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an excerpt from

Seduction in the Sun

 

Copyright © 2014 by Daire St. Denis and published here with her permission

How to Train a Lover

A Savage Interactive by Daire St. Denis

Tessa Savage travels the world for business…and pleasure. From the Rocky Mountains to the Greek Islands, there’s no place Tessa won’t explore and very few sexual positions she won’t try.

It’s been a year since Tessa’s rendezvous with her favorite cowboys—a year of non-stop work. Now Tessa’s off to spend some much needed R&R in the Greek Isles on the luxury yacht of playboy billionaire and sexual dominant, Alander Papadakis.

However, when Alander breaks one of her golden rules, her holiday plans take a turn and she jets off—solo—to the island of Lesvos where she happens upon a mysterious young man from her past. Built like a Greek god and with the eyes of a lion, Nicolai Kinellis is hard to resist, especially when he asks Tessa to teach him everything she knows…about sex. A holiday training session with a hot young Adonis is exactly what Tessa needs but, when Nicolai treads too far over the line of another of Tessa’s rules, she must make one of the most difficult decisions of her life.

Tessa doesn’t know what to do and she needs help. Your help. Will you help her?

Welcome to Wicked Way Interactives by Daire St. Denis where you choose the ending to the story and determine Tessa’s fate in the Greek Isles.

*****

I catch a flight from Athens to the island of Lesvos, and the following day, I rent a car to drive from Mytilini, the capital, to the quaint seaside town of Molyvos. Memories assail me during the hour-long drive, unexpected memories of a man I’ve spent the last seven years trying to forget. I’d come to Greece a number of years ago after my failed marriage to Chase Walker. Yes, it’s true, Tessa Savage was married. Can you believe it? You heard the part where I said failed, right?

Like I said, that’s a story for another day. The point is, I took a six month sabbatical after the papers were signed, to heal, to regroup…all that shit. For the first couple of months I traveled both in Turkey and Greece, seeing some really cool places, but mostly doing the tourist thing, visiting ruins, island hopping to all the well-known spots; the white-washed villas of Santorini, Naxos, Crete, partying in Mykonos and Rhodes…

It wasn’t until I arrived on the island of Lesvos that I found any sort of peace. No. That’s not true. It’s where I managed to heal enough to go on. The person most helpful during that time was the grandmotherly Mrs. Kinellis, the owner of the Daphnis and Chloe guesthouse where I stayed for the remainder of my trip.

If there was any place that had ever felt like home, it was there, probably because Medea Kinellis and I had formed a connection—a rare one. The kind where you feel as if you’ve known the person forever. Even though her English was poor and my Greek basically non-existent, she nurtured me during my stay, taking care of my needs, giving me a motherly hug when I was feeling down, ignoring my evening exploits when I was feeling randy—which (you know me) was pretty often. I never once felt judged. She had a comforting quiet knack of knowing what I needed when I needed it and if she was too busy to provide, she’d send her young, wide-eyed grandson to help.

Such a sweet kid. In the months I stayed, I don’t think I ever heard him speak, though he often watched me with these unusual hazel eyes, always wide, as if I was a curiosity.

As I drive down the hill and Molyvos comes into sight, I see with delight that nothing’s changed. It’s what I love about the island. It has all the amenities that you could want on vacation: beaches, museums, great restaurants, live music, night life…and yet the small port town of Molyvos clings to the side of the hill like it has for millennia. The ruins of the Byzantine castle on top of the cliff welcome me as if I’m a long lost traveler come home. The streets of town are narrow and cobblestoned, not designed for vehicles, so I park my car in the lot on the outskirts of town and tow my luggage behind me, weaving my way through the narrow streets and steps to where the guest house perches.

The town is unusually quiet, particularly considering it’s spring and, in my opinion, the best time to visit. It’s just past one, so most residents are at home enjoying a large midday meal, but the decided lack of tourists is another reminder of the failing Greek economy.

Based on how quiet everything is, I guess booking the guesthouse online wasn’t necessary. But I’d wanted to because it seemed so ironic that the aged Medea Kinellis was conducting her business via the internet using twenty-first century technology while still living in a place where time stood still.

I ring the bell with a sense of giddiness. I can’t wait to see her. Of course, there’s always the possibility she doesn’t remember me. I mean, I’m only one of thousands of people who’ve traveled through these parts. The fact that she seemed to have a special place in her heart for me, well, that was probably just part of who she is, part of her charm, and a way to get tourists to come back every year.

Even with these doubts whispering around in the back of my head, I don’t care and I’m sure I’m sporting a goofy smile.

The door opens and an elderly gentleman I don’t recognize is standing there, slightly stooped, his thinning dark hair slicked back from his high forehead. “Ms. Savage?” He smiles questioningly, dark eyes watering.

I nod and he opens the door to invite me inside. When he goes to take my luggage, I assure him I can manage, but then I notice the flash of displeasure and realize my faux pas. In his eyes, I’m a young woman. He’s a man. It’s his job to help me, no matter how fragile he may look. I relinquish my bags and follow him through the entrance.

Like everything else in Molyvos, the guesthouse hasn’t changed. It’s divided into four parts: the common area: with a kitchen, dining room, sitting area and large terrace all located on the main floor, a pension style lodging for travelers on a limited budget on the lower floor, the family residence is on the third floor and the deluxe guest suite, where I’ll be staying, takes up the entire second floor. My suite includes a large bedroom with a beautifully appointed en suite, a living area with kitchenette and a large private terrace.

The exposed beams and whitewashed stone immediately comfort me, as do the gauzy white curtains that blow in the open windows. It’s all so wonderfully welcoming, the smell of the salty sea air, the feel of the cool red tile beneath my sandaled feet, the lure of the large four poster bed. Yes, I feel as if I’ve come home.

“Excuse me,” I say to the older gentleman as he deposits my suitcase on the rack next to the wardrobe in the bedroom. “Is Mrs. Kinellis at home?”

His brow furrows and he shakes his head. He holds up his finger and mumbles something in Greek, as if asking me to wait. He departs before I have an opportunity to give him a tip for carrying my luggage and I vow to leave extra upon my departure.

Making my way across the room, I go to the curtains and spread them wide, smiling as I take in the red tile roofs leading down to the port at the base of the hill. The azure blue of the Aegean Sea sparkles in the late afternoon sun.

Ahh.

I have a feeling this is going to be one of my best holidays yet.

A knock sounds on my door and my heart flips as I anticipate coming face to face with dear Mrs. Kinellis after so many years. “Come in,” I call, still standing by the French doors, not wanting to betray how anxious I am to see her again.

Except, it’s not her.

Standing in the open door is someone who is as opposite to Medea Kinellis as you can get.

First of all he’s a ‘he’ not a ‘she’. Secondly, he’s young. Late twenties, maybe? Thirdly, where Medea was barely five feet tall, this man is enormous. Six foot three at least. He’s too tall. Too big. He has to duck in order to clear the doorway.

He’s wearing an open-neck cotton shirt, rolled up at the sleeves, and loose linen trousers like he’s just come from a photo shoot on the beach. His hair is a mass of dark curls and his face is tanned with a wide jaw and the kind of nose sculptors take great care to reproduce in stone.

But it’s his eyes that captivate me. They’re tawny colored—I think, it’s hard to tell from this far away—anyway, the color contrasts with his dark skin tone and dark lashes making him look like a tall, delicious, god with king-of-the-jungle eyes.

There’s something familiar about him too, like I’ve seen him on TV. Or, like he’s made a guest appearance in one of my many illicit dreams.

Yes. That last one.

“Ms. Savage. Welcome to the Daphnis and Chloe Guesthouse.” He looks around the room. “I hope you find everything to your liking.” His voice rumbles like a volcano about to erupt, and I feel the wonderful resonance of it in my chest. Even though he has the coloring of a Greek man, he’s got this beautiful British accent.

Sublime.

I’ve got a partiality to accents, British accents in particular. Probably because they sound so proper. Given the right partner in the bedroom, that proper accent creates a tantalizing dichotomy when coupled with completely improper requests and the sound of his accent prompts my imagination to take me there…with him.

Would you kindly shed your garments, Ms. Savage? Yes. Lovely. Lie on the bed. Ah, that’s it. Beautiful. Now, will you permit me to tell you exactly what I’m going to do to you…?”

“Is everything all right? Is the room to your satisfaction?”

I clear my throat and glance around. “Yes, everything looks lovely.”

What is wrong with me? Two minutes in his presence and I’m imagining inappropriate scenes with the poor man.

Fickle, fickle Tessa.

What was it? Less than twenty-four hours ago I was with Alander?

Alander who?

I know, terrible, isn’t it?

Now I only have eyes for the tall Adonis with the lion eyes and the sexy accent who has barely made it inside my doorway. If he doesn’t leave my room soon, I’m going to jump him and it won’t be pretty.

“We normally serve breakfast downstairs between seven and nine, but as you’re our only guest…we can make other arrangements if you like.”

My warped brain takes his words and twists them as if he’s suggesting illicit arrangements.

I give my head a little shake and rub my eyes. But when I open them, I swear I catch him checking me out. His gaze starts somewhere mid-calf and up it goes with a leisurely browse. Then back down. Only to shimmy back up, even more slowly, giving me the shivers.

I swallow.

My hand flutters to my throat and I fight the urge to undo the top button on my blouse.

Not good.

“I can bring your breakfast up here, if you like.”

To my one-track mind, it’s like he’s suggesting that he, himself, is on the menu.

“Ms. Savage?”

“What? Sorry. What?”

“Is that all right with you?”

“Yes. Yes of course.” I nod even though I have no idea what I’ve agreed to. I think it’s something about breakfast. Not sure. Doesn’t matter. “Thank you.” I say, trying to politely wave him out before I do something insane. “Everything is lovely. Perfect. Really. Thank you.”

He smiles as he backs out the door. It’s an interesting smile. Secretive. Like he can read my dirty mind.

No. That’s just my overactive imagination.

There’s something wrong with me.

“If you need anything, anything at all…my name is Nicolai and I’d be happy to serve you.”

With that, he closes the door and I am left to deal with my insanely naughty thoughts. I lean against the door and press a hand to my feverish forehead. My reaction to Nicolai—what a nice name—might be understandable given his striking physical presence, but is no less unacceptable. I just met the man. Good lord. My reaction is over the top, even for me. I’m sure it’s because I’ve had my arousal prematurely squelched with the whole Alander-being-married thing.

There’s only one remedy. A cold shower.

Of course, once I’m ensconced in the shower cubicle, my imagination takes me back to the elevator…with Alander. In my new version, his body guards aren’t there, it’s just us. I’m facing the mirror at the back and Alander is behind me, being his bossy self…

“You shouldn’t have made me wait, Tessa Savage.”

“I had no choice.”

“Is that right?”

“Yes.”

He nuzzles my neck while caressing my hip with one hand and burying the other in my hair. It feels nice. So nice. When he tilts my head to kiss me, properly, I let him. Gladly. He’s such a good kisser and I’ve anticipated our visit for so long. His hands roam freely over my body when I remember the truth about him.

He’s married.

Damn. Even in my imagination, I won’t go down the path of infidelity with Alander.

I pull away to tell him to stop. That’s when I catch his reflection in the mirrored wall of the elevator. It’s not Alander whose lips are swollen with kisses…it’s another man, a much younger man. One with dark curls and incredible hazel eyes.

“Nicolai?”

What?!

Water sprays in all direction as I shake the unexpected image of my young host out of my head. I finish showering, determined to control my wayward imagination. I’m pretty sure I know what my problem is. I’ve gone without sex longer than I should have. The little interlude with Alander yesterday only served to aggravate my libido, so now I’m reacting to the first attractive, red-blooded male I see. There’s only one solution. I need to find a lover. Quick.

However, when I head out that evening with plans to go to the nearest taverna for supper and hopefully meet someone of like mind, I run into the very man I’m trying to avoid. He’s carrying a cloth bag filled with fresh vegetables and he’s wearing a perplexed expression on his handsome face.

I was hoping my lust-logged brain had embellished his attributes. Unfortunately, it did not. In fact, if anything he is even more attractive. He seems somehow bigger outside in the narrow alleyway. His eyes shine brighter, his shoulders appear broader and the smile on his face hints at even naughtier secrets.

The mere sight of him triggers a tingling sensation in the pit of my stomach.

Not good. This is not good.

“Ms. Savage,” he says with a frown. “You are eating at the guesthouse this evening, aren’t you? My cousin’s grilling fresh mackerel and the spanakopita’s already in the oven.”

“Oh,” I say, covering my mouth. So that’s what he’d asked me about earlier while I was immersed in my wicked fantasy. I clear my throat. “I did say I was eating in tonight, didn’t I?”

“Yes.” He gives me an odd look.

“Right. Well, let’s go back to the guesthouse then, shall we?” Oh no. I wonder if he can hear that I’m putting on a little bit of a British accent. I do that sometimes, I unconsciously adopt the accent of others around me. Perhaps it’s because I have no home but make my home wherever I am at the moment.

