Authors: J.R. Rain
“Yes, look for a missing mother and child. There won’t be a murder reported. At least not yet.”
“And you know this how?”
“Call it a hunch.”
“Fine.” He paused. “Any chance the child was playing a prank on you?”
“Not a chance in hell.”
“Don’t hold back, Sam. Tell me what you really think.”
“Smart ass.”
He said, “My question is: How did
Maddie
find your number?”
I had been thinking that, too. I bit my lip, and looked at my watch. Shit. I was already seriously late. “Hard to know, but my guess is that the number was already programmed into the phone.”
“Her mother’s phone? Or the killers?”
“The million-dollar question,” I said.
“Maybe
Maddie
hit redial. Who was your last call?”
I could have smacked my forehead. I told Chad to hang on as I quickly scrolled through the iPhone.
“A creditor,” I said.
“Keep scrolling.”
I did. “Nothing unusual. Nothing out of the ordinary.”
“Keep looking,” said Chad. “Perhaps a past client.”
“Nothing,” I said. “But I’ll go through it again when I’m not in a hurry.”
“When you’re not in a hurry? Hey, I was the one
jonesing
for coffee.”
“Just please find out what you can,” I said. “And tell your mother sorry.”
He said he would and before he clicked off I heard him ordering an iced
venti
vanilla latte...and my mouth watered.
God, I missed coffee.
Still shaken, I quickly scrambled around my house, grabbing my sunhat and my purse. I had already slathered my cheeks and hands with a heavy application of the market’s strongest sunblock, although that did little to stop the searing pain as I now dashed out of the house and crossed the small patch of grass that separated my house and the garage. Oh, how I envied those with connecting garages!
I was gasping by the time I reached the minivan. There had to be an easier way to get my kids. Maybe there was, but for now, no one was picking my kids up but me.
When my hot, irritated, inflamed skin had calmed down, I started the minivan, turned on the AC, and headed out to my kids’ school.
Chapter Nine
My kids were being pills.
Anthony had gotten into a fight...with a girl, no less. The girl, apparently, had seriously kicked his ass (and is it wrong that I secretly found this funny?), and as we drove to Burger King, his older sister, Tammy, wouldn’t let him forget it. It took the threat of a week’s grounding to finally get her to ease up.
I think my boxing trainer, Jacky, might be getting a new client this summer. Someone needed to teach the boy how to fight, and obviously it wasn’t going to be his worthless dad. Granted, I wasn’t advocating fighting, especially fighting girls, but who wants to hear about their boy getting their ass kicked at school?
“But Mom,” said Tammy. “She
sat
on him.”
I stifled a giggle behind my hand. Anthony, who was sitting next to me and sporting a swollen lip, looked at me sideways. When I gained some semblance of control over myself, I said, “Then maybe you should protect your little brother and not let girls sit on him.”
“Who do you think pulled her off him, Mom?” said Tammy. “I wasn’t going to let that cow sit on my brother. Well, not for very long, anyway.”
She giggled again, and I did my
damndest
not to join her.
We pulled up to Burger King and I put in our orders. I repeated Anthony’s plain hamburger order twice, knowing he wouldn’t touch anything with ketchup or mustard or anything else on it. With our food bagged, we headed home, and while the kids ate and did their homework, I took a hot shower. The shower was intended to clean off the copious amounts of sunscreen, but it also served another purpose.
I craved heat. My body had no natural warmth. I lived with an eternal chill, and so I craved blessed warmth. Showers were certainly nice, but, admittedly, nothing beat the warmth of a man lying next to me, a warmth I rarely felt since my own ex-husband had basically shunned me.
Of course, I had recently experienced such warmth. In fact, just over a week ago, in the arms of another man. A former client of mine. A man with his own dark secrets and a body that radiated heat unlike anything I had ever experienced.
A shiver went through me. A very pleasurable shiver, especially as I recalled Kingsley’s skillet-sized hands on my body. His touch, his expert touch, had sent shockwaves through me in more ways than one.
But as I stood there in the shower, as the water did its damned best to penetrate my eternal cold, I thought of another man.
Aaron Parker. Aka Fang.
The heat had worked deep into my skin, and as I stood there under the powerful spray, I reached behind me and turned the temperature even higher. Anyone else would have yelped. Anyone else would have leaped from the shower as surely as if being dropped into a boiling cauldron.
But I only moaned with pleasure.
After having drinks with Aaron, he had walked me back to my van where we had stood together awkwardly. He wanted to kiss me. He wanted to do a lot more to me, too. His thoughts were as clear as a bell, although anyone with a half a brain could have read his body language. I reminded him that I had a lot to digest. I reminded him that he had been aware of me for a lot longer than I had been aware of him. This needed to sink in. I had to sort through my feelings and emotions....
And that’s when he kissed me.
He kissed me long and hard and although I had nearly pushed him back—hell, he was lucky he didn’t go flying into the trunk of a nearby tree—I decided I liked his kiss. There had been a crazy hunger to him.
Or maybe he was just crazy.
His lips covered mine and I knew he wanted to bite me, or at least use his teeth. To nibble, to bite. To draw blood. When he got too aggressive, I pulled back. He apologized, and then went back to chewing on my lower face.
Never had I been kissed like that before.
Never. And never did I expect to be kissed like that again.
The shower spray felt so damn good. Too good. I could stand there all night. I could probably do other things in there all night, too. After all, I had recently discovered that I could experience something very pleasurable. Something I had thought was lost to me.
That thought alone sent a shiver through me.
I pushed it away and turned off the shower. There was work to be done. There was a little girl scared and alone and living with a monster.
And with images of Fang whispering goodbye in my ear, I got dressed and headed for my office at the back of the house.
Chapter Ten
I was scouring over internet leads, scanning heartbreaking article after heartbreaking article, when my cell phone rang. It was Chad.
“Hey, Sunshine,” he said.
“It never gets old, does it?”
Chad was, of course, poking fun of my “condition”. A condition called
xeroderma
pigmentosum
, which was what most of the world thought I had. Believe it or not, I didn’t run around telling people I was a vampire.
“Probably not ever,” he said. “Besides, I’m your ex-partner. I can get away with goofing on you. Kind of like an older brother.”
“A stupid-face older brother.”