Read The Purest of the Breed (The Community) Online
Authors: Tracy Tappan
“Anyway,” she added softly, “thank you. I don’t want to be alone right now.”
“Well…okay, then.” He took her gently by the arm and led her downstairs and into his bedroom. “So, you ready to hit the hay?” he asked, closing the door behind them.
She looked around his room. “Not really,” she answered.
“It’s almost three in the morning.”
Everything in his room seemed to have passed muster, because Marissa’s eyes landed on him again. “It’s almost three in the
afternoon
,” she countered. “Back in Normal Land, I’d be making myself a fruit salad for a snack right about now. Why do you flip-flop the times, anyway?”
He shrugged. “We only work topside at night, so switching the time just makes it a regular work day for us.”
“Always at night?”
“Yep. That’s when the bad guys come out, after all.”
Plus, I’m a vampire
. “Um, you should’ve been given a sleeping pill to help you adjust.”
She shook her head. “I wanted to stay alert, in case…” Anxiety filmed her eyes. “Just in case.”
He exhaled a slow breath. Damn, these last couple of nights had really tangled her up.
“And…” She nodded at the knife set slung over his shoulder. “Should I be worried that you’re still holding onto those?”
He smiled. “Nah.” Crossing to his wet bar, he put his knife set on it. “This is just an occupational hazard, sweetheart. I don’t even go to the bathroom without a knife in my hand, right?”
“That does sound hazardous.” Her eyes came to life with amusement. “You might cut something important doing that.”
He chuckled. Christ, but this girl was cu-ute. So pretty her face made his bones ache. Thickly lashed green eyes were set above exquisitely constructed cheekbones, with an upturned little nose that tempted him to reach out and tweak it. The delicate arch of her jaw smoothed down to what
appeared
to be a slender, arching throat, but which
luckily
her long hair mostly covered, or he probably would’ve crapped himself. Her skin was a deep honey color, suggesting Mediterranean ancestry somewhere in her pedigree, and her hair flowed straight and fine down her back, with long feathery bangs that caught in her lashes. The color was cool, too: kind of two-toned, with tarnished blonde on top and light brown underneath.
She was wearing a new pair of lightweight sweatpants and a T-shirt that, Christ, yes, did show off a nice pair of ta-tas, although he hated to quote Gábor. Beth Costache had probably donated some clothes to Marissa…Hadley, too, he’d bet. Beth was just that level of nice. Marissa’s body was slender, bordering on too skinny for his taste, if it hadn’t been for the slight womanly flare of her hips and those mighty fine ta-tas: a high-end B cup edging toward a C, by the looks of them. Her nipples were suffering from a serious case of stick-out-itis, and at the cocktail party, he’d kept them under solid surveillance in his peripheral vision. It’d taken every ounce of willpower he owned not to lean forward and close his mouth over one like the cherry-on-top it was.
“You have incredible eyes,” she said, surprising him out of his nipple reverie. “They’re a gorgeous silver color and, wow, so bright.”
He hooded his lids.
Stop thinking about her boobs, you dumbass
. “Um, your eyes are also… I like your eyes, too.” Besides being a beautiful green, the pupils were surrounded by starbursts of gold. “They look like little suns shining up from the bottom of a mossy pond.”
Her eyebrows popped high, then she laughed. “My God, who
are
you, Dev? A big bad GI Joe type, or a poet with a palate for fine wine?” She nodded toward the floor-to-ceiling wine rack across the room: home to his extensive collection.
“All right, all right, don’t get all fired up now. I’m not a high-society type.” He pushed his fingers through his hair, raking it back from his brow. “It’s just that not much dating goes on around here.”
Or any
. “Uh, small town politics, you know? So hobbies are essential.”
“Really?” She gave his body a slow, thorough once-over. “It’s hard to imagine you not being constantly swarmed by women.”
The appreciative look in her eyes made his skin jump. “Uh, well…um…” He snapped his mouth closed. What the
hell
was that? A beautiful woman was flirting with him and he couldn’t come up with anything better to say than something Urkel might’ve spluttered? Though in his defense, he’d always been the flirter, not the flirtee. Vârcolac females weren’t allowed to be flirtatious, and the Dragon women they’d brought into Ţărână before hadn’t exactly been in a welcoming frame of mind, the whole abduction thing putting a real damper on that. So having a woman show interest in him was a real red-fucking-letter-day experience.
