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The Lunar Effect (The Ayla St. John Chronicles Book 1) Page 21
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“Okay. I promise not to do it again. Can I go now?”
“Not until you tell me why you killed her. The real reason.”
“No.”
He rushed over to me and slammed me onto the office’s sofa and pinned me there. I gasped at how quickly he’d done it. He murmured close to my ear, “I have been hearing whisperings that you are a hunter. Please tell me that it’s not true. You use that witch friend of yours to help you with your dirty work, do you?”
I couldn’t breathe at his close proximity. Because my legs had had nowhere else to go but spread apart, he used his hand to run it up the inside of my bare thigh as it was wrapped around his waist. I tried and failed to suppress the shiver that racked my entire body from his touch.
He then leaned down to whisper in my ear, and as he did, I could feel his hard arousal against the inside of my other thigh. “Maybe I should rip these panties from you and render you pliable and compliant, then after I make you come a few times, you’ll tell me why you murdered Elda.”
Before I could protest, he slammed his lips down on mine and molded them to my own. When his tongue licked the seam of my lips, I opened up for him and our tongues began to mingle. He tasted amazing and I soon realized I had never been this turned on, ever. He reached under my dress and yanked the thin lace panties from me and then wadded them up, shoving them in his pocket. Pushing my dress up higher, I felt his fingers graze up my inner thigh and then I gasped when he shoved two fingers inside of me. He used the pad of his thumb to press and circle on my most sensitive spot. I began to buck my hips as a blindingly fast orgasm ripped through me, and I screamed into his smiling mouth. He then leaned down and bit into my neck, and once he began to suck, I came again, or maybe I was still coming? All I knew was that it was so intense, I almost couldn’t handle it.
Slowly removing his fangs from my neck, he used his naughty fingers to wipe blood from his lip, and then he put both wet fingers into my mouth. “Taste yourself.”
Reaching down, he unbuttoned his pants. “Now I’m going to fuck you until you can’t move, little wolf.”
“Ayla!”
“Aylaaa!”
Voices echoed from the hallway outside the door and I recognized them to be Sanja’s and Beckett’s.
“Shit!” I said, sitting up. “What the hell are we doing?” I muttered the last part mostly to myself.
Kellan looked at me, amused. “We’re having fun, don’t you agree? The door is locked. Lie back and let me pleasure you some more.”
Damn, that sounded awesome, but I realized, for the second time since he’d made me weak and stupid, that I did still have a boyfriend. One I hadn’t spoken to in over a week because I was still mad at him. One I needed to make a serious decision about.
My friends continued to call my name and I ran into the bathroom to clean up. Then, quickly rummaging through the drawers, I found a large, almost empty pill bottle. I dumped the pills onto the counter and ran out and shoved as many of Elda’s ashes into it as I could.
Kellan had re-dressed and now had his hands in his pocket, and I could see he was still very much bulging and straining behind his zipper.
“What in bloody hell are you doing? Don’t touch those! Dr. Stoker needs to bury them.”
I stopped what I was doing. “Uh, I was just cleaning up for you. I feel bad for killing her now.”
No, no I didn’t, but if I didn’t bring Dean her ashes, I had just killed her for nothing.
“No, you don’t,” he said, mimicking my thoughts.
I paused and looked up at him. “Tell you what, let me bury them for you. Just tell me where.”
He shook his head. “You’re a terrible liar. You killed her for money and now have to deliver her ashes.”
I let myself fall onto the floor on my butt and sighed. “Okay you got me.”
“To whom and for how much?”
I shook my head and looked down. “I don’t think so.”
He crouched to my level and used his fingers to tilt my face to his. “No, I’m genuinely curious. Who wanted Elda dead?”
“Does it matter? I killed her, so you’ll have to punish me, I guess.” I was stalling, trying to figure out how the hell I was going to get out of there.
He laughed and stood, helping me to stand. “I’m going to give you a sixty-second head start. Take what you have, gather your friends, and get the hell out of here.”
