Flashfire (3 page)

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Authors: Deborah Cooke

Tags: #Romance, #Fantasy

BOOK: Flashfire
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Great shot. He looked both mysterious and approachable, trustworthy. Lorenzo had done the smart thing on his promotional shot, and looked directly out at the viewer. It was as if he were making eye contact. A little illusion there, but a good one.

And that half smile was good. Sexy. Sensuous. She’d bet he smiled slowly, like he knew something special about you. All your secrets revealed. She shivered a little.

Then she hoped he wasn’t short. Lifts would ruin everything.

“You’re probably hoping he isn’t short,” Stacy charged.

Cassie laughed. “What if I am?”

“So shallow. Love transcends such details.” Stacy grinned. “And everyone’s the same height lying down, anyway.”

“You’re terrible!”

Stacy whispered mischievously, her eyes dancing. “No, I’m very,
very
good.”

Cassie laughed again.

“I’ve realized Scott wasn’t man enough for me,” Stacy said with a confident nod. “You were right about him. All flash, no
delivery
.”

Cassie didn’t know what to say to that. She tilted the brochure, wondering whether the glints in Lorenzo’s eyes had been Photoshopped in. She didn’t recognize the photographer’s name. Maybe it had been a lucky shot.

Or maybe Lorenzo really was this good-looking.

No. Maybe he knew a good plastic surgeon. She suspected that this much masculine goodness had had a little professional enhancement.

Stacy hurried to the lobby door, leaving Cassie momentarily behind her. That was when Cassie realized something. “Wait a minute,” she called after her. “What does it matter whether he’s gorgeous?”

Stacy cast a smile over her shoulder and nearly galloped through the doors.

Oh no.

“You’re going to ask him more than one question!” Cassie guessed. “Or ask him to help with your, um, agenda item.”

Stacy just laughed. “Vacations are supposed to be
fun
, Cassie. And what could be more fun than getting it on with a hunky, rich magician?”

“But . . .”

“It’ll be good for my ego, even to catch his eye.”

Right. “You can’t be expecting forever. . . .”

“No, just
fun
. Remember fun?” Stacy preened a little. “Who knows—I might know a few tricks he doesn’t.”

Cassie knew when there was no chance of changing Stacy’s mind. “This I have to see,” she muttered, and Stacy laughed again.

Cassie unfastened her ponytail and redid it as she walked through the lobby, combing her hair into some kind of order with her fingers. As men turned to ogle Stacy, she realized that her friend had deliberately dressed to attract attention.

To stand out from the crowd, as it were.

“Front-row seats,” Stacy said, waving the tickets under Cassie’s nose. “You won’t miss a thing.”

“How much
did
those cost you?”

Stacy laughed. “It’s found money, so it’s guilt-free to spend. Come on!”

“You’re crazy,” Cassie said lightly. In a way, she was glad to see Stacy ready to take a chance again. And she didn’t imagine for one minute that this Lorenzo would take the bait.

Stacy grinned. “No. I’m having fun. You should try it sometime, Ms. Workaholic. You were probably wishing for your camera all day long, even though you said you’d quit.”

“Well . . .”

“Then step aside, Cassie Redmond, and watch how it’s done.” Stacy lifted her chin and squared her shoulders, then sashayed down the aisle of the theater. If the reactions of the people already gathered there were any indication, she’d be stealing the show from Lorenzo.

Cassie smiled to herself at the prospect. Seeing a magician get more than he bargained for just might be fun.

Lorenzo was irritated. He pulled into his parking spot behind the theater and flung himself out of his orange Ferrari. He locked and armed it without a second thought, his hand on the stage door before the car had given its last beep of acquiescence.

Fred was there, sweeping the door open for him with his usual flourish.

At least something was going right.

Lorenzo hated being late. A lack of time before his performance compromised his routine of calming himself before the show. That lack of composure could lead to mistakes. He took the pricing of the tickets to his shows very seriously—he was determined to give each attendee the value he or she had paid for. And that meant a perfect show, each and every time. Perfect consistency. Perfect timing. Perfect showmanship. The way he saw it, he and the humans made an exchange: two hours of magical perfection for one hundred and fifty dollars a seat.

