Blood of Dawn (4 page)

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Authors: Tami Dane

BOOK: Blood of Dawn
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For now, I would just have to stay strong. Stay focused.
“Skye?” JT called to my back just as I was about to head out. I had no idea where he’d come from.
I jerked a look over my shoulder. “I’ll be back in a half hour. That’s all I need. Thirty minutes.”
“For what?” JT asked, his gaze settling on my arms, which were still covering my chest.
“I need to go shopping.”
“Why?” both guys said in unison.
“Because clearly you both have dirty minds.” I unfolded my arms and jerked up my chin. There was nothing wrong with my shirt, and I was mad at myself for letting those two . . .
boys
. . . make me think there was. The picture in the center was of a peapod . . . that did look a little like a penis—but only if you squinted. It didn’t help that the stupid pod had a smiley face. The text said: Obey Mendelian principles. It’s the laws of inheritance. I’d picked it up during my last visit to the Smithsonian. “You’re immature children. Both of you.”
They didn’t look a bit remorseful.
“A half hour,” I said. My phone rang. Mom. “Consider it my lunch break.”
“Fine, Skye.” JT waved me off. “See you in a half hour.”
I punched the button, taking Mom’s call as I stepped out into the hall. I poked the down elevator button. “Mom. Katie and I need a place to stay for a couple of weeks. Can we camp out at your house?”
“Why? Did you have another firefly infestation?” Mom asked. You might wonder why she’d ask such a crazy question. There was a good reason for it. “No.”
“Lose power from a major electrical short?”
“Not that either.” We only had those when Mom was staying with us. Among her many bizarre habits was the building of contraptions she called inventions. So far, one, in hundreds, maybe thousands—I’d lost count—had been somewhat useful. She’d actually built a trap for our last unsub. It had failed at trapping the killer, but it had saved a life.
“There was a fire,” I admitted. The elevator door opened and I stepped into an empty car. “Not our fault—this time.”
“You know I love Katie, but . . . ,” Mom said, sighing.
“Sloan, I’m pregnant. I can’t have any benzene in my kitchen.”
“I promise, your kitchen will remain benzene free.” I pushed the lobby button.
“Yes, you said that last time—”
“You weren’t pregnant then, and Katie was working on an important project. Besides, she’s using toluene these days. The solvent properties are almost identical, but toluene is less toxic.”
“No toluene either,” Mom warned.
“You have my word.” The elevator landed, bouncing a little.
“Fine.”
“Thank you.” I stepped out into the main-floor lobby and set my sights on the exit. “I’ll call Katie and let her know. See you later, Mom.”
“Okay. And, Sloan?”
“Yes?”
“Would you mind picking up some pie on your way home?”
The main door swooshed open. “You bet. Let me guess. Something tangy and something sweet?”
“That’s perfect. I think I’m going to like having you living at home. Yes, I think it’ll be just fine.”
Exactly what I was afraid of.
Why—oh, why—did it have to be our building that burned down?
A sudden bold and unexpected question doth many times surprise a man and lay him open.
—Francis Bacon
4
Five hours later, all I’d accomplished was procuring a basic wardrobe, a new toothbrush, and two pies—French silk and cherry. We’d made no headway on the case. There’d been little to go on, and we were still waiting for the ME to give us a final determination on the cause of death. I was now whizzing along I-95, a few miles from my exit, pondering the COD, when my phone rang.
It was Damen Sylver.
Gorgeous, sexy, make-me-quiver Damen.
A little flash of excitement zoomed through me as I hit the button, answering the call. “Hello,” I said, my voice all smiley. I couldn’t help it. Damen Sylver made me feel girly. He was gorgeous. He was polite. He was intelligent. And he wasn’t a coworker, an ex-boyfriend, or otherwise completely off-limits like Gabe and JT were.
Albeit, he was also an FBI agent. He’d convinced me that wouldn’t be a problem.
“I have a surprise for you,” he said. “But . . . I noticed your building looks a little vacant.”
“Yeah. There was a fire last night. I have to stay with my parents for the next couple of weeks. Where are you?”
“In your parking lot.”
“I’m sorry. I didn’t think to tell you.” Why would I? We weren’t an item. We hadn’t done enough stuff to be considered an item yet.
“That’s okay. Would you mind if I stopped by your parents’ place?”
“Absolutely not.” I glanced in the mirror and scowled. I’d been walking around looking like the undead all day. I had no makeup. My hair was a mess. The only thing going for me was the fact that he was sitting in my parking lot, and I was minutes from Mom and Dad’s, which gave me time to make myself presentable. I rattled off the address, asked if he needed directions, and when he said no—GPS—ended the call. Then I lead-footed it to my temporary home, hauled in my bags, and dashed up to my new bedroom. Moving quickly, I gathered up some supplies from Mom’s stash, showered, shaved, loofahed, primped, spritzed, flat-ironed, and plucked until I was looking date ready. I was putting the finishing touches on my hair when Sergio knocked, announcing I had a visitor downstairs. He was waiting in the den.
I found him sitting across from Mom. He looked amazing, from the top of his shaggy-haired head to his well-shod toes. What he was doing here, waiting for plain old me . . . I couldn’t imagine.
“There she is.” He bent over the side of the chair and grabbed something; then, keeping his hands behind his back, he strolled to me. Intriguing. Curious to find out what he was hiding, I did my part to decrease the distance separating our bodies. Within seconds, we were standing mere inches apart. He produced a medium-sized, gift-wrapped box from behind his back.
“What’s this?” I asked, staring down at the box. “It’s not my birthday.”
“It’s just a little something. I saw it and thought of you.” Smiling so big that little crinkles fanned the outsides of his eyes, he handed it over. “Open it.”
“Okay.” I untied the ribbon, then ripped the paper away. It was a book. I flipped it over to read the title:
Comparative Analysis of Vampiric Species,
by James Skye.
As far as I knew, that book had been out of print for decades. “Where did you find this?” Considering the fire, and the fact that I’d lost all of my father’s research, this was the find of the century.
