Read Dana Marie Bell - Heart'sDesire01 Online
Authors: T L
“Bed, hopefully letting the remedies work.”
His grin faded. “Remedies?”
She glared at him. The moment he started making fun of her “witchy” ways he was in for a world of hurt. “Don’t start.”
His lips twitched. “Yes, ma’am.”
“We think this Cole person tied the sickness to some wolf hair Christopher somehow left behind last night.”
“Tell me about it.”
The command in his voice got her hackles up, but she could understand how he felt. It was his little brother in the other room sleeping off the effects of a nasty spell. “My car broke down last night.”
“I got that, and I got that you’re Christopher’s mate. How did Cole get a hold of some hair?”
“Cole was in the woods last night, and Chris tried to protect me.”
“How did he protect you?”
She knew what he was really asking from the cautious way Gareth spoke. “His wolf jumped Cole.”
“Which means the son of a bitch has hold of wolf fur. Fuck. That means Christopher can’t shift or it’ll get worse.”
Lana smiled. “That’s what I thought.” Nice to have it confirmed, too.
“So you concocted something to help?”
“A plant in his room to draw the illness out and ground it into the earth, some ginger, anise and cinnamon tea, and chicken soup.”
He blinked. “Chicken … soup?”
She shrugged. Explaining the instinctive nature of a witch’s magic to a wizard usually ended in frustration for both parties, and frankly she just wasn’t up for explaining right now. “It’s good for colds.”
“Uh-huh.” He shook his head. “I’m just going to go and check on Christopher.” He nodded towards the computer. “Glad to see you’re doing your homework.”
She blushed at his knowing look but decided to brave it out. “Thanks.”
Gareth Beckett strolled out of the room with the same grace his brother usually exhibited. Oddly the sight didn’t move her the way it did when she watched Chris, but she still enjoyed the view. “How many of you are there, anyway?”
He was laughing. “Four.”
“Four of you? Lord help the women of the world.” She frowned, glancing back down at the open registry. Wait. Four?
He ducked his head back in. “Only three of us are available now, babe.”
“Don’t call me babe.” He made his way out of the office again, chuckling. “And who the hell is Cole, anyway?” She shouted after him.
“Ask Chris,” he yelled back.
She rubbed her eyes with the heels of her hand, suddenly weary. “I’m so going to kill Kelly. Stupid boondock bachelorette party. It’s not like there isn’t a male strip club right here in Philly. We could have done pizza and Club Risque, damn it.” She turned back to the computer and shot off a quick email to Kerry, telling her she’d get in touch as soon as she could, deleted the spam about a bigger penis for her pleasure, and shut the computer back down before heading back into the blue bedroom to face the Beckett brothers.
Time to throw myself to the wolves.
* * * *
“Your mate didn’t tell you I was on my way, did she?” Gareth was sprawled in the seat Lana had sat in, poking a curious finger at the mostly dead plant on the nightstand. Chris was vaguely reassured that there was still some green left on it. With Lana’s help it might even survive.
“No, she didn’t, probably because I was asleep up until ten minutes ago.” Christopher got out of bed and reached for his shoes. He was feeling remarkably well considering he’d napped most of the day fully dressed. He usually felt rumpled and out of sorts when he did that. Actually, he did still feel rumpled, but the knowledge that his mate had chosen to stay by his side was a joyful hum inside him. He did, however, dislike feeling rumpled, so he decided to change into some fresh clothes.
“Hmm. Too busy on the computer, I guess.”
Christopher stopped on the way to his suitcase. “She was probably just checking her email.”
“And asking about Cole.”
“Shit.” Christopher ran his fingers through his hair. He’d been hoping she’d wait for him to deal with his old nemesis. He should have known better. “What did you tell her?” Because he already knew that she’d take whatever little bone his brother had thrown her and build an entire skeleton out of it.
His brother shot him an annoyed look. “To ask you.”
Christopher nodded, relieved. “Thanks.”
“Don’t mention it.” Gareth grinned. “Grats, by the way. Alannah’s a cutie.”
Christopher growled and grabbed his suitcase, heading into the bathroom in the hallway. He flipped open the suitcase and pulled out the nice dark wash jeans. “Thank you. I think.”
“Seriously. If you two weren’t mated, I’d make a play for her. She’s feisty.”
