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Lie Down with Dogs Page 15
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I nodded that I did. “Did you stage this as some kind of intervention?”
“No.” Diode slinked away from Shaw and found a patch of sunlight on the carpet to warm himself. “Staging implies effort to bring about a series of events. It was only a matter of time before this occurred.”
I leaned forward and pressed two fingers to Shaw’s pulse and counted. Strong and steady. “Out like a light.” I traced the shadows beneath his lashes. “Sleep tight.”
Diode turned a circle, kneaded the carpet and lied down. “You should rest while you can.”
“I think I will grab a nap.” I stood with a groan. “Can I trust you to play nice with him?”
The great cat blinked. “I haven’t killed him yet, have I?”
“I’ll take that as a yes to the good-behavior thing.” Opening my senses, I scanned the area for an indication my guards had arrived. No scent of them. “Keep an eye out for the guards’ return too.”
“They know their way in.” His eyes shut, and he settled. “Now go to bed before I bite your nape and carry you to your room myself. Nothing will happen until nightfall. You can rest for that long.”
Knowing he was right, I turned on my heel. “I need to check in with Mom first.”
Odds were slim, infinitesimal really, that Mom would cross paths with Mai. But if she did and I wasn’t with her and hadn’t called Mom to explain where I was, her momma-bear switch would flip.
“How is your mother?” Diode’s voice sounded far away.
“She’s recovered from her vacation in Faerie.” Sarcasm dripped from the word. “It’s like it never happened.”
His head bobbed once before he lowered it to the carpet and resumed his sunbathing.
Phone heavy in my hand, I went to my room and called my mother.
I lied, told her that Mai had food poisoning and went home but insisted I finish out the week. Mom, who enjoyed sand and sun more than anyone else I knew, agreed wholeheartedly. She signed off with an I love you and a wistful note in her voice.
Guilt had me dragging a pillow and blanket into the living room to make Shaw comfortable. By the time I had wrestled him into position, I was so tired I curled up beside him and shared his pillow. His unconscious mind must have sensed me. He rolled onto his side, tucking my back against his front. His arm draped over my waist and hauled me closer, until his nose buried in my hair and his even breaths hit the back of my neck.
Safe in his arms, I teetered on the brink of falling asleep. That’s when Shaw sighed. A contented huff. The sound a man made when he was right where he wanted to be.
Sleep eluded me after that.
Maybe that was the reason Rook didn’t visit, though I was starting to wonder.
Chapter Nineteen
Stiffness in my back woke me. I rolled over and found myself lying alone on the carpet. I pushed onto my feet and stretched while a yawn popped my jaw. No one had turned on the lights after it got dark, but Shaw’s laptop screen illuminated his face. I made my way toward him then peered over his shoulder at the grainy surveillance footage playing on a loop while he scrawled notes on a legal pad.
Onscreen, a slight, beautiful woman shopped for toilet paper. “Is that your sister-in-law?”
He glanced at the screen instead of me. “Yes.”
Hello, post-feeding awkwardness. “Will you go back to Orlando when we finish up here?”
“No.” The snap of his pen hitting paper emphasized his response. “I’ve seen what I needed to. The trail is too cold. There’s nothing I could do from there I can’t do from home. Besides, I have cases waiting.”
An offer to help him parted my lips, but first things first.
I plopped down onto the closest chair. “How do you want to play this tonight?”
The pen got threaded between his fingers. “Both times Linen went after Mai, she was alone?”
“As far as he knew...” I turned the events over in my head. “Yeah.”
Shaw’s head lifted, gaze zeroing in on a spot at the far corner of the room. “Ask if there’s anything to report.”
Righty materialized next to my arm, and I startled. “How long have you two been back?”
“Hours.” He bit off the word. “We let you sleep.”
The implied, with Shaw, I heard loud and clear. “So is this a recap?”
From the shadows by the door, Lefty materialized. “We report to you, not the incubus.”
Touchy, touchy. “We’re all on the same team here.”