“Hey, you want to open a bottle?” Marissa wandered over to his wine rack and carefully eased bottles out of their circular holders to peer at the labels.
Hmm, let’s pause and assess
: hot woman alone with him in his bedroom being flirtatious and in a vulnerable state…plus several cocktails already consumed by both of them…plus more alcohol in the form of wine.
Decisions, decisions
…
“You have a very sophisticated wine collection, Dev.” She glanced over her shoulder at him, her eyes once again doing that check-him-out thing that gave his nuts a nice, firm squeeze. “I’m impressed.”
He warmed all over, feeling inordinately pleased by the compliment. “Thanks. Yeah, go ahead and pick a bottle.”
The proverbial
famous last words
, surely.
Chapter Fourteen
“Ah, here’s a good one.”
Dev watched Marissa pull out her choice and set it on the high, round table he used for a sommelier station.
He crossed to the table and picked up the bottle to check out the label. No Napa Valley for this girl. She’d selected a Beaujolais, a pricey brand, but not exorbitant: the best quality for the money, in fact. “The chef knows her wine.” He set down the bottle. “You like French, do you?”
She showed him sparkly white teeth in a smile. “I specialize in French cooking.”
“Do you? That’s cool.” He used his wine opener to deftly pull the cork, then set the bottle back on the table to breathe. “So why a chef?”
“I was actually a marine science major at USD to begin with, if you can believe it.”
Sure, why not? She seemed smart enough.
“But then my mom got breast cancer and I had to drop out to take care of her.” He heard her soft inhalation. “I’m the oldest, so…I’m sure you know how it is. Responsibilities.”
Actually, he didn’t know. Even though he was the oldest in his family, he’d always managed to finagle himself out of responsibility crap. “Your dad’s not in the picture?”
“No, he died of pancreatic cancer when I was fifteen.” Her lips twisted wryly. “I’m pretty much a ticking time bomb, aren’t I?”
It wasn’t the best hand to have been dealt. “Not so good, no.” ’
Course, hooking up with a Vârcolac would cure all that
. “What happened with your mom?”
“Oh, she’s fine now,” Marissa said, brightening. “In full remission and going strong. And things happen for a reason, don’t they? As it turned out, marine science wasn’t my thing. I discovered I wanted to do something creative, and, anyway…” she laughed, “I’m a terrible swimmer. But the best thing about it was that my mom and I got closer. I just feel like…my sister, Natalie, should’ve done her share. It would’ve been the right thing.” She picked up the Beaujolais and poured them each about a finger’s worth. “And what about you? Why a soldier?”
“Hell, I’ve never given it much thought.” He supposed he’d gone into the Warrior Class to please his dad, who’d secretly wanted more for his son than geology. Unlike Dev’s mother. Yeah, pleasing Dad had always equaled displeasing Mother. Those two had forever been at odds, and never very good at keeping their children out of the middle. It’d been a rotten way to grow up at times, but at least when it’d come down to choosing sides, the decision for Dev had always been clear: Dad, the man who’d put Dev on top of the world from the moment of his birth.
“You like to hit stuff,” Marissa provided. “Be messy. Grunt and sweat.”
He laughed. “That sounds good. Let’s go with that.”
Her eyes sparkled like emeralds. “Are you ready to taste this?” She swirled the wine, then lifted her goblet high to check out the color.
Picking up his own glass, he went through the same motions, a feeling of contentment warming his chest. He loved the rituals that went along with wine drinking, and sharing it with her, someone who clearly understood the finer art of it, was…well, awesome.
It wasn’t beyond him that wine collecting was an unusual hobby for a guy who liked to grunt and sweat, but it’d been impossible for him to define himself as a man who only used his fists…and as a breed of human who was a monster. He tried not to let it show just how much world opinion about vampires bugged the shit out of him. But it did, and he supposed part of his solution had been to wrap himself in something that could be counted as quote sophisticated end quote. He caught flak from his warrior buddies for it, but not as much as he could’ve, since wine-tasting at least involved the consumption of alcohol. That kept the lip tolerable.