But the statistical likelihood that this was merely a lucky coincidence was almost nil.
“It was collecting dust in a little used-book store I like to visit from time to time. . . . Okay, I confess. Jim—er, your father—called and told me what had happened. I had this copy at home. To be honest, I thought I’d sold it. But I checked, anyway. Obviously, I hadn’t sold it. I thought you could use it more than me.”
“Thank you.” I hugged the book to my chest and stared up into his eyes. “This is sure going to come in handy.”
“Glad to hear that.”
Mom cleared her throat. “Oh, my.” She yawned loudly. It was a complete fake. “I’m exhausted. I think I’ll head up to bed.”
“Did you have some of your pie?” I asked her. “I bought French silk.”
“French silk.” Mom’s eyes sparkled, but then they flicked to Damen. All the sparkle vanished.
Poof.
Gone. “My doctor told me that I need to cut back.” She shuffled past my gentleman caller, stopped next to me, and whispered, “Good night, Sloan. I gave Sergio the rest of the night off, and your father’s working late.” She waggled her eyebrows. Then, continuing on, she turned to Damen. “It was good seeing you again, Mr. Sylver.”
“It was good seeing you too,” he said, the corners of his lips twitching.
Once she was out of earshot, I shook my head. “I knew living with her was going to be tough, but I had no idea—”
Before I could finish, Damen hauled me into his arms. I looked up, my mouth agape. And he tipped his head down, lower, lower. He was going to kiss me; and oh, my God, was I happy about it! When his lips came into contact with mine, my whole body felt like it was electrified. Every single cell. I heard the book hit the floor long before I realized I had dropped it. I threw my arms around Damen’s neck and held on while he kissed me. The world seemed to close in on itself, until all that existed was his big, hard body and little, trembling me.
When he finally broke the kiss, I blinked a couple of times and muttered something unintelligible.
“Are you okay?” he asked.
“S-sure.”
With his arm still curved around my waist, he bent over and picked up the book. “You dropped this.”
“Th-thanks.”
I couldn’t seem to produce more than one syllable at a time. My insides were zooming and swooping and flip-flopping. My head was spinning. I wasn’t sure which way was up. I was brain-dead. And as much as I wanted to shake myself out of it, I couldn’t.
“Sloan, come here.” He guided me to the couch and helped me sit. Then he went to the kitchen. He grabbed a bottled water out of the refrigerator and handed it to me. After I guzzled half of it, he asked, “Better?”
“What was that?” I asked. Three words. Three syllables. That was an improvement.
“I’d like to think it was the result of my overwhelming charm.” He winked.
“I’ve never been struck dumb before. It was weird.”
“Weird, bad?”
“Weird, weird. But not necessarily bad.” I set down the bottle. “In the name of science, maybe we should try that again. To see if we get the same results.”
His smile broadened. “Of course, in the name of science.” Our mouths met. An explosion of colors blasted behind my closed eyelids. I swear, there couldn’t be a nerve in my body that wasn’t on fire.
It was magic.
“Excuse me,” someone said.
No. Not now.
The offending interrupter cleared his throat. “Thith is life or death.”
So was this. I didn’t just want to keep kissing Damen. I
needed
to keep kissing him. I couldn’t stop. Not a chance.
Damen stopped. He leaned back. I pried open my eyelids and cut a mean look at Elmer.
“I don’t care,” Elmer hissed. “You didn’t help me thith morning, and now it’th too late.”
My gaze wandered up and down his form. He was wearing a suit. Black. Black shirt. Black tie. His hair was cover-model perfect—and much, much thicker than it had been this morning. And his skin was the shade of a
Baywatch
lifeguard’s. His teeth were no longer barracuda-pointy. And his hair was a lot darker, too.
“Why . . . What’s wrong with your mouth? Is it your teeth?” I mumbled.
“Capths.” He pursed his lips. “I’m thill getting uthed to them. Do I talk funny?”
“Not at all,” I lied. “They definitely make you look less . . . er, scary. Are you wearing a toupee?”
He grunted; then he slapped his hand on the top of his head and yanked the hairpiece off. “I told her it wouldn’t fool anybody.” He wound up for the pitch; his target was the trash can in the kitchen.
“No, no, no.” I caught his spindly arm. “I didn’t mean to make you think it looks bad. It doesn’t.”
“They hired a thylist to guthy me up. But I don’t feel like it’th me.”
“It is an improvement.” I released his arm.
He didn’t look convinced. “If you thay.” His gaze slid to Damen, who was sitting very quietly by my side, one arm draped across the back of the couch. “I need Thloan to come with me. They’re filming the first epithode in a few. She got me into thith. . . .”
That was, at best, a slight tweak of the truth, but I didn’t bother to correct him.
“That’s fine. I need to get going, anyway.” Damen stood, leaned over me, and gave me a quick kiss on the lips. The kiss was much too brief. “When can I see you again?”
I gazed up into his deep eyes. “I’m pretty much free every night this week, assuming I don’t get called in to work.”
“Good. I’ll be back tomorrow. Don’t eat dinner.”
“Great. See you then.” I basked in the brilliance of his smile before standing. “If you want to wait a minute, I can walk you to the door. I need to grab my purse.”
“Sure.”
Elmer shot him some mean eyes.
“Actually, I should get going,” Damen said, looking a bit nervous.
Was he really going to let that little creep chase him away?
I bit back a comment that he might not have liked and threw him a little dismissive wave. “That’s fine. I’ll see you tomorrow.” He made a beeline for the front door; I glared at Elmer. “Why’d you do that?”
“What?”
“You scared my friend.”
Elmer blinked his creepy, little, beady eyes at me. “I didn’t mean to.”
“Yeah. Right.”
“Whatever. Can we get going? Dale Nethinger hath been calling me every five minutes thince I left. I think she’th getting nervouth.”
“You could have called her and explained the problem.” Inside my car, I shoved the key into the ignition and gave it a twist.
“I’m not a freaking geniuth like thome people, but even I know that wouldn’t have worked.”
“Okay, so why don’t you just
poof
to wherever they’re filming and I’ll meet you there?”
“Becauthe I’m not filming even one minute without you being there. Consider yourthelf my agent.”
What had I gotten myself into?
A jagged bolt of lightning lit up the sky.
 