“No.” Distaste curled Righty’s lip. “We are not.”
A feline yawn gave Diode a spot in the conversation.
“What am I missing?” I glanced from face to face. “Did everyone wake up on the wrong side of the bed?”
“You didn’t make it to the bed,” Lefty said under his breath.
“Oh.” I drew out the word. “I get it now. This is you two judging me.”
“You are wed to Rook.” Righty stared down his nose at me. “Consorts must be approved.”
I snorted so hard my nostrils burned. “Sorry, guys, but no. Just no.”
Lefty stood straighter. “I fail to see what amuses you so.”
“I didn’t agree to be Rook’s wife. It just happened. Like walking through a mountain pass and a boulder falling on top of your head.” I pushed to my feet. “The person squished underneath the rock doesn’t have to ask it for permission to keep breathing. The person can fight to get free all they want, and the rock can stuff it where the moss don’t grow.”
Judging by the blank looks, my analogy had gotten away from me. They did that sometimes. “I support monogamy. I won’t share a straw in my milkshake, let alone share the person I plan to spend the rest of my life with. The consort thing was skeevy even before you mentioned my husband getting to approve my choice of lover.”
The furrowing of Righty’s brow amused me until he said, “It is the way things are done.”
“We aren’t in Faerie, and those rules no longer apply.” I scrubbed my face with my palms. “The thing with Shaw isn’t what it looked like, but even if it had been, it’s none of Daire’s business or yours.”
“A closed door does wonders for preventing such misunderstandings,” Diode rumbled.
I pointed at him. “You are not helping.”
“I want you to be happy—” his luminescent gaze cut to Shaw, “—and safe.”
My hands dropped, and I almost choked. “Are you implying Rook is a safer choice?”
“No.” The big cat bowed into a deep stretch that unsheathed his claws. “You value honesty in a relationship.” He sat on his haunches and showed Shaw all his pointy teeth. “You couldn’t be with someone who lied to you, even if they had your best interests at heart. You would rather face an obstacle with a partner as equals than be coddled like a child. Trust matters to you, and honesty is its cornerstone.”
I got the feeling these two had talked while I was sleeping. Obviously, I had been the topic. Which meant the guards had monitored their conversation. Maybe that—not finding me with Shaw—had bunched their undies. Too bad the guards were too tight-lipped for sharing gossip.
“If that was an elaborate way of calling Rook a bastard,” I said, “then I wholeheartedly agree.”
Neither guard met my gaze after that. We had been making such progress too.
“You two were absent when we arrived,” I addressed them. “I assume you swept the grounds?”
“We did.” Righty’s clipped tone had returned.
I made a rolling gesture with my hand. “What did you discover?”
“There was no trace of the entity.” Lefty always sounded snappish. No real change there.
Diode studied his claws. “The magic he’s using to camouflage himself has fooled you before.”
“It has fooled all of us.” I jumped in before the guards’ wedgies went atomic. “So we agree there’s a chance even if we don’t sense Linen, he might be down there.” I plucked at my shirt. “I should change before we go. Both
times he approached Mai she was...” I considered and rejected several word combinations, “...scantily clad. He might have a thing for skin. My swimsuit isn’t as flashy, but it will have to do.”
“He has your scent.” Shaw didn’t look happy about it. “I don’t think the swimsuit is necessary.”
“I agree,” Righty said. “If, as you say, he has a thing for skin, the less you show, the safer you will be.”
Lefty threw his weight behind the motion for me to stay covered up. Diode graced us with a kingly nod in agreement. Motion carried.
“Okay. The swimsuit’s out. I still need fresh clothes.” This outfit was linty from my nap on the floor. “But I’ll keep it casual.”
“I assume you mean to use Thierry as bait.” The cat sounded displeased.
“The guards will be with me.” I shrugged off his worry. “I’ll be fine.”
“I won’t let her get hurt,” Shaw promised.
“Don’t let the boobs fool you.” I smirked. “I’m trained for this.”