“Good.” He furrows his brow before continuing down the lane to the guesthouse.

I follow so close that I catch a whiff of his personal scent; citrus, cardamom and fresh air. He smells like a beach party. It’s a little slice of heaven and instantly brings on more vivid fantasies starring…him. My naughty gaze drops to the mound of taut flesh covered by loose linen, moving directly in front of me.

I try to tear my eyes away, but I’m not having much luck.

It’s not until he stops and I nearly run straight into him that I lift my gaze. Is he smiling that sort of half-smile because he caught me staring at his ass?

“I hope you’re hungry.”

“Yes. Very.”

“Please.” With a sweep of his hand, he indicates the open door to the guesthouse. I precede him inside and he ushers me to the terrace where a table has been set for two. Pulling out my chair, he gets me settled before disappearing inside again to drop off his purchases.

He returns with a bottle of ouzo and two small glasses which he promptly fills. He hands me one and takes the other, lifting it in a toast. “Yasou,” he says.

Yasou.”

We drink and he refills our glasses.

“Is it too presumptuous to ask to join you?”

“Of course not,” I indicate the empty chair. “I was hoping you would.”

Ah, shit. I wonder if I should warn him that spending time with me in this intimate—I glance around—romantic setting is going to result in only one thing. Me jumping him.

He’s smiles and I start to think that perhaps the man is amenable to me making an advance, despite our obvious age difference. I tilt my head and smile back.

His response is to continue to regard me over the lip of his ouzo glass.

“So, Nicolai, are you the property manager here?”

He sets his glass down and leans back in his chair, crossing his arms over his wonderfully broad chest. “No. I own the guesthouse.”

“You do?” I frown, realizing I’ve been so enamored of him I’ve forgotten to ask after Mrs. Kinellis. She must have sold it. Considering she was in her late seventies when I was here last, that would put her in her eighties now. Running a guesthouse on her own was probably getting too difficult at her age.

“The property has been in my family for three generations.”

I blink. I tilt my head. I blink again. “Really? I thought this place belonged to the Kinellis family. You see, I stayed here before. About six years ago. Medea Kinellis and I became quite close. That’s why I came back.”

“I know.”

“You know? How do you know?”

“I know because I am Medea’s grandson. I’m Nicolai Kinellis. And, it wasn’t six years ago that you were here, it was seven.”

He stands and dips his head in my direction. “Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ll go see to the food.”

I’m stunned. I’m completely gob-smacked, confounded, blown-away, dumbfounded. Stunned. It’s not possible.

Medea’s grandson is a boy.

The person I’ve been interacting with, Nicolai, is a man.

The two are not the same.

Although, now that I think about it, there was something about him that seemed familiar when we first met this afternoon.

When he returns, a moment later, carrying a steaming platter of fresh spanakopita, I realize what it was that I recognized. What I now recognize.

His eyes.

I remember how he used to watch me, always with a semi-perplexed expression, as if I was a curiosity. And, I remember how striking his eyes were, even then.

But, to say this man sitting across from me is one and the same as that shy young boy? Well, it’s impossible for me to put the two together. Everything about him has changed. It’s like some Greek god swooped down from the heavens and took over his body, leaving only his eyes intact.

I’m so stupefied, not only am I running out of adjectives to describe my shock, but I don’t know what to say to him. I’ve been entertaining erotic fantasies about him all day and now I feel like the biggest pervert around. I mean, I knew he was younger than me, but that much younger?

I cover my discomfort by stuffing my mouth with spanakopita. But the pastry is obviously fresh out of the oven and I burn the inside of my mouth.

“Ach!” I spit the spinach and pastry back onto my plate, waving my hand in front of my mouth.

“Are you okay?”

I grab ice out of my glass and suck on it, pressing the cube against the sensitive skin on the roof of my mouth.

“I’m sorry. I should have warned you it was hot.”

I mumble something about it not being his fault while I continue to suck the ice. However, images from my most recent fantasies plague me as I nurse my burned mouth and I’m appalled with myself.

How could I have been fantasizing about him? He’s barely more than a kid! And all that stuff I’ve been picturing…it’s immoral.

The problem is, how do I shut all that stuff off? I don’t want to think about him but that’s not how my twisted brain operates.

It doesn’t matter how wrong it is, how young he is, he’s still got the body of a lion god and the face of a dark angel.

“Are you sure you’re okay? Can I get you something?”

“I’m fine. Really. I’m totally fine.” I’m lying, of course. But, it’s not like I can tell him what’s really wrong. That I’ve been having fantasies about him from the first moment we met and that I am now officially a cougar. It’s downright humiliating.

Thank God his cousin appears at the open door with another platter of food. She carries it to the table and sets everything out, providing a moment of distraction.

However, she’s gone too soon, leaving Nicolai and me alone again. He opens a bottle of white wine to accompany the meal and I busy myself with heaping aromatic food onto my plate. I have no idea how I’m going to eat it, with my burned mouth and troubled stomach, but I’m going to do my best to pretend everything is normal. Totally normal.

The first thing I do to try to encourage normalcy is to ask about his grandmother. In retrospect, I should have asked him about her before. I’d meant to. I really did. But my philandering thoughts took over. Remember?

“I was hoping to see your grandmother when I arrived. I’ve thought of her often over the years.”

I know what’s coming before he opens his mouth. It’s apparent in his expressive eyes and the serious set of his mouth. “Grandmother passed away a year ago.”

“Oh no.” My lapse in judgement over Nicolai is completely forgotten by my shock at this news. “I’m so sorry.”

“Thank you.” He stands. “I have something for you. I’ll be right back.”

Nicolai returns within minutes and places two books on the table in front of me. They are tied together with yellow ribbon. I undo the bow carefully, as if I’m diffusing a bomb, and then stare transfixed at the titles. The first is The Love Songs of Sappho. The second is Daphnis and Chloe.

I open the covers to see my name printed there. I’d left these books behind when I’d departed seven years ago. Having no fixed address, it’s what I do. I leave things I don’t need anymore, hoping others will make use of whatever it is.

I never expect to get these things back.

Seeing my own handwriting in books that once belonged to me makes me feel something strange and unnamed and the melancholy I thought I had under control as I drove into Molyvos, returns.

“She saved these for you. In case you should ever return.”

I’m overcome. I glance up at Nicolai and find him watching me with an expression that is completely indecipherable.

“She saved my books,” I whisper.

“Yes.”

“She told you she had them?”

“Yes. You were…special to her.”

There is an enormous lump in my throat that is making it impossible to swallow. “I should have come back sooner. I should have—” I cover up the fact my lips are quivering by taking a drink.

“You’re here now,” he says and his hand moves as if to touch my arm, but he stops himself and quickly pulls his hand back.

The seriousness of his news and my feelings subdues my rampant lust, allowing the two of us to catch up like we’re old friends. After he tells me a bit about his grandmother’s illness and passing, I am struck by how fluent he is and on the fact that he doesn’t sound Greek.

“Your English is excellent,” I say. “But, why do you have a British accent?”

“My mother died when I was ten. Afterwards, Grandmother sent me to boarding school in London. The summer you were here was the first time I’d been home in four years.”

I think back to the gangly teenager who is now barely recognizable in the man sitting across from me. I suppose his English would have been excellent even back then, but he was so shy and quiet, I don’t know if I ever heard him speak.

I ask him about what it’s been like running the guesthouse this past year in his grandmother’s absence and then we discuss the recession and austerity measures taken by the Greek government. I tell him what I do for a living and propose that I look at his books and business plan, offering to do anything I can to help.

“I’m afraid no amount of planning can help, Ms. Savage. All of Europe is suffering. Tourism is non-essential and is the first thing people give up when times are tough.”

“How are you surviving?”

“The last three summers we’ve earned just enough to get by. In the winter months I take on odd jobs, labor, construction, anything I can to earn extra income to keep the guesthouse running. I keep the costs down by only hiring part-time staff, mostly family, when I can’t manage on my own.”

I look around. The guesthouse is in beautiful condition. There’re no chinks in the stonework, no cracked tiles, everything is clean and welcoming. I’m impressed by what I see, so much so that my next question pops out of my mouth before I have a chance to stop it. “Nicolai, how old are you?”

His hazel eyes flash. “Old enough.”

“Come on. You can’t be more than twenty, maybe twenty-one.”

Looking away, he says. “I’ll be twenty-two next month.”

I sigh. Oh, to be twenty-two again. I’d snap Nicolai up in a heartbeat, he is divinity personified. Despite my best intentions, my wicked imagination takes me back down that road of immorality, imagining his youthful strength and endurance.

Oh shit.

And I was doing so well.

“Ms. Savage,” Nico says, breaking into my fantasy of youth revisited. “I don’t know what your plans are for the evening but there’s a play tonight up at the castle that I thought you might be interested in.”

I love the castle. I’d attended a number of performances up there when I was here last. Musicals, plays, even rock concerts, I loved the dichotomy of old and new melding together.  “What is it?”

He points to one of the books on the table. “Daphnis and Chloe.”

“What time does it start?”

“Forty-five minutes.”

“Perfect.” I begin to gather our empty plates.

“Please, Ms. Savage. You’re my guest. Leave the cleaning to me.”

“But aren’t you coming to the play?”

His movements appear as if in slow motion. He stops what he’s doing and slowly turns his head, meeting my gaze. There is a conversation going on between our subconscious selves, I feel the tingle of it in the back of my skull. I’m afraid I know what my subconscious is telling him. I’m not sure I trust what I think his is telling mine.

“Would you like the company?” he asks softly.

“Yes.” I answer, just as softly.

“Then, I would love to join you.”

***

I’m a wee bit tipsy and a whole lot turned on during the walk back to the guesthouse after the play. Based on how quiet the town had seemed earlier, I didn’t expect there to be such a large turnout for the production. However, the performance was just one of the many events going on in celebration of the weeklong International Women’s Festival. Busloads of women who are staying down the road at Skala Eressos, the hub of the festival, came to watch the play. Based on the party atmosphere, they may not have come to watch so much as they came to drink, talk, laugh, and make-out on blankets on the grounds of an ancient fortification.

Nicolai and I shared a bottle ourselves. Hence the tipsiness.

The arousal? Well, that’s sort of my perpetual state of being of late. But the play didn’t help matters. The story of Daphnis and Chloe is a romance written in antiquity and set on the island of Lesvos. It’s about a young man and woman who were abandoned as babies and raised by shepherds. They fall in love and are overcome with physical passion, but don’t know how to follow through…if you know what I mean. So neighbors, friends and the odd Greek god help them figure things out. There’s even an older woman who takes the two under her wing and tutors them.

Now that scene was a feast for the senses!

If the intent was titillation, it worked because my whole body is throbbing right now. The nudity alone could have put me over the top. But, what didn’t help was that I was cozied up on a blanket beside young Nicolai with the lion-eyes. We sat close, so very close that I could smell his virile scent, hear each breath he took, feel the heat emanate off his big body. But we never touched. By the end of the night I was so hyper aware of him, I ended up drinking way more wine than I should have and now my wicked thoughts are ten times worse than before.

I look up to find Nicolai waiting for me a few steps ahead. “Are you okay?”

I’m so caught up in my naughty daydreams, I find myself leaning up against a wall instead of walking toward the guesthouse.

“I’m fine,” I say, hurrying to catch up but stumbling in the process.

Miraculously, I manage to keep from falling. “Okay, I’m a little unstable. Give me your arm.”

He stands completely still as I thread my arm through his. The man is not only tall, he’s ramrod straight. Of course, that could all be an illusion because I’m so floppy at the moment.

It’s embarrassing.

Looking up, I try to pretend I’m more sober than I am. “Sssooo, what did you think?” Unfortunately, my slurred words give me away.

“What did I think of what?”

I give him a playful hip check. “The performance, silly.”

He glances down at me with one of those expressions I find hard to read. “I enjoyed it. I always like to see modern adaptations of the guesthouse’s namesake.”

He’s not slurring. This bothers me. How can I be drunk when he isn’t? It’s not fair.

I form my next words carefully, committed to sounding as sober as him. “So, how was this one different?”

“For one thing, in the original story the older woman, Lycaenion, doesn’t teach both Daphnis and Chloe about sex, she only teaches Daphnis. She’s in love with him and wants him for herself. In fact, she tells him he shouldn’t be with Chloe because he’ll hurt her.”

“Hmm,” I say, thinking about the erotic, threesome sex scene—again. I clear my throat and try to sound scholarly instead of overly aroused. “What do you think of the premise? I mean, I have a hard time believing that the two main characters wouldn’t be able to figure out sex. They were shepherds for God’s sake. I’m pretty sure they witnessed copulation before.” That’s how the sentence sounds in my head. But apparently I got my words confused.

“Capitulation?” Nicolai gives me one of those odd looks.

“Did I say capitulation? No. Copulation. Cop-u-lation.”

Nicolai clears his throat. “It’s a romance written in the second century. It’s not meant to be taken literally. I’m sure it was meant to be a story about the rite of passage from youth into adulthood.”