Christopher pulled out the golden yellow microfiber shirt, wondering if Lana would like the soft feel of the fabric. He started to get undressed, tossing his dirty clothes back in the suitcase. “Yes, she is. Almost too feisty.”
“Hey, if she’s too much for you to handle, bro, toss her my way. I could use a little cute and hot.”
Christopher could feel his wolf protesting Gareth’s laughing comment. “Drop it, Gareth.” The rumbling quality of his voice startled him. The wolf was closer to the surface than he’d thought.
The silence on the other side of the door was deafening. Christopher got dressed and stepped back into the bedroom, ready to face his brother.
Instead he saw Lana sitting on the bed, Gareth staring out the window behind her. “Who’s Cole?”
He finished buttoning his jeans, gratified at the way her gaze drifted to his hands. “Cole is a member of the Godwin family.”
“The Godwins are rivals of the Becketts. They’ve hated us ever since great great great great grand-dad ate great great great great grandma.”
Christopher just shook his head at Gareth. “That’s one reason, but not all.”
Lana frowned. “The great grandma who got eaten was a Godwin?”
“Yes, she was, and she was the reason our ancestor jilted the witch.”
“And they still hold a grudge?”
Christopher shrugged. “Wizard memories are long.”
“Do not meddle in the affairs of wizards, huh?”
“For you are crunchy and good with ketchup,” Gareth snickered.
Christopher rolled his eyes. “That’s dragons, nitwit.”
Lana was looking at him with wide-eyed innocence. “Dragons are good with ketchup?”
He rolled his eyes. “Yes. Yes, they are. They are especially good on wheat buns.”
“Sorry.” But she didn’t look all that repentant. He had the strongest urge to reach over and kiss the smile flirting at the edges of her mouth.
“Cole, for some bizarre reason, felt the need to poke at Christopher all through school.” Gareth moved away from the window and sprawled in the chair next to the bed.
Christopher almost growled. Gareth’s knee was touching Lana’s. He reached out and moved her leg.
“And I, for one, didn’t really see why I shouldn’t poke back.”
“This great rivalry sprung up between them.”
He sat next to Lana, placing one hand on her knee, knowing how possessive the move looked and not really caring. He was possessive where she was concerned, so everyone would just have to get used to it. “Things got more and more heated. Competing for the same grades, the same classes—”
“The same girls.” Christopher snarled at Gareth, who just grinned. “Seriously, bro, my favorite was when you marked Cole’s backpack in college.”
“Marked? You mean…?”
Gareth nodded. “Yup. And it was open at the time.”
Christopher flushed. He tried to forget that one, but Gareth still, after all these years, found it hilar-iously funny.
“Ugh.” Lana shuddered, looking disgusted. He’d have to explain to her later exactly how drunk he’d been when he’d done that. “But why did Cole threaten to kill me? So far it sounds more like jealousy than anything else. What drove it over the edge of pissy testosterone games into death threats?”
“He threatened to kill you?” Gareth stood, his hair practically standing on end, and glared at Chris.
“When were you going to tell me Cole threatened your mate?”
“I would have last night, but you were too busy laughing your ass off over the fact that I’d mated a witch.”
Gareth zipped his lips. “Ixnay on the aughinglay.”
“Oronmay.”
Lana’s comeback startled a laugh out of Gareth. “I like her.”
The hand on Lana’s knee tightened. “Just don’t like her too much.”
Gareth waved his hand. “Maybe I’ll mate a witch. They’re a lot more fun than some of those prissy wizard women.”
“Uh-huh.” Lana stood and brushed by Gareth. “Okay, so Cole wants to get back at Christopher for peeing on his life, right?”
“Something like that.” Christopher found himself not surprised at all when she started pacing. It looked to be a habit of hers when she was thinking or upset.
“More than that, actually.” Christopher glared at Gareth, but Gareth kept going. “Christopher stole Cole’s fiancée.”
“Oh.” Lana was glaring at him. “How could you steal another man’s fiancée?”
“First, she didn’t tell me she was engaged.”
“People say you could hear the sounds of her having a really good time on the entire dorm floor.”
Gareth sighed.
Christopher tried to ignore his brother, focusing instead on Lana. “Second, you can’t steal another human being.”
Gareth grinned wickedly. “I understand she was a screamer.”
Christopher gritted his teeth against the urge to strangle his brother. “Third, when I found out she was engaged to Cole I went to him and apologized.”
