Turned (6 page)

Read Turned Online

Authors: Virna Depaul

BOOK: Turned
2.61Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Téa had told her often enough that she would get tired of rejecting human contact—but as a coffee shop owner-manager, Ana usually had so much human contact that by the end of the day she wanted to rip up her apron and run away into the Seattle sunset.

It was
emotional
contact she could use. And work that meant something. Her greatest achievement to date was learning how to correctly foam skim milk for half-caf
double-shot supertalls at six bucks a pop. She still lived week to week. There was never enough to consider quitting and giving the search for Gloria all she had. Sure, Gloria had told her to leave her alone, but if Ana could find her, if they could see each other face-to-face, she knew their sisterly bond would take over, giving her a chance to talk sense into the other woman. They were
family
, for God’s sake.

Ana ached to hold Gloria again. To see the dimple on the side of her cheek when she smiled.

And to find out how everything had gone so wrong that day seven years ago, when her formal jump out of Primos Sangre had turned into a shoot-out.

She wanted her sister, damn it. But there was no denying she wanted more, too.

Ty said Belladonna paid well. What else was he offering?

He smiled at her.

Riiight.

Could she really relax enough to let someone in again? Even if it was simply to work with a team, to work with Ty and be treated with kindness and respect, to maybe even explore the sizzling attraction that flared to life whenever he touched her …

Her instincts fought against the idea. Her aching heart tugged her forward.

“Ana,” he said quietly. He walked toward her, his movements slow. Predatory. Primal. Jesus, he got to her. His strength was a natural part of him, just like his confidence.

“I’ve answered a few of your questions,” he said quietly. “Now I want an answer from you.”

What could he possibly want to know? Belladonna seemed to cross so many of the lines she had created for herself. If she accepted the job, what would she be asked to do? Was he going to ask whether she’d ever killed
someone and would be willing to do so again? Whether she’d sold her body for money and would spread her legs for information? Whether she’d—

She stiffened as his gaze zeroed in on her face—one specific part of her face. A split second later, he asked, “Why haven’t you done anything about the scar?”

Her scar burned under his gaze, a reminder of how much she’d paid because of her past. At the time, the payment had seemed worth it. Now?

She’d simply learned to make the scar invisible when she looked in the mirror. Of course, she wasn’t going to tell him that.

This job he offered—this chance to get information on Gloria—could be a chance to finally heal. Or it would scar her more. Right down to her soul.

“Pobrecita,”
he murmured, and the sound of her native language falling from his lips made her shiver. “You see the scar as penance, don’t you?”

Slowly, he raised his hand and ran his knuckles against the unmarred skin of her left cheek.

She shivered, but didn’t pull away.

Penance? That implied forgiveness. A fresh start. She wanted it. She was so close to having it.

But as this man’s questioning proved, she wasn’t close enough.

Ty leaned closer and nuzzled his nose into her hair, nudging the heavy, dark brown tendrils behind her ear. Despite the chill he radiated, her body was infused with sudden heat.

She waited in breathless anticipation for him to kiss her again. She wanted him to. Was close to pulling his face around so she could initiate a kiss herself. This time, she thought,
she’d
use her tongue. She’d sate herself on the taste of him, and let her hands explore the body that seemed capable of both strength and tenderness …

As if by accident, his fingertips brushed the raised, jagged line on her left cheek. Her eyes flew open. Like a bucket of ice water, the contact with her scar shocked her out of her trance. “Stop!” She shoved him away, took several steps back, and put a chair between them.

For a second, he looked like he was going to come after her. Like a fool, she wanted him to.

He didn’t. Suddenly he was all business again.

“Belladonna can offer you something different, Ana. Something more than the gang ever could. Something more than what you have now.”

“Shut up!” She was disgusted by how easily he’d pulled her in then allowed her to back away without even a hint of regret.

Ty waved his hand around the coffee shop. “Technically, you’re fine. You immerse yourself in your business and your garden. I’ll bet you even shag every once in a while, just to prove you can. But you have no friends to share your highs and lows with, and when you do have sex, you probably never come. Hell, you don’t even have a cat for company. Are you living? Or are you just waiting? And if so, who are you waiting for?”

