A Monster and a Gentleman (12 page)

BOOK: A Monster and a Gentleman
9.49Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Females could be so confusing.

“Uh, I’ll go the other way.”

The voice intruded in Seling’s musings, and he turned to see Catherine. Seling wasn’t entirely sure what they needed a visual effects supervisor for, and from the few times he talked to her she’d seemed a bit confused too.

“Sorry.” He folded his wings down over his shoulders and smiled. Her eyes rounded and Seling reminded himself that he couldn’t really smile in this form. The fangs made it look threatening.

Her eyes slid to the blackened bit of pavement. “Did you just burn up the wood pallets?”

“Yes.”

“Does Jo know?”

“Were they for the set?”

“Yep.”

“Don’t tell her.” Seling winced. It wasn’t Jo he was worried about, but Tokaki, who would kick his ass for messing with Jo’s stuff.
 

“She’ll never hear it from me.” Catherine examined him, her eyes moving slowly over him, from his feet up.

Seling cleared his throat, a little embarrassed. When Cali looked at him, it was either with desire or with cool assessment. Catherine’s regard was different—it was as if she didn’t like him or didn’t know what to do with him.

“Are you done burning things up?” Catherine asked.

Seling felt like his mother had just scolded him. “Yes.”

“Okay. I’m leaving.”

He watched Catherine tuck her laptop more securely under her arm and walk to one of the entrances where a guard let her pass.

He really didn’t understand females.

Now later than ever, he headed to his trailer. His next scene was as a human, so he needed to change forms and grab some human pants before he went to wardrobe.

Lance, the casting director, was standing in the door of his trailer, his head deep inside.

“Hey, Lance.”

He spun and gasped, pressing his hand over his heart. His eyes were wide with terror as he stared at Seling before he dropped his gaze.

“Oh, sorry,” Seling said, regretting that he’d scared Lance. “Are you looking for me? I know I’m late. I just need to change.”

“Good, good, go to makeup.”

“Makeup? I thought I was supposed to go to wardrobe first.”

“Right, go there first.”

“Is everything okay?”

“I’m just helping out. We sent all the PAs and talent wranglers on errands.”
 

“Okay.” Seling wasn’t sure exactly why Lance was so jumpy. They’d only met a few times, since Lance’s job was to find actors who could be trusted to keep their secret.

“Can you hand me some pants?” Seling asked, since Lance hadn’t moved.
 

“Ah, sorry, I’m in your way. Here.” Lance handed him the pants just inside the door and jumped down.

Seling heard rushing footsteps behind him. He turned, expecting to see someone hurrying towards him, but there was nothing. He frowned. The sound of the footsteps had stopped.

“Seling?” Lance asked.

“Yeah?”

“Everything okay?”

“I thought I heard someone coming towards us, but I don’t see anyone.”

Lance’s eyes narrowed. “Go to wardrobe.” With that parting comment, Lance took off, walking quickly.

Seling dug down inside himself where the spell Maeve had given him was curled up, pulsing with magic. He pulled on it and felt the change overtake him. Where his true form ripped through the human skin, this transformation was less gruesome, though no less painful. He felt his body heat and then start to tremble, as if he’d been flying or running for hundreds of miles. There were pops as shrinking bones moved to new formations. His fingers tingled as his talons shrank down into thin, weak human nails. Now human again, he took a moment to reorient himself to being smaller and weaker than he was used to. With a sigh, he pulled on his pants and headed for wardrobe. He saw Nell, the location scout, walking towards him. He raised his hand and waved, but she ducked between two trucks.

Seling lowered his hand.

What was going on today? Had all the humans gone mad?

Shaking his head, he picked up his pace, hoping to find one of his Clans-men on the set. Maybe one of them could make sense of what was going on.

Chapter Eight

Oren and Maeve

Oren and Maeve got back into his car.
 

“When we find her, I will talk to her.” Maeve’s voice was cold, and for a moment Oren thought the temperature in the car dropped, so much so that he saw his breath. A shiver wracked him and the hair on his arms stood on end.

In the next moment, the car was back to normal temperature.
 

Oren looked suspiciously at Maeve, who was sitting primly with her hands in her lap.

“When you say talk to her...”

“I mean I will touch her and look into her past and see who it is that gave her the photos.”

“And you’re not going to hurt her or make her pass out.”

“She’s a danger to my people.”

“I was afraid you’d say that. Let me rephrase. You can’t make her pass out or kill her in the middle of a Coffee Bean without a whole lot of consequences.”

“Fine. I will hurt her later.”

“Is there any chance of me convincing you not to hurt her at all?”

“No.”

“Okay then.” Oren blew out his breath. It wasn’t the poor blogger’s fault. He’d just have to whisk Maeve away as soon as possible. “We need to make one stop first.”

“Where?”

“The store. As delightful as you look in that short dress, it’s a bit...odd.”

Maeve looked down at herself. “Henry said he got it in Hollywood.”

“That explains why it says
I love Los Angeles
in glitter, but I think some more normal clothes that make you not look like a tourist would be good.”

Also, she needed to cover up more or Oren was going to die from the perpetual semi he was sporting.

“I need to blend in?” Maeve asked.

“Yes.”

“Okay. Let’s go buy clothes.”

Oren took her to Target. He had no idea where women bought clothes, but the last time he’d braved the crush to buy toilet paper and a massive tub of Red Vines, he’d gotten lost in a section of women’s clothes, so he knew the store had them.

They parked and Oren led her in, already regretting his decision. She looked around with interest.

“Have you ever been in a human store before?”