Perfection was only possible with no stress.

Unfortunately, everyone around him seemed determined to generate stress by the megaton.

One more matinee. Three more evening shows. Then the launch of the spectacle, and he’d be done.

Free.

He was counting down the moments.

Lorenzo marched to his dressing room and slammed the door, pressing his fingertips against his temples. He needed to calm himself. He was edgy. Ready to lose it.

Of course, there’d been that argument today at the house, the completely unnecessary drama of his father shifting shape right in front of the staff, and the subsequent need to terminate all employees at the house.

All Lorenzo had done was ask his father what had happened to the darkfire crystal.

Again.

It was still missing. Lorenzo had promised to hold it in trust in exchange for the flashfire song, and he had kept his word. He’d made the deal with Rafferty’s grandfather, the Cantor, then dropped the rock into his hoard, content to have what he wanted from the exchange. Six months ago, when he’d been putting the final touches on the plan for his great escape, he’d checked on the crystal.

It had disappeared.

That worried Lorenzo. What would the
Pyr
ask of him in exchange for his failure to keep the crystal safe? Did anyone know he knew the flashfire song? Could it be wiped from his memory as easily as the Cantor had put it there? It was imperative that he have no more ties to his kind after Saturday, and the flashfire song was key to his disappearance.

Only Lorenzo and Salvatore had access to the hoard, which was secured at his house. Therefore Salvatore must know what happened to it since Lorenzo didn’t. But his father was evasive and confused every time Lorenzo asked about the crystal—Lorenzo was certain it was an act. This time, he’d pushed harder, but his father had abruptly shifted shape in the middle of their dispute and gone to sleep.

Of course, the housekeeper and her husband witnessed the shift, which was undoubtedly Salvatore’s plan. They would never truly forget seeing a dragon shape shifter in Lorenzo’s living room. Lorenzo regretted losing them after so many years of good service, especially due to some game of his father’s, although he had paid a hefty severance to each.

Plus the pair had to be beguiled before they left his employment, for their own safety and psychological well-being. Now he had to find another couple willing to work for him under his terms, and for only a few days. It was all very time-consuming and extremely annoying.

Lorenzo couldn’t help suspecting that his father was deliberately making problems for him.

Instead of just being old, confused, and generally impossible.

Never mind that there were technical issues with Lorenzo’s final spectacle of being buried alive in the desert in his car, a feat of daring that relied upon precise preparation. The modifications to the car were not quite as he had insisted, and he’d have to discuss it with the mechanic again. If Lorenzo had had a dollar for every incompetent human with whom he’d been obliged to work over the past four centuries, he’d be a multimillionaire.

He was one anyway, but he’d earned that money.

And now the eclipse. He could feel it. It had nothing to do with him, because he had nothing to do with his fellow
Pyr
, so it infuriated him that he was sensitive to total lunar eclipses at all. What did he care if another
Pyr
had a firestorm? What did he care if another
Pyr
met his destined mate, whether they conceived another dragon shape shifter? They were just more
Pyr
for Lorenzo to ignore.

Lorenzo had work to do and money to make and obligations to fulfill. He would have appreciated the other
Pyr
ignoring him as thoroughly as he ignored them.

It would only have been polite for the moon to have chosen to not send him notice. But the pending eclipse teased at the edge of his consciousness, making him feel on the cusp of change.

Involuntarily.

Lorenzo hated everything that was involuntary.

And he hated being
Pyr
.

Becoming a dragon was barbaric and primitive. Never mind the fighting, the slashing and ripping and biting. He shuddered. It wasn’t clear to him whether the flashfire song would eliminate his shifter powers completely—as well as breaking the connections to his kind—but Lorenzo didn’t care.

In this moment, Lorenzo had to put the crystal out of his mind and focus. He preferred evening shows, but that wasn’t relevant. Two thousand people had just paid top dollar to see his afternoon performance.

And they would leave his custom-built theater happy.