Breathing in relief, I plunked the lid on the pill bottle and said, “And what are you going to do?”
He looked down at the rest of the ashes, then back to me. “Lie my arse off.”
I kissed him on the cheek and, shoving the pill bottle into my bra, I opened the door and saw my friends at the end of the hallway.
“There you are,” Sanja said, looking relieved.
“We need to leave now,” I whisper-yelled.
“But—” Beckett started.
“Now!” I hissed, looking around.
“Where were you—“ Sanja began.
“Later. I’ll tell you both everything later,” I promised.
We descended the stairs and walked as calmly and coolly as we could out the front door. Once we were outside, I glanced behind me, knowing my sixty seconds were over, and as the valet brought us Beckett’s BMW, I heard a man’s voice howling in grief from upstairs.
Chapter 30
I got home and shot off a text to Dean Hobbes: I have something for u.
He replied immediately: Excellent! Where shall we meet?
Me: How about the first place we ever met?
Dean the Vamp: See you in 20m.
“Where are you going?” Sanja asked, alarmed to see me heading for the front door.
I held up the pill bottle. “To deliver and collect.”
I had told both Sanja and Beckett on the way back to my apartment about what had happened upstairs. I may have left out a few sordid details about what Kellan had done with me—to me—but they got the gist. Beckett was upset that I had killed a vampire for money and had dropped us off, angry, tearing off down the street in his car. I would have to deal with him later.
She frowned. “I don’t think that’s a good idea.”
I sighed and walked over to her. “I know you don’t, but I just want this done. I don’t think I’ll be doing this again, so you don’t have to worry.”
Narrowing her eyes at me, she said, “I somehow doubt that.”
“Wanna come?” I asked, plastering on a cheesy grin.
“I don’t think either of us should be out when you just committed murder like an hour ago. You’re going to have the entire Vlasé looking for you.”
I shook my head. “Kellan told me he’d cover for me.”
She raised an eyebrow and crossed her arms across her chest. “And you believe that crazy vampire?”
I laughed. “Yes, I do. You coming or not?”
She shook her head. “Like I’d let you go alone. Let me change.” She disappeared into bathroom and came out wearing yoga pants and a hoodie. I was still wearing my dress but had flats on, and I grabbed a sweater on the way out.
“This is it?” Dean asked, holding the pill bottle in the palm of his hand.
“I’m not sure if you’ve ever tried to collect vampire ashes, but it’s not exactly easy on plush, high-dollar carpet. You’re lucky I got that much.”
He shook his head. “I don’t even know if these are hers.”
“Are you for real? Like, how would you know if they were hers if I had given you all of them?” I asked, incredulous.
“Her scent. It’s faintly there, but I don’t know.” He opened the lid and inhaled again.
Sanja made a face. “That’s really gross.”
Dean ignored her and pierced me with his beady brown eyes. Without breaking eye contact, he handed me a wad of bills.
I handed them to Sanja and said, “Count it.”
“Gosh, I feel so Breaking Bad right now,” she said, peeling off the rubber band and licking her finger.r />
“We done here?” Dean asked as he turned to walk away, his trench coat swishing at his feet.
“She stole your woman away from you, didn’t she?” I asked curiously, wondering if I was right.
He stopped in his tracks and turned around. “How did you know that?”
“She was married to a very prominent member of the Vlasé, you know. A doctor. I’m pretty sure he’s royally pissed at his wife’s death.”
He snorted. “I did not know much about her. Met her at a fetish club, and she took Janine and me home to play. Two weeks later, Janine tells me she’s leaving me for Elda, never saw her again. That was two years ago. Janine and I had been married for thirty years.”
“I’m sorry,” I said, feeling bad for the little weasel now. “I didn’t stay at the party long enough to see if there was a Janine there, but I can try to find her for you.”
He waved a dismissive hand and said, “Nah. I don’t want to see the bitch ever again.”