No one
.

But it wasn’t true.

More than Gloria, she’d been waiting for someone like
him
.

The realization weakened her knees and ate at her belly.

Ty’s expression softened. “You know another term for waiting? Dying. What I’m offering you is the chance to be more. To do more. To join in the land of the living again. To have purpose. In doing so, you’ll train and be trained in return. You’ll learn to stop suppressing the hatred and guilt and anger inside you. Feel them. Control them. Then you’ll hold all the power in the world.”

Power. Power to feel again.

Power to feel more of what she’d felt today. With Ty.

Power to feel alive.

She was almost convinced, but he didn’t need to know that. She had to keep this interview, which was what it seemed to be, on track.

“These other women I’m to train. Who are they? Gang members? Ex-cons?”

Ty shook his head. “That’s also on a need-to-know basis. You won’t necessarily be working with each other. Not at first.”

“So what you said about training them—”

“You’ll cover what you know to prepare them for their own missions, if and when it’s necessary. They’ll do the same for you. Different skill sets. We need them all.”

Annoyed, she stopped pacing and frowned. He was actually serious. He truly believed she could make unknown women into badass spies. That
she
could be one. Weren’t Bond girls all boobs and no brawn? “What would
I
need to be trained in?”

He thought that over. “As I said before, control to start with. But the other female agents won’t be teaching you that.”

“Who—” she began, even though she already knew.

He simply stared at her, all traces of lightheartedness gone.

She wasn’t surprised. And she didn’t miss his message, either. He wouldn’t just train her. He’d push her. Far more than she’d want to be pushed.

He moved, stepping right up to her. His gaze wandered over her face. Her scar. Her lips. But he didn’t touch her.

“You have the business card, Ana. You know how to get in touch with me.” He paused, looked out the window with a slight frown, then met her gaze again before
saying, “You’re brave. You’re strong. You built this coffee shop from nothing. You’ve fought to survive, but you’re still not willing to fight for what you
really
want in life. When you are, I’ll be waiting. And I’ll help you. All you have to do is call.”

CHAPTER
FIVE

Ty strode out of Ana’s coffee shop and kept walking despite
the strong urge to go back to her. To kiss her again. To do far more to her soft lips, her slick tongue, and her warm, fragrant body.

Lust the likes of which he’d never felt before, even during the first two months of his transition, was riding him hard, making him nearly dizzy. When he’d first been turned, his lust had been for sex, regardless of who it was with. Now, his lust seemed reserved for Ana alone.

Shaking, he headed toward the flat he’d rented. It was across the street from Ana’s house, so that he could easily keep her under surveillance. Thankfully, the more distance he put between himself and the coffee shop, the calmer he seemed to get. Within minutes, although he still ached to have her, he no longer felt like he was going to die if he didn’t. His surroundings, rather than his desire for Ana, became his focus.

Since it was past midnight, the streets were quiet. Eventually, the trendier neighborhood where Ana worked gave way to a seedier part of the city, one where gunshots and sirens weren’t uncommon and some streets were virtually abandoned. Ty’s flat—
apartment
, he reminded himself—was nothing to brag about. It was on the top floor of an anonymous three-story brick building with a clear view of Ana’s little house. Carly had paid the rent in advance for several months, although Ty
had no plans to be there that long. The renting agent was glad to take the cash and asked no questions, handing over the keys and assuring Ty that there was no extra charge for the furniture.

One tug on the greasy string dangling from the bare-bulb light fixture in the ceiling and he’d seen why. The previous tenant had left only a beat-up sofa and a rickety table and chair. There was a hot plate. Shabby digs, but all he needed for the temporary stakeout. Dragging cumbersome items from a van into the building would have attracted attention, something Ty wanted to avoid.

He’d braced the table so it could safely hold his surveillance monitors. The rest of his gear—flash drives and micro-engineered spy stuff, including items designed specifically for Ana—weighed next to nothing.

He slouched comfortably into the chair in front of the monitors, touching a few keys to adjust certain settings. A half hour later, she arrived home.

For a second, Ana looked straight into a tiny camera she didn’t know was there.

Ty sat up, mesmerized by the catlike wariness in her brown eyes. He was relieved when she looked away. She moved around inside her house, her expression calm.

