His fingers tangled in my hair, angling my head for better access. “You taste good.”
“Talk later. Kiss now.”
“Hell, yeah.”
There was something so familiar about our words, but at the moment, I couldn’t reason out what. Didn’t care why. There was only here and now and him. He was shirtless, and oh, glory, I could feel every ridge of his muscles, every bump from his scars, even the cold metal piercing his nipple.
“What me to stop?” he rasped.
“No. Yes. I—”
His hold on me tightened, and I—
“O-kay,” an irritated voice said from beside us. “This isn’t what I expected to find.”
Cole released me, spun and faced the intruder, staying in front of me to blockade me from a possible threat.
His dad stood in the entrance. “Heard there was a catfight,” Mr. Holland said. Tall and menacing and now—amused?
Someone kill me. Now!
“No harm done,” Cole said easily.
Mr. Holland scraped the tip of his boot against the wall beside him. “I see that.”
Please, please, please kill me.
“We were just heading out,” Cole added after clearing his throat.
Mr. Holland waved toward the door. “Well, then, don’t let me stop you. Go.”
I scrambled off the counter, moved around Cole and beat feet, never looking back.
*
One huge difference between living with an all-seeing dad and unaware grandparents was bedtime. Dad hadn’t had one, but Nana and Pops were tucked in by nine. The “early bird special,” they called it. This saved me from having to drug them, as Cole had warned me I might have to do in order to sneak out.
At nine-thirty, Cole stepped into my backyard. Cole, who had kissed me. Cole, who had refused to discuss it afterward. Okay, fine. I had refused.
Cole, who was driving me flipping crazy.
At nine thirty-three I was outside the house and standing beside him—and the rank scent of rot coated the air.
As Emma had warned, zombies were on their way.
Nervousness blended with anticipation. I had spent several hours practicing the spirit-out-of-body thing, and I was getting quite good. I wasn’t going down easily tonight.
“I can’t spare anyone tonight, I’m sorry, so I put up so many traps nothing will get past your gate, okay?” Cole grabbed my arm and bolted into a full-blown sprint, forcing me to keep up or be dragged. “Don’t step anywhere I don’t step.”
“I thought we were fighting them here,” I gasped out. There was a full moon tonight, the large golden orb surrounded by a long stretch of black sky. There were clouds but no stars that I could see.
“Frosty spotted the first wave of them already and stayed on their tail. They’re headed to your house, but we want to see if they’ll follow you.”
A question I’d like to know the answer to as well. “And if they don’t?”
“I’ll be notified and we’ll return.”
We broke out of the forested alley, his Jeep waiting at the curb. Bronx was at the wheel, his hair hidden under a dark bandanna, just like mine. Cole practically threw me inside, then slid in beside me. The tires gave a little squeal as we started down the road.
Reminded me a little too much of the night my family had died. How my dad had tossed me in the car, how I’d had to scramble to get buckled in. I will stay calm. This night was different. It would end differently, too. Though it was pitch-black inside the vehicle, I could make out an arsenal of guns, crossbows and swords.
Zombies were gonna die tonight, not us.
“You armed?” Cole asked me.
“Yes.” Before he’d driven me home, he’d given me a switchblade and a double-edged dagger. Tomorrow I would learn the basics of wielding a shortsword and shooting a crossbow. I couldn’t wait. Until then, I was to stick with what I knew.
The Jeep swerved, nicked a corner and bounced me up and down.
“Careful,” Cole said.
Bronx was his usual talkative self—meaning, he said zero. Several sharp turns later, a stint outside the neighborhood and into another, the Jeep stopped abruptly at a curb. Cole hopped out, dragging me—and two of the swords—with him.
He hustled me up a hill, through another cluster of trees and into a clearing. Bronx stayed close to my heels.
“What do you want me to do?” Though I couldn’t see his friends, I suspected they were spread out, watching and waiting. I could smell the floral scent of Mackenzie’s shampoo, the musk of Haun’s cologne and almost everything else I’d breathed in at Cole’s house.
A darkened cluster of clouds moved in front of the moon, creating a dull, almost reddish color. It was the perfect camouflage for us. We were dressed in head-to-toe black, and there were black half circles painted under our eyes. I had no idea why Cole had asked me to add the paint, but he and Bronx sported the streaks, too, so okay.