“Once my people had the ability to shift into human forms, they started going to the human stores. We live off the land, but it is too cold at our home to farm fruit or vegetables, so we enjoy buying those. Plus we needed garments for our human forms.”

“Okay, but have you ever been?”

“They let me go, once.”

Oren was starting to get a bad feeling about Maeve. The way she referred to herself in reference to the other monsters made it sound like she was not on equal footing with them. She was a grown woman who looked more human than they did, and yet they hadn’t let her go to the store?

What was that about?

Then Oren remembered her saying that they feared her because she was dangerous.

Holy shit, she’s River. Pretty, mysterious and deadly.

Oren closed his eyes and took a breath, prepared to lead her through the madness of the store, while watching out for signs that she might suddenly go into ninja mode.

She was gone.

“This is bad,” Oren muttered to himself. He scanned the people filling the aisles and a caught a glimpse of dark hair. Threading his way through the throng, he found her in women’s lingerie.

“Maeve, there you are.”

“You were taking too long standing there thinking.”

“Could you tell what I was thinking?”

“You’re worried about me, afraid of me.”

“No, I’m...is there any point in lying to you?”

“No.”

Her head was bowed over a rack of bras and Oren felt like an ass. He was sure that was what every woman wanted, for a man to be scared of them and think they were dangerous. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to be rude. A few things you said just made me wonder. You did say that the other monsters are scared of you, that you’re dangerous.”

“I am dangerous.”

“Okay, well, I’m sorry. It was a rude thing to say.”

“Why?” She pulled a bra off the rack—green with black lace. His eyes dropped to her chest, mentally putting the bra on her before he could stop himself. “I
am
dangerous. You would be foolish to forget that.”

She grabbed a few more bras, then some G-strings in the same green and black. Oren turned his back to her and took deep breaths.

“I try this on now, right? That’s what they do in movies.”

“Yes. I think there are dressing rooms over there.”

“Are you coming?”

“Uh, sure.”

By the time they got to the dressing rooms, Oren’s arms were full of clothes and he was starting to understand why she was dangerous.

 

Maeve slipped on the next pair of panties. These ones seemed to fit. She checked her ass in the mirror and nodded in satisfaction.
 

She’d figured out her bra size through trial and error. Now wearing the bra and panty set, she turned to the clothes. As she moved, she was aware of the smooth fabric on her breasts. Curious, she rubbed her palms over them. Arousal crept through her, and Oren’s image popped into her head. Maeve shook herself and went back to the clothes.

At home she wore clothes made of fur and heavy human-made hiking boots. She had human-made socks, plain T-shirts and cotton athletic shorts which she wore under the skins, since those were easy for someone to pick up for her. She’d never asked any of the males to get her underwear when they went into town shopping because she didn’t know what to ask for or what size she was.

Maeve now realized she could have gone herself.
 

She never ventured out among the humans because she always assumed that if she were surrounded by so many of them, their feelings and wants would overwhelm her. Even a casual brush might cause her to See their past or future, and if she Saw something there that indicated they were a danger to her people, she would not hesitate to kill them.

But her own wants and needs grounded her and blocked out the humans. She needed clothes to blend in and wanted the pretty lingerie like she’d seen in TV and movies.

A salesperson stopped outside the door, asking if she needed help. Maeve opened the door and pulled her in to check the fit of a long, loose dress in bright yellow.
 

She did it thoughtlessly, without considering the ramifications. As her fingers closed around the woman’s bare elbow, she felt the Everafter. Maeve sucked in a breath and focused on her reflection in the mirror. Gray filled the edges of her vision. Through sheer will, she mastered her need to See, and the pressure around her eyes lifted, the gray fog swirling away.

“Miss?” The salesperson sounded uncertain.

“Yes?”

“Did you, uh, need something?”

“Oh, yes, this dress, is this the right size?”

The salesperson, a young blonde girl, took a step back and considered her. “It’s a bit too big. Let me get you a smaller size.” She looked over at the massive pile of clothes on the bench. “Are you buying a summer wardrobe?”

“Yes, yes I am.”

“Ohh, okay. It’s kinda slow back here, so I’m going to help you. I go to FIDM.”
 

Maeve had no idea what the girl was talking about, but her pride in what she’d just said was so strong that Maeve said, “Congratulations.”

“Thanks. You know, you can actually do some really stylish stuff with the clothes here. You just have to mix and match and maybe do some alteration.”

“I don’t do alterations.” Maeve wasn’t one-hundred percent sure what they were.

“You can have your dry cleaner do it. I assume, with that hair, that you have an urban hippie look going.”

“Maybe,” Maeve said. She knew what hippies were, but wasn’t sure what urban hippie meant. “But I want to be sexy. And powerful.”

“You know you’re at Target, right?”

Maeve just stared at her.
 

“Okay, we can do this.” The girl started picking through the clothes, throwing some things over the door, while hanging others up. “Try those ones on. I’ll be back in a few.”

Maeve pulled off the sundress she had on and handed it over.
 

“Oh, and is that your boyfriend out there?”

“My boyfriend?”
 

“The good-looking older guy?”

Maeve didn’t think Oren was “older.” He was probably only in his forties, which was young by Maeve’s standards, but then again, to this girl he probably was old.

“Yes, that’s my…boyfriend.”

“Okay, I figured since he’s just out there looking bored. We’ll get you a good outfit and then you can show him.”

Other books

Santa's Posse by Rosemarie Naramore
Ripped at the Seams by Nancy Krulik
Pippa's Fantasy by Donna Gallagher
A Pattern of Lies by Charles Todd
Bound to a Warrior by Donna Fletcher
Ashes In the Wind by Christopher Bland
The Wolfman by Jonathan Maberry