Ana was a natural beauty. Thin gold hoops were her only jewelry, piercing plump little earlobes that he wanted very much to nip. With flawless light caramel skin, she didn’t need makeup and she didn’t seem to use any besides eyeliner. Her fine features and dark, wing-like brows had a delicate symmetry, unlike her full mouth. Her lips were luscious, the lower noticeably more full than the upper. Made for kissing.

And that body was made for loving. Ana was petite and slender in an athletic way, with small breasts he longed to caress and a shapely ass that filled out her jeans. All that combined with her long, dark brown hair had him aching for her.

Tough luck.

She went into her bathroom and shut the door. Not that she had a roommate or a lover who might barge in. Ty had satisfied his curiosity on that score after hours of surveillance. Just as she kept to herself at the coffee shop, Ana lived alone and seemed to like it that way. Then again, it made sense that anyone who’d been in prison would come out with a compulsive need for privacy.

After a few minutes, he could just see wisps of steam curling around the edges of the door. Hot shower.

Thinking about what she looked like naked and wet made him a candidate for a cold one.

Frustrated, he leaned back, tipping the chair so that the two front legs rose from the floor. A sharp creak brought him quickly back down. He stood, bending to lift the loose floorboard where he’d hidden a compact nylon zip bag filled with several forms of ID and a reserve smartphone.

Ty was a true believer in backup, especially during a solo stakeout. He took out the zip bag to check on the contents. Even with the high-tech locks he’d installed on the door and windows, it wouldn’t do to be too cocky. Not in this neighborhood.

Everything was there. Real and fake driver’s licenses and passports, and several government-issued picture IDs.

His British passport was no more than a sentimental token by this point. He hadn’t been back in more than a decade. The picture resembled his father at the same age, a secret agent himself, but for MI6.

No one had known about Gil Duncan’s double life. He had been born into wealth and its attendant privileges, turning himself into a master of spy craft simply for the thrill of it.

Ty, his mother, and his sister, Naomi, scarcely saw him
for months on end. They lived in luxury, but explanations for the absences were never forthcoming, and depression became a way of life for his mother, with her spending more and more time in bed, barely able to take care of herself let alone her kids. Just before Ty moved from London to the United States to attend university, his father had told him about his double life and advised him to get a desk job. To raise a family and spend time with them. To reject secrecy.

Too little and too late.

One learns what one lives. Ty knew that all too well.

Two months after his mother died, Ty was recruited stateside. Of course, his father hadn’t approved. Not that it was any of his bloody business. Ty could have forgiven the way his old man had treated him, but the way he’d ignored his mother’s and sister’s needs, leaving the burden of their care to Ty? He couldn’t forgive Gil for that. They were still estranged. Ty being a vampire simply made it a thousand times more likely they’d remain so.

He put the nylon bag back into its hiding place and glanced at the monitor. The steam was still curling out from around the closed bathroom door.

Ty forced away thoughts of his father, guilt about his own failings when it came to Naomi, and pleasurable fantasies of joining Ana. He went to the window and absently looked through the slatted blinds. When his mind continued to spin with images of death and blood and sex, he cursed. He had to get out—and walk faster than he could think.

On his way out, he took a last glance at the lighted windows of Ana’s house. Given how serious she seemed about leaving her past behind, he marveled that she’d chosen such a dangerous neighborhood to live in. Then again, she didn’t have much choice. Since she was an ex-felon, it had been a miracle she’d gotten a small business
loan to start her coffee shop. After she paid her expenses, there was barely anything left for rent. Even so, she was making a life for herself, one symbolized all too well by the small house she kept well tended and freshly painted despite the punks who frequently vandalized it and the dilapidated shacks surrounding it.

Other books

Knitting Rules! by Stephanie Pearl–McPhee
Deadline by Craig McLay
Changing Times by Marilu Mann
Terra by Mitch Benn
Murder on the Cape Fear by Hunter, Ellen Elizabeth
Stranded by Barr, Emily
Dead Corse by Phaedra Weldon
The Plimsoll Line by Juan Gracia Armendáriz
Cowboy for Keeps by Cathy McDavid