Lorenzo did his breathing exercises and deliberately lowered his pulse. He steadied himself as well as he was able, under the circumstances, and prayed that all the preparations had been done correctly. On this day, he’d take heads if there was anything less than perfect. He dressed alone, as always, then squared his shoulders and considered his reflection.

He wasn’t holding up too badly. He didn’t look a day past three hundred years old.

Or in human terms, a day past thirty-five.

The tuxedo fit him beautifully, but that was the mark of a good bespoke tailor. It reassured him to look so polished. Appearances were critical. He straightened his bow tie with a tweak. He swirled the black cape he favored as he swung it over his shoulders. As usual, the glimpse of its orange satin lining lifted his spirits. So beautiful. So elegant. So unexpected. He adored that cape.

Lorenzo scooped up his top hat and turned with a flourish. He strode to the door, leaving his dressing room with purpose. He checked the props and the staff, hearing the chatter of the audience gathered behind the heavy velvet drapes. He felt the familiar tingle that he always felt before a performance—part nerves, part anticipation, part terror.

The lights began to dim. The music began to play.

Showtime.

Cassie had to hand it to this Lorenzo guy. The theater was incredible. He hadn’t skimped at all. There was nothing tawdry or tacky about it. The interior was gorgeous and elegant, far more luxurious than any of the other venues they’d visited or glimpsed.

The seats were cushy and upholstered in black velvet. They were scrupulously clean, as if they’d been upholstered just that day. The carpet was black and thick underfoot, unstained as far as she could see. There wasn’t so much as a stray kernel of popcorn. The curtains on the stage looked like real velvet, black with a line of metallic orange along the hem. That line etched the glittering outline of flames.

Trial by fire. She got it.

There were sconces spaced along the walls, each looking like a brass bowl that held a flame. Of course, they couldn’t have been real flames, not with fire codes, but they looked real. The temperature in the theater was cool but not cold. It felt like a refuge, both from commercialism and the noisy bustle of Vegas.

She listened to the audience as they took their seats and murmured to each other. She felt their wonder and knew that Lorenzo had them believing in him even before he began his show.

Cassie folded her arms across her chest, less willing to be persuaded. All of this magic stuff relied on trickery, on making people look left when things happened on the right, for example. She was determined to see the truth of whatever this guy did.

Her BlackBerry vibrated again and she glanced at it. Again they had doubled the price they’d pay for shots of those shape-shifting dragons. Melissa Smith’s television show about the
Pyr
must have really good ratings. Cassie scrolled through the message, eyeing the specifications for what they wanted.

A suite of shots, documenting the change from man to dragon.

That would be tough to fake.

Of course, if the
Pyr
were real, the shots wouldn’t be fake.

Cassie dismissed that possibility. She wondered what the editor would pay for proof that the
Pyr
were a hoax. Well aware of Stacy’s disapproval, Cassie sent a message to ask.

Her BlackBerry received a reply almost instantly. This story was hot. She wasn’t totally surprised that the editor would pay the same price for proof of a hoax, but was surprised that the price had increased again.

But where would a person find one of these supposed dragon shifters?

“Off,” Stacy muttered. “You promised.”

Cassie turned off the device and put it away. It would be enough money to retire. To leave the business of illusion for good.

She was surprised by how appealing that idea sounded.

Cassie was still thinking about that money as the lights began to dim and music started from all sides. The flames in the sconces leapt higher and that line across the bottom of the stage curtains began to glitter.

As if it were burning.

A trick, but a good one.

If she were pretending to be a dragon shifter, where would she hide?

Maybe, just maybe, in a place where nothing was what it seemed to be.

A place like Las Vegas.

Hmm.

Lorenzo nodded at his staff and strode to his place at center stage, where he would await the rising of the curtains. He fought his awareness of the slow burn of the eclipse, teasing at the edge of his thoughts. He felt the firestorm light for some poor
Pyr
and ignored it, just as he had a hundred times before.

Even though it was close.

It was
not
his problem.

Lorenzo was in the act of donning his top hat when the music swelled. One pair of curtains swept back and the other curtain rose skyward.

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