 
Emma Walker could hardly believe this was happening. She was alone. With Kyle Quinn.
The
Kyle Quinn. “I thought you’d hooked up with Stephanie Barnett?” she asked, finding herself leaning into him. He smelled so good. Looked even better. And she hoped to find out how he tasted soon too.
His brows scrunched. “Who told you that? I didn’t hook up with her or anyone else.”
“I thought I saw you together at Joe Malone’s party.”
“No. I didn’t go to Malone’s party.”
“Oh.” The house had been crammed full of people. She supposed she could have mistaken someone else for him. Now that she thought about it, she hadn’t gotten a clear view of him . . . or whoever that had been. “Anyway, I really appreciate the help with algebra.” She pulled open the door. “It would take me hours to do this stupid homework if you didn’t help.”
“No problem.” Kyle stepped inside after her, then waited for her to shut the door. “Where’s your mom?”
“Working. She’s on afternoons all week. Then she switches to midnights. The joys of being a nurse.”
“That sucks for her.” Moving swiftly, he hooked her waist in his arm and jerked her to him. The air left her lungs, and her heart started pounding in her chest.
“Yeah, sucks for her,” she whispered, smiling up into Kyle Quinn’s dark eyes. Little currents of electricity seemed to be buzzing up and down through her body.
He tipped his head. “I’ve been wanting to do this for a long time,” he said as his mouth moved toward hers.
She swore that she’d just died and gone to heaven.
 
 
It was almost three
A.M.
before I’d been able to hit the road. My eyes felt like they’d been plucked out of my head, rolled in sand, and stuffed back into their sockets. I was probably incapable of passing a field sobriety test. Not because I was drunk, but just because I was so freaking exhausted. And all I could think about was landing in my big, soft bed.
The filming had gone okay. Not great. But not disastrous either. As it turned out, Elmer could act charming when the cameras were rolling. Even I found myself looking past his ghoulish features to admire his sense of humor. When he was
on,
he wasn’t a goofy cutup. Nor was he socially awkward. He was witty and intelligent.
At any rate, by some miracle, I made it back to the parents’ mansion without being pulled over, hitting something, or going the wrong way on the freeway. I dragged my stiff, achy body up the front walk and tried the door. Locked. I knocked. I rang the bell. I called Mom and left her a message. And once everything else failed, I went back to my car, slumped into the driver’s seat, reclined it as far back as it would go, and shut my eyes.

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