“Can you imagine?” I persist. “Having these feelings and not knowing how to act on them?” I try to imagine, but I can’t and it’s not just because I’m tipsy. It’s because it’s been so long since I didn’t know what to do in the sex department.

When I look up, I’m startled by the expression on Nicolai’s face. It’s heated and piercing. “What?” I ask, wondering if I’ve somehow offended him in my drunken ramblings.

He shakes his head and opens the gate of the guesthouse, holding it so I can pass through first. Damn. The kid’s a real gentleman. I think I want to kiss him. I turn and give him my I-think-I-want-to-kiss-you smile.

He furrows his brow.

What is wrong with me? Besides being drunk and horny? I’m not twenty, far from it. I’ve got to stop flirting with him. He is not Daphnis and I am definitely not Chloe. Lycaenion, maybe. But I don’t want to be the older woman in this scenario.

Once we’re inside, I look up at him, resolved to behave myself. “Tonight’s been lovely. Thank you.”

I can tell he wants to say something, so I wait. I see his eyes move to the stairs behind me. “Let me escort you to your room.”

He must realize I’m drunk and is afraid I’m going to fall down the stairs.

Bless him.

My legs are more unsteady than I expect as I lead the way upstairs to the door of my suite, overly aware of the man—no, not man, boy, dammit! Boy—following behind me, smelling deliciously of sweet grass and ocean air. I unlock the door and stand in the opening. “Thanks again. Good night, Nicolai.”

“Tessa?”

“Yes?”

He is staring at me with this weird expression like he’s going to say something really serious, I don’t know, like he has a terminal disease or something. That’s how serious he looks.

“May I kiss you?”

What? Don’t tell me the I-want-to-kiss-you smile, worked?

I am not prepared for this and unfortunately my head bobs up and down giving assent before I mean to.

Even in my drunken state, I know this is a mistake. I know I shouldn’t allow this to happen. But I can’t help it. Nicolai is exuding pheromones and, in my uninhibited state, I’m exuding them right back. His question, stated in his marvellously accented voice, fans my arousal to unbearable proportions. Not to mention, he has this killer serious look in his tawny eyes that tugs on some warm part of me deep in my abdomen.

I want him.

I need him.

It is impossible to say no.

I don’t want to say no.

I should say no…

“Yes,” I whisper. “Yes.”

*****

His head moves down and his lips find mine and…

It’s all wrong.

His mouth is stiff and unmoving. When I go to hold onto him, because quite frankly, I’m about to topple over, his body is hard and unyielding. He doesn’t reach for me, he doesn’t wrap his arms around me, he doesn’t lift me up or press himself against me.

Confused, I look up and realize we’re standing in the doorway—the doorway that is too low for him.

Of course, he’s uncomfortable, so I grab the front of his shirt and pull him inside the room toward the bedroom. It takes me a moment to realize he’s saying something. I think it’s Greek. The saying, “It’s all Greek to me,” flashes through my mind and I giggle like I’m a teenager.

That’s what this man does to me, he wipes a decade and a half off my actual age and makes me feel stupidly young. I’m so busy tugging him toward the bedroom and giggling like an imbecile that I don’t pay any attention to the strange expression on Nicolai’s face.

He stops just outside the threshold of the bedroom.

“What is it?” I ask.

His eyes flick over my head to the canopied bed behind us and then he shakes his head and says, “Nothing,” before following me through.

Strangely, he avoids touching me, so there’s no frantic stripping of my clothes, like I’m doing to him. No tossing me onto the bed, either. His hands remain frustratingly chaste and he keeps watching me with this tortured look.

“Nicolai?”

Forcing a smile, he licks his lips, ducks his head and once again, presses his mouth to mine. I flick my tongue along the closed seam of his lips and his body jerks. I run my hands up his oh-so-gorgeous chest and he gasps as if my touch burns him.

The problem is, I can’t tell whether my touch burns in a good way or a bad way.

If only I was a little more clearheaded, I’d be demanding that he tell me what the problem is. But I’m not clearheaded so I press on as if nothing’s wrong.

Dragging him to the side of the bed, I give him a shove so he falls back onto the mattress. I pull my shirt up and over my head, revealing my lacy, pink bra. It’s a pretty bra and I take a moment to admire it…with my hands.

Beneath lowered lashes, I watch Nicolai’s expression.

His eyes widen, but his look is more concerned than aroused.

Does that stop horny-toad-Tessa?

No.

I crawl on top of him and spread his shirt wide open.

Oh heaven! His chest is…well…he’s beautiful. He’s so lean and strong and his skin is so warm and there’s a sweet patch of dark curls in the center of his chest and it’s all so delicious and the hair is so silky and his skin is so hot and all hard and soft at the same time and I press my lips to his sternum and move lower, kissing and tasting like I wanted to from the moment I saw him, following the delicious line of dark hair down, down and down some more.

Does Nicolai thread his hands through my hair?

No.

Does he guide my head, telling me where to kiss him?

No.

Do I care?

Apparently not.

I unsnap his fly and his body goes rigid.

I go to reach an inquisitive hand inside and…

Nicolai convulses on the bed and rolls out from under me.

What the hell?

He looks tormented and angry and he’s speaking to me in Greek. No. Not speaking, yelling—I think. It’s really hard to tell with this Greek language, it all sounds like yelling to me.

“What? What did I do?”

He’s still yelling…or talking very passionately? I don’t know. I throw my hands up in the air. “Nicolai? What is wrong?”

He squeezes his eyes shut and then, with a shake of his head, he turns and strides to the en suite bathroom and slams the door.

What the hell?

There’s nothing like an outright refusal to sober a girl up. As I listen to water running in the other room, I sit in the middle of the bed and replay the events of the last few hours over in my head. Dinner, the erotic play at the fortress, the walk home, Nicolai asking to kiss me…

He did ask me, right? I didn’t force a kiss on him, did I?

An awful thought materializes.

What if…what if he was just going to give me a little goodnight air kiss, the way the Europeans always do—kiss-kiss—and in my inebriated state, I misinterpreted it?  Oh God! He’d been trying to tell me all along, albeit in Greek, but judging by his body language, he was trying to tell me that he wasn’t into me. He totally wasn’t into me!

Did I listen? No. I tore at his clothes like a rabid animal. I pulled him into my bedroom and pushed him onto my bed and stripped him and jumped him. I basically didn’t give him a choice.

Covering my face, I groan because I realize that I have just acted like the cougar I swore I’d never be.

Oh. My. God!

I jump off the bed and wrestle my shirt back on. The last thing I want is to be sitting here, half-naked, looking like a dejected cougar. My stomach roils with embarrassment and my head pounds from an early-onset hangover.

I rush out to the kitchenette, pull a bottle of water out of the refrigerator and press the cool plastic to my forehead, rolling it back and forth.

When Nicolai reappears a few minutes later, I wonder if I look as awkward and embarrassed as he looks.  His face is red, his hair is totally wild, as if he’s pushed his hands through multiple times and his eyes are dark and…angry? Is that what that black look means?

As if reading some bad script we both open our mouths and the words, “I’m sorry,” come tumbling out in unison.

I laugh—uneasily.

Nicolai’s nostrils flare with some grim emotion.

How could I have screwed this up so badly? I long for a rewind button on my life. I’d take myself all the way back to meeting Nicolai on the street this evening. What did he say? “You are eating in this evening, aren’t you?

But instead of going back with Nicolai, I’d apologize and explain that I’d changed my mind. Instead, I’d go out to Molly’s Taverna, like I’d planned. I’d have a nice meal, meet a nice, thirty to forty-something single man. A tourist probably. We’d talk, we’d laugh, we’d dance, and then…we’d either agree to meet again tomorrow or we’d go back to his hotel and I’d throw all my unspent arousal at him.

Not Nicolai.

Dammit! Why didn’t I do that? Why did I have to follow Nicolai, with that fine round hiney of his, all the way back to the guesthouse? It was tempting fate and I should have known better.

“Nicolai,” I say, cringing because the simple act of uttering his name is painful. “I’m so sorry.” I take a step toward him but he hastily retreats as if I’m about to attack again.

I put my hands up to show him I mean him no harm.

He shakes his head and shoves a hand through his thick curls. “Don’t apologize. It’s not your fault.”

A cynical laugh bursts out of my chest. “Not my fault?” The laugh, that’s not really a laugh, erupts again. “I jumped you. Attacked you. I nearly made you…God! Who does that?”

I can read his expression now. He’s perplexed. And, for the first time since we’ve reconnected, I recognize Medea’s young grandson in his expression. The way he’s looking at me now is exactly the way Nico used to regard me when I was here seven years ago.

“Is that what you think?”

“Uh, yeah.”

Letting his head fall back, Nicolai groans at the ceiling.

Am I still drunk? Because his response to my apology is not making sense.

“It’s okay, Nicolai. You don’t have to lie. If you’re not attracted to me, I understand. I’m a lot older than you and I took advantage of—”

“Tessa.” My name shoots out of his mouth like a bullet from an assault rifle.

“What?”

“It’s not you. It’s me.”

I laugh because the line is so clichéd and so overused, I can’t help it. “Nice try.”

“Jesus.” He paces the length of the room. “I’m attracted to you, okay? Very attracted to you.” By the way he cringes when he says this, it’s as if he doesn’t want to be attracted to me or he’s embarrassed by his attraction.

“Did I do something to embarrass you?”

His reply is a deep growl at the back of his throat. After pressing his hands to his temples, he gives me one last pain filled look and makes for the door.

“Wait,” I shout, running after him. “Where are you going?”

“I’m sorry. I have to leave. I should never have come up here.”

Before he can open the door to my suite, I grab his shirt tail. “Oh no you don’t. Not before you explain yourself, buddy, because I’m at a loss here. On the one hand, you’re telling me I was correctly reading your come-on signals.”

“You were,” he says to the closed door.

“But…your body language is screaming that you’re repulsed by me.”

I’m not prepared for how swiftly he turns around to face me. His face is flushed, his full lips are pulled back in a snarl and he’s breathing really hard.

“Repulsed? Are you kidding me?”

He grabs my arms and slams me against the closed door. He’s right up against me. Snatching my closed fist, he pushes it down to the front of his jeans. “Is this the reaction of a man who’s repulsed?”

“I don’t know what the hell this is.” I wrench my fist out of his grasp and try to push him away but he doesn’t budge.

His nostrils flare as he regards me as if he’s having a very hard time keeping himself in check. Though he’s clearly aroused, he doesn’t do anything about it. He doesn’t gyrate against me, he doesn’t use his knee to force my legs apart. He just stands there, pressed up against me, staring at me, breathing hard.

I’m breathing hard too.

Finally, he closes his eyes and bows his head. He whispers something, I think it’s in English, but it’s too quiet for me to make out.

“What?” I whisper back.

“Tessa, I don’t know what the hell I’m doing.” His beautiful eyes open and I can see some emotion, but I don’t know what it is—anger maybe?

His nostrils flare wider. His breathing becomes more labored. Little muscles tick along the side of his jaw. Suddenly, he slams his fist into the door beside me and I hear wood splinter.

“Dammit!”

He moves away, shaking what must be a very painful hand. But apparently there are other things going on with Nicolai that are more painful because his hand is soon forgotten as he paces the length of the room from the kitchen to the door and back again.

“I thought I could do it,” He mutters. “I thought it’d be okay. With you, of all people.”

He turns to look at me.

Umm, what’s that supposed to mean? With me, of all people?

“But I…I can’t do it!” He slams his hand against the kitchen cupboard and grunts in pain.

I rush over because two crushing blows with the same fist have left his knuckles split and bleeding. “You’re hurt,” I say, grabbing his hand and running it under cold water. I open the small freezer compartment and pull out a tray of ice cubes to make a cold compress.

Once I’ve got his hand wrapped in a tea towel full of ice, I grab another bottle of water out of the fridge. Indicating the French doors that lead out onto my private terrace, I say, “Let’s go sit outside, okay?”

His expression says that’s the last thing he wants to do, but I don’t care what he wants to do. I’ll lock him in, if I have to. He’s not leaving before he tells me what the hell is going on.

With obvious reluctance, he follows me out onto the terrace. Once we’re seated in a pair of comfortable lounge chairs, facing the ocean, I say, “Do you want to tell me what ‘it’ is?”

He takes a drink of water.

“You thought you could do it. You don’t know what to do about it. Nicolai, what is ‘it’?”

After a lengthy silence, he says, “It’s not important.”

I watch him as he’s staring out at the lights of the town below. “Obviously, it is.”

When he still doesn’t answer, I say, “Can I make some guesses?”

He groans.

“You’re attracted to me but you don’t want to be because I’m too old for you.”

“No. You’re not too old for me.”

“Do you know how old I am?”

“You’re thirty-six.”

“How do you know that?”

He glances my way. “I Googled you.”

“What? Why?”

“I saw your name on the online registration and I wanted to make sure you were the same person who was here before.”