Marissa set her nose over the rim of her goblet to smell the wine.
He followed suit again—fruity, with a hint of cherries—then they both took a sip.
Their gazes locked over the rims of their goblets, a look of satisfaction spreading over both of their faces. In that brief second a connection passed between them that twisted Dev’s insides with a strange, painful yearning for something more. Everything.
He pulled his eyes away, suddenly feeling uncharacteristically awkward. “Gotta love that pinot noir grape,” he murmured.
“There’s not much better,” she agreed, pouring them each a healthy serving this time. “So what’s your favorite wine?”
He
hmmed
in the middle of a long sip. “It can’t be my favorite, I guess, since I’ve never tasted it, but it’s the one I most want to try. It’s got a rep as the best French red in the world: Château Cuvier III, 1990.”
“Oh, my God,” she laughed breathlessly. “You’re kidding?”
“No.” He eyed her quizzically. She had the strangest expression on her face right now. “What?”
“It’s just that…” She shook her head, the barest trace of a smile still on her lips. “No, nothing.”
Maybe she was amazed he even knew about it. The vintage was extremely rare.
“Do you know why it’s considered the best?” she asked.
“Yeah, from what I understand, it’s made from some type of impossible crop. Each area of France produces a distinct grape, as I’m sure you know. The Rhône Valley in the south makes different wine than Burgundy to the north. Well, Cuvier Vineyards is in this tiny place called Jura, close to Switzerland, and normally very cold, right? But one season, Jura had a record warm spell, and the grapes turned into this amazing combination of north-and-south. Only a small portion of the crop was affected that way, though, and just a few hundred bottles were ever made. The stuff’s impossible to find. I’ve been writing to vineyards all over the world, trying to get some, but haven’t been able to.”
“Such dedication to your hobby.”
“Well, hell, this wine’s so good, it’s known as the ‘love wine.’ Apparently, as soon as it passes the lips, the superb flavor puts a body in the mood for”—he slanted a devilish brow at her—“hanky-panky.”
She hooted with laughter. “Oh, Lord, that’s great! I mean, totally wrong, but very funny.”
“Wrong?” WTF. How would she know?
She sipped her drink. “I’m familiar with the history of that family. Angelique Cuvier, the madame of Cuvier Vineyards and widow to the great wine experimentalist, Jacques Cuvier III, fell madly in love for the second time in her life at the ripe age of sixty. Her
objet d’amour
was thirty years her junior, making their affair overtly scandalous, fiercely passionate, and, unfortunately, agonizingly short. Her lover died in an accident six months into their relationship. Angelique was devastated beyond consolation. She lay in bed for weeks, refusing to harvest her crop.” Marissa wrapped her thumb and forefinger around the stem of her goblet and spun the glass, gazing at the bright red stars of light reflecting off the surface of the wine. “So you see, plenty of that incredible north-and-south blend of Cuvier grapes had ripened. Angelique just let most of them rot on the vine.”
“Good God.” Dev exhaled sharply, appalled. “The woman ought to be shot.”
She glanced up at him through her lashes. “It was for love.
That’s
why it’s called the ‘love wine.’” She stepped around the sommelier table. “I’ve noticed you don’t have any hair on your body,” she said quietly.
He blinked, the switch in topics jarring him.
She stroked a finger lightly over his bare forearm, and the hairs on his nape went on high alert. Her attention strayed to the wedge of skin exposed by his V-necked black T-shirt; no chest hairs curling there, either. Maybe he should’ve hunted Om Rău tonight in his suit blazer or that stinky trench coat.
“Why do you shave your body?”
I don’t, sweetheart. I’m a breed of human called Vârcolac, so I only have hair on my head, armpits, and nuts
. “Well…” He cleared his throat. He’d known there was going to be a certain amount of truth evasion he’d have to engage in with the newbies, hopefully not outright lying, but rather some creative side-stepping. But now that he was facing the prospect of maneuvering around her question, the idea of hiding his true self felt more wrong than he’d predicted it would. Maybe if he didn’t already like this girl so much, he wouldn’t care if she liked him back…for who he really was, fangs and all.
Right
. Fat chance. “It keeps me sleek,” he said, slicing his hand through the air in a forward motion, “for chasing down bad guys.”