“I heard one guy actually came out of his room and started waving a ruler like he was conducting a symphony.” Gareth, glancing sideways at Christopher, waved his hands to an imaginary beat.
Too much more and Gareth would find himself flung out the window head first. “Cole decided to fight me. He was humiliated when I won.”
“Then there was this other girl who—”
“Gareth. Don’t make me kill you. Mom would get pissed.”
Lana was wiping at her mouth, but she couldn’t hide her grin. “Ookay. So Cole wants to hurt me in order to hurt you. I get that. He must not have thought I could take him.”
“You can’t.” Gareth’s face paled, the humor replaced by horror.
Hell, so did Christopher’s. The speculation in her eyes scared the crap out of him. “He’s a wizard, sweetheart. He’ll be prepared to face another wizard.”
She cocked her hip and frowned. “So?”
“Mom always explained to us that witches were very powerful, but only if strong emotion was behind what they did.”
She nodded. “Like the witch who cursed your family.”
“Yes. And wizards are more like chess players, planning every move way in advance, prepared for every eventuality.”
She smirked. “Other than being cursed into werewolves.”
Chris blinked. “Well, yes. Although I understand it’s become standard practice to guard against that sort of thing now.”
She rolled her eyes. “Can’t imagine why.”
Christopher cleared his throat. “A wizard’s strength is less fluid, but requires less power at the end since we’ve already got the spells in place. They just require a trigger. A witch might hold a wizard off for a little while, but I believe the wizard would ultimately win because of that.”
“I think you believe that because you’ve never faced a pissed off witch before.”
He took her hands in his. “You don’t understand.”
“Then show me. I mean, didn’t I break the sickness spell? I think I can take a wizard.”
He blinked. She couldn’t seriously be asking… “No.”
“Why not?”
He squeezed her hands, horrified at the very idea. “No way in hell will I duel you!”
She sniffed. “You’re just afraid I’ll win.”
“Uh, guys?”
Christopher was outraged. “I do not think you’ll win! I would kick your ass.”
“You so would not, Scooby.”
“Guys?”
“Oh, I think I would!” He huffed. Scooby? He owed her for that one.
“Please. All I’d have to do is wave a Milk Bone around and you’d be toast.”
Gareth got between them, holding up both hands. “Don’t you two think it’s a bit more important to figure out why Cole wants you dead?”
“Good question.” Christopher still wasn’t certain what had pushed Cole over the edge. He hadn’t been near the man in two years, and that last time had been at worst civil but cold.
Lana rolled her eyes. “Like I haven’t been asking the same thing.”
“Yesterday he threatened Lana. Unless I miss my guess that little head cold he gave Christopher was meant to be a great deal more uncomfortable than it turned out to be.”
Christopher lifted Lana’s hand to his lips. “Thanks to you.” He kissed her fingers, loving the soft blush that came over her.
“You’re welcome.” She took her hand back and resumed her pacing. “But we still don’t know what’s going on. I could see him trying to seduce me, or take me away for revenge, but murder?”
Christopher studied Lana. His little witch had hit on what had been bothering him since yesterday.
“She’s right. Something much bigger is going on here.” Christopher reached out and stroked one of the few green leaves left on the plant. “Something Cole is willing to kill for.”
* * * *
“I got nothing.” Lana sat back in the chair and rubbed wearily at her eyes. Across the kitchen Gareth was talking to someone on the phone, his voice low and urgent. In front of her, the laptop’s screen remained depressingly empty of answers.
Christopher handed her a can of soda with a weary sigh. “I’ve tried scrying, but Cole is blocked.
And divining doesn’t seem to be getting me anywhere either.” He scrubbed at his face with his free hand. “It doesn’t help that most of my equipment is back at my house.”
She smiled, opening the can of soda. “Maybe your tarot cards are broke. Want to borrow mine?”
“No thanks.” He sat down next to her, casually draping an arm around her shoulders. He gently stroked her hair. “Head hurt?”
Without even thinking about it she leaned into his touch. She’d always loved having her hair played with. “A little.”
Grammy came into the kitchen, her phone in her hand. “I’ve put out feelers among the witches. It’s a long shot, but maybe someone in our community has heard of or had dealings with Cole and can give us a clue what he’s up to.” She joined Lana and Chris at the kitchen table and put the phone down with a sigh. “Any luck?”