“Why would you do that?”

He doesn’t answer and I continue trying to figure him out when a sudden thought occurs to me. “Oh my God, are you gay?”

“I’m not gay.”

“It’s totally okay if you are. I can help you come out if—”

“No, Tessa. That’s not it.” He makes an exasperated sound.

“Then what’s wrong?”

He shakes his head and stands. “I need to go.”

Suddenly the truth dawns on me. “You’re in a relationship, aren’t you?” It’s more of a statement than a question.

He stands still. I hear him swallow so I figure I must have guessed right.

“I’m sorry,” I say, standing, putting my hand on his arm. “If I had any idea you were in a relationship, I never would have…well, I wouldn’t have attacked you like that.”

He turns to me, his face pinched as if he’s in pain. “That’s not it.”

“Then what is it?”

He looks down at me, blinking. I can practically see the wheels turning inside his mind. Finally, he sighs and sits back down, elbows on knees and head in his hands.

I sit too. Waiting. Watching.

Very softly, he says, “I’ve never been with a woman.”

His words don’t compute. “But you said you weren’t gay.”

“I’m not.”

“So you’ve never been with a man either.”

“No.”

“So, you’re a…oh. Oh!” I cover my open mouth. “Oh my God. Tell me you’re not saying what I think you’re saying.”

Even in the dark, his posture says it all. “I’m a virgin, Tessa, and I need your help.”

*****

I stare at the man sitting beside me, unable to believe what he’s telling me. “You’re lying.”

“Unfortunately, I’m not.”

“But…that’s not possible. I mean, look at you.” I wave my hand around in his general direction. “You’re all gorgeous and everything. How can you be a virgin?”

He inhales, then exhales rather noisily before replying. “I think I mentioned that I went to boarding school in London, right?”

“Yeah.”

“It was an all-boys school.”

“Okay. But you came back when you were, what? Fifteen? Sixteen?”

“Right. Then, it was just me and my grandmother.”

“Okay. So…?”

Big sigh. “I was…” he shrugs again and looks my way, but his head blocks the outside light and in the darkness I can’t make out his expression. “You met me. I was shy.” He rubs his forehead and continues quietly. “Then grandmother got sick and I had to take care of her and run the guesthouse while the Greek economy fell apart.  I didn’t have time for anything else, least of all women.”

Holy shit. No wonder he seems so much older than his years. I contemplate his confession. It seems completely impossible. Yet, it goes a long way to explaining what just happened inside.

“What about this past year?”

He makes a noise deep in his chest. “There are only two options for me.” He indicates the lights of the town with a sweep of his hand. “Someone local.” He shakes his head. “Bad choice. Even if I was interested in someone, which I’m not, it’d be impossible.”

“Why?”

“Molyvos is a very small town. I’m related to half of the people here. Then there’s the issue of my parentage. Or lack of parentage.” He pauses and rubs his jaw. “I’m the no-good-bastard-son of Medea’s slutty daughter.”

“Is that what people think?”

He nods. “What makes it even worse is my mother didn’t know her father either.” Shrugging as if growing up without a father, losing his mother and then being ostracized is no big deal, he says, “Immorality runs in my blood. No mother wants me near her daughter because they’re all convinced I’ll get her pregnant and bolt.” He laughs without humor. “I’ve been shunned for even looking at a girl the wrong way. So, I stay far away from locals.”

I’m starting to see Nicolai through a new set of eyes. Holy hell, it must have been hard growing up being an outcast in his own home. Molyvos might be quaint, but these antiquated attitudes leave a bitter taste in my mouth.

However, equally unpalatable is his explanation. “But, Molyvos is a tourist town. Surely you’ve met your share of available and willing female tourists?”

He looks at his hands. “I have no experience. Any woman I want expects that I do.”

“That’s not true.” I place my hand on his knee. “There are plenty of young girls who would give anything to have a little vacation tryst with the likes of you. With or without experience. Trust me.”

The muscle beneath my hand flexes and I notice he’s staring where my hand is resting on his leg.

“I’m not interested in young women.” His gaze sweeps up to my face. “I’m interested in experienced women. Like you.”

“Like me?”

“Yes, Tessa. Like you.” He lifts my hand off his leg and drops it. Then he gets up and stalks off to stand at the railing of the terrace, staring into the darkness. From where I’m sitting, he looks every bit like a god of Olympus scowling upon his mortal realm below.

I give him a few moments alone before joining him at the railing. “So,” I say. “You like older women.”

“Yes.”

“And they expect you to know stuff.”

“Yes.” He looks at me. “But I don’t, so I never make a move.”

“But you made a move tonight.”

“You’re different. At least, I thought it would be different with you.”

“Holy shit,” I whisper more to myself than to him. “You were about to lose your virginity to me.” I don’t know why this thought has taken so long to sink in, but once it does, I feel like I’ve been clocked on the back with a sledgehammer and it’s hard to breathe. “My God, Nicolai. You can’t just do that. You can’t pull something like that over on an unsuspecting victim. How did you think I’d react when I found out?”

“You weren’t supposed to find out.”

“Of course I would have found out.”

“How?”

“By…I don’t know how, but I found out, didn’t I?”

He shakes his head and scowls. Staring out at the darkness, it’s obvious he’s upset. But so am I.

He turns to me, looking down at me. The outside light shines across half of his face and I can see the burning intensity in those startling eyes. “I need your help, Tessa. I need you to change this for me.”

My body—traitorous bitch—is saying, ‘hell yeah, let’s go!’  But I’m sober now and I am finally able to access the reason center of my brain. Waving my hands in front of me, I say, “Oh no. No, no, no. I’m not going to take your virginity, Nico. I can’t do it. I’m sorry.”

“I’m not asking you to take it. I’m asking you to change it.” His nostrils flare as he leans closer, still not touching, but close none the less. “Please, Tessa.”

Oh man. His body is less than an inch from mine. I can feel his warm breath on my face and smell the hot scent of his skin. It fills my senses, consuming me with desire. Overwhelming desire.

Despite everything that’s happened, I still want him.

I need him.

I want to say yes.

He wants me to say yes…

I shake my head and back away. “No. Nico. No.”

***

Considering how tired I was after the long day of travel, I barely sleep. Now that it’s morning, I sit out on the private terrace, enjoying the cool morning breeze, wishing that the tranquility of the setting could settle the disquiet within me. But it doesn’t. Of course I stayed up half the night thinking about what happened and thinking about Nicolai’s request.

And yes, I’ll admit it, I imagined all kinds of crazy, wonderful, x-rated scenarios involving my handsome young host. The fantasies went on and on and on. I must have eventually dozed, because the scenarios became much more dreamlike, though still excruciatingly vivid—with tastes, touch, sensations that lingered long after I woke up. I dreamed Nicolai and I were starring in the play, Daphnis and Chloe, up at the fortress. He’d forgotten his lines and the blocking for some of the more erotic scenes, so I had to coach him through it. ‘Touch me here, yes that’s right,’ I whispered in my dream. ‘Kiss me, like that…good.’

I rub my temples, trying to wrap my brain around the fact that Nicolai, a young Adonis, is basically asking me to be his own personal Lycaenion: initiator, teacher, tutor, lover. It’s been a fantasy of mine since as long as I can remember. Even if it weren’t, Nicolai’s plea for help is compelling. Completely compelling. I know I should refuse him, but…I am only human.

When I hear a firm rap on the door to my suite, I experience the strangest sensation of hot and cold coursing simultaneously through my body. It’s no secret who is standing on the other side and I know that I

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Soulless

by Toni Hofman

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Text-to-Speech: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Fairfield Detective Alexis (Alex) Martinez is in pursuit of a killer so brutal, he holds an entire city in the grip of terror. His victims are picked at random; their torture and mutilation, unspeakable. As the body count rises, Alex’s investigation puts her among the hunted—not by the serial, but by a much greater threat: a secret society with members imbedded inside world governments, law enforcement and every walk of life. Their prime objective is to avert discovery, and when her investigation comes too close to revealing their existence, Alex becomes a target. The only one that can save her is the trained assassin they’ve sent to kill her; someone who has already infiltrated her heart and mind, and who may be the monster she’s been chasing all along.

David Jason Sawyer is a predator with the face of an angel, his mind a weapon as equally formidable as his body, prince of a powerful hidden society believed to represent the next step in man’s evolution: Family. Their physiology has evolved to consume bio-energy directly. They’re stronger. They age at an incredibly decelerated rate. With their extraordinary ability to heal, they’re close to invincible. And they feed on humans to survive.

Since childhood, Sawyer has been trained to manipulate and entrap on reflex, to put emotion second and Family first; yet one moment of weakness, sparing the very detective that hunts him, the woman he has grown to love, makes him a dangerous threat his people cannot tolerate.

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PROLOGUE

Alexis knew her cries of pleasure were surely penetrating the hotel room door and echoing down the halls but she didn’t care. The burning passion consuming her felt as relentless and dangerous as the trained killers that had been hunting them for days. The deft, sure strokes of David Sawyer’s fingers were damn near driving her crazy, trailing down her back, brushing her breasts, stroking her quivering stomach only to dip into the slick, aching depths of her, teasing, probing. He smiled down at her like a loving husband but, even now, she could sense the cold, restrained power that marked him as a dangerous man. Under his comforting weight, she bucked and cried out again, losing herself in a world of sensation that, for a few precious moments, eclipsed her fear.

He was an assassin trained to be unstoppable, methodical, ruthless. And at the moment, all of that felt as far away as the moon. Her want, her need of him had taken her over long ago, making all pretenses at sanity, at caring about what he was, as inconsequential as the detective’s shield she still carried. She was his, body and soul, with no other identity. Not until the danger had passed and she could return to her normal life. If that was even possible.

But she wouldn’t think of that now.

Sawyer’s face, with its clear, strong brow, full lips and prominent cheekbones held a sense of hidden strength within its noble structure that never ceased to reassure her. His hair, as dark and lustrous as obsidian, fell down to partially cover his forehead. She grabbed a handful, yanked his head back and kissed him hard, drinking him in as a low chuckle vibrated in his chest.

Roughly, he spread her legs apart, his hard, muscular body pressing her down. She wrapped them around his hips, hugging him with her thighs, welcoming him. Sawyer’s talented fingers reached between them and moved in a slow, lazy circle that robbed her of breath.

“Please—” she cried, barely recognizing her own voice.

She was on fire, her lithe frame twisting under him restlessly. As if to quench the heat, his mouth came down on her throat, trailing open, wet kisses along her sensitive skin.

His breath blew hot on her ear. “You like that. Tell me you like it when I touch you,” he coaxed sadistically. “It’s okay, Alex.”

She groaned. “Shut up.”

Smug son of a bitch.

He chuckled again, and she felt him nip at her earlobe, his teeth causing a brief jolt of pain mixed with pleasure. His tongue laved the spot as if in apology, its circular motions sending electric currents of ecstasy shooting all the way down to her toes. “Say you love me. That you’ll want me like this forever. Promise it, Alex. Come now, I’m losing patience.”

He thrust roughly against her to prove it and shot her a cocky smile that didn’t do enough to downplay the taint of something not quite right in his voice. It caused her arousal to dampen a bit, and she pulled back to look at him. He returned her stare, his gaze only calmly assessing, without any specific motivation or ambition, untouched by the passion she darn sure had physical evidence he’d been feeling.

A man raised under the strictest edicts of discipline, David Sawyer always held his voice, emotions and reactions under strict control. Sometimes his eyes registered no emotion, and that chilled her. But when they looked at her and warmed, it was like the sun emerging to light up every part of her life.

They knew each other as deeply as two people could. Right now, she saw what he was hiding: uncertainty, and love so clear and startling it threatened to break her heart.

“Don’t…” she whispered, desperately trying to hold on to the passion, to block out the troubling confusion he always brought.

He stroked her hair, filling his hands with the long, chocolate-brown tresses and then releasing them to tumble down along the pillows.

“Promise me,” he said.

She knew what he meant. He wanted her acceptance, her commitment, maybe even her forgiveness. Reality came crashing down, stamping out the fire that had threatened to overwhelm her seconds ago.

Damn it, don’t ask me for that now.

“I’m trying.” It was all she could say. There was blood on his hands. Though he never admitted the fact, God help her, she knew it, and she didn’t know how much. Alex forced her mind away from the thought just as Sawyer brushed his lips along her forehead in a gentle caress.

He was as seductive and darkly powerful as Lucifer, yet the good in him was so strong. It’s what had ensnared her, why she couldn’t kill him when she’d had the chance.

They’d met months ago and it was as if they were meant to be together from the first moment. Searching for each other. She knew what he was. He’d told her, because loving him, their being together, put her in danger. The people he belonged to wouldn’t tolerate her. She knew their secret. It was that simple.

So, he’d convinced her to run with him. No plan. No time for that. Only escape, and a chance at life. Together. And even with her reservations, and only the small hope that she’d be able to return home someday, she went. She couldn’t help herself. Or excuse her actions.