“So you just wanted Elda dead just because?”
He chuckled and walked down the alley. “Yep. Thank you.”
“It’s all here,” Sanja said. “Nineteen hundred.”
I handed her five one-hundred dollar bills and said, “Thanks for your help.”
She grinned and pocketed the money.
Ryder had me up against his car at the top of Wolfe Point and was kissing me crazy. “I’m sorry for everything. God, I’ve missed you. We shouldn’t go a month without seeing each other.”
I hugged him tight. “I’ve missed you, too. You still set to graduate in May?”
He nodded. “Yep. Then we can figure out what you’re going to do. Maybe we can move in together.”
I snorted. “We’ve been together five years. We should do something or break up.”
He pulled back and looked down at me, a mix of hurt and shock on his face. “Wow that sounded defensive. We’ve both been too busy to play house. We are still young…”
“Stop,” I said. “I did not mean that to sound the way it did. Sometimes I don’t think before I speak.”
“Sooo, you really do feel that way?”
I sighed. “In a roundabout way, yes, but not as harsh as it came out.”
Feeling increasingly more twitchy and agitated, I walked away and said, “You guys have fun hunting. I’ll be in the trailer trying to avoid mirrors and razors.”
With that, I went inside, stripped off all my clothes, and waited for the fever to hit me. Then I spent the rest of the night eating pizza and washing it down with a blood bag, while I watched DVDs on my laptop I’d brought.
The blood bag was a necessity I’d learned to bring with me for each shift. I found it was easy to steal them from blood donation trucks. It sucked to be stuck in the middle like this all the time. I much preferred being the wolf. I felt a comradery with my brothers and sisters when we hunted and shifted together. Now, I was just some freak outcast who could get shot or put on a TV show about Bigfoot if I stayed in the woods. So I just spent the night in the trailer and locked the door for two of the three nights. I’d found by the third night, I did not shift into anything. I’d been taking my own car up the mountain so I didn’t have to waste my time hanging around on the third night.
I always called in sick to my job for the two days I was gone, and sometimes I got lucky and it landed on one or two weekend days so I didn’t have to seem like such a bad employee, but there really wasn’t much choice.
I thought about going into business for myself… as much as I had hated my first vampire kill, I found the next two weren’t so bad. The more I studied them, the more I realized lots of them had been around for decades—even centuries sometimes, and the longer they ‘lived’, the more insane they became. It had been a week since I’d offed Elda. I found myself thinking nonstop about Kellan, but knew that wasn’t such a good idea. Guilt still flooded me when I thought about what we had done that night. What made me feel even guiltier was how much I liked it and wanted to see him again.
I also realized I would have to make a lot more stakes. I didn’t trust that wood wouldn’t splinter or break so I had bought a bunch of metal piping from the hardware store and began sharpening them with my claws. I had also discovered that I could somewhat shift parts of my body on command, like my claws and fangs—like when I had killed that vampire in the alley. The fangs just descended on their own when my body was prepped to kill or defend, I’d learned.
Sanja’s spring break visit was over, and she had gone back to Boulder to finish out her last semester, but she was already talking about staying in Colorado with me instead of going back to Texas. She wanted to open up her own magic and herbal shop downtown.
I was halfway down the mountain at the end of the second day when my phone rang. It was an unknown Denver area code, but I answered it anyway, hoping I wouldn’t lose signal.
“Hello?”
“Ayla?” asked a male voice.
“Yes. Who’s this?”
“Evan Grant, we spoke a few weeks ago.”
I nodded, remembering the cute but sort of strange hybrid who had approached me at work. I put the phone on speaker because I needed both hands to navigate the Honda down the windy mountain road. “I remember. I was wondering if I was going to hear from you.”
“I understand you went to a big party the Vlasé threw last weekend.”
“Yeah, so?”
I felt nervous and immediately defensive. Did he know I had killed Elda?