A slight grin crooked Shaw’s lips. “Yes, you are.” The look I cut Diode was smug. Shaw continued, “But that doesn’t mean any of us want to see you—or your boobs—get hurt.”
Utter mortification swept through the fluorescent-yellow cat and turned him sallow. “Her—” He strangled on the word, unable to cough it up. “Her anatomy is not up for discussion.”
Wrong of me, I know, but I laughed at the prudish crinkle of Diode’s nose. “I’ll hit the bar and see what happens.”
“Don’t drink your order,” Shaw warned. “We don’t know how the drugs got into Mai’s drink.”
“Well, shucks,” I drawled. “This here’s my first rodeo, Mr. Incubus. Are you sure you ought to let this little filly run wild?” I lowered my gaze to the vicinity of his belt buckle. “If I need emergency wrangling, how good are you with your...lasso?”
He ignored me, my twang and my lasso reference.
Spoilsport.
The cat’s whiskers flexed in thought. “The bartender might be fae.”
“If he is, we’ll get him relocated.” Shaw’s expression darkened. “There are kids here.”
I could have pointed out that children didn’t belly up to the bar, but some fae preferred the young and had no qualms mashing herbs into lollipops or mixing spells into chocolate bars. For now we would focus on the pattern we knew, the option that would give me fewer nightmares later. Linen liked sexy fae women. Sexy wasn’t happening. I wasn’t that girl. But I was half-fae.
Two out of three ain’t bad.
“I assume you’re going to hold down the fort?” I asked the lounging cat.
“Not that I have much choice with my charm nullified,” he said dryly.
I walked over and scratched under his chin. “If he comes up here looking for trouble, don’t hog all the fun.”
He leaned into my palm. “You and I have very different ideas of fun.”
If I hadn’t seen him shred those hounds in Faerie into confetti, I might have believed him. “No.” I kissed his nose. “We don’t.”
His playful swipe at my legs with his sheathed claws made me grin.
After dancing out of his reach, I spun on Righty and Lefty. “Did you see any signs of the gray men?”
Both guards shook their heads. “The beaches are clear.”
No surprise there. “Did you sense any other fae in the area?”
“No,” they said in unison.
Fae weren’t as common as humans, but in a resort this size, this time of year, and so close to the ocean, we should have had company. “So, either there are fae here and someone, maybe Linen, is concealing them, or this area has been claimed by something dangerous enough to run off visiting fae it views as competition.”
And if Linen was the something dangerous claiming this as his territory, how powerful did that make him?
“It doesn’t matter much,” Shaw finally said. “If Linen is powerful enough to hold territory here, we’re going to have a fight on our hands removing him. As tight as the competition is for beachfront hunting grounds, I doubt he leaves his home unguarded. That’s assuming he isn’t working for someone else.”
“Four to one are good odds.” Between the guards, Shaw and me, we could hold our own. “We can test his defenses if nothing else.”
“I want you to wear this too.” He tossed me a small leather pouch on a string.
I caught it, and cold magic rolled up my arm. Then the smell hit me. “Phew. What’s in this?”
His lips twitched. “Do you really want to know?”
Spellwork was his forte, not mine. But I had a good nose, and I trusted what it told me. I also trusted I didn’t want the specifics.
“Let’s go the willful-ignorance route, okay?” I tightened the drawstrings. “What does it do?”
“It defuses spells and enchantments cast in your vicinity or on your person.” Grim lines hardened his expression. “It won’t last more than two hours. Three max.”
The spell was active. That meant the clock was ticking. “Then we better get started.”
The bar scene spawned a migraine. Lights flashed. Drinks splashed. Half-naked women jiggled while guys filmed their next YouTube upload on their cells. Much to my surprise, the desk clerk told me the hotel serviced two bars.