“I love you,” he said.

The oath she had taken to uphold the law, the one that ripped at her guts every time she went willingly into his arms, got to tearing her up again.

Please, God, let this get easier.

As she struggled to word a response, a strange sound carried down the narrow hall on the other side of their hotel room door.

Sawyer stiffened and looked in that direction.

Alex’s preoccupied mind worked on the sound for a full three seconds before she realized that high-pitched whine, abruptly cut off, was a woman’s strangled scream.

In one fluid move, Sawyer was standing, naked, a fierce, dangerous warrior poised to strike. His voice came calm but urgent. “Someone’s found us. Get dressed. Fast as you can.”

Impossible.

They’d traveled west in his black Mustang, taking secondary roads instead of the major highways. They’d spent their nights at motels in out-of-the-way small towns before moving on. They’d left their credit and ATM cards back in Fairfield, and used their dwindling supply of cash for everything. Now, apparently, none of that had been enough.

No way we left a trail. However the hell his ability to sense his own kind works, it’s gotta be off.

The motel was in the middle of the Arizona desert.

If they could track us here, and this quickly… Jesus…

Alexis reached for her 9-millimeter on the nightstand. “How do you know they’re here?”

He stared at her intently. “I know.”

She grabbed her discarded jeans, t-shirt and gun holster from the floor and quickly threw them on. “Don’t tell me: A family trait?” She couldn’t keep the hostility out of her voice, or the anxiety that was behind it.

He dressed quicker than she could follow him with her eyes. A katana in a shiny black case had rested on the dresser. Now it was in his hands.

Swords were the weapons of choice in fighting among his kind; no bullet shells or other trace evidence left afterwards that might lead to their discovery, only blood. His people were masters with the weapon, trained since childhood. Sawyer gripped his katana firmly by the hilt, pressing it against his leg to partially conceal it from view, and then looked at the weapon holstered at her hip.

Adrenalin and a sharp, unsettling fear coursed through her.

It’s not enough to drop one of you. I know.

Still, Alexis rested her hand on her gun, the weapon feeling uncomfortably inadequate against her palm.

“This isn’t a stand-and-fight situation for you,” he said. “And these aren’t Colin’s men. My father couldn’t have tracked us so quickly. If anybody’s out there, it’s Renegades. When I left you last night, I went looking for someone rumored to have joined their ranks: Braxen, heir to the Western House. I thought he might be able to help us. I had to make it known that I was seeking him. It was a mistake.”

“Run. I’ll clear you a path.”

“No.”

“Alex, if they touch you…”

“You won’t let them.”

Sawyer glared at her. For a moment, he looked on the verge of losing his carefully-honed calm. “I can’t promise that.”

She shook her head. “If they get their hands on me, you won’t let them hold me for long—”

“Alex—”

“—not long enough to calm themselves, to focus. If they can’t concentrate on killing me, they can’t kill me, right?”

“Unless they’re armed, which they will be. I can’t fight them and protect you at the same time.”

“You don’t have to. I can hold my own in a fight. I’m the cop, Sawyer, remember? I’m not freaking helpless.”

“Yes you are,” he pressed. “You’re human.”

“Look, maybe this gun can’t kill them, but it sure as hell can slow them down.”

They were out of time.

He sighed, running a hand through his hair. “Stay behind me. If it gets rough and I tell you to run —”

“I’m smart enough to be scared, okay? Let’s just get this done.”

She opened the door.

And all of the lights in the hotel’s hallway went out, plunging them into darkness.

For a moment they hesitated on the threshold, then Alex felt him grab her hand. Together, they walked out into the hall, Sawyer slightly in front of her.

At the end of the corridor, they turned left and headed into the lobby. The area behind the reception desk was empty. Blood spray ran diagonally along the wall near it. A smeared trail of red on the linoleum tiles led from behind the desk and out the hotel entrance.

Shit.

Alex’s heartbeat sped faster.

They kept moving, exiting the building, heading for the parking lot.

She only saw one of them, a tall man, lean and muscular, wearing jeans and a weathered leather jacket, and with that ageless look Alex was beginning to recognize. He looked to be in his twenties, but she knew he could be much older. He stood at the back of the Mustang, waiting for them.

Rain fell in a slow downpour.

They stopped twenty feet away from him.

“One of Colin’s?” she whispered to Sawyer.

He shook his head.

Renegades.

Sawyer’s voice carried through the rain. “I wasn’t hunting him. No order has been given. I came to talk. My father does not know I’m here. If you choose to move against me now, Renegade, that will change. We both don’t want that. Do you understand?”

The tall man shrugged.

Alex felt a prickling at the back of her neck and turned.

She watched four others approach from a parked car at the side of the hotel entrance.

Her breath quickened. Five of them.

She looked at the tall man again and saw that he held a sword now, his katana’s blade glittering in the harsh light from the parking lot’s overhead lamps.

Terrified, she unholstered her weapon. Raised it.

“No,” Sawyer yelled. “Run!”

One of the approaching four came towards her, sword raised.

She fired, the loud boom of the shot echoing in her ears.

The bullet hit the man mid-chest, right where his heart should be.

The man staggered. And kept coming.

Shocked, she fired again.

The man barely flinched.

Fear gripping her, she took a step back. Another.

From the corner of her eye, Alex saw Sawyer fighting off the tall man and two of his companions. He moved with catlike grace and incredible speed, his sword flashing briefly in the moonlight, sweeping upward in a blur followed by a shower of red. One of the men fell as Sawyer’s blade opened his jugular. Blood poured. The other two intensified their attack.

Above the jarring ring of metal against metal, sword blades clashing against each other at the end of powerful strokes, she heard Sawyer scream at her, “Alex, get out of here!”

The man she had shot was almost upon her. In his dark clothes, his face pale in the moonlight, her attacker looked like approaching death.

Her attacker raised his sword.

Suddenly, she felt someone grab her arm. Panicked, she turned.

Sawyer.

Move!” he screamed.

And then she was airborne. He threw her across the parking lot like a rag doll. She felt the whoosh of wind around her, the sharp agony of her head and back slamming into something solid, metal.

Time went by, and then Sawyer was there, leaning over her.

“I…”

“Don’t try to talk,” he said, stroking her hair.

He looked into her eyes. She felt herself falling into them. Him surrounding her. His life force, his essence invading her mind.

Forget, he whispered to her. Not with spoken words. Still, she heard him, the sound like a voice carried on the wind.

Stay safe and forget me, love.

And then the world went black.

________________

When Alex came to, the building next to her was burning. She felt the heat on her face, heard the crackling timbers, and realized she was on a stretcher. An ambulance waited nearby. Cops in uniforms she didn’t recognize and fire crews swarmed around.

Someone was standing over her, a patrolman.

“Ma’am, can you hear me? Can you talk?”

Alex gave a short nod and tears came to her eyes, the pain was so great.

“I’m a cop,” she managed to say. “Fairfield PD. ID’s in my left pocket.”

He fished it out and examined it. “Can you tell me what happened here, Detective Martinez, and what you’re doing out of your jurisdiction?”

Confused, she said, “I don’t… Where exactly am I?”

He looked at her strangely. “Arizona. Pima County. Near the border. Hotel blew up. We think it was a gas leak. We found you unconscious on top of a car, looking like you got the shit kicked out of you, and your weapon on the ground a couple feet away.”

Disoriented, Alex gazed up at him, a feeling of panic rising. “But … how did I get here?”

_______________

Down the street, from the shelter of a pay phone stand, David Sawyer watched Alex being loaded into an ambulance.

He made a phone call.

“Hello?” The voice of the man who answered was brisk, commanding, with a refined Southern accent.

“I made her forget. All of it. Leave her alone. I’m coming back.”

“Oh, I won’t touch her, son, as long as you pay my price.”

“What’s that?”

Colin Geoffrey’s voice grew harder still. “Meet your obligations, boy. Or I will suck the life from your pretty detective as a loving sacrifice to your people. You’re my heir, and you will learn to do me—to do us—proud, so help me God you will.”

David’s hand gripping the phone tightened. “Two days. I’ll be there.”

“And David?”

“Yes?”

Arizona,” Colin said pointedly.

David hung up the phone.

 

BOOK ONE:  THE FATHER

“For everyone that doeth evil hateth the light…” John 3:20

CHAPTER ONE

Two weeks later

Alex’s cell phone rang as she sped down Harbor Avenue, maneuvering her Honda Civic through traffic. She picked up.

“Martinez.”

“You finished with your personal life yet?” Farrell’s gravelly voice barked.

Her face reddened. She’d come in late for her shift three times this week, today made four. Apparently, it had been noticed. “I’m almost in. You got something?”

The watch sergeant at Fairfield Police Department’s Area Three Division snorted. “Yeah, I got something. There was a call-out right before the eight-to-four shift. You do know that’s your shift, right?” Chuck Farrell had known her since her rookie days. She’d worked under him for a while, and he’d supported her move up. He had a right to grind on her and he was taking it.

“Yeah, I know.”

He grunted, then left it alone. “Body found at the City Center Park Condominiums on Gibraltar, eighteenth floor. I didn’t want to go on the radio with it because I didn’t feel like fielding more damn calls from reporters. They’re crawling up my ass squawking about the Cantrell case, and this one sounds almost as bad as that one. Body’s been there for days. Stinking up the whole place. Patrol on site says it’s mutilated some kinda way, so a happy good morning to ya.”

Alex swung onto an entrance ramp and maneuvered her car onto the freeway. “What’s the address?”

Farrell gave it to her. “Your partner’s already there. I’ll note that you’re on shift and en route.”

Five minutes later, Alex pulled up in front of the building. After hardly getting any sleep last night, her cramped, exhausted body protested as she eased herself out of the car. Though her wounds from what had happened two weeks ago had healed, her back still felt stiff sometimes.

She hadn’t regained her memory. Short-term amnesia from her head injury, the doctors said. Apparently, she went AWOL from work for a couple of days. She’d no idea what had happened during that time, or some pieces of the last few months. Only her lieutenant and her partner knew about that, and she wanted to keep it that way. Be damned if she wanted anybody coddling her.

For the past few days, the winter weather had been mild. Only a light, chill breeze ruffled the manicured tree branches around her, and the day was clear and sunny.

Alex left her coat in the back seat, popped the trunk, grabbed her Polaroid camera and fished out her Mini Maglite, the only supplies she had in her car. Her kit was back at the station, but she knew Mike would have a crime scene equipment box already up there.

The Jones New York pants suit she wore flattered her athletic, 5’9” frame; the doorman watched her as she moved.

Cop girl. Frank Talbert, her ex, used to call her that. She found herself thinking about it every time she geared up to work a case.

Alex stuffed the small flashlight into her jacket pocket, slung the camera around her neck, went into the building and took the elevator to the eighteenth floor.

The odor hit her as soon as the doors opened: the unmistakable stench of death and decay. Down the hall, a uniformed police officer stood sentry outside an open door. He wore a mask over his nose and mouth. He looked her way as she advanced, recognized her and nodded. Alex stepped through the doorway. The smell hammered her full force. She held her arm up to her nose.

In the living room, two criminalists dusted for prints. Another CSI tech worked in the kitchen. The smell came from a closet not far from her. Mike, masked and wearing latex gloves, stood just inside the closet looking up, a kit open at his feet. He took off his mask as soon as he saw her and held it out. “No more left. Take mine.”

Thick and bald, with skin the color of dark chocolate, Mike Sloan had a husky, lineman’s body and a smooth-rolling, easy grace to the way he moved that mirrored his easy-going personality—like a bear with a mild cannabis habit. The guys at the department had nicknamed him Sleep.

Alex scoffed at him. “Gimme a break.”

“I swear I ain’t being chivalrous to a lady.”

“Gee, thanks—”

“I just don’t want it anymore.” He put it over her head, stretching the elastic band and positioning the mask over her nose and mouth. “Damn thing chafes my head.”

“Yeah, right. Chafing.” Must you in public? At least get us a room, dear. She scowled at him behind the mask.

He pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and held it against his nose. “Anybody ever tell you you’re overly suspicious of people?”

The bloated, disfigured body was naked, its legs straight, flat against the wood shelf near the ceiling. It was bent and pressed abnormally flat at the waist, the chest flush against the tops of the thighs, arms folded between them like a dancer stretching after a routine. The dead man’s eyes gazed out at Alex, and at an angle—with the back of the head resting against the side of the left knee, cheek flush against the shelf—that would have been impossible if not for the crushed vertebrae in his back. Alex stepped closer and studied his face, its expression frozen in a look of frightened awe.

“The victim’s name is Brian Finley,” Mike said. “Real estate broker from Marshalltown, Iowa. Fifty-two years old. Friend of the guy who owned this place, Morris Berman, a corporate attorney downtown, bigwig, apparently, now deceased. Brian here came down for the guy’s funeral, so the dead attorney’s wife said after the building office got ahold of her. Story goes that she didn’t feel comfortable in the apartment after the death, so she went to stay with her sister and let Finley stay here. The sister corroborates her story. She lives over in Hamilton County. Said Mrs. Berman left the service with her and her family, and she’s been with them ever since. The funeral was Sunday.”