He chuckled. “Well, my family and I were there. I was going to approach you and say hi, but you disappeared pretty quickly. Linden was at the party.”
I raised an eyebrow. “Oh, yeah? So why didn’t you kill the bastard?”
“He was heavily guarded and only made a brief appearance. When his head of security disappeared upstairs, we were going to make our move, but he was escorted out by about a dozen other vamps. I just wanted you to know that you were close, and that we figured out that he actually lives in the Vlasé’s mansion headquarters there.”
I smiled inside thinking about just how preoccupied his head of security had been. “Yeah, Kellan was upstairs with me.”
A long pause ensued.
“Hello?” I said.
“You were with Kellan? Was that before or after you killed Dr. Stoker’s wife?”
Shit.
“How did you know about Elda?”
He didn’t pry about Kellan, but said, “We know everything.”
“Who else knows about what I did?”
“No one. We have secret cameras in that house, and we watched.”
My cheeks immediately heated. I swallowed hard. “Then I’m sure the Vlasé have cameras in there, too.”
“No. Dr. Stoker prohibited cameras in his office. But we managed to plant one.”
I felt sick. “I trust you will keep that and whatever else happened in that room a secret.”
He laughed. “We’ve already destroyed the tape, but the reason I’m calling is because I’d like for two things to happen.”
I had finally reached the long, stretching highway that would take me back to the city, and breathed a sigh of relief that I was off the small, winding treacherous road. I flipped down the visor to keep the sun out of my face. “And what is that?”
“One, I would like to use your relationship with Kellan Conley to our advantage. You get close enough to him so you can meet Linden. In exchange, my wife and I will train you how to hunt and kill vampires. Because, girl, that metal stake thing you did… not good. Sloppy.”
I smiled despite his insult. “Sloppy, but effective.”
“And that is not how you collect ashes,” he said with a smile in his voice.
“Okay, Evan Grant, you have yourself a deal. When do I start?”
“Tonight, blondie. Meet me at the Griffen Apartments in Lo-Do at eleven p.m.”
I swallowed hard as I felt butterflies invade my stomach. “I’ll be there.”
Epilogue
I cha
nced one last look at the twin gargoyles flanking me, and knew it was time. The snow was coming down harder now. As I prepared to leap off the twenty-story building, I was excited to take out this particular vampire, Johnny. He had been killing humans for five years, undetected and unchecked by his coven within the Vlasé, and it was time for him to die. Again.
It only took three times for me to perfect flying. Evan’s wife, Karina, had shown me how it was done, as I hadn’t attempted it since my leap off the bar’s roof the night I met Beckett. I was a total pro now. Evan and Karina also showed me easier ways to create stakes, using heat and fire to mold the metal soft before I sharpened it with a sharpening steel. I also realized the sharpening steel, if perfected to a point, would make a great shank in and of itself. It was that which I held in my hand now. Next week they were going to show me how to use a crossbow pistol, and a few special guns. I was excited.
With my hair flying up behind me, and the ice-cold wind rushing against my skin, I watched as the ground flew up to meet me. Like a cat, I landed on my feet with a thud right behind the sleazeball in front of the Griffen Apartment Building. He quickly turned around and looked at me, shock registering on his ugly, pale face.
His brows drew together. “Where the fuck did you come from?”
I grinned darkly. “Hell. Which is where you’re headed.”
Cheesy? Yes. Makes me feel like a badass? Definitely.
He began to chuckle and bared his fangs, “You first, bit—“but he was cut off when I drove the sharpening tool into his chest. He clutched at it, and fell to the ground, where I pulled it out and jumped off of him, watching him crack and turn to ash.
“Bravo,” Karina said, her pale skin and bright red hair illuminated under the streetlamp.
“I got it,” Evan said with his phone up, recording.
I high-fived Karina, and then she used a tiny electric hand-held vacuum to remove the scumbag’s ashes.
Evan then handed me fifty one-hundred dollar bills, my payment for killing Johnny.