It was supposed to have been handled, but . . .’’ He lifted one
shoulder. ‘‘I’ll probably be gone through next week, and I hate
like hell to dump everything on you.’’
‘‘I can get Joanie to help me out,’’ Patience
said, trying to camouflage the immediate spurt of relief. As a
rising star in the world of corporate architecture, he often had to
take off on a moment’s notice. The emergency call couldn’t have
come at a better time, as it gave her the weekend to figure things
out. She tightened her arms around his waist, loving the good,
solid feel of him. ‘‘Promise to miss me?’’
‘‘I already do.’’ He kissed her quickly, then
disengaged. ‘‘I’ve got to pack. My plane leaves in a couple
hours.’’
The next twenty minutes were a whirlwind of
getting him out the door. Before he left, though, he took her hand
and turned it palm up so he could kiss the tattoos at her wrist, a
stylized lizard’s head beside a cluster of circles that looked like
a Pacman gone wrong. His own tattoos, consisting of a matching
Pac-Man beside a tribal-looking eagle’s head, were covered by the
sleeve of his starched shirt and suit coat, but she knew they were
there, knew the symbols bound them together just as surely as their
white-gold wedding bands.
The tattoos, like their relationship, had come
from a half-remembered night of carousing in the Yucatán. They’d
awakened in her hotel room, two strangers who’d obviously made
love, with dirty feet and fresh tats that, oddly enough, hadn’t
hurt. Patience could only assume that she’d chosen the tattoos,
placing them where Hannah said the Nightkeepers wore their
bloodline glyphs. The lizard was her bloodline signature. The
eagle, she guessed, had come from his last name, which was now
hers. She didn’t know about the Pac-Man.
He smiled as he linked his fingers with hers and
leaned in for a last, lingering kiss. ‘‘Miss me.’’
It was a command, not a question, but she didn’t
argue. Instead, she pressed her cheek to his and hung on a moment
longer than usual. ‘‘Back atcha.’’
Then he left, striding down their flagstone
walkway with his garment bag and computer case slung over his
shoulder. Uncharacteristically, Patience stood at the front door,
watching as he backed his Explorer out of the garage and drove off
with a beep-beep and a wave.
She couldn’t help feeling that she wasn’t going
to see him again.
When the alarm went off before dawn, Sven grabbed
for the clock, intending to chuck it at the nearest wall. He came
up with his cell phone instead, and realized that was what’d been
ringing.
‘‘Oh, for fuck’s sake.’’ He flipped the thing
open, squinting into the too-bright light in an effort to make
sense of the caller ID, but last night’s drunk hadn’t yet turned
into today’s hangover, and he couldn’t see the letters.
Didn’t matter, though. His so-called partner was
the only a-hole likely to be calling at this hour, and if Fontana
was calling postparty, he’d be too blitzed to make a lick of sense.
He could wait. Besides, it was already too late to answer—the damn
call had gone to voice mail while Sven was staring at the
display.
Head still drumming with the backbeat from last
night’s dance music, he dropped the phone on the floor and rolled
over, dragging the bedsheet with him. The motion earned a feminine,
‘‘Hey!’’
Surprised, Sven rolled back and did the squinting
thing again, this time making out a pouty brunette. Huh. Go figure. He didn’t feel lucky, but apparently
he’d gotten there sometime last night. Sweet.
She crooked a finger and slid him a look as she
shimmied her torso in a fake shiver. ‘‘Can I have the sheet back?
I’m cold.’’
‘‘Take it.’’ He tossed it in her direction, too
out-of-it to decide whether she was actually cold, or sending him a
green light. ‘‘I gotta pee.’’
Okay, even woozy he knew that wasn’t a great
line. But by the time he’d taken care of business and splashed some
cold water in the direction of his face, he’d regrouped and was
ready for a second—and hopefully more memorable—assault on Mount
Brunette.
‘‘Hey, babe,’’ he said as he strolled into the
bedroom. ‘‘I was thinking—’’ He broke off when he saw that the bed
was empty.
Bummer.
Figuring on writing it off as her loss and
catching another few hours of shut-eye, Sven was headed back to the
bed when he heard female voices out in the main room.
Voices, as in more than one female. Cool. He was the man.
Suddenly really, really wishing he could remember
the night before—and hoping he could talk them into round two—he
pulled on a pair of swim trunks and strode through the door into
the main room of his beachside apartment.
And stopped dead at the sight of the girl, or
rather the woman, standing in the open doorway. Sunlight spilled in
behind her, gleaming on her dark, white-streaked hair and outlining
her boy-slim, athletic body.
She might have been wearing shorts, a tank, and
sandals instead of jeans and a work shirt, but he knew her
instantly even through the fog in his brain. The gut-punch was
unmistakable.
‘‘Cara?’’
She didn’t say anything, just let her gaze roam
around his apartment, where surfboards and dive gear were piled
atop depth charts and the odd artifact, competing for space amid
what he liked to call creative clutter but suspected she would see
as garbage.
The brunette—who was still wearing his sheet, for
chrissake—looked at Sven, brow furrowed. ‘‘This your girlfriend or
something?’’
‘‘No,’’ he said quickly. ‘‘She’s—’’ Then he broke
off, because he’d never been able to figure out what to call her.
She wasn’t his sister, not really. She wasn’t his friend, either,
not now, anyway. She was—
‘‘I’m his little sister,’’ she said, apparently
not sharing an ounce of his dislike for the term. Focusing on him,
she said, ‘‘Get dressed and pack your things. We’re
leaving.’’
Sven’s gut iced over. ‘‘Is something wrong with
Carlos?’’
‘‘Yes and no.’’ She paused, and for a second he
thought he saw a crack in the disdain she was projecting like plate
armor. ‘‘Look, please don’t ask me to explain. Just pack.’’
The brunette pouted and turned to him. ‘‘Are you
going to let her talk to you like that?’’
The look in Cara’s eyes said, You owe me.
And the hell of it was, he did.
Sven nodded slowly. ‘‘Yeah. I am.’’ He glanced at
the brunette. ‘‘Get dressed and get out. Apparently I have a plane
to catch.’’