Alex frowned. “She stays away for almost a week without trying to contact the guy staying at her place?”

“She said they returned to the condo that night to check on Finley and retrieve a set of car keys she left in the bedroom. Nothing looked strange in the apartment, and the car was where she left it in the garage. Said she called a few times, but when he didn’t answer, she thought he’d flown back home without telling her.”

“After coming down for her husband’s funeral and staying at her place? Him needing to return the key and everything?”

Mike shrugged. “You gotta give the lady a break for not thinking clearly. She just buried the guy she’d been married to for twenty-odd years, then she gets the cops calling in the wee hours asking about the stiff in her closet. She ain’t exactly having a good week.”

Alex looked back up at the body. “That’s gotta be a good six feet off the floor.” She looked at the doorway. “Little room to maneuver. How the hell…?”

“Tell me about it. Mrs. Berman and the sister are on their way down.”

She swept her gaze across the rest of the house. The living room was neat and orderly. Sooty fingerprint dust streaked the cabinets and white kitchen counters.

“No sign of forced entry,” Mike continued. “The leasing office is rounding up the rest of the building staff, all shifts. They’re kinda bummed that somebody got killed in their secure community, so they’re being more than helpful in getting us the information we want and speeding us on our way.” He grinned. “Salesmen. Gotta love their concern.”

He pulled out a small spiral notebook from a jacket pocket and scanned his notes. “Let’s see, what else? Oh, yeah, the scaffolding… The building is an ongoing rehab job. Some things still aren’t finished being revamped, one being the security cameras. We’ve got none on the floors and outdated pieces of crap in the elevators. The building manager said they’re scheduled to go in next week.”

“Gee, great.”

“The tapes from the elevators are on their way to the lab.”

“Anything else?”

He handed her a pair of latex gloves. “Yeah. This is the third time you’ve been late for work this week, but who’s counting.”

She didn’t need to be reminded. “Lieutenant say anything?”

“I signed in for you. Told him you were in the ladies’ when he assigned the call. I left you a message on your cell phone.”

“I didn’t get it. I called in.”

Mike stilled. “You called in.”

“Yeah. Farrell said he’d sign in for me, make a note in the log.”

“So you’re saying I just screwed myself.”

Alex shook her head. “I’ll say I asked you to do it.”

“No, I’ll call Farrell. We’ll fix it.”

She glared at him. “I’m not a fix-it case.”

Mike met her stare. “Wasn’t saying that.”

“Good.”

“But it might help if you stop acting like one. I mean, if there’s nothing to fix, who could get the wrong impression?”

She averted her eyes and looked at the body again. After a moment, Mike followed her gaze.

“Not much of anything to go on,” he said. “The guy not being a native doesn’t help, either. Can’t map him to a local, except the attorney and his wife. I already ran them. No priors.”

Alex frowned. There had been two other murders involving mutilation and torture within the past six months, the bodies found naked and both scenes damn near sterilized by the perp.

The victims differed in every way—age, race, financial status, everything. Still, looking into the second murder, Alex had gotten a sense of déjà vu. Mike hadn’t, but he’d backed her. She’d run it by Frank who, besides being the only man she’d ever come close to marrying, was an agent at the Bureau. He hadn’t felt the same way. The differing MOs, lack of evidence and any type of victim commonality made confirming a blossoming serial-killer threat or a connection between the murders impossible.

Now, Finley.

Déjà vu again.

Alex leaned out, scanning the apartment again. Her eyes caught on a pattern of lines rubbed into the carpet. “Vacuum tracks?”

“Yeah, guy knows how to clean. Even took care of the dishes. There were two mugs in the dish drainer, both wiped clean. Vacuum tracks on the couch, too. I found a Hoover in the bedroom with the hose, brush, and vacuum bag all missing. The vacuum was wiped, too, and the closet doorknob, everything. These guys did get prints on the front door hardware, but considering how much the guy cleaned the rest of this place, they probably belong to Mrs. Berman or her sister. We’re getting dink on hair and fibers. Might be more evidence on the body, but if the guy’s careful enough to take the clothes … ” Mike shrugged.

Alex examined the closet floor. A faint smudge was barely visible at the base of the right wall.

She leaned down. “Did you see this?”

Mike looked over her shoulder. “Could be a shoe scuff.”

“There’s something here at the bottom of it, in the crack where the carpet meets the wall. It looks like soil.”

Mike called to the techs in the kitchen. “Hey, get Park over here with the camera when he’s done in the other room. I need to grab a sample and a photo.”

One of the techs nodded and headed deeper into the apartment.

Wearily, Alex straightened and looked at Finley’s back again, the bumps his broken, jutting bones made as they pushed up under his skin.

“Something with leverage or maybe he was squeezed somehow.” She fought to keep her voice louder than a whisper. The world felt still, as if an air of mourning had floated down to envelop them. “A hundred and eighty pounds he has to be at least, maybe a deuce. Tough muscle and bone. To bend like this until the strain broke—” Her fingers traced the ravaged spine’s outline in the air. “And then to lift him up here—” This time, Alexis couldn’t help whispering. “Pack him out of the way.” The indignity of it drew her to search out that unending stare.

Mike pulled her back out into the hall. “I canvassed the floor. Talked to the doorman. He doesn’t remember anything. Building office gave me the two other guys who rotate shifts with him. The one who works the night shift on weekends, he remembers seeing Finley come in with somebody on Sunday, but he didn’t get a good look at who it was. Couldn’t tell me age, sex, nothing.

“Talked to the doormen of the buildings on either side, the folks in the apartment next door, over there with the window that faces this one here in the living room. Nice people, by the way,” Mike said. “Woke them up and the wife offered me coffee. Not bad coffee either. Anyway, spent most of my time writing down a whole bunch of nothing ’cause, of course, nobody saw anything, heard anything or did anything until the smell started to get in the way of breakfast this morning.”

He stopped for a moment and looked at her. “You look like shit, by the way.”

She knew that. She was twenty-eight, young for a detective. Without makeup, she looked like a college coed, her Brazilian ancestry evident in her olive skin and alluring features. Today, her long, normally shiny dark hair hung dull and lifeless, and her deep brown eyes were bloodshot. “Long night. Couldn’t sleep.”

Nightmares had plagued her until sunrise, as they had for most of her life. The scenes changed over the years, but the theme of someone hurting her, controlling her, was always the same. That and the paralyzing fear.

Mike poked her with an elbow. “Hurts dragging yourself in early morning, huh?”

“Nothing compared to what this guy went through.”

Brian Finley’s sightless eyes stared down at her in a frozen parody of life.

CHAPTER TWO

David Jason Sawyer stood outside his apartment door searching his pockets for his keys. Memories, first of his real father and then of Brian Finley, came out of nowhere, capturing him before he could put up a sufficient guard. He saw Tommy Sawyer’s sightless eyes staring up into nothing. Then came Finley, the older man’s face flushed red from the cold and flooded with concern.

The hunger had come to claim David’s life for good and all five days ago, due to his unwillingness to do anything to stop it. He’d fled to the park, in the middle of the blizzard, and knew the game had changed when he realized he’d been listening to the sound of someone’s heavy tread through the snow for quite some time, the wail of the wind muted, the freezing cold forgotten.

David slumped over on the park bench, wanting to run, unable to. Moisture seeped through his thin jeans and T-shirt as the harsh wind attacked his face and arms. Snow covered his head like a sodden, dripping cap.

He heard the approaching footsteps in the snow cease, and felt that pause in the air, like the momentary caution of game.

David raised his head. Through vision momentarily blurred by the agony ripping through his insides, he registered a tall middle-aged man, salt-and-pepper hair, a kind, craggy face. 

“God almighty!” the man whispered, and hurried over so quickly he slipped on the frozen path and nearly fell twice. “Hey, you okay?”

God, just kill me now, David thought, before he remembered: God didn’t take prayers from devils like him.

 “My name’s Finley, Brian Finley. What’s your name?”

With his pitifully inadequate clothes and hanging head, David guessed he looked like a wayward son to the older man, the soon-to-be victim of a senseless tragedy.

“Saul,” David finally heard himself say. “Uh … Saul Perlman.” And at that moment, he knew he was lost. Instinct had taken over before he’d even been aware. Finley stood in front of him like an offering…

As the memories bombarded him, the world began to spin. David closed his eyes and rested his forehead against the cool wood of the doorframe. In a moment, it was over.

Feeling desolate and grimy in the clothes he’d worn for five days, he thought of Alex, and a hollow ache settled in his heart. He needed to hold her like he needed breath, and he couldn’t. Ever.

He clamped down on the swell of self-pity. Just have to get used to it.

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On Her Majesty’s Secret Service By Ian Fleming

On Her Majesty’s Secret Service

By Ian Fleming

In the aftermath of Operation Thunderball, Ernst Stavro Blofeld’s trail has gone cold—and so has 007’s love for his job. The only thing that can rekindle his passion is Contessa Teresa “Tracy” di Vicenzo, a troubled young woman who shares his taste for fast cars and danger. She’s the daughter of a powerful crime boss, and…

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★★★★★ 5 Star, FREE Thriller Excerpt Featuring The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: All Washed Up by Jennifer L. Hart

On Friday we announced that Jennifer L. Hart’s The Misadventures of the Laundry Hag: All Washed Up is our Thriller of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the thriller, mystery, and suspense categories: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Thriller excerpt:

5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Maggie Phillips is fine—just ask her. So what if two psychos tried to do her in and her business is all but dead, she never wanted to be the laundry hag to begin with, so why should she mourn her tattered reputation? With spring comes a fresh start, garage sale season and the birth of her brother’s first child. Life goes on even if cleaning has lost its luster and the sight of her scarred hands brings back horrific memories.

Help is on the way, whether she wants it or not. When Maggie’s mother-in-law asks her to assist with renovations to their project house in upstate New York, she smells a rat. Matters become murkier when Laura casually tells the former laundry hag to “see to that pesky ghost,” like the phantom is ring around the bathtub. But both Neil and Sylvia are eager to undertake the zany task and really, what else does she have to do?

How about solve a two decade old murder, find a few long lost relatives, fix her mental hang-ups and reconnect with the husband she’s pushed away. And if she has any time to spare, maybe she can even survive a pissed-off apparition and keep it from finishing the job the last two killers started Third time’s the charm…right?

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

“Maggie dear, so nice to see you.” Laura did that little faux kiss thing on my cheek. Didn’t actually press her lips to my skin—for fear of smudging her nude lip gloss no doubt—but more of a weird cheek to cheek peck gesture that I supposed denoted affection in birds of prey. I stifled a shudder. It wasn’t wise to stand so close, and one hand covered my heart in case she decided to rip it free from my chest and eat it before my eyes. I could almost see the blood drip down her cashmere twinset. Corporate attorneys did things like that.

Luckily, my mother-in-law turned her attention to Sylvia, who was resplendent in her simple black cocktail dress and heels. “And Sylvia, how are you?”

“Very well, thank you.” Sylvia was too poised to shift nervously from foot to foot, so I did it for her. I smelled a rat in the elegant townhouse. Just what was Laura up to? I glanced around for Leo, my inside man. Unfortunately, he was nowhere in sight.

“Hello sweetheart.” Ralph pulled me into a hug. I still wasn’t sure if he knew my name, since he called every woman he encountered sweetheart. His hand traveled down to my ass and he gave me a little tap there. I recoiled and pressed my backside into the wall. Had I really convinced Neil that dinner with his parents was a good idea? Stupid, stupid laundry hag.

Laura glowered at her husband as he gave Sylvia the same treatment. She squeaked and backed away, too. Ralph smiled and sipped clear liquid from his highball glass. “Who wants a drink?” he asked as he headed for the drawing room.

“Honestly Ralph, I’m amazed we don’t have a slew of sexual harassment lawsuits, the way you behave.” How a sexist man-pig like Ralph and a militant feminist like Laura made a marriage work was one of life’s great mysteries. Equally mind boggling, how had their DNA managed to combine into Neil’s utter perfection?

I took a quick look at Mr. Perfect—who was still ignoring me. Usually when we suffered through dinner with his parents, we’d exchange knowing glances and small smiles. On one memorable occasion we’d played footsie under the mammoth dining room table while his mother bitched about a client. But Neil’s halo was a tad tarnished and while I wouldn’t accuse him of sulking, he was definitely giving me the cold shoulder. Fine, I’d leave him to it, as long as I could anyway. We hadn’t exchanged two words since the hospital debacle and I felt a little sick. This was more than a rough patch. He’d driven the boys separately in his truck while Sylvia and I carpooled in my Mini, so we could speculate why Laura had summoned us.

Kenny and Josh took center stage while the adults sipped martinis. Their retelling of my encounter with Frau Badass was both overblown and hilarious.

“And we saw Aunt Penny’s booby!” Kenny announced, clearly scandalized.