One was tucked in the corner and strained to exude elegance amid the sandaled masses. Maybe that explained why I had missed it each time I passed through the lobby. The lighting was low, which made for ideal hunting conditions, but there were no singles in sight. Only married couples. Paired with the Parents After Dark vibe it had going for it, I ditched that bar and focused on the poolside hangout where Linen had made his first appearance.
A quick check of my phone told me thirty minutes had passed. Time to get noticed.
I ordered a Bahama Mama from a suitably flirty bartender and started making the rounds. Most guys grinned when I cut between them and their partners. The women, not so much. A few men offered to refresh my drink, which I made sure to splash onto the ground while dancing. Not that I wanted to start a drunken catfight over a guy I had no interest in, but hot tempers and loud voices attracted a certain kind of attention.
“All this for me?” a dark voice purred near my ear. “You could have called.”
Chills dappled my skin. “You didn’t leave a number.”
“You left in such a hurry.” Linen clicked his tongue. “I’m pleased to see you’re not a coward.”
The accusation rankled. “I’m surprised you noticed. You liked my friend, remember?”
“I liked her well enough,” he admitted, “but she was never the prize.”
Meaning he had targeted me all along, through Mai. A fissure of unease shot through me, but he was here now, and I couldn’t very well hold up a finger and beat a hasty retreat after telling him this new information meant I had to consult with the fae extraction team I had on standby in the shadows.
His hands landed on my shoulders, and he whirled me around to face him. “Thierry Thackeray.”
Following his lead, I spun again, part flirt and part self-defense. I wanted his hands off me.
“That’s me.” No harm in confirming what he already knew. Besides, it wasn’t my Name.
“I am Balamohan.” That same flat, black gaze as before drilled into me. “I am Makara here.”
Makara. My brain stalled on my rusty Hindu mythology. “That makes you Ganga’s pet, right?”
The dark skin covering his jaw tightened as he ground his teeth. “I was once in her service.”
From what I remembered, Ganga was a goddess of rivers. Her mount was a Makara, and for the life of me I couldn’t remember what that meant. A half-terrestrial and half-aquatic mishmash of a creature maybe?
Having a goddess as his patroness explained how Linen maintained a low baseline, easily concealed, while being able to tap into so much raw magic. Mixing energies also explained the muddied power signature.
Though the way he phrased his answer mad
e me wonder if Ganga was still among the living gods. “Who do you serve now?”
He forced himself to relax into his laid back façade. “That would be telling.”
“You do realize as a conclave marshal, I could force you to state your allegiance.”
“You could try.” Now he was smiling. “The conclave means nothing to me.”
“Well, that’s where you and I are going to have to disagree.” I attempted contriteness. “We have rules in this realm, and everyone has to follow them. If you don’t—” I spread my arms, “—you get a visit from someone like me. And no one wants that. So why don’t we refresh your memory, okay?”
Those black pools set in his face sparkled. “What if I wanted this visit?”
The thought sent a shiver through me. “Now, now. Flattery won’t unbreak the law.”
“This is going to be fun,” he said with a laugh.
A stinging sensation in my arm made me glance down to where a filament from the jacket of his linen suit stretched over to me, like it had unraveled and a loose string grazed me. Only I couldn’t brush it off. It had latched on to me, and the worse it hurt...the less I cared about the pain.
“What are you doing?” I touched my lips and found them as frozen and numb as the ice in my drink. And they weren’t the only thing. A slow paralysis swept through me, concentrating cold down my left arm. Before my sense of smell dulled, I scented my guards nearby. That alone kept me from frying Linen on the spot, before a cast of all-too-human witnesses. Well, that and the fact I couldn’t feel my hand. Hard to feed on someone I couldn’t touch with deadened mojo.
I wish I had a nifty lure like Shaw’s.
“Sparing you.” He caught me when I slid off my barstool. “You didn’t think Faerie would allow a half-blood upon her throne, did you? As you said, there are rules, and everyone must follow them.” He wrapped an arm around my waist, and that nasty string thing bound us together hip to hip, digging in deeper. “Let me take you away from all the politics and protect you from all who wish you harm.”