I wondered how much Botox my mother-in-law consumed in a year. It must be considerable, what with the amount of frowning she did. In her late fifties, Laura’s skin was still mostly smooth, so either she’d sold whatever passed for her soul to Satan or she spent the equivalent of a third world country’s GNP on the stuff.

Still no sign of Leo. I knew from experience that the dragon lady would think me rude if I just came out and asked for him. Leo was the help, not family, after all. Maybe I ought to excuse myself to the little girl’s room and then peek into the kitchen. There’d be holy hell to pay if I got caught, but better to beg forgiveness than ask permission, right?

“Maggie, did you hear me?” Laura’s tone was sharp.

“No, sorry.” I drained my martini glass for fortification.

Laura’s hazel-green eyes—so much like her son’s but oh so much older—narrowed. “I said,” she clipped out in a brittle tone, obviously irritated that I missed the memo the first time, “that we just purchased a lovely little place on the Delaware River.”

“Oh?” I feigned interest as best I could. Laura and Ralph bought real estate for a hobby and since the Great Recession, they seemed to acquire a new place every few months. Some they renovated and sold, others they rented, still others they donated to the local municipalities as halfway houses or battered women’s shelters. They went through houses like I went through tissues, so I couldn’t get too worked up about it and not look like the poor relation.

Laura’s world was martinis and investment properties. Mine was Walmart and brawling in the maternity ward. Who was I kidding, I was the burned, leafless branch of the Phillips family tree. More of a diseased stick than an actual branch.

Laura stared at me expectantly. What the hell was I supposed to say here? Mazel tov didn’t seem appropriate. Good for you sounded like a kiss off. “That’s great,” I said like a total goober.

Her expression soured. “Yes, it is great.”

Had I really thought coming here was a good idea?

Sylvia, sweetheart that she was, rode to my rescue. “Is the property on the water?”

Laura rotated toward my friend, warming to her topic. “Nearby, with a terrific view and access, but no, it’s not right on the water. That’s why we got it for a song.”

“That, and it’s haunted,” Ralph put in.

“Haunted?” Josh asked skeptically, the way only a twelve year old boy can.

“Cool!” Kenny crowed. “Was there a grisly murder there or something?”

“Pish. There’s no such thing as a haunted house.” Laura dismissed the ghost with the same nonchalance she did interns at her law firm.

“Of course, pet. But the legend that surrounds the place is what kept the price down. And will be exactly the sort of story that will help sell it. Once you take care of the lost soul of course.” Ralph saluted the room with his glass.
It took me a minute to realize that I was the you he meant. “Me?” I squeaked.

Ralph and Laura both stared at me expectantly. “You and Sylvia, of course.”

Sylvia looked as poleaxed as I felt. “What?”
Laura’s perfectly sculpted brows drew together. “I thought that was what you did with your new business. Neil mentioned something about cleaning up spirits.”

I blinked. Opened my mouth, then shut it. Cleaning up spirits? That sounded like mopping the floor of a bar. But they’d purchased a haunted house, not a tavern. My head swiveled toward my husband. Heat suffused his cheeks along the path of his sharp cheekbones. Slowly, he turned and met my incredulous stare. My first thought was that this was some twisted sort of revenge for the dinner or the hospital or the lack of lovin’, but Neil wasn’t that petty.

At least I didn’t think so.

Steam must have billowed from my nostrils, because his eyes went wide. Never one to back down from a fight, his chin went up and he met and held my gaze.

I fired the opening salvo. “You told your mother that we were ghost hunters?” I asked, my tone deliberately even to counteract the ridiculous statement.

Neil shook his head with vehemence. “No.” At Laura’s sharp inhale, he hastily tagged on, “Not exactly, anyway.”

I gave him my best squinty-eyed death stare. “What do you mean, not exactly?”

A lesser man would have scrambled around until he wormed his way out of the awkward situation. Neil drummed his fingers on his knee as he picked his words with care. “I’d mentioned that you were thinking of going into business with Sylvia. And that she would specialize in a spiritual cleanse. Those were her words exactly.”

“Right,” I said slowly. “But it was just an idea. We haven’t had time to come up with a business plan or anything. And just how did we get from talking about assisting Chi to cleaning up spirits?”

Laura looked as confused as her Botox treatments would allow. “Isn’t that the same thing?”

Sylvia started to shake her head and then paused, a thoughtful expression on her face. “I guess—”

I stood up before she could utter another word. “Neil, Sylvia, could I talk to you privately for a minute?” Without waiting for a reply, I strode from the room, a ship under full sail.

My husband and my business partner followed at a more sedate pace.

“Maggie,” Neil began, but I cut him off with a sharp hand gesture.

“Is this because I won’t have sex with you?” I blurted, before I thought better of it.

A muscle jumped in his jaw. “Sylvia, give us a minute.”

She turned to go but I gripped her like a lifeline. Tired and upset and betrayed, I didn’t want to be alone with him, not in the volatile mood we were both in.

He glanced at my grip on her arm, then back to my face. “Calm down,” he said.

Oh man, he knew better than to tell me to calm down. “You’re doomed,” I told him through gritted teeth. I didn’t know how or when, but that much was certain.

“If you’ll just listen—”

“Doomed,” I repeated as the fury grew into a raging inferno, the kind of crazy that ate the sanity right out of a body.

Neil stared at me for a minute as though he’d never seen me before, then turned and walked away.

The anger evaporated as suddenly as it had come on and I sank down against the wall.

“Maggie, are you all right?” Sylvia asked me.

The short answer was no, I sure as hell wasn’t all right. But the thought of putting words to something I didn’t fully comprehend….I just shook my head. “Give me a minute.”

She knelt down beside me, oblivious to her dress or the cold that seeped through the tile floor. Her quiet, undemanding presence soothed my frazzled nerves. Distantly, I heard the clanking in the kitchen, pots and pans, the low murmur of conversation, the steady bustle of feet as the drones buzzed about doing the queen bee’s bidding.

“A freaking ghost?” I said to Sylvia.

Her low chuckle made me smile. “You have to admit, it’s different. And it was sweet of her to think of us.”

Poor misguided Sylvia, always seeing the best in people. Laura would grind her bones into paste for a light evening repast. “No, it certainly wasn’t sweet. It’s a pity job.”

She squeezed my arm. “Maybe, but it’s also a paying job.”

“Family wages,” I muttered. “No reward is worth the grief. Besides, you’re a life coach now, right?”

She winced. “Yeah, about that. I don’t think it’s going to work out. I don’t feel like I have the right to tell people how to live when I can’t get my own life together.”

Well, that made one of us. “Okay, but what the hell could we do about a ghost infestation? It’s not like there are humane traps for disembodied spirits at the local hardware store.”

“Fly paper?” Sylvia asked with a grin.

“Hell, we could just make one out of duct tape.” I smiled at the thought of pissed off ghost stuck to a giant silver hag-spun web.

She nodded. “This might be a good trial run, to see if the two of us actually can work together. If we can’t, well, then we’ll know and won’t lose our shirts on a doomed experiment.”

“So, you catch them and I’ll tidy their graves? Nothing ruins the death experience like mold and mildew.”

Our laughter was interrupted by the smart click of heels. “What on earth is going on here?”

“Just a business meeting.” I hefted myself off the floor. “Laura, I’m not sure what you thought we could do about your…um….ghost, but—”

She cut me off with a sharp gesture. “Maggie, you don’t need to do anything.”

I blinked. “No? Then why—?”

“You’re the placebo.”

“What?”

Laura rolled her eyes. “It doesn’t matter what you do there, so long as people think you are doing something worthwhile. I already have Leo working PR with the local paper. They’re going to do a story on the revitalization of a haunted house.”

Well, that explained where Leo was, but I still didn’t understand what I could do about a haunted house. “So, why do you need us?”

A slow grin spread across Sylvia’s features. “To make it look like we’re doing something about the ghost, even if we can’t. That way, you can dispel the rumors and tell people the ghost has been dealt with at the same time as you get the word out. A total win-win. That’s brilliant, Laura.”

“In any case, there isn’t a ghost.” Laura’s hands went to her slim hips. “But people are seldom interested in the truth. It’s the notoriety of it all that’s the real gold mine. So. What do you say, ladies?”

Sylvia actually bounced on the balls of her feet but I put a staying hand on her arm. Being impulsive had hurt me before and I had too much at stake to make a snap decision. With a metric ton of baggage to consider, I needed to hash things out with Neil before we committed to anything.
I squared my shoulders and met my mother-in-law’s gaze, full on. “We’ll let you know.”

****

“Hey.” I found Neil in the miniscule back garden.

“Hey yourself.” He took a pull from his beer—God alone knew where he’d found it—but he didn’t look at me.

There was enough space on the bench for me to sit next to him, but I had to know something first. “On a scale of one to ten, one being miffed and ten being you want my guts for garters, how angry are you?”

He didn’t smile and his voice was level as he said, “Don’t have too much use for garters myself.”

Joking was good, or at least it was better than yelling or cold silence. I sat beside him, not quiet touching but close enough to share body heat. The damp spring air cooled my flushed face. Or maybe after a day full of Walmart, hospitals and my in-laws, I simply needed the reprieve a hidden garden offered.

“I used to come out here whenever it got to be too much in there.” Neil indicated the house with his beer bottle.

“Did you?” He’d never told me that before. “Did it help?”

He nodded. “Sometimes. Like if I failed a test and mom was on the warpath. Other times, not so much. Like when Dad had a new mistress.”

I sucked in a sharp breath. “Your father had an affair? Did Laura know?” I couldn’t imagine that she would know and Ralph would still have all his body parts attached.

“Not just one. Multiple women. Not constantly, but often enough. He was always discrete about it, but I could tell when the pattern started up again. Hang-up phone calls, nights when he stayed too late at the office, shit like that. And if I knew, I’m positive she did.”

“Holy frigging crap,” I muttered. My heart went out to my husband. In my mind’s eye I could see him, a scared kid, maybe the same age as Josh was now, perched all alone in the darkness and worried about what would happen with his family. And the overused organ in my chest ached for the man I’d met years before, a father with two beautiful children of his own whose first wife had cheated on him in the same par for the course, cavalier way. And for maybe the first time, I felt a pang of sympathy for my mother-in law, too.

Neil polished off his beer. “The worst part, though, was that if she did know, she didn’t do anything about it. You know my mother, she gets results. That was what I used to think about when I sat out here. Not why he did what he did, but why she didn’t put a stop to it. In the end, I don’t think it really mattered to her. They got married for my sake but as to actually being a family, well…she just wasn’t interested. ”

“God, Neil.” I took his warm hand between my cold ones and squeezed. In the dark I couldn’t see my mangled hands, but it wouldn’t matter if I could. My man needed me and I wished fervently I had more to offer him.

“I hadn’t thought about all that for a long time. Maybe because I don’t run away and hide from problems anymore. Maybe because I’m like her and I’m used to doing, to getting results, even if they aren’t the ones I intended.” His tone was rueful, but he squeezed my hand before withdrawing his own. “You used to make it so easy for me, Maggie. You never once hesitated to tell me what was on your mind or in your heart. I think I took it for granted a little bit. That you would always be you.”

“I’m still me,” I assured him, though I had my doubts. “I haven’t changed since high school.”

There was anguish in his voice as he answered—a sort of hoarse rasp that scraped along my every nerve ending. “Yes, you have. And it’s my fault. I couldn’t protect you from it, from what happened with the Klines or the Valentinos. You were hurt because I didn’t stop it and it’s affected you. How could it not? You were always so strong, so capable, and now….”

I’m broken, I thought, but couldn’t say it. Didn’t need to say it. The words sat there between us in the expanding gulf that kept us both from being who we were meant to be.

He turned to look at me and I could barely make out his profile in the darkness. “You’re afraid and I don’t blame you. I blame me. It was my job to keep you safe and I let you down. That will haunt me forever. I don’t know what to do to help you. And you…you don’t seem at all interested in helping me figure out how to make it right.”

Lord have mercy. Emotions warred within me, fear, anger, guilt, but most of all a wrenching tenderness for the man beside me. A man who wasn’t afraid to take the entire weight of my baggage onto his massive shoulders. He loved me that much and I owed him so much more than I’d given him lately.

And what as worse, he was right. As stupid as it was, deep down I did blame him for not protecting me. Not the way I blamed myself, but I’d had endless hours of recovery to imagine ways it all could have been different. To wonder what if. What if I hadn’t involved myself with the Klines or the Valentinos? What if Neil had fought me harder, done more to stop me, talked sense into me? It was sick and twisted, but that didn’t change the truth. He was supposed to be my hero, supposed to take on all odds and see me safely through any ordeal unscathed.

But I had been scathed, massively. Not just the healing burns, but my innate faith that good would triumph. I’d come so close to being murdered. Twice. The fact that I might be too stupid to live for getting involved in those cases in the first place was on me, but Neil was right. I’d counted on him and he hadn’t been there when I needed him most.

This wasn’t a quick fix conversation, something we could hash out in the darkened sweet scented garden with the tulips popping through the moistened ground. Not even on Dr. Bob’s Naugahyde couch with new pennies glinting in our marriage facilitator’s loafers. We had to work our way back together, to reestablish a trust we’d both taken for granted.

Decision made, I immediately felt better, more like the old Maggie somehow. Because I had a goal, a purpose, and failure was not an option.

“I am interested,” I murmured and took his hand again in a firm, no-nonsense grip. Let him try to get away. I’d hunt him like a lioness hunts a baby gazelle across the savannah and take him down to the ground and consume him.

He didn’t move or make a sound but I could feel his relief. It cascaded off of him in waves.

“Do you wanna catch a ghost with me?”

 

 

****

 

“I can’t believe we’re doing this,” Sylvia squealed.

“Sssh,” Penny and Marty, the sleep-deprived new parents shushed her in unison.

Baby May, the blond-haired blue-eyed cherub, stirred in her bassinette. We all held our collective breaths, but she simply sighed deeply and slept on. Soft suckling sounds came from her rosebud mouth.

“What a good girl.” I grinned down at the newest addition to our family. I’d been so freaked out by hospital drama that I hadn’t appreciated my newborn niece at first. More than a week later, I couldn’t bear the thought of parting from her. There was no help for it though. A haunted fixer upper on the scenic upper Delaware didn’t exactly scream childproof. And the research Leo had done on the place made the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end.

“It says here that most ghosts are only partially aware of the living world.” Sylvia moderated her tone to barely above a whisper. “Spooky.”

“So then they can’t hurt anybody, right?” Marty asked. He wore green plaid pajama bottoms, and one side of his shaggy dark hair stuck up straight while the other was mashed down flat. His gray T-shirt was stained with baby spit up and spilled coffee, and his red-rimmed eyes told me he’d rather be sleeping than talking turkey with the ghost hunters. But since he and Penny were in charge of Kenny and Josh, he needed to stay informed of our plans.

“Of course not,” I assured him, though I had no proof of anything. I still wasn’t sure how I’d been nominated to morph into ghost huntress extraordinaire.

“Your folks are as nutty as a bin full of used jock straps,” I’d said to Neil the night before. “Who buys a house they know nothing about?”

“That’s why it’s called a risk, Uncle Scrooge.” Neil patted my butt on his way to his sock drawer. “They might have a great place, or it could be a total pit. I’ll pack the camping gear just in case, though.”

Camping, oy.

Neil and the boys had gotten me to go camping exactly once and I’d vowed on my mother’s lemon pound cake recipe that I’d never do it again. While the idea of snuggling with the man I loved under a blanket of stars sounded wonderful, the reality was mud, mosquitos and magpies trying to nest in my hair. Maybe I would have been more forgiving of the great outdoors if there were some way for me to pee and keep my backside poison ivy-free at the same time. As it was, there were certain places a girl just didn’t want to have a rash, because calamine lotion should never be used as a lubricant.

I shoved aside the unpleasant thoughts of living rough and returned to the task at hand. Namely, research. Though Laura had made it clear she didn’t really expect us to do anything about the ghost, Sylvia had prepped a ghost-be-gone kit equipped with everything from dried sage to Peter Venkman’s proto pack, which she’d procured from Craigslist. You really could get anything there.

“Don’t cross the streams,” I muttered and stared at the device, which looked like nothing more than a car battery strapped into a cradleboard with a hose attached via duct tape.

“Hmmm?” Sylvia continued to scour the internet for more mentions of our apparition.

“You know that thing isn’t real, right?” I gestured toward the pack.

“Sure it is.” She double clicked on another screen.

I was torn. Yes, it was great to see Sylvia enthusiastic about something, even if it was a ridiculous exercise in futility arranged by my mother-in-law. Her divorce had rattled her confidence and while living with Marty and company helped her make ends meet, she’d been floundering, at a loss as to what to do next. I could so relate, but the whole ghost hunting thing…I still didn’t know how I felt about it.

Neil and I had agreed to oversee the project because we needed to spend time out of our natural habitat. We needed to reconnect, to bond, and the home improvement project was just what Dr. Bob ordered. Literally. He’d told us to get away together. He probably hadn’t meant with my wacky best friend armed with ghost-busting goodness in tow, but we’d left that bit out.

I nudged the proto pack with one finger. “It looks nothing like it did in the movie. And even if it did, that was just a prop.”

“But the movie was based on a real ghost hunter’s story,” she argued without looking up.

“There was a giant marshmallow man bent on destroying New York City. How real could it be?” My incredulity came out louder than intended, and May jumped and cried.

Penny gave me the evil eye as she scooped her daughter up and rocked her in a comforting gesture. “There, there sugar booger, it’s all right.”

Worst. Nickname. Ever.

“Sorry,” I hissed, then rose from the table. “I’d better go finish loading the car.”

Penny allowed me to drop a kiss onto May’s sweet scented head. If only cleaning products came in that baby fresh aroma. On second thought, better that they didn’t because there’d be even more imbeciles huffing chemicals out of aerosol cans.

Marty walked me to the door. My brother was newly employed at the local Stop-N-Rob as a night clerk, a job that scared me out of my wits. I pulled him into a tight hug. “Promise me you won’t do anything heroic while we’re gone.”

Marty made a dismissive sound that was part nose whistle, part scoff. “Do I look like an idiot?”

Probably a rhetorical question. “I’ll send the boys over as soon as they’re done with their homework.” Our plan was to get on the road tonight, though there was no chance we’d get to the place before dark. That way we’d see it in all its spooktacular glory and get a feel for what we were dealing with.

And maybe be back by morning if it was half as bad as I feared.

“Are you sure you guys can handle everything?” I asked Marty for the bazillionth time. “We can always wait and go next week so you don’t have to juggle May and my boys, too.”

“Maggie, go. You need to get out of this town for a little while. Trust me, Josh and Kenny will be fine. I’ll hold down the fort and we’ll see you next weekend.”

“Not if we see you first.” I hugged him and sent up a silent prayer to our parents to watch over him and the lives for which he was responsible.

I was snuffling like an idiot by the time I reached my own doorstep and detoured to the garage instead of the house. Neil was in there, inventorying what we’d take in his truck and what we could cram into Sylvia’s car. Atlas snuffled through the various toolboxes and bags that waited next to Neil’s truck. The dog added a little extra slobber in case our bags were too dry.

“How’s it going, slick?”

Neil grinned at me from the bed of his truck. “Almost there. Did you get your baby fix?”

May’s scent still lingered in my olfactory receptors. “Best smell in the world. Other than fresh coffee.”

Neil hopped down from the bed of the truck in one fluid movement. He looked better than he had in weeks, happier and more like himself. This trip was a good thing, no matter how harebrained its inception. “Poor Uncle Scrooge. Is your biological clock ticking?”

He meant it as a joke but I froze. Not that I’d been moving, yet every cell in my body stopped and waited. The baby thing kept coming up, like a song stuck on repeat. It was only natural, what with our family’s latest addition, but it was one thing to appreciate May in all her pink-cheeked perfection, quite another to imagine my own baby. I didn’t know how to respond.

Neil and I had exactly one pregnancy scare in our relationship, way back in the beginning when we weren’t sure we’d have a future together. Nothing had come of it and Kenny was still in diapers at the time, Josh barely a toddler. By mutual consent, we’d delayed any discussion of adding more offspring to the mix and I’d been diligent about birth control for more than a decade. The subject hadn’t come up again.

Not until now.

“Sorry,” he said, though his tone didn’t hold a hint of apology. If I had to put a name to the emotion he exuded I’d call it wistfulness.

“Nothing to be sorry about.” I didn’t have any regrets. I really didn’t.

One finger traced along the side of my face. “Do you ever think about it? What a child of ours would be like?”

“Of course I did.” Did he? His demeanor suggested he did but I was afraid to ask.

“You never said anything.” His touch was gentle, sweet but careful, like I was breakable. Maybe I was.

“It never seemed like the right time to talk about it. It’s still not.” Not with the mess we were currently in. Adding something small and helpless and completely dependent on us for its survival seemed almost cruel.

“I know.” His hazel eyes were hooded, seductive. “But it’s a thought.”

A very appealing one what with the way he touched me. Tenderly, with sure strokes that blotted out my good judgment. It’d been so long since we’d shared a moment cocooned in intimacy meant for the two of us alone. Even though I’d slithered away from it, I’d longed for it too. No shouting or door slamming or idiot dog barking up a storm. I leaned into his caress, savored the rough texture of his calloused hands. For the first time in weeks the panic and fear weren’t with me and I only wanted our connection to go on forever.

Of course it didn’t.

“Hey, thought I’d let you know, Leo just pulled up.” Sylvia popped her head around the corner of the garage.

Neil and I sprang apart as though guilty of doing something more than canoodling and talking crazy. My heart pounded against my ribcage as though the damn thing wanted to burst forth and ricochet off the garage walls. I shook my head as though I could rattle the errant thought Neil had placed in there free. Did he really want to talk about us having a baby, or was that just a new way of hinting that we should make with the lovin’?

Sylvia’s eyebrows went up as she looked between the two of us. “Should I give you guys a minute?”

Neil snorted. “It’d take more than a minute for what I had in mind.”

I looked away to hide my blush and focused on the mountain of stuff that we still needed to load. No way would it all fit, even with Neil arranging the bed of the truck like it was a giant jigsaw puzzle. “It’s fine, Sylvia. Do you have any more room?”

Since there were three of us, plus a monkey-butt-ton—the technical term—of tools, cleaning supplies and ghost busting stuff, we were caravanning along with Leo, who knew where he was going, to the place in upstate New York, a small town nestled along the Delaware River near the Catskill Mountains.

Sylvia shook her head and grinned. “Nope, my car is packed to the gills.”

“And possibly radioactive,” I muttered. Who’d have thought my vegan neighbor, who made her own herbal deodorant, would have cornered the market on toxic ghost remedies?

Sylvia wrinkled her nose. “It’s not that bad. Most of the stuff is completely organic.”

“So is the Ebola Virus. Organic doesn’t mean harmless. Look at Neil’s mom.”

Neil covered his laugh with a cough. “Play nice, Uncle Scrooge.”

“I just want to make sure our bases are covered,” Sylvia said with a shrug.

From her preemptive packing list I felt certain Sylvia had covered acids, bases and everything in between. Her enthusiasm for our mission was weird, but it was nice to see her revved up about something again. I just wished it was contagious.

“Maggie, you’re riding with me, right? I just downloaded eight steps to a cleaner aura onto my iPod and I thought we could listen to it on the ride.”

I pasted on a smile, though it felt a tad brittle. “Sounds great.”

“I didn’t know your aura was dirty,” Neil remarked after Sylvia had left.

“Not as dirty as my mind, anyway.” I climbed into the bed of the truck to help him load our gear. I frowned as he handed me a large gunny sack. “What’s with the dog food?”

“It’s for Atlas.”

At my blank look he set down the Rubbermaid bin he’d muscled into position. “We can’t leave him here alone all day, he’ll eat his way out of the house. Penny has her hands full with the baby and the boys will be in school.”

That was it, the bridge too far. “We can’t.”

Neil scowled at me. “Why not?”

I really didn’t have a good reason, other than I didn’t want to drag the hairy, slobbering beastie all over Hell’s half acre in the middle of BFE nowhere on a ghost hunt. Atlas was not the peaceful, short-haired lapdog I’d agreed to a few weeks back when the Phillips men ganged up on me about getting a pet. That was the last time I’d let them go to the humane society without me.

Granted, he was a sweet tempered dog, but while his size and youthful exuberance were endearing, he stank, shed, slobbered and made his presence known every second he was in the room. Bad enough I had to deal with his mountains of poop on my own turf. No way did I want to road trip with them. Desperate times call for desperate measures. I took a deep breath and lied my ass off. “Leo’s allergic.”

Neil hopped down out of the truck and offered me a hand. “So?”

“Whaddya mean, so? He can’t be around dogs, so therefore, Atlas can’t come.”

Neil stared down at a grease spot on the concrete floor. “Sure he can. We’ll just keep him outside.” At my look, he clarified, “The dog, I mean, not Leo.”

“Neil—” I didn’t whine, but it was a close thing.

My husband held up a hand. “Do you want to pay to board him?”

Appealing to my thrifty nature. Low blow, slick. My shoulders sagged and I uttered a defeated, “No.”

“Then he’s coming with us.” Neil slammed the gate of the truck to punctuate his declaration.

Damn. “You know what this is starting to remind me of? Four people and a dog driving out into the middle of nowhere to chase a ghost—we’re living a freaking episode of Scooby Doo.”

Neil grinned. “Too bad we don’t have a Volkswagen Bus. So, are you Daphne or Velma?”

I felt neither pretty nor smart. “I want to be Shaggy. Not the new generation Shaggy, either. The one who got stoned with Mama Cass and the Harlem Globetrotters.”

“I’ll see what I can do,” Neil